truck driver and _ his Thirty-two — others five critically, be shot. repairs. The Miss., to Arlington, THE DEAD: . Killed besides Stewart’ were: Ronald Philip Spence, Las Ve- gas; Nev., and Hawthorne, Calif., relief truck driver. Barney Boyd, 44, El Paso, Tex., . driver of the bus. Florence Minium, 65, Ringsville, _ Tex, “Johnny Lee Rodden, 7, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Rodden, Re- dondé Beach, Calif, Casanova, 56, ‘Guantan-| men Benito amo Oriente, Cuba. Carmen, 53, his. wife. Carol Hall Reed, 38, 304 Chest- nut. St, Pensacola, Fla. Peart Grogan, 64, Los Angéles:)~ __.__“God_bless that man who told us to sit still and shut up," said” Delois Gaines, 39, a restaurant worker fron) Los Angeles, weren't for him, we prebably would have hurt each other try: ing ta get out.” s Lake> GNARLED GREYHOUND — Before a bloody collision, this Greyhound bus was a bi-leveled one. You'd neversknow that now. The impact of a head-on crash with a double-decker cattle truck east of Tucson, lower level. Nine: were’ killed,including both drivers; 32 were injured. Most of the bus passen- gers were going home for Christmas. ze st \ AP Wirephote Ariz., completely gouged out the Bus-Truck Collision Kills Nine TUCSON, Ariz. @— A Grey- hound bus and a eattle truck trav- eling on the wrong side of-the road collided about eight miles east of! here Sunday killing nine persons. Let's Try April in Paris, West Tells Khrushchev - PARIS (® — The Western Big Three today invited Nikita Khrushchev to an April-in-Paris summit confer- ence that may launch a round of summit gatherings in London; Washington and Moscow also. The Soviet Premier is expected to accefit the bit te § Orton Man Mother Perish One Auto Rolls Over in| Groveland Twp.; Other Strikes. Tree Two people were killed in Oakland County traffic ac- cidents over the weekend. A mother of four was fatally injured Saturday when her auto struck a tree in West Bloomfield Town- Ship. An Ortonville man died Sunday morning when his car rolled over on him in Groveland Township. Dead are Joseph E. Brown, 23, of 144 Ball St.. Ortonville, and Mrs. Leatra M. Wilson, 28, of 6870 Aeroview St., West Bloom- field Township. Brown. was alone in his car driving west on Grange Wall road shortly before 3 Sunday morning when his. car missed a curve, sheriff's deputies said. He was killed when struck by the vehicle he was driving. Dep- Suen | uties said the car Toll in °59 rolled over sev- On in eral times. _ -As.it began roll-|_ 74 ing; he was thrown from. the Last Year..| car into a sitting to Date: 90 | position about 10 | an nt yards ahead. - The The ‘bus driver and six p gers were killed along with the relief man. aboard double-decked bus were injured, Also killed were thirty. head of cattle, mostly calves. Some other animals were maimed and, had to Auto Crash The “truck, he said, was on the wrong side when it struck the Los Angeles-to-Yew Orleans bus. double-decked truck was hauling 67 steers from Jackson, Ariz. ‘of Marysville. x belia (Osbie) Butler, 24, of) Wash., and Rich-| rai Calif., was taking her 5- feos daughter Stella to San) | Nek cide thir wicks: Sciteiy Lau Rodden ran ahead of Stella to the (Contioned, on. Pane 3. Col. D TV Piciore Clears A young Navy. wirman, Mélvin Highway Patrolman dimmy |Ray Werth of 598 Keith Dr., Mil- Williams said track driver James |ford, was killey yesterday when a R, Stewart of Del Rio, Tex., ap- stolen car being pursued by poiice parently missed a “keep right” |at more than 80 sign where the road divided for |, p:h, crashed in- to a house front} in Marys vilic, Wash. An airman first Aix Station, 40° miles northwest | He was the only ~ son of Mr. and WERTH Mrs. Alex Stammen. < No one inside the house was. in- No more information was avail- able regarditg the accident. Werth's body will be brought to Richardson-Bird funeral home: in Milford tonight, according to Stam- A Night-to Remember? LONDON: (UPD. _ A London ding. “Ladies will pal hight. | gowhs with long wey = _ the item said. — in West Kills Area Sailor *the first summit. session, suggested for the week of ‘April 25. x *& * President Eisenhower, British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan. and French President Charles de’ Gaulle ‘wound up their talks by! charting the steps to be taken to the summit that Khrushchev has’ long been clamoring for. West German Chanceller Kon- rad Adenauer also attended the weekend Western summit meet- ing although he will net be at the conference table with Khrush- chev. ‘Here are the salient points from Snow to Go auto continued rolling and came to* rest on top of Brown, said Deputy | Everett M. Fredericks He was etininnend dead by | lard Sr, of Clarkston. Mrs, Wilson was returning from, ishopping Saturday afternoon when| her auto struck a tree along Green| Lake road south of Commerce road) less than a. mile from her home.) * * * 4 She. was dead on arrival at Pon- \tiac General Hospital. The -car traveled some 73 feet on the road shoulder before im- pact. Ba d. News for Santa; | Deputy Coroner Dr. R. W. Bul- Winter officially begins at 9:35) the weekend session. * * * 1. To quiet West German fears | the Big Three gave Adenauer as-| surances that the Allies are de-| termined to hold on to their war-' won occupation rights in West | Berlin. ARMS TALKS FIRST? 2. They. agreed to press for the opening of disarmament talks by sion before the proposed summit conference — a move that could serve asa test of Soviet inten- tions. Late March was talked of as a likely starting time. Original- ly the commission had mn - eX- pected. to meet~in February, in Geneva, but a new Western dis- . armament proposal wilt probably ~ mot be ready then. 3. De Gaulle accepted an in- the 10-nation East-West. .commis-| (Continued on Page 2 2, Cot. » a.m. Tuesday, but the Weather | |Bureau predicts the snow that fell: jast night will be gone before | |Christmas. | * * * The five-day forecast calls for'| ja..warming trend after Tuesday | with temperatures in the 40s. They! will average -about four degrees | above normal..The normal high is| MM, the normal low 21, Precipitation will average | about one-tenth of an inch in | oceasional light snow during the , week, Tonight’s: low will be 24. The, mercury is expected to climb to a. high of 34 tomorrow, Light yar-| iable winds. will. become easterly 8-15 m.p.b. Tuesday, - ~*~ * *& At 8 a.m. this mor ning the mer- cury. read 22 degrees, and easterly “winds registered § m.p.h. The reading at 2 p.m. was 2. C Truck & Coach Back at Full Strength i. W. Bloomfield & ral ic fine ' - See ietemer tains oo epee pee et Shah Takes Wife NEW QUEEN FOR SHAH — The Shah of Iran and hig new queen, the former Farah Diba, sit for photographs after their wedding today in a Moslem - Hitupe in his Tern palace. The ale “year old Commoner is Leukemia May Beat Christmas She Needs Flood of Cards , tar this Christmas,” her mother ‘other victims of childhood diseases By PETE LOCHBILER Carolyn Carr needs a lifetime of, iChristmas.. cards right now. .. i Like most children, the 11]-year-) old leukemia victim likes Christ-, imas best — Santa Claus, Christ-} imas trees, presents, carols. Christmas is only four days | | away. Bat the fatal blood disease | may not. let Carolyn live to en- joy it. Her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Earl | Carr, 54°-N. Jessie St., can only | cross their fingers. ENJOYS FAMILY'S CARDS Carolyn wants Christmas cards, | | they said, * * * “She's enjoyed so much the / cards the family has received so CAROLYN CARR. - : Today said, “She. said. to me, ‘Mommy, Id Hike fo get Christmas’ cards my: self—lots and lots of them.’ * *« * Mrs. Carr shows Carolyn the | icards during the few hours of the iday that she is not slambering un- a card, Mrs. Carr hopes he does, t immediately. She asked, too, that he messages be cheerful and with-! jut any reference to the disease, whiclr Carolyn thinks is ‘real bad) measles."’ * * * id The Carrs and Carolyn's six, brothers and sisters have tried to) give Carélyn some advance Christ-| mas joy, S| The family tree has been up for some time and Carolyn’ has had) her own little tree next to her: bed for two months, A Christmas thrill caine last week when Carolyn’s letter to | Santa Claus was read on a tele- and the show won a. large, stuffed dog, It lies on“her bed, Touched by her plight, friendly store owners have sent Carolyn presents — mostly dolls, her fav- orite companions. With the help of an ambulance . last night Carolyn saw part of the ‘Christmas play staged by the Sun- day School class she used to attend at United-Missionary Church Saturday she briefly _joinec ‘ | shah. He divorced the first two after they failed to bear a son. See story on page two. Say no, ‘much weaker in the past 10 days,”’ isaid Mrs. Carr. i Tom Tracy's pespchaensacnily | AP Wirephote the third wife of the 40-year-old Michigan Tums Froma 3-Year ‘Trend of Safety Grim Figure. Is. Triple Previous Weekend Toll; 1,376th Fatality Listed By The Associated Press Deaths of 19 persons over © the weekend brought Mich- igan’s traffic toll thus far this’ year to 1,376 and re- versed a three-year down- ward trend in traffic deaths. Donna Francisco, 16, of Lansing, who was killed | Sunday in a two-car crash ‘near '1,376th victim of 1959. Lansing, was the State. Police said traffic claimed /1,375 lives in. Michigan in all of 1958. They said such deaths. had been decreasing for three years but the Franciseo girl's death sig- nalled an upswing, The death toll was more thin ‘three times as large as that of the previous weekend when six died in traffic. Only minates We- fore the Associated Press death | count began at 6 p.m. Friday, eight persons were killed in a vat a party at McCarroll School. She played a Christmas care] on the organ, A moving company transported Carolyn’s own organ to the party for the occasion. Carolyn was first hit by leukemia 16 months ago. In the hospital two months, she was able to attend |der sedation. fourth grade classes at Central Carolyn likes to read the School only a couple times last | cheery messages, finger the glit- year. tering colors, observe the famil- | * * * iar figures of the Holy Family — But she tried to keep up with her | and Santa Claus, class at home and the school, If anyone cares to send Carolyn knowing of her illness, promotéd her into the fifth grade in June. As sometimes happens with leu- ikemia, the disease seemed to go. laway this summer. Carolyn appeared normal when) she went back to school during the’ first two weeks of September, Then the disease came back, this time with a crippling feroc- ity. Carolyn's been in bed most of the past two months . She begged us to let her go to the party and the play. We couldn't even though she’s grown “We thought, ‘This may be her i ‘last chance to enjoy life.’ vision program. Carolyn watched | 40) * *> ““ _~ “She’s fought so long and brave-| ‘ly against the disease, even when! ‘it was most painful, She has so much wil, power for a little child and so much fight in her. “This has been-an inspiration to) all of us, Watching her fight, we haven't been able t to giv@-up hope | either,” "Tom Tracy s Son Found Dead in Crib football player infant son was found dead in his crib today at the family’s home, 709 S. Blair St., Royal Oak. * * * Police said death apparently was due to suffocation. An autopsy was ordered to deter- mine the cause of death of .7- week-old John Thomas Tracy Jr. * * * Tracy played with the Detroit Professional Lions ‘and: now is with the Pitts- burgh Steelers. | They are not included im the | weekend roundup which ended at | midnight Sunday. Three persons died in miscellan- eous accidents this weekend, com- pared “with four last. weekend. A teen-age Flint girl .suecumbed to carbon monoxide fumes while sit- ting in a parked car, a Wayne County General Hospital inmate was killed by a train, and a Cad- illac. woman suffered fatal .injur- les When she slipped and fell on an icy driveway. There were two Oakland County traffie deaths. Others around the state included: Verna Jean Michols, Rapids, Frances K. Indian River, Margaret E, Hitch- ings, 29, of Grand-Rapids, and Ralph D. Stewart, 34, of Grand ‘Rapids, killed in a two-car head-or collision Sunday about 20 miles north of Grand Rapids on US 131. State Police said Stewart was alone in one car and the three women were in the other car. | (Continued on Pgse 2, Col. 2) Businessman — Dies in Hospital Henry P. Gaukler Jr. Belonged to One of the | City’s Oldest Families’ 30, of Grand Lee, 55, of | Death came yesterday to Henry |P, Gaukler Jr., well known Pon- rone of the city’s oldest families. een Mr. Gaukler, owner of Gaukler Storage and Mov- ing Co., died Sun- day evening at St. Joseph Mercy 4. * Service will be Wednesday at Our - GAUKLER Lady of Refuge Catholic Church at 11:30 a.m: The Rosary will be re- cited at 8"p.m. Tuesday at Sparks- Griffin Funeral Home. Mr, Gaukler lived with his. wife, Marffnn Davenport, and’ children, David, Eli hy: and Henry P, Tit, at ‘laken Rd., Bloomfield — BRIEF ILLNESS Mr. Gaukler died after a brief illness. Death came following an operation, © Seaides iis wite inl: tetar soq| Lake ‘Country. Club,” ~~ Chub and Pundke BPO. aupe rae os ha eee | car-train collision at Fowlerville. * itiae businessman and a member of : Hospital, He was. on nee MIO ERN BRT. PN Agia, os speech in seven days—Ca t > ‘injParis, Mr. K? 10 Urges Asks Islandwide Setup. ‘to Make Every Cuban a Posentiol Informer HAVANA (AP) Setting " Cuban g {Cuban in an island-wide ~ gystem, Fidel “Castro has’ an even tougher crack- down against his enemies. a ae ee The Prime Minister's promise came as antigovernment violence flared in the oval A * In a television ebook of almost - three hours — his ~ Rew night told the Cube ‘people the ao age Seer ‘stripping all property: rie persons\convicted of coun-| terrevolutionary ‘Activities. * * * “They will lose theif money, their houses and their lands,“ he thundered. Castro spoke at a: packed meeting of the commercial workers and barbers unions. He accused the rich of foment- ing~a counterrevolution and an in-) vasion from abroad to regain, their privileged status. * * * Castro said a system of inform- ers is operating throughout Cuba to point out the enemies of his revolution. Slang for. the informer —“chicato,”. or bleating™ goat—is) one of the most hated words in Cuba because of the operations of | the informers under the Batista dictatorship. * * * union members Minister . Augusto Martinez Sanchez warn that “eounterrevolutionaries, the press! and reactionary. businessmen’’ would get the same tough treat- ment as aggressors in the event of an invasion of Cuba. a oy How About April Earlier the heard “Labor -(Continued From Page One) in April only days in advance of the contemplated Paris summit meeting, By then, the French President will himself have been host to Seer te Khewshchov and formed a personal opinion of the Soviet | leader. ; 4 Eisenhower suggested the possibility of a series of summit talks with the Soviets. The White House Press Secretary, James C. Hagerty, told newsmen, ‘The President feels it would be very difficult to solve all problems at! summit conference.” * * * 5. Eisenhower failed to persuade, De Gaulle to abandon his opposi- tion to giving the NATO military command control of French forces assigned to the defense of Western Europe. But Eisenhower reported- ly convinced the Frenchman that, although the United States ab- stained in the U.N. vote on the Algerian issue, Washington still) endorses De Gaulle's proposal for a self-determination referendum) in Algeria after peace is restored. 6. The Western Big Four moved toward setting up a sort of Atlantic economic council | aimed at averting a trade war | among the Allies in Europe, It would seek to coordinate Euro- pean and North American trade bodies and reconcile West Europe’s rival economic group- ings, the six-nation common market and the “outer seven’’ free traders led by Britain. invitation to the, Khrushchev's summit conference went to the| big three ambassadors in Moscow | fot delivery to the Kremlin today. k* oe * An informant said they left the door open for the Soviet Premier to: suggest an alternate meeting site or date. . : * & Eisenhower was clearly enthusi- astic about the outcome of his meetings here with De Gaulle, Mohammed Reza Pahleyi took a | bus turned over,"' Everman, who | -|a 10-year.safe driving award from ‘reported in serious condition. TEHRAN, tran (APY — Shah pretty young student ag his third wife today in hapes she «ill bear him q son who can belp: secure. his throne, ~ * * Farah Diba,°a 2l-year-old com- moner plucked ‘from relative ob-, security as an afchitéecture student, ‘in Paris, becomes the queen of, ithis ancient nation in a simple! “Moslem ¢ ceremony 36 Hurt—Icy Road B ' Moritz, Switzertend, ve an Egyptian princess, bone him a daughter, Princess Shanaz. He divorced Queen Séraya 20 months ago after a childless but obviously happy ° marriage. The’ red-haired Iranian beauty now ‘tives in Rome and is spending a ‘lonely winter vacation at Bt. en tees enn wt aa lamed Girl Killed in Bus’ Wreck SPRINGFIELD, Ohio One; were injured wherr a double-decker Greyhound bus swerved to avoid ‘sliding automobiles, aeicided off U.S. 40 east of here and rolled over on its top last night. Killed was Daisy Mae Harris, 15, of Cleveland. She was one of 37 “passengers aboard the New York fo.St. Louis. bus when it crashed onthe jey four-lane divid-, ied highway 10 miles east of here. “T can’t tell what-really did wn ipen,"’ the driver, Robert-Everma 41, of Franklin, Ind., ‘said: “We suddenly hit a slick spot and the cam in front of me started sliding, I tried to swing to.the left tg avoid them and the was unhurt, related. The driver, who took over on the bus in Columbus, said he received Greyhound Dec. 6. CLIMB FROM WINDOW He said there was not too much confusion following the crash. “People just started climbing out the windows. I started giving] first aid to as many people as 1) could,” he continuéd, Everman said several motorists | stopped to give aid. Onty four of the injured were One, Mrs. Daisy Harris, 35, the mother of the deal girl, sat dazed in City Hospital. “I grabbe’. for Daisy Mae but I had to. “hold oni Debra’ (Mrs. session of his cabinet will’ 4 was killed and 36 persons Harris’ 2year-old daughter), The next thing I knew Debra and I were standing in the snow. I don't know what happened to Daisy Mae,"’ she mumbled Waterford Twp. to Debate Bonds, Request to Purchase Presented Tonight A request: troni-Waterford Town- ship Clerk James Seeterlin for the purchase of $1,000 in revenue bonds ‘autherized in 1952 will be present- ed to the Township Board tonighit.| x & The bonds, due to maturg in 1961, would be retired with a sav- ing of $64 to the township if ap- proved by the Board x * * The township attorney also is expected to present his report and recommendations on the set- ting up of a child guidance and youth clinic, Part of a countywide project, ithe new department would work ‘with the police in seeking to re- duce juvenile delinquency in the township, The Board will set a hearing date on establishment of a_ spe- cial assessment for blacktopping Traffic Accidents Kill 19'in Michigan (Continued From Page One) One car apparently swerved in- te the path of the other “put | determine which one. Bil G Batey Jr, 21, of Ypsi-| anti, was killed Sunday when his car struck a tree in Ypsilanti. HITS CULVERT L. C. Pollard. 35, Freeman Ed-! wards, 29, and Ovory Lee Head, 33, all of Muskegon Heights, were, killed Saturday when their car struck a roadside culvert at Mus- kegon Heights Stephen Hudek, 20, of Detroit, was killed Saturday when his car’ collided with another at a Detroit: intersection. Delores Guthoerl, 59, of Rowe- ville, was killed Friday night when a car struck her ay she crossed a Roseville street. | Leroy E. Washburn, 20, of Bron-| son, died Saturday night after be- ing pinned beneath a car that! went out of control, slammed into| an embankment and flipped over. The accident occurred in Bronson| Township, 14 miles west of Cold- water, * * Mrs, Dovie Watson, 48, troit, was stfucR and killed Sat-. urday as she crossed a Detroit) street. ‘FLUNG AT TREE Donna Francisco, 16, of Lansing, thrown from the front seat of a. car that struck the rear of another one mile south of Lansing on Aure- lius road. The girl was flung s against “a_tree and then_crushed “Memillan and Adenauer, a major event in his 22,000-mile good will, ____mission now w_drawing. toa close. by a door from one car. ‘She was): a passenger. Floyd Rodgers, 70, of Detroit, ous i a 3 The ¥ Weather ae + tt — ostly with Uttle change tn temauvedies. it gg A péssible late tonight sete od. 4x _ é U.S. Weather B PONTIAC AND VICINETY. able east. 8-15 even Bete Prt preceding 8 a.m. 8 4.m: Wind velocity 6-8 mph. sete mere at 5:02 Soseacy “ts v4 . tists Monday at at 11:34'p.m. Deuntown Sou Tn be eee wee | Saturday when the car in which | he was riding struck a utility | pole: on the Ford expressway, | west of Detroit. John D. Green, 83, of Frontier, te-|was injured fatally Sunday when he was struck by a car on M99 in Woodbridge Township of Hills- dale County, Earl Wood Jr., 24, of Albion, was killed: Sunday when -a car in which he Was a passenger|® slammed into the rear of a truck on M99 in Calhoun County. Andrew M. Przybycki, 29, of “ass City, was killed Saturday night in an auto collision on M81, 244 miles “i west of Cass City. 2 Bible Clubs to Sing Courthouse Carols — ‘The Bible Clubs of Pontiac Northern, Pontiac Central Avon- schools will form a 100-voice choir td “sing Christmas carols 7 p.m. -\Puesday around the Courthouse manger . on Saginaw and _~, Sion streets. ree adverticets see . investment in daily sews. wage oat by cigariee Oe sgid they had not been able to I. | 234 per cent in 1958, The} 4 parts of LaSalle and Meigs streets. * * * | Several applicants: will be. con- sidered for the position of licensed ‘sewer operator for the three sewer jtreatment plants in the township. _The State Health Department has ‘warned township officials that the sewer operator must be hired in ithe very near future. *. * * Rollin Francis of Detroit has re- | quested that the Board consider) | the transfer of a 1959 Class B hotel!* ‘and dance permit to him from the| The President told welcoming} Stanton Langs estate. The hotel is ‘located at 5803 Dixie Hwy. The handsome, Msenrels Shah 3 nee divorced his first two wives bée- cause they failed to bear him an/from heir to the throne. His first. wife,” archial order. Iran's constitution requires that the successor to the ‘a male, and the ne The. dives itselt is ancient and ‘rich if--histoty—but® the Shah's ‘family is hot. His father, Reza |Khan, was a tough army officer ‘who seized power in 1921 and had ‘himself crowned Shal- in - Shah ing Farah for reasons “of a mor) (King of Kings) four years-later. A shah without. an heir is ob-, viotisly not as secure as a mon- | arch whose line of succession is res fixed, The Shah himself the pos- abit a assassination. » -ab- sence of an such a situa- tion would bevait Vitation to, po- litical oo ’ ths shottiee se were sur- rounded by the ornate splendor of ancient Persia. The scene of the ceremony. was the Shah's office, known as the Mosaic Room. ‘ * * * ‘Part: Of the ceremony included financial conditions—payment the bride may expect if evér divorced, as well as the groom's dowry: to the bride. Both .are symbolic. The dowry js an elaborately’ bound copy * the koran and one gold coin. separation séttlegient would be haif a million rials, (The rial is worth little more than one Ameri- ean penny.) . * * * The wedding schedule included, after the ceremony, a state ban- quet for 150 guests and two hour's later a wedding ball for some 2,000 in the palace's glittering Hall of Mirrors, where -the Shah enter- tained President Elsenhower last week, The couple will start their honeymoon in av few days on the Caspian Sea, -They plan a trip early next year to Pakistan and later to Europe, ’ Visiting Spain, ke Asks Peace Tells Franco, Crowd of His ‘Message From American People’ dent Eisenhower arrived in Spain ‘today on the last leg of his peace mission that took him halfway around the world and made an-| other. plea for “peace and friend. ship in freedom.” ‘crowds, including Generalissimo | Francisco Franco, that he came there ‘‘with a message from the No, No Albert! That's Not a Phone Booth Albert L. Lighthall wanted to) imake a phone call. * * * He banged on the front door of \the building Sunday morning. No jone answered, He went around to the back and banged .on the rear door, No response, He went through this three times. KICKS,.IN WINDOW Finally window of the front’.déor. Before he could say ‘Albert L. ' Lighthall,” he was arrested by | Pontiac Police. The building he was trying -to was killed Sunday after she wa enter was the Baldwin avenue ‘branch of Pontiac State Bank. * * * ‘eall a friend> He had been drinking heavily the previous evening, he told pe- . Lighthall became an- of De- noyed. He kicked in the plate glass Lighthall, 23, of 3033. Glenbroke St., Keego Harbor, told police he wanted to get into the buildingto ‘American people to the Spanish ipeople"’ about ‘‘a brighter future in cooperation for the noblest of all human causes: peace and) friendship in freedom.” \ * * * Hundreds of thousands of cheer- ing Spaniards gave the President the biggest welcome this country has roared out to a foreign visitor in modern times. LANDED AT TORREJON _ Eisenhower's plane —landed at neraby Torrejon Air Base at 10:22 a.m. EST after a flight from Paris where he attended a western Big Four heads of government confer- _ ence and discussed. serious Franco- American differences with French President Charles De Gaulle. |. The Western leaders invited Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchey to an. East-West summit. meeting in Paris next April 27 in the con- itinuing drive for world peace. The President will wind up his journey to three continents with a visit to Morocco tomorrow and a return to Washington tomorrow night for the Christmas holidays. Speaking to a large welcoming crowd at heavily guarded Torre- jon, -13 miles outside Madrid, Eisenhower said ‘‘on this mission, onthe Y died” Sunday “at Wijurtes “surteret— “tise, malicious destruction of property Renew Steel Talks With More Charges and steel company lock, + i. S28 ~. dale, Waterford and Rochester highT,, my He was arrested on a charge of ‘ivance toward a world free from WASHINGTON. (AP) —: Union negotiators meet today for the first time in 10 days. As they gathered, the companies were saying new and higher union demands prove the union is responsible for the dead-, Union President David J. Me-| Central Oe er The Geites Steelworkers MADRID, Spain (UP) — Presi-| ” Balaian Gil Erstwhile Sui to : ‘to ' Princess Margaret of England is Married BRUSSELS, Belgium uw — Prin- cess Margaret's onetime suitor, Peter Townsend, was married in Brusséls today to Marie-Luce Ja- magne, 20-year-old daughter of an Antwerp tobacco tycoon. * * * The engagement of Townsend, 44, and Marie-Luce, his 20-year-old secretary, Was announced by her mother Oct. 9, Townsend's romance with Prin- cess Margaret breke up four years ago. He had been divorced. The Ohurch of Engiand forbids marriage of a divorced person so long as the other party to the divorce is living. The _ former Mrs. Townsend is living and Princess Margaret bowen * the ehurch rule, “fownsend cénceded on Oct. 11, when “he introduced his fiancee to the press that he alsd had a re- ‘ligious problem in this Romance, since Marie-Luce isa Roman Cath- ‘olic, which is no more.tolerant of divorce than the Church, of Eng-| land to which Townsend belongs. * * * Marie-Luce is a slim, long-legged ‘brunette whose friends call her “mosquito.” She likes horses and hag been a frequent winner in jumping contests. She met Town- ‘send at a riding club about five ‘years ago, Townsend, sinc@ his romance with the British Princess col- lapsed, has been roaming the world, writing a book and mak- ing a movie. He says eae is his home now, — On his second world tour he took) Marie-Luce along as ‘“‘secretary- photographer." ! * * Today's ceremony was reported to have been a civil one performed by the burgomaster in the sub urban town hall at Watermael- | Boltsfort. | | Says It s Time | for Price Cuts Saulnier Claims Firms Must Be Responsible -for «Stability WASHINGTON (#—President Ei- senhower’s chief economic adviser said today the. time has come for business to cut prices whene pos- sible, Low food prices at the farm level have largely been responsible in recent years for keeping the economy relatively stable, said Chairman Raymond J. Sauinier of the President's Council of Eco. nomic Advisers. ‘Now we have got to the place where responsibility for stability. must be shared by industry,” he declared. $ say +o Spain Bote i ieee mais oso Jet us. work together so that in our ‘own days we may see a long ad- «1s: aggression, from hunger and dis- ease, free from war and a con- stant thredt of war. + * * ‘Let us work together so that we golden promise that mankind will achieve peace with justice, friend- ship in freedom.” Friends Don’t Wish Her may pass on to our children a| of the FTC’ . j * _ 4 " up-fer- + ‘ he: termed justified price cuts within a wage-price formula. He appeared ata Federal Trade Commission session called to discuss phony bar- gains and other practices classed iby the FTC as “trickery in the ho; market place.” sacle Be Christmas, She Is | Eisenhower regretfully turned ‘Again, in 1958.8 hearing of necesé| of a 29-foot concrete pavement with storm sewers and drainage struc: tures, At that time the Commission de- termined that there was no neces- sity for such an improvement. Maps showing the proposed lim. its of the assessment districts also will be made praia to the Com- An attached report from City engineer G. R. Serenbetz states that the poor condition of Redding road from Woodward avente to Lakeside is due to a complete lack of drainage facilities. “Therefore, it will be neces- sity was heldsfor the construction|ham daughter Mrs. Ferndale, Bee Sen eek NE er. Surviving are his wife Jane, a Paul Conover of ‘Bus-Truck Smashup if sm (Kills 9, Injures 32 (Continued From Page One) washroom for a° drink, The sal was killed. “All of a sudden I started. fly- - ing through the air,” said Mrs. quest by the that the} Butler. “Then about four people question: of onal be resubmit-| fell) on me. I looked up.. There ted. a -was-a cow's bleeding head look- eo o« ing at me through the window.” “ft eould hear Stella erying, A worhan was screaming. Then a man started pulling people off me," x * * Stella, pushed under a broken, seat, was ‘almost unscratched. sary to install a storm sewer with singeame Greinage: site The construction of the needed sewer would add an estimated $5,700 to the street repaVing, Seren- betz said. —_——— Registration for the Baldwin Pub-| Ike Turns Down Royal Welcome by New York NEW. YORK \ — President os Seeesesvoes x sauvasssssescsiucosteostestascatee down today a welcome-home tickertape parade up venue a | Mayor Robert F. Wagner re- ceived a telegram from the Pres- ident in reply to an invitation sent last Thursday. * * * | “I recognize the high honor you would do me... and certainly | for all of us a New York welcome would be a most heartwarming _ sort of return home,” Eisenhower | | said, . *, * * “Unfortunately, my schedule | and every element in ali the arrangements for the days be- tween now .and Christmas were set weeks ago. None of them can be changed without affecting the Christmas hopes and plans of a great many people.” » ‘The prone had been suggested, for Wednesday. of Russian Exiles MUNICH, Germany (AP)—Two explosions rocked the living quar- ters of a group of Russian exiles early today,. All the residents were away and nobody was hurt. The Russians, members of the anti-Communist central organiza- tion -for~-Russien—emigrants;—tived: with their families in a nee in * * * Munich police after an initial in- vestigation said they bomibs were thrown by Commu- nist agents, but they were not sure sqeeeseeeoseseeoeseces ‘ODI Your OR Rolls ‘ To SIMMS for. Finest - GOLOR PRINTS j no. 2 OASY Eo SCOUTING KIT Pi ah lee S eoceeesosocoosoocores set em atte stom Blast Rocks Home f a Munich suburb. Ee believed... $9.88 Value Kit has rifle with ‘seope, gua & belster set - poy ae with eo x FREE Full-Color _ ENLARGEMENT " With Color Film Brought In For Developing e LIMITED TIME ONLY ® = Repulse 69c jumbo 4 x 6+inch enlargement with every roll . you pick picture to be enlarged at no extra charge. SIMMS. Comers Dept. — Main Floor — er bu Regular $7.95 Value Heat 832 9} 3°: ity deihe if Li $3 | NO. 25 DAISY PUMP GUN fe Sat Cay accurate gee: Regular slor $9.95: yo mey eccccsesccccececcccessesoceecccccosocccose see enmeenemngyer 98 N. Saginaw—2nd Floor em” fo tN ; Truman Biocsaches Writes on Williams. \Politics to Play ~ EANSING UPA book about Gov. agazine, is the author of the’ volume, to be released by Oceana Publications. MeNaughton did a history of the Truman administration in iy — he addition to the biography of the Derndcratic president. holiays. 60¢ Lotion White Rain Shampoo PLUS e. Cosmetics NATIONALLY ADVERTISED ‘CAMERA NEEDS Last Minute GIFT IDEAS Drastically reduced prices help you give the gift that lasts—some- thing photoarepbie for the camera fan on your list. Tonite and Tuesday PHOTO O A ut ; BBS RR BBB Be ee eS eS ee Se See Se Black & White Snapshots i Take Full Color Snaps ; Kodak & Ansco Film , Kodacolor _ 5 1 cma 3 Rolls , Color Film ) 99¢ ! 620-120-127 ' @.6% Size | $1.35 94° , i e120 Siz, = Roll 127 8 petal _ Ko- t Take Chris tmas dak or Ansco ; snapshots Ps 4 €¢oigo . fits Limit 6 ' Tims Kodak 35mm Color Film ; Kodak Color Movie Film $2.05 List » bal ' 2% SLIDES ‘ = eee sy" DN Suites (2° a ge iachrome film for @ _™=_ : iden -— © Kodachrome otter films Lag indéer @ or outdoor movi Fresh 4 omminninkidemdicsinwbeaiwumindene mame BARLITE OUTFITS { BROWNIE ‘STARFLASH AS, 6° , Camera Outfit 3 With 4-floed bulbs 1 @ wot. 839 , Bounce LITE q a , R BAR-LITES : | 5 es... 84.987 ‘ - pi t. 4 sass” “13 4 Built-in flash. | @Sewe 22 G8 OS ee ee ee ee ee ee ee siaapesir eadk ; s SLIDE TRAY CHEST j Meteor : 1 30x40 .. 8.99 EAD ' + 50x50 .. 16.87 yore ' j ‘ J y Sereenmaster J | 30x40" 27.87 4 | 37x50” 37.87 ‘ ' d ~- ELECTRIC ge = «EYE-127_ Camera Regular $34.50 Seller 33 ae” Special quantity purchase brings pr way down! No guess work — electric eye gives perfect exposure every time! _ACCURA ELEVATOR TYPE : TELEPHOTO & eee } MOVIE LENSES &... il 7 ‘$15.95 hw _ $24.95 Value Pits Brownlie [2.3 or Tripod with built-in : 12.7 cameras. tevel Repeal case pandied- ae mee peer oo Choice each lekki ttletatelebatetet ett ft tet ttt POLAROID ‘WINK LIGHT’ Camera Outfit $151.99 oe Z ¢ DISCOUNT \ meee ta ene” Minute cam- ere Wink-L: that whisks ' shaaowe' es ag: Gee 5000s Pag: ge film. ($20.95 peay ‘Conlon Projections. oneenanseens | - Revere Electric ! CINE-Z00OM oye ‘Camere 999.50 Vol. $00 W., en 87 Eee cee ee ‘he vices - Bia res Trevs <.. “one = —Main « >)BROWNIE ‘Starmatic’ ‘$19.95 Lens for" 2mm > CAMERAS... ere LA Mayor Shuns (Christmas Carols || _LOs ANGELES (AP) — Mayor “During the Christmas season oleae ; The sie eek (over | station KFID was interrupted by, only one “commercial"—the may-_ or’s plea-for safe-driving over foe RRB RAI VIA DAIS IWaDaaAaHe — —— Se ~~ 7 _ $16.95 : : : THE, PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, DECEMBER 21, 1959 ae UMA = apt c a - i aes j (ee) al { 77 Lee pissin Bocas ONLY § MORE DAYS te shep for Cartas: ‘and you can depend — sesh Maan ines noel tall pen aed vn wp until Christmas Eve... plus, you'll wsmally find it priced a on these Simms Is The Best Friend Your EXTRA ) SALES in Oakhill Cemetery. ie pee LOUIS H. MOUFEIS Following a four-year “Louis H. MouFeis, 88, of 99 Dan-| forth St., died Saturday. Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. | * William Sesvold of White Lake, a. ‘ments are by Donelson-Johns Fu- ' stead, 76, 103 Thorpe St., ‘Mrs. Robert Ruff of Fort Wayne, Sw a a brother, Jesse Monfils of Union Lake, and ‘three grandchildren. | Service will be held Tuesday 2 p.m. at Arfier Funeral Home in’ East Liverpool, Ohio. Burial will follow in Memorial Park Cemetery in East Liverpool, Local arrange- neral Home. MRS. EUGENE W. OLMSTEAD Mrs, Eugene (Grace G.) Olm- died of a heart ailment Saturday morning} at Pontiac General Hospital fol-! lowing an illness of 242 months. She was a member of Central Methodist Church. Surviving are two daughters, Ind., and Mrs. Waldo Ashley. of Pontiac, and five grandchildren. Two brothers, Joseph Feneley of Phoenix, Ariz. and James Feneley of Walthem, Mass., and a sister, Mrs. Maud Turnbull of Pontiac also survive. Service will be held at 1:30 p.m. Tuesday at Donelson- Johns Funer- OWE OF AMERICA’S OUTSTANDING RESTAURANTS 325 Seuth Unter Bed, i Gerth of 14 Mile Read ot Woedwerd-Nunter @ TABLE SERVICE @ CAFETERIA @ CARRY-OUT PANTRY NOW—IN EFFECT DAILY Until 9 P. M.—Sun., Dec. 27 A POPULAR FOODS CONTEST $225 in Prizes Weekly Information and Entry Blanks available every day—from 11 a.m. to 9 pam. No entry fees; no purchase necessary. Join in the fun. Extra entry blanks on Monday and Tuesday. iliness,! ers. lal pe with bitMal in Pine Lake Cemetery; =~ CECIL L, WOOD Cecil L. yor “TT, of 111 Oneida: Rd., died Saturday in Pontive Gen- eral Hospital following a stroke 15 days ago, A retired engineer with General Motors Truck Coach Di- vision, he had lived in Pontiaé 30 years. His bedy is. at Donelsen-Johns |Buneral Home until Wednesday , Noon. MISS MAUDE E.. BIRD — OXFORD — Word was received ‘of the death of Miss Maude E. \Bird, former teacher at Oxford} ‘High School, Funeral service will be held at '2 p.m. Wednesday: at Standish | ‘with burial in Sterling Cemetery, Sterling. Miss Bird was a teacher here until 1922. She suffered a fatal stroke yes- iterday. JOE E, BROWN ORTONVILLE—Service . Sherman Funeral Home here. Bur jal will be in Ortonville Ceme- tery. | Mr. Brown died yesterday of in- juries sustained in an automobile accident. Surviving are his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Irving Brown; three sis- Mrs. Charles Garner, Phylis ters, and Carolyn; and three brothers, lIrving, Carlos and John, all of Or- i tonville. . WALLACE G. DOAN NOVI ~ Service for Wallace G. Doan, 66, of 44480 Grand River Ave., will be at 1 p.m. Wednesday at the Casterline Funeral Home, | Northville. Burial will be at Oak- land Hills Cemetery, Novi. Mr. Doan, night dispatcher for the Novi police department, died ‘suddenly at his hame Friday. He is survived by his wife, Thel- ma, four sons, Wallace, Robert, | — ‘Walter and Thomas, one daughter, Claudette, a sister and oné grand- | child MRS. JOSEPH T. DeCONICK WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWN. SHIP — Service for Mrs, Joseph) -T. (Margaret A.) DeConick, 60, of 6680 Orchard Lake Rd., will be held at 10 a.m. Wednesday at Our’ Lady of Refuge Catholic Church, | Burial will follow Pontiac. ' Mrs, DeConick died Saturday in Orchard Lake. in Mount Hope Cemetery, St. Joseph Mercy Hospital after an illness of one year, She was a member of Daughters of Isabella Circle 479, Pontiac, and St. An- thony’s Guild of Our Lady of Re fuge Altar Society The Rosary will be recited at 8 p-m. tomorrow at C. J. God- hardt Funeral Home, Keego Har- bor. Surviving besides her husband are two daughters, Mrs. Ned Clark and Niceta DeConick, both of West | Bloomfield Township; a son, Cole- man of West Bloomfield Township; and ‘one grandchild. Also, a sister, Mrs. Irving Ma- loney of Pontiac, and four broth- for Joe at. 'E. Brown, 23, of 144 Ball St., will be res at 2 p.m. Wednesday ‘from BABY BOY EVANS MOUNT VERNON — Prayer! service for baby boy Evans, infant. rson of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Evans, of 61621 Mount Vernon Rd., was to be held at 11 a.m. today|three daughters and a sister. at St. Andrew's Catholic Church, Rochester, ‘with burial in Mountl- Avon Cemetery. - The baby died at birth Saturday at the Community Hospital near Almont. Funeral... arrangements were made by Pixley Funeral Home, Rochester, Surviving. besides his parents are grandparents, Mr, and Mrs. Evans of Washington and Mr, and Mrs. John Phillips of Mount. Vernon. day at Wujek Funeral Home, De- troit. Burial will follow in Mount Olivet Cemetery. Mr. Nagorka died unexpectedly of a heart attack at his home yes- terday. Surviving are his wife, Adele: four daughters, Mrs. Irene Chled- inski and Mrs. Jean Horetski, both BERNARD G. LONG jof Detroit, Mrs. Helen Levengood) AUBURN HEIGHTS—Service forjof Toledo’ and Mrs. Stella Jaris Bernatd G. Long, §7, of 57 N.\of Romeo; a son, Stanley at home; Squirrel Rd., willbe held at 2jtive grandchildren and a brother, p.m. tomor row at Sparks-Griffin — Funerat Home, Pontiac. Burial] MRS, ARTHUR SCHROEDER will follow in Oak Hill Cemetery, OXFORD—Service for Mrs. Ar- Mr, Long died yesterday after|thur (Emma H.) Schroeder, 70, of several weeks’ illness. 15-Crawford St., will be held at 1 p.m, tomorrow at Holy Cross Suryiving are two daughters, Mrs. Edith McCullough and Mrs,|Lutheran Church here. Burial will follow .in Grand Lawn Cemetery, Loretta M, Olsen, both of Williams Lake: three grandchildren, four| Detroit. Mrs. Schroeder died suddenly of great-grandchildren and a sister. a heart attack Saturday. Arrange- MRS, FRANK MARCHEWITZ (ments are under the direction of AVON TOWNSHIP — Mrs. Frank|Bossardet & Reid Funeral Home (Frances) Marchewitz, 75, of 3375}here. Grant St., died.today in St. Joseph Mercy Hospital after several weeks’ illness. — , Surviving besides ther husband are six daughters, Mrs. Helen Schaffron of Detroit; Mrs. Rose Drouillard of New Boston, Mrs. eran Mission Altar Guild, the La- dies Aid at Holy Cross Church and the Lutheran Ladies Auxili- ary of Detroit. Surviving besides her husband are two daughters, Virginia of Oxford and Mrs. Dolores Wilkin- dartiving ore bie’ hte, Weer” She was a member of the Luth-) Mrs. Stadler was dead on are| rival at Pontiac General Hospital yestérday of a-heart attack. ie Her -body is at William R. Po- of service. ‘Surviving besides her husband, | sioner, - are two ™, Wilbar and Roy Behnke, both of Utica; | three grandchildren. MRS, WILLIAM B, WILSON Mrs. William -B,. Wison, 29, of 687 Aeroview Rd., will be held at 2 p.m. tomorrow ‘from Flumerfelt | Funeral Home, Lake Orion. Burial will be in East Lawn Cemetery. Mrs, Wilson died Saturday of injuries suffered in an automobile accident the same day. Surviving. besides her husband are a son, Dennis, and three daugh- ters, Karen Lee,-Beverly Kay and Gail. Ann, all at home, brother and a sister. Viola Dulz of Taylor, Mrs. Ruth Groen of Newark, Ohio, Mrs, Pa- jtricia Schwartz, of Washington and ison of Marquette; a son, Arthur Schroeder Jr.; and Mrs. Sally Roediger of Auburn) children. Heights ; Aso, three sons, Frank Jr., of MRS. HENRY M. SCHULTZ TROY — Service for Mrs. Henry |M. (Theresa) Schultz, 84, of 30 |Cloveridge Rd. will be at 1 p.m. ‘Wednesday at Manley Bailey Funeral Home, Birmingham. Bur- Highland Park, Robert of Royal Oak and Eugene of Rochester; 40 grandchildren and : 25 great-grand- children, Arrangements are: being , made} by Moore Chapel of Sparks-Griffin orial Cemetery. four grand-; jal will be in White Chapel Mem-) WALTER WHY ROCHESTER — Service for Wal- iter Why, 74, formerly of Rochester, will be held at 7 p.m, today at Pixley Funeral Home here, Crema- tion will be in White Chapel Me- morial Cemetery, Troy. Mr. Why died Saturday after an extended illness. Surviving are his wife, Effa, and Also, a tere Funera} Home until 11 a.m. Wednesday and will lie in state at} | the church from noon until “ner former Rochester street commis-]] Behuke” bt Wisconsin; and Fred} two sisters, Mrs. Viola Stadler and/} i.e Mrs. Ida Stade, both of Utica; « dj | j | | Burial For bountiful blessings, and for the opportunity: to serve you, we are thankful and appreciative: May your Christmas. be merry and the coming | New Year truly happy. ORCHARD LAKE — Service for}, 979 E. Pike Miracle Mile 269 N. Perry Soxber Shop 368 Auburn 4481 Highland Road Union Late 2d. Funeral ‘Home, Auburn Heights. [ 1) ee oe Oe A i A a RE oe i i in? te ay aoe ee S| You may select the colors cithuie } Convient Terms. So Smart — So Comfortable _ and unbelievably low priced at only 'a son, Walter Jr., of Warren. mixes easily with companions or traditional . . . . or fabrics of your choice if: you act at once. Other swivel rockers from $34.95 up. -- Hefee en Open Evenings to 5:30 FURNITURE} ss ~ Ours.is a big neighborhood, covering 12 states from New York to Tennessee, where over 4,000 Ashland Oil outlets are located. Everywhere the. neighborhood is bright with Christmas light, and warm ‘with Christmas greetings. This isa spiial time for expressing the good wishes of the 4,900 direct employees in the Ashland Oil family and the thousands of others associated with —— Ashland é 2 : | ASHLAND OIL & REFINING COMPANY, Ashland, Kentucky ees Oil distributors, jobbers and service stations. It’s a time to thank all our neighbors for one of the best years in Ashland’s history. And above all, it’s a time to be reminded that the true measure of our success —- on the friends we make and a. We look forward cnienly tos New Year lowed wi ‘ led peo apg go * CLEANERSFE 4-9593 523 N. Pontiac Trail Walled Lake bo nc pe Pie a a nena be Romeo em ‘s - eee “Ceeoe seen eee @eeennnnen ee a teeneeeeeevercceseccoeete as cv) peeeeeese | CAN NON, “Dorset” “TOWEL | ENSEMBLE , 99° 59¢ w. Cloth DOE Dobby borders. Pink, beige, colors. “Bath Hand Waite's Linens ... Fourth Floor . blue, yellow. or white solid Pepe. ee Washable zippered corduroy cover... CONTOUR~ PILLOWS 1.98 Contour neck pillow — for watching TV, traveling ete. ' Removable, washable, cordu- roy cover. Waite's Notions ... Street Floor stretch - WOMEN’S SLIPPERS *1.00 Bead and embroidery trim Red, black, white, pink or blue Imported ‘‘Helanca” Waite's Lingerie . "Second Floor 99 ------------~=- Shop Till 9. Every Night TILL Christmas Use a Waite's Flexible CCC Charge = cr ' ‘ - Little Boys’ and Girls’ LINED SLACK and SHIRT SETS *1.99 Flannel lined corduroy slacks and Wash Girls’ style 4-6x; boys’ 3-6x matching shirts ‘Nn wear Waite's .. . Second Floor LETTER HOLDER & TOWEL SET $1.99 fringed: kitchen terry towels. Waite's Linens ...» Fourth Floor Brass plated letter holder with two printed MEN’S TERRY BATH “KILTIE’ Wraps around waist, $1.98 beach. With. Sockan. 3 colors Waite's Notions .. . Street Floor wonderful for bath or WOMEN’S GOLD STRIPE BRIEFS $1.65 with fancy trams. White 5 to 8 Gotham “Gold Stripe black or blue: sizes Waite's Lingerie .. . Second Fioor GIRLS’ 3-6X FUR HATS, CHOKERS $1.98 Woaite's Children's World .. . . Little girls’ snow white fur hats and fur choker, Sizes 3 to 6x Second Floor ra PRINTED KITCHEN TERRY TOWELS 69¢ Gay, decorative printed kitchen towels. Thirsty terry, quick drying, colorfast. Waite's Linens . . . Fourth Floor FINE QUALITY BOXED STATIONERY 2 Boxes $ Wide selection of fine quality boxed stationery Printed or white. Waite's Stationery ... Street Floor PRETTY PARTY APRONS?* $1.69 Waite's Daytime Dresses . Permanently pleated cottons and nylon sheers Half style. Wondertul extra gift . Third Floor 5 BOYS’ & GIRLS’ NYLON MITTENS Warm fleece lined waterproof nylon mittens 1.98 Waite's Children’s World . navy; sizes 3*to 12 . Second Floor COLORFUL 1960 CALENDAR TOWELS $1.00 Decorative prints on tine quality linen. Boxed in mailing carton ~ Waite’s Linens . . . Fourth Floor PAPERMATE HOLIDAY BALL PENS With new Texas-size cartridge. Two-tone or solid colors. Waite's Stationery .. . Street Floor Won't skip. WOMEN’S 100% WOOL EAR WARMERS $1.00 Waite's Neckwear . .. Bead trims, embroidered trims ‘and plain knits Red, Kelly green and white Street Floor OFFICIAL BOY SCOUT FLASHLIGHTS — $1.98 3 Ofticial scout flashiight,.gift for a Boy Scout. ' Waite's Children's World . . . Second Floor REVERSIBLE CARD TABLE COVERS 99« Quilted plastic card table covers. Fits all stand- ard card tables. Waite’s Sictionery .... Street Floor ONE STRAND RICHELIEU PEARLS $1.00 Famous Richelieu costume pear! necklaces able. Street Floor Waite's Jewelry ... Uniform, adjustable. Matching earrings avail- FRINGED END PLAID SCARVES $1.00 Clan plaid long scarves with fringed ends Wonderful little gifts Waite's Neckwear .. . Street Floor Cub Scout model $1.49 GIRLS’ LITTLE LADY COLOGNE $1.25 « Waite's Cosmetics . . Light, airy fragrance ideal Thrilling gift! . Street Floor for young lade: 9-PR. LO-BOY SHOE RACKS $1.99 Chrome. plated 9-pair shoe racks for men’s or women’s shoes. : Waite's Notions ... Street Floor WOMEN’S ALBUM QUEEN WALLET $2.00 Waite's Handbag Department . . . dows, coin purse, full length zipper. Street Floor Genuine cowhide wallet with 32 picture win- “ MEN’S ALL SILK NECKWEAR $1.50 Waite’s Men's Wear . Stripes, solids, exciting new colors and shadings. patterns; . Street Floor FAMOUS FABERGE COLOGNES $1.50 Choose from! these exciting fragrances: ' Woodhue, Aphrodesia, Tigress, Flambeau. * Waite's Cosmetics ... . Street Floor From same material as missile nose-cones! Famous CORNING Cookware Guaranteed not, to crack or glaze! *3.95 Will go direct from freezer to stove without cracking! Then serve in it; it’s pretty enough for any table. With cover. ° 1-Qt. Size Matching Larger Sizes and Accessories Available Waile's Housewares .. . Fifth Floor FLINTWOOD BREAD TRAY & NAPKIN *2.98 Attractive chili-colored tray with printed linen- like napkin.to-keep rolls warm. Waite’s Housewares . . «Filth Floor IMPORTED MUSICAL TEAPOTS $2.98 . Waite’s China . IMPORTED. GERMAN BEER STEINS $3.50. 7 * Several lovely designs to choose from. Plays: music while pouring. 4-cup size. .» Fitth Floor Rs teal’ novelty gift for the man in your life. Large tapacity, gay colors. Waite's Giliware . . . Filth Floor SCALLOPED PILLOW CASE SET" : $2 69 Colored scalloping on CANNON white percale. ow oo a df Waite's Domestics wae Fourth Floor es BOXED “POODLE” TOWEL SET. 900 cea oo : Waite’s Linens... Fourth Pléor * ~ SLUMBERON BLEND BLANKET | Rayon-acrylic blanket blended for tight wih ~_ warmth. Mothproof, washable - a rt i 2 “ he Styles for him or for her... MELE JEWEL BOXES *3.98 Piushly lined “boxes with spacious com- partments. just the gift to keep all ac- cessories organized. Waite's Handbag Dept. ... Street Floor WOMEN’S LEATHER BUXTON WALLETS $3.95 ae Waite’s Handbag Department . cases, Also men’s style, same price. Fine leather wallets with removable picture « Street Floor _LEATHERETTE PORTFOLIOS. $2 50 For meri-or women, complete with tablet and = envelopes, 4 lovely colors. Waiie’s Stetionery . . » Street Floor SMART LEATHERETTE BOOKENDS 2, 98 - Wipe clean with damp cloth, will not mar desk or table. Green. ivory, or brown. Waile’s Stationery ... Street Floor Men’s ‘smart LONG SLEEVE SPORT SHIRTS 2.99 Handsome long sleeve sport shirts, many wash’ n wear. Some button down collars. Many patterns; sizes 43 S, M, L, XL. J Waite’s ... . Street Floor FAMOUS ARROW DRESS SHIRTS classics Famous Make BAN-LON SWEATERS Slipons Reg. 5.98 $2.99 - Cerdigans Reg. to 7.98 $3.99 irregulars, Slight full ” fashioned, novelties and ~ Sizes 34 to 40. Waite’s Sportswear... Third Floor DACRON/COTTON ROLL SLEEVE BLOUSES ' $ Soft or fused collar styles. Wash ‘n wear or $4 98 Women's little or no iron Italian collar blouses: 4 25 en * Sizes 30 to 38 in 9 colors. * _"e regular, 1452347 neck, 32-35 sleeve. . : Waite's Men’s Wear. .. Siteet Floor Waite's Blouses . . . Third Floor ; a | MISSES’ ORLON CARDIGANS. , | -——-MEN‘S WASHABLE-SLIPPER-SOX— = $ Fine orlon cardigans in’ pink, maize, beige.¢ $2 95 Two smart styles with wool or corduroy uppers black. red or blue. Sizes 34 to 40. ‘ a. Sizes S, M, L. ; ‘ Waite's Neckwear... Street Floor ‘« Street. Floor -) Waiie’s Men's Wear... AM ANEL #5 $5 00 A cherished cologne that shows your good taste ® in gifts. ° Waite’s Cosmetics .. . Street Floor PLASTIC AUTOMOBILE SEAT COVERS $4.98 Heavy, clear plastic seat covers. Styles for front or back seats. Welles Notions .». Street Floor 12" cor ILLION FAILLE SOFA PILLOWS $3.99 mee Waites s Drapery Department. . > Fourth Floor Foam rubber core, zip cover. Square or round _ box styles. 8 lovely colors. ; HAMMERED SATIN SOFA PILLOWS . Son - Resilient Dacron cores. r, knife. edge styles. Also foamy rubber -csattes Waite's Drapery Deportment ++» Fourth Floor Square or ‘round ,box,: BOYS’ 6 TO 20-SPORT SHIRTS $2.98 Waite's Children’ s World . Wash ‘n wear Acrilan, flannels or ginghams. Long sleeve styles. Sizes 6 to 20. . Second Floor “CHILDREN’S NITEY-NITE SLEEPERS $3.00 ~ Waite’ 's Children’s World . 22pe. gripper middy styles. Solid holiday red or red and white. 6 months to 2 years. . Second Floor Dainty prints,“ eck or ‘solid colors. Plastic lined 9 ie Sizes $M, b,. XL. 2.98, Waite's ‘children's world . » + Second Floor = PRINTED COTTON HOUSEDRESSES $3.99 Waite's Daytime Dresses . WOMEN’S NYLON TRICOT SLIPS i 3.99 Waite’s Lingerie . _DRIP-DRY COTTON SCHRANK PAJAMAS : $398 Zip front or shirtwaist styles. Flare or full skirts, Sizes 12-20 and 1415-244. . Third Floor ee ee Lavish lace trims. Choose champagne, white, black or pink. Sizes. 32 to 40. . Ld . . Serond, Floor : aah % ++ Print or solid color! dri. dry gotton ' broadcloth : Sizes 32 to 40. -” Waite’: 8 bagere,, * Voccett Floot NYLON Te HALF SLIP $299 re and 299 He te at we! Permanent pleats and lace trims abe pink, or black. Bete _ Waite's Linge see ‘Secon i sichigan's financial solved temporarily. Glory be! x * * Even this fleeting breather is accepted “with praise and thanks- giving.” We're sick of having an entire nation and part of the whole world looking down on us and: making silly wisecracks that aren't true but which give us a “bad name,” partly in jest and partly in earnest. And now, just to rush in with a quick platitude: “The settlement doesn’t exactly satisfy anyone.” That's for sure. Compromises rarely do. x *«* * But this one has the saving grace of putting the State “back in busi- ness” so we can pay our bills,’ meet our obligations and become a ‘wel- come customer” — which we weren't muddle is any State’s Financial Di Is Solved—for the, Present and the noxious smell, high heavens. , Heer 2 Ree, Bans M. Teeepwere, a. Spaikersss Jonban., Groeek C. fenen. ‘Managing Editor _ Cireulation M Local Advertisiia ~ Class Manager ° ; anager. Dilemma else they can thumb that down legislature can climb back on the merry-go-round and -go into the act all over again. reste sssoaoameaseesnetcsasss nensncoremeam cat THE steel union has already become quite cool during the 80-day cooling- off period. The other day it was so cool to a new wage offer that it turned it down cold. . PayinG and receiving a bribe under “payola,” doesn’t lower the altitude of the ob- that reaches to the other name, even The Man About Town for an appreciable span of time. * * * | Governor WILLIAMS has already | leaped into the public prints with a blast against the Republican Senators and the stop-gap settlement. This is to be expected. Michigan’s most dis- ~ tinguished captive has probably been even more carefully briefed than — usual. — x * * The GOP isn’t too happy, either. Its members believe that the peo- ple of Michigan will vote for a i one-cent increase in the sales tax ' next November. The voters have so indicated in several informal polls conducted in various sections of the State. That's what the Re- publicans wanted. It is also noteworthy to recall that ‘when we actually voted on a State income tax in the past, the people cut loose with a hearty and well planted kick.in the slats every time. It never got to first base. We doubt whether it ever will. x * * The Veterans’ Fund will be tapped but probably this is relatively unim- portant. In that last analysis, it simmers down to a bookkeeping item. The excess of the moment will be bor- rowed and then restored in the days ahead as fast — or faster — than it’s needed. facts, * * * News dispatches suggest the Governor's declaration of “we - want more taxes” may set the battle ery for the 1960 election in Michigan. The Democrats could launch a campaign of still higher ‘taxes which would be consistent with Williams’ 11-year record. | One studious element in. the State contends we already have too much tax money, and an effi- cient and economical administra- nee — tion could actually get along ; with less than we get now. Anyway, the smoke has cleared. Michigan moves onward. _ wk & * The suggestion that the State was sheerest nonsense and only emanated } from those that didn't comprehend. Michigan is one of the wealthiest dozen have our resources and tax tential. We simply lacked ready . We didn’t lack credit, financial ... nding or detual wealth. Our cash go was greater than our cash eter the method of adding to the re- niga want dimotrecit ch an” wasn't even 7 page: vey | enclosed a sum of money, ing note: “I hope you get well before Christmas. I know you don’t know me, that you are sick, and I want to help you get well before Christmas. I do hope that you get well, and am going to help you as much as I chan. My name is Paula, I am in the fourth grade and have three brothers and a sister,” Paula's - at the San., years ago weekly of . Who Is ‘Paula? Further Identification Is Quite Urgently Wished — Xmas: A combination that bor- ders on the sacrilegious. ee Writing a letter to “& Sick Béy or Girl,” and-_addressing it to the Oakland County Tuberculosis Sanatorium, “Paula” ' Kitty Heson, will benefit by this child's benefaction. But this column wishes that would identify herself. Send me your full name, and parents’ name and address. Passing away a few days ago at the age of 92, Mrs. Samuel Bunting was born on Saginaw Street, and the widow of the man who built the first cement sidewalks on it. A sample of the queer quirks of politics according to that keeper of the historical Jack Muldowney of Birmingham, is that it was 20 years ago today that Vice President John Nance Garner of Texas announced his candidacy for the 1940 Democratic nomination for president. The pet ground hog of Lancy Jasper, Grandparents. of the widely known Rosebush quadruplets born in 1951, : Mr. and Mrs. Fred C. Rosebush — — of Oxford have just celebrated their gotd- en wedding. Proof of the progress and growth of one of Pontiac's suburbs is found in the 60 dn that enterprising items Bill Haight, “bankrupt” during 1959 was ‘the which says the Lake Orion telephone ex- change has 22 subscribers. ‘A 1930 Ford car - owned by Vance Stromwell States in the Union. Barely half a of Oxford, is in daily use, and had rolled up over 100,000. miles before the speedom- broke 12 years ago. A SS Verbal Orchids to - . Mr. and Mrs, Evert Johnston and Lansing couldn’t agree of 105 Oak Hill. St.; golden wedding. Mrs. Bessie Gallagher of 248 South Anderson St.; 84th birthday. ' Mr. and Mrs. Roy K. Mack of 391 Elizabeth Lake Road; 55th wedding ‘anniversary, “Mr. and Mrs. Chester Crews of 98 Peach St.; golden wedding. Mr. and Mrs. Fred C. —e ~~ of Oxford: golden _ wedding, - thi: init srs. Merge 3: Gmeeet: 0 aeekionten: ee eae, with the follow- but I know wish has been granted. A child Paula ANOTHER attempt at int&ration, this one by Atty. Gen. Roaers, is re- sented in some quarters. He is trying to integrate states’ rights and states’ responsibilities. : Pae ‘on its merits. Work, ad, WS» David Lawrence Says Hero Today’s * 5S. For France, It Isn t Peace o on n Earth WASHINGTON—This is @ season of moodiness in international affairs rather than of acts that advance or retard the cause of world peace, It seems in- credible that the President ef the United States should find it necessary to persuade the ‘Président of the Feench Republic that the defense of Western Eu- rope must be integrated. LAWRENCE Twice in the last half century, the United States. has come to the rescue of France at a_ terrible sacrifice. Twice the American forces have had to cross the ocean long after the enemy had won victory after victory in sweeping across the plains of Western Europe. * * * Today, however, when time would be of the essence in a military struggle .and when mis- siles as well as jet airplanes can cross frontiers to the heartland of an enemy in a matter of minutes, it is unbelievable that the head of any Western government would make even the slightest gesture that could weaken the military urlity of the Western powers in an emergency. The fact of the matter is that General De Gaulle, as a military -man himself, knows . the impor- tance of an integrated defense ‘but somehow feels he can use Nineteenth Century methods in diplomacy te gain his end in an unrelated question—the future of | Algeria. . French leaders have always thought that the “quid pro quo” method of negotiating was the way to deal with Britain and the United States. This is disconcerting be- cause the United States, on the other hand; has always felt that each question should be considered * Today. for instarice, the American’ viewpoimt_ is. that Western defense unity is more im- ear Rochester, who has been delaying . his long winter sleep away beyond former years, finally dropped off into his big snooze Fridays —------~--1-~- ~ been handled satisfactorily, -be taking sides. It portant thah a thousand: Algerian problems. FRENCH FEELINGS HURT French~feelings seeny to have been. hurt by.American failure to give moral support to General De Gauile's~tatest plan-for Algeria ~ when. a vote was takenin’ the United Nations. -The American delegate abstained because he was _instructed_to do so_on. the theory that the. United States should not would have done no great harm, however, if the American vote had been cast alongside of France. Decisions like this are delicate ones to’make and undoubtedly. even if this had Gen- eral De Gaulle would have seized on something else to give him an oppdrtunity to emphasize anew his independence of all foreign powers. Thus, outwardly, French policy is concentrated for the moment on gettiig neclear weapons of its own. General De Gaulle talks. . about becoming a. first- class power in the nuclear field. Renee See The Country , Parson er Knowledge Nutrition, ; McCottam, Ph.B.,.Sc., D., LL.D., vised to _.amin_C are He overlooks the fact that it would cost the French people a good deal of money to accom- plish this doubtful purpose and that also, at the mement, world opinion seems to be urging nuclear disarmament rather than the buildup of nuclear strength anywhere else. President Eisenhower by “his visit to Paris had an opportunity to smooth over General De Gaulle’s ruffled feelings. The French leader no doubt has derived additional prestige with his own people as a powerful influence in world affairs because of the decision to hold the big East-West summit conference in Paris, He likes to feel that the world leaders come to him, tot &e * But Moscow must be smiling. For inside France “are plenty of Communist members of Parlia- ment to say nothing of Communist- minded individuals in the univer- sities and the press who manage to wield considerable ififluence in shaping French policy. They are said te be very active in fostering a haughty and arro- gant attitude toward the United States on the theory that this fits in with General De Gaulle’s passion for attention and in- creased personal prestige, These moods in international affairs are temporary. Fortunately, the type of friction reported re- cently in dispatches from France doesn’t last too long and permanent prejudices do not have a chance to develop. (Copyright 1959) *, William Brady Says: Scurvy Still Abounds— Right Foods Prevent It Today it is standard ‘practice to give every baby, from the age of three weeks 6r‘so, orange juice, factory canned to- or fruit juice, daily, You begin with a few drops a day and grad- ually increase the ration of fresh fruit or vegetable juice to a few tea. spoonfuls daily when the baby is five or six months old. A baby getting scurvy -is frethul. pale and tender in the legs, ° that he cries out when handled, The gums become purple, swollen and tender, so that they bleed from slight irritation. This ten- derness of the gums has often been mistaken for ‘cutting teeth” — babies who get their vitamin DR. B RADY ~C usually have little trouble cut- _ ting teeth. The other baby is cross, sleeps poorly, loses color and weight, has little of no appetite, If not given vitamin C the baby soon becomes feverish and lies as though par- alyzed, From “Bight or appareatty 1 no ~< “injury the baby. has “black and blue’t. marks, and such marks have led-to falee accasations of- cruelty to infants er to inmates of institutions, In adults some of the early signs — or symptoms of scurvy are list- lessness, lack of energy, failure of appetite, irritability, and later loss of weight. Ankles and sometimes other joints become tender and swollen. Extravasations of blood under the skin produce “black and blue” marks, and similar hemorr- hages occur under the mucous membrane of the mouth and other cavities. . The gtims are swollen ‘aed bleed easily.° The teeth become loose and may fall out. Headache and — other general ‘symptoms occur. In his famous book, The New- of EY. When tle school diet was re- Youngsters who squander. their money on colored, flavored, pocket | ‘earbonated sugar water (pop) in - “ «, Stead of lemonade, orange juice Some of the best sources of vit- a y ly plenty of vitamin ~ “C the boys immediately improved “in all respects. nized as they should be, such as fresh and canned grapefruit, fresh and eanned tomato or tomato juice, green and red peppers, fresh or canned, strawberries, raw cabbage, raw or cooked cauliflower, dande- lion greens, beet tops, horseradish, alfalfa (lucerne), mint, mustard, parsley, nasturtium leaves, turnip tops and watercress. Signed page or 100 words long pertaining to letters not more than one personal health and wz iene, not = ease, ,» oF ent, will snowered Dr. William erety, if * stam -addres envelope is. sen’ to The Press, tac, (Copyright 1 they oe when taxpayers pe- tition for a blacktop street. * * ~ Probably not all residents are affected, but it has affected my property to the extent there's and this 1- ‘did not buy. A little ingenuity could have satisfied everyone, * * * : Officials. seem: more interested in satisfying the construction com- pany than taxpayers, as they dis- regarded two written requests to . hold up approval of this street un- til the condition was corrected, They neither notified us nor put any notice in the paper. Waterford Township Resident ‘Write Eisenhower About Nuclear Ban’ Aug. 26 President - Eisenhower announced the U.S. would extend the ban or nuclear tests from Oci. ' 31 to Dec. 31: England followed, and so did the U.S.S.R., announcing it wouldn't resume tests so long as Western powers didn't. * * * Dec. 31 is almost here and we— have no assurance the tests won't be started again. It’s up to the people to help the President decide what to do. If he doesn’t hear from us, perhaps the mil- itary will be successful in con- vineing him to resume tests and expose present and future gen- arations to deadly radioactive fallout. , * * * If, however, enough let him know we want the ban extended, I'm sure he will again find cour- age to take this bold step toward peace. I urge one and all to write the President. What better ges- ture for “Peace on Earth — Good Will Toward Men,” Betty Houston, Pres. Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom Oakland County Branch ‘Keep Busy Days; Go to Bed Nights’ Teens without enough to do should look into our Young Peo- ple’s Programs at the churches. Try going to Sunday School. At- tend church regularly. Find your niche in the light hours, not the dark. If you're busy during the day, you'll be glad to hit the feathers before midnight. Look around your own backyard and stop destroying others, Fishing, skating, skiing, and indoor hobbies await the boy and girl who care to look around, Clarkston Teen-ager No one that has read. Lady. Chatterly’s Lover can pass it off easily like a letter in Voice of the People did. Intimate scenes . are one thing, but plain dirty, foul words are another and when Ges cea van alta, aeicaaeien. why it makes you sick to. your stomach. Freedom of speech does not mean freedom to becoimne low, vile and filthy in public. One Who Read It . ‘Why Not Use Some No-Good Humans?’ That little monkey,-Sam, didn’t ‘Jook happy about his trip to outer space and why use an innocent monkey when there as so many no-good human beings that rob, _ steal, rape and murder? Let's use them and then maybe we won't have to pay their room and board any more. Be Kind to Monkeys Portraits By JAMES J. METCALFE Krissie dear is home again . From school so far away . . wreath and mistletoe . . Yule log and the tree . . Krissie home for Ch . . . Her loving family . . . We've planned to make her holidays . . . The brightest and the best... . And hope and pray the year ahead . Will be her happiest. (Copyright 1959) . Smiles A scientist says it's a problem for people to find what to do with their leisure time. What mother A movie star claims she is the .‘vietim of typing. Like the girl who - spends years as a stenographer. Case Records of a Psychologist: Child Must Learn to Like Music Crystal’s wise suggestions bring out the merit in- the game called “musical detec- tives” as played with such tunes as Mitch Miller’s « ar- rangement of “Little Sandy Sleighfoot.”. Urge your young- sters to_see how many of the eight -backdrop instruments they can identify in “Little Sandy Steighfoot... e & &> - By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE 28. is a music teacher. * ek “Dr. Crane,” she began, “I notice that Kener eee, young: sters have a poor sense of rhythm. “And. they don't care much for aa Rest Bo 2 I tell | devo a. pore a a ly inherit their fondness for -mu- sic. They don't. Good mothers and devoted teachers must “sell” a liking for mtsie te toddlers, This can be done by linking the new musical piece to other ego-inflating ex- Pertences already known, to the vou ean start by such a sen device as playing “musical chair’ ‘ where the youngsters are to grab a seat-as soon as the pjano play- dg. Stops. Thus, they “begin: to astioclate music With the hilarity of a game, though their attention hasn't even been focused on-rhythm or me- lodic harmony. _ NARRATIVE MUSIC not oe ie ‘thai areata we pel adults may hardly pay attention to this backdrop. So encourage yotrr children to listen with you. and see how many ort it instruments you can pick ou Even now 1 still can’t ‘identity - but five or six, though Mitch Miller told me in persom.that he had used eight. As we weave har- ration and fun and religious in- 2.99 ‘Mazet’ Orlon slip-ons fashioning. Popular colors and black or white. In sizes 34 to 40. Reg. 3.99 fashion-rite skirts All-wool_ flannel, tweeds, checks, 3 Crew neck, short sleeve with mock $2 plaids and blends. Everything from slims to all-around pleats. 22 to 30. Tots’. Billy-the-Kid slacks Warm corduroys, polished cotton 298 or Bedford cords, many colors, 2-7. Li'l boys’ smart sport shirts By Rob Roy or Wee Willie, long of 199 short sleeves in cotton. Sizes 2-6. Holiday dress for tots Cotton in holiday colors . . . lace, 299 contrast color trims; 9-18 mos., 1-3. Most wanted gift of all... tailored and dressy blouses | 99 799 So many, many styles . . . split level, crop top, overblouse, cumberbuynd and tuck-ins. Cottons or blends, silks, etc. 30-38, 40-44. Still lots of pretty dresses to pick from for tots, girls 3°9 Cottons of nylons in porty or go-to-school styles. Pastels for both . . . tyrolian style for 3-6x, jacket dress, 7-14, “Just two of manyl Shop now and pay later... just say “CHARGE IT”. Downtown AND Drayton Plains ec ee ee ee Gift-lovely quilted dusters Tricot: quilted duster. Dainti- 399 ly trimmed with lace and rib- bons. 12-18 in the group. Favorite lounging pajamas Quilted rayon tricot with demure $ Mandarin neckline for added style. 5 32-38 in the group. While they last! Welcome gift! Sport shirts with perma-stay collars. Cot- ton flannel, gingham. S-M-L. Ivy League or regular styles 2° Wash ‘n wear dress shirts Fine count b’cloth white, tan 3 50 and blue. Permanent collar stays, convertible cuffs. 14-17. Forgotten someone? Don't worry, Federals still has lots of gifts for all . open every night, too! Closed Christmas eve at 6 p.m. ‘Evening in Paris’ gift set 5 versions of the fragrance all $ French women love! Beautifully 5 wrapped in sotin-lined case. ; Plus U.S. tax Tussy ‘Midnight’ gift set Her favorite fragrance, set includes $4 cologne; hand and body lotion. Gift packaged in Midnight blue. Pius U,S. tax ee | All boys need and want long- sleeve dress. or sport shirts 1 99 Flannels, ginghams and broadcloths. White for dress or solid combinations, plaids, stripes or checks. Sizes 6 to 18 in group. Just in time for giving! c Luxury robes, dusters ct savings, reg. 12.99 Fitted or full . . . whatever milady toves best ae in wonderful opaque nylon... quilted for i wt warmth in soft shades of pastels or white. epee Glitter buttons, frilly lace and ribbon trims —s to their femininity. Give her a gift she'll *tharik you’ for every time she wears it. Met sizes for all. Posie rey buy them oe j. . mnt Se th inthe, ri Family of Four pont Shakes : : ad leading “in se, ‘Snowy Mantle VEITON Apal | in Swan Son pe oe ae se | Tere dv ree Brutally Killed . 7 ** * By The; story apartment house forced 95: juries and smoke inhalation. They Amociaied Press persons to grope their way to safe-' were’ released after treatment. Le as to clritica) chndition (wit be me New Window Eee! ‘eastern lowa and the northeast up 3 ee. of Missouri eastward through the PRINCESS southern Great Lakes region and §: 83 ; . . It. was snowy, and cold across FOR: tate Police. say +l burner tv in smoke and darkness today.’ One of the building's occupants | Girl Found lying Face wide areas in the eastern half of pa Illinois, Indiana, Ohio-and-p : No one was seriously injured. |gescribed the escape scene as Down in Tub; Probably |"! the rl ya today, the last day of nts gob ne © inte (22, Residents of the Graylawn apart-'* Palit hoses late’ today. killed ual a were! ‘fourth was critically ak something out of a horror story.” Held Under Water | ‘Ee three-month winter season burned Sunday starts at 9:35 a.m, Eastern Stand-| ; Harry Doane, and his OSPREY, Fla. (AP) — A Christ- ard Time ‘Tuesday. ° The British Royal Mint produced brother's, Herschel, '’ and. Wil- ‘mas tree glitters today in an iso-| Snow falls in most places were 593,201,554 coins last year, They|liam, 7, were dead of lated home, but two youngsters light, with depths of generally less wiles a total of 2,940 tons. / suffocation. A fourth brother, Wek, will never open the four gaily- _——__ wrapped packages beneath the’ boughs. An unknown assailant murdered COLD-PROOF jegtea on _ Po er The bodies of the paren.s and a year-old son lay on- the floor not far. from the Christmas tree - “FOR “OUTSIDE STORAGE TANKS. Clifford jw alker, his wife, and their two small children Saturday at thet rural home eed until discovered Sunday. Officers theorize the killer was a friend 6f the family who tried ‘unsuccessfully to rape the mother, | They believe the murders oc- ‘curred when the father and chil- ‘dren arrived home from a friend’s house. The victims were Clifford and Let the temperature fall below zero— you don’t have a worry in the world if you use Mobilheat! It flows freely in cold weather—keeps your burner running smoothly, at full capacity. What makes Mobilheat _ so good in cold weather? It’s simple—every drop of Mobilheat has to pass severe refrigeration tests be- New Extend-A-Bench! Top Buy! fore it is okayed for use in your home. So enjoy more Christine Walker, both 23, their *-- dependable heating this winter by ‘switching te son, Jimmy, »an a 22-year-old Doll Bunk Bed Doll Sarrioge Doll Crib Mobilheat today. Just call us, daughter, Debbie. hod hs Rama aa ode Oe ‘one’ Made of eatherette wees ee date, Mother and a delivery of cold-proof SHOT IN HEAD vood rade $895 wfin metal frame, $795 Chriatona, ss, And of Mobilheat will be on its way in The parents and son had been ladder anes fing weet: _ » Site. $695 Mobil a MODERN SWIVEL CHAIR shot in the head. No murder wea- minutes. pon was found, but three .22- U : ; rireuaety a se it as a cocktail table $ 95 Colorful plastic swivel chairs by Baum- If y ou Don’t Know Fuel caliber cartridges lay near the]. Hi TV , is) : y , yeee bodies. . : dort OF table ritter.. Choice of colors, walnut finished The girl's body was found face bench! Walnut or ebony. arms. Bronzetone leos 1 AS Know Your Fuel Dealer! wth brass leg levelers. down in a half-filled bathtub, and ‘Sheriff Ross Boyer said the killer . & ‘apparently held the child under ‘the water until she drowned, The ee uae 'girl also had .been shot, officials i reported, il Hi . : Although three persons were nO? I Hi-Choir a Table & Chair Set Tric ycle | taken to Sarasota, 10 miles north manée Just like the kiddies. Callypainis _ft eany sporase Geet selection, ay tricycles in ' spy . reti w steel reinfore able 8 of Osprey, for questioning, Boyer as ants ta $495 orerdy steel sete ‘7 50 } sises. Pees $1150 said he had no real suspects. down fortable chairs 11 in|. Cos OAL and OIL CO- COAL USERS ATTENTION! —— Transportation advertisers in- vested $42,700,000 in daily news- papers in 1958. 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Free Delivery Seog w , i year THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 21, 1959 ele ae etn ae seem: n naval im Mr. ‘Common Man: Who’ s Going to Pay! . taxable income, TFT calculates e/3 of 11 Fatal U.S. Cases ~|Combine Tax and Election Days? i=: wn rm we responsible. for three of the 11 fa-| aiceounted' for only 13 per cent Of 141 cases of rabies in the U ted No Contract: ; the 1957 tax yield. as By LYuz c, WILSON | tour of gene bog! revenue is meng of income subject to the | The common man does not real-/States in the past two years, the Necessary ‘ ‘WASHINGTON (UPI) — Edito- oe racket, the ifirst bracket rate was about $108 ize that the money being tossed|World Health Organization re- «Call Tod s rial writers in two widely sepa-|! racket, There he pays 20 [billion of total taxable income of) sround by the spenders used to be-' ported ; . wid ‘rated communities (Omaha World| Per cent on the first $2,000 of '$153 billion, The first bracket pro- jong to him. He thinks he's get- poriee | | | Gregory Oil Co ¢ Herald and Houston Chronicle)| txable income, |duced about 61 per cent of the| iting something for nothing. se og ry , : have endorsed the suggestion that|’ Tax Foundation, Inc.; (TFI) of/total income tax yield." | It said more than 400 persons ij 94 East Walton Bivd. income tax pay day and election New York, observes: | Ifthe progressive rates had been| More than 1,000 divorce decrees|died of rabies in India and 27 Phone FE 5-614). day should be combined on the; “In ‘1957, the latest year for abandoned and the first, bracketiwere granted each day last year|succumbed in the Philippines in| same date in November. which data are available, the Tate had been applied to- all 1957 in the United States. 11968. his suggestion had & PUrPOSC. | pesssesceeeseenememe eee ; : lecseniinsj It was to focus the attention of, , Hurry int These Great Gift Buys Won't Waitt public office. The voter-taxpayers of thie | a 'voter-taxpayer with taxes much on his mind would be in an angry voters on the tax-take at the very time when they were being whee-| less, despite certain deprespihg etna es 2 - a es evidence that most ef them are | ; | - | wot very smart, either. ALWAYS FIRST @) LT:¥ DAYS i I: I F . _ fimood. It could be a mood to-chal- | the pie-in-the-sky chmpaign died by spenderama candidates for | It is reasonable to expect that a performances of candidates whose greatest claim to public office ap- peared to be a free-wheeling en- thusiasm for spending other peo- iple’s money. | “Who,” the moody voter-taxpay- “NO MONEY. DOWN — TERMS KEASEY ELECTRIC (er might ask, “‘is going to pay for lall of this?” The fact is that the greatest 4620 Dixie Highway Phone OR 3-2601 _ OPEN TONIGHT — PARK RIGHT-AT THE DOOR WAREHOUSE BRANCH STEWART-GLENN co. A 40,000 SQ. FT. Tt: SUPERMARKET ines theta il i all ‘Bl - ma bees “OPEN NIGHTS and WEDNESDAYS ‘til CHRISTMAS _ FOR CHRIST MAS DELIVERY _THIS FAMOUS RECLINING CHAIR _¢ Barcalgunger’ PRICED FROM 109” DELIVERED What better shirt could you give him at only Only ~ the: amazing BarcaLounger gives you SEE OUR LARGE DISPLAY Keane Comfort,’ the patented design made from dies of people floating in water . OF RECLINERS. OTHERS the gig position Ls the world! Ask ; . ay cs) e enthusiastic users rea- PRICED FROM $79.87. Loungers are available in a variety of sizes, : styles and coverings. See them today! _ & 3 PO SECTIONAL SOFA by KROEHLER us . Penney’ s soft, lustrous pima cotton broadcloths are a sensational shirt buy ... the perfect gift for every man you know! Give him the fit he wants... every shirt is Towncraft® proportioned to _ tuck in properly with-no bunching at the waist, deep armholes Will not pull or bind, new low front neckline allows extra collar comfort! Give him the style he wants, too . .. Penney’s tailors these shirts with a soft, short point collar, permanent stays and the new fashion convertible cuffs. Laundering is almost effort- less... they machine wash, almost forget the iron. Sanforized®, too, so they won’t shrink out of fit! At Penney’s low 2.98 price tag, you’ll want to give him several! o 93 Sizes 1444 to 17 (SLEEVES 32 TO 39) PENNEY PLUS VALUE PENNEY'S NEW LUXURY QUALITY 100% PIMA DRESS SHIRTS Rial 3-pe. sectional ogee Delivery Towncraft quality dress shirts tailored from long w earing Pima cloth’ French or barrel cuffs and 2 93 wisii's Stow two collar styles. Sanforized for perfect fit. Sleeve lengths 32-35. They make fine last-minute gift. 14% tel? "_, PENNEY’S DOWNTOWN STORE — PENNEY'S MIRACLE MILE STORE Christmas Store Hours: Open 9:30°A. M: to 9:00 P.M. Open 10 A.M. to , P.M, »_Mondey throwgh Seturday Every. Dey Until Christmas! sf _THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMB “: 19 Cs ike . Prime Minister Nehru today re- on the India-China border dispute. ; * * * The Indian leader told -Parlia-| -. tment that he had replied to Pei- ping that preliminary discussions’ (AP) S jected Red Chinese Premier Chou) Ex-lai’s offer to meet this week) / Chou had soaeibed in a ‘letter “week ago that Nehru meet.him xt Saturday either in China or Rangoon, Burma, to discuss in de- tail the es “or claims. The Chinaes psinlae had pro- both countries withdraw their forces 12 miles from ‘their present’ positions — a move that would leave the Communists still in control of thousands of miles of territory claimed by India. Pint Code #043 $380 4/5. Qt. Code #942 STRAIGHT BOURDON WHISKEY © 86 PROGE + OLD QUAKER DISTILLING CO, LAWRENCERURG, 1m, Say Advice Depends on tivietesent Objectives Se Bond Market at Record Low Mark By. SAM DAWSON AP Business, News Analyst NEW YORK (AP) Should — you buy bonds now? Should you! sell the ones you bought a few years back? Bond dealers say they have lsome customers in‘ each of these categories. Those who are buying .are at- tracted by the high yields that U.S. Treasury and corporate ‘bonds bring teday. The return-is and some buying by inatitistionsl investment’ companies for the same reason, * * * But there is a rub that defers some -from buying bonds. That is, when the bonds mature the Treas- ury or the corporations will re- deem them at par, The difference between present low prices and the par redemption will constitute a capital gain and therefore is taxable as income, Dealers say that those who are greater than can be had through! selling their bonds come under ent prices. * * * ¥ Most of the longer term U.S. _|Treasury securities are selling now at or near their record lows. Although the fixed interest rates on the ones issued some years ago are low, the bargain prices mean that your dollars buy more bonds than if they were selling at par, Therefore the yield on the; dollars you spend is high. The same is true of many of the older corporate bonds. The U.S. bonds aré the market- able variety sold in large denom- inations. “U.S. Savings Bonds can't be sold—only redeemed at fixed prices—and so aren't involved in this discussion, *x* * * There has been some switching ifrom common stocks into bonds ‘by those looking: for higher yields, Wonderful Selection of Diamond Watches in all famous makes $59.50 to $1,000 ‘loss ‘awhile back and what they get ithe dividend payments of most} several categories. Some are sell- /corporaté common stocks at pres:| ing to set up for tax purposes the between what they paid today, Some are reported switch- ing from U.S. bonds to corporate bonds where yields may be high- er. x * * Some see their present bond holdings likely to go still Jower in price if the Treasury comes into the market next year with bonds bearing high interest rates. The treasury already is paying 444 per cent for its shortest term securities, its weekly offering of 91-day bills. Some selling of U.S. bonds is to take advantage of still higher returns in other fields, such as mortgages; or, in the case of banks, to get higher returns on loans to business, Many banks are short of funds to meet all of .the demand for Joans. The question of shether you should hold onto your old bonds) © depends, therefore, on your own) circumstances and plans: _ weigh- ing their low interest against the loss at today’s low prices, with an eye on greater returns, from — iwestmnents to offset the Whether you should ‘put any idle money you have into bonds de- pends likewise on weighing their attractive yields and certain cap- ital gains against what you think . particular commen stocks might do for you, or what other more risky but higher yield investments might bring in. Symington for 60. | Drive Is Launched JEFFERSON ITY, Mo. (AP)— A drive to promote Sen, Stuart Symington (D-Mo) for the Demo- @ Precision @Canadian blades . Ralunced ; 2 cratic presidential nomination was , launched Friday by the Missouri State Democratic Committee. * © e i * ** ok. Members were asked to seek support from national party leaders. and potential convention delegates, ‘and to volunteer for personal tours into other states) in Symington's behalf. x *« * @ Nationally advertised for the entire family! White or black figures Money to finance the drive will’ “More and More People . . . Christmas Shoppers ‘25 You receive our own service guarantee in addition 10 that given you by the manufacturer. Choose from: HAMILTON BULOVA MOVADO NIVADA GRENCHEN Tempered steel blades. 88 GIRARD-PERREGAUX Black, brown or white 4 CROTON ... and others Priced from BUY ON BUDGET PAYMENTS Supple leather, pad- 7 8 8 ded tongues, Pit 8.88 he t pont through a $100-a-plate —— —— counters. 1 to 4 - 9.88 a, Womens, white, 4-10 ...... a> Men's black, 6-12 .......... 0) Hard-toe hockeys Ankle strap, padded ton- 88 gues reinforced stitching, 8 boys’ 1-5; men’s 6-12. Child’s double runners leather, sizes 10 to 2. Hockeys for li’l boys Black ‘n brown leather, . padded tongue and 6** 00 » $500 box toe, Sizes 12 to 4. ‘Skate guards or ankle supports dust Sey: CHRISTMAS PATENTS “GUARANTEED TO FIT 299.4” “Gleaming black patent for dancing feet on Christmas! All have rayon faille linings, durable street soles and fancy ONLY 10% DOWN—10% MONTH bow trims. Gift shop now! | POOLE EEC ES | FULL EXCHANGE PRIVILEGES row ins 8 9D | . CPN NSPE ENE MMA I LE IEE Girls’ swivel strap ta. 99 | wae — sires 844-3, BO 3.99. ) ANY ITEM GIFT WRAPPED © Girls’ QUEEN ANNE, ' . heels, ierir tii: 4.99 : AT NO EXTRA COST OPEN EVENINGS TONIGHT - AND THROUGH WEDNESDAY Ya-3; B-C-D 2 , : ot ee _THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY? DECEMBER 21, 1959 Pent EVERY NIGHT 70. 9 ERY NIGHT . ot 6PM ‘ ‘ ) a SHETLAND | HOOVER ae K 3 polis Vacuum at new, ea » in luck.-- \) The | her met ae its * Last minute “Santas” are ra ' Federal’s s saves you w 4 eee Just say Shetland h d Hoover deluxe Conver- k ; . rp servbs ee “floors, fible with bia getenis whe Ls — bumper, t : ; ; | | shampoos your rugs halal 50% t. as : + mewn on ps aaachon hon kingeaze i | Hey kids . . . be sure to visit SANTA at Federal's < im ee . Re a : “flick of a switch.” throw-away bag. : | i © 29% 69” ms po . Federal’s hes dispos- o Wa garry complete | re tgs ton men | : wos aor for Shet- vecuums. Marks 59-piece | electri in ‘ “ eaters Were set Paint-by-num- Her very own SAILOR—Patricia Merrill, 19, 9” ber play set cosmetic bag of Little Silver, N. J., will reign R eg. 15.95, with locomo- An ideal education- Pretty plastic tote New verre Coton Jan. 15-24. tive, signal, village, . etc. al gift thot’s fun bag, just like mother The Hood College sophomore is UL approved transformer. for all. Buyl 98¢ has. Hurry! 9Be a sailing enthusiast. ows . WARES & POLrnwrS | : Secret Provided M pj t Drink and. oon IC ures Wet doll Soviet Scientist Tells 2 aoe Poant . Rema of Special Apparatus Reg. 2.99. Soft Easy-to-do Chrome table, Colorful pic- Stopping Rotation | ee nai, sleep embroid. set chair set ‘ture puzzle MORCOW a —' A Soviet sh ‘ 7 , diapers, Four attractive pic- 2 padded chairs, Assortment of fasci- scientist reports a special secret} 4-s dph h and has its own tures complete with plastic topped table, nating pictures to apparatus stopped Lunik III from| peed phonograp See ttle. Sh frame. ; rotating on its own axis long) Portable has tone controls, dual © bottle. Shop now! rome. Buyl 98¢ Sturdy 11.99 put together. 70¢ enough to photograph the moon’s flip-over needle, big speaker, hidden side. light tone arm. 2088 ; He also says electronic signals from the equipment transmitting © oe te photographs came in 100 - Modern table radio ion times weaker an signals li . 5 | received by an ordinary television fode-ree ‘color. Rich Tone and | set. The little g la ‘ory ‘ whizzed by the other side of the; long-range tuning. 1495 _An article by a corresponding = H fe ‘eee ee se . Pi. oe. a. member of the Academy of Sci- mower-packed radio o | bf : ie oe = , . e _" ss Zo f ce Soviet prerta Jn the ge | in beautiful, durable PBtysty. Colorful plastic Educational Boys’, girls’ Woven willow Chime wagon distfibution abroad—gave the first rene cabinet, 2088 horse & rider traffic- signal . _ roller skates sewing basket for wee ones fairly full account printed here of | ; ry ; ‘ , “* ‘ the technique used in making the | pictures. Siforov emphasized two things—| (1) that the entire operation was | controlled by commands from | earth, and (2) that all the ap- | paratus was contained in a space measuring -only 15,8 by 11.8 ec es ° He said the planned trajectory | put the sun, the moon and the | earth in a™ ‘straight line at the! hour planned for the photographs, | with the sun’s rays lighting the | moon's hidden surface. Canada May Launch Own Space Probes OTTAWA (UPI) — Canada may launch its own irstrument-bearing rockets next year to probe the upper atmosphere, the Defense Researeh Board said. The launchings would ‘be part of a series of tests on a new solid-fuel rocket developed by DRB scien- tists at the Valcartier, Que., arma- ment research establishment, Two of the new test vehicles were successfully lifted into the upper atmosphere from Fort Set of three “Old A tun lesson in safe- Clamp-on style. Quilt - lined basket Wood wagon that West” riders and ty. Three colored Great fun indoors with everything for jingles as tots pull it horses. Buy! 98e lights. Hurry! 7Oe and out. 2.98 sewing. Hurry! 1.55 along. Savel 98 yl Reg. 14.98 velocipede 999 10” size. Heavy tubular steel, T- type frame, solid rubber tires. Popular ma- chine pistol Authentic Mau ser- type gun. A favorite toy for boys. 3.39 ‘ _—_ ES eevee cr ee A nm . ane 9.98 plastic upholstered 8 | |TV rocker for children ob 6% eigen eneeenttstim tre vevetnsee vearenecseartone care. c+ “Needs no venting or Four-player *<¢ ° ? Churchill, Man., in September. ; ; 1 Li‘l soldier’s The 24-foot-long rocket involved, special installation. Comfortable tot-size rr tg their croquet set machine gun known as the “Black Brant,” is very own. Covered in durable plastic . ; capable of a 20,000-pound thrust. that wipes clean easily. Smartly styled fr eley a for Like the reat thing, . The vehicles fired in September | : ion. ayers. Fun in- removable firing cy- reached a height of 60 miles before in a. two-tone color Cantincrion - doors or out. 70¢ cle. Only 8,09 falling into Hudson Bay, In 1960 tests will be followed a @ear later by the launching of a joint U.S.-Canadian satellite to ex- plore the ionbsphere’s top side.-The | satellite, to be fired from Vanden- berg Air Force Base in California, will be instrumented by Canadian _ May seen wonder how come the scientists, 4 ‘It's No Longer Efectric visca 3 the 5-Cent Beer Like-real Christmas tree Tote? 3.way “ibe eee “ten cit cinch te ee vette, Solas PURITRON portable cleans the a pe en 98 es te tat conch: Noe “tired air” ... makes it fresher, cleaner ; feel fresher, work Amazing Puritron purl. ee, it will help sove and. , ps ee oe ergprigg tty AE bs é filte it, mn See haat i sud yee ® PP det % Site csr Animated musical lamps, worth more! Circus scene: as the “Swiss | music bex plays. the clowns swing up and down. 7,99 AP Wirephoto NO TAKERS—If this ‘‘woman"” looks a little hefty, maybe it’s because “she” is 6-Toot, 1-inch ~ Buffalo police Det. Al MecDon- \ald. For four nights McDonald walked the city streets cdrrying a purse he hoped would be snatched. But he walked in vain. All he got were blisters and stares Lake Tonnage Drops Little Despite Strike . CLEVELAND (AP)—Despite the steel strike, which virtually halted | iron ore shipping on the Great Lakes for about four months, total ‘Newsprint Gobbled Up - Jat Record Pace in 59 ened pewsprint at a faster duning-the first 11 months of vihis | ‘newsprint trom January. through/to 6,074,249 ec ca the & same period) Gates Jr., year than during any comparable '} ‘November, a! 6.9 per cent porgase last eran net rimspmaine irene samt oartl the American oni Publishers Assn. said: : * .*= 2 total tof Te ANPA sald newspapers ne-lipe' ned States for t ( j—New NEW YORK (UPID—Ne cane ag nt wot ene ates cee men ‘who has advised military ‘Want to wear stars # directive Gates Issued on the |the L ee ns v FOAM RUBBER! freight tonnage handled by lake shippers to Dec. 1 was down only | Reversible Cushions! | 6 -per cent from the comparable period of 1958. The Lake Carriers Assn. report: | ed today 105,125,970 net tons were | shipped to Dec. 1 this year, pared with 122,290,965 tons for 1958. For November, although the ore | first week of the month, total ship- / carriers were not operating the | com- ments were 12,567,049 tons, pared with 11,593,988 for the pre. vious year The association re ported 5 5,958,050, net tons of iron ore, 4,818,367 tons shipped in -November Dec. 1 were 48,766,305 net tons of iron ore, 44,056,3 and 12,303,286 tons of grain. The November coal shipments | were the highest in 11 years, the | association reported. come | of coal and 1,790,632 tons of grain! Totals to’ 79 tons of coal | Big, deep, comfortable chairs with zippered reversible foam rubber cushions! Expensive hair and felt filling. Colonial, traditional and modern styles to suit every taste. A wonderful choice of fine decorator fabrics and colors. | {i 95 WE GUARANTEE CHRISTMAS DELIVERY ON ANY ITEM PURCHASED BY NOON, DEC. 24. i age ONLY 3 MORE SHOPPING DAYS TILL CHRISTMAS ALL TRANSISTOR POCKET RADIO =| hew tone sensation Pe. * with EXCLUSIVE INVERTED CONE SPEAKER ee fuller | ‘TONE , 5. An exquisite all-purpose available in e BLACK LACQUER WITH BRUSHED GOLD © WHITE LACQUER WITH BRUSHED GOLD An almost unbelievable value! Here is a style creation $ 95 QUALITY |. PLUS... WORLDS FINEST | PERFORMANCE j KFASY —s_- 90 Days : TERMS. Same as Cash pe Fri ined ‘til Chishes ‘of one of America’s recognized top stylists . . . a thing ne é of rare beauty which blends-perfectly into any Con- (2 ‘FOR *115) temporary, Traditional or Modern decor. It is both functional and fashionable . . . 37” wide, 18" deep, 31” high . . . ideal'as a Boudoir Chest, Living Room Commode or Foyer Piece. Crafted by one of America’s finest cabinet- makers. A tremendous special purchase makes this price possible. (2 of them side-by-side creates am imposing double dresser.) Hurry please ..... we expect # complete sell-out! . oy . | STORE—IT’'S FREE | “OPEN EVENINGS 10% DOWN . TERMS OF COURSE PARK BEHIND UNTIL 9 @® STEP TABLE 20" x 2914" x 22%" High By Mahogany Desk Leather Top French Provincial Tables with hand “ padded leather tops. Antiquateg front wood finish. $69.95 ae 22x32 Leather Top Step Table ‘Christmas Gift for your bride of 1960! a Lane Sweetheart Chest Other chests avail- —» able in White French } decorated or Maple Ye ' Provincial, Colonial Limed Oak and Ma- hogany. 2 Cannon Blankets given with each chest pur- chased. ® COCKTAIL TABLE ~ 18” x 45%" x 14%” High om ® END TABLE 18” x 2834” x 2244" High > Your choice of lovely limed -Oak or Deep grained Walnut. finish, AY, DECEMBER 21, 1959 . Sew-rSue F Fabrie Shop. : Baskets = © ‘Skirts ow TEL-HURON SHOPPING CENTER open to 9 p.m.monday, fii FOR LATE SHOPPERS Se | a fitted *. as pa i , tues. pin acai ; - Plastic Shel _ ) astic Shelves. just seopnids Onan: Nights Monday—Tuesday—Wednesday ‘til 9 P. M. 1 Electric Scissors) © @ Jewel Setter Kits (Some- Stores Will Close 5:30 P.M. Christmas Eve) _ $4 ie Cut. Add your own a ae. trimmings to ee seaicicy. clothing © Fine Selection of = %° sits Wiss Gift Scissors © Plastic Thread Pinking, Dress-- a a 4h 4) as as 4) df) a) all alas Gs 44 “Wonderland of Gifts i 4 \ : Cg Boys’ Warm | - RG: —G ween 8 § wah . § cr’ Chup = SHOP i m74 , Dy iisiin h “7, GIFT ROBES n Ph. FE 5-4457 9 a, ! a =a ‘a i Cozy Warm Robes . TEL-HURON SHOPPING CENTER B i \S) ne f WS Flannel and Cotton a cca acme Are eZ . ; 2 Corduroy, Red--Blue . x Gift Boxed r asa 6to 12 VU $ 4%” oh ark ae or asia ae Afr ia ae Long Sleeve ( 4 3% Girls’ Gift A 4 Beautiful a make him the most “gifted” NIGHTS 6 aS % Plaid Colors . manat H Sayiaimas Stretch Tights : : ; res 4-6x, to. Choose in lat Bin 7 j Reg. $2.00 Value a 25" Metal Shoe Horn ‘ : With Purchase of & A Florsheim : Gift Certificate -— ~ “Best for Children” , + *Sernice, Tel-Huron Center 175 W. Maple # FE 4-0259 Pontiac -— Birmingham & fe fr tr Simiaeterts re fp fe frie fr re fe fete fe fas per har) a Jd) 4] dt 4) dt at At dt ds 4) 4m GRADE A TURKEY , Corn City or-Top Frost Sexy lnigucted: Fecmeys COMIN G , TIMEX’S — NEWEST PETITE STYLE Regular $15.00 Sale *T ‘ 88 tg LADY'S AND MAN'S $395 Shed love to ski y iv fp ir LAND-O-LAKES BUTTER “Lightly Salted — ‘in Quarters fro e fp fe fe ~ COLONY $PC. MILK GLASS — “SNACK SET “4 Plotes — 4 Cups hee Sp eae tae ea this beautifully! re fete le fete ip fe LP LF LF irr aaah hae Cael cae Cae a fe fr iv ie fs ia Sore Pe ie ie Le le Le fore ts JELLO Cetthernia Parent 6-CUP IMPORTED MUSICAL TEA POT ty by (té ag , As it pours if plays “TEA FOR TWO.” You can have $ 88 f ; . your tea and music too. Floral decoration on white y sy . . ts : ‘° . C E LE RY background trimmed in gold. * Come see our wonderful collection of n | Gelatin , famous White Stag ski-fashions to . : & thrill her, Christmas! Lastex, < as # Rep. Pkos. ore a “ x gabardine pants; nylon ski jackets = 3 gf : BF“ nuecrnic conn rorren ft in solids, prints and reversible styles! " Se Aa caer 9595 A ; : Goh ee yonsen the jacket $2795 : : : Print nylon hood jacket in blue, bronze. Small, medium, large. the ski pants $3995 > Solid lastex! In black, 1, Sole blue, : _ brown. Sizes 8 to VA. The turtle-neck oink , ithe Re Pen Fe eres vanicnane q 4% Oe da: tee EN The ‘Side That itt Wraps — 4 A | _ : * ; Deaths Males “CouldChange | “ B8 Pct. Involved in LANSING @®— A raves of Michigan auto accident ities over a six-month period showed 88 per cent of the drivers involved were men, the secretary of state's office reported. The survey covered 750 acck! dents involving 1,035 drivers in, which 850 persons were killed. | Drivers ever 60 years of age | were invelved in 105 fatalities and drivers under 21 in 99 fa-— falities, the report showed. The report showed 594 of the, drivers, or 57 per cent, had one, er More convictions for a moving violation during the five years) prior to the fatal accident. ‘A check of violation tickets. ist; sued to-drivers surviving the ac-) cidents showed excessive speed, as the most common contributing | factor with 196 tickets issued for this violation. Other common violations includ-| ed 58 for driving on the wrong, side of the road, 46 for failing te, yield the right of way and, 3% for disregarding a stop sign. | 80 Foreign Students | Enjoy Yule Adventure EAST LANSING (® — More than 8) foreign students registered Sun- | day, at Michigan State’ University | for the. seventh annual Christmas | Adventure in World Understand- ing. * *® * The students will spend the, Christmas holidays in Lansing and | Central Mithigan. area homes. wilt visit area farms, | factories and industries and see the workings of state and local governmental units, labor move- ments and social. welfare pro- grams. The 10-day program is designed to give foreign students attending | colleges and universities in this’ country a better undersfanding of our culture and customs. As: a “change rom « previous PS ENCE EE EE ee Ne ame Ng a a years, a trip to Kalamazoo is being | substituted for the annual visit to Detroit. _ “We selected Kalamazoo because | of its diversity in industry” and because it has been called a typical | American city,’ said Mrs. Louise Carpenier, program director. Believes Viewers: TV With Letters HOLLYWOOD @ — In Holly- wood television, the customer may not always be right, but he is never ignored. - “They'd write a lot more let- fers,” says Arthur Rowe, “if | ori realized what an impres- | ion it makes in Hollywood when €ven one person writes in to say a show's lousy — or good.” * * * Rowe, a 37-year-old ex-Marine who has written about a hundred . teleplays -and also done some producing, isn’t given to yep and nope type conversations. He’s full of his subject when he talks about audience reaction. = “Lots of folks say their lonely littie letter won’t matter. Non- Sense! Just one letter can have studio brass’ moping or singing all day. Believe me, they read them all,” he says. Why Accept Less for Your Money _ NOT. | NOT. (32% a a a ag a MULTI-SPEED PORTABLE PHONOGRAPH : Durable, Plays 33-13, 45 and 78 rpm records; attractive carrying Perfect gift for the teen-ager! NO MON case. *] a* Complete. with antenna. No Money Down! OLYMPIC BIG SCREEN TABLE TV Mahogany wood finish in this big screen TV. Superpewered chassis, big picture for comfortable viewing. Easy, accurate tuning. 168 NO MONEY DOWN Full 2 PC. SUITE... $159 84” slant arm. sofa and chair in loop frieze. Rubber cushions. Save NO MONEY DOWN y You'll firid these selling for, as tuch as $79. Now sale priced! 2-WAY SOFA... Double - arm sofa bed in tapestry cover reduced for Christmas. NO MONEY DOWN aed Dries $29 * You get heaibosrd, legs and box Spring, mattress combination. Very special. ‘NO MONEY DOWN J EVERY NigHT yemebeoneee EY DOWN at Wk 1960 PHILCO PORTABLE TV Famous ‘‘Slender Seventeener” Wv$ 95 Full powered AC-DC radio with built: $ s 88 - ore op ply, le 2 88 has sharp, bright picture, exclusive in“loop antenna, 4’ Alnico ‘speaker. y Complete. with T-pe ot oe briefcase styling. Only 11} '/2"' slim! > & of cleaning tools. A re if 2 f NO MONEY DOWN , Tall Man Recliner! i High back, full spring con- _ Struction. Looks like $100. - NO MONEY DOWN. Ge ee “f % FAMOUS OLYMPIC. | gop AC-DC TABLE MODEL RADIO © NEW EUREKA VACUUM: Perfect for kitchen or bedroom. . gular $69.95 value! NQ MONEY DOWN * No Money Down! scl a WEBCOR “HOLIDAY’’ AUTOMATIC STEREO PHONO ‘7 9” ~ NO MONEY DOWN Super stereo phonograph with automatic 4-speed disk changer is self- contained, or separate speaker cabinet by 8' cord for even finer stereo reproduction. Separate volume controls. . Equipped: for. stereo! Olympic radio- _ Olympic Radio-Phono- Combination phono console with 3-speaker sound ” system, AM radio, automatic 4-speed phonograph, tone. controls. SP os 128 _ 4 NO_MONEY _DOWN ~NO DOWN PAYMENT! _ Advance 1960 style 4-piece sectional (Not 3) covered in modern tapestry. Each piece has foam rubber filling for added comfort and durability. Limited quantities, so better work fast. Christmas delivery guaranteed. ~ te a + # . : y . BIG ULTRA SMART BUY! 3-pc. bedréom; triple dresser, chest, bookcase bed, gray ma-— hogany. Saver $62. : NO MONEY DOWN) LIMED OAK DESK “3159 Handsome and sturdy with ~ large drawer. Reg. 24.95. NO MONEY DOWN MODERN DESK . . . $3450 in’ maple with 7 spacious. drawers: Save NO. MONEY DOWN odgrain §—formica plus 4 comfortable slip seat chairs. Save $10, table TIME FOR CHRISTMAS! | PONTIAC PRESS 4 Lathes TAG, MICHIGA ~_For the first time in its 57 years, Pine Lake Country Club has re- “mained open after the summer) season, An addition to the origi- nal building, built in 1905, provides ‘cold weather facilities. The club + eS he on Selig enedeg oo it — i iets aad soft glow of light in the lobby: Two of the walls are paneled in oak squares, The front wall is all win- dows while the fourth wall is buff. brick like the exterior. Other lighting comes from pierced alu- minum fixtures. ; * * * Most’ of the aqua tile floor is covered with a handmade Puerto Rican rug. This rug has a deep pile. and combines several shades of blues and green, All the draperies are a pale PINE LAKE COUNTRY.CLUB — This view of the addifion to Pine Lake Country Club was taken from the north side and.shows the entrance to the locker rooms. Started in March, the new a was opened for use in November. Boddy, Ben- building. The exterior is buff brick. U.S. Will Grow at FasterRate.. Chief Economist Sees! a Sump to 4.2 Pct. a Year During Next Decade WASHINGTON (UPI)—The -chief econémiist of the National Plan- ning Assn. predicts that the U.S. ratéd of economic growth in the next dec will rise to 4.2 per cent annually, It averaged 3 per cent a year during the 1951-59 period,” * : * * The economist, Gerhard Cohn, said his forérast was based on the -expectation that the nation’s la- bor force would grow and that world conditions would perniit “the adaptation of defense technology to peacetime use.” Writing in the shedatatinne ménthly publication Looking “Ahead, Cohn predicted that Rus- sia’s rate of growth during the per cent, rather than 12 per cent the Soviets boast they will achieve. Soviet Premier Nikita S, Khrush- chev has said that Russia's _ out- put of goods and services will catch up with this country’s by 1970, x * * Cohn siad that if his. forecast proved correct, Russia would not eatch up to the United States for several decades, although the dif- ference in U.S. and Soviet output would diminish. AS Toledo: Tonnage Up. 217 Pet. Over 1958 “TOLEDO, Ohio. w—The Port of Toledo increased its overseas cargo tonnage by 277 per cent in the} — first year of the St. Lawrence Sea- way. i Ps : ‘ * * A a tons ‘er ‘to > ,800| * * sandalwood semi-sheer nmterial with an overlay of fish net. In the lobby ‘this overlay is aqua. Four arm chairs upholstered in a rough textured beige material are grouped arotind: in a large round Formica topped coffee table. Nearer the entrance is a small sofa.covered in a changeable blue- green fabric. Two long black benches with aqua cushions are placed in front of the windows. x *& * Up a couple of stairs and to the ORE Bee OSES "MIXED GRELL — This large grill room can be divided in two parts by the folding leather doors in the center of the room. Similar doors close off the old dining room from the new. addition. Here, the center ‘of the floor is tiled in & y : to. Toledo's : mrs sole Geb deep aqua to esmesy oni a pool. tra left ‘is the men's grill and lock- er room. _|BEIGE DRAPES Floor-to-ceiling windows on the east wall let in. a floor of sun- light. Here the draperies have beige and rust fishnet alternating on the sandalwood background. Lighting fixtures are like those in the lobby, but are copper. The floor is covered with a rough textured carpeting in a rusty earth shade. Walls are paneled in ran-j dom width oak. Back of the bar Pontiac Press Photos jamin’ and Woodhouse of Detroit were the architects. F. H. Taylor Company did the ” ‘The carpeting around it is a rusty earth color. Furniture is black metal with white tops on. the tables and aqua upholstery on the chairs and sofas. A fireplace is set in the paneled wall at the rear. Roman Catholic roe Ra ah —« concludes Merrie. Priests at Rome College | an apricot shade. Tables and chairs of limed oak are used for meals, Near. the windows there are two octagonal shaped game tables, algo made of oak. These have a center of apricot colored lexther, The armchairs of Texas oak have seats and backs of apricot leather, laced with rawhide, Sim- ilar chairs without arms are used at the bar. f * * * y A fireplace graces the wall op- posite the bar. Made of buff brick, it has a raised hearth, On either side of the chimney,is a wrought iron bench with aqua cushions, In the mixed grill ~— or main dining room -—°a folding leather wall is mounted on a ceiling rack -jn the middle of the room. This of |’ course, enables the management to close off either side for private parties, This same kind of door is used between the middle section and the old dining room on the lake side ¥ RUST CARPETING For larger affairs and for the whole room is used, At the| southern end there is an’ oval dance floor covered with aqua vinyl tife. The carpeting around it js. the same rusty earth color as in the men's grill. Alternating panels of rust and aqua. fishnet cover the inside of the draperies. In the acoustical tile ceiling the cement block wall is. painted dances | Split on Rename . By REBA HEINTZELMAN - Thomas Alva Edison is a much maligned man in Waterford Town- ship -- not his memory, just his} last name. There's criticism.— mostly from) high school pupils — of the Board of Education's decision to rename Waterford Township High School. To avoid confusion, the old high school was named Edison and the new one, now under ¢on- struction, Was named after an- other native son of Michigan ~ Charles F. Kettering — whose inventive genius won him the re- spect of the nation. A Pontiac Press survey shows that while some like the new Plan fa School fo establish a policy of selecting distinctive names for our new schools,"’ Two high school seniors dis- agreed. They would like to see their school gets its old name back. - * * * **Too many things will have to be changed,” said Pete Mayo, 4996 Hatchery Rd. “Ever since the school opened in 1948 we've. had > the “Anchor” (school = paper), “Skippers” {({oot- ball team), tne yearbook, “‘Wa- terlog,” the names, others don't x * instance, Mrs. 4912 Hobson St., She + ‘ Eugene -Mi-|, likes them | thinks’ it) would have been! confusing for the township to follow) in the footsteps of Pontiac where the} old high school Js} now called en- ne tral and the new yo one Northern. “Thote - have’ to be more ” high schools in MRS. MIHAY Waterford Town- ship some day,’ she said. ‘‘Names based simply on geographical |o- eation would be confusing, es- For hay, 4 will school . rings, and ithe school song; “Waterford Blue and. Gold.’ 7. All this has_“to do MAYO with Waterford Township,” he added: WANTS SAY-SO sf : +a Another senior, ‘ sie Veronica Gure- — sak, 3423 Norris St.. thinks the students should have had some- thing- to say in the renaming of the high school. She Said: % ipecially to outsiders. “d think it definitely was time there are square lights set flush — a and a large star spray chah. delier at each end of the room, Tables are topped with white Formica, flecked with Koid. All| the furniture has black iron frames, The chairs apd small sofas ~ have bright aqua cushions, k * * A second fifeplace backs up to| the one in the men's grill and| opens inthe big dining room, The entire/wall surrounding it is oak paneled. There are several doors opening} /onto the porch from. this room. SWINGING DOOR A hallway runssfrom. the lobby! directly through to the old dining room...Here the floor. has beige textured carpeting on it, A swing- ing door: is set at: aboyt the sane spot as the first folding wall Beyond this swinging door is the cocktail jounge. A white sun- burst clock with one blue and | one aqua hand decorate the wall | behind the bar.’ Black and aqua | stools are lined up in front. In the women’s locker room one | end is curtained off with flowered | draperies. The entire room is car-| ‘peted in aqua and beige tweed. The block walls are painted aqua. On the locker side of the dra-| peries—which conceal a block wall | —there is a long wardrobe where the women can hang party dress-| es instead of stuffing them in the smaller lockers. * * * In the lounge there are two large eard tables, one of which is wal- nut with a Formica center and brass inlay trim. Chairs are either black or white leather. At one end 60P Dangles Dollars Hook State Party Seeking $1% Million for 1960's Campaign | DETROIT — A campaign to raise $1,250,000 for next year's elec-| tion wars was launched today by} slate Republican. jeaders. * * * < The drive will begin in earnest) Jan. 7 jat $40 plate will be held ground | the state. A highlight will be a iclosed circuit television appear- ance” by President Eisenhower. Don E. Ahrens, head of the GOP State Finance Committee, announced plans fer the fund drive today after a weekend | meeting with 4 regional Repub- lican finance officers, party lead- ers and staff members. Ahrens said about $100,000 of the goal will be earmarked for the legislative “races. 'g400,000 FOR NATIONAL Another $400,000 will go to the party's national committee and much of the remainder will be spent on party Ahrens said. Ahrens described the campaign as “the result of long study and preparation.” He added that “We know where we will spend every penny.” is a low cinnamon sectional sofa. | George S. Hodges built the first clubhouse in 1905 at a cost ef $5.,- 000. He rented it to the elub. In! 1913 it was remodeled, The pres- | ent addition cost approximately | |$300,000. No, Not Carol— ‘She's Merrie Christmas WASHINGTON (P — Latest is- sue of the Washington telephone | +-book lists 44 Christmases -but enly one of them is Merrie. She's. 21, blonde,. and is vir- tually beside herself as the. big day, for which she was named | approaches, Merrie was bern in Adrian, Mich., to. Margaret andgthe late Karl Chvletenas, whose ancestors long ago had Anglicised the French family name of Noel. x * * Merrie, now a secretary to a ‘law firm, ‘says she gets three | sorts of reactions wher she iden- tifies. herself: Some say: 1. “Isn't: that some- thing!" o> — think their leg is be~ ing pulled 3. Some conclude they've heard it wrong. But almost no Bes lets it pass. “It’s a wonderfal conversa- tion piece, both in and out of. 3 State Hen ‘Ordained ROME —Three Michigan men were among 45 students of the Ardale treasurer, the state organization will Ferguson, state told GOP leaders that. close its 1959 books with al] debts paid’ ‘and ‘‘a small balance.” Ferguson said the party raised $370,000 in the state in 1959, a fig-; ‘ure he said was a record for a ‘nonelection year. Every county in. Michigan con- | tributed, the treasurer said, with | about 35 per cent of them meet- | ing their quotas.° National Committeeman John B, ‘Martin and State GOP Chairman ‘Lawrence B. Lindemer reported on organization plans and prospects ‘for the coming year. Past Masters _ at Legion Hold Christmas Party Members of the. Past President's Parley and the Past Commanders ‘of the American Legion, Cook- 'Nelson Post No. 20, have observed Itheir annual Christmas dinner party. KK Ok eral chairman was Mrs. L. Gladys Williams, president of the parley; toastmaster was. past commander Donald R. Macdonald. , Lewis C. Jatrendt apube on served, . “Mrs. Homer . .Sisney, dinner chairman, was gssisted by Mrs. Leo: Mineweas¢r and Mrs. Arno ’Hulet, with “Mrs. _Roger B. Dean - table. when 15*Michigan dinners | spire organization, | party 2 Acting as téastmistress and gen-/ an gave th Year In which they ; MISS | GURESAK | * * * | “We are the ones who attend this school. I don’t know of cne single student who wants the Highway, has nothing but, praise for the action of the Board of Edu- eation. He said, “IT think it’s a fine thing to name township schools for promi nent Michigan people. would take a TONKIN If the students good look at the history of dividuals like Edison and Ketter- might jn- them to work a little hard- ier in attaining a lhetter . than-ave- erage life.”’ Township Build- ing, it ing Inspector Carl Walton, 2831 Edgefield St., thinks that any- thing as im- portant as rena™- WALTON ing a high school, should have been put to .a vote of the people ALUMNI ISSUE “The . people who pay for a school should have something to say about changing-the name,” he said. He added that alumni of a school like to see their. place of graduation main- tain its original name. A Drayton Plains _ attorney, John B. Wilsen, 73 Fernbarry St., believes that this mis the time to establish rules for present and = ‘u- WILSON ture names for all schools in the idistrict.. He said: “When there is only high schoo] in a township, | alright to name it~ after area. However, with more than | one, each should have its own name, and this policy set-up by one it is that the Board . of. Education . will eventually prove | Saperior to ell others.”* Hee ee er A bookkeeper, Mrs. Stanley iIrish, 1437 Woodlow St, has a son in the 10th, . grade and is def-9 “ initely against the 7 change in the inaming of “he ‘high school. “4 “I don't like the * idea of a -nam for a school tha does not identify # the community i is - situated in, : |Most children are MRS, oes org Si\proud of their town, their high schoo] and their home, all identi- fied with the location where gee have lived,” ~ tate in- -- *Fhe Offices of PONTIAC FEDERAL SAVINGS | and Loan Association and CAPITOL SAVINGS and Loan Association and Will REMAIN CLOSED Until Monday, December 28th No Business Will Be Transacted on Saturday, December 26th WILL CLOSE THURS. AT 4:00 P.M. AP Wirephete NEW DIVA— Swedish soprano | Birgit Nilssn won front-page plaudits from New York music critics for her debut Friday night at the Metropolitan Opera, She made her bow in Wagner's “Tristan und Isolde."’ Rules Township Wages ‘May Be Per Diem ' LANSING (UPI) — Atty. Gen. ‘Paul L. Adams has ruled that pay- - J, ment of salary to various township officers may be at a per diem rather than a salary rate, and there is no restriction on increas- ing per diem compehsation, The ruling came at the request of the Kent County prosecuting at- itorney’s ‘office. | It concerned Walker Township, Ww here salaries for township trustees were ralsed on a per diem basis. jot Chrysler Corp. said Saturday. DETROIT w—Retail sale “of new passenger cats in the United ‘States this year may total 6,100,- 000-units, president L.L. Colbert He predicted 1960 sales prob- ably will exceed seven million, second only to the 7,200,000 sales in 1955, The estimated 1959 total in- cludes 600,000 imported cars. He ‘said the industry is planning to produce 2,240,000 cars in the first cuarter of 1960 for the high- est first quarter productien in his- tory. Colbert gave these reasons for expecting an excellent car market next year: 1. Compact cars introduced this fall have helped to stimulate the entire market. 2. General business conditions are promising. 3, Consumer confidence is high. -4. Demand for good used cars continues strong and steady. “We in the automobile indus- try expect increasing automo- tive demand not only in 1966 but throughout the ‘60s,"" Col- bert said. We are entering a decade when the base of auto- motive demand is going to be well above that of the 1950s._ “The population of the United rysler Chief Sees lor 7 7M illion Cars Jhas allocated one and a half mil-|§, itt, All purpose zigzag aoe. We years immediately - ahead. These (faa young people will provide a strong market for cars, especially used xe ears and economy cars.” .. x Colbert said that by 1965 it is xf ae expected that between 66 million compared with 58 million now and | * SPECIAL RECONDITIONED “Rebuilt by Curfs Avehens: ising Our Own Parts” and 69 million cars will be in juse, 36 million 10 years ago. : «xe He said the continuing’ spread: a aa of population-inte the suburbs and: the increase in multiple-car house-| Attachments holds will spur the demand for’. « Included cars, | +t $1. 25 Week Goes fo Health Research ie NEW YORK (UPI) — The Na- * tional. Foundation announced it * lion dollars for education in the ie" health professions. The allocation becomes effective Mg Jan.. 1, Basil O'Connor, foundation ‘Bg president, said: He said $600.000'5 CURT'S Appliances wale be Sond to ewe pee 1077 W. Heron After Hows OR 3-9702 doctorial research fellowships in ie . OPEN MON., FRI. ‘TH 9 P.M. *e States is now 28 million greater medicine and related biological and physical sciences. EXERERESSSSSSSSSSORE ES One marriage in four ends in di- ‘voree today, according to the Con- ciliation Court of Los Angeles, 1000 children a year. Fino PENDANT With 14K Chain Reg. $69.95 now ® 49”° f / / wh AOE IPOH ELS 14K GOLD Site i, tahhe

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Sizes 3 to 6x Other Dresses $3.98 t $12.98 | Wen in Doubt-Always- Give a Lion ae sift Certificate ‘lof $2.56 a week in the nation's Grim Safety Council | Forecast 160 Over Normal Weekend CHICAGO’ (AP)—An estimated 530 persons may be killed during the long Christmas weekend, says ‘the National Safety Council. . The gouncil said the number would compare with 370 deaths 4 on the highways during a non- aa es tholiday -weeke nd at this time of ; year. | The count of traffic deaths will istart at 6 p.m, Thursday, Dee. 24 and continue until midnight Dec. 27, a period of 78 hours. During last year’s Christmas holiday, which’ covered a four-day period, or 96 hours, 594 persons 'were killed in traffic accidents. oe U. S. families spend an average 54,000 drug stores. To help sell their products through these and other outlets, manufacturers -of ‘toilet. requisites spent nearly $35 million in newspaper advertising vin’ 1958. MARA SHS AAAS S r Some tailored, others sv Seamprufe and $ 3"; ae” | 98 $ 3°* May Bring Top Price at Spring Auction LONDON @® — Reimbriondt’ s “Juno,”’ a portrait lost for almost 300 years, comes up, for auction next spring. Art experts believe it ‘will fetch at least $420,000 and may even rival the world record auction price of $770,000 paid last June for Rubens’ “Adoration of the Magi,” . The “Juno,” was among 54 other old Dutch masters from the collection of the late Dr. C. Van Aalst. The “Juno” is a late work by Rembrandt which was the sub- ject of a law suit between the painter and an Amsterdam col- lector, Harmen Becker, in 1665. The ‘picture — the mode] for which seems to have been Rem-) brandt’s devoted mistress, Hend-| ‘yickje Stoffels — is recorded irr the’ - inventory of Becker's paintings. It disappeared after his death ‘and was missing for more than two centuries. -Then, unrecognized, it turned up) in a Bonn gallery. The gallery sold) it in 1935 for about $22, believing | it to be a picture of no great consequence, “Juno” was bought by a Dutch furniture dealer and passed through several hands before fi- nally being acquired by Dr. Van Aalst. By then it has been accepted as the lost portrait by nearly all experts on both sides of the At- lantic. State Senate Confirms Four Reappointments LANSING uw — The Senate has confirmed four of Gov. Williams’ re-appointments to state policy- making bodies. They are Saul R. Levin of De- troit, to the state corrections com- mission for a term ending Oct. 1, 1965; Dean ‘W. Rumbold of Big )pelp to the country’s economic Rapids and Carl A. Hoppert of > owth; the President should have East Lansing, to the board of ex- arniners in basic sciences, both for terms expiring Oct. 29, 1965, and Dr. Perry B. Burnstine of Detroit, to the state council of health for a term ending June 30, 1965. Cockroaches Written Guarantee. From Houses, Apartments. Groceries, Factories and Restaurants. Remain out only one hour. No signs used. Rox Ex Company 114 Pont. St. Bk. Bidg. FE 8-4558 | ‘Jano, Lately Found Pua J cases. This Chois tmas! Give Your Boy or Girl Better School Marks pest few weeks New York's Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller has taken ‘a stand on a number of issues rang- ing from labor to farmers to foreign. affairs. On some. he’s ‘been direct, on some fuzzy. On and off for weeks he’s been whisking around the country to fig- ure his chances if he ran against Vice President Richard M. Nixon for the Republican-1960 presiden- tial nomination. , * x * line up Republicans on his side— and Rockefeller admits the vice president has’ a big edge—this has - been a little like looking for Santa Claus. So he has had to identify. himself by taking a ao a se He hes had to give “publican isome reasons+beyond a/ big smile —why they might prefer him to \Nixon. ,Nixon, being in front, has stayed quiet, ony / In this past week /in the Mid- west Rockefeller has been bang- jng into Nixon strongholds. But he’s kept up a ch¢erful look. He said he will announce early in January whether/ he will try to také on. Nixon. AGAINST POLICY Probably the/ most controversial thing he has said yet—because it ran headon into President Eisen- hower’s policy—was his stand on nuclear weapons testing. The United States, Britain and the Soviet Union have suspended the tests while they try to work out some fool-proof agreement to end them altogether. Rockefeller| said he would resume the tests. * * * His reason: To keep the United States from falling ‘‘behind in the advanced techniques of. nuclear materials.” * * Here are other positions he has taken, Since Nixon has had years to 9 on the decision which was handed down May 17, 1954. Federal aid to education: He’s for such aid — for school construction and scholarships — “where there is proven need." Birth control: He said: “If the people of a country requesting technical as- sistance from the United States in (as in birth control) it would seem an area where it had knowledge) ROCKEFELLER DONS WAR BONNET — New York Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller, right, says thanks to Chief James Sun Eagle after being made an- honorary chief of the Pawnees and given a war bonnet. The ceremony was at Okla- homa City’s airport before Rockefeller left for peace. to me that the United States would want to cooperate with them if it, was in the interest of the other country.” : * * * Health insurance: He favored a system .of health insurance which would preserve the private kind but supplement it) with government action where needed. # AP Wirephete Texas on his political tour. Sun Eagle gave Rock- efeller the Indian name of Nashuro Larwlak- alhru, which means ‘Noble Man.’ He said Indians, now are peaceful, and hopes all pedple will seek Non-Communist atfidavit: He called for repeal of the non- Communist affidavit required of [college students seeking loans un- der the National Defense Educa- tion Act but he said he thought they should be willing to take the loyalty oath required, by law. ¥* x * He doesn’t agree with sugges- tions by some Republicans that Labor: He suggests labor forego further ‘reductions in the work week as a legal power to compel compulsory arbitration when a. long. strike threatens the country’s welfare. EXTREME CASES But—he said he doesn’t think compulsory arbitration should ap- iply to all strikes, He made it plain he was talking only about extreme / On the Supreme Court's ban on public school segregation: ; He said: “I regard it as neces- isary and historic affirmation and ‘clarification of the essential liber- TAPPAN 36” GAS RANGE Fully Insulated Oven Smokeless Broiler \. ties and the abiding principles by iwhich America must live.” This was a more direct stand than Eisenhower has so far taken Discount House Prices on All © Smith-Corona e Remington For 32 Years ALL MAKES @ Rar) ard ar Rar) wfhd « at bi bs hs hb hd As hd Bs Separate Set and Clear keys — balanced. Factory Price $121.37 Our be ng Discount Prices Carrying Case i Underwood Leader NEW Buy Your Portable Typewriter Service Guaranteed — Trade-in Allowance Golden-Touch® -—— Quiet Tab! » Big-Typewriter Features! 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E& Telegraph Rd ae) cor. ntiac estimated half a million dollars 7 PM. | worth of shopping carts in the past| _. SAT. two years, a Eood Industry. Com- : BAe mittee “Spokesman 2 r page 6M tick Be ark fo Pick Up Your’ 4 GEN ERAL- ELECTRIC TV 17” HAMILTON DRYERS Beds... SLAGOO = os $16995 + sx $1999 61 W. Huron St,, Pontiac MAYTAG DRYER With adjustable .tem- perature control. _ (155 sq. in, « viewing area) with “out front” ‘ “sound music or F alarm Portable $s] 59 ~ General Electric CLOCK RADIO - SSI Wake to sir $ GEO Model ‘l 48” OPEN EVERY NITE "TIL — : eS Well Deliver for Christmas | 7%: (OOD HOUSEKEEPING of PONTIAC | ij } ~—_ IN YOUR HOME Here is the Telephone ‘Man. He is in your living room, installing a trim red extension’ phone to match your new draperies and chair covers. This afternoon he will be down the street, advising newlywed Mrs. Smith about where to put | her new kitchen phone. *Tomorrow if you glance upward as you drive past the new housing development, you will see the Telephone Man atop a pole installing the cables that will bring phone service to a new community. technicians in maintaining their fre-control r : on ah arid stretch of New Mexican desert, working with his soldering iron on a’ in The month after—who knows—undersea in a sub perhaps overhead in a B58 jet bomber. The Telephone Man is a member of the Wt Ha ia aging Fre~he nt ht hk er Bite . military equipment. Se A A AR al RE S ON GRANTS ~ BABIES TO BRIDES... 0-0-OH GRANTS HAS THE. _ MOST BEAUTIFUL DOLLS ONLY $ a ay ; i 25" BRIDE... She looks so lovely all dressed in white from the top of her veil to the tip of her lavishly lacy gown. The bride stands. 25- inches tall . ... has a fully- jointed rigid vinyl body (you can-move her arms and legs). 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THRU SAT., 9 to 9 advertised in PARENTS’ luxury patent leather will not crack from continuous wear or extreme temperature changes to 15 degrees below zero, there is 50° more leather ‘‘breathability”’ than any other patent leather and its brilliance will last. indefinitely. Sizes 8 thru 3 in children’s and misses MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER _ wae At Sibley’s Miracle Mile Shopping Center Shoe Fashions That Capture a . Feeling of Holiday Cheer Newly arrived—A group of beautiful Holiday shoes by “Accent” in a variety of colors and materials including Lustre Calf, Kangaroo and . Gleaming Black Patents. 2° You'd never dream they cost so little ! MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER STORE ONLY! PRECISION CRAFTED SWISS WATCHES Amazing $ 95 Plus 10% ww e Fed. Tax % Expertiy-Crafted Swiss Movement. % Tarnishproof Cases % Fashion Wristbands Dozens of reliable watches that make treasured gifts for their beauty and long- wearing use. They are so low priced you can give several . @ sport watch tor dad, a dress watch for mom, a first- watch for sis of junior. LFor Girls & Women] ™2isisttrivtieren mx" S$. S. KRESGE COMPANY Miracle Mile Shopping Center S. Telegraph at Square Lk. Rd. . Open Daily 10 A.M. to 9 P.M, faeat Ouacity! Uu MIXMASTER A. PERCOLATOR B. MIXER peal : Cc. —% y ( —\\ laa a) \_¥ a The only compieteiy automatic toaster, Bread lowers automati- cally, no levers to push. Toast tises silently and automatically, ~ Sunbeam COFFEEMASTER E, Automatic Coffee Maker New streamlined styling and beauty; more powertul for greater perlormance. Exclusive Bow!-Fit Beaters. in 4 colors and chrome. Finest automatic percolator made —éopper with heavy nickel anc chrome plating inside and out Choice of 8 and 10-cup models. °- Sunbeam Controlled Even Heat FRYPAN Makes everything taste more de- licious. Choice of 4 sizes, medium size in colors. Covers optional. Model also available with Remov- able Automatic Heat Control. - Brews 1 to 10 cups of delicious cotfee. Made of copper, nickel and chrome. plated inside and out easy to keep clean. ‘ MIXMASTER F. ’ HAND MIXER e G. STEAM or DRY IRON Lig! ht, powerful. New Push Button Beater Ejector. Stores Exclusive “Steam Flow" Vents tet _Contfortable plastic ap Sonicone 3 neatly on wall. dn white, pink, you iren on an “All-Over Cushion trates warm drying on hale. ton aeons Soap mn Steelcase ok { : A. Percolator .. ...19.88 and 22.88 { E. Coffeemaster ....... : B. Mixmaster ............. 37.881 F. Hand Mixer : C. Toaster ......16.88 and. 22.88 G. | D. ‘Auto, Frypan , 13.88 to 19.88 | H. i PENNEY'S Mt Come out and try a few samples and we know you'll go home with an arm- load for Family, Friends and Your- self, Too. Open 8 to 8 Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday Open to 6 Christmas Eve Our Candy is “Kitchen Fresh’ Made in our Candy Kitchen * 4642 Elizabeth Lake Rd. Hear Ye! Hear Ye! Christmas Needs Candy ROSS’ FINE CANDIES FE 2-2509 focen the nearest thing 10 a0 Sn litcrnational language since World War II, but it is beginning to have gore competition from Rus- guage situation is appropriate be- ‘cause celebrations are being held ‘all over the world this week to imark the centennial of the birth jot Dr. L. L. Zamenhof who for- mulated the — artificial ‘“‘world ‘tongue"’ called Esperanto. | Esperanto has gained many adherents since its initiation ‘io om oF Amenica's ! ‘ TANDING RESTAURANTS , @ TABLE SERVICE © CAFETERIA @ CARRY-OUT PANTRY HOW—IN, EFFECT DAILY A POPULAR FOODS CONTEST $225 in Prizes Weekly Information and Entry Blanks available every day—from 11 a.m, to 9 p.m. No entry fees; no purehase necessary. Join in the fun, Extra entry blanks on Monday and Tuesday. | ery ‘look at the international lan “|the Soviet Union and its satellites. . |ONE OF THOSE THINGS business, diplomacy and seience. Pie is at present the prime language in all these fields, with French running a poor sec- ond. / French generally was accepted ag the common world language; 40 years ago. Forty years from now it may well be Russian, de- pending on the political ‘fortunes and commercial aggressiveness of the United States that so few: se-[ ; 8s, sot co at 8 sian publications in the original.’’ Piron said English is much eas} ier to learn than Russian -but. is) much less precise due to vee of English grammar and multiple word meanings. United Nations translators firid it less difficult to translate. Russian into the official 'U.N, languages — English, French, “The growing importance of Russian is the current internation- al language phenomenon,” said Claude Piron, Belgian-born lan, guage expert at the United Na-| itions. ‘‘No oné could. have predict- ‘ed it two years ago.” become more insistent on the recognition of their language at international conferences. Schodl children in the satellites are taught Russian and publications printed in Russian flood the Iron Curtain area. ‘ * * * “Up until last year only the So- viet, Byelorussian and’ Ukrainian delegations at the United Nations made speeches in Russian,”’ Piron said. ‘“‘Now the Czechoslovak and, Bulgarian delegations are using | | Russian more and more.’ But it is in the field of science that the Russian language is making the greatest inroads, ac- cording to the linguist. “Russian scientific Publication 1 is Piron said the Russians have) Spanish. and Chinese — than to translate English into other lan- ages. Piron also noted these recon ‘language trends: ‘ —The nationalistic new coun- | tries-of Asia and Africa are -pro- moting their native tongtes at the expense of former colonial languages,- such as French and English, at the risk of isolating | themselves from the world com- munity. —Arabic has taken on suchinew importance with the rise of Arab nationalism that jt has been ac- cepted as the only half-official lan- guage at the United Nations. —German’ is retaining its im- portance in many European, Asian and African areas, especially in commerce; but it has never re- gained its pre-war primacy in the iscientifie field* —Spanish continues to grow in |popularity, especially in countries ‘that have trade relations- with La- tin America. | —Chinese Mandarin is still the ‘most important language in _the PERFECT GIFT FOR DAD RECLINER * i i ee a ae $ ea of Pontiac” Member Federal Deposit. Insurance Corporation — = , No Business Transacted at Either Bank From | 3 P.M. THURSDAY DECEMBER 24th MONDAY DECEMBER Hours Apply to Entire Facilities gth t Pontiac State Bank Community National \ | \ y iBeauty and comfort per- ; sonified. Reclines to any EJ position. Wide selection of a2 jor whe A gift he can You Pay Right in our Store aaa at TWEED RUG You'll be proud to own one $ f Q) : of these lovely 9x12 durable tweed: rugs. Your choice of colors to fit any room decor. Be Sure to | Ask for - ; | Wyman’s Bive . “Trading Stamps | Good for Valuable Premiums +) not uneven aren HOLIDAY HITS! PLATE GLASS MIRRORS! Mirrors for Every Purpose, Here Are a Few: _ 20°28" . HOSE. 32x38" .... 19.95 | 24°°x30" . 15.95 34x46" .... ores a ee ee. t __ DHE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 21. 1959 RE A AS RR GURNEE NE LAN AOL TRIE A ARE RTT meee. | _) Genes: sc © e i p i H i = ez if See i | - _ . r — Lionel Pullman Fae Wha — , Seleiii mel 3 l eerwareran ’ a u_§ =F \ & i > ne , - a wt a. eS aoe , t 2 ] | YT TG THAYER 299 | 350 “CHILDREN’S “Sno-Coaster | pow. | ROCKING Saucers | BASSINETS CHAIRS PADDED | Complete with . @WHISTLE and SMOKE. ENGINE © TRACK. ©@ TRANSFORMER ae e* @ Genuine Lionel TRACK | SNOW SHOVELS 027 Gauge | T 5: SNOW PUSHERS | Ea. Curve or Straight for ONLY No Limit | 4 he R44 O32. eo). 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Automatic COFFEE MAKER Model P-31 . @ Brews 3 To 9 Cups © Automatic Brew Selector S $8 e@ Easy To Clean y 2 |, S44 GF ». a A oF f 1111 Vy /// RT WHISTLING 7 / 3 $6” TEA $497| TABLES $9 Te KETTLE | 4 CHAIRS - | | on een AUTOMATIC » Tae ELECTRIC CAN OPENER Value. Complete With Cover SALE! *, SPECIAL! SPECIAL! 2 Automatic Record Changer Reg. $69.95 Value .® SPECIAL! SPECIAL! 2 & fy © SPECIAL! SPECIALS COSCO CARD TABLE SET Styleaire Pattern tee JUST IN TIME FOR CHRISTMAS HOURS: Daily 9:30-9:30 Sunday - 10:00-6:00 Choice cat, $43 ° a. $24.95 Insurance officials admit gen-, erally there is no concrete, statisti-| eal evidence yet of few or less! should begin to show positive results within the nect few years. _Even in Michigan, the state gen- erally conceded to have the driver education program in th country, insurance statistics show that young drivers are a far greater risk than adults. st {Advertisement (Ad vertisem ent) Tormenting Rectal Itch Stopped In Minutes Science Finds New Healing Substance That Promptly Stops Itching and Pain of Piles New York, N. Y. (Special) —- One of the most common afflic- tions is a condition known as “itching piles”. It is most embarrassing for the victim during the day and especially vating at night. ‘® matter what you've used without results — here's good news. For the first time, science has found a new healing sub- stance with the astonishing ability to promptly stop the burning itch and pain. It actu- ally shrinks hemorrhoids — without surgery. Medical sci- ence has proved this substance | aageeres a remarkably effee= ive rate of healing. Its germ- killing properties also help pre- vent infection. In one hemorrhoid case after another “very striking improve- ment” was reported and veri- fied by doctors’ gbservations. This improvement. was main- tained in cases where doctors’ observations were continued over a period of months! Among these sufferers were a wide variety of hemorrhoid condi- tions, some of 10 to 20 years’ duration. ‘The secret is this new healing 7 substance (Bio-Dyne*) — dis- | eovery of a world-famous research institution. 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TIMEX for sho stainiess sft. $100 2 Week SELF WINDING WATCH The new Timex winds itself automatically with your slightest movement and gives you these features: 360 degree rotor assur- ing “oxeatet. accuracy —— Armalloy bearings resistance. — chrome case — back —— unbreakable crystal: COMPLETE SELECTION — ALL STYLES FOR. BOYS—GIRLS—MEN—LADIES FROM Diemond Ring - $49.95. F 50c Weekly $6.95 oF Silver Serving Platter $17.50 Watches by PRODUCT OF LONGINES-WITTNAVER ous business. and wear with pride for A Wittnauer is that kind of watch. Made. by Longines-Wittnauer, Wittnauer watches offer the best dollar value you can find. nauer is the watch to give to one you love, 39° Pay $1.00 Weekly . £ “4 DIAMOND DUO $ 50 untings. Specially Pky oes p- 89 *“ * * HIGH RATES NOT ENOUGH During the three years Michigan tes has had a statewide driver educa- tion program in its public high schools, young .drivers in most cases have had to pay anywhere from 114 to 2% times as much as adults for ear insurance. ! Michigan Insurance _Informa- tion Service (MIIS) figures shew, however, that these higher rates were unable to. offset losses among the young drivers of more than twice the amount among adult drivers, The margin between premiums paid by-the young drivers and the losses paid out by the insurance companies for their traffic acci- dents-was 8 per cent greater than the adult margin, despite the high- er rates charges by typical com- panies for drivers under 25, x * * The MIIS has prepared a stand- ard speech for delivery before civic groups by insurance officials who belong to the organization. “It will be another four years, when the ranks of the young driver population will ‘ nearly saturated as possible with young driver education gradu- ates, before the full effect of this UMMC} You want @ Witt- You Can Own an Diamond for as little as $1 007% A WEEK eC sually Jovely bridal gold> pay on $1.50 a Week 21-DIAMONDS 21 brilliantly cat dia gold. A wedding band $1 6-DIAMONDS diamond weddin best the ence of example. be as Zo) ZL \ ds exquisitely set in 14 kt. tarplees. * ‘ a Week Large center a flanked by two $2.00 2 Week. - =~ =s WHES RAWDPA awe AND GRANOMS B Pega: ; Te * * * should be.’ The insurance officials say driver education is aimed at teaching four fundamentals of safe driving—driv.' ing skills, rules of the road, the) need to be a good driver and the, proper attitude toward driving. * * * The first two can be’ largely taught in the classroom but par- ental and adult guidance is needed to supplement the formal training in the other two fields, they say. If losses by young drivers can | be reduced to the level of adult | auto | insurance costs in Michigan alone | driver losses, they say, could be cut by some $17,000,000 a@ year, almost four times. the anoual cost of the program. ers, even when its full effect isq felt. ee ‘BETTER BEGINNING’ | “Obviously, this is only an effort | “Apparently too much of our guidance of young drivers in the @ use of modern cars under modern conditions hasn't been all it | i To date there is no statistical evidence to show that the program! is even paying for itself in either dollars or prevention of suffering in accidents but the insurance in- dustry still has faith, | yet SET ve Lotro Pr 2.00 qssurized e_ Gitts: by _for the hap rt hed B eae io i American Greeting Christmas Cards BOX of 25 59° ONLY HUETS pi est faces P 15 BULB INDOOR OUTDOOR -~ LIGHTS CHRISTMAS ssos SESS © LIGHTS Value |. "oO hey Decorate the -oufside} Goes Out. $ 19 100; weathargrost for Rest Stay safe, colorful Christmas.] | On we BUY For office, school, hom ‘\\ a ae ONLY AT 44 ' oe NC THRIFTY DRUG STORES 7% PD Valid Only Until Jan. 3, 1960 CREE 10 FLEXIBLE STEEL RIBS COVERING EXTRAS or e ne ———— af dol ae WViy VW as «4 B pA Reg. c 98c Sample box of delici- ous assortment of | 10 oz. aerosol self light, lates, fruit,Netc. ARTIFICIAL SNOW k choco- spraying can; Non- flamablé, washes oif. anything can happen when you wear E AM E } BLANCHARD GIFT DUET Now $ 10 Only Jealousy and Evening Star Concentrate; gift box. knighthood . adventure create a lovely disturbance with gifts of fragrance Fine Matthobell: ~ LENTHERIC GIFT SET 5-Piece $439 Set Set of four fragrances; Shanghai, Miracle and ‘Tweed. Lovely gift box of heavenly Christmas. fra- grances: : A OR BESTEL LARA GONE SEE: REELS IRS REELED (Di LEE ELON AE LEE LET ERIE LEO GEG ROH LE Three elegant crowns of fer milady. Wind Song, Sines Stradi- vari and Beloved, in o box y ith red velvet. $3.75 Fe ale of the HIS’ EXCELLENCY DOELUKE DUO Lo aceite APOTHECARY JAR A luxurious old-time apotheca jor laden with 50 both olf pn Ag GOLDEN ABANO) xopateion FILM emblazoned red fox. sules af the exotic fragrance that 5 soothes the ptyche.” $3.50 plus - R ¢ : se, =Y ~ $1.35 ; ROYAL DUO : Every women's cholee for rego j elogance....crowns of Wind Son Sed Seeadivert colognes ina oe. - ©-127- 620-120 \5) bm io f ty rer Ne j—s box. $4.59 plus : : $7.50 Show him who is ‘King of Your Heart. Gifts for ' good grooming, . - -Trumpeting Out é B ~ «- Fe a6 A Christmas Story _ By- Wall Scott 72°21 | @ 1960 by nea Serine. mc. At Wheel of World Destinies Four ‘Ancient Mariners’ Sail On By EDDY GILMORE PARIS (AP) — Four remarkable men — whose ages total 286 years—are engaged in’ a health taxing climb to the summit that would stagger thousands of younger mortals. . x *« * This unusual quartet is, of course: West German “Chancellor Dr. Konrad Adenauer, who'll be 84 in 17 days. . + President Eisenhower, 70 next October. French President Charles Andrew Jo- seph Marie de Gaulle, 70 next November. And the baby of them all, British Prime Minister Macmillan, 66 this coming Febru- ary. In tooks and action each belies his age. How do they stand the pace of tgious travel, rough, tough political negotiation, conducted indoors and often under nerve- racking pressure? * * * The only thing their daily routine seems to have in common’ is — early to bed and early to rise. All of them drink a little. Adenauer likes German white wine and some of the headier vintages of France. And an oc- casional whisky. Eisenhower will take the oc- casional whisky and the wines of lunches and dinners. De Gaulle is partial to wine and an occasional cognac. Macmillan likes strong cigars and mellow port, Adenauer loathes smoking, Eisen- hower has abandoned it. De Gaulle hasn't been smoking in years. But they all like to get to bed between 10:30 and 11 o’clock at night and get up with the dawn. Two of them, Adenauer and Eisenhower, watch their food and eat lightly. De Gaulle and Macmillan are fair trenchermen. Ike plays golf. The rest don’t. Macmillan ‘is fond of walking, but gets very little chance to do it. x * * Three of them are married. and the- ‘fourth, Adenauer, is twice widowed. Eisenhower, De Gaulle and Macmillan. have soldiered in two world wars. De Gaulle i and Macmillan each were three times wound- ed in World War I. Adenater was imprisoned by the Nazis. Eisenhower shouldered for four years the burden of the highest. military command. Is there some inner strength that sus- tains these men in high office? One thing is certain—they give unself- ishly of themselves. And each is deeply re- ligious. | Mater. about 60; Wasil Kierucok, 52, and Thomas O'Day, 99, The hotel eatered to railroaders and old-age pensioners, * * * The building, on Lima's South Side, is probably 60 or 70 years old, police said, While the upstairs interior where the fire broke out virtually was destroyed, firemen contained the blaze and the frame of the building remained standing. More than 100 million people ‘in the United States are indirect owners of corporate sto¢k through savings in, insurance companies, pension funds and the like $8. BABY DOLL .. 2. 9.99 BETSY WETSY DOLL 4.90 2.909 DOLL CRIBS .. , 1.99 2.99 BABY'S FIRST DOLL 1.99 Cure ! of Tune With T his Bt. he added: Teacher's Aims rat race. Some people like it.” ~*~ * * jhe filed New York nightspot en- ® . igagements and made recordings, LIMA, Ohio, Blaze “New York is ‘Kills 6 Men in Hotel He conceded that he had made} LIMA, Ohio (AP)—Six elderly; HAWO Mave! ATALL 18"! EXTRA STRONG! EXTREMELY pretry! DECORATIONS jgeneral furd soon. may be increased .|“disappeared or missing persons” THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, DECEMBER 21, 1959 GEORGE'S DEPT. ST Rules State Entitled fo Unclaimed Stock * MUSKEGON YAP) — Michigan's | by upwards. of $65,000 as the re- sult of an opinion \\by Muskegon Citeult Judge Noel. P\ Fox on un- claimed Continental Motors Corp, stock and dividends. yee He ruled the stock and payments credited to persons held fo be escheat tp the state, The opinion is expected to affect similar situ- ations throughout Michigan. The case in question listed 370 missing persons with about 3,800 shares of continental stock and |' accrued dividends, Judge Fox ruled that the es- cheating process is legal although Continental Motors is incorporated in Virginia, His opinion held the firm's principal seat of operations is in Michigan. Continental is a) major employer ia Muskegon. The firm changed its stock setup in 1922 and in 1935 when exchanzes of stock were involved. In some instances the old shares were not rexchanged built up over the. years, The eom-} pany alleged: that Miehigan had no claim in the matter because the ALL TOYS REDUCED And Many More—Too Numerous to List! Come. Save! coL.orFul ! SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Jazz! go0d money, but.worked day and | trumpeter F. Allen Smith is back night with very little sleep. in a fire that swept through the| teaching fifth grade pupils after! Smith got his teaching creden-| upper floor of the two-story Hol-| a brief but successful career with tiais after graduating from San jieran Hotel here Sunday night or middle-aged men were killed) big, name bands. . \Francisco State College after! xt kt * i UR? te « P | . . co ; > . . ; . he ori ~ ar iT. He teaches at Bur The victims were identified by, Smith, 34, said in an interview)nett elementary school, police as Barney McCloskey, | Sunday that jazz and his desire ‘about 50: John Phalen, about 67; | in GAY coors! \ GEORGE'S ae fifth of incomparable © to teach had been in conflict for! years. He left a public —sehool teaching job in 1958 to go on tour; Petrified tree trunks are so com- mon in the vicinity of Piggott,' Ark., that many have been ‘used! Patrick Moran, about 68; Fred with Benny Goodman, In addition as cemetery tomb stones. ' . IF YOU WISH THEM THE BEST~ | - WHY NOT GIVE IT? —Schenley Che Uhushy of Rlegance in the Decanter of Elegance Your gift speaks eloquently of your desire to give the best when your choice is the Whisky of Elegance.i the Decanter of “s h Schenley . . . all at no extra. cost. Just remove the cello- *. phane sleeve, and it’sready_ to give, oe : Regular pints are also ri gift-wrapped in the same ; all beaut ul foil: Sey \ \ a sheet’ © WLENDED WHISKY, v6 rn: 65% train Hora! Sis Schnin Dititon Co, HG” ELECTRIC SHEET SINGLE CONTROL REGULARLY *21.95 NOW ONLY 69 WHITE ONLY Two OR MORE! Me-46ae-03— NSUM ‘GIFT SPECIAL ASK ABOUT OUR SPECIAL REDUCED PRICE ON PURCHASES OF aurel Electric lankets and Sheets at OUR LOWEST PRICE EVER ELECTRIC BLANKET SINGLE CONTROL REGULARLY 29.95 ‘NOW ONLY $ CHOOSE FROM. MANY COLORS ERS POWER PERFECT FOR firm is ehartered in Virginia. 1,00 5-PC, SATELLITE SET ,...... 8-PC. TRAIN SET . 1,00 $10. AIRLINE PLANE ......... 6.90 TICK TOCK CLOCK 3.99 STURDY / 4 { Is i | } 1OOdOS SOLD and dividends—~were}— ELECTRIC BLANKET DUAL CONTROL REGULARLY £34.95 NOW ONLY 99 CHOOSE FROM MANY COLORS ft CHRISTMAS! COMPANY —— NO MONEY DOWN—JUST CHARGE IT! Se | Overniter by SAMSONITE Warm, Gift BLANKETS 3° Towel Gift. Sets Give a Lasting Gill. Men's. Wool ha k Bd A No MONEY DOWN B.V.D. Sport . Shirts 299 A. Real Gilt Men's Better SUIT ‘29 Topcoats .. . $29 Dress Pants . 7.99 . White Shirts , .3.99 ee 14” | FA Free Doll , + with 3-Pr, ‘Ladies’= 7 NYLONS: 99° 3 Pair 2.97 SHIP ‘N SHORE BLOUSES 1 - We miminee: jens SLT eT ee Te eee eee ee Tee ee TTT TT CCPTTTTTPCTITE LT LLL LETTE aeeeeeii titi iti tee te eet tee ate “A terrific shortage of Office employees has shown bosses that the mature woman's ex- perience is a real asset, She ; now is eagerly sought. . If you are such a” woman, you can learn business’ skills— er brush up former skilis— with a quick course here. The cost is low. Instructors are experienced and under- thie abilities and - confidence you need for an office position. Thousands of mature wom- en have entered office work recently. You, too, can do it, - with our training and the help of our Placetnent Service. Phone our offices, or mail the blank below for more facts, We will be happy to discuss your. opportunity in office work. But do act now. The Business | nstitute of Pontiac. 7 W. Lawrence FE 2-3551 | ee Se ee ee ee : Please send me the facts about office positions for mature women. I understand that there is no obligation. NAME.. ben eees apREsé..... bocce esses CITY, STATE... » * +. > WASHINGTON (UPL) — Broad-| | Gen, William P. Rogers’ offer to help draft a radio-TV good prac-| jantitrust laws. \ | They said his action removed a miajor stumbling block. to stricter self-regulation. : Some cireles were known to be- lieve that the industry had not been rae as vigorously as it jmight in policing itself because of " professed fear of antitrust action. Official Snubs. Status Car as’ Waste of Taxes’ PROVIDENCE, RI. (AP)—Here ‘is a state official who‘ is more interested in saving public money ithan be is in status. Charles A..Kilvert, Rhode Island ‘director of administration, said, | Thursday night he will turn in his} expensive car for one in the low price field to save the state mon- ey. . “IT just don’t see any sense in ==RAMMLER-DALLAS= DODGE-DART Only $2,076.00 Sa nlee Pactery Simea, 1001 O1 MAIST. rue. — Sales Tax & License Extra ysier, Imperial, Dedge Truck ROCHESTER se 2 “SN WF rance, 3 | assigning expensive cars to direc- “ltors,’’ he said, “Low priced cars lean get us around just as well and a lot. cheaper.’ The divorce rate in the United| States is six times that of Canada, | i three and half times that of The sciéntist, Dr, Cari C, Seltzer, based his conclusion on studies |# extending over several years of 252 Harvard men, The men were classified accord- ing to their “masculine compon- ent” as indicated by body build ~“, anatomical traits. a report to the American ink for the Advancement of Science, Seltzer sald that “‘the.. heavier smokers show the great- est proportion of individuals with weak“ or very weak masuline components.” / Conversely, thé more masculine feminine build, he said. REFLECTS PERSONALITY Seltzer said this ‘‘suggests that. for a specified type of individual. ismoking may be a reflection of certain personality and behav iorial traits which are characteristic of his biological makeup.” In addition to being heavier smokers, Seltzer said, the “less | maseuline persons tend to have an aversion for strenhous exer- cise and sports, are apt to be low in physical fitness muscular work, for hard and are often | peor in muscular coordination.” “They are apt,” he continued, | “to be _less well integrated and + —_ men smoke less than those of more}: | Who’ s Heavier ‘Smoker? | , 1 Surprise! Not He-Man . Jcasting officials welcomed Atty. | WASHINGTON (UPD — A Har-;more ticiea crusiins nak lees to’ vard scientists reports that he-men less than 4 tices code which would not violate “ke wri er pays itive, “They are more frequently shy nd antisocial and more frequently and inhibition. . . “Academically, they most often select the areca of gris, letters and philosophy asa college major, and their choice of career tends to follow these same lines of interest.” ~- Seltzer recommended that fur- ther studies be undertaken to de- termine .whether heavy-smoking, ess masculiné men are more sub- ect to lung cancer and coronary a a 2 prison. population. normal hearing date. was reported, the number of bers was temporarily halted by a stepped-up policy of parole re- leases through scheduling parole bearings. 90 days ahead of the During the past three weeks, ; mates, has been on/the rise and disease than their he-men fellows. stood at 9,749 at the last count. The stady also said no changes! have. traits of self-consciousness |!" the law or administrative poli) cies are foreseen that might off} set the continuing increase in the) it in- The he Latest in Eye Weat Came in ead Haye Your Present Glasses Adjusted — No Cha “You Can Dot the Best at Baker Optical! 8612 N. S 9:30 to s: No Appointment Neseer ; rgel y Settle tor Less?” naw--Across from. Federal’s RIDAY NIGHT Tit 8:30. WEDNESD pene ee ee of everything! STORES - SELECTIONS - GIFTS You'll find more, easier and at a range of prices in Downtown Stores. Shop tonight or tomorrow night. Be Sure You Get Your FREE PARKING STAMP: Be Sure to Ask for Your Parking Stamp in These Stores! ARTHUR'S 48 N. Saginaw St. BACKENSTOSE BOOK STORE 19 E. Lawrence St. BARNETT’S CLOTHES SHOP 150 N. Saginaw St. SAM BENSON 37 N, Saginaw St. DR. B. R. BERMAN, 0. D. OPTOMETRIST 17 N. Saginaw St. , BOBETTE SHOP 14.N. Saginaw St. \CLOONAN DRUG'CO. ie N. Saginaw St. CONNOLLY’S JEWELERS 16 * Huron s. THE DeCOR SHOP 26 W. Huron St. FIRESTONE STORE 140 N. Saginaw St. WAYNE GABERT 121 N. Saginaw St. GALLAGHER’S MUSIC SHOP 17 E. Huron St. GENERAL PRINTING & OFFICE SUPPLY 17 W. Lawrence St. GEORGE’S-NEWPORT’S 74 N. Saginaw St. HUB CLOTHIERS 38 N, Saginaw St. JACOBSEN’S FLOWERS 101 N. Saginaw St. LEWIS FURNITURE. CO. \ 62 $. Saginaw St. MARGARET ann SHOP SHOP DOWNTOWN Free Parking Validation Stamps Given With Each $2.00 Purchase! NcNALLY MEN’S WEAR 106 N. Saginaw St. | 9 5. MODERN DAY FURNITURE 15 E. Pike St. OSMUN’S MEN’S WEAR 51 WN. Saginaw St. FRED N. PAULI JEWELERS 28 W. Huron St. PEGGY’S DRESS SHOP 16 N. Saginaw St. PAULI SHOE STORE 35 N. Saginaw St. PHILIP’S LUGGAGE & SPORTING GOODS 79 N. Saginaw St. WIGGS (24 W. Huron St. PONTIAC ENGGASS JEWELRY CO. 25 N. Saginaw St. PONTIAC GLASS. CO. 23 ™ Lawrence St. RAPPY’S NATIONAL CLOTHING STORE SALLAN JEWELRY CO. 88_N. Saginaw St. SHAW’S JEWELERS Y 24-N. Saginaw St. SHERWIN-WILLIAMS PAINT 71 W. Huron St. STAPP’S. JUVENILE BOOTERIE 28 E. Lawrence St. TODD'S SHOE STORE 20 W. Huron St. “WARD'S HOME OUTFITTING CO. 48 S. Saginaw St. : ty cae f- eh DOWNTOWN PARK-SHOP me, eo Saginaw St. ‘eo? Ca | | i ON EE OEE ER ES I EEE an) * 90 DAYS SAME AS CASH! f “= 24 “MONTHS TO PAY! - GUARANTEED DELIVERY BY CHRISTMAS | HOLIDA BARGAIN TRAIN e FREE DELIVERY 6 FREE PARKING S OPEN TONIGHT THRU WEDNESDAY ‘TIL 9 P. M.! to Dad THERE'S ONLY ONE STRATOLOUNGER OFTEN IMITATED NEVER DUPLICATED NATIONALLY ADVERTISED IN ee Sooo eee ee ee ee ——w 7 sa ease ied < CEE CEE LEC 7 20 UNBREAKABLE Christmas Tree ORNAMENTS 10 BALLS 5 STARS - 5 BELLS | Yes, Truly Unbreakable While They Last! : 20 8 { Reg. $2.59 CASH and CARRY a OPEN TONIGHT thru WEDNESDAY ‘til 9 ae ee Mis Maes i i Mia Si ee f 4 yee = SSS Se Se with love. STRATOLOUNGER ral AMERICA'S FINEST RECLINING CHAIR Delivery by Christmas! This First Time Low Price! >B3 8s With Exclusive 3-Speed Magic-Massage Vibration Other Recliners at $59.95 — by Stratolounger Christmas Tree 15 = 54° MULTIPLE WIRING IF ONE GOES OUT THE REST STAY LIT FREE DELIVERY BY CHRISTMAS! fsa ORCHARD 1 37 W. Varon st. - | ie WYMAN. FURNITURE | ~ MeCANDLESS CARPETS THE PONTIAC PRESS ize tunes a I A Me Bory Se \ AE We Haron St, 18.W. Pike St. | | ee . ; ) io . fi — USE OUR LARGE PARKING LOT — 108" NEG C14 a i Si: i Ws "eM Mt Ma a Hs is hs Ma i i a. te ae gs ae ps, Ma ag Me ae es ae Ae Dede i ee Ss se _— 2 THE PON'TIAC ‘PRESS MONDAY, DEC EMBER 21, 1959 _AWENTY-FIVE is _ TOYTOWN: Gas: PRICES IN HALF ROPE A a. ey ee, es We're loaded with name brand toys. We must sell them : | . before Christmas. We've cut prices irt half! Hurry... + These are below cost! Don’t miss out! Sale Starts Tuesday at 9 A. M. DIS e THIS IS IT... ABSOLUTELY... BELOW COST ‘4. Hasbro ATOMIC SUBMARINE °9% 7 Tudor ELECTRIC FOOTBALL °3°° 20 Electric Microscope Set i%..54Q°° ‘12 SHIRLEY TEMPLE DOLL ‘6% *) DAISY CHEYENNE RIFLE °° 10 15” BOWLING SETS ;,, °5°° 8 Mattel Winchester RIFLE ..ti.. 54° ‘10 Remco Project Yankee Doodle $5°° 20 Electronic FIGHTER JET *19° ‘10 MACO COMMANDO SET 3 °5” 528 4 SPEED PHONOGRAPH $44” ‘6 PEG TABLE & CHAIR SET § °3°° 3° PLA-SCHOOL MAIL BOX ‘47 2 Mattel Buckle Guns ‘1 h Monopoly...... 2° 3 Tickle Bee... “1” wit Chemis Se eh wot E97 23 N. SAGINAW ACROSS FROM. © PONTIAC STATE BANK OUR ONLY LOCATION ae _WHeRE ALL MERCHANDISE = GUARANTEED! _ y Local . ; 2 * : a . ; 4 . By JAMES i. KILGALLEN ; NEW YORK: (UPI)—The “'Fren- ged Fifties” were. great news- making years—a decade of heart- aches and successes foreshadowing more startling things to come. * ‘The Space Age was born, And as the 10-year span 1950-59 came to 4 close man was getting set for interplanetary travel. "In the decade great events tugged the hearts of men -everywhere. | i It was a fast and exciting | ried. The gloom and __pessi- nism occasioned by the outbreak ef war in Kerea in 1950 changed Yo cautious optimism and ‘hope. 1959 as a result of Nikita &hrushchev’s visit to the United | States and President Eisenhow- er’s unprecedented goodwill tour bi Europe, Mideast and Asia, Fin ie ae < ‘Travel time. between the United States and Europe was cut to about seven hours. And the Daited States shot to. the forefront in the development.and production of atom-pow¢red submarines. Familiar names’ usurped the page one headlines —‘Eisenhower, ‘Khrushchev, Macmillan, Truman, Nixon, MaéAfthur, DeGaulle, Pope John XXII, Churchill, Queen Eliz- abeth II, Princess Grace Kelly Ranier, Nasser and Fidel Castro. The "50s were sometimes frantic, often fearsome and never | secure as the cold war poised | the threat of a nuclear war that could annihilate ‘millions af peo- ple in double-quick time. this period of stress In and ‘strain, America's role as a world ‘power reached its zenith. Competi- ‘tively, the Soviet Union flexed its ‘military and economic muscles and irose to the most exalted stature in 395.12, of. which $1,218,211.29 was in cash, Tye same year two Puerto Rican fanatics invaded Blair House and tried to assassinate President Tru- man. PERSONALITIES MAKE NEWS Armistice negotiations in Korea were instituted in 1951, Sir Winston Churchill returned to power and Sen. Estes Kefauver (D-Tenn) launched his spectacular televised crime hearings. _ Harry. 8S. Truman decided: not to run again for president in 1952 and Gen, Eisenhower became the Re- publican nominee, defeating Sen. ‘Robert A. Taft of Ohio at the GOP convention and beating Stevenson in the presidential election.in the fall. The’ United States conducted its first ‘successful. H-bomb—§ experi- ments. Elizabeth Il became Queen on the death of her father, | es—Years of Terror and F pitched a perfect World Series game the Dodgers, Fem- tine readers reveled is, the fairy princess story of the wedding of Grace Kelly to Prince Rainier in Monaco. President. Eisenhower suffered a mild stroke in 1957, precipitating a controversy over presidential ‘dis- ability. The Seviets were busy sending up Sputniks, used in integration trouble at Little Rock Central High School. The Milwaukee “Braves won the World Series, and the Brooklyn a and New York Giants moved to the West Coast. : In 1958 the indictment of in- dustrialist Bernard Goldfine on. charges of contempt ef Congress: stirred up a lot of excitement in Washington, Soon _thereafter presidential assistant Sherman Adams resigned, Pope Pius XII. died and~ John Federal troops were: rs| Fitth French Republic, it had hit the moon with a rocket, and Vice President Nixon's visit to Russia, Ingemar Johannson of Sweden won the world’s heavyweight championship..from Floyd Patter- Son in New York, The Los Angeles ers took the World Series. Secretary of State John Foster Dulles died of cancer! Revolu- tionary leader Fidel Castro as- sumed control of Cuba. Gen. Charles’ de Gaulle was - pro- claimed first president of the And Alaska and Hawaii were ac- cepted as the 49th and 50th states jin the union. Burke Favors Easing Curbs on German Navy WASHINGTON (UPD — Adm. Arleigh A. Burke, chief of naval ae THE, PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 31,1050 ____ ~~ Hopes" Gone edicia WASHINGTON lief measures now could jeopar- for all taxpayers, x * Acting Seale ‘of the Treas- ury Fred C. Scribner Jr. gave that advice Friday in a letter to (AP) — The!’ Treasury says piecemeal tax re-|, Rep. Wilbur D. Mills (D-Ark), e "Science made phenomena]! its_history. | King George VL ctinne gai vee drides. With the Space Age, Amer-, . ee ee oe | mine ooree Ne _.__|XXHI was elected as his successor, Operations, on he favors jhe hier! e jean and Russian probes intoduter, Heavily populated, * ideological- | Iran broke relations with Britain Business toop a sharp turf for the 7°°mS OF PELTUSHON {6 AER space brought within range the minded China stirred itself and: over oil and King” Farouk was'better in the United States and|!@rser Submarines and surface ousted from his Egyptian throne.'[ana Turriér’s daughter ‘fatally PYarships. o. sibility of interplanetary travel. menaced peaceful India, Freedom. A Sov net rocke iy hit the moon. aspiring Hungary was violated and|,. /"¢ death of Stalin in 1953 paved stabbed Johnny in| Returning from a week's trip to The United States fired a variety its revolution crashed by Sovi et (the way for Khrushchev's ultimate Hollywood. \Britain and Germany, Burke said of missiles into orbit and selected tanks. The free world, of neces- | "5° to No. 1 man of Russia. Riot-| The visit of Khrushe he v to. the exceptions were needed to . the stven astronauts, or spacemen— | sity, tightened its alliance through | ing broke out in East Germany, | United States followed by Presi-| treaty which limits West Germany erat uhom may be hurled into|NATO. And the United Nations |‘M® coronation of Queen Eltzabethide nt Eisenhower's _ triumphant submarines of not more thaa space in 1961. ‘carried on its ceaseless struggle |“@4 staged in London, a British! goodwill tour of Europe, Asia, and/350 tons displacement and to sur- oaAND AS oy ‘to maintain peace, jteam scaled Mt. Everest, and Sen.'the Mideast commanded world at-, face warships of not more than JETS AND A-SUBS ABOUND | Selecting the biggest stories of Joseph R. McCarthy of ‘Wisconsin tention in 1959. 3,000 tons, The Republic has . Jet planes brought nations closer’ this stirring decade was no easy |tunched hearings on subversive) Of great interest, too, was the applied for an undisclosed number tegether. A nonstop flight whipped influences in government, Sovtet Union’ s announcement th at lof exceptions. task. ayound the world in less than 48 : ra + DECADE’S TOP 10 STORIES KOREAN WAR ENDS A truce ended the fighting in. Stom pant ato WORLD OF WONDERFUL LAST MINUTE GIFTS (Advertisement) However, in the opinion of United Korea. Sen. Taft died. History’s| i») “‘thated ift-bu in Press International client news- | ‘worst air disaster killed 129 per- g YIN. papers and UPI editors who bal- sons in Tokyo and atom spies| * loted year after year in nationwide | ‘Julius and Ethel Rosenberg were polls, these were the top 10, . 1950—Communist- invasion of executed in Sing Sing Prison. | ‘ Now I can hardly Give her warm wishes; REAL SPORTING Box of 3. 1.65 ” believe it \ was is me! Korea and: U.N. intervention. , In ron the nation was shocked by’ . INITIALLY HIS ; aa cesnnann sotaeecpeaes 1951—Truman fires Gen. Mac- i nome of Representatives! 2 «.« give her a i Hand- embroidered, Washable nubby rayon : |Arthur as U. S. commander in the by Puerto Rican fanatics. | hand-rolied edges. shirt; matching ' |Far East. ' 4952—Eisenhower wins GOP nom-, ination and is elected first Repub-' llican president in 20 years, defeat- ing Gov, Adlai Stevenson of Illi- nois. " | 1953—Death of Stalin marks new alignment of power in the Kremlin. President Eisenhower's heart 1954—Army - McCarthy hearings attack in 1955 evoked deep sym- and subsequent condemnation of pathy and concern throughout the McCarthy by Senate. ‘country and abroad. 1955—President Eisenhower's; the AFL-CIO merged. In Argen-. heart attack, The U.S, Supreme Court out- : lawed segregation in the nation’s : 3.95 schools and the trial in Cleveland | ef Dr. Samuel Sheppard for the murder of his wife hit front | pages. ROBE 599 Lies and gifts and do-it ' if | 1956—Revolt of Hungary against Ang toe eee eer at wihiens Nylon tricot quilted | wrapping. Bah! ‘Humbug! Then [ Co trike ‘it was announced that Dr, Jonas duster length robes, became knowledgeable. Imperial | heen. s continuin gE: Salk’s polio vaceine is an effec-] Carefully detailed, each Whiskey ON handsomely gift- | istruggle over racial integration of tive preventive of paralytic polio. seam bound for easy Brooklyn's beloved Dodgers won | schools. their first World Series, defeating 1959—Khrushchev tours United, ithe highly ‘touted New York States, agrees with Eisenhower to yankees in seven games. negotiate further on Berlin with a deadline. Of course many other big stories broke in those 10 years —from the conviction of Alger Hiss for perjury in 1950 to the | ¢onfession of Charles. Van Doren wrapped, free. Now | know holiday | giving's as much fun as getting—with | emooth, popular Imperial. machine washing. In aqua or rose, Top news of 1956 was the revolt in Hungary which was put down by Russian troops and tanks in a ‘blood bath. The Suez Canal crisis ialso worried the world, and vio- lence broke out in the South over school integration. Gift-wrapped al no extra cost. $981 aton 5, 36 N. SAGINAW 4/5 QT. | in the TV quiz show scandal in * x * CODE NO. 408 | 1959, . Don Larsen of the Yankees Beginning with 1950, there was . : BIENDED WHISKEY + 86 PROOF + 70% ‘the sensational stickup of the) HIS TOP GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS ° HIRAM ‘Brinks express office in Boston. | WAKE & SONS INC, PEORIA, ile Masked mien’ got away with $2,775,- CHOICE Richman’s hat gift certificate. Fa 8.50 COVERAGE Foulards, Acritan* knits, burnished tones, flanellas. LOSSES SSSSSSSSSSVIVSVVS GG e . So that you will have more @ ‘> RCAVICTOR 3 money to buy other gifts BS 388-4. a5 | ° Diem’s Pontiac’s Popular ata nianaadheneas eS POWERFUL < Y Shoe Store offers this | © o iP j FINE NECKWEAR . é ALL TRANSISTOR ° ~- in SENSATIONAL | sure. racu NEAT COMBO eo : . | . | . ; $1 -1.50 tales “en _ _ ® PORTABLE “| Pre-Christmas Shoe Specials | 20 art ee rs | ved . ® . oe , | e RADIO | ©] 3 Big Days of Savings— Tues. - Wed. - Thurs. COMPLETE Lo : : 3 e 980 Pair 800 Pair WOMEN’S e WITH Ra WOMEN’S WOMEN’S , CARRYING | &] | Soft ond Hard Sole| | Hish ond Mid Heel CHA-CHA || § CASE Mle pes rasnion suoes|| ° BOOTS ||. zy EARPHONES Irie All Sizes Grey and Block. | | f and BATTERIES We ‘say5 ae S56 Res. 6 v Ou ~ = | : ) $ : e Choice of Colors ' | bi 29 6° ie 95 2 y Ao 2 Pair $5 Black - Blue - Red - Brown All Sizes ; < / y 90 DAY ty | YS" SERVICE 4 Women’s Original All Leather | 2 $| LAKE PLACID BOOTS | 90 | 42 a Wonderful to get or to give as a Christmas Gift—Black, 9 7 @ I grey, beige and red. All sizes, fleece lined. Our regular PAIR i OUR SPECIAL PRICE! PY 90.09 volue special VEST ) ae PLAYS | MEN’S MEN’S MEN’S — ie sa . * WINTHROP a rirecw TRAMPEZE LOAFERS HOUSE SLIPPERS Black-Brown Genuine Glove Leather Our $7.95 Value. SB All Sizes _87. N. Séginaw St. - for every day. : _ popular heather tones. 1.00, 3 for 2.75 . , 4.95 was, §3Q° _ 90 DAYS SAME AS CASH! mm EASY TERMS! All Leather All. Sizes—Black ond Brown - Our $10.95 Value & for a wonderful buy you can always rely on. SESE EES PONTIAC'S POPULAR | SHOE tinal ee Ts Ys ee” : "MIRACLE MILE SH PING CENT R w A | Next to Federal’s: Se =e Deily 10 “rn are 2 z ‘ i / : i ‘ < ae ‘3 i i 5 + x i Be Te iaeenns am wr “Y eur “Appliance. Specialis?” Ad Saginaw St. - FE 5-6189 e sessesesesssese? itr PONTTAC PRESS. MONDAY, DECEMBER. 21, 1059 3 fe) Paar \ Be eB calor I pause in s * * * Relatives placed his age at 117. “The wounds of the and * West Heads Claim Hekelg’ Summit Talkers in Clouds PARIS (AP) .— The windup of|ence left off last summer, Now, the Western summit conference to-| Adenauer believes, the Americans, day finds each of the four nation’s leaders happily convinced that he has scored a personal success. x * * In their frank exchanges of views President Eisenhower, French President Charles de Gaulle, British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan and West Ger- -. »blunted the sharp edges of dis- agreement within the ‘Western al- liance even if they were not able to resolve all their problems. LIKE APRIL INVITATION One result achieved without much trouble was the invitation to Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev to meet with Eisenhower, De Gaulle and Macmillan in Paris in April. If Khrushchev really de- sires serious. negotiations with the West, it would seem he, too, has reason to be pleased by the week-| end talks in Paris, which he must} have watched with so much in- terest. * * * Ideally, diplomatic negotiations conducted a Allies should make each man feel like a winner. In that sense the Western surimit talks weré a success even if many tough details were passed on to working groups of experts. Eisenhower was described as highly satisfied with the outcome. He ‘succeeded, for example, in convincing De Gaulle that the United States supports the French President's plan for settling the Algerian problem on the basis of self-determination after peace by ‘estored. STILL PROBLEMS Eisenhower and De Gaulle were unable to resolve their differences over integration of the North At- lantic alliance’s defensive «ystem which France opposes. There was hope in the American camp, how- ever, that this matter ultimately can be adjusted, at least to pro vide for unifying Western Europe’s air defenses. es * * * De Gaulle clearly secured great-| various | among Western} er consideration for French views leaders. The Western preference for Paris as the site for the East- West summit next spring also could be regarded as a triumph for the proud French leader. Macmillan secured agreement) from his allies for one of his long- range. goals--the move toward a series of summit conferences. Only a few months ago Macmillan alone favored this idea of a chain of summit meetings with each’ one attempting only Kmited objectives. * * *® Adenauer ‘was believed to be the} happiest of the four. His allies as-| sured him. that they would not be-| gin negotiating--with Khrushchev | on Berlin at the point where the) Geneva forelgn ministers’ confer-| New Bridge in uP Opened to Traffic “HOUGHTON #—A bridge, res} placing -an old span linking the twin ¢ities of Hancock and Hough-ji~ ton since 1895, was opened officially | to vehicular traffic yesterday. * * * In the first 11 hours after the barriers came down, 11,000 cars crossed the new steel structure. | British and French will have mere line to pay out slowly when they talk with the Soviets about the) Lost Velaren of Ci “vl Warlve Formosa erty and. justice for al the ge ig oo eR ;paid their respects German and Berlin problems. ‘Bread, Water’ Youth Arrested Battle Creek Judge's ‘Severe Sentence Fails to Slow Him Up | BATTLE CREEK (UPI)—Rich-| ard Lee Babic, 17, who spent al short jail sentence in solitary con-| finement on bread and water, was back in the arms of the law today. He was captured yesterday after! he wrecked this stolen car in al ;two-mile chase by police.- Babic| was a police prisoner in a Battle) Creek hospital, held for gar theft, | investigation of burglary and as a parole violator Judge Alphonso AL Magnotta came under fire for his “severe’’ sentence of the juvenile delin- quent. Informed of Babic’s lat- est arrest, the judge said, ‘You can’t-expect miracles.” He still believed, however, his bread and water and solitary con-| finement sentences would help) some of the juveniles he has had| locked up. * * * William Einhardt, also 17, was! ; for disorderly conduct in a ight morning. Judge Magnotfa said that despite! the two cases last weekend he} sentences. “experimental” = and the Gray. All rest Ay Americans in honored An 00 $2 a 00 Week 50 . 999 SHAVERS AT EXCEPTIONAL] SAVINGS A- complete selection of famous make shavers for men and tadies. Alt are priced at much less than you would expect to pay. ° REMINGTON AUTO-HOME Reg. $31.95 $1695 REMINGTON ROLL-A-MATIC $1595 Reg. $20.00 $988 LADY RONSON SHAVER: Reg. $17.50 $950 ec pong demtong solids, plaids, stripes. wools ie . ¥ blends and inport- ed Cashmeres. $29.50 to $85.00 Seed ca A GE NR ig ais ~The “ Se Imported gloves of the worlds ae Shawl collar Pullover by ~~ Gregor. ee finest leathers . . . Unlined Sone Robert Bruce ... A terrific weight . . . Completel RC or lined with fur or wool. re eee new style in a bulky knit wool with Curon insulation. 5 smart ~ © $3.95 to $19.95 F 2 blend. 4 smart shades. — $19.95 $12.95 ne aE Famous Van Heusen “Century _ See _our tremendous selection : The new “Boat Neck” Pull- Vantage” Wash & wear shirt eS of Cardigan Sweaters... Im- eee over . . . A wonderful and with dual cuffs that can be ; ported wools ,.. bulkies and : popular style by Robert Bruce, worn buttoned or with cuff ightweights by famous mak- age Pachion Hill, McGregor and links. ers. . Paes . Himalaya. 5.00 $10.00 to $29.95 : $8.98 to $15.95 aR Handsome gift Robes in wash- | : lon able fabrics and imported se : sleeves. Wools and blends. Pac wools by Rabin and Pendle- Gift Pajamas : gE ass . | : = 4 Banlons, Cottons . . . Rolid oF £3 ton. $8.95 de tenho ~ SO St Fete aha Also > are = ; 7 ES : sila ; “ * ‘ : : ae see mm ¢ . ‘ : z = PS. o ae ont e o E jJounge — 5 Fass: i wo | $4.95 to.$12.95 ? vos oo ee : é models, Sizes 4.8, C, D. $3.95 to $10.95. DOWNTOWN PONTIAG . me 51 N. Saginaw a < TEL-HURON CENTER - : Haron at Telegraph ICE COLD a «COCA-COLA - FOR EVERYONE ALL DAY THURSDAY, DEC. 24th ne et at am Stores aoneeeen we Beret _HYGRADE'S- to Limit Quantities — 4 : ; None Sold to Dealers ae or Minors . a ; , e 12 TO 15 POUND AVERAGE SHANK PORTION WHOLE-HAM ............. 1», 46¢ CENTER SLICES ............1s 79¢ VELVET Brand S ICE CREAM | HOLIDAY . “HALE 63 0: as POULT RY GUARANTEE—You Must Be Satisfied " DARTMOUTH Frozen Refreshing STRAWBERRIES | COCA-COLA Special Low Price! ° € 10 OZ. PACKAGE | REGULAR size EACH BOTTLE AGH / . OR WAX BEANS DEL MON PINEAPPLE. GRAPEFRUIT DRINK “3 # Bh Caren eeeee * eeeeneree Clie aeeRe Tt7 + Vopesed seeder tie ere a oe * aera beeeeene * eh - 4 cee ey ry es weewv ees, ores ee 2s oT 41 'N. Sagina aw St, ° Miracle Mile GIFT SUGGESTIONS FOR LAST .MINUTE SHOPPERS ROBES . SLIPS pgs PETTICOATS P MAS , _ BLOUSES PANTIE (Sets) SKIRTS SWEATERS NYLON HOSE’. =‘ SLACKS . _ CHILDREN’S WEAR ‘PAJAMAS DRESSES SWEATERS _CAN CANS SOFT TOY STUFFED 41 North Saginaw Street — Miracle Mile SYNOPSIS: . Bante end Oonik have discovered that the feason the lee making Wife mis- erable for coe =~ is that ~ belives nobody him... Santa has a plan te ‘Sim 8 vite but first - needs the feindeer he set loose back in Sante Land. Chap. 13 _ Santa’s eight reindeer did not want freedom. Neither did they ‘want to find food for themselves if it meant. leaving Sdnta Claus. So when Santa turned them loose they had merely hidden behind a snow ridge, When he had started reindeer had followed, always from a distance always’ out of sight. : They were very jealous of Keotuk because he pulled San- ta’s sled. When the polar bear started pulling the sled the rein- _ deers’ hearts were broken, They | theaght Santa had turned them free to get rid of them. But still they trailed him loyally. fine hunter’s eye and his father had trained him well. From the ivery beginning he had seen the ireindeers’ antlers far behind and ‘sometimes heard the clatter of their hooves. | So now he said to the Ice King, “Do you have some salt?” The Ice King replied. ‘‘Cer- ‘tainly. I have taken salt from ‘sea ice and I use it to keep my ice from .melting in the summer- time. But this year there has been no melting and~i-have salt to spare.” | “fe * * Oonik took the salt the Ice King gave him and spread if on the steps. of the castle. Then he clapped his hands and waved his coat and shouted. By and by the reindeer, who | were hiding behind a hill, came Stop all 9 kinds of ITCH the way'doctors do! WHERE WHY do you itch? do you itch? @ Allergic itch — @ Nervous Itch @ Eczema Itch : Under — @ Rectal tich 4 4 @ Detergent Itch ~ Body @ Shaving Itch Gros @ Chapped Skin Rectum @ Winter Clothing @ Pruritus Toes GALAMATUM BRINGS RELIEF BEST New formula contains 6 anti-itch ingredients . to soothe pain, speed healing, stop itch fast! Science has developed a. remark- able new formula that combines 6 anti-itch in jents to a a 9 kinds of itch in seconds! Cal CALAMATUM® Ointment, re new ted cream actu- ally stops itching and othes on spreading itch like poison ivy, because it helps dry open weeping lesions, prevents spreading. Pre vents risk of infection from scratch- ing, too, because CALAMATUM furns\into its own pink bandage —won't.rub off until you wash it off! Get cooling, soothin CALAMATUM.~Ointment at a drugstores without prescription. too. Effective even <—_FORMS ITS"OWN PINK BANDAGE © 1959 Isodine Pharmacal Corporation, Dover, Del. up, one by one, and gratefully licked the salt from the steps. Then Santa came out and greet- with tears in his eyes. “Now,” said Santa to the Ice} King, “you must come and woo! the Sun Daughter.” The Ice King. trembled with | fully combed his silken hair. “Do I look all Fight?” he asked | nervously. “TRRESISTIBLE” “Trresistible,"’. said Santa. He harnessed the reindeer to) the sled and he and Oonik and ithe Ice King and Keotuk and even the polar bear, who did not want} to be left-behind, got on the sled. The eight reirideer,overjoyed to be! iworking for Santa again, did not mind the heavy load. They lifted the sled into the sky and away | | they sped, In no time at all they arrived in a land far to the East where | the Sun Daughter dwelled. Now this maiden was the fa-| _vorite daughter of the Sun. She) dwelled in the East so that her} father could see her face the very first thing in the morning when he came over the horizon at dawn. Though she was very beauli- ful she had never married be- cause she was very finicky and hard to please. Still she realized| she was getting older every year! and she often longed for a hus- band to spoil her when her father was not around to do it. x * * So she was overjoyed when San- ta Claus suddenly appreared at her out on his journey with Oonik the: It was trie that Oonik had a/ | ed them and embraced them - | he had brought her a suitor. * * * “Show. him in!’’— she little bedroom to change into a ‘yellow frock and arrange her lovely yellow hair. the Ice King standing there, over- come with admiration, the icicles trembling from his whiskers and the hoar-frost gleaming in his hair. “Oh Beautiful One,” he mur— mured tenderly and moved to take her hand. By D. HAROLD OLIVER WASHINGTON (AP) | Paign plans, * * * While the meeting's agenda has| “GET OUT! Get out!" screamed the shocked Sun Daughter. bright_little cottage and announced | When she came back there was. Dem Committee fo Plan 1960 National Convention jback in horror. She snatched up a blanket and threw it around cried her shoulders. eagerly and then rushed to her| “Get out! Get out!’ she 'screamed. “I can’t bear the cold!” slammed the door. Furious, the Ice King stalked from the house. ‘‘See!"’ he shouted angrily at Santa. Claus. “Every- one hates me. Take me home! I shall go back to my castle and +make a winter that wil] last 4 | thousand years!” Next: One More Try |Same number of votes in the com- The mittee as it has in the national eagerness. He took a comb of ‘Democratic National Committee | convention instead of the tradi- icicles from his pocket and care-| i) meet here Jan, 22 to discuss | tional two votes each. On the basis |1960 national convention and cara-/f the 1960 convention vote appor- | tionment, this would give New ‘York 114 votes and Illinois 69 votes, with only 9 each for Ver- yet to be decided several state | Mont and Hawaii. All these states ileaderg have indicated they will! [now | have an even voice in the ifight National Chairman Paul M. | Butler’s proposal to penalize states ‘behind in their campaign dona- i tions, . * * * Some committeemen also have spoken up in favor of the Butler proposal which’ would assign con- vention seats and hotel rooms on \the basis of state records of finan- |cial support of the National Com- ‘mittee in the 39 months up to | April 1, 1960. * * The Demmcrate have been hav-| ing difficulties meeting current! \operating expenses at ittee, * * * Committee officials see little chance of the Arvey proposal get- ting committee approval because many of the smaller states would refuse to give up the equal power chey now enjoy with the larger states. * * Arvey could take the fight to |the national convention for a show- down vote but he has not indi- jeated he would take that. step. Thirty-one states néw have boat national Numbering laws in line with the headquarters while at the same| Federal Boating Act of 1958. After time raising money to pay off a April 1, 1960, the U.S. Coast Guard huge deficit from the 1956 cam-|Will number every boat of more paign, than 10-horsepower operating on Another scrap that may materi-| navigable waters of the. United alize at the Jan. 22 meeting is proposal which Illinois Commit. teeman Jacob M. promised to put, forward which would-give the larger states great-i| er voice in National Committee decisions, . * * Arvey would give each UPARK JEWELER’S | GIVES DISCOUNT. PRICES ON ALL MERCHANDISE! ") GENUINE Pioy DIAMONDS S old W; th A rime {S/iAl hf U/ di @ —_ 50 with purchase — 50 Piece Nationally ‘| Advertised —f adele a SETE ctl lta tee ct. lta tlt. lt . BULeva — ELGIN ~ _— 40% to 50% OFF SALE GRUEN WATCHES REGULAR SALE | $39.50 $19.28 | $49.50 $24.75 — $59.50 $29.75 $69.50 $34.75 $79.50 $39.75 BIRTHSTONE _and CAMEO RING SALE! REGULAR SALE $15 $ 7,50 $20 $10.00 $25 ©, $12.50 _ $35 _ $17.50 wc bie the} as se REBEESa&eaeae oa a| States. ‘ » |delegates to a constitutional con-| a H gaomaethetiises: Hagllendleo jof one delegate from each’ state|| representative district and one: _| are Republican-dominated. On the basis of present strength| # But the Sun Daughter stepped | | And she went in her bedroom and The compromise proposed by the League of Women: voters calls for from. each senate district. convention because delegates would be chesen only: on the basis of Senate districts, which in the Legislature Republicans would hold a 30-vote edge in a convention if delegates would be named only from Senate districts. '|They would hold only a 10-vote! edge if the compre was ac- cepted. * & * Staebler, speaking at a politi-.6 cal seminar at Wayne State Uni~ versity, said ‘1 predict that. the voters next summer to call a con- stitutional convention: Paul D. Bagwell, 1958 Repub- he*-still favors a‘ - constitutional convention. acta teeter enentientineen nen U. of M. Has List lof Translators. sity of Michigan scientists and en- gineers boost their stock *in_ re- search. ; Hundreds of scientific articles and treatises written in foreign lan- guage journals can be ‘translated and made available to research- ers here under a unique intra-uni- versity translation system, . ¥, a faculty member who across a scientific pa- per in another language often | had to dig, search and scrape to find a person qualified to trans- late it, Now all he needs to do is eall the wniversity’s technical translation service and within minutes he will have a list of qualified translators. The service-is the brain child of! Rudolf .B. Schmer!, a member: of | the university's research institute. Schmerl has compiled a card file of persons available to ‘translate articles in 15 languages: Chinese, Dutch, Danish, French, German, Hungarian, Italian, Japanese, Ko- rean, Norwegian, Russian, Per-| sian, Romanian, Spanish and Swedish. “T felt that if a technical man needed a translator, the university being what it is, there would be someone around to do it,” Schmer! said. ‘‘The arrangement is advan- tageous to both because the fee is generally lower than that charged elsewhere and because the transla- tor has an opportunity to use his proficiency and earn extra in- come,’" || DETROIr™ (wen — :— ‘Democrats will. back a “¢dmpro- ~ Democrats up to now have 2 been cool toward a constitutional | Democratic party will endorse the | ¥ compromise’ and agree to ask the | { jican candidate for governor said/§ for Any Language ANN ARBOR ® — A language & broker system is helping Univer-|§ ae Bo hd ~- Choose heat, air and b abeie for normal loads; air and tumbling for synthetics ond palicate fabrics : . that require no rot to dry, BRAND NEW—LATEST MODEL! t * 121 N. SAGINAW GAS DRYERS INSTALLED FREE 2 YEARS TO PAY ~-.90 DAYS. SAME AS CASH or SR FE 5.6189 EE Fe em Fe nF tae te ie It | a 6 2 62 é at al y iF. hetientina’ ~~ on, tt SR te a, anil . hie vin eek ctig me Medan ace for Speedway Fuel Oil, Speedway insures your fife. f you are ne longer here to pay the bills, Speedway delivers fuel eil fer the rest of the recon ot ne extra cost te your tamiby. FUEL OL FOR COMPLETE DETAILS ON SPEEDWAY'S LIFE INSURANCE PLAN FOR FUEL Oil USERS, CALL ‘OAKLAND FUEL & PAINT 436 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 5-6159 te = a L * ALL FOR | 2828888 888 See eee “ 8 a8 -PLASTIC WALL TILE PKG, DEALS» You Get Enough Tile for 5x7 |___Bath 4 Ft. High (70 Sq. Ft.) | @ 70 Sq. Ft. of Tile @ 2 Gals. of Mastic hgh gh @ 21 Ft. of Feature Stripe ® ‘} Spreader © 10 Fest of Base " - ONLY . ae . 7s.) (eft. gy ng : YOU"GET ALL THIS: Ft. of Tile | a i f ‘8 8 &@SSaeeeee se eee eee ee ee “2888 8 ea ee oo 8 (hte pee tose i i i * “THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, DECEMBER 21, 1959 ¢ * A LWAYS THE meee? Ee ger Vil the gs re} Orchard Lake Open Daily ‘til 9 P.M. : ” eat ‘til 5 P.M. a i i Aa ae te * 2 Tate Lama SR AC Ae i le Ne a DOMINO SUGAR My LB. Q SAVE BAG esting Chistes $2.06 purchase purchase we piece SET $1.29 —— _ ge, _— ENRICHED SLICED 7 _ af “You cant beat these lis 3 de ti 7 WHITE | Y Wo, Pty Sa Pure —Fresh , SOE | Sy BREAD aan U.S. CHOICE QUALITY _ POT sw, } Roast “OQ BUTTER | LARGE LOAF ICE CREAM 19° SAVE 14¢ . Carton Cc 3h i SWIFT’S FINEST ae GRADE 1 \ in a Pure Pork BREAKFAST 22. 2D g: SAUSACE '"™ U.S. Gov't Inspected Young, Plump, Tender Maxwell House or Hills Bros. : EE C Farm-Fresh | COFFEE / USDA. GRADE “A” reer 8 Lbs. un Ae I-LB. VAC.CAN LARGE EGGS ARMOUR STAR or SWIFT'S BUTTERBALL SWIFT’S PURE: VEGETABLE | Fancy — Plump - Fender STUFFED 59: TURKEYS Staffed with Genuine Pepperidge * Farms Stuffing, No: Defrosting, SWIFT'NING 3 LB. CAN ag" eee ee ee ee De —.. Oven Ready, 6-10 Lb. Average SAVE 20c Lambrecht Farms Fancy , € Ea. ROCK CORNISH Hens 69° EVAPORATED . | ___._ ARMOUR STAR. FANCY. SUGAR CU ‘SLICED BACON Roth Blechhowh, Thick or-Thin Seed poten .49%e tb. Swift's Premium, Sliced Baton ........,... 49c Ib. Hygrade’s Reliable, Sweetenized, Sliced Bacon 49c Ib. PET MILK3 = ‘SAVE 10¢ DEL. MONTE. ive IT 303. ORGANS ARP CGIALETRE EERE ES 2 AEAN—-MILD-TENDER-SUGAR CURED-—WICKORY u. OF ‘SMOKED HAMS......... — WHOLE or BUTT MALE. hu ed: et CKTAIL a LIBBY’S ~Beech-Nat Strained P| oles romain | Thay FOOD ced 2 2: 39°) GO Cans 4 5 ‘ # 3 y a tes AS hs 8 PAYMENT ! . 6-to 12. Months on Balance (For Full Size 26" Bike) We Guarantee Parts For The Bikes We Sell Pees rp ie Tepe JUST CALL FE 3-7843 . and We Will When You Want it! SCARLETT'S Bicycle G Hobby Shop SEE THE LARGEST SELECTION OF (SCHWINN) BICYCLES IN THIS AREA : Britai id Soviet U PONTIAC DRAYTON PLAINS - §/Marriages, Deaths Big News rie soeatuts aio ‘uted of GULF'S FINEST . . . OLEAN-BURNING 20 ve nro St. 4 een seleatane vaste for “Gepetchiog FUEL OIL PARK FREE BEHIND tae tae hae hae Cae ae ae tae PtP P- eet Se Deliver with his mother, Margaret, to TO GRANDPA’S HOUSE WE GO — Harry S. Truman carries his sleepy grandson, Clifton Tru- man Daniel, as he arrives in Independence, Mo., ) spend Christmas ; join the tamily BOTH STORES ' By BOB THOMAS Sela eanneeeenennan AP Movie-TV Writer Santa’s House is located in the cen- ter of the parking area. Special No- tice to parents and Guardians... For a special memento of this Christ- mas Season your child's picture with Santa taken by a professional photographer. Pay the nominal serv- ice charge of $1.25. for the original. bands. lost cancer, later married K at h- ryn Grant. Prince. Louis B. Mayer, | Cecil- B. 4) HOLLYWOOD — What a decade! Lana Turner watched her daugh- | VISIT SANT A me Ss Iter slay a ranting boy friend. Bing Crosby} Dixie to! Grace Ke!1 y| won an Oscar| Presley, Davy Crockett; ang a real-life Bardot, wide screens, 3D and “I The giants dis-| appeared —| s = What a Decade Hollywood's Finishing! land back to the top of the movie| jheap. Rita Hayworth tired of Aly Khan, took husbands 4 and 5. | Marilyn Monroe went from 4a baseball great to an egghead play- ' | Elizabeth Taylor had four hus-| wright. |ELVIS, DAVY, WEREWOLF It was a decade colored by Kim |Novak’s lavendar, Jayne Mans. T/field’s pink and Liberace's gold jlame. It was the decade of Elvis Brigitte | Was a Teen-age Werewolf.” | It was also the decade of great- t change since Hollywood rose | out of the grapefruit groves. There “|was even greater change than dur- Mille, H arr Y/ing transition from silents to falk- (} AP Wirephoto with the ex- :- President. In the Year a nurse carries the newest grandson, William Wallace Daniel, 7 -months. The children’s father, Clifton Daniel, will this week, As the 40s were closing, Holly-|' wood was just beginning to feel the pinch of change. Theater men across the nation were complaining that Tuesday was a dead night for business. Folks were staying home to watch Milton Berle on television. TV was the major factor that shattered Hollywood's prosperity of the frantic 40s. Theater attendance plummeted from the 1947 high of 90 million weekly to 45 million in 1957. Six-thousand movie houses (out of 18,500) closed their doors in the past 10 years. Few new theaters lhave been built, although drive- ins hav@ increased from 1,200 to 5,000. While the population rose from joffer to agree to a step-by-step ban .| present equipment. Today’s failure meant that the West probably would renew its plosions are easy to detect with * * * The Soviet rejection of the U.S. information marked a new low in the test ban negotiations, which ‘|here among the world’s three nu- have been going on for 14 months ~~\elear powers, the United States, inspection teams to check sus- pected underground blasts on the spot. , Their only. agreement was on suggestions for better equipment in the 180 control posts that would, police the ban throughout the) world, But the United Nations repre- sentative at the conference, T. G. Narayanan, said the governments | might call the scientists back to- gether at a later date. All three nations have banned nuclear, testing while the negotia- tions continue. The Soviets want to make: the ban for all tests and) for all time, but the West wants a} foolproof control system estab-| lished before agreeing. The delegates recessed Saturday | until Jan, 12. The scientists’ report | will be sent to the three capitals for study. “ pal ado nn ‘ e Have YOU ever dreamed that : winter caught you: by surprise? © It's a real nightmare .. . and it's so easy to PREVENT! Call NOW! FULLY AUTOMATIC DELIVERIES! ‘Call us today . . . we will being winter warmth and comfort right to your door. phote. Additional copies can be ar- | THOMAS Cohn. . lies in the 30s. /150 million in 1950 to 175 million] The birthplace of the Prostes- | . . ranged for with photographer! | Ingrid Bergman mothered an ille- * et in 1959, wren every Other indus-/tant Episcopal Church in the) ee FREE igitimate baby but returned to) years ago, there were 150] ry expa United States was at the Old| L HH OLE Ol L re) EE GIFTS FOR ALL THE en ar But the film business shrank. {Christ Church in Philadelphia. | e ° ° services were attended by 15) signers of the U.S. Declaration of Independence. |Hollywood’s esteem. ‘stars making important pictures. | Death came fast.to Tyrone Pow-'today, only a dozen are considered| The major companies turned out jer, James Dean,; Errol Flynn,| pox office naturals. | 408 features in 1937 and 320 in Mario Lanza; with cruel slowness) Tey years ago, the studios ruled| 1951. This year the total will be to Humphrey Bogart, Suzan Ball. ‘supreme and controlled long lists} Uader 200. x ke jof stars. Today, hardly any stars| There were other factars besides |_ 2 Frank Sinatra battled in and/are under contract and the bigger'/TV that brought about the films’): jout of a marriage to Ava Gardner ‘ones can dictate their terms to the|decline. The move to the suburbs — i studios. |helped kill off many downtown - theaters. The new leisure changed CHILDREN WHO VISIT: SANTA MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER S. TELEGRAPH AT SQUARE LAKE ROAD Open by 10 A.M. to 9 P.M. Daily OVER 40 YEARS of DEPENDABLE SERVICE The major studio operation ts . | as dead as the nickelodeon. Two | : ® Miracle Mile studios have * vone out of the Sengrionns Ded time and money Shoppin | picture business — Republic and |'° ee ome projects, motor- : Pping RKO; others are selling their |'"S: g, ete Cent property and leasing back. And Hollywood itself failed to ‘ be ; enter ne } ' jcome up with attractions to main- 7) All of the lots are now largely |tain moviegoing, once a national hip fer td Yi CHHEE Store Only clusters of independent producers. | habit. ; Even the social aspects of Holly- | ‘wood have changed. No longer do| the Cohns, Warners, Mayers, | Schencks, and Zanucks rule film-| ‘town society. ti id ies his . itime in world series tory, no |STARS ARE BIG GUNS starting pitcher was able to go the The big guns are the top stars—/‘distance in the: 1959 classic be- Pitcher Statisitcs CHICAGO (UPI) — For the first At the lowest price for any 3-foot dol Coopers, Stewarts,,tween the Los Angeles Dod, Compare | Douglases, ote y. Grants. land Chicago White Sox. : $495 | » to... | — Special ‘N ied | 4199 We'd Like to. Introduce the Newest Member of Our Sales Staff to Assist You With - Your Appliance Needs __MR. EZEKIEL WRIGHT Get Acquainted Special! A GENERAL ELECTRIC PORTABLE “STEREO” HI-FI | “Current Rate * : ion on All ee oo On Stands or sits alone Savings Accor Beautiful 7 5 00 For A Home Demonstration CALL FE 4-052 eyes, lashes Ask for Mr. Wright r —NAME BRANDS WE CARRY ARE— WESTINGHOUSE GENERAL ELECTRIC RCA VICTOR © EASY WASHERS — Plus Complete Furniture Lines “CALL MR, WRIGHT TODAY—FE tetas Washable, rooted hair Movable limbs, heads, eyes Unbreakable vinyl body Imagine the excitement of receiving this life- size playmate for Christmas. And being able to, dress her in her own: size three clothes! Without’ ~ 4 Convenient Offices to Serve You v - Pontiac Federal Savings. Home Oftice: 761 W. Huron Street t f oe ~ doube-the miose a could Be: ‘FRAYER ~ te a. * Rochester Branch: Downtown Branch $ Pm. - Drayton Branch 4416 Dixie Highway bs re Sa "Geb Sacra. ak RESGE COMPANY , Open Eves. ‘til 9:00—Sat. ‘til 6:00 . #4 , ; — pees 1 oe 2 THE PONTIAC PRESS, LADY SCHICK ELECTRIC qi doll with beautiful clothes) . . DOLL BUGGIES at BIG, BIG DISCOUNTS! ~ Reg. $2.00 Bissel 5 Carpet Sweeper ~ Dolly Play Pen or Crib (Fine Wood) ELECTRIC PORTABLE MIXER ‘8.88 ELECTRIC CAN OPENER 12.88 | STEAM & DRY IRON | v eae © oe ee ee eh ’ Horsman Play Time Pal Doll : (Tall as 3.YearOM)........ ~~ Amazing Buy. Reg. $8 3 Giant Size 25” Doll, oy 99. Mattel H20 Missile see ~ She Drinks and Wets....... , Set. Reg $5. ‘ ~ . Sno-Disc $480 9 88 od - Reg $3 «tt! | 2 a CASCO ELECTRIC BLANKET . ~ $5.00 Marx Hi-Fi— sso 4 (Large $14 ped Size} _ FRUIT : Laphone....__... : a _. (Lb. CAKES , . oo Marx Twin Pom Pom 1 50 4-SPEED RECORD PLAYERS oe un yok $] 48s Reg. $2.95 = HURON STREET STORE ONLY : PLASTIC VEGETABLE BINS ‘1.19 * Coca Cola Dispenser ». Capt’n Crow Talking Target ~ Set, Reg. $4.00... ~ Children’s Watches (Mickey Mouse — Cinderella — Hop-a-Long “4” Cassidy), Reg. $6.95... .... | = Mr. or Mrs. Potato A A | ' Head ................... ~ Color Forms (Sparegform Totem qe e Pole Form), Reg. $2.00... .. . © Steve Canyon Pilot's a hea 88 ~ __Helmet, Reg. $3.00... | Safe Vault (with Burglar sso | Remington Roll-A-Matic | - Alarm) ................. Electric Shaver ........ Remco Bulldog 3” ‘ : Tank ........ ee ¢ Remington Rollectric | Kiddie $900” Y Aiteteen a 3 95 Typewriter ............. 2 ’ is - Bowling Set (Regulation Size), | “4” . ; , Schick 3-Speed $ 95 Reg. $10.00............... ; “.. Powershaver ......... ars > Lionel Trains (with Track and ~ ‘Q” ; Transformer)... . From : ’ : Sturdy Peg Table and $44 — — Orbital Desk Combination ........ 2 “. EB Paper Orme crs Kc 1 24/26 Inch Bikes (Choice of Models ox aw are a efor Boysor ——& 50 ‘ V4 Inch Electric Drill - ‘27> ee BS ty (nat. advertised brand). . 16” Heavy Duty Xi Battery Booster Boys’ and Girls’ Ice Skates ¥ Cables ©... ¢........ (High Quolity) oer — Remco Penny Machine, * Bernz-0-Malic Torch - #2 . Reg. $13.00... . (complete kit) Reg. *10.. / Remco Sneaky Pete Magic | = — ~ | Show, Reg. $7.00.. «: Electronic Sr Page : Solder Gun . - WEST. SIDE | 1082 WEST HURON STREET HIN CITY BLOCK . MONDAY, DECEMBER 21, 1959 i: JUST A FEW OF THE : HUNDREDS OF TOYS AND "APPLIANCES AT OUR 3 BIG STORES: a [© Ideal Patti Play Doll (Life size y id : * ) &mm Movie Projector, Mel Mac 45-Pe. Unbreakable SERS CS Ri oe ae + LR COUPON a 4°’ In Each of Our Three Stores We Will Give Away: 5 & |. LEATHER TOP LAMP TABLE ($30 t a Value) and IMPORTED FRENCH jie GLASS TABLE LAMP with three-way : ; bulb. e ADDRESS........... 2. TWO—Yes—TWO at Each Store: LEATHER TOP LAMP TABLES ($30 | 3 Value). , . TWO—Yes—TWO at Each Store: | ; bi: IMPORTED FRENCH GLASS TABLE — : | LAMPS with three-way bulb. e. $) 5 preniny “Drawing TONIGHT-FREE- FREE |3 FE ‘roumt | fo rT (Monday, Dec. 21) 6t 8. M. 3 Re Bahia se aheiga® Hurry while supplies ~ last! Large array but limited quan- 15 wonderful gifts to be given away absolutely 2 tree! Nothing to buy. You don't even have to be present to win’ one of these gifts. F Simply Fill Out the Coupon-at the Left and Drop ; . It in the Box at Any One of Our Three Stores = vf > > tities of AMI: moninaainnannndnnorrbadnnt A OCMC ICICLE a 4 each item. ioe $2.00 Hasbro Fearless Fireman Game $2.00 Colorama Alphabetter TOASTMASTER Automatic TOASTER $] Q*® Game Set................... . : $3.00 Space Target 1 50 RVERSAL GOFFEE MAKER Game .._............... $] 0O* AUTOMATIC COOKER - FRYER (6 Quart) *6.66 $3.00 Tootsie Toy Rocket Launching Set $3.00 Parks Battle Cruiser Target Set ..—............ | $3.00 Tico Plastic Electric : oh ‘ 12” ELECTRIC FRY PAN Train Set ._.. (with Cover) / ~8.88 _ _ TABLE RADIO (Gtube) ~ $3.00 Lowell and Gates | Toys for Tots. . “PING PONG TABLE tegision sce VD), 95 : Dinnerware Set (irreg.) . Handy Wall Blackboard $175 Large Size v Automatic Pinspotter Christmas 12 for 88° Bowiin G. GAME CHRISTMAS TREE STAND $488 Reg. 3. 50° (Keeps It Fresh). $7.00 © 66-Pc. COMPLETE TEA SET, $388 Full 7 Foot POOL TABLE" ~ (Complete with Bells | | ' : Rack, Que Sticks) e Gient 20 Foot ICE SKATING RINK 777 | $8.00 Value. For the Kiddies | 26- Pc. STAINLESS STEEL FLATWARE oo CHRISTMAS TREE LIGHTS (7-Light Indoor Set) _. FRUIT CAKE with Serving Dish and Stainless. Server. 3 Lb. HURON STORE ONLY * (Aluminum Sides, ANTENNA. Uses House Wiring Vinyl Liner) as Antenna GAIN EAST SIDE 526 NORTH PERRY et GLENWOOD yc) Next to Wrigleys. LANSING ( (UPL —- A rare ‘book written by one of Michigan's most ‘controversial and colorful historical figures has been. published in a limited edition by W, S. Wood fill; chairman of the Mackinac graphical errors were. A photo-, graph of Strang is elgnecee ee gaan enema iustrations. Jsland State Park Commission, _ Carrymg the cumbersome title “Ancient and Modern Michilimack- inac, Including an Account of the _ Controversey . Between Mackinac and ébe Mormons,” it was written by Beaver Island Mormon King James Jesse Strang and published -@8 his own press in 1854. “Although it was again pub- ‘Vished in 1885 and 1894, it has long been virtually unobtainable — at any price, and ts found in only a few libraries. The book iS a contemporary ac- count of the conflict between “King’’ James’ Mormons, who formed 4 colony on the island in. 1847, and their opponents.on Mack- inac Island, the political head- quarters of the region. : * * * Dr. George S. May of the Michi- gan Historical! Comimission and editor of the book; said the pub- lishing was a private venture for both he and Woodfill, who also operates the island's Grand Hotel. “Bat | guess yeu could call this a public service,” May said. “Woodfill will probably break even when all the books (at $7.50 each) are sold.” About half of the 500 copies printed have already been sold, he said. “Strang, who took an offshoot of the main Mormon branch which followed Brigham Young to found Salt Lake City, Utah, surveyed the island in 1847 and the main body of colonizers came in 1849. * * ¥ By 1856, Strang’s colony num- bered 2,000. He served two terms in the State House of Representa- tives and from all accounts was “a surprisingly competent legisla- tor." May said. One of his con- tributions was to straighten out hazy county lines in the area But the slight, ‘bearded Mor- mon king was in trouble right from the start. He threw Irish settlers off the island and his colony began the practice of polygamy, Strang himself had five wives and fathered about 12 . children, In June 1856 two disgruntled fol- lowers shot Strang as he prepared to board a U.S. .naval ship at the island, and he died two weeks later in Wiscansin, where he was taken by others in the colony. The Irish mainianders, former settlers on the island, in July invaded the colony and dispersed the Mormons, burning their village to the ground. “This book is probably the best account we have of Strang’s ‘kingdom’."" May said. ‘“Strang’s history of the area before he ar- rived is pretty inaccurate and his discussion of his opponents is pre)- udiced, but the account of his own colony is probably. accurate. May said the Strangite Church has revived in recent years, with headquarters in Voree, Wis. of which Strang was a native. “But it still numbers in the hundreds, not thousands.’ he said. “One of Strang'’s sons lived in Lansing amd didn't die until some time in the 1940's.’ “May said “He was a Congregational minis- ter. None of Strang’s wives ot children remained Strangites.”’ There's Punch inthe Acting - of Archie Moore HOLLYWOOD @ — In Archie Moore, movieland figures are con- vinced they have a rarity — an athlete who can. act “That. man has a naturalness and sincerity that shines from the streen,”’ says actor Norman Lloyd who first suggested that Moore try acting. Moore's. initial effort, still in -production, is “The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn.” He plays dim, a runaway Negro slave, Lloyd's opinion was echoed. by John Carradine who appears with the’ light-heavyweight title holder in the Mark Twain story. . “What a sweet, expressive face.” says Carradine, “No one would ever guess that man is a profes- sional firhter.’” et ° Moore himself is deadly serious about his new career, He is on the set at MGM -going over his scenes long before others in the cast show ‘lip at the studio. He talks enthusiastically about doing at least three more movies. “An extinet volcano named. Nev. ado. _ Toluca, GT tniles south: | Printers were a sacri cnmeeniipit Spa) Woodfit! Seblication is almost . oo of the original. around population’ of about 400, photographs of the 184 edition-and) “ying historical society has “S even misspellings were not 1 changed, ‘although obvious type- taken over Strang’s old print, iference Friday that while dining|C. K. Eddy Family Memorial|months ago, will be defended by OD Men’s Wash ‘n’ Wear Shirts, 1.99 © Lacy Nylon Slips, 32-40......2.98 C Fancy Christmas Candles. . 10-69% C Men's Broadcloth Paiqmas. . . .2.99 C Fancy Nightgowns, 34-40... .1.98 C Fireproof Cotton Mats; 16x64”, 49¢ 'D Men’s Ivy Leagye Shirts..... .2.99 D Lacy Briefs, 5-7 _39¢ & 50¢ CO Men’s Holiday Ties ......... .69* CD Seamless Sheer Nylons: ... pr. 98 © Men’s Felt Slippers, 6-11. . .»r. 1.79 CO Boxed Handkerchiefs, . . . 3 for 1.00 Christmas Wrappings - D Children’s Slippers, 5-111.00-1.29 Cl Boys’ White Dress Shirts, 6-18, 1.99 0 Boys’ Orlon Sweaters, 6-16. O Ship Construction Kits... QO Dress Leather Belts. . D Two-Blade Pocket Knife ... ‘Ca e Today Beaver Island has 4 year-| men are for Goy. Edmund G. (Pat) Brown J6 to 0 ay @ favorite UPD as $75,000 was received by the Sag-|on inaw~ General . Hospital bling They fund drive committee. Officials saidthe gift, from the| was shot down over ShOWN| mostly Irish fishermen. The Beav-| Brown also told his pi con- | Posey: Bs ek ee et ee: cory He is ‘state's entire Se his'goal. of $1. shop, the only surviving building with six of the congressmen here|Fund, brought to mame the totalia local lawyer. : . tt inte a museum, 4 ~ Christmas Decorations O Miniature Tree Light Set .....1.98 ‘D Lighted Santa Claus Face... ..39¢ O Lighted Tree-Top Santa .....1.19 0 14” Holly Wreath..........1.98 OC Styrofoam Decorations . . .25*-69* © All Purpose Half Apron....-.1.59 Ci Gift Blouses, 32-38,.. . . 1.98-3.98 CO Women’s BanLon® Cardigans, 4.98 Oo White Angora Headwasher. . 1.00 CO Women’s Gift Handbags plus tax 1.99 O Girls’ Pixie Slippers...... pr. 1.98 O Girls’ Party Dressed,7-14.....5.98 OC Pure Silk Scarfs ........79#-1.00 OC Women’s Fancy Billfolds pius tex 1.00 .3.98 0 Girls’ Nylon Petticoats, 4-14. .1.98 D Girls’ BanLon® Cardigans, . . .. 3.98 C Girls’ Bulky Cardigans, 7-14. .3.98 O Girls’ Nylon Panties, 2-14.. pr. 50 © Holiday Corsages ... . each 29*-39¢ O Silk Blend Scarfs ............49F @ Registered trode-mork O Gift Paper in Cutter Box... .. . 59¢ C3 Rolls GiftPaper............1.00 C Christmas Gift Boxes... . .10#-25¢ D Four Spools Ribbon in Dispense-49¢ 2.99 .. 1.69 OC Men’s Leather Billfolds. . plus tax1.98 OC Snow Brush & Scraper....... .39¢ .. 59F 0 Leather Brief Case... . . plus tax2.98 CO Women’s Peignoir Sets ..... Musical Gifts OG. E. Clock Radio. .29.95 D Portable Transistor Radio. . .29.95 > .G Automatic Clock Radio. ....17.88 0 3-Speed Record Player.....16.88 O Children’s 4-Record Album ... .98# 0 Kiddies’ Christmas Records. . am : - O Chimes or Carols,2 Records,rpa1.00 \ ~~ Christmas Songs. 33% rpm... 1.49 Dolls and Toys 0 20” Bride Doll .............3.88 0 20” Undressed Baby Doll... . :2.98 D Hobby Kits ............-79*-98# ( Automatic Drum ...........2.98 OD Doll Carriage ..... - ween 4.98 CO Double Gun Holster Set... .. .2.98 O Six Top TV Games... ... each 1.98 © 36” Mounted Cut-out Doll... .1.49 O Stuffed Animals ........2.98-4.98 Gifts for the Home -O Large Metal Bird Cage......2.98 CO Apothecary Glass Jars... 19*-79* 0-27-pc. Punch Bowl Set..,... .4.95 42-pc. Stainless Flatware Set. .7.98 § C1 Glass Stemware, 5 sizes, ea 29¢.39* © Ci 16-pe. Dinnerware Set ......2.88 1) 3’x5’ Low-Cut Pile Rug....... 1.99 Ci 2.pe. 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Gleves for Everyone Cl Women’s Fancy Wool Glovespr.1 00 or. 798 © Leather-Palm Gloves,.....pr. 1.99 OC Men’s Leather Gloves, 8-11 pr. 2.69 © Boys’ Warm Dress Gloves. . pr. 1.99 D "What's My Name” Mitts, 2-7, 1.00 © Children’s Wool Mittens... . A, By © corduroy Slippers. sibel lid 7 PART Crean 8 { Se ae eed Audie ead seu ® DOWNTOWN PONTIAC—TEL- HURON CENTERDRAYTON PLAINS -ROCHESTER--MIRACLE > ~ “WK VON'TLAG 4 PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 21, 1959 ‘Program Ye ae hristmas. The New Citizens League Antona’s citizenship class celebrated of Pontiac and Janice “Christmas Around the World” Friday evening at Pontiac Ceuiral High School. Miss Antona at left examines the ey # oa ROR RT Pe Pontiae Press Photos authentic Greek costume of Bessie Fotineas of Hill street, Va Yee of Park street. Womens Section Li EE RRR ee Woman Driver Cares for Car NEW YOR Ki(UPI)—When it comes to taking care of the family car, women are way ahead of men. More than 70 per cent of the sales of auto replacement parts are made to women, says Joseph Weiss, president of a manufacturing firm. More women also bring cars in for check-ups and installation of safety belts, probably because they usually drive with chil- dren in the car. ‘SERENE AEROS Rae SEE: SS Luncheon at School A luncheon for teachers, ex- ecutive board members and room mothers of Willis School is slated for Tuesday at 11:30 - a.m. in the library. Mrs. William Davis, home room mother chairman, will be in charge, with Mrs. Lawrence Smith ‘assisting. The Service Squad Girls will serve, Gifts will be exchanged. Albert Krueger will chair- man the old newspaper and magazine sale on Jan. 11. City Jaycees Dance Wives and friends joined Pontiac Jaycees at their annual Christmas Dance Saturday eve- ning at Westacres Clubhouse Highlight of their year's so- cial events, the dance attracted more than 150 people. In a festive Christmas set- ting, dancing was to live music. A midnight buffet supper added to the occasion. Cochairmen of the event were A. H. Magnus and Richard Hutte..locher. ee LRP REO RRS So ed Berean Class ‘Elects Officers for Next Year Andrew Bee was elected i president of the Berean Class { Oaklaad Avenue United Pres- byterian Church when Mr. and Mrs. Omar MacNutt opened their home on Neome drive to the group Friday evening. Other officers elected inelude Lester Bell, viee president; Mrs. David Duval. recordin. secretary: Stanton Level. treasurer: afd Mrs. Max Ea ton. corresponding secretary. Members brought food and gifts for a needy family basket and exchanged gifts. The Mar- ion Group and the Williams Group, respectively. provided -the entertainment and served the refreshments. Seven Pages Today in Women’s Section Joining in admiration of the rich fabric is JUDITH ANN GREER Mr. and Mrs. Archie Greer of Dresden street announce the engagement of their daughter Judith Ann to William High- field, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ben- son McClaughry of Walled Lake. January nuptials are planned. Try Wire Brush Whe re-painting metal furni- ture, scrape away rust with a stiff wire brush. cri bes ustoms New. Citizens -origins, and. showed slides. “Christmas Around the World” was celebrated by the e of Pon- tiac and Janice “Atona's citi- zenship class on Friday eve- ning, One hundred and fifty members and guests were at the party in Pontiac Central High Schoel, Mrs. Joseph Bennett accom- panied the group in carols di- rected ‘hy Mrs, Theodore Wier- sema, Mrs. Wiersema told of Christmas customs and_ their CHRISTMAS CUSTOMS Customs of their native lands were explained by Tina Prince, Violet Walker, Mrs. R. A. Per- kins, Renata Melinat, Anna Cantarella and Helen Parsons. Some of these: In Holland: Christmas. is a family and church affair with religious programs on the 26th, following the family gatherings on the 25th. The traditional ‘phim pudding with its sprig of holly and blaz- ing brandy sauce is the climax of the English Christmas dinner, Food is given to the poor at this time. Boxing Day is celebrated the day after Christmas. * .® * With the beginning of Advent early in December a candle is lighted each week until Christ- mas in Switzerland, Saint Nik- olaus comes down from the mountains on Dec. 6 with toys for good children and switches for bad ones. Much is made of the religious services on Christ- mas Eve and Christmas Day. Advent marks the beginning of the holiday season in Czech- oslovakig also. An evergreen decoration is suspended from the ceiling of the living room. Four red candles and gaily col- ored figurines: are fastened on the upper side with gold — or silver-coated nuts and cones underneath. The candles signi- fy the four weeks to Christmas. On Christmas Eve gifts are brought by the Christ Child. WARM AND HOMEY Germany's Christmas —_ is _ warm and homey. Many and_ rich arg the traditional foods. Homes are decorated and church bells ring out every- where. This is a land where music is very much a part of Christmas. ® * * In Greece the children go from house to house on Christ- mas Eve, carrying the manger scene and singing carols. St. Basil is the gift giver. Presents are given on New Year's Day and festivities end Jan. 6. Children must prove their talents for Santa Claus in Es- thonia by reciting poems or singing. The traditional Christ- mas diner is roast pork and biack pudding. * * Allen of Joslyn road and Connie Bast rico of North Perry street. Mouth-watering goodies from many lands tempted guests, Eying «the Christmas cake from France are Clyde * Langton was chairman of the refreshment committee. Christmas cakes and cookies from all over the world were served from a ta- ble centered with a Christmas cake from France. Mrs. Per- kins in native Swiss costume and Ma Yee in a Chipese dress t poured. News of Personal Interest They're Coming Home for Yuletide She is the daughter of Mr. and Marion, Ind., Alton Hagle of Hanley senior. drive. - * * * Pfe. Richard Weber, son of A reception in Gingellville - Mrs Daisy es deed meets West Huron street, holding son Kim. Pony-tailed Aline looks on with in- terest. East West in “Christmas of Around the World.’ Mrs. R. A. Perkins of Hilltop street admires the rich native costume of Mrs. Lin Hong @ Cross Trailers Swing Partners Amid Green Cross Trailers Square Dance Club held their regular dance JoAnn Van Tassel, -senior in where she is a radio and television, has been Mrs. selected..for membership in “Who's Who in American Col- oe leges and Universities’’ at the Mr. : Mrs. Edward J. Lally Fri evening at Willis School oe oe Mr. and Mrs. Edward J. Lally Community C oy . University of Alabama. of Balmoral terrace, Water- ommunity Center, hosted’ by the -Robert Craigheads, hon- amid a setting of Christmas ored their parents Mr. and A radio and television major, ‘ford, artived Saturday by W yss, Richaid ‘igeatsahte: Feri Misia fi Richard F gerald and Mr. as Mess James Huttenlocker. * * * Caller Sam Joan was pre- sented with a gift from club ~~ members. * Received as new members were Mr. and Mrs. Evold Witt. _ Guests were Mr. and Mrs. “Donald Allen. Mr. and Mrs Albert Anderson, Mr. and Mirs. folenweld. Mr. and Bassett ‘and Mir and Mrs. Witam R wussell * Other cuests. were Mr. and Mrs, David Lamson, Mr. and Mrs. Neil Hollinger, Mr. and Mrs. Norman Waggoner, Mr. and Mrs. Andy Anderson and Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Smith. . Fred Suppus,; Emma Bentley. Russell Lynch and Beatrice Riddle completed the group. * * * In charge of refreshments were Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Messman. Mr. and Mrs. Warren. Hughes * will handle tickets for the New Year's Eve dance. Gloves Protect, ~ Help Beautify If you are one of the many ‘women who hate to wear work gloves when doing the house- hold chores, cream your hands and cover them with cheap 2 white cotton glov You won't get that trapped oon that heavy gloves often and you'll give your Sanne a ‘beauty treatment at the same ‘time, gee. J ‘ Miss Van Tassel is the daugh- plane from Fort Sam Houston, Mrs. George Morris of Alberta street, on. their recent 30th ‘ wedding anniversary. Over 0 of their friends were present: ter of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Texas. Pfc. Weber is stationed Van Tassel of East Iroquois. |. with the paramedic corps. road. She is a 1956 graduate of » Friends are invited to an Pontiac Central High School. Open House Christmas Eve. He * * * will return to his base Jan. 3 Evely * * oe sh . Barbara Hagle. Central . * ~*~ > Mr and Mra Forres rot a8 Michigan University junior, “Mary Kent, daughter of Mr of Osceola drive, has returned and Mrs. Ralph Kent of West tutgers street, arrived home ._by plane from Marion College, was recently initiated into the new Alpha Upsilon chapter of Alpha-Gamma_—Delta Sorority. home for the holidays from her college work at Baptist . Mis- sionary—Training-Seheel-in-Chi-—-—-—--—- cago, Miss Brown is a .-junior, working for the degree. of bachelor of religious education. She will return for classes on‘ Jan. 5, Evelyn is vice president of the junior class. She was in ' charge of the “Hanging of the Mr. and Mrs. Charles T. Frever of Niles announce the engagement of their daughter Patricia of Greens" at the school. Rochester * * Ss ochester to The bitth of a son, Kevin Carl F. Ray, Nov. 30 in St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, is announced by Mr. and Mrs. Ivan R. Find- lay (nee Suzanne Danner) of Hough. Jr., son of Carl F. Hough of State street and the Mrs. Robert L. Danner of late Mrs. ~ North Lake Angelus road and Hough. He the Ivan K. Findlays of. : attended the Payton, Ohio. aoe ae University of ae ‘Maryland and the College of Swedish* Mas- sage, Chicago.. ‘Wet the Stretch - NEW YORK (UPD—If, as sometimes happens to even the an best - quality knitted dress, a. A May a} . eollar stretches or the B ght sits e wedding is Oe nae Fi er planned. “cess WA i Se may 1 Wc Booe 4 Bets : = 3 sor 4 4; and SERVICE | FE 4-3277 | acquired -a phantasmal|wasn't having any such silly’ con- old pillow case,|fusion of appearance with reality. and dropped over|1n the manner of one correcting . Anyway, off he!the extremely stupid, he said stern- his mother trail-|)y: “It's ME! It’s Brad!" To stich small ones who can still insist on the difference be- When he knocked at the door /tvreen what they seem to be and the first neighbor, she opened |what they are, be Life, Health and and feeling obliged to support (Strength! a ne * Still time to select Gu 1H VON ‘they begin to believe true ones. Because, like. the neighbor lady, we take appearance for re- ality. We say: “Who is this naughty boy jump- that their false faces are Z ing up and down.on the sofa when he’s heen told ndt.to?” And our “naughty” boy, in- stead of saying, “I am jumping up and down on your sofa from exuberance, not from naughti- ness,” accepts the character of | a disobedient child We say: from Grinnell’s! The magnificent all-inclusive Stereo Theatre brings you the great entertainment from TV, radio or records through the wonders of Magnavox! Choose from many finishes. @ Two sound systems in one beautiful unit @ Six Magnavox speakers including two 12" bass. _ @ Big 24" chromatic TV -@ Automatic phono with stereo diamond pickup @ FM-AM radio for continuous static-free music $62 Down, $27 Monthly 3 MUSIC is our business! ithe hallway partly from untidiness|. fi hee | avery —~oo your magnificent Magnavox. of saying, ‘I left my skates in but mostly from my need to get to the library before it closed,” ing the truth from under his pil- low case, lose the innocent power ? to ery out,:“‘Hey, you've got me|._ Since wrong! This is Me!” | living chiefly upon the tips : tell these people that more is expected for such ‘sergice? > Answer: The° propriety of your making’ any comment about the: insufficiency of the tips. offered would be inexcus- able behavior ‘on your part. In fact, any sign of discon- tent would simply lead to their sae sympathy. : will overtip for the same serv- jees is about the only bright prospect that I can see in ‘your situation. If you can skillfully pointment, rather than il- humor, this might help. x * * THANK HER, Dear Mrs. Post: Last year a neighbor offered me the use of her very beautiful baby carriage. Now that my baby’ is growing out of this model I soon expect to return it,. I'd like to know the proper way to show my appreciation and thanks for her kindness. Answer: The important thing is to return it in perfect con- adition, Just say “thank you"’ - | appreciatively, and when. op- portunity offers, do something for her. * : , a “ Dear Mrs. Post: I have been. invited to the 50th wedding anniversary of very, dear friends of mine,I know the 50th year is gold, but I can- not afford to give anything expensive. Will you please téll me what else would be suitable | to give on this occasion? | Answer: Anything in gilt or O95 POINSETTIAS A gift so delightful in thought for those on your special list. Now Pearce’s have the most beautiful plants in years. Choose the new Pink, White or traditional Red. “4. ), 7 *1() Grown in our own greenhouses. Come in, select from thousands of exceptionally~lovely plants. Roses, dozen ..... . . 85, 86, $7.50, $10.00 -- Cyclamen. Plants ... . . . ° We Telegraph - Flowers Anywhere In The World - GRINNELL’S, 27 South Saginaw Street Also 5, $6, $7.50, $10, $12.50 2... $7.50, $10 to $15.00 CENTERPIECES ... . . .». . $2.50 to $15.00 Corsages. ............ $2.50 to $10.00 GRAVE BLANKETS AND CEMETERY WREATHS Pearce Flowers of Distinction Since 1890 559 Orchard Lake Avenue “""* Phone FE 2-0127 ‘gold ornamentation on it — FE 3-7168 — | brass or anything with gilt or Thursday, December 24th” ~ we will close at 7 P.M. UNTIL is. |, PLENTY OF FREE PARKING HE Red pee oagate e- po * F loral | ~O. or something in golden yellow —would be suitable, * * * Dear Mrs. Post: When ‘a man is waiting for a bus and | finds himself the only man among a large group of wom- en, is he supposed to wait un- til all the women get on the bus before he does? Answer: In a ‘crowd, it is best to move with it in the turn you happen to come. When there are only a few, it is courteous that he wait. ‘ +e . we receive, is- it possible to. | show -rueful disap- © you'll achieve a pretty, springy | fasting curt rather than a friz- Identical Dresses | color. Can Be Different’: | (NEA) — i these ave | ) psn ab te cach: other dressed. jf son with a Visit bo. Rowsus’s SQIS. HIGHER You Get All This: Carefree Haircut Permanent by an Experi- enced, Licensed Operator Styled Set Our Famous Guarantee: A Complete Wave for $3.75 ... None Higher HOLLYWOOD BEAUTY 782 North Saginaw Street FE 8-3560 Over Bazley's Air Conditioned ~ TRIPLE PLAY | brasby Good news! Lady -Mar- lene bras. convert in seconds from straps to strapless! Lightly pad- ded, gently wired cups. Embroidered, white. : FEDERAL 2 dept. stores at OPEN EVERY NIGHT Closed Christmas eve ot 6 p.m. “%, Downtown And t “Drayton Plains ; For holiday necklines = erica . modern as teal: row. Visit our salon for CUSTOM . Controlled Permanents 2nd Floor Pontiac State Bldg. 4. 50 - 510.00 Complete q No Appointment Needed _ Immediate Service Open Friday ’til 9 P.M. Beauty Salon FE 5-9257 | ' their son Frederick leave Wednesday to meet their son- inlaw and daughter Mr, and Mrs. Roy C. Olson Jr. at the Long Island home of Roy’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Roy C. The young couple has been living in Venezuela since wed in July 1958. After Christmas with the senior: Olsons at their home in | Sands Point, L. L, and a visit in Birmingham with Linda's parents the J. M, Balls, the junior Olsons will leave for Tripoli, Libya, where they will live for the next two years, . * * * Mrs. Dorothy. Kemp Roose- velt is visiting her sister-in- law, Mrs. Franklin D. Roose- velt at Hyde Park, N. Y., and in Mrs. Roosevelt's New Yark. . apartment. Mrs. Kemp Roosevelt will go to” Prayidence, R. I. to spend the Christmas weekend with her brother-in-law and sitser, Mr. and Mrs. Stanley C. Stannard. ‘ Pe, STAPP’S cee fit children right with TRIDERITE SHOE GOOD TIMES ALWAYS COME IN PAIRS And party Stride Rites are here, in sparkling new styles with new toes, sassy bows... patents and pimps and nylon velvet.,For little misses and for little men, too, we have all sizes — all with a gift for making merry. A. Dress Kid Pump For big girls who like smartness ‘ sand comfortable fit, too. Smooth black kid with natural bow trim. Sizes 41}; ~e SS 95 AAA—C ony other styles in E 2 Dates ° “Yeo, for your choosing. — ——B.-- Tot’s Strap Dressy black with perky bow trim. A slight lifted heel with rubber’ cap. For party and school, Sizes 64/,>—12 $ 50 B—D 8 . sizes t24y a $8.95 Open to 9 p.m. Tonight, Tues. and Wed. C. Patent T-Strap Wonderfully fitting for dancing, play or just sittin’. Of course they love the gleaming black patent. Infants 5—8 CE : $750 _ sizes ee D $8.50 sizes ua :3 $8.95 4 JUVENILE BOOTERIE 28 E. Lawrence St. and FAMILY SHOE STORE © 928 W. Huron at Telegraph 4. Alum tame | Birthingha ? umnae of Gamma Phi Beta ngham will give their annidal Christmas tea Dec. 29. = It will be at the home of Mrs. with Mrs. James W. Olson, Mrs. John Carter. ‘Mrs, Cowden Forkenbaugh, Mrs. C. Howard Marlan, Mrs. Armand St. Amour, Mrs. M. A. Darling Jr. and Elizabeth Browne. . * * * Mr. and Mrs, Brent ,Paul McKee (Julie , Harrigan) an- nounce the birth of a son Brent Paul Jr. Dee. 12. * * * Mr. and Mrs, Forest K. Fow- ler announce. the. engagement of their daughter Frances Kay to Edward Graham Preston, son of Mr, and Mrs. Charles — Preston # bere x5 ton, Mich. * * * : Mr. and Mrs. C, E. Wilson will hold their annual family party..Christmas Eve in their home, “Longmeadow.” Included will be -Mr. and Mrs. Thomas E. Wilson, Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Wilson Jr., Mr. and Mrs. E. Curtis Matthews and Mr. and Mrs. William B. Hargreaves. NN * * * MP. and Mrs. Harry Steng- lein of Saginaw and Mr, and Mrs. Richard G. Wiliams will have Christmas glinner with the Edwin J. Andersons,’ The Andersons are Mrs. Stenglein’s and Mrs, Watdams’ parents. . * * Mr. and Mrs. will spend Christn¥as in Har- linger, Tex., with their son and datghter-inlaw, Captain and Mrs. John A. Bird. * MARJORIE ANN HENDERSON Warren Henderson of Wixom their daughter to Gary Lee Pace, son of dohnson avenue, Marjorie attends Clear y College. Her fiance is at of Michigan: Dorothy Inglis Wed In Redford Presbyterian church Saturday -afternoon, . Dorothy Elizabeth Inglis, daughter of Mrs. James Inglis of Detroit, exchanged wedding vows with Frederick W. Camp- bell Jr. \Sizes M46, 1642, 18%, | 2444. i yards tern part. -Send fiftv-cents in coins for this'+ pattern—add_ 10 cents e pattern for ist class mailing: Send | to Anne Adams, care of the Pon-i(, tiac Press 137 Pattern Dept., West 17th St., - {Print plainly Name, Address with € Zone, Size and Style Number. 4654. SIZES 14%4—24¥4 by Perna Hadas Printed Pattern. 4654: Half 2042, 22%, Size< 1642 39-inch; blouse 1% yards. Printed ditections on each pat- Easier; accurate. New York 11, N.Y. rinne Toy Grand Pianos . sara tot ho | oe here Santa ned. hoy _ Merry MUSICAL TOYS! els, 7 south Saginaw Street . FE B:7168 jumper takes 3} for each, He is the son of the senior Campbells of Petersburg, N.H., and athletic director of Cran- brook School, The bride, who is admissions director at Kingswood School, Cranbrook, appeared in a dress of Christmas blue wool and green satin hat. She carried a white prayer book, After a wedding trip to Bos- ton and New Hampshire, the couple will live at Cranbrook. Happy Holidays, |: but Go Lightly... on the Goodies NEA—The holidays, with all the delights of roast turkey, plum pudding, eggnog, Christ-, mas cookies- and cakes, are just ahead, While no one wants to forego Christmas feasting, bear in mind that all of these “delicious things are fatténing. 2436 It's time to throw caution com- pletely to the winds and it's also no time to ruin your pleas- ure in the season by nibbling on a lettuce leaf. *» -* What you can do is be mod- erate about the portions you take. Pass up the second help- ings. Don’t stuff until you feel uncomfortable, even though this may be in the good old American ‘tradition, Learn to say a polite ‘No, thank you"’ to your hostess and mean it. If she’s wise, she won't insist. If she does insist, pretend you didn't hear her. Have your plum pudding but then don't. decide you'll just celebrate by having the pump- kin pie, too. * * * And when the holidays are over, put yourself on a cot- tage cheese diet for two days. You'll take off five pounds in the two days, eating. cottage cheese three meals q day. And you nl feel better. Hagpry Bird > Mr. and Mrs. announce the | engagement of Marjorie Ann. MARY ANN MURPHY Wir. and .Mrs. Thomas L. Murphy of Tyrone Street. Wa- terford ‘fownship, announce the engagemerit.of their daughter, Mary Ann, té.James Marvin Porritt, son of Mr. and Mrs, Marvin Porritt of .Seymour Lake road, Ortonville. The wedding date is Jan. 2, 1960. Yule Fete for D. of I. Mrs. William Robertson opened her Oliver street home for the Daughters of Isabella Mr. and Mrs. Earl Eugene | Pace of South the University Shuffleboard League Christmas party Friday evening, Estelle_ Steves was cohostess for the affair. * * * Guests included Mrs, Fern Sturman, Mrs, Russell R. De- Longchamp, Mrs, Mary He- bert, Mrs. Margaret Thomp- son, Mrs. Nora Ashton, Mrs. Vincent Murphy, Mrs, Cecelia Stark, Mrs. John Becker, Mrs. Daniel Scott and Mrs. Susan Carry, Elsie Duprey and Celia _ Smith. Americans spent an estimated | \1.8 billion dollars on dental bills jin 1958, Nobody keeping up with the Joneses as Old Man Jones. has as much trouble | that fits every man? flatters all tastes? é our welcome GIFT CERTIFICATE Tel-Huron Center Telegraph at Heres Downtown Pontiac 51 N. Saginaw crt ury when in doubt. . CA a0 Gift Certificates issued in any amount at our Main Floor Desk. ; QHQAQHoongagegegeegneagegonnanogongeagogs a r ss GNI ‘diamond cummerbund”’ . because the rhinestone banded vinyl is-eased at both sides by elastic. And the fit . springolator hugs your sole even when the dance tempo’s hot! On black crepe heel. As seen in Vogue. Jnomschhng designer originals —> 20 ar 'f you've searched and compared, you'll masterful workmanship, the luxury of professionally CHARGE . . . BUDGET "DEFERRED «as LAVAWAY oy . v3 vey" a5" >! 33038 Se Ree 232” It's all vamp. Like nothing on foot but jewels and enchanted Shoe Salon — Mezzanine . know what an unbelievable value our mink stoles are! MINK = $199 asus. Magnificent . . . in superb aii full skins, matched skins. These stoles should unquestionably sell for a great deal more. -Natugal pastel, Natural Silver blue and Sapphire Blue minks.* * . Full Length Black. Persian Goats Natural Pastel Mink side + : ___..._. SHE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, DECE: Dear Abby Says How, About Male Help? Husband Is.to Blame —_ | Macaro for Office ‘Messes’} re) sgt : ‘Macaroon Type All Wise If you have. an extra egg By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN something to. say about day two or three of them are leaving his. conveyance.” You we . @ white or two in the refriger- ‘ DEAR ABBY: .Do you seen walking up and down the failed to mention that. If you |~ om = EVERY SANTA | think a wife should ‘have | street having the best time. | print this, Abby, I know sev- | ator, this cookie recipe will Machine end Cold avin The older girls stay out of | eral thousand rural mail car- help you use it up. It comes 25 Years Experience what . from another of our teen-age NEEDS A HELPER... school a week at a time and sia » cooks, Vicky Landspafger. riers will appreciate it, I know there is nothing wrong kind of wom- P. R. H. (Orwigsburg, Pa.) BEAUTY CENTRE Men | | her hus- cS : CALL band “spends: with them. . DEAR P. R. H.: One million, x * * Di oo. ge “or ~_ Mary DORIS HAYES AND ‘| between 8 and If you were in my place two hundred thousand apolo- The recipe is correet. There and floured cookie sheet. 2 cl SED MoNBA¥S HER STAFF FOR ; 10 hours a day would you notify the school glee. my are -oapaggeed > : is no flour init. orate tops with candied fruit % 8. Saginaw bs ucticha : . with? I refer. authorities? =. ’ rmed me (right out of Mis |= or nuts. Bak Zabmettis PERSONAL SHOPPING to his book: BAFFLED |. 1959 manual} that rural boxes yf SCANDINAVIAN SWIRLS me e about 15° min- should - be “about 3% to 4 By Vicky Landsparger “ tary or eash- are interested in. doing a’ pub- | aw ¢ jer. I won't lie service, call on the mother one on the route should have i ag oe ae § identify of these children and find out |. er box * a? most ~~ ese: tase CHARGE ACCOUNTS INVITED , 2 Is hether she is ill, incompetent eight for his mailman. fo ‘ Free Gift myself be- w , 4 ‘ eas CORSET & HOSIERY: SHOP’ ‘ -cause I am or absent from the ‘home. Pér- wouldn’t have intentionally P . “a Skin at Bottom of It Wrapping ROCHESTER, MICHIGAN — OL 1-1022 ASSISTANCE Open Evenings ‘tit 9 ‘ti) Christmas * OP PLL LL Le ~~~ Na a en a [ ; Chic (Next to Edison Market) 181 EDISON STREET skeeper, secre- well - known ABBY in town. My husband has a habit of getting too chummy with the women who work for him. After the last mess (and believe me, it WAS a mess!) I made up my mind that I was going to interview all appli- cants for jobs calling for a woman. The one I hired lasted exactly four days. Now he's looking again. He refuses to let me interview them. I'd like your opinion on this. DEAR BAFFLED: If you haps this’ family needs some ’ friendly assistance. x * * ‘DEAR ABBY: I’ve been a rural mail carrier for the’ past 11 years. In that ti I've driven approximately - 160,000 miles, worn out 9 automobiles . and = served 1,200,000 boxes. You were correct. The Fed- eral Postal Regulations manual states- that rural mailboxes should be “about 349 to 4 feet approximately feet high.” Of course “every- offended the mailmen for any- thing in the world, They're my best friends, *. * * CONFIDENTIAL TO “IN LOVE AND MILES APART”: “Absence is to love what wind is to a fire; it: puts out the little, it kindles the great.” (de Bussy-Rabutin.) Rise to Occasion (NEA) — Heels rise to the occasion. When it's just a hen | | | 1 cup blanched almonds, finely und ‘Wives, Working Girls Have Beauty Problems Who's prettier, the housewife © or the career girl? That’s a provocative question But, basically — and con- sidering that beauty is the re- sult of care and good groom- the all beauty problems ' the beginning. When you’ are at home in the evening, clean face thoroughly . with soap, then apply a cream’ designed for your skin type, Leave it ° . . HUSBAND who needs to be also states that “the “rural { day-night dance or a formal ll oblems room, kitchen (and in desk). ris mas Gla questioned. | box should be convenient for class prom calls for a slender | Skin: The housewife has cer- Use lotion after each hand. , x * * the carrier to serve without mid-heel pump, ~ | tain advantages here, She can washing DEAR ABBY: If you answer —— $$ omit makeup during most of [oo ra WAVING — HAIR CUTTING this by telling me it is none of children of school age. Nobody seems to care if they go to school or not. Almost every The Gift - She Can Wear The Year ‘Round PEGGY'S famou EXCITED? 1@ NORTH SAGINAW 47. lect to dry hands thoroughly Light Sets or use protective lotions be- ; * fore tackling rough jobs. @ Place Mat Sets Swirl | _ And does the business wom- ™ | an have a problem to balance » ° x WRAP 'N’ TIE | this out? Indeed she does, In ° Figurines : her effort to look smart . ' | ® Mobiles Sure we are... and s, functional fashion becomes part of your daily round of living morning, noon and night . * } | the day; and cosmetics often ing her housework, The business girl, however, has a very important psycho- logical advantage — she must ‘look her best; it’s ‘‘good busi- ness.” She's surrounded by others who take pains with complexion care and_ with makeup and the competition spurs her on. * * * To take the other side: the housewife constantly works with compounds, polishes and waxes which may irritate her skin. Many women just get into trouble because they neg- throughout a hectic day, she is inclined to put one layer of makeup on top of another — a Instead, apply a cream or lo- tion — moisturizing or dry- ing — which suits your skin and ~ let it work while you work. 14 N. Saginaw ' { f lat j g ; : ENOUGH SAID | from the ground.” Although party, they’re low. Walking out ing — each group has a few on overnight. . ; wan | DEAR ENOUGH: I think | those specifications were made on a date, though, usually special advantages. And prob- FOR BOTH : 5. s BEAUT Y SALON FE 4-1687 oon a 00 fe ot ist your | in the Model-T days, they arw' | means a Queen Anne or a fens. sider the most basic of Stock up on bottles of hand : - ong people. | still in the manual. The manual one-inch squashed heel. A Fri- onside! mos . lotion. Keep them in bath-: e men * PA credit is Reg. $8.50 $5 00 my business you will probably | dry, sometimes irritate, the 5 PERMANENT . be right. skin, She can evep use medi- | : A rather poor family who | cinal creams and lotions dur- | 4 TINTING — BLEACHING — SHAMPOO — lives on our block has five | ing the hours when she is do- | V4 CARAT DIAMOND USRSES Tees = E. Specials 8 ® Italian Miniature ¥ you'll be too when you see our new ‘ SWIRL collection. They're here in | j truly rough way to treat the SOLITAIRE ~r4 Pa r Ribbons & prettier-than-ever prints: Each one | | skin. i] Yellow or White Gold 5100 ipe ; superbly styled each with | FOR HOMEMAKERS Regular $150.00 Tie-ons unique dréssmaker detailing. Fine Make yout daily bath a + | Coftons, preshrunk for lasting fit, riod of ystaxation as walt as | 2>\ 4 e Candy Garlands some crease controlled for day-long a thorough cleanser. Don't z a mr & freshness, pracessed with a drip-dri wear makeup (except for lip- “i e Puppets $ finish. You'll love the way this stick) while alone at home. id © Italian Lighted Sput-Niks helps you face yor siest day | 1 rs a ant lowety your busiest day, Put your makeup on at five, | : & “ na rove'y so you'll look your best when | © sei ee the breadwinner arrives home. | 3 = : Remove it before going to bed 6 DIAMOND PAIR ie rs , and skip night creams. Hus- % es Misses 10 - 20 bands resent them, and you've Aste f° Von aoe q LAKES SALES f used them during the day. Gold. 2 e Half 121/y - 241/, FOR BUSINESS GIRLS Regular $100.00 _ 3127 W. Huron St. — This ethereal debutante dress — not necessarily | se daily be 2 von ae ‘ | OPEN TONIGHT ‘TIL 9 — for debs —is designed by Jacques Heim and is of dry, apply a moisturizing te) cj a ~] WEEKDAYS 9 To 6 $ puffy, light nylon fabric. Chunky balls of black cream under your makeup in Fricndly Dept : ; . E .|. the morning. When -you repair ACCU Ed FE 4-7121 . puckered nylgn outline the off-the-shoulder neckline | makeup during the day, re- | 24 8 teal is to and new ankle-length hemline. | move it-first, then start from | » Saginaw - Neor Huron eemeeeen — _— a ee el ed | Luxurious Leather Bags en 5 on ao New! Hammond Organ — - - —_ -"Stereo-Tone" HAPPY IS THE HOME WITH A HAMMOND! Surprise your family with this amazing easy-to-play organ. se ONE wonderful gift for your entire family! the Hammond CHORD ORGAN Now your Hammond Spinet or . oe Gord Orgén eb sound mere You'll find new interest and We've a large selection of ; . +.’ 6 rich, colorful bags in fine thrilling than ever. Enjoy full * companionship that strength- leather. Grand gifts at low- est prices. © 4 FROM $395 to $1695 © ens day by day! Here is one -home instrument you can ALL play without knowing a note of music! Ask about the Free 3-Day Home Trial. In velvet smooth walnut. $985. $100 down, $30 me range sound ewith the Hammond "Stereo-Tone”. reverberation ‘unit. . Choose from two models, each finished to motch your own orgon Floor Model, $230 Music Rack} Model ie $165 “tao oan +m Give A Gift Certificate a ; _- Nothing Could Be Finer Than ae ae | a Gift Certificate from Peggy's | UN : : ‘ 20 4 : ee ( oF - ¥ t coe a rire -< : i = 5 oe + *3 ar : 1 GRINNELL'S. HAMMOND” ORGAN. STUDIOS, .27.SO. SAGINAW, FE 3-7168- i i ; : ee i % 3 ps ‘ E i : | ¥ so e 3 \ : ‘ 2 i ‘| THE PONTIAC. JPRESS. MONDAY. DECEMBER 21, 1959 : she means to you with a | Portrait Gift Certificates ) Select, in our studio, the type, | RNER THORPE 4 #\Arlene Butler, 518 West I Huron Street ; 2 |Mrs. silhouette in formal fashions for the festive holiday season. * * * Over a closely fitted sheath she drapes gossamer black lace, chiffon or organza, giving ‘a veiled look to the figure. The effect is all that any siren could desire, * * * | The new after dark ‘“‘illus- ions’’ come in both short and long styles, usually strapless, always figure-revealing and Strong on allure. | A short dance dress with a hobble-skirt look poses a trans- parent: barrel skirt of black lace over a strapless black sheath. ~ A long ‘evening gown features a spiral drape of gsheerest black organza from strapless top to hémiine, with a floor- length drape at one side caught up by a cabbage rose. FIGURE FIRST “I always start with the ba- sic shape of the feminine fig-, = 377 Auxiliary Meets at Post iat Lake Oakland Chief Pontiac Pest 377 Auxiliary} — met Saturday evening at the Lake “|Oakland Post home. Following the business meeting, offered. Vocal solos were presented by |. Hazel Thomas. accompanied by Hostesses for the evening were 25 Yrs. of Practical Experience 205 Voorheis Rd. FE 4-2857 Between Telegraph & Urchard Lake Stay U p-to-Date (NEA) — Having your hair restyled at least once a year helps to keep you looking chic. It need not be a drastic change but it should be enough to J to keep in tempo with fashion. Vernor Macom and Mrs. | Benjamin Shelton. rs 1 $ the Season for Grand Mlusion dla program and refreshments were Go Well Supplied the entire trip, You won't want to spend ‘all of your time hang- ing over a washbasin and laun- = age is not always re- liable. Friday fare: . Skillet-fried pat- ties made with canned salmon and Legion Fetes Children - Light refreshments we fe To Cleaners Often . (NEA) — Wearing — leather gloves until the dirt is ground-|- in is. false economy, If you like gloves in vivid colors, plan to have them dry-cleaned often. Bonneville” Bridge |Winners Announced | The Pontiac Bonneville Duplicatelf- Bridge Club met Saturday at the|| ‘Hotel Waldron with seven tables! in play. . * * * Winners were Ernest Guy and] Edwin V. Clarke; Mr. Lionel Thompson; Dr. Earl Leitz; Collins; Dr. Otherwise,’ the soil may never really come.out, = : Smail. Dr. and Mrs. Edward) and Mrs. Robert Segula; and Mr, and Mrs, Melvin ) and Mrs. and Mrs. MAIL. BOX $8.95 Black satin-finish with gleaming solid: brass eagle emblem. Wrought-iron scroll top bracket and magazine rack. 14-inch length. Other mail boxes from $4.95 to $20 Choose from — our Brass, Leather, Jewel-studded Metal! Clock Shown TRAVEL CLOCKS $4.95 to $15 delightful collection of travel clocks in Lucite, or Travel Alarm Clock — depend- able and accurate. With leath- yada ... for his Christmas stocking! FLORSHEIM Gift Certificates . Tt Vs Florsheim Shoes rom $419 U This Christmas is certain to be more enjoyable if you give America’s most wanted item of apparel .. «Florsheim Shoes. He'll find*it easy to help him-. Ag 20 W. Hore fe Riad. for the. Entire Family gelé to the finest in style and —— and the bone ~~ horn is a gift in itself. + Ce ees a FE 2-3821 | conan earner stenerenemnenan eee" SS CRO Bsns U ‘ { roel i i i t ‘ 4 ‘ * S Z : emer nnenennerrmennrmmnamn nm iceman renee eer enema KNEEHOLE DESK $89.95 By Ethan Alien. rich brown nutmeg tone, or bedroom. Thé same desk with Mar-Proof Plastic Top makes a wonderful gift for a » $99 youngster’s room ........... Of solid Vermont rock maple and hand-finished in a this hand- some desk will add a touch of colon- cial charm to living room, family room, And we have a number of other desks to choose from: Ethan Allen Dresser — Cherry Kneehole Desk amber leather top ........ Desk . Cherry Organ Desk, choice of antique brass or carved fruit-basket drawer pulls $179.95 3-Drawer Chest Desk in fruitwood cherry , CHILD'S BOSTON ROCKER $16.95 Any little girl will love this authentic replica of a colonial Black finish Boston rocker? with gold trim. Adult Sjze Boston Rocker in antique maple. : “$29.95 Po ee . $105.00 . $139.95 $149.50 DECORATIVE In Newest Decorator Shapes and Colors! Delight designs! in. satin, ‘silk print motifs. 4 | a peTve OA CA : “35¢ a eile to $1. 50 sach oo , sizes, shapes and kinds . heauty of candlelight to holiday festivities! See > special Christmas. candies. : : SOFA PILLOWS $3.95 to $7.95 | someone _ with one or more of these at- 4% "tractive pillows! All the most popular decorator, Zip-off covers ~ shantung, corduroy, velvet, and hand-blocked provincial oe We have AGELCHIMES again. eh. ie Aedes: a ee: iGGS © 24 west HURON STREET | “3 er case in choice of colors, $4.95 — ‘ they'll love to find under the tree! - | fe ‘add the - ee eG fe ve yy Bh B38. " 4 EAR RRAgR 20 AGH ATER PRATT RL TTT PS a GIVE A BEAUTIFUL A lamp of lovely opaque Bristol glass Christmas special! includes several styles in both white and pastel colors. are hand decorated. with hand- sewn stretched silk shades, and A aR GT LAMP. OF REAL BRISTOL GLASS $24.95 POSE AEE wilt make an elegant gift for someone Our large assortment All 3-way light switches. \ ° a 3 A = Ed e § = CHAFING DISH $16.95 Charmingly festive buffet accessory! Stainless steel and copper with black legs and handle. Other chafing dishes in copper and brass, silver, or Buenilum. Priced from ooo oe eee . $15 to $50 MAPLE CRICKET SIZZLE STEAK PLATTERS ‘Broil, fry, Bake, and serve on these platters . that keep food warm for long periods.. Spec- dally ined heavy cast aluminum plat- ters with wooden trays. 101 "Length «.. $3.95 : #1 Length <./...... $6.95 15° Length with. solid _— tray CHAIRS Were $ 19.95 $16.95. Choice of provincial print cover in either cape-brown or antique-gold. Reversible cushions for long wear. ee err a ae EAE ie A lg ME ig . Famous Magnalite ROASTERS SAUCE PANS $695 to $995 SKILLETS GRIDDLE $895 BAKE and $795 Come in and see our complete selection of this fine cook-ware . ... gifts to delight any home-maker 119 N. Sognaw FE $0282 7: $795 1. $1095 $1350 $2430 * ? ROAST PAN - ° Because WIGGS is in the “gift business” weeks of the year, we can still offer you a complete selection of beautiful and ‘unusual gilts . in every price range! en ee TT. $10.00 eee on your Christmas list! SPECIAL! J Save $2.96 on this Magnalite DUTCH OVEN Regulary! $9.95 $699 COMPLETE WITH Lid’ | AND TRIVET Magnalite gives 52 “oven flavor’ basting. roast tor making stews. $4, Peesevonera Ree with top-burner cooking . . . for this special magnesium alloy rediates heat from every part. Vapor-tight covers are completely self- — The Dutch Oven is-ideal for | ng meats on top of the stove or And washing with ordinary soap and water “keeps Magnalite gleaming ee ee bright! These fine utensils. ate a most welcome ad- dition to any kitchen! eee SNAK-STAK The All-Purpose Hostess Helper - by COLONY. Peles n 95. Clever,: divided - SnakiStak holds a 3-way asortment of Christmas candies, nuts, mints, #tc. — makes a charming and different gift, indeed! Generous size — 13” tail ahd 6’ in, diameter. Of heavy, deep-patterned: crystal, “a a? m Why. Be Weak and Flabby? Warm, comfortable, knit uppers with padded soles TV Sox Slippers bright leather Sizes to fit everyone in your family, or on your “gift list |. baby,- yourigs ster, teenager, young. adult, and adult. Chogse almost any color or pattern . > “we have ‘them all! They‘re all\on sale! STAPP'S yay JUVENILE BOOTERIE 28 E. Lawrence. St. ° Open Tonight 3 Today's exercise for stimulation. _THE PONTIAC PR RI Exercise to Raman Young . ously it loses its keenness. Unless; tor in beauty, health and happi- ,care should include stimulation of By JOSEPHINE LOWMAN It is becoming more and more apparent that inactivity leads’ to early deterioration” while activity prolongs -the youthful portion : of life. When muscles ‘are not exercised, they become weak and flabby. /- When the mind is not used Vigor-| . we oa Es our hearts quite often, nothing much seems worthwhile. ~ Stimulation ig an important fac-) ness. Poor circulation probably has an’ influence in hardening of the arteries, heart attacks, constipa- tion and many other physical trou- bles. Let's begin with the skin. Its) Parents Should Ask. Questions of Selves By RUTH MILLET (URISTA sp SPECIAL . G Regular $10.50 \. Permanents Only Main Floor 35 W. Huron FE 3-7186 ose < - jalgebra or sis is failing English| literature, Since junior isn't dumb| studying. s\ahd sis’s 1Q is nothing to be. * * "the cireulation, You ¢an accom- the youth allowed to missopolize a So junior is flunking high school family car? The teen-ager who is ion wheels can always find some- ‘thing more exciting to do than plish this with gentle patting and facial exerci Circulation |. creams which whip the blood up . - are helpful in overcoming a rough, Sallow or goose-pimply neck. The complexion also profits by general exercise which sends the blood: zooming “to all parts of the body. One of the best known special-| ists in gerontology feels that it is| most important to stimulate the! liver with special exercises. Here are two of them. -Lie on the bed ‘on your back.| a legs straight. Keep your back on) 50 would ask themselves a few ques- © J \tions -and answer them honestly— (= they “wotildn’t need any investiga- ts | tion. nese TONY’S Beauty © | They might very well start with Shop |< these: — ashamed of, ‘their worried parents| ean't, understand the «"'why’’ of. failing. marks. wee . * * * In a large public high school in one Southern city the parents of 54 per cent of the students .are wondeirhg why their kids are fail- ing in at least one subject. There is going to be an. investi- gation to try to find. out why so many students are making failing grades. If the parents of the students who are getting one or more Fs Is sis or junior going steady? It so, school work is sure to seem far less important than the teen-age romance, Is sis or junior so loaded down with school activities that there: is actually little time for studying? If you haven't looked inside a high schoo] year book. lately you'll be amazed at the number of clubs, organizations and social activities that are school-sponsored, Do you have a hard-and-fast rule that sis or junior doesn't go out at night except on weekends? How do you expect a teen-ager to get ihomework done if you don’t keep him at home so he'll have a chance ito do it? * * * Any parent whose teen-ager is making poor grades shouldn’t de- pend on an outside investigation to tell him why, He ought to start looking for the reasons himself. Yellowstone Park was estab- Does § sis or junior have a a car, is! lished by Congress in 1872 as the, first national park” in the world. | Joyous surprise af i We Are Your Allied Florists acobsen’s |r lowers - 101 Ne Saxioar _ FE 3-7165, Delivery oie Daily nel irmitighede ana ‘ aN E GIFTS * Ss Se ce'4 ‘abdominal muscles down toward the bed as you push your abdom-. inal muscles up toward the ceiling. as far as you can. Now pull your the bed. Pull hard and hold for a few moments. Continue, doing this exercise slowly but firmly. BEND KNEES UP Another. Lie on your back on the bed or floor, legs*straight and arms resting on. the floor overhead, Bend both knees up close to the abdo- men. Grasp the knees with the hands and pull back toward the ab- domen. Hold for a few moments. Return legs and arms to the floor. Continue. These exercises are cor- rective to constipation as well as liver-stimulating. After Shampoo: thin wool, chiffon broadcloth o flannel, cottons. From select the one size best for you. this Christmas.... “Flowers by Wire throughout the world” s POINSETTIAS The glowing beauty of Poinsettias are- always the gift for.special people... the Gift the entire family will enjoy. ‘Large blooming» plants with any numiber of blossoms, In Christmas red or white. WE GROW OUR OWN $ =. 00 37.50 harger sizes also available. . JOLLY oT. MICK $ 4” Ceramic Santa carries holly berries, miniature pine cones and cattails in his pack. Comes in red ee pe white. rfect ‘ and $10__ j ‘ f j j ‘* ee >.> HDd ‘Nie ie Re Si Ne Ma We Me -——— pee We Dede Be Ded Bide > ins atten tes “etn ab ee poo. In hard water areas more care must be taken and per- haps lemon juice used to cut the deposit. ‘size, ‘/rial for lining. send $1.00. ir mixtures of rayon and worsted, rayon and silk, or town this size chart, Length Thorough Rinse oe Nape of | Sizes Bust Waist Hes ook ‘ ne" aig (NEA) — Despite what many | 8 33 23 acy an 16¥4| women believe, frequent sham- .| {9 3 pe 3 hd pooing does not hurt the hair. i Hy MN, Hair will be dull and dry, is = % 3 41 17% however, if it. isn't rinsed Size 12 requires 2'2 yards of thoroughly after ‘each sham- (54 inch material for two piece dress and 2 yar ds of 39 inch mate- To order Pattern No. 1351, state Easy living along sophisticated| ; lines is created by Harvey Berin|25¢, For Pattern Book No. 15,; with a transitional two-piece dress. The waistline is just relaxed enough, and the top, with a narrow inverted pleat in back, is buttoned on to the skirt in front. The skirt, although slim, has released pleats on either side in. front to add to fluidity of silhouette, Make it in Snow Bobts Grey-Black Regular $7.99. Value Men’‘s ~ Warm Lined © sLiPPERS Designer Pattern by TONI OWEN). For HARVEY BERIN label, send Not only his valuable clothes but the whole send $1.00, Address SPADEA, Box} family’s deserye Pontiac 535, G.P.O, Dept. P-6, New York] Laundry’s gentle . care 1, N.Y. If paid by check, bank| and expert workmanship. And it costs no more to (Next week look for an American|| -h@ve finer dry Cleaning. Call Careful Dan at FE 2-8101 requires 4c handling charge. | 4 dj , Enjoy Insured Mothproofing FREE PONTIAC Appear Cheap, See the Inside (UPD) — The humor of ‘‘con- temporary” . greeting cards that deflate some of our more stuffy traditions makes: its de- but this year on Christmas gift wrappings, Don’t be surprised if you re- ceive a package wrapped in an offbeat paper that declares, “I'm giving you this gift be- cause .. . I like to help the needy.” Another says, “If you think this wrapping looks cheap, wait until you see what's inside! Taking a poke at itself, the pa- per advises buyers that ‘This gift wrap is so cheap, it makes any present look great.” LauUundty DRY CLEANERS 7-Hour Service at Our 3 Locations "540 S. Telegraph Road 2682 West 12 Mile — Berkley 933 S$. Hunter — Birmingham ~ PLAY SANTA.JO YOUR FAVORITE NURSE! THE CLINIC SHOE Tras bet Ui rae a, (Doman un White 0 - - Give het Clinics. the professional exterd preferred by aurses | throughout the nation) “Clinics ore softer. -strenger... smerter! Quy bere poly today. se ca me $1,295 Genuine | @pODYEAR wits in white... service women. «visiting nurses... public health wunes.. .seclal serview worker, miles Dae chan nk Woe ee : . Heme Sithen 80 WE MAAR 0 8” i pe : + : sien oS 35 N. SAGINAW STREET se | OPEN ohh eahabiosh 7 Ca 3 ii 6 Alek Ain Atta ae eens ak ; A I 2 A My get ott ™, ig Nc: Wh 2 BERG ERIN ¥ Pa 20 le ea A op ge ig: AB a. i. 2 * eee All Beautifully Gift Wrapped *& ? & ° - tir. HURON at TELEGRAPH OPEN EVERY . NIGHT UNTIL CHRISTMAS - gallery to the public. conquered. It bought 20 of Wal- ter’s, 20 6? Margaret’s — both ’ $1,500 for a painting. ‘Tt also bought six from the _ parents’, but even so it's pret- camp. The range was from $6 for Jane’s ‘‘Mr. Potato Head’’ te $35 for Susan’s “Clown.” x * * about the. only thing left in the gallery as they prepared _ to go home for Christmas was posteard reproductions of some of ‘their works. The artist foursome came about this way: : blonde, was painting even as The public came, saw and | pa BREE Fe g “She admired some ot my | ‘artist ‘also portrays adoles- works,” said Walter, cénce with an ethereal qual tevin lyre Sate hese” MONDAY, DECEMBER 21, 1930 ete yh oe serene in-the-garret “existence,” said Keane, “but there were lean - ; years when we started. The | a hii ete 8 ni ete means _ vate de ae > 6 97 Styled Haircutting from $1.50 We Specialize in Children's Hair Cutting, -ANNALIESE BEAUTY SHO 80% -N. Saginaw St. .. “FE 25600 “ie ieee enanseoton ag of whom get from $450 to | girls, and one customer com- - ings cost much less than their- ty good savings for summer. - The head of clan Keane said Margaret, a fragile - looking _ it happens every time \. [bring ’ . MALING’S” --D. Powde Ty ET) Ceeeeeneveceneccence Bilver, or Pink and Silver ~ 'B. Black, Royal, Red, Powder Blue, Whi Green, or Pink, with white fur. . es u TWO WONDERFU l*SHOPS ‘of | GIFTS-and FASHION + top left. Newest luxury in a‘slip Rogers nylon tricot. slim as a wand. Delicate embroidery frosts the lined bodice front and bra, con- cealing ‘California’ back. “Walking slit hem. White. Sizes 32 to 42. 8.95 bottom . . the Rogers nylon by with walking slit for freedom. Sizes S-M-L.' White. 5.95 Christmas Shop Every Night ’til 9 1662 SOUTH TELEGRAPH — PONTIAC 245 WEST MAPLE — BIRMINGHAM top and bottom righ! A charming and practical ensemble to give or feel gifted in. Yards and yards of Rogers nylon tricot flow into full sleeves and shapely button front. Lace edged and floral embroidered collar. .. . Its partner... the waltz length charmer to match, embroidered bodice with lacy prettiness on on all edges. White. Sizes 32 to 36. Complete ensemble . 495 : if / new . We have a wide selection of the newest fashions for the coming holiday festivi- ties! All the beauties imaginable . .. chiffons trimmed with satin; silk organzas, laces, satins, many - detailed with rhinestones, sequins or ‘jeweled brocades. Junior sizes 7 to 13. in prices as in colors and fabrics! 24.95 to 45.00 & in Our Juniof Christmas : Formal Collection SOP LP _ FASHION ; GIFT | IDEAS... dalton cashmeres with matching: skirts | white stag jackets pendleton sportswear -evan-picone skirts’ glasgow sweaters schrank oajamas bags - purses dawnelle gleves- grandoe kid gloves af prince gardner } 28 GIFTS a 7 For LESS ee For LESS THAN I Venetian Glass Ash Tray... ....%"" [isaer tee 33° Women’s Gift Panties... 18° | cnr: to ; QUILTED ROBES. . 3 Tubular Steel Hack-Saw . . Girls’ Polished Cotton Slips...... 7 , I ae Bal Sen B = a Form-Fit Rubber Auto Rug I" T Ladies’ Lace Trimmed Sips a sr cite esechtie nein > Kromex Cake Cover & Tray +1 1 Women’s Gowns, Waltz & Baby Dolls . *2” ‘I 7 Cup Electric Percolator ..... . . ‘1° , Women’s Cotton Wash Dresses. . . - Ae Ladies’ Full and Half Slips . . NYLON HOSE a4 Girls’ Orion ; ‘Swing- -Away Wall Can Opener | | Decorated Step- OnCan ... Girls’ Anklets wee 6 68° | Husky Football Helmet. ........ I Boys’ Poplin Tip 4 Car-Coat... . 2° Little Boys’ Flannel Shirts seenens oo Men’s Long Sleeve Sport Shirts. eh Girls’ Holiday Dresses... ...... 2" 75° Men’s Cotton Argyle Hose. . . 3 = 99°, Men’s Tie and Sock Sets er io ' Ladies’ Flannel Gowns & jt eres a - ton Underwear. . 2~ 88° (ZeyT oy MP VAY. C1) ie) a occ Men’s Nylon Stretch Hose ... . 4°" 88°! Boys’ Washable Flannel va wh pace 52" Men’s Wc Pajamas. a Men’s Leather Dress Belts ....... TT sami Amo x | I $3 Washable Flannel Robes ..... °2” *1* Boys’ Flannel Sport Shirts... . . = 1 MEN’S DRESS SHIRTS . | | p Men's 4-Button Cardigans... .... Wee Boys’ Cotton Blazer Hose... . . 4°"-77°g! — | | Boys’ Wash & Wear Slacks i kc ee Men’s Neckties ............ 64 zt Boys: Gaucho Kai Sport Shirts. _| seal Beer Stein oe : my j Boys’ Knit Ski Pajamas... ... 1 : — TERRY CLOTH SLippens _QQ°|4 Bor’ Beton Cardigans 1 EER 2 | 2, I Boys’ Hooded Sweat Shirts ...... ogeromoarmmmens | Imperial Ash Tray... . . . ierge,sze 99° E Girls’ Orion Knit Headwear ..:.. . a I Electric Corn Popper . - Genuine Leather Wallets... .. 23, 88° : beGet nt: oes. ee oP 1 Trigger Type Sn Tea ea | Tilford Treasure Gift Pack Cologne . 97° Girls’ Slips and Petticoats... .. i 1. 1 9” Adjustable Pi i _ | Glasbake Casserole and Server. . . . 97° 4 Tots’ Cotton Knit sue wee a 50/fL White Fate _ | Shoe Shine Kit’ ............ 29°H| Girls’ Stretch Tights .... - cee A] ‘Fo De ated TV.Table ees wl Ladies’ Lunt oe secu es Ke (NOUR r. Shoe Rack ... ae + ede ria Set a ge ns s a 2 a i Children’s and Women’s = Ld 2 aie =|) Ee S oe i |: 3): oa FI Bae = Fl 1¢| ie a |< id |3 a ‘strong possibility” that he will become Illinois’. coach. ; Elliott and Dave Nelson, head | coach at Delaware, have long: been regarded the top choices te succeed Ray Eliot. . Eliot stepped aside at the end of the 1959 season to become assistant athletic director.after coaching the Illini for 18 Fggg on x * Nelson, Sy a Michigan graduate who gained football fame as a stfategist and helped devise the wing-T offense, was considered the top candidate a week ago, Hqw- ever, Nelson’s name has not been as prominent the past few days. “Hlinois athletic director Deug Mills - yesterday said Elliott's ititerview was routine and that half a dozen other candidates | have been interviewed in the . Same manner. Mills has managed to keep secret the names of those interviewed, with the exceptions of Elhott and N@om. * * * After Mills talked to Nelson some two weeks ago, the Delaware coach “He (Mills) asked if I was. interested and 1 told him I might be. But I would have to know what was being offered before I could say 1 would take the job.” Nelson said the job was not offered to him at the time. Elliott, 33, said his weekend meeting with Illini officials was a followup of an earlier session with Mills in Denver. — “We met.to talk things over in greater detail,” he said. ‘‘They got to know me and I got to know what they had in mind. Any _fur- ther comment will have to come trom Illinois. ” Elliott played football, basketball and golf at Michigan and is the only 12-letter man in the school's ‘ history. His. brother, vs. White Swan, 8 pm. : At Pieree Chalmers (Bump) Elliott, is head football coach at Michigan, The fact that Illinois has con- tacted Elliott twice to talk about the job indicates more than routine interést in the native of Blooming- ton, Ill. In all probability, Elliott will talk the matter over with offi- cials at. California before further action is taken. Sports Calendar ONDAY Cit ie Soskelben At Pentiac Centr: CLASS A—Lakeside Royals. A Knights of yt are 7 p.m.; CIO Local 504 vs. ghaw's Jewelers, &: 36 Herthere ASS vs. Larry & Shop opm Commerce “Lakers vs, Wal Late, 8:30. D At PTincotn Junior High jack. Hawks Ys. en CLASS D—B! 2 pans mee EUESDA vs, Aces,. 8:3 DA High School oe Marlette at Imlay North ——. at vO ‘th School Getmming Pontiac Northern at Utica RO —— = Dearborn restling Pontiac Northern at Pontiac Central ity Le etball Welden’ sna spotting & Goods, oe ind T ea CLASS ytel) & Speedway 79, 6:45 pan.; Drayton h — CLASS. A—Johnson va. Rocco's Restaurant, 9: ry p.m < | bows, Ch tions on ate “family” The. “Liberty ‘and Bluebonnet although | mere tants, into of post-season Many experts laughed when a — group announced Bowl game. ,}major post-season bowl battle Sat- ae, a crowd of 36,211 turned out for the North's first lurday and watched Penn State turn back Alabama, 7-0, on an 18- yard touchdown ‘pass from sopho- more quarterback Galen Hall to sophomore halfback Roger Koch- man, is Gary Alcorn (16) of the-Pistons. ST. LOUIS # — Since their quick visit to first place the Detroit Pistons have learned the St, Louis Hawks aren't very hos- pitable hosts, - The Hawks-have had first place in the National Basketball Assn.'s Western Division to themselves for three seasons. They, as well as the Pistons, were startled a few weeks ago ‘when Detroit surprisingly found itself occupying top spot. St. Loulg quickly saw to it that the upstart Detreiters were evict- ed, knocking them out of first personally Thanksgiving eve, The Hawks haven't let up the pressure since, dropping the Pistons in four straight meet- ings, Yesterday the Hawks rode roughshod over Detroit, 102-86. ° It was the Pistons’ lowest scor- ing game this season, _* « * ‘We couldn't buy a hoop and -fi- nally hit on ‘only 29 per cent of our shots,’ complained coach Red .| Rocha. Detroit now has lost six of its last eight games and has fallen S 5% games behind the Hawks. The Pistons, sharp in downing Syracuse 120-112 Saturday, fell behind by 10, points in the first | sxtgeelions Susie ‘got an of- © - AP -Wirephote FOUL IN MAKING — Clyde Lovellette (34) of the St. Louis, Hawks ‘is catight in the act of committing a personal foul as he grabs the arm of Archie Dees (22) of the Detroit Pistons in the first period of their game yesterday. Leaping in from the side Pistons Now Are 5% Games Back of HaWKS nvew vor cra fense going until the final period. Detroit narrowed the score to 88-80, but St. Louls then went on a scoring binge to regain com- mand, to four points, * * * 21 points, euse 132-127. Carl Braun got hi cinnati, 132-118. DETROIT ST. LouUIS \Schaads Ist KC GFT GFT Gontin : 2 ie 2 1 3ibe morning- -afternoon affairs, ex- Bere, 3 1 Gemere bg Gleent Saturday Lioya Ti dberne 7 aie | Meouire 2.4 8 Martin 2 2 s| Japanese Pucksters — ; 2 een 6 118 . " pet 311" \Head for U.S., Canada se ES a , SP hente LS ae 88 ete —— ee ta tanmank BOSTO! . ice ey eam 0 ama ceil <4 GFT — a F 7)Sunday. aboard the eugene Maru y 2-0 4 Barnett 4-21lfor Vancouver, British Columbia Cous: $2 Bianchi 102 , bs Hlemsohn 3a Coste 2 % 6ifor a series of matches in Canada i a aa Dierking —_ 4} $ agiand the United States before pro- Loscutoff 30 6 Hopkins 8 319% ceeding to Squaw Valley, Calif. ¥ 9119 8 1.17 . Richter @ I 1 Schayes 9 14 32 x *& & ; bona 8 a les inate nlc eancsitiet i en Var 7 in- Totals s 27/ cluding players, is due in Van- a oe eA Ts leouver-Jan.- 2. Boe \DoublesChamps | jon 1281 Score to Knights of Colum ' {Motor Inn. ~ Jamboree held Saturday at | A 1274 bowled by Andy and Pearl | _ | Duff was the only real contender [to the championships score. a. Prizes were awarded at a gath- Stet ‘ae jleast at the gate—as Clemson ral- Walt Dukes, with 20 points, was the only. Detroiter on target, Gene Shue added 15 points. Bailey How- ell, who had two better than 30-; point games last week, was held Cliff Hagan led St. Louis with The Boston Celtics, meanwhile, ran up their 12th straight victory. Bill Sharman led the way with 30 points as the Celts downed Syra- first victory.as New York coach as the Knickerbockers routed Cin- * * * The Bluebonnet Bowl inaugural was even a greater success—at lied in the final petfod to upset xas Christian, 23-7, before 55,000 fahs in the Rice Institute Stadium at Houston. The Liberty Bowl promoters got a fair shake from the weath- erman. for their initial venture. The temperature was a crisp 4 degrees but the skies were clear and sunny, and the fjeld at Phila- Municipal Stadium was in good condition. Ambrose (Bud) Dudley, presi- dent of the Liberty Bowl Assh., estimated Penn State and Alabama teach will take home close to $100,- 000 as its share of the gate, tele- vision and radio receipts, * * * “We might even have made a little money for ourselves,”’ Dudley added. “But, more important, we're off the ground now and al- ready looking ahead to next year's game.” Both head coaches, Rip Engle of Penn State and Paul (Bear) Bryant of Alabama, also were convinced the Philadelphia game was a boon to eastern football and should eventually take its place among the leading post- season attractions, Other Liberty Bewl supporters pointed out that the Orange Bow! at Miami drew only 5,134 fans for its inaugural in 1933 and the first Sugar Bowl game at New Orleans in 1935 attracted 22,006. * * Officials of the sthesheene! Bow! | stil are’ busy tabulating the re- iceipts from their first promotion, Coaches Only Workers Today NEW YORK (AP) — The coach- ing staff of the Eastern Confer- lence champion New York Giants) were the only ones at work today in preparation for Sunday’s Na- tional Football League champion- ship game at Baltimore against the Colts, ~*~ * * Coach Jim Lee Howell gave the team its usual Monday holiday. The Giants will work tomorrow, Wednesday and Thursday. They will take Christmas Day off and jeave for Baltimore Saturday morning for a final drill there at Memorial Stadium. i 2 2 a Howell said he did not want the double practice sessions last week. All of this week’s workouts will Ss hich, like. the. Liberty Bowl, was televised nationally, However, El- vin Smith, president of the Hous- ton group, promised ‘We'll put on a bigger and better game next year. ee Hall’s winning touchdown pass to Kochman at Philadelphia came in the final seconds of the first half and developed from a fake field goal formation, Hall had taken over in the second period for All- America Richie Lucas, who suf- fered a painful hip injury, Another second-stringer sparked Clemson to ‘its upset victory at Houston. Sophomore - Lowndes Shingler tossed one touchdown pass and set up another touchdown and a field goal--with his classy pitch- ing. He also wound up as the Ti- gers’ leading ground gainer with 6 yards in three carries, BOWL STRATEGY — Members of the North team who will play in the North-South College All-Star football game in the Orange Bowl on Saturday get together for a discussion on strat- egy: Playing in t . Penn State end; he Shrine game are Nort Neff, Bob Oswandel, Army center and Joe Caldwell, Army quarterback. The team is — nna tm in Miami. Gary Aldcorn, Jerry Melnyk Pace 4-2 Win Whitewashed for Two Periods, Wings Rally to Conquer Boston BOSTON — Just when it ap- peared the Detroit Red Wings were in that Jong-expected tailspin, their /hewcomers bailed them out again. * * * Their six-game unbeaten streak snapped Saturday at Toronto, the |Wings were blanked at Boston for two periods last night. rookie Jerry Melnyk scored once and draftee Gary Aldcorn twice and the Wings were on their way to a 42 victory, General manager Jack Adams had said all along the difference in ithe last- place Wings of last season and this year’s second-placers were the new faces. . * * The Bruins were ahead 1-0 when Melnyk got the equalizer right after the third period faceoff. Ald- corn scored twice in 27 seconds before the seven-minute mark. Veteran Alex Delvecchio boosted Detroit's lead to 41 before Boston came back with its final tally. Detroit lost for the first time in seven games Saturday to the weekend’s play, the Wings were no better, no worse in the stand- ings than they’d been before. They still trail Montreal by six peints and lead Toronto. in third | by five. The Wings had to be caged on ‘before breaking. into their third- game with Boston, x * Assorted articles ‘ including. a ot 13,909. Phe egg hit Wing goalie Terry Sawchuk in the left eye while he was losing, 1-0, MeArthur-was hit Maple Leafs,’ 4-2.: But after the . period scoring spree in the wild | wooden seat of a chair, paper, ap-|. ples and an egg were tossed onto the ice by the demonstrative crowd; Newcomers Rescue Red Wings Aga In Then within: seven minutes, | ALL EYES FORWARD — All eyes puck which went hghind the net as Terry Saw- chuk, Red Wing goalie made the save off the stick of Don McKenney (17) of the Bruins. Com- follow the (3). and Louis Watching also is Leo Labine of the Bruins. | AF Wirephote ing in to support Sawchuk is Marcel Pronovost Marcon (19) of the Red Wings. Women’s Event Ends 3rd Week DETROIT — Loraine Demsky) holds a one-pin margin in singies rolling at the one- quarter mark of the 12-week women’s state bowling tournament. The Detroit bowler had a 655 handicap total after the third weekend of rolling yesterday with Jackie Peel of Flint right behind with 654, Nellie Provost of handicap. * * * ‘Ann Smith and Celina Bleau off Detroit led in doubles rolling ‘wit runners up Peggy Bender and Sally Hoffman of Pontiac, Third were Barbara Smith and Anna McKen- ney of Dewitt with 1,200. x wk o* Madeline Gough of Marlette ‘ed the all-events with 1,894 handicap. Florence Root of Jackson was sec- r dundusky was in third with 611 | 1227 handicap, 15 pins more than) City Team 2nd in Doubles ond with 1,852. Third was Jactzie| ‘Peel. with 1,847. Singles leaders: Actual Handica 1. Loraine Demsky, Detroit ,. 583 65 2. Jackie Peel, F Mt ....ccene iT 654 3. Nellie Provost Ogncusky Pr] 641 4. Maxine Taylor, Gd. Rapids 633 63: 5. Anita Clayton, Gd. Ra fae. « $53 634 5. Marion Barszko, Detroit ... 853 634 5. Ruth Morely, Mount Elemens $65 634 & Josephine Raczynski, Detroit-566 632 9. Delores Bagetanees, Prankenmuth 63 $02 10, Helen Shook, Grand Rapids $21 Ready for. Olympics (> COLORADO SPRINGS, (AP)—David Jenkins, world fig- ure skating champ, says his leg injury. is healed now and _ he’s ready to represent the United States in the Winter Olympics: The. 23-year-old Jenkins, home from -college for the holi- days, was cut on the right leg in an accident while skating. here last Aug, 25, Hawks Clip Leafs, Rangers Also Win Hull By The Associated Press is 2nd Hat Trick When names of hockey’s future Hull of the Chicago Black Hawks. ‘Many around the National Hock- ley Bir ey h i asslc Duke 76, Nev? Auburn 59, Alabama 52 (for 3rd) Murray (Ky.) Invitational Memphis St. 79, Miss. St. 62 (champ } Baylor 71, Murray & ‘for 3rd) St. John's iN.Y.) é7, LaSalle 64, Niagara Banta Clare 69, St Bonaventure 48 Cornell 97, Syracuse 61 Georgetonn ¢{D.C.) 64, Duquesne 63 YU 91, Denver 68 Be Joseph's (Pa.) 14, Penn 62 Drake 55, Canisius 50 Fordham 90, Columbia 68 St. wraneie (Pa.) 102, Youngstown 66 Colgate 69, Penn 8 State 67 Villanova 88, Wagner 63 @ON MAN: TELLS ANOTHER & SATURDAY’S COLLEGE BASKETBALL THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 21, 1950 _ Ask Closer Ties. jon Farm Rules Building Gives W. Bloomfield Trouble WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWN- SHIP — Given 30 days to remove an unsightly, frame real estate of- fice at Orchard Lake and Walnut Lake roads, a representative of the lowner offered it to the township. In trying to locate a key so that , _ _|a check of the interior could be WASHINGTON (UPI) — The Na saade, Township Clerk S ie tional. Milk Producers Federation! ‘Chamberlain was told that a mis- has called for closer cooperation | ‘take had been made and the owner Milk Producers Want FDA, Agriculture Dept. Liaison on Drugs, Etc. Eyesore S Tounshin $ bisdochs had no intention of parting with the structure, report to the township and it was decided immediately that the town- ship didn’t want-the building even if it had been given to them. 2 &: & 9% . So back to the original problem of having the building removed. The clerk Was asked if a bond had ever been set when the build- ing had been constructed that would cover the cost of razing if the township had it tern down, However, a building inspector | checked it anyway and found that timbers at its foundation had been rotted by mildew and .ter- mites, The building inspector made his NOVEL CHRISTMAS TREE-—Patricia Vogels- burg, 20, of 2014 Willow Beach Rd., Keego Har- bor, adds the finishing touch to a Christmas tree she made of toothpicks. Patricia, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wayne F. Vogelsburg, said she the novel tree. others S on | top. used more than 8,000 toothpicks in constructing toothpicks in balls of plastic foam, placing some of the balls in a circle and then pyramiding |With Poland, Yugoslavia between the Agriculture Depart-| ment’ and the Food and Drug Ad-| ministration in regulating the’ use) of pest control chemicals, drugs and antibiotics. ‘ o* * . M. Norton, secretary of the| Ymilk federation, said that some farmers now following pfactices recommended by the Agriculture Department find themselves con-| , |frented by crackdowns from the, Food and Drug Administration. Norton .said this was ‘‘intoler- able.” It results in seare -head- lines, needless consumer worry, and losses to farmers and the government, be declared. The milk federation leader said misuse of drugs and insecticides should not be allowed. But at the same time, he said, farmers should} not be penalized for following rec- ommendations of the Agriculture Department. * * * Government economists warned that dairymen may begin produc- ing surpluses again in the near fu- ture. Pontiac Press Photo The tree was built by placing the | ‘The warning came in an. Agri- | culture Department report enti- | tled, “The Dairy Situation.” Orion Twp. Power Vote Wednesday © ORION TOWNSHIP — Voters in. tional | | the special election Wednesday .on| renewal of Consumers Power Co.’ s| 30- -year franchise with the town-| ship. Clerk Mrs, Margaret Stephen | said pells in all precincts will be | open from 7 a, m. to 8 pum, we The franchise, if adopted, wil give the power company authority to lay, maintain and service gas” mains, pipes and services in_ the| township for another 30 years. The | present franchise expires next. April. , * * Mrs. Stephen also announces) that. the township offices will be! closed Saturday because of the) Christmas holidays. - Jail 7 Danes Convicted as East German Agents COPENHAGEN, Denmark (AP) —Seven Danes, including admitted SHARON LEE AHO Communist party members, were) A June wedding is planned by convicted today of serving as in-/ | Sharon Lee Aho, daughter of telligence agents for East Gre- | Mr. and Mrs, Elj Aho of Green- many and sentenced to prison’ land, Mich. Her fiance is Don- terms ranging from 18 months to) ald Frank McLaughlin, son of 5. years. Mr. and Mrs. Frank McLaugh- The convictions fo'lowed a three-|; lin af 3057 Moss St., Keego Har- week trial. bor. ~ | Finance Challenge Remains 4-H Eyes Red Exchanges WASHINGTON (UPI)—The Na-;exchanged next year with Poland 4-H Club Foundation says! : Orion Township are reminded of|farm youth delegations may be international farm youth exchange The report said that in recent months the relationship between beef and milk prices has begun to! change, with beef prices dropping | and milk becoming relatively more | profitable. * * Economists believe this will on lead to an upturn in milk p tion. Their report pointed ant that! while beef has turned down, milk ™ ‘prices during the. second half of| 1959 have been stronger in com-} parison with support levels than at any time since 1952. and Yugoslavia as part of the | program, Negotiations to include Poland). and Yugoslavia in the 1960 pro-/ igram are under way. | | They would be the first Com- | munist countries ever to take part in the program. Killer Dies 3 Days Before Getting on Infamy List TULSA, Okla. Forty-one states and at least 50, foreign nations will take part in| ithe exchange of farm youth dele- igations in 1960. (UPI)—A fugi-| tive murderer and bandit who was | A total of 108 young Americans tg have been placed on the FBI's will visit farms in foreign coun- jjct of 10 most wanted criminals! tries and about 130 young men'tomorrow was identified today as and women from overseas will Pa¥|one of two men killed in an auto! return visits to rural areas in| wreck at Tulse Saturday night. | this country. The cost of the program in the! The FBI * velensed the identity, United States is financed entirely, lof Thomas Oliver Moore, a sullen, jwith private funds. |unbalanced criminal, The FBI had planned to public- | Tractor Chief Fined $500 for Shooting Porty for Children ly list Moore as one of its most | wanted tomorrow. ST. JOSEPH (UPI)—J. R, Love, at Dryden Wednesday Bau Claite has been fined. $59 DRYDEN—The Dryden Fire Hal on his conviction of felonious as- will be ‘the scene of the annus! iChristmas party for village chil- sault in the shooting of one of his_ former employes drén at 7 p.m. Wednesday. The fun * will be staged by the Dryden. Area * * |Development Assn. and the local The industrialist faced a max- iveterans organization. imum sentence of four years in| * * prison and a $2,000 fine. Santa Claus will be on hand to ; t | 1 ‘ward Christmas and their wives \Clara, Winifred and Eunice, and | and wasting the taxpayers’ mon- iat noon Thursday for fhe Christ- | was installed as worshipful mas- ter of Austin Lodge 48, F&AM, at the Masonic Temple here Satur- day evening. No, a bond hadn't been set, ex- a bill of sale had been recorded. ‘This means the township takes ‘ownership of the building, accord- Plenty of Christmases, | but None of ‘Em Ts Mary [s.r eee i ts one ‘unsightly, frame real estate office lat Orchard Lake.and Walnut lake FARMINGTON _ Christmas alli mas, |roads. year ‘pound? | that is, | Farmington has 11 of them, but! “It's a nice name to have,” she) No action will be taken on the not one Mary, Christmas. |said, “people never forget you.”’ building, township trustees. said, kk * * * |until a thorough check is made of There’s Harry William and Ed-| Mrs. Eunice Christmas, x * * sale. v mas? there’s Peggy, Jimmy, Colleen and Danny. Kathleen, | They’re al] related, and live within a bleck of each other. William and. Edward are sons of Mr, and Mrs, Harry. Christmas of 28700 Independence Rd. Peggy, 5, and Jimmy, 6, are the children of William and Winifred of 21550 Hamilton Rd. Kathleen, 6 Danny, 3, and Colleen, 1, are the children of Edward and Eunice of 21534 Rockwell Rd. : * * * None of the Christmases was born on Christmas, but Jimmy will be 7 on New Year's Eve, Colleen was born on Dec. 5 and Danny on Jan. 2 “We come close but we never quite make it,”” said Mrs. Chrlat- Yanich Must Wait -No Meeting Tonight # TROY—City Commissioner Louis i Yanich, who tendered his resigna- jtion on Dec, 14, will have to wait | another week to find out if it is ac- cepted. * * * For the first time in many weeks | ‘the Troy City Commission will not | 'meet on Monday (tonight), but will resume its business Dec. 28. “ AP Wirephote | POLIO PEEKERS — These photographers used a unique sub- Yanich resigned because he | said politics‘in city affairs -were “getting out of hand” and that he was “tired of doing nothing ject — a polio virus — in their picture taking. Dr. Donald D, Stu- art Jr. (seated) and Dr. Jorgen Fogh took such a shot for the first time at Albany, N. Y. They used an electron microscope to invade the virus’s domain inside a human cell. ey.” Action on his resignation was tabled at the last meeting which iYanich could not attend because | he was at a relative’s funeral out) of town. — * * * The Troy City offices will close List : State Farm Figures | Corn Crop a Whopper bushels last year and 38,540,000). ihis year. Dry beans —. 515,000 acres har- vested, 1,160 pounds per acre, 5,226,000 hundredweight produced last year and 5,974,000 this year. Sugar beets — 73,500 acres harvested, 17.6 tong per acre, 1,112,000 tons produced last year and 1,294,000 this year. Apples — 12,200,000 bushels last year. and 12,000,000 this year. WASHINGTON & — The Agri- culture Department has estimated this year's corn crop at 4,361,170,- 000 bushels. If the year’s final estimate holds up, it will be the largest corn |crop ever produced. Michigan is expected to harvest 12,581,000 acres of corn at a yield|- of 57 bushels per acre for a total of 125,571,000 bushels. ke * Other estimates for Michigan mas holidays. Install Stanley Verbeck Davisburg Mason Head DAVISBURG — Stanley Verbeck| ‘plained Clerk Chamberlain, instead}. Who would ever forget Christ- 'the legality of the recorded bill of |. In a tear-choked voice Love told) udge Thomas N. Robinson Sr. | idistribute bags of candy to the Presiding officer was Past Grand Master Dr. Morgan J. Smead. Peaches — 3,200,000 bushels last ‘year and 3,100,000 this year. ‘included: Capital Brews Speculation: Williams Will Run Again LANSING (4+—Michigan’'s new 87-| cashed within a few weeks—bring- million - dollar revenue gave legislators nothing more than/pay the most pressirig bills. a breathing spell in their struggle RESTORED BY 1971 to solve the state’s- nagging money problem. It also. fanned: specul: Gov. Williams might try for a sev-| ($1,200,000 it yields package | ing in about 40 million dollars to} It will be restored by 1971 and stion that | the Legislature will appropriate the | annually for| lyoungsters, and group carol singing ‘Thank you" after the sentence |. was handed down. wat be the featured entertainment. * * ; Love had lost a motion for al inew trial in the Nov. 4 conviction) of wounding Charles Gen Oct. 21,) * William D. Ellis, senior warden; Bruce R. Barnett, junior warden; The first all-talking motion Pic-| Harold J, Vollink, P.M., jture, ‘‘The Lights of New York,’ i was was presented | in (18. ‘‘and Don C. Kockenderfer, itary. Other officers installed included | treasurer; secre- harvested, 31 bushels per acre, 16,- 045,000 this year. ‘41 bushels |Wheat Program Second Target Federation Delegates Approve Creation of Marketing Association From Suc News Wires _ The nation’s largest farm group—The American Farm Bureau Federation — is shooting for more bargain- ing power for farmers with food processors and distrib- utors and sweeping changes in the country’s wheat pro- . gram. ine federation's 160 voting dele- gates gave unanimous approval to creation of a national marketing association in final sessions of the group’s 4ést convention at. Chicago. “The national group will co- ordinate market information on prices, supplies and demand to help stabilize farm® income by enabling. farmers to plan produc- tion to meet demands.. The new group also will service local bargaining associations, con- duct research on contract terms and if necessary negotiate agree- ments with processors and distrib- utors. * * * The proposal suggests that first consideration be given to the bar- - gaining position of fruit and vege. table growers with other producers to be brought in later. The federation also called for sweeping changes in the nation’s wheat program—changes more in line with the Eisenhower admin- istration’s proposed . new pro- gram, . The federation voted final ap- proval of resolutions urging elim- ination of wheat acreage allot- ments and marketing quotas and suggesting that support prices be linked to corn and market prices. Wheat prices now are supported on a sliding scale of 75 to 90 per cent of parity. — |MIGRATORY WAGES The federation also has come to the defense of wages paid to Migratory. farm laborers. “Incomes of farm workers may not be high; neither are those of farmers,” said a resolution passed by the nation’s biggest farm organ- lization. But wages of migratory work- _ers “have increased apprexi- mately twice as fast as the cost of living during the past 10 years,” the resolution said. “Virulent and often uninformed criticism of farm wage rates has ignored the fact that such rates in 1959 averaged 47 per cent above 1947-59 levels."’ “ * * * | The resolution also asked state legislatures to enact or gmprove “statutes relating to housing for migratory farm workers.” Another AFBF resolution at- tacked the nation’s new inter. state highway system as ‘“un- necessarily” expensive, The Farm Bureau, which fought for years to get hard roads past farm houses, went on record as “opposed to any expansion of the interstate highway system beyond the 41,000 miles now authorized and to any change in the federal share (90 per. cent) of the inter- Winter wheat -— 1,133,000 acres year and 1,200,000 fhis year. Potatoes — 53,500. acres har- vested, 144 hundredweight per acre, 8,745,000 hundredweight pro- iduced last year and 7,722,000 this 920,000 bushels last year and 14,- Oats — 940,000 acres harvested, per acre, 53,856,000 1958 ina fight during a plant party) icelebrating the defeat of 4 UAW- |CIO representation vote at his com- | pany. @ ‘Romeo Lass, 17, ‘Takes the Cake’ With Cherry Pie enth term next year in an attempt! |benefits to needy veterans. to clean up the financial mess be-; Starting Jan. 1, smokers, “sre he bows out. | drinkers and telephone and tele- graph users will pay new or higher taxes totaling 34. million | dollars a year. ROMEO ~ Five years of conk- ‘ing experience paid eff Friday for ‘Claudia Johnson, 17, when she won the Cherry Pie Baking contest at Romeo Community High School. * * * Claudia, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Max S. Johnson of 5485 Lock- wood .Rd., Washington, won the competition over six other con- Bills setting up the money pro- sram adopted Friday by the Leg- islature—a combination of. taxes and the veterans trust fund— were ready for the governor's signature today. To become law, they must be signed by Friday noon. Corporations will pay a five-mill franchise fee, a one-mill increase, to bring in another 13 million dol- lars a year, Another 18 million dollars in ; . business, sales and use taxes|testants. She is a senior. "Seiueae tabchet’ the mseatites passed last August remain in ef- sey an 3 baa Donna Kay s fect. Posey a usan Jersey. ‘inadequate and miserable’ but ’ y * * »romised he would not veto them.| 18 patching together the new | Candia wil represent Romeo in The alternative, he. said, would be| Package, Kepublicans blocked jai. district bake-off Jan. 12 in the governor’s demands for an income tax, crux of a bitter feud that tied the Legislature in knots for months, And they voted less than half the money he said was needed to pay off the state’s 95-million-dollar debt piecemeal and meet demands of a fast - growing. citizenry~ for state services. STEADY DEFICIT Except for the most optimistic e * revenue calculations of some Re-|'‘Let me live in a house by the _|publicans, the-concensus is that the) . Side of the road ; general fund deficit probably* will “And be ‘a friend of man.” tistay at or above. 80 million dollars) That house, Foss’ birthplace through 1960. and inspiration\of the often quoted Next November, voters may get ‘a cnance to ballot on whether they prefer a sales tax increase, So. MT ® tax. solution favored by. “The last occupantiowner, a wid- utter financial chaos.” East Detroit. They'll Sell His en by the Side. of the Road CANDIA, N.H. (AP)The statutes are written in more severe me- ter than that employed by the late poet Samuel Walter Foss, Fas pean: ‘him to try for sother two-year stay in the governor's office, as haven't made, up my mind,” - the State Welfare Department. lines, faces sale—to satisfy claims} ae He ag me : ~ BIG JOB, BUT FUN — The Russel Blackett children merrily decorate their’ huge Christmas. “Republi-| cans, or the Democratic - toca edo died a year ago. | fax. sivas msn vimanas ~ home at 8951 Big Lake Rd., Clarkston. Big trees dine, 7... : \ sone, Yodtins tae sak 90 mich Semele he year. Choruses Will Sing Before Smart PTA WALLED LAKE -— The Clifford H. Smart Junior High School PTA meeting at 8. pom. today will fea- ture Christmas musie by the school choruses and instrumental groups. * * * The boys’, girls', and | mixed) choruses, under the direction of Eugene Guettler, will offer a col- lection of well-known holiday se- lections. * * *- A highlight of the evening will be the showing of color slides depicting scenes from the “‘Christ- mas. Story” with the choral and instrumental groups providing background music, ‘ The public is invited. ~ |40 Pct. of State Counties Are’ Free of Brucellosis . |per cent of Michigan's 83 counties |have no known herds of. cattle | dare $1 others which have five or tree. It measures 12 feet high.and 10 feet around, them, explained Mrs. Blackett. The youngsters /pidylai - and just fits in the lofty living room of their from’ left —— ee a Pears: — 1,400,000. bushels last) LANSING (UPI) — Nearly 4 infected with brucellosis and there | state highway construction costs.”’ | * ok OF | The resolution. also opposed ‘‘di- version of federal highway funds for the purpose of: reimbursing utility companies for relocation costs incident to highway construc- jtion in cases where facilities are located on highway rights-of-way.” The delegates also aimed ‘a reso- lution at the railroads, shippers of many farm products. They voted to oppose both rail rate increases and “ ‘make \work’. practices in transportation operations which re- sult either from labor-management agreements or legislatior." ia The delegates re-elected Charles B. Shuman, 52, of Sullivan, I1., president and voted to hold next year’s convention in Denyer, Shu- man has headed ‘the organization since 1934... Church Open: Doors for Ist Time in Oxford OXFORD ~ Climaxing ei ght months of work and years of plan- ning the new Free Methodist Church here opened its doors for the first time yesterday. = f — ‘patient population at Pontiac State ~ quired) on our dosage, Then he — we paid to supply him with the /Comnty Social Welfare Departme:t / cannot be of assistance. -Hopes Women f _ on the outside market has been|pIeely on the Use Ot vtieees engls#id “They have enabled patients| the sdvent of tranquilizers to : “Ito function more comfortably inal) have vielence and destruction of . “returnees” to Pontiac State Hos-|doesn’t want, to take a chance be-|/ areas and some get home who) property, This kind of behavior pital. . cause "he has had no experience) otherwise would not. pow is unusual, for relapse of the released patient ‘is anvinadequate rapport between explained as one of the reasons for the family physician and the medi- cal staff of the mental institution.|they are not determined by ‘the The problem was aired at a drug would be of harm to a patient, + x *°* ' 7 ie "i . * yy) “They allay anxieties, enabling/their homes from a disturbed ward ; ee nals arlene bread yy ol the patients to be more accessible|. . . unheard of prior to tran- ae edges the psy , to hospital Soret ‘ ‘ rod Sangeet bs - : ; Since the ‘tranquilizers began to| In 1953 there were only four or size of dosage. If a particular). used extensively at Pontiac|five open wards (no locked doors), State Hospital in 1953, the phychia-|There now are 11 open wards. ° of representatives of jit would make no differencel. ics caiq: More the hospital's pharmacy; medical |whether it was administered in a ine 7 home for. convalescent: leaves ‘sett, nursing staff, caseworker |small or larger quantity.” Bnwprs Gece | ee these things have been at- staf¢ and administrative staff. x * * ' ltributed A hospital pharmacist said the "_ A psychiatrist, who chose, to re-| tranquilizers are not habit form- | In “1953 approximately 100 pa-|drug is not a cure. THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, DECEMBER 21, 1959 _ patients- today can visit patients are able to go main anonymous, said t pa- tients have sufered relapses and returned_to the hospital because they did not meet the expense of drugs it-was necessary for them to buy. * * * ; He said 98 per cent of the 3,100) Hospital aré on tranquilizers. The cost to the hospital per patient for)’ a month supply is dfi average of 7.50. , , , “When we discharge a pa- tient,” the psychiatrist said, “we give him a two-week supply~ of the tranquilizer (if it is re- ‘is in the hands of his physician. “On the outside a month’s sup- ply of the same prescription will cost him twice as much as what drug. He pays an average of $15) ~ a month on the outside, not to/ — mention the physician's fee for of-j|— fice calls during thé month.”~ A Pontiac State Hospital official also said that once a patient is released he remains on-convales- cent status and is carried on the hospital's books for three year's. NO COUNTY AID For that three year period, or until the patient is judged sane by Probate Court, the Oakland The psychiatrist said also that discharged patients have had to return to hospital care because their private, physicians weaned them off the tranquilizer dosage prescribed by the hospital medi- cal staff. . “Patients are released who will be fine on the outside,'’ he said, “as Jong as they remain on the) drug . . . and they must remain * on it in order to stay out of the! ° hospital. “Many family physicians, how- | ever, are reluctant at the size of | dosage we prescribe. They may! _ try to cut down the dosage and | then the patients come back to us.| Many people must continue with) the dosage we prescribe in order! to function.” NOT SPECIALIST The phychiatrist explained that ~~ ——— Nina Khrushchev. | Can Guide Peace MOSCOW (UPI)—Nina Khrush- chev, wife of the Soviet Premier, expressed hope that contacts be- tween Soviet and American wom- en would be broadened to pro- duce “peace on earth and clear skies over the heads of our. children.” ; The Soviet First Lady made the statement in-an article she wrote for the: magazine Soviet Woman as her “Christmas mes- sage” to the American people. DONALD DUCK BOARDING HOUSE “HEY, THAT'S A BREAK! MY ENVELOPE 1S six STILL HERE/ I'VE BEEN HUNDRED STASHING MY POKER WINNINGS IN IT.ON ACCOUNT OF HERMIONE +~THAT'S MY OLD LADY aw HAS GOT MITTS LIKE FLYPAPER/ Sl MUST BE ABOUT 600 CLAMS L GETA CUPPA COFFEE IN THIS “SS \ Al: i Mad a * . ( Ye . ) M\AvBe HE Sie IAW NSN LIKE 10 STAY- 12-2) © 1950 by NEA Service, ing, TM. Reg. US. Pat OF, FOR DINNER = DOLLARS! AND NOW You WISH ME TO HERE / ~~ SAY, CAN FETCH YOU REFRESH- MENTS & SOINT 2 yy) SPUTErr/ Sas. {t 97 jo e@; ‘ P) - OUT OUR WAY = — Al Dee yf it, 4 e' a etl Xz, Su WV. Fo) Sy SN Qi) TM. Reg, US. Pat, Of » JZRWwILLAMsS (2-21 seen = /| rT i AS i | B= i ; TT / WHY MOTHERS GET GRAY © 1959 by NEA Service, Ine, Cog PROFITABLE OPPORTUNITIES Press Want Ad Section pE | tvery Day in the Pontiac lake advantage of this easy way “to solve your. Buying and h om Brahms — they're all alike to Martha, . ey I “Y ) : MAPLY oF ets 4 rg) ¥ ver. | WETTER GET @ WIRE OFF WO WER... 80, LL, PHONE, | WELL...[ HOPE ™S || BUT WHEN THE GOING YOURE RIGHT, PAL! } SOE ike +} SURE T CO 4 DOWNHILC Ay 1 By V. T. Hamlin ALLEY OOP 5 AL MELA ERE COMES THE \\ FIGGER ON yf MOB...D'YOU SUPPOSE. YEAH! THAT SHOULD MOVE TH! CULTURE OF MOO A By Leslie. Turner . SPLENDID! HAS HE MENTIONED 4 “THAT CONFOUNDED HISTORY OF HELLO... \ THE BAHAMAS HE'S WRITING? THEN L MUST SOFTEN UP THAT KR AND ee ee NANCY ; po DEPT | WHAT'S I GOT BUBBLE HAVE You STORE| THE GUM IN SANTA'S a BUSHM ILA ER. py.-2'- MATTER ? WHISKERS MORTY MEEKLE BUT HE JUST MADE IT WORSE. CAN YOU COME RIGHT AWAY ? OHI CANWAITA - COUPLE OF DAYS... 7, i se ‘ LINWOOD, IT’S ALL YOUR ] FAULT SHE DION'T GiVE }- US COOKIES! ‘ a - - 2 Wh SL Ne 3 ON KE The following are minutes Gealings on the Board|them in wholesale package lots. of Trade ’ rye leading the set- backs Om losses.of more than a cent | + * * Were off major frac- Friday. Detroit Produce top prices jemering sales of tocally ‘grown. iproduce brought to the Farmer's Market by growers and sold by Quotations are furnished by fhe Letroit Bureau of Markets. ‘as of : a ae « Industrials Flirt | . eZ % ; s aay el With New High NEW YORK ® — Industrials nudged’ close to a record high in active trading today. Motors paced the stock market early this after- noon. In any irvaduie® and labored ad- vance, gains of fractions to about | 2 ; e wi . heiress Frederika (Bobo) Sigrist une, and her estranged American verdict. Juarez will have the nil for the remaining two and *j wong ty in all December’ con eure a point oan Lares sacle ow 2 tracts ends today and a good deal) Appirs. Delicious, bir #159 numbered pum ! of transactions appeared to be to-/4PPis Soasnok’ cw... : ite ogee situated stocks made bet- i 7 5 howings. ' ; or —. “oormmerial. bus rea rerthern 8 on vereeeene 3 For the douend time in a.week, ness was slow. . VeGRTARLRS the Dow Jones industrial aver- Japan bought « small amount (Beer sepPcs bY ER ge Mirted with a new historic , + -of soybeans and Pakistan has Gapbage, Curly, bi. Leap tHE 30 top. At noon the Dow 5, ag K ed offers tomorrow on a (Corroin lopped. bi. pet ROE 408 to SAE, tapping GETS CUSTODY — British ae moderate amount of wheat. The (Celery, root. dos SR ee Second closing high of 678.10 | holds her 2-year-old daughter Bianca ag she was awarded custody ee tne ten noun, |Caene. tae eth bas 1g] Menened inst Aus. 3. | of the child for nine and one half months of the year. Both Bobo, - eepted subsidy cen tre : ae Last Tuesday—at—the—-same—-heu i j : a bushel on 700,000 bushels of Barsiey carly, doa behs “3 the Dow industrials were above eaend, Glecy Junren, ter on nt in the London court for the corn for export this month and (Pircnipc, iy bu 1 30] the previous record closing figure an ot haves the siand ” : - wext, Foye ~b] ms be er} but sank below it by the time the half months of the year. : Near the end of the first hour fefishes. hothouse. dos. bes. ... 1-$3| session ended so no new record wheat was % cent a bushel lower !Squash, Acorn, bu. |).....)) ||...) 190) waw get. . to % higher, December $1,96%; | S2ussh- Buttercup, ‘bu... .200.2. £90} The industrials were bolstered . corn % to % lower, December Squash, Delicious, bu. .............. 1.00 by a gain of more than 2 by Al- R t } bbe . I ] $1.08%; oats % to % higher, De. /SAoer, Hubbers wu Bea Gee a Du Pont also # LeLILOE Car an ISle ' gember 76%; rye % to 1% lower, helped, rising about a point; but SALAD OREENS Decémber $1.23; soybeans % to| [Celery Cabbage. doz 1%s lower, January $2.09's. $175 Livest ck Grain Prices pansies OPENING GRAIN (AP) CHICAGO. Dec. M Opes aing | jaughter steers’ ond helfers, quality gra in: somewhat improved, good and choice Wheat Oats », |Predominating; cows comprise around 25 Dec. 1.96% Dec 76%— per cent; around 200 head stockers an Mar 2.01% Mar 1S |feeders; steers and heifers moderately Mey 2.00%, May 72" | active, about steady with last week's late dis 183% Jly' Obi) | gectine. or around 25c under last Mon- Corn Rye ib = cows active, fully steady; one lot ie 1.08% Dec 1.23% Fe me 955 Ib. yearling steers 26.00; smal | Mar 112% Mar 1.28% | et pieh choice to prime 1168 Ib. 26.75: May 1.16% May 1.20% choice steers 25.00-26.50; to sly 1.17% Jhy . 14g! low "choles steers 23.00-25.00: few lots Sep 1.158 Bep 1.28 ifers 22.50-24.00; utility cows |1$ 90-16-00; camners and’ cutters 12.00- i Bose Salabie foo Butchers a0 Leaun Harrelson =: Withdraws Suit Will Seek Settlement of Land Profit Deal)” With Louis Linteau higher; choice wooled } tow loads “choles shorn eee: several loads good woo! ooled lambs 27.00-27.40; load choice wee | lambs 18" 15; utility to good lambs 14.00. 7.00; lead choice shorn lambs number | 2 pelts 18.00; ewes 4.00-8.00 cull to choice slaughter | Poultry and Eggs The 16-month lawsuit started by. DETROIT POULTRY Leaun Harrelson, president of Pon-) prrporr. ive uae Prices per tiac Teamsters Local 614, against) pound f.0.b. Detroit for No 1 quatit; live poultry Louis C. Linteau, a former- secre-, Heare type: hens 20-24. light type (Late Morning Quotations W j tary-treasurer of the union, has | fens 8% heavy (be toasters: over 5 Pigures after decimal points are eighths of ater Lily Seeds + * a a ¥- been withdrawn, Harreison’s attor ers 3-4 Ibs. whites 20-23: dueklings 31: Admira} 24.1 Kennecott o3 —Not Wheat ney said today heavy ducks 22-25. light ducks 19-21: Air 'Redue |. Kresge, 88 31 , . . eeese oan , turkeys heavy ty ype young Allied Ch 116 Kroger 32.4 * * * pens 0. heavy type young toms 30'4- | Allied Strs LO G Harrelson filed suit in August ° ‘Alum Lid. Liv McNaL fez) WASHINGTON (UPI) — Wheat : § ugus ram Atrlin . I. S a | peTe EG Ligg & My . 874 anc bread go hand in hand, but’ 1958 — he had been cheated: OIT EGGS aman . Lockh Aire .. 32.1] ! ROIT, Mee 21 (AP) — Eggs fo.b. Am Cyan 7 Lone 8 Cem _ 30 /tky to convince an Australian abo-| out of $5,700 by Linteau and other) Detroit in case lots federal state! a an o ty = . Lone. 8 Gas | 37 dlrigine of that. More than likely| persons after he entered into a/et™aded jam m Motors Lorillard 37.8) three-way deal for the purchase of; ree ae A extra large. 39: / 4m "Gas Mack Trk 30 he'll just shake his poison dart tube | ee-way pu oan eum 3). erede “medium Am 8: Martin Co .. 44.3/in bewilderment. real estate, known as the North. />rowns grede 4 large 33: check: 8 y . ed in the market averages, was q outstanding, dividend. American Cable & Ra-| ‘dio opened on a 19,000-share block |and was more than a point higher /Am ele fel : |Am Tob the chemical blue chip erased the igain and was easy as the “| iwore on, Motors were helped by con-| COZUMEL, Mexico ~ If you! tinued optimism over 1960 auto | | want to go off almost to the end of ilized atmosphere, you might try this island of Cozumel. x * * Twenty-five miles long and 15 across at the widest point, it is located 12 miles east of the Yuca- tan peninsula and is part of the Mexican territory of Quintana Roo. American Motors, not represent. rising about 3 points before clipping a point from the rise. : Sharply stepped-up production plans for the Rambler next year drew buying to American Motors. Ford continued strong, rising a ; 7 the religious sanctuaries of the an- point General Motors added @ cient and highly civilized Mayan — Indians, and was a stepping stone Steels, after an uncertain (of Cortez in his conquest of Mexi- start, edged to the upside, the | major steelmakers showing small | fractional gains. Rails were a bit easy. The Friday optimism about a steel strike settlement | no longer prevailed. Morrell wag active and up mor® ithan 2 on news of a 25 cents stock co for Spain. Bread Around in active dealings. Favorable ru- New York Stocks It Used to Be Made Out! Mead CP . 48.1) e ‘ (31 M i 29\don't know what wheat is. ridge Subdivision in Waterford Commoretalty graded: |am nda d Mert Ch & §& 743 But they do eat bread, Township inrge 35-37; Sarge $0035" medhum’ 36:98,|AMREWEC CS SEE Monsen, ch. oat ey OO : . ts i . Ward . 3 jsmall 33- 24: grade B large 28- 32; browns | Atchison” Ge Mot Wheel 3 | Which brings up the natur all Harrelson’s attorney. said the large Avco Cor 135 « question, bread made} from what? | Motorola OE FER Ro 83 OO atm cn SU SVSTRARSLRSSGHVSEsyves 2 ef RWI OOM mm hw hw mee ee - complaint against Linteau was 30°: 32. & mrge sbuaT 28; small 22%), | Beit eo Murray Cp Made from water lily seeds — officially withdrawn in Circuit | Boeing, Air Nat Dairy ree water lily. seeds molded Crart tere Oras bean ’ . Borden... Nar ee 322 /into loaves and baked. hopes a settlement “might ne- Borg Warn . - atiated privately.”’ 6 News in Brief | Briggs Mts Nort & West 1o74' Even though we grow it by the i te t Bru Balke $32 No Am Av .. 351 billions of bushels today, man | ..., 26.2 Nor ©. , Harrelson said Linteau paid him) iifford Pollard, 69 Dougias St., Burrouens 33) Oblo On |. 325/ hsm’ Seth secure he ahweys | reported to Pontiac police Satur- Campb Soup |; 55 Owens tm Gl 103 y but $300 of what he believes should a= - nea 9.7 HO! | had bread. have been a $6,000 share from the/@ay that someone stole an alumi-| Can Pac |.... 3b. Om S08 Pan A reported $17,000 land deal profit./num suitcase, valued at $50, which | Carrier Cp ... si Panh pl 48 -In comparatively recent times, . he had left inside the front door! Cater Trac ||: 35.4 Parke ‘“ithe American Indian used acorns. F Penney, JC 120 . . ; ~\of-the apartment building. | Chea & On. Oe pe R ig’: Uh f|First the redmen boiled them, then . et . | Citte . 41.4 Pepsi Cole “laid the molded acorns, in the sun. 4 | i —— Cities ore Sa Preer 35 a0 Magic? It’s Tragic Mrs. William Beatty, $59 W. Iro-| Clerk Faup -- {2 phelps D 58 | .The natives of the Spice Islands LONDON (UPI) — Magician i ean’ toe bebe baa Colum Ges. Ry Eniloo 337\use the pithy substance of palm oayi lnc w ‘ali ice saturday that someone broke Pw. Bt t & G .. 894/plants, It makes a wholesome—b Devid Berglas, who specializes into her h by forci Consumer Pw . Proe f°." 34 plants a lesom ut in disappearing acts, said he |) 0 er Home by forcing a door, | Con Cop & 8.. 13.5 Rea a9 | tasteless—loaf. came out of the London night- ‘hen stole Christmas presents val- Cont Mot... {27 Republic St! .. 78.1) Two thousand years ago, baking | : -eeme . ght- : ‘on Rex Dree 47.6 ey where he is appearing and wed at $60. | Copper Rng 22 Bern Met 67.6'was booming in Rome, with 250 | : ppe iCorn Pd 544 ee Tob 59.6) ford his car, containing his Mrs. Blanehe O'Neil, 27 Hudson Curtis Pub 121 oval Dut 49.5/bake shops. and a couple of baking show props, had Vanished ‘Ave., reported to Pontiac Police Bet Edis 2, satewny 36 schools, It was said that “bread | St ry §3 : BLIC SALE Saturday that someone stole two | Deug Ane 38.5 Scoville Mf 28.2 and circuses" were enough to keep | 1956 oun PUBEE No. Séemaeee? Dix ‘purses containing $25 from her /BOS,qhe™ 388, Sears Roey eee Deople happy. and emperors of : 4 dr. Sale te be held 10:30 a.m. Dec. 22.) ; Bet Ar Lb. 3 § - $9'gthe day manipulated the populace 1959 at 608'S. Saginaw. Pontiac, Mich. MOMe. The intruder entered) Fest 0, - sop anil 39.5|with step-ups or cutbacks in the : igan through an unlocked door, 4 Eaton Mig $$ Sou Pac... 234 ; : Dec. 19. 21, ‘58, jEl Auto | 42 coorry Ra .<. 26 |bread allotment. re & Mus... 12.1 Sper e 2 , : NOTICE OP PUBLIC HEARING James Jones, 18 Lull St., re Ene RR It Std Brand - 39] The ancient Greeks got along on Notice ie, hereby given that « public ported to Pontiac police Sunday|Ex-Cell-o ||, 364 std Of Ind .. 423/a coarse barley cake for their : hearing 3G be: ay Suauare ta the theft of a watch valued at) Food Mot 93% sté Ot Be 3} lbread needs a. FS ‘ payee , F i 25.2 . Pp... 327 ar : Time ‘in the Gembilstion Chamber City, ‘Proettre 04 Steg ebace ©. 4 | But ‘before them. the Egyptians: Hall on the proposed vacating of the: re Gen brnam 466 80" Js-+ 33,/Wwere wise to making bread from z ; . P Sut Pp .. 38. Streats H fine ‘Tot et Bene B Ne te |Gen en Rice 108 3 seit ‘& Co). 46.1) wheat, Triangular loaves have y ‘ to, : 3 T as... 4% ‘ ee Gee eee business Notes Fak. 1) a iit ie ea oe bs the wing resolution adopted De ‘OTe ‘& Ey. 836 Tex wi ember. 8. 1988, jen Yi Textron ...... 23.3) | mi y com omm. Miles. sitpported by Comm; (C. D, Harris general manager of{Gen Tire | LS Fimk |R Bear o2.4,were paid in loaves of bread. Commission Yeoommesnes "the Jaceting| the Curtiss-Wright Corporation, Genesco, od $3 Tratisamer ... boy Even 16,000 years age, man ate x. east Boe “ot giles Wpuens Vista Utica Division, announced today Sothef pr 3 Underwood. | 265, Dread. Swiss lake dwellers used. Heights paivision, extenee northerly ‘that Richard P. Ballou has joined Gostrich .... $3 Un Garbide tee te grind up crude grains, mix *n crefore be it Resolved. that « public! the Division as product manager- or Brige & Unit Air Lin... Be them with water, roll the dough Hon & "Etapter, XIft of the ‘City Char-|Seerators. Gt No ay $84 Unit Fruit’... 273] Into sheets and bake it on hot ter, as amended, of the pro vacat-) Ballou has ex Gul On... 36a US Lines 27.4). stones, _ ng of =, stub end sliey lying west of (oe 0 ee i ; Rud ...... 84 ‘Bight attr Sxesat bere the field of To Reairin, 11 HBS" 4) Today even tings as soya bean Maen father hassel fiel's puoie tating electrical Bins St Wiarton. gaan’ bine bark plus those water hearing be. held on the roposed va- . Inspir Cor i 40. West Un Tel .. 52 lily seeds—are still used for bread- machinery, hav P, 1 RSE me eve seertiee ater, ) EPG tien ght Weng ahh peaking. ae * LJ o enua siv 5 to ab # ‘3 : id "1960 at 8 p.m. Eastern Standard Time, (8 — Previously Int Harty 48.5 White Mot .. 5 | In the United States, we con- * in the Commission Chamber, City Hall." Deen associated Int Nick ill Wilson & Co.. 444 a at of the ing’ commission. Int Pape 136.6 Woolworth |: 64.1/8uMe 14,000,000,000 pounds of bread Sed December 14 with Marco In- Int Tel & Tel 39.9 Yale & Tee . 34.8 each . f it the f me ee. n $9. dustries, Inc. as Johns Man 496 Youn & W 33.5/C8C0 year, most of it t soft, lice _ a CUT Ies, 4 t . Jones & L .. 85.6 Zentt Rea ..113,2| white .variety,, Only an_ infinitesi- gate oe OF MICHIGAN, IN THE PRO- igialdieg: Wes Kelsey Bay = 45.2 . y|mal amount is returned to the the County of n : ; . baker as.unsold or faulty ell Electric Mo- ; AVERAGES _ : i ee ggg A gage mong tors Company. fe , (Comptied by the sg sorsated Press) Test ny as , a pe ‘Allbe: ‘te of said child: |c hief engineer; BALLOU Indust, Rails Util. peei(’ h | T 3 ¢ ied i . Net Chan tae ee be ta | ier a ear iFederal Electric Products. Com-|Noon Monday 350.1 120.0 97.9 2368 if as njures: wo Guides [PANY a8 chief engineer, and helmet, fay ake ML Te Beal, Raytheon Manufacturing Company|Month ago 336.8 125.9 95.6 ~291.6 . OY | year 304.7 132.1 93.9 209.9 a graduate of the lows, State Ool|i9e Uae dat a St BES) a graduate é Iowa State Col- ©. 908. 3 : : t > lege where he received several|isst tow |. a4?- ‘ans 993 tees 4 Ponting Township main and et |degrees in Electrical Engineering caneiniehis 1 bm. avinbbied Waterford Township woman were + a 1 M Inve 678.67. er injured early Sunday poise: wand yon, #9 Rails 194.98. up 6.21 [when their car went out of control! Sonimanant to appear. per- Can't Be Too Careful | | Sie ane woe on Lansdowne street near Hatch- : : Volume to p.m. 1,930,000. ° jery road, Waterford Township, and RAMBOUILLET, France RETROIT STOCKS — ‘struck an abutment, z to (UPL) — Security, arrangements Se é Nephler Mo) ‘/Pontiac State Police for the summit meeting at the 7%" — The di Rambouillet Chateau were so {fee Bie Rubee 6s. mee Ss é i oe =: ne o speeine 7 and asked. nowhere, and still remain in a.civ- Historically, it once was one of, Of the islands 3,009 inhabitants | _sbout Ruianed live in this town— Before History ‘should carry their own equipment. | Is Civilized Shangri-la also Cozumel—on the coat. . This is a quiet and peaceful, place, with little activity except for bursting growth of vegetation, There are no nightclubs, and only one movie theater which operates two nights a week. * * eastern * or trucks pass on the principal street, ° Some have taken advantage of the island’s tranquility te come hereto read, write, or just rest. | Others\fish or skin dive in the crystal waters. The island has not been overrun | by tourists, and\some residents say \tney don't want ‘it to be. | Still, they welconte well-behaved | visitors who want to share the is- land’s charm and friendliness. The island is almost crimeless> -- HAs AIR FIELD owe Ryd way to get here com- is by private plane or yacnt, “or a daily cargo-passenger: iplane from Merida, capital of the | state of Yucatan. | There is a good air strip, ‘built | ‘by the United States for use of) planes scouting enemy submarines | in the Caribbean 7" ing World War, There are twb hotels, the Pal- a converted government | building. and the small Mayalu- The aborigines} um with a garden of lush trop- | teal plants. . The food, especially at the Maya-| luum, is good. There, two world-! itravelers, Ilya Chamberlain and his wife Janr.>, can whip up plain or exotic diches with equal knack. * ® * Those wishing to fish or skin dive There is no adequate rental serv- ice at present. Boats now available for fishing are not comfortable for catching] big ones. They are converted sail- | boats with for swivel chairs in the rear. Skin divers, besides enjoying the underwater beauty, can spear fish and giant crayfish which hang around the coral reefs. The sun is hot, but a balmy | breeze constantly flows across: the| island, and the nights are com- | i 'fortable, * * * idols, People came from all over the Mayan world for counsel. The| idols were hollow and fastened to temple walls, with an epening: ior the priests to enter. Club for seven years. =e stallation of officers. vo al It is a busy day when two cars! Warns Teachers Meeting Tonight of Pontiac CFM To Elect Officers and Establish Study Groups " at First Session The. Pontiac chapter of ‘‘Citizens for Michigan” will hold its first meetin at'§ tonight at 8 N. Gene- ae ee eee The purpose of the organization meeting will be ‘to elect perma- nent officers and establish CFM founder George at ithe organization meeting held last | Monday. Dr. 8, d. Dalley, temporary chairman ef the Pontlag chap- ter, sald it was not necessary te have attended last week's meeting to join the city group tonight. “Any citizen of voting-. age wivhing to help his state is ey: invited tonight,” he Dr. Dalley said already some 50 persons have indicated a desire to be members of the Pontiac chapter. x *« * “Citizens for Michigan” is an created by Romney -and others in’ September to seek remedies for ‘Michigan's economic and govern- imental ills, brought to the fore-| front by the 175-day political stale-! day. | 6-9- 12-Fe. Wide 257 S. SAGINAW FE 2-7755 Open Mon., Fri. ‘til 9 'troit News. | olis survives. a had written regularly for the De- . *® * * A. brother George of Indiana» Business for Sale Established brand name retail store outlet in Pontiac. Investment $25,000 yielding high return on stable prod- tien write: uct. Fer informa Box No. 38 Pontiac Press CARLOAD PRICES FROM FACTORY TO YOU PLASTIC "WALL TILE a es ALL You NEED NOW—2 CONVENIENT: BIG “LOCATIONS. ~ NOW ACROSS FROM THE NEW reat art eS ERR SL TERN ASPHALT TILE -9x9Y%, SBD case CASE OF 80 Vinyl-Ashestos TILE 9x9 S6.D5 cas CASE OF 80 7 ny ‘HURON bed” ‘lighting 4 certain - ten wo rok te lives plus ra ‘Give Pe Poinsettia Reasonable Care _—and It'll Last Unlike Topsy, Chrstmas poin- settia. don’t “just grow.” But with reasonable care they'll bloom for several weeks after. the holidays and you can keep them alive to! ¥ blossom again next year. “Just learn the plant’s peculiarities and humor them, say the experts. pe The poinsettia is stubborn about what it will do in certain day. | lengths. Its lighting require- ments vary at different times of | the year, At Christmas it demands lots of light, so keep it in a cool, sunny window and make sure that it re-): rigins artificial-light until bedtime. '¥ A fluorescent lamp or a 75-watt bulb will do the trick. Unlike To , Christmas poin- settias don't grow.” But with. A native of , the poinset- : i face fesis slightly dusty. When you notice discolored leaves, take heed; a dash of ler- -tilizer or plant food is in order. Mix 4% teaspoon of complete fer-. tilizer with a gallon of water. Then use portions of this mixture, | rather than tap water, the next time the ‘plant is dry. After the leaves have dropped, reduce the water supply grad. ually until the soll is completely dry and put the plant into stor- age (any spot where the tem- - perature is a constant 60 de- grees). . F Forget about it until April or May. Using a sharp shears, cut back the old stems near the base of the plant to force new growth. Remove thin stems and trim the sturdy ones to make a shapely 5, rich loam (mixed with a broken|' egg shell) and water and fertilize as necessary. Remember, too, that poinsettas can be troubled with mealy bugs and scale insects. You can prevent insect attack by spraying regularly with a handy aerosol insecticide, the Antrol African violet and house | > plant insect bomb. In September, keep the plant — away from artificial light after A sundown and pinch back growing tips to keep it busy. Then you can enjoy a blooming, home-grown és re poinsettia in time for next year's Yuletide season, ~ Economist Jolts | ~ Smug Optimism Eliot Janeway Expects. Trouble in Six Major Areas Next Year NEW YORK (UPD — Economist Eliot Janeway challenges the smug optimisim over, the U.S. economic outlook for. 1960. He sees trouble building up in ‘gix areas: The unresolved state of the steel dispute, the serious slide in farm income, the stepup in price competition. by foreign . producers, defense cuts, tight money and narrowing profit. margins. Alsoz-he notes,.the severity of the housing industr§ decline is dangerously ‘underesti- mated. “Our sick industries such as agriculture, oil and housing, are fikely to. get a lot sicker mext year and even recently healthy industries such as- stecl ‘and aluminum are likely to find conditions far from ideal.” _ Janeway believes _ that many tactors responsible for the 1957 re- cession are, hang 8 work now. 4p. says-at_ resent . _..Reynolds. levels Singer Manufacturing Co ‘ghares offer séund value for in- comme, and Jona-feneg Investment. $ SEREEBes SSeen rs S8Seseses | seeees ete: (B3s ice Re x rad Boe Rent Miscellaneous _REAL ESTATE FOR SALE ASSRESESS s => water only when the sur- Bale Lamy a Bontracts to Loan gg service ne Plumerfelt i Interment in Lt n Cemetery.) _heral Home, 1 1959, CECIL L., Johns Wedne, eda: Wa: cc. EKen- ties now in death's cold chill, I often sit and think of him, ter, and childre: SPARKS GRIFFIN CHAPEL rfhoughtful Service FE 2-584) < COATS FUNERAL SOME FARM MERCHANDISE wer. orein & Feed... pate Farm ui penent coe ee fm, Baw pl Por Sale Housetrailers 00, 101 cm: ‘3, Help Wanted Male 6" _ Death Notices _ BOOTH, 959. mares. 2305 Williams’ Lake Rae joved husband Booth: dear father of Charles J. atid Robe: Booth state at the Sons Puneral Home. 33° ee YOU USE EXTRA MONEY? rown, Char Phylis Brown and Carol: Puneral -|\GA8 STATION ATTENDANT. | rehard Lake, cn ok officiating. DeConic gob ects a ba s © BBs 7, Cocnneme Puneral Home, b+ =H FUNERAL HOME 8 bul 1 ‘ cy Ambulance Serine ft Plane or Motor Le : dear a xe en mig and ee re a t 2-2/ or tree Mc, “What kind of antifreeze do I use? ion. Mrs. Wilson will lie) in state at the Flumerfelt Fu-) on, } Help Wanted Female 7 PPP EE woop, iy Gnsles Ra Ra ¢ 77. Mr. Wood SALESMEN FOR MODERNIZATION will He in state at the Donelson- gaies, also telephone canvassers PE 2-8245. Funeral Home until noon, In Memoriam - 2 YSITTER WANTED. CHIL- dren are 2, 3, 6 and 7. Live to. Fd 23-1186. IW LOV: NO MEMORY | OF MY. tema” assed away | yeer CAR HOP, EXPERIEN! ap. ey ape pon. 3 Prot Tor D Drive in 21, ies i face % loved is now laid low, E votes ig still, the yo who often clasped in eit live in, santas c caekmene OF poves. 2 young children, general clean- 4 nice » kame. FE 8-8631. call MI.7-0858, RILL prod EXPERIENCED. i weady. person, Frost ave’ of jie W. Huron. t gri i Sadly missed by wife gon. daugh- “atte TO MANAGE STORE Previews exp. in drug & coametic E- 43463 __ Funeral Directors 4° s 4 «| Donel son-Johns re iA habe OME Ler 2 “pe eat, FOR DAY ' 8 must be ne i Bey Boy Drive nee” Dixie | TS Reg. U8. Pee om | @ 1960 by NEA Serves, LOST The best—hot chocolate!" Building Service 7 | Al RESIDENTIAL COMMERCIAL L | & industrial Mason : *) tee store front re- ers sing | Mice Belt and Orchard Lake! John W. Copies. jeinity, PE 4214 ia AND CEMENT ° ro Also fireplace,” OR _3-0402. ALL TYPES OF "MASONRY RID ge Res. & com- Fe 7 NUM “SIDING. AWNING “es rms. FE. Notices & Personals 27 1 23 Wanted Real state | WRIGHT-VALUET {5 eee “Et i008 or FE neon Po TY eee =| OW eo & GAR’ O07) FE 8- : epsima “Uphaleiering 7 : UPHO ones . one ‘ee 207 Te PERRY, Ss. 13 wen. Dine, MY ENT, ior : FAWN & WHITE “eriawa-| [ hua dog. Male, spots on side and tail, Final. “1073. See & ROE SS Sar Bass | i eabin eabinets, | be BASE jute WATERPROOPED Le Work wuarenierd. me estimates. Ey ‘i } ___Lest and F Found 26 ~—— 4 LOST: aname FEM: ALE, e vic. rs es: & BATH. UTIL. Paip. Birmingham, Re DEC EAST \tesé cat, Reward. PE 5- 7445 | LO8T: BLACK RIMMED GLA. SsES_ finder please call FE 5-2306 LOST: RED COCKER, BLOND! hild webeom top knot vicinity Huron Gardens, F _Gingeliv the. Pe ataat’ ee ROOM Suturday E 4-6320 OST: MALE BEAGLE. BROWN, ’. 2 BEDROOM APARTME any GIRL OR WOMAN nee.” i a friendly advisor. Phone FE) afize, After S$ p.m. or tf no an | dine. FE. 4-2004 | a FE “a4 9.8734 Conftrentie! - = stairs, attics, window's. Complete | A A ar PRIVATE DETECTIVES Don't worry. Kaow the sects Ex- pert shadowing. FE — KITCHEN 1 HELP POR FULL TIME evening work 5171 Oixie Hwy. Clesed Mon LADY TO 8 BTAY ay Wit 3 INVALID, 7:30 am. to 5:30 p t,° dey, | 953 Cameron Ave. ‘Call E 213 after 6:30 p.m Orayton Plains. OR 31181 4 Voorhees-Siple', | Help Wanted Female 7 LIGHT HOUSEWORK & BABY- oiring. Vic. Columbia & Walton off Baldwin, Hrs. 7:30 to 6:30 Caill_after 6:30. FE 48164. MATURE, RESPONSIBLE WOMAN to help care for children visitin, parent ante week of vas: 27, 1959-J 960. Call 5-8277 after 6 o PM. Bat. after | TPM Cemetery Lota 5 NEAT ATTRACTIVE LADY, 25-35. |PERRY MT. PAR CEMETE RY Beautiful 6 grave Tot. Will divide FE 4-0682. BOX REITIES . At 10 a.m. Today there were replies at The Press office in the following boxes: 1, 5, 17, 34, 35, 60, 62, 65, 70, Tl, 72, 7%, 161, 116, 117, 119. ~~ a amail 6 vie O'Brien Heating, wage, “Bi oorhels. » RELIABLE MIDDLEAGED WOM. an to help with poneewers. and to of Sashabaw “and Maybee R Road. OR 3-6039. WAITRESS FOR EVENING WORK, full time. 5171 Dixie Hwy., Dray- ton Plains. WHITE LADY TO LIVE IN, CARE of house and children, $18 a wk. FE 38-2776, . ate | WHITE WOMAN WOULD LIKE day work or work by the week.) B 8-0546 ‘WOMAN POR GENERAL OFFICE | work. Must like detailed clerical | work Typing required. Write Pontiac ress 61, giving | age, education, jo experience & | family status. 2 QUALITY SALESMEN with proven npekgveund in upper level sales, $400 commission per+- sale, in protected te Vorrhory, Write ntiag Press Box -i17. All re- jes confidential. _ CALL TONIGHT (7 to 9 that” basis apgmnoh Wayne, Michigan. Lo $1540 PA 7.4300 to a week in spare ae yi consumets in Pontiac 0 & Lake. Orion wen Rawieigh's Products. Start immediately. Write pawieth's Dept. MC AITRESS WITH ‘BAR EXPERI- ence. 913 Baldwin Ave. Help Wanted — 8 LL | write Pontiac Press LOOKING FOR A JOB IF 8@. Box 7 ad out if vou Job ESTABLISHED WATKINS ROUTE | ‘available. Pull = pers we Ay erage $2.50 per h 6:30 to li: ee EXPERIENCED MALE 0) | male cook. Write Ti Pontiac: Preas. i 696-312, Free nm, in | GAB bRIVERs. uate, STEADY, \NITOR, DOWNTOWN bldg. Must be able to mon Reply Pontiac Press Box 82. ¢|DRAPTSMA a EXPERIENCED for special machinery, Apply Mur- _ray-Way, Birmingham. LO- eal references. Mechanically in- _flined, 6480 Telegraph, GRADUA for ok, ol automobile body assem- bly plant. Will, train for. specific assignments. send resume %. Sal- Pl y, Divisions \ Hon paket Wiener cate Baldwin Ave. pra tine-Cad- sr ergs FOR PONTIAC Seathées stating aintenance., 40 Patte calls. + ROUTE MAN . work 8 hours a dey, \b% days week. one bb. F Y|@EAL ESTATE SALESMEN WANT. ed for full time. Lake oro: a} and — home salrs. Cal held | 39-0085 interview foment ek NG MAN TO LEARN THE AU- ~ tomobile: business and t (ea cars. w. Crissman ir 3 MARRIED LADIES 35-35, N.C.R, MACHINE | onus accounting 4 ase. per ™ Employment _Agencies ‘ 9. -| \your regular job. Phone OR ee -| \3-0922, Mr. Alb he CAR HAULERS. EXPERIENCED. 25 to 45, with late model Ford. Tractors. Must be able to meet | ec. pr aizqments. eeaeor enna Evelyn Edwards $225. nieneed CAR BILLER............. $250 id {PBX RECEPTIONIST ....... was | ! rienced | Ro eccee ceeeee ss | | WORSE'S “ ine $185 | il. |PHONE WORKERS ........ $200, ALL MAKEs 0: A 4 and up 1 IB PIST .. .. CLER: : Ba fo Receptionist ‘duties rene BOOKKEEPER $350" ATDS $37.50 PER WEEK a ve-in EVEL vA de pw ARDS COUNSELING SERVICE 24'4 EAST HURON sr ITE 4 FE 40564—FE 4-14 RECEPTIONIST A 22-35 with se0d typing and tient dows ntown . Some Dubie contact, Mid- mployment, Pontiac Education. ualilieations “4 a expe should be on "9 Cloyd Houts. ; Director iieatined | “and opal Pe WORK NEW #4210 $115 week Logie to start for Barred nan | ith car to niceeiamnenineetrimastheteete aniaienepeenetneeenSieeentie Help borne Female 7 State Bank ‘Bidg.” PE 5-027 ork Wanted Male 7a” “repair, FE and! is A-1 gerTG, A? WALL PA BOOKKEEPING ALL TAXES 3.3416 s. © with Army, FE §-1031. iW WEEDS WORK DRAPERATE. ~1y_ot_eny_Bind. FE $01. c Sl MENT Ig OUR SPECtALTY. ts. 35-4879. eysroa FOMe ‘TL cL TAPING ing. Free estimates. | ite 5 8-67 PIN ing. Free estimates. KNAPP SHOES. ELECTRICAL SERV.—FREE Est, | HAND PARTNEY Electric. E 5-5439 KITTTING, < 3 GROCHETING 3 and sewing. OR 3-3084. E UCTION Garages. Baaitrone, cabinets & etc. EM_3-3659 WIRING, | us. | 7°. TRENCHING [MM 3-0881 aoe STR OE CABINS. ADDI- FHA - | HOUSE MOVING. FULLY ped, FE 4-6450, L. A. Young. KEITH G. SIEGWART BUILDING CONTRACTOR, Li- censed, Residential, Commercial, Remodeling b FE 5-078: FINANCING AVAILABLE. NOTHING DOWN; Wayne B. Hall oat 33 MONEY LN redl REMODELING, NEW) See a American Asece.” "Credit Counsellors | CO., 1185 Michigan Asnoc. Credit Counsellors iF rou NEED aso FOR ANY j ergency we SEABOARD. FINANCE ELECRICAL CONTRACTOR. Perry FE 8-9661. maintenance. | “Ed _Connup "electric, UL 23-3002. PREE ESTIMATES © ON 1188 a welcome. PE 8-1 | IN ‘DEBT? Give You 1 Place to Pay? Ease Your Mind WE ARE NOT &- LOAN COMPANY MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELLORS 7 | RM. "bE STATE BANK PLASTERIN AIR Atties finished. Rat's res ‘+ 153 FE 8-4272. CASH * 48 ‘HOURS « HOME — FOQUITY Gl AND FHA. Wisner sebool are cesar ce Rent A ts. Furnished 37 a optaogonaene OTs. PVT. ENT. : full fall daylight basen basement, lots. th, nh Betore , P PE 2-6102, Wil de carate arase . RM. & KITCHEN: NETTE. TV PVT.| ten “Paul A, Kern. / bath & entr, N. end. PE 92-4376. RM. : ROWNTOWN. ‘QUIET rn ; $etes one person, rE 3 ROOMsg AND BATH. A LLY et Perry. fine home. Retrig., stove 3 “BDRM. P ENT. SHOW! heat. One other oe lat 3 pe | spec lise iS } bachelors. and ci ‘ontiac +- only. Roc hes ter, rminghem PE 4.1908. tine eM sudo or i Root, (AND BATH UTILITIES. |2 : BEDROOM ok ie | St FE 2 Dri i Shopping Center. ROOM “AND KITCHEN \g ; > |r stan tid” eold ‘water turn: sa mgm, ished, 290 N. Paddock. Adults ' r mo. BEDRM. LAKE FRONT 3 Apts, Partly furnished. OR 3-0106. (18T FL. NEAR ¢ MIRACLE MALE, /3 | elean 3 rooms & bath, 855 & w __FE 43369 or FE 8-1370 LARGE ROOMs CLEAN. GOM.|4) pletely turn. $11 weekly. 342 Or- nard Lake Ave. $12.50 per-wk, Bastside, in chy. Breakfast set. Auburn at) space heater, R 3-605: ee Heights, * call St THbo gg FLOOR. _ BVT gE. rtridge. FE 4-356 1056 W 2 RMS. GROUND 7 5 ot: Adults, PE 4-1319. . Ms LARGE ROOM BASEMENT a “RMS. & ‘BATH, 3 apartment. Private bath and en-) furn. Adults | iB AN Heat furnished, FE 2-1832 RMS, FIRST FLOOR, BACHE: 5 LARGE RMS. & BATH, LOWER * er or couple, FE 4-7267, opt. newly decorated, $50 a mo. aut FOR FE 20712 or Pi 6-8827. rent, utilities furnished. PE 68-1057 §— Bu GA rs, NEAR GEN. - oELy| Hospitai, ‘Se old. Tan} .to_! ue sevoa ahaa A mone | Barbe Answers|2 OR 3 CLEAN R 3) UM or) Sai reward. _in, adults, PE $8182. Ler A... eh tae 2 FAMILY APARTMENT. 11 “DOWN. 5 ROOM tive ra ; | cou ta oper stairs furnished rooms and AND | bate each Gas Heat. 78 Hill | NISHED. $85 ERATO! A Y _ Street, | AT 03 BLOOMFIELD TERRACE 2 ROOMB, E8 PAID, NEW.) pet TO 8ST. JOSEPH iy decorated, ground floor, _PITA vate cutranee and drive. on bus ¢ uae a, LOWER. GARAGE. PVT _.2° CGZY RMS CLEAN” NORTON. Fe on 36 FRONT STREET “| i ¥-reom apartment, all modern, “AND BATH PVT EN-| $35 per month, Children per- + eee Aauits only. Robbing Mo-| mitted, K. G. Hempstead, 102 B* ALL [_MODER F 8. Fe 6 bile Village. 3300 Elizabeth Lake) eres. FE 4-8264 or FE 2-7439° ee Barnet, $60 ae d. ; after 5 p.m, month _F * 2? & 3 RMS. PVT. BATH. APPLY (CLOSE IN. WARN. « ROOMS & COZY ¢ ROOM MODERN AN bene pou WoabIraL c “on t LEM bath. Also garage. FE 8-1414. garene.. mC . shady" weicome AND ers ‘ 7 MEN. $10 WK : COLO! beth Lake CENSED | _ Quillen, OR 3-3874. Hours 1-3 p.m a Fa For RT ORG | Apartment for rent. Stove, re 1968. te salts DAINTY MAID SUPPLIES TR -" FT EMPLOYED ‘"igerator and heat turn Call ATTRACTIVE 4 ROOM NOURE. FINISH-| Menominee | after 4, PE 5-597. full basement, a heat. East 81. 57805. I< a PeT ae BATE ~ThME i |_on bus line, OR 38-3123. aie HAYR _ ; [Nearly new 2 bed terrace KINNEY STREET NEAR < ny ra: aa ian oes FOR ALL OCCASIONS a mi double. Adulis| OC yimemn Stove cod refrigerater. 2 bedroom ome PARLARS, ou furp : cat gn on | furnished Bus at door. N &t. FOOmE Ramee Poe) Ra, ee see fl aa cant .| o. In Lake Or ealtor. or Car Ne ROOM PRIVATE, UTILITIES | re 4-3009 area, 4 room conag ‘ety Ferry and washer furnished. Bus line. | a Ct. Phone OL 28121 eed 493. _thra Friday 7 a.m. to 5 RMS. PVT. ENT. & BATH.. '2 BEDROOM DUPLEX — Brick LAKEFRONT MO * Baby. welcome. FE 5-3668. “—_ full | besement gas need room. Large ce is a and sun 3 AND BATH. PVT. ERT. floors, Will decorate for re- A year leage, 08 moO In Auburn Heights FE 40644. || fponsible tenant. $75 per | Dorothy Snyder , “avender 3 ROOMS FURNISHED. OUTSIDE | ealtor Est. 29 Years entrance First floor, Utilltte 7 M56) furnished. FE 4-5548, 3740 Joslyn Nicholie & Harger Co. ‘phone EM 8-3303 or = MU 46417 rn ee 15344 WEST HURON FE 6-8183 wOpERN 3 ROO! PT, 523 N. SAGINAW. _ Middle 8 ge Bog rte ed :- _Call FE 4-109, | quire ais Hillcrest, J RM. APT. UTILIT Ties | FURN. | FINE “BRICK, “LOWER eR APART- | Pvt. ent. & bath. 60 N. Paddock | MENT. West cide. 6 igtee ee | _Call_efter_3:30. bee oath bad ry avaiiable. §125 3 v RMS. ERB APTS ‘119 STATE BT; © month or lease to ‘te |* PE 6-220 + ee rE esos, eer Par eth es UPPER 4 ROOMS AND 1s LOE. RMS UPPER, UTIL. PORN. {ARGE ? ROOM DUPLEX. VIC. 2 Parkhurst, FE 5-550. location. en rking 4) f fi ake Rd. | as. PVI, BATH oS ENT Sg Sita tet Custer Sake Ressonehie ren at Crap "iat | ‘LOVELY APT. 2 LARGE BED- jac ROOM Ht *| 3 TGE RMS. MODERN CLEAN, “rooms Clarkston school ous si MODERN 2) oie nose, Pam PART- Witn acto heat. Convenient to; door. Oil heat Electric stove and, NORTH UBURBA qromena or bus. Couple only. | retvigeraver. $50 per month Ma 4 URBAN. NICE 9 Fe 342 5-082). ome with stove, Paar LOBE “AND 5 erator, carpet rapes “Seal peta coe aaa ee owes ees Se eee ee, a peer -A-Diet _ ; : ROOMS, CLEAN. UTILITIES. bldg. Ms sundry ects, Northview, drinkers. PE 2- a. . oaM WARWICK HAS, IN erat |_Court “off ______ , MONEY FOR BOvING AND RE-| ak ieee D ? ‘TRMS_AND BATH furnishing $500. §tu0. ‘te pt ard at -_ PE 44878 SEABOARD FINANCE CO. ‘1186| 32%, kG aN as at. _N. Perry St. PE 8- kG. SNYDER FLOOR eerie, | Thea consolidate a your bills #3 ROOM FURNISHED APART Try St. | PE 40444) ROOF REPAIRS | BUDGET” SERVICE | EAVESTROUGHING | "Over Connolly's Jewelers” PLASTERING & REPAIR — REAS. | OFFICE 5 EaCaVATING FOR | Field tile, footin fe. | —Greeti bes “oo ‘poat well. UL 2-5 | B Building Supplies | NEED CASH , FOR REPAIRS s_on| W E BEA A- i LICENSED fous DAY OR 24 care, 4-5615 14, 19 Fast Lewrence is _ Business Service MOREY Oil Burner & “Gas — BA , Saeee Brands" used “Wid. Hou Household Goods ; 29 “CASH POR FI FOR FURNITURE AND AP- liances. Odd pieces or Bouseful 3° ROOM LOWER. BATH, UTIL. tive apts.. where the people are AS x ED BUSINESS $3.99, postage paid. for tee sample and style chart. Entire home nion ollar 006) ae ment. Private bath, garage | |\SEVERAL APARTMENTS AVA’ iL. i ane es wo h. MY 31180. __Aduits_oniy. 106 Henderson. | aes £velsoom. pedioom ‘sone | ne ALLED LK. MOD. CONV. WR. | ROOM APARTMENT. TILE ‘BATH. Buctia st. 60 mo: 3 bedfoo | Village. bdrm. $13 wk. MA garage, newly decorated Whitfield, $65: 1 bedroom, ome 230d ployed couple or 2 men Must ee Cameron st.. $50 m rE Fen AROU —eopeesaeeeeeen= ND HOME sed. Near Waterford Township! 173 Lake. 14. mi nove oo DIXIE | 4. 2321 or after 6 p.m rE Pontiac. | Hall, 1704 Crescent Lake Ra. | Bove and reirigerstor” furntshed. | | SUITABLE FOR i OR 2 WOMEN— 3 RMS” PVT BATH NEWLY, DEC 3 rooms, Stove, refrigerator, All Garage. 1 bedroom. Ideet for isin Saati Sea SESS Mn 'y RB RMB. CUTE. MODERN Pri. —* at 2 Be re a-141¢) fate. gad Noor, Vicinity ot Por Upper Flat—Heated | — For ‘or Rent Rooms A E (3005 A — tiac Engineerin iin « URN AVE. or ; AUBURN HTS. ; Wed. _ Children ren to Board 28 _ 42131 or FE 4-343 Living room. dinette, bedroom.1 STUDIO ROOM FOR RADY. anew 9 RM. UPPER FLAT. “$16 307 S kitehenette end beth. Front and| Everything furnished, Linen serv- s ROOMS AND as “FUR-, Atirective four-famfly building.) Douglas _nished or unfurnished. OR 4-0062. $75 per month References re- ATTRACTIVE ROOM. LADY. PRIV- ROOM APARTMENT, FURN: _°ulred. PE 3-7101 or PR 5-008 °__ileges 94. W. H ~} * sehea private bath and gntrance.| UNION COURT APTS. ATTRACTIVE ROOM GENTLE- | _Ciose in, Call after 4, PE 4-613. Are you looking for clean, attrac: | Pr 4. io26. " privileges. Garage. Paddock. FE 2-7 rear private entrances. Gar: ge. | jee, Automatic heat. $9 whey C _ FE 43181, Prompt, | furn. Intent welcome. 108 Center. rude aa? and ‘bath apte.| “ty! Pua STOP LOR” PRONT Rid. | pemeatetee . < . FE 2-23 ee ent f ‘50 pe ; its erything for . venience, FE aed Tarn Seappuange gRORMe Gq Bares EVE, Seg,in aie bung RO, Rome oeeEE PING Top prices. Please ph. | Heights. FE 2-8901. 1 etd, 1 aren Ot Fm +060 | HOUSER EET ING, COMFORT ARLE write) FURNITURE NEEDED. 3 RMS. _ & PVT. ‘BATH a & ) ENT. UPPER TPLREMENT $80, HOTEL ACCOMA MODATIONS. MEN. t odd lots, Get the|—No children. PE 3-7406 2 or 3 children welcome a ; _Oakland, top {ll buy outright er 3 ROOMg AND BATH. PRIVATE: oR Rybats. SLEEPING RM KITCHEN. sell’ tt for you, nae {Community | eights” Vicinity of Aub _entr. 365 Baldwin Ave, FE APE 41008. FE 5-5201. FOUNTAIN PENS| hold Domestic_or Criminal. rite APPLIANCE $325 96 TATE AVE. ¢ BLOOMFIELD ) WALL CLEANERS. Reasonabie. PARTS PE : SERVICE. aluminum sid ing and storins wie or will COMPLETE HOME 8 - pRIVATE DETECTIVES Saie. Witt LiquipaTE ain HOUSE- RMS. UPPER. PVT. BATH AND) oods, either by private sale 230 ry trained man er gu lie auction. Appraisals. b |. it tiae Trail. 4 rooms, heated, stove office. General Printing & ONPURNISHED APT. POR RENT. eights Adults. only, UL “pine. Heat, ot eS gights furnished jams. ent. stpenine privileges. Close in.| | WaLLED Pe souTu pon, _ Rooms with Board 43 PPP LAL OP PLL ALLL LAP de Bmart Sale Parm. Rochester 4 NICE ROOMS UTIL. NEWLY) ¢@ refrigerator, $18 week, TO) ROOM WITH BOARD FOR 1 OR 2 tae: Michigan’ OF t.sati ester |" aecorated. FE. 44686 53-5005, | gentlemen. PE 2-3429 WANTED A 8 4 ROOM DUPLEX; ALBO 5 ROOM > H ‘ tainpe, warble tor latices” MY apartment, Nery Seagate: Nice, “com WEST, SIDE and) _Lonvalescent | lomes 44 24021 2-152. location. $50._92 Huron. refrigeratos. Second floor. Ail util HAVE ROOM, POR PATIENTS HAVE Wid. Misce Miscellaneous _ 308 CHURCH Has NEED FOR 1 OR 4 ROOM & BATH. GARAGE. WEST Rent Houses Furnished 89 wr ‘moore or FE Bees" Phone FE 2-8328 or 1704 S. Telegraph Rd. K ~| eat ible disc “i Ron Res mu. RE- Toa Wc “Work Wanted Female 12) hwy WANT WA gaan AND SEeICe ae Write Box 114 Pontiac ~ os — ‘: RON NG! ich “Moving and Trucking 22° OPN ANNIE PN i 1-A Reduced Rates Local or dista: vi | ABSOLUTELY “es ie co. FE ‘ae64 | tion on your land Cas! i waiting, Call Re Realtor taba 1980 WwW. 8 buyers _ridge, rE 4-358). case & able. Se APa ‘KE ORION, HOUSEKEEPING | Lonnie Weaver. FE 42031, Ing. No ees. | any hour, FE 4-3844. o FE, ba oe eal cAbrTOL. shvixos & a ° W, Huron St, FE 4-056 uP TEN 4 ROOMS, PVT. ENT, & BATH ALL 5 . i ma after 4:90 pm Adult ities furnished. OR 3-7183 nly. OA §-2833, Call between 8- 8-3. only. 16 Pine Grove. Rent Stores 46 ANP AR LOP LL LOLOL side location FE 44188 Eves ~~~“ 4O2€9 — ON TELEGRAPH ROAD FE 5-784) BEDRM. MODERN. CLEAN.) 4crose frem Tel-Huran shopping “PTYPEWRITER i912 WEEKLY 3 “ROOMS, PRIVATE one heat. Storm windows. Cou-| center. Large pev ved parking « bath and entrance, heat and util-| ple Chiid weleome. $15 wk..plus, Fertect retail or wholesal Shee: ELECTRIC MOTOR SERVICE RE- ®dding machine or piece of oi fic “ee ; i airin, powndne- 28 © 4#E. furniture or ities. $16 weekly. Apply at 806 util. 4270 Hatchery % oes furnished. DOWN- of Miochi- ‘ building fi its oT Over gx Giffersnt “a? S scunsaok *y ED, GI AND RESALE Gi 3m down. FE 4-3767. a 08, merece: ~ €ustom built homes ‘bon our models. Pontiac, Roches- “ter & Utica areas. Also remodel- & ae “BUILDERS #4 Emerson, Pontiac FE &-8845 Ee VinestW, of Fon bot 4 4-6531. H STOP He crn home 1185 | FOR SALE 6 AM. Se: BATH. basement, garage and extra large jot, seen 3200 Eus Walton, owner wil! tinance, apely owner 1lg_ Edison _ GI—-NO MONEY DOWN «$99 MOVES YOU IN Rphotes, Michigan, Last home left Tiong aes new subdivision. Corner lot. 3 bedrm, brick, fuil bemt, elty water & sewer, paved ra) rod features. EL indi" or 1-0315 LAKE ORION indaceped. a ca » bedrooms, bath, tiled floors. Oi! e tt 100 x 150 1 Diosk rom schools, $13,500. $2,000 -dow! WEBSTER. REALTOR Oxford OA 83122, Orion MY 2-2201 Move into a new home by Christmas. No money down, 3 bedrooms. Full! See Ter ey ie ees PER A far Dy Oe A ei ee a PUL ate N ESPN span bile { # a basement. Wilson Real : Estate. FE 2-3953, EM | 3-6556. HOUSES FOR SALE BY OWNER and builder. James d, 27 Dwight Street, FE 45429, (2) 3- bor 1411 and one at 1421 Rosedale, pres Village. 3-bedroom home, lots, and 2 car garage, 681 ke One _2-bedroom at (2801 Watkins Lake wend. Shown by appointment. FE | i Q Orion, —“ Teation room. ol furnace. Gas incinerator. Paved street. Excei- lent neighborhood. $15. $00. Terms, 345 Oakland $500 down. ‘dreom. -home.| Nirea for dryer & range. $6,500 is the full price. LAKE FRONT. $500 down. West Suburban, 2 bedrm. home. Fair condition. Oil heat. Full price $5,450. a INCOME. WEST SIDE. 5 Apart- ments. apt., owner-occupied, has 5 rooms with bath, 4 apart- mens on terndaiet, {2roes ot r.year, Call for a . ment, $22,000. Terms. pee CLARE Spe AREA. 2 on Waldon Rd. was burite in 057. 200°. $8,200. Terms, 86 E. Waiton FE $-0441 Open 9 to 7 P.M., Sun. 1 to 4 Clarkston-Orion ‘Road 3 bedroom Ee. Partly finished. Lot 86 x 5 full Terms to suit, “ae petce. rick Starter Home bose om: lot 86 x 660. $7,950, wea ee Zo Harbor : $5,500, terms to Pontiac Lake “Front Ae ie, 8 eer i or 2 bedrooms, well jandsé ans . and Goad tip onan $1 j with CRAWFORD "AGENCY At Its Best eee 4) Pecan HOM ae ‘3.8021 ' $450 DOWN — Oak floors, Oi] furnace. Lot 100'x | J. C. HAYDEN, Realtor | and frame * “Lot 42 / PS Only $20, | PIONEER Bateman Kampsen.” MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE SWEET AND LOW... and a Golf course at your back Seaatiful 1 downtown Pontiac, Brick ranch view from country minutes attached garage This is a home for the most exacting family. Priced to Sell 950 | HIGHLANDS 3 bedroom brek, close to Byl- van Lake. Excellent lake privi- leges tra-nice Fireplace, Carpeting. Ex- landscaping. Garage. and fenced yard. You can't help but like this invited VALUE West Pull Owner's loss — Your oven, carpeti $1,750 wil NORTHWE one. Examination Priced to sell. PACKED Side 3 bedroom brick. basement and corner ‘ot leaving town. Their gain. Range and ng and gas heal. handle ST SUBURBAN 2 bedroom brick. Large kitchen with range basement, 2 garage and $15,500 with EZ FE 4- and oven. Full fireplaces, 2 car hot water heat, Ez FHA terms. 0528 — REALTOR — 3371 S. TELEGR APH OPEN EVES. ~ WIBLIAMS Charming “2 bedr LAKE oom bungalow with potiyity room, and attached @ yard 1 : Bletely te fenced i and jak a mts 0 $73 m by mae ft., com- fica ond payments of 1 F.C.W Willams Lake _After on 50x225 ft rent the other income. DOWN — 4 ment, of! $500 H. ©. Corner Aubu _ UL? 6 pm. $50 per heat, house, fruit trees, NEWINGHAM ood Co. 36 at M-30 MA $-1691__ 2 SMALL HOMES lot. Live in one, This is a good month. room s arage. chicken arge jot. rn and Crooks 2-3310 RILEY ONLY 1 YEAR’S TAXES AND IN- SURANCE DOWN—2 or 3 bedroom brick or frame on of with large wit ontiac lot. 5% aved streets. All newly decorated automatic heat, ranch type houses In or outside full bath per cent interest low monthly payments. Now vacant with possession at clos- irig time. RILEY REAL ESTATE PE 4-1157 HAGS ace Elizabeth Lake Rd. FE 4-4821 TROM 2 BEDROOM—This attractive small home with attached garage and fenced excellent investment. $6,900 with $750 occupancy. Here is a nice with recreation ment. On vileges ‘ on ri Burtt in 1956. Down payment re- | duced to $1,812. this one. in lot will make 67'x300 ou an hee jate Pul down. Imm 2> bedroom home room in full base- * lot, with Williams Lake. Take look at Hagstrom . Realtor 490 Highland Rd PONTIAC (M59) OR 40358 “MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE — AR RO Near Grade School 3 bedroom home. lastered walls, room, reh, ay $1,000 +5 vase 3 bedroom, car garage. Elizabeth 2 bedroom hom FE 54284 ~ Open 9 -a.t mt to 8: ~ “sOH & home, newly bus and Ss per a NEAR rifice this } Five rooms used for tw lot, $ peume, thr 31.500 down. 1 sion. Phene 8 et ine sun room, ebster gchool one block, alse pects A CHRIST- er leaving town and will Large living glassed-in ment, lot @0 x cD, Ideal Eamily Home baths. full base) 2 S ment with tile Foor, iit heat, i'- 5 oe 11,780, terms. Lake Estates e in exceNent con dition Heated, glassed-in ch. Beautiful wooded lot. $11,500, | “erm ARRO REALT TED “McOURLOUGH: REALTOR 3143 Cass- Elizabeth FE- 4. 3844 30 0 p.m. }. Sunday 1-5 HN K. IRWIN SONS WEST SIDE: Cozy two betireom decorated Khotty full basement. $500 down eac- ovely older home. on the first floor with attic cpace that could be bedrooms. Large 7.850. will take late mode! car or housetrailer for down payment. Shown by appoint- ment. DRAYTON AREA; Lovely five rm. full bene vuew ment, new fur- iniiednie with Immediate posses- "John Kl Irwin &S Sons ALTORS n3 weg ite Street e FE 2-4031 4 Templeton) Ay ie beautiful home just) 4. § Pontiac in. Or mr room hectal ty aac and ask for ton, Realtor “a friendly Want Ad, wt™ 9] Sales Clerk, | full base- | 3 rancher, | 2 i will we time to ge : fook at. home. ret floor. breezews + le ae « aes 2 a sigh. kiohen, ~ 2 ou beauty i , war ad reom Living: room with fireplace, course. Like new eat i Toom. Off the kitchen recrea’ room, is a family room and a den closets, ceramic tle Secwnt , Teer ea ted. Other { . ter. newly aeear a we! a ar ; er fea- tures such ae: Hinge ceramic baths landscaped NEW UNIVERSITY: Own. | | FE 5-1201 and i _ Action $16,600, MURRY! 4-Bedroom Brick Rancher located in desirab fleld Township, priced at Bloom- 2 car {2-21 “How about a gift certificate for the pooch?” ily room, well ‘, en, & wi room, au» 4 tomatic gas heat and: et : water, porch. i crive, —at $23,000, by ~ appointment, only, make yours NOW! “Bud” Nicholie, Realtor 49 Mt. Clemens St. Call. Mr. Meiser or PE 5-8004 ANNETT- Ranch Home, Large Lot 3 bedroom ranch in excel- car attached petrage $19,500, terms. Near Oxford Beautifully remodeled 4 bed- room home, living room 19 x 40, fireplace, modern kitchen, 24 baths, enclosed orch with anoramic view, arn, $28,500, terms. Also more acreage available. Price Reduced . 4ftamily brick, each 5 room and bath, full basement, oil heat, 4 car garage. Excel- lent west tide! location. ne bus an opping center $10,000 down, 2-Family . First floor owner occupied, second ment, separate gas furnaces, 4 car garage. On paved street and bus ling $2,000, down, nay Peet ane. Open Evenings” & Po sunday 14 FE 8-0466 COLORED 3. BEDROOM RANCH HOMES Your choice of red or grey brick. Tiled baths, modern kitchens.- Full basements. Gas or auto, oi) heat. Some with alum. storms-screens. Large back yards. Near schools and shopping centers. Only $100 down with good employment a and credit record. ASSOCIATE BROKERS | Inv. Co., Inc. 443 he Lake FE 8 8-9663 -- _Atter _ 5; FE 61000 BRICK There is nothing to do but live in this modern attractive 3 bedroo ited Noort. full brick home. Car basement, pave drive, car brick garage. Patio & nicely landscaped lot. Well located on paved street in beautiful Wash- ton Park. Only $13,540, bot sell on contract or to Bey cent .mortgage. Appointment “TACK LOVELAND 2188 Cass Lake Ave. PE 2-4875 Apartments .. Three of them — all fim A-1 con- dition, Near bus, sh » e@te., Oil forced air peat. nie separaie “entrances. Each own bath. Income is $57.50 per week. FIRST OFPERING. $12,250, $1,750 down BE INDEPE. Oh yes, LIST WITH Humphries 83 N. Telegraph Open Eves. MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE STOUTS Best Buys © | Today . ¥ $500 DOWN . " | Moves, You fn, and you can | i imamediate possession. 1 home ts a 5 room 1% | ry frame with automatic | heat, oak floors, and ' 120x180 and has Grive to the 1% car ga- rage. RANCHERO | $ Long lew. ready to go, at» i tractive bedroom home, iitished, heated. breeseway, king site 2), Car garage, utility space. Spacious land- lot, privileges .on s Lk, Only — $1,500 down, quick possession. CLARKSTON Walking distance to new Clarkston High, custom built brick home, over 700 square feet living ase, plus garage. Features liv- ing room with _rtiepince, family reom, custom + spacious walk in closets, lated shower, At Tipsico tx ing . Bunting. reek én 50 x i) dock your ny y heated & ready ‘io mov: this for $6,300, $40 per_mo. Secu at tae iene ties 3 a ees ode turn to ies to Demode Rd. left Pa follow signs to Daw! are Sale LOANS TO $500 FoR DOWN PAY- ment or purchase of cottages or lake lots. SEABOARD FI- NANCE CO.,. 118 N.. Perry. FE 1. For Sake Lots 54 SEF-T CHEROKEE HILLS — CARL W. BIRD, Realtor wenity Ni 1 Ban Ber ees, PES “— Homesites for “Bhose page Care: MI-HILL FE 2-9066! PE 8-1275 | OOT FRONT- |. eg stat wane. RILEY BEA BEAL ©: ESTATE Rent, ite . . Prop. 5 57A 6 ne, AND GARAGE IN CLEAN- + business for or lease. EM 33 342. Business ies 59 AN GuTRA CORR 2 STALL Pinclal lease, ay Waterford. ar al inv. chan nt requ ed. e 2 ig 1. After 7 p.m MA 4-2941. HAGSTROM eaued gue weston’ ben’ tee foot, frontage in excellent, locath location near Pontiac. ong Lg ut Owners will take rt t tor down payment of $20,500 Let us show you some Sa values. orthern will Why it rover? come in. and ‘Hagstrom Resitor (M59) PONTIAC. OR 4.0358 “LETS TALK BUSINESS” Department Store New modern store with 1 Erte a Sateen oa uals auepes saies and pitced for 4 ideal in- band and wife See for” your- self, MICHIGAN BUSINESS SALES CORPORATION 198M, AND UESSED. BECEES egral RK AT OU % R PRONT R manvice saraitea POR LEASE, good potential. Please call be- tween 8 and 5. FE 5 p.m., FE §-1448, PURE Oil CO. COIN-OPERATED AUTOMATIC CAR WASHER | Ist Time Offered in This Area Coin Operated Machinery @ rare opportunity ‘or ndence and security in the billien dollar auto wa: try as operator e offer local co-ownership ‘in the fabylous car washin si- rties desiring itable fates Washmobile installs and fees the equipment, and provides —jocations in high volume areas, May be bande in addition to resent occupa interested you are Matncerely in a@ money making business and modest investment The Coin . M Lowell Michigan or Box 3272, . Pontiac, | Partridge ‘18 THE “BIRD” TO SEE Meat Processing & S.D.D. Ale 8 room apartment is L ad in this hie ferrite. rtunity betive cen, ot freezer ‘us Sasinens and over asual kage — slore' business. 3. $38,500, plus Charcoal Manufacturing The big demand for this product Poe! Teeat Ghee Lake This thriving opagine #8 has unlimited spoply ost _mesdwece. $7500 dn. P. oO. Mich. Send for Partridge’s new free fall “Michigan seg Guide. * Patirigge “SUN OCO SERVICE STATION -FOR’ RENT - WATERFORD, MICH. 5995 Williams Lake Rd. (across trot ee Drive In Beauti } oa on ca eye ‘“Mrawe “seu! pictures e: Sanit $10,000 ae i, area, low “fades eee | * residential area. ,000 on terms. Call now. | 32-0101, After / sh 43% 8 This modern 2 * ‘tion offers an ay, ervtoe clgh- borhood potential for custom - blended Blue Sunoce gasoline, ace | RESSOry sales ser ae Sanimum investment chandise and small equi; only, Complete: 6 ks in — a ® oe) at comp: this’ " hog oP Fraining ror "SUN om CO. . a tla el 6 iM SELL re Call MA | TA N - sti on 00m G 5 ‘Signature. °° Bi FE 29200 OAKLAND- Loan Coinpan __202 Pontiac. “LOANS munity Loan + HET eee Borrow with Confidence , $25 to $500 | Household Finance. 3% 8. atic Ot Ponte 40635 , BeXPem 2 LIVIN = FE FE 4-1574 _ LOANS. $25 TO ) $500 your signature or “TOME & AUTO ‘LOAN CO. _ $25 TO $500 CEATE FINANCE CO. ok Bid. PFE. 4-1574 ae TOTO - Seaboard Finance Co. ne FE 6.0061 PERRY Ease 1% Ring — Phone TEAGUE FINANCE CO. 202 S. MAIN 214 E. ST. CLAIR ROCHESTER ROMEO- vows TO $500 ‘OCK ROUSEUOLD Goons OL 6-0711 OL 1-9791 PL 2-3518 PL “FRIENDLY SERVICE“ ___ credit Advisors : 61A BUDGET YOUR DEBTS CONSOLIDATE BILLS—NO LOANS For your best bet get Tat of debt see to Financial Advisors. Inc. SAGINAW FE. 3.7053 Mortgage Loans 62 a4 BEAR CONS ou D Da Te thes one. Call us, we Can BIG BEAR, RCOR STRUCTION CO. 62 W PE 3-7833 *<600 TO $2000 on Oakiand County bomes. Mod- er. of not. Voss & Buckner. | Inc. 208 Nationa! Bidg. 4-4729 63 Swaps OL 2 USED WATER SOFTENERS. cellent condition. Very reasotabie gotiek'e Appi. OR 3146, MY ROOM HOUSE, LARGE FENCED ‘ shad es. Neat and clean. TIM WRIGHT FE 5-441 ‘L's CLOTHING. ALMOST ee OTR 10 to 12. 154 Mark, 12 to 5, BORGANA oes. RIG- * inally, $110. BM 3-076 | LOVELY BLACK -ACK PERSIAN LAMB coat, ea $50, You ean't beat it. 1 ree Ww Huron, . GRAY AN T, sice. 12-14, Exe. cond. MI. 6-5036. _Sale Household Goods 6s ILVER © * gut, Double éroant, nookeas Ail for 600.90. P 2 vente, arn mts Puratare, a Ore # _THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 21, 1959 GER equipped it Mgr., OR 3-9781. bunk bed» m woe ot. 40 or @ month for ® months. Call AGA BRAND gen WROUUET Lesa ¢ 8 ngs 530 95" Pearson's 5 Apemances, Davie Tia. cu ft. $45. aS var PRICES CH PERE ers, rere. televisions and built- ins. Sam _ burg. MA osrort WESTINGHOUSE RE ERATOR UL 23-3084. ae c ete et of AINS, 2 TRANS- rem contro! Fall line of buildin & plumbin materia s WOLVERINE LUMBER FOR st ST yiooR MA 5-11 FREE CHRISTMAS 3 in 1 combination g: ner ang 1 barr rr GARAGE DOORS Pactory seconds, al! mageors sizes in stock from $25 and w Electric door spenders, “folding —. oo *- and disappearing ae give estimates on garage re- W ATER MASTERS | ng. Open from 8 to 5 Noon on Saturdays BERRY DQOR SALES ro | pricks and .soft now _MA 5§-6011. EN WESTINGHOUSE ELEC. STOVE. ‘| Hke w, Bpeed- Queen washer, _FE 61124 after sonable, 4-6324. WANTED ey MuaF BE REA- HOT WATER HEATERS, 30 GAL. gas. New. Consumers Power ap- roved. $89.50 value, €39.50 and .50. These are slightly marred. Also electric. ob! and bottled gas WHILE THEY LAST GE sw attress ears " re 42 Orchard Lake ‘ave. BUY A SMALL RATHO, re TO $8. Also t radios 5-8755.; CASH FOR URED ture & mise. FE 2-0367. BANKRUPT STOCK " Livang room, Bedroom and break- fast Chairs rockers. ina & WooD HEATING atUxs. ¢ f) ans $15. Sun Sales. —$ MAYTAG Automatic Washer. New. ne rY ~~¥OUR USED FURNITURE and appliances makes down pay- sna usica) cae “FOR FURNITURE, TOOLS instruments. FE 4866. DESK, TYPE ELECTRIC SEWING FE ment ‘. new. 12 onths on balan B Ys B AUCTION, 5089 Dixie. Highway. On 1T Antiques 65A machine, Almost new. $85. LADIES. 2-881. ANTI Poe upto 00" 1 PERABOARD OL Sous aan ie Dp a aa, 1185 N. Perry. Hi-Fi, TV & Radios 66 | PPL LLLP LALA A AA AL Ah LA et Pon O R_ 3-4340. New mod “sie crate-ma 2 years to Find wo days same ae KENMORE RANGE. as = aS PETERS scratched or or| cash DEEP FREEZE. EXC. COND. $125.2 PIECE MAHOGANY MAA Ox Refrigerator, $35; gas stove, $25;, Stereo Hi-Fi. Like ord wringer washer ; . electric storage. i ia both cabinets. $200. stove, $25; studio conch, My 8. a uke box. al TABLE MODEL TY $10.98 $28: electric arzer, $0. FES “21” Raytheon table model $44.95 EVANS. OIL URNERS. a ans 24" DeForest $79.95 BTU's Brand new. $49.95. Sun 30 other sets to choose from Seles. MA 5- : All sets rebuilt. guaranteed for ELECTROLUX vaccum $301! Most nscts new picture tubes. We stove e blond) take trades at TV, Sectional with 2 blond tables $200, th Lk. Rd. FE ¢-4945. Open ine =] ge RANGES aT —2-* to 9 pm ose-ont prices. MAple §-6011. 2!" MOTOROLA, CONSOLE. LIKE ree jances. CASH POR USED TV's. PUR- chased at your home. FE 2-0367. MAGNAVOX 16 IN. TV. 3 SPEED EEPERS, New. All attach- ments, "Tank type, swivel top. heaters at terrific values. Michi- gan Fluorescent, 393 Orchard Lk. ve. —- H-C LITTLE Oil FLOOR FUR- nace for 6 rm. house. FE 2-4363. HEADQUARTERS FOR HOBBIES Trame-< tere —Sehees Bikes MOTOROLA CLOCK R. RADI 0S, -New, Scarlett’s Bike-Hobby 8 1960 Model. 5 ry Warranty. 20 E. Lawrence, Pontiac. 1843 MOTOROLA IY. New a”. Full 4824 Dixie, Drayton. on 3-0021 warrenty. Deliv: INS ON pg ise. Mica pellet Housefil] $1.95 bag SPEED QUEEN Gas Dryer. New. i as Med. Thick Blanket 6 only. Delivered, Installed. e Ft. per roll et vulty lanket 100 oa Ft «, $4.65 Foil Sq 250 Baylock Coal & Bidg. $3.90 Suphiy ce Co. Lamps and tables, Box springs; Delivered. eochasa Late Ate. and sses. Must sel] im- ae Be _81 Orchard Lake Ave. Fi mediately. A e for a real HOOVER » U Cnt SWEEPER. aware AUTOMATIC WASHER, Bed r itting Co, 4763! New. All attachments. 2 Speed.| $50. 4161 Motorway. FE Hwy. Drayton Plains. Open — ean ps— KITCHEN CABINET ry Sa dea ee ousexEErt Sate” alte Se Sue ti J ¥ ww. ie eo : GooD HOUS ne Pontiac last. Also terrific values on 54" "S, FURNI- 51 WEST HURON FE 41555 and 56" models. No phone orders. please. Michigan Fluorescent, Orchard Lake Ave. Knotty Pine Paneling 3 PATTERN WP2, WP6 and WC140 CHURCH'S, INC. LAVATO! ace MIXING tuccete $24.50 value, $19.95. Also bathtubs, toilets, shower | stalls. Factory irregulars. Terrific val- ues, Michigan Fluorescent, 393 Orchard Lake Ave. — : 393 Also 1 wt e American radiator bovler. Fe 0278. ye rEavine STATE: TROMBONE. accordion, corner table, bowling b e s, bow’® arrow, 26" Schwinn bike, gkates, gas engine’ Nails, plumpsing fittings, bricks, bi . ete. 1401 Tull Drive. OR 3-067, MEDICINE CABINET. LARGE 20” mirror, slightly marred. $3.95. Also tremendous selection of medicine cabinets with or with- out lights. Sliding doors and vanity mirrors, at terrific savings. Michigan Fluorescent, 393 Orchard Lake Ave. 37. MONEY FOR ANY WORTHWHILE te SEA 1 USED Cast IRON BOILER, record player, Radic oe Solid 1185 N. mahogany cabinet. - FE 2-6608. Perry St. FE 8-9661 NEW LUXAIRE OIL FURMACE & dis For Sale Miscellaneous 67 | aucta MAple 51501 OO hoe ‘NEW IST QUALITY BATHTUBS. $46.50. Free standing toilets. $19.95 est. _$50. , leaf bur- wh r- 1 | GIRL’s | i LARGE MUELLER OIL FURNACE’ : 7 Pahoa pick RAD) Las ER American ade, sib Toe PRE R. B. 21 130 BASS AGCORDION AND AM- plifier. Guitar, sewing mach radio and record r, lee sates. 22 rifle, shotgun, wood and ping pong table, FE AUTOMAT NG a, Wonderful ift for a wom- 10g: Cost $350. FE 5-7517, eee. YER, 8-CAR FREIGHT. chest. ‘68 Cushman Eagle. as water heater. Oil circu- ea ee) Br AUTOMATIC WASHER, GE, WiTit sudsaver, Used legs than six Pe oS Mis . BALE, $30. "Poreh § ident 4s _OR 35506. cw MIDGET AUTO. REA- ble. 230 E, Pike, FE sions. ARAKEETS, $2 & $3 breeders. with Bg otbles” Oat of MA- BABY &0 out BUSHELS OF TOYS, TOYS, TOYS. cheap. New, used & second, Bar- gain House, 103 N. Cass. CHRISTMAS SPECIALS Ice skates, toboggans, guns and ar- chery sets, hunting -clothes and 63 E. Walton 10-9 FE sees CUTE PUP; $5. D hold un mas, OR suse. astra POINTER, $25. REG, OR FOR SALE—BASS PIDDLE, SET OF _ drums, OR 3-8153. PRENCH BIKE, $26, CLARINET, OR 32112 26° SCHWINN BICYCLE, good condition, OR 3-5331. CHILD'’s MA PLE ROLL TOP desk, yeane: r ice GIRL's ROLLER SKATES, “size 8%. B ice skates, smsetted sizes, 4-6343. Gentine “LEATHER Canvas . billfelds, gun cases ible covers & & Shoes. Repair Servi es 53-0065. - HAWAIIAN Soot Tae TI- plant. Easy to gr in soil and water. From sw pay Hawaii. 59¢ or 2 for $1) ~ ‘to Rican rage 200 Tegge: Rd., Rt. Mil- stm Chetemas Tree 2A 67A TIZZY By Kate Osann i 1) = ‘al Re, | ; + @ 1950 by HEA Bervion, ina, <~ Tit, Reg, U8. Pat. OM a ee | —" J ae a PARKHURST -- TRA'LER SALES or = wh u ssakee, er | on heien ; : ny FH care vi condition ide eash of can ar FE Featuring ‘all Bepmer. Com _ k the ears wre. We' trailer for you man of parts | itches installed & | i) sel} vour used | .40 FP, CHAMPION eld and in excellent condition. T: bedrooms, Pull bath. Priced at oniv $2780. Easy terms and payrion's. Call Mrs Broughton Mp $-9403 evenings. ; | VERDC “CHAMPION ja x 37 PT | 1 Hioer 41 ft. ~ Only 2 yr eal on a new 10 Dwellavan. HOLLY | ri COACH BALES. 16210 RD. “HOLLY. MEIrose ~ ue ind | Tour-a-Home & Trotwood a King, & Huron Homes. Special rates for Perla vacations. Sale on used rentals Jacobson's Trailer sales. 5685 Williams Lake Rd. OR 35881, be 7 Rent Trailer + Spake 90 : foachn HEIGHTS. MOBILE VIL- ieee me finest “% mile SE 12-21 110. on “Opdyke PE §-3361 me “what I want it for?’’ 7 Pa Sale Musical Goods 71 SOP DLN LLM Ie ar L- ‘gee * ogee ” pee a ft n. ei ahogan ne $395 takes itt GALLAGH R'S 18 E Huron FE 4-0566 8UPRO ELECTRIC HAWLIAN GUL. | ter with be see and foot con tral. “be seen at 362 First before é' ‘Sale ffice Equipment - 2. G ADDING MA- ED CONSOLE PIANO. 40 ‘s$H REGISTER, / chine, checking machine. Exec, cond. FE 5-737. ROYAL sayPEWRITER, & TABLE. poxrores AND STOCK, LOVELY cases and mannequins. Retirin ng. 1:9 E. Maple Birmingham, Mic _igan, MI 4-2755. HOTPOINT COMMERCIAL DEEP fry, 2 months old. §125. FE 2:6861 ROYAL’ {TYPEWRITER cy 8 “ Work $8. Mr bie, NT: SANTA. CLAUS SUIT — Large. Ask for Joe, FE 5-7136. ROCKOLA JUKE BOX, PLAYS 50 plays, 45 rpms. $150. Professional, $25. TRI- bike, needs bumper 1 table $100. A won- derful ristmas gift for recrea- tion room. FE §-4219 SUPER CHEF ROTISSERIE WITH baking unit. Like new, used 3 times. $30. FE 4-6937. SKATES, SCOUT SUIT OUT. _8rown clothing. FE 5-1448. TWO 24-IN. BOY’s BIKES. good | cond, $17 ea. FE 5-0333. THOMAS ELECTRONIC ORGAN. Built-in record player, mo. old. OR 3-4611, THOR FOLD AWAY IRONER, $40. OR 3-0120 WOLVERINE BUMPER POOL TA- | ble, regulation size, exc. cond. FE 2-2814 SPECIAL CLOSE-OUT PRICES All Christmas ornaments-figurines Italian miniature lite sets Ornamental t se rose - gift wrappings : Unusual and show selected . ‘WAYNE GABERT house with oil burners and 2 G._A: Thompson. 1005 _M59_West. INLAND FAKE, SALE. _gallon oi! tanks. OIL TANK AND OIL FOR SALE. | 3127 W. HO RON a 8 47121 bieewi 3d vau Sa ALUM Ma MS,/ _______OR_ 3-205 | OPEN DAILY 96 FRIDAY TIL 9 —nam ag Corel rie | _awnings, VALLELY GO. OL OL 16033 OVERHEAD. 100,000 GAS UNIT. yates. 149 “— 2 WHEEL TRAILER. 400 GALLON sc. furn, No Dealers. OR 3-6988. 1 . , 0 phone, orders please. Michigan) _fuel oll tank, UL 23867. PING PON Machinery 68 Lake| > pUEL Ol. TANES. GOOD CON- NG PONG TOPS es ive. Mn, 11.95 | 200 AMP of OR TABLE ARC WELD- dition. ‘Will deliver. FE 65-0120. ee FAMOUS PHAFP Z iG SEW- inc solL PIPE 6 Fi. M% 12.95; er, $100. 6% inch heavy dut machine. ache buttonholes, |4- INCH PIPE. 6 PT., 83.79%" 1495| electric hand saw, inc . fancy stitches} Sump Pumps ...... aed Chrome leg sets "* $1198} heavy duty belt sander, $30. ‘Me without. attachments. A_ balance SAVE PLUMBING SUPPLY. s of all kinds Dg iBh, Pipe ale. $50. of $69.60 or $6 nfonth for 1 year. 1728. Sa PE 56-2100 PONTIAC PLYWOOD CO. Ideal awn mower Call creat mgr., oR 3-9781. A & ¢IN. SOIL PIPE, PER LENGTH, | !488 Baldwin Ave. 2-2543 | grinder, § mo2so _FE_2-7003.__ Products , $3. a8: wil bie “pipe, per length, PAINT FLOORS WITH TRED.| CORNER RIGHT MACHINE & GE DRYER, NEW WARRANTY. bat G. A. eae ‘7005 M59 Applied in Ye the ime. ae cea shears, EM 3-5813. Floor . Ope: axing.) d) utes. . Pa” cate $1.98 ga Sosayear | _ Warwick's. ais Orchard Tea | Do It t Yourself 8 Baie re, 30 8. Cass, Pontiac. PE 5 neg Ste FT. Cast bithtub ar bench’ Be Best quallt: . Thompson, an, ~ Special Paneling Offer 49.95. G, GE REFRIGERATOR, BRAND West, 47g Panela, Mo" mahogany ae cach pew i family size. We NA sea | 4x8 Sancls, iF mahoeany eac ; et Teal O8F/9x12 Linoleum Rugs $3.89 aay Broate: © grade 35.30 each | oars Fe re. s. “Cais, Pontiac. “ ” TINY V-groove, Lag . $7.00 each BuyLo” UNCLAIMED Oak Fl oar ances 20.95 a ooring OUTLET trie Rang Be ee Reveit 95 102 8. sabnnw FE 98-2498 ARE red ...... ee $225 se Waeteticrnic | “ifaiet oats cubed cat hal Se Za ‘ eater, 90 cheb Aubara Ray boon Tom ui Werk Ores) BENCON LU ‘MBER’ CO. UL. 2.3000 Reg 4-3573' _ Eves. Baa, Chee a x sont doxis VANITY Pon : RELY ATTe REFRIGERATOR, ca, FY, Mary | 34 Hey | xircmie via cx COAL, WOOD! _. A. Thom , Thos Mio _W : C I “eae combination. MApie a ot ELEC, HEATER. a SPE “, I A S S sinks and fittings, $54.95 up 3 “ KELVINATOR 3 BURNER (DOU-) [ 2 fit wet eed , _ Kher Sp. electric range. FE 5-3 cela. $10.95. Cash & Carry, 2x4x8 Pine 0.0.0... 04.6. 390 em. BC SAVE MBIN / = ~» “KENMORE DELUXE AUTOMATIC/173 8, Saginaw FE_5-2100| Ajum. Comb. doors, prehung $29 95 washer, since =e ee 21" TV, 3) HEATING UNITS, OIL, AND 74 _ exc. cond., rigerator with gas, new and used, all sizes in- | ” Pirebrick ............... 10¢ em. freezer ‘$89, aids vos set like) Cluding - space heaters, floor 4 , new cost M sell for $20.) Gan furnace Must ¢ . ¥ 100 sq. ft. insulation $ 3.87 FE _5-2766. or we' install. Hurry’ FHA terrhs. FURNITURE POR Roll roofing, 90 Ib. ..... GooD USED __Sale. 177 8. Jéss LINOLEUM & Ratt SALE. HALF) i954 “SLDSMOBILI __price at J Jack's, 281 Baldwin. availabe Ace heating & asia Co, OR_: 3-4554 a T eaihe, LARGE CRIB AND MATTRESS, brand new, $15.95. Pearson's Fur- niture, 42 0 Orchard pre Ave, and aes EM 3 RE ror COLDY “CRE ACE. Heating & Cool Co. i rel Ask for aa. r expert any . en Demode Rd Left and follow signs MAPLE TABLE. CHAIRS — tions | "HA_Terms REE Estimates; accordion loaned free to begin- A PU reey time payments ; . a. wats a . _E eee. _whatsoavery No ‘oulgcions | PMopen b:8:30 MON: thru SAT ers. with lessons. FE 5-5428.” Eg RPG. DACHSHTND ‘eat “SKING BROS. sia wt ake Phone MAln ee AYTAG AUTOMA *$ = MT. t FLAT CLARINET. EMERSON | AK GISTE: INC "every. __ late model and Ma\tag dryer. aOR S SO ae 5-165. Pumbing. SURPLUS LUMBER comb. radio and’ 3-speed phono. me ote’ ome xD *sPRiNom YOUR MeCULLOCH DEALER ~GiFTS FOR THE BOATING Balance $2 Per irae Tor eas electrical, paint and formice, In- MATERIAL SALES CO, | Antique frultwood organ. Cherer FE. £3397. qrorTiac RD. AT OPDYKE Oe ties SNR. CEIKe. surance ass. 5. 6340 Highland Rd. (M59) OR 3-700 +3458. AKe IPPERKE, 11 MOS. FE- NEW AND USED ONE AND TWO) Evinrude motors, 3 to 75 horse- or what neve nt hick's wate 7 q y . row corn pickers, Homelite saws, Latson and Cutter boats. Appliance. MY _3-3711. cletrie water est "yetbe: Open Clear fir, 100 BABY GRAND PJANO yaa, housebroken. Reas. OL) New , era . reduced price. _ Bomplete line of Marine Fittings. woe ont nea LOOR. MOD- Paays week. Cupolas—s Do cececcees eee $8. , Completely reconditioned pes Py AKC COCKER PUPPIES. BRED Davis Machine: NaA_ 7-3292. Also good, clean used motors. Seb. pay 'an Mle ae $128 per|4 Aas ane sNGER Se | ome i" teok! ‘ony bas hear WroRRIS MUSIC for conformation, Cail Wednesday FIGNEER CHAIN SAWS © AND HARRINGTON hs Bette Dag tg Bors? oh 30 oki cam ow accept $7.20) Black Te B oard, axes 69¢ 48 Telegraph Re ge er oye a4 5 Monday and Tuesday. tha ye ten we Keliy's Hardware. |. BOAT. WOR KS orm, a URED TY sapkon! Fi <3 = theres Ferg ee hot] CONN ELEC, ORGAN | AKG COCKER SEANIEL POPPING | SPSThcammeny NEW AND | "Claw SG TELFORAMH caontnicienige | EONS Oy TDI c HAN | $19 to $20. MY_2-4373. ARM MACHINERY — NEW A beac solemn, - ANCHOR FENCES . A BURN | LUMBE R- In beautiful ebony finish with | AKC > BAGHSHUND STUD SERV- used Preals Oliver Sales on M24. one ae WALTO Wal ‘No money down FHA approved: were Sa Tee ee eee a aiteuime buy, | Hoe uick: Super 2 dr. h, 05 a eed 62 Buick r i 195 “$3 Mer ery "#4 Ford A Pord 2 dr. b.tap, $295 Nash 2 ar. hardlos seven $105 ‘Dixie Ko’d Specials (Klean ‘ paren The-end of 1 CHOICE™ 52 FORD eae “CLEAN \* &H .... . | CHOICE OP 50 CA ' t | inside. New snow tires on back,’ good | _ Wenaportetion. $115, FE OR | 54 FORD, 2 “DR. CUSTOMLINED. R&H. No rust. Std. trans, $425. OR_ 3-5672. _ 1954 FORD “VICTORIA RADIO & Wie ER, ABSOLUTELY NO M Harold. ‘Turner Ford. $6 FORD FAIRLANE, . f. BIRD eng. FOM, P.S..many extras. LI __ 86-0655, j955 FORD CUSTOM, 8 CYLINDER No Money 2 door, 2 tone, sharp .. $54 BIRMINGHAM- “RAMBLER 666 8. WOODWARD MI 6-3900 Auto. HEATE. TRANSMISSION. YY DOWN. Assume pay- Pai 06 Per Mo. Call Mr. Parks at MI 4-7500. Hérold Turner Ford. lb CN a Jay “The muffler isn’t to ‘keep him warm, it’s to keep his moéuth shut while we're shopping!’’ AN LAN-= + For Sale Cars 106 Pe ene clean. Full price, § $195. Make pay- ments 4 Pe King Auto. Mr. ite, . Saginaw, FE 50 roa *é 1M RUSTED BUT start when the rest won't. FE 2-1063. FORD VICTORIA, V3, Ra I . ABSOLUTE redit Mgr. 4-1500, Harold “Turner Ford, —FORD DEALER— A-1 Used Car Shopping Center 58 FORD THUNDERBIRD ‘Cy’ Owens 147 S. SAGINAW STREET CLEAN UP Ko Nash Rambler, a we $75 0 '50 Ford, 6 & 8 ..... First $50 | 75a ‘30 Pontiac, ket veces ; 50 50 Plymouth .................05 Ht . $51 | 50 Oids 88, A-l running ...... $75 i Cadillac, A-lL running $05 | 8 Dodge stake. a Studebaker, 5 NO REAS. OFFER REFUSED | NO MONEY REQUIRED DOWN | | | - SUPERIOR- ] AUTO SALES 923 W. HURON | FE 4-7500 1956 FORD CUSTOM “, No Money Dn. 2 door, R&H, spotless $695 BIRMINGHAM-RAMBLER 666 S WOODWA ARD MIL Pa 3900 1952 FORD 8 CYLINDER, 2 DR., RADIU & HEATER. ABSOLUTE: Li NO MONEY DOWN. Assume PE 5-4101 ‘35 FORD, 2 DR., STD TRANS __ sharp. am aaa H, Riggins. ‘* & 50 FO Mer wooP COND. 'E 2-8262; OL 2-11 195. ce ee Tn? TRDROr ABSOLUTELY Credit Mer. Mr. __4-7000. Harold Turner Ford. BY OWNER ‘57 MERCURY STA- | tion wagon, Call OR Sn | HASKINS DEPENDABLE - TRADES © | 1957 Chevrolet Bel Air 4door | Station Wagon. V-8 engine, power { gliae, radio, heater. | | 1957 Oldsmobile ‘88 2-door dan. Hydramatic, radio, 1957 Chevrolet Bel dan. 6 cylinder engine. { se- | heater. | Alr 4oor se-, standard | Mer. 41500. Haroid_ Mfurner Ford. \j a payments of $0.00 | Credit Barks 1954 FORD CONVERTIBLE, R&H. Small iM EM down payment and take wo monthly payments. | | are FORD “‘ DOR sedan. Radio, heater, Ford- omatic. power steering. Beauti- oy white and blue paint. Must for oniy $1298 |oN orth Chev. Birming 2735 | 1955 FORD SEDAN, ) RADIO x | HEATER, OVERDRIVE. ABSO- Y Credit Mgr. Mr. Parks ; at MI 4-7500, Harold Turner Ford. $5 DOWN °54 PORD Victoria H-Top. Straight stick—Sharp —$25 83 PER MO.— Eddie Steele — FORD — W. HURON AT ELIZ. LAKE Ane FE_ FE 5-3177__ seat | 68 ;PORD 1 FAIRLANE 6 500, Auto. R&H, Sg 2B. | new wilte walls. $129 down. OM BOHR, INC 120 LS Main, Milford, MU #1715 | PONTIAC-CADILLAC 500” FAIRLANE FOR- | transmission, radio and 1957 Chevrolet 210 4-door sedan. V8 engine, Powerglide, radio, heater. heater. | 1958 Chevrolet 4-door Station Wag- on. 6 cylinder engine, standard transmission, radio, heater. | ape Oldsmobile ‘88"" Holiday | pe. Hydramatic, power steer- | cur | ing. power brakes, radio, heater. | | 1958 Chevrolet Biscayne 2-door se- | dan. V-8 engine, Powerglide rae | dio anJ heater. ALSO | Hunter Blvd. at 8. Woodward ATs | | ham MI 59 DEMONSTRATORS | PARKWOOD’ 4-DOOR WAGON BEL AIR 2-DOOR SEDAN IMPALA 2-DOOR HARDTOP OLDS “88"* HOLIDAY COUPE | Haskins Chev. | 6571 Dixte Highway at M15 MAple 5-5071 Open nites ‘til ¢ -FORD DEALER-— A-l Used Car Shopping Center 59 FORD CONVERTIBLE $2495 ~. | | | | ‘Cy’ Owens 147 8 SAGINAW STREET WILSON | | “CLEAN”. Birmingham Trades © 13S0N. Woodward Birmingham MI 4-1930 Johnson OFFERS "58: PON TIAC WGN. + RUBS Johnson . Motor Sales "LAKE ORION ‘MY 2-2871 or MY:3-1461 TIRES. 3 PASSENGER cicee $1995 ‘67 PONTIAC HARDTOP, 4 DR SHARP. LOW MILEAGE ...$1395 ‘S$ PONTIAC STARCHIEP, 4 DOOR. FULL POWER °.... $1095 "66 POT IAC HARDTOP, 4 DOOR. PINK & GRAY. ..$ 995 "99 PONTIAC CATALINA, SE- DAN, POWER BRAK! & STEERING .............. $2695 ‘56 PONTIAC HARDTOP, DOOR, GOLD & BLACK . $ 908 ‘8 FORD WAGON, RED & , HITE, AUTOMATIC ...... $ 795 '86 PONTIAC WAGON, CLEAN INSIDE & OUT ../..¢.....$ 805 "bS FORD Wagon BLUE & WHITE, AUTOMATIC ...... $ 795 ‘$5 PORD V-8, 2 POOR: AUTOMATIC, CLEAN’ ..... $ 695 ‘55 FORD V- , FORD V-8 2 DR. . $ 496, - $4 FORD, SEDAN, 4 DOOR. GREEN. V@ .............. $ 495 "64 FORD » BIRAIGET etick, 6... 1465 THE TIME HASCOME | TO TURN OVER OUR USED CAR STOCK COMPLETELY. NOTHING BUT GOOD CARS AT CHRISTMAS PRESENT PRICES 362 ‘86 Pontiac, automatic . $800 363 '60 Willys, white tires ... $596 372 '55 Pontiac, Nice one .... 299 '56 Buick Hardtop $956 400 '65 Buick 2 dr.. Seda: $580 410 "57 Buick, A beauty ..... $1550 426 '56 Buick, R & heater ... rind 431.°57 Buick Roadmaster .... $1475 432 '55 Ford, tu-tone .......... $628 434 '55 Buick, std. trans, .... $600 449 '59 Pontiac 2 dr. sedan ... $2030 462 ‘56 Buick Special cook 9BTS 464 '57 Buick Cent. Hardtop §1435 483 '65 Buick 4 dr, berdtap id "59 Opel 2 dr, s 1. $1670 488 ‘57 Ford V-8 Fairlane $1190 493 'S9 Fiat 500, sunroof ..... $910 495 '56 Ford Delivery ......... $665 500 *50 Ford ton ck... ee 501 58 Olds Wagon $1750 S04 ‘88 Chev; Impsia hardtop $1903 ‘ ev. pa ar 505 ‘58 Buick Electra 4 dr, $2795 / 1 509 '59 Buick haere 2 dr. $2495 SEE HANK OR Gan Pontiac's Santa Giatiges OLIVER | Motor Sdles- "210 Orchard ‘Lake Aye, FE 2-910) Open Eves, BUICK + ‘OPEL - JEEP Ear Sale Used Care 106 ney. de down. King Auto. 1 Sagifiaw. 8-0402. — YOU'LL LIKE OUR WAY — — — OF DOING BUSINESS 's- FORD Country Sedan . 495 “69 VOLSWG'N, 9,000 Miles Sess | 57 DODGE Btaiton Wagon , - $ias ‘ST CHEVY 4Door 210 .... $1285 ‘57 PLYMOUTH 4 —— H-Top $1295 "$38 RAMBLER 2 Door ...... $1195 '3T DODGE 2 Door ........ 1195 ‘66 PORD Country- Sedan $1195 ‘56 CHEVROLET. Hardtop $1095 55 CHEVY B-Air 4 Door 885 54 PONTIAC Deluxe 2 Dr 8 § 495 ‘83 FORD Custom @ FOM .. $ 495 ‘653 PONTIAC Deluxe 4 Dr... $ 305 ‘82 RD Custom ve 395 ‘62 BUICK 2 Door H-Top $ 195 ‘651 LINCOLN 2 Door ve 495 ‘49 FORD % Ton Pickup .. § 225 Quality Motor Sales 649 ORCHARD LAKE FE 3-704! —FORD DEALER— A-1 Used Car Shopping center 759 FORD 2 DOOR $1895 ‘Cy’ Owens 1955 ERCURY ai RDTOP, RA- & HEATER, AUTOMATIC payments of $34.96 Per Mo. Cail Credit Mgr. Mr. Parks at MI 4-1500. Harold Turner Ford ~ NORTH'S CHRISTMAS SPECIAL For You Sume NEW CHEVROLETS = Oificials’ and Loompeny cars $1792 2-Door, 4-Door Impalas Most with power steering. Bank rates — 36 Months. Easy down | payments. North-Chev. Hunter Bivd. at 8. Woodward. Ave, | Hunter ra, ays, | | | 1 | | | i \ | I \° | | | Simineham | i954 MERCURY. GOOD TIRES | and clean. running cond. Real $375. FE 5-2766. 1953 MERCURY HARDTOP. NICE _and clean. PE 2-64 LOOK! BUY! 1 SAV E! 1959 PONTIAC $2795 wer steering, ramatic, radio, Spare never Convertible with ower brakes, Hy eater, whitewalls. been used | 1958 VAUXHALL Radio, heater actuai mies. car. 1958 DODG $1395 and only A real 12,000 | economy $1495 | 2-door atien with radio, ‘heater | andrew tires. 1959 CHEVROLET Impala convertible, a $2595 power steer- ing and brakes. V-8 engine, white-,| Biack with walls Powerglide. ‘white top. '1958 BUICK $1 Special 2-door sedan,. ‘Dynafiow, radio, heater. Like-new whitewall | tires. Beautiful green finish. 1934 CHEVROLET G1THS Biscayne 4-door sedan. ve en- gine. Powerglide, radio, heater, whitewals. ke- new. - 1957 BUICK yor Roadmaster 2-door hardtop. er steering, brakes and windows. . They. don’t come any Nicer, 1895 1987 BUICK .. 062.00... cee ees $1505 2-door hardtop. Dynaflow,. rate heater, whitewalls, Only 14,000 actual males. 1957 PONTIAC $1605 Starchiet 4-door hardtop. ' Power steering and brakes, radio, heat- is er, whitewalls. 1B UICK ........).......... $1198 uper 4door har Power steering and brakes, ynaflow, riidio, heater, whitewalls, 1956 BUICK .......2.......05. $1195 | fuper hardtop, power steering and brakes, whitewalls. Plastic covers never been off. $665 1956 FORD WAGON $1195 Country sedan, V-8 engine, Ford- omatic, radio. heater, ‘ihiiewslls. Green and ivory. ae < URE 5 weg Beng’ sedan, Dynaflow, radi, ater. whitewsll tire. Only 12,006 actual mi les. 1955 Hardtop un heater, whitewa finish, sar gutaesters $ 895 Hydramatic, radio, Blue and white eens ide" warden, ‘aitlane «i ; ppc’ ve _sadine.- Perc dips eater. ; ee gg ts SHELTON Pontiac - Buick | Pe aa ‘eat sales io. ’ ee Py ‘ € ys Se & Foe A. | ROCHESTER OL 1-8133/ ; \ i} | "$2150 . Silcerar { ROCHESTER OPEN EVES. "TIL 9 é | or ttn a v8 $605 L 2-9721 HOM ER HIGHT 3 MTRS. ites from Pow 4. x |W. HURON AT ELIZ. LAKE RD. FE 5-0861 ‘85 MERCURY Door, -Ma- tic, Radio & Heeter, ayia $24.50 PER MOm~ Eddie Steele. —FORD— > W. HURON AT ELIZ, LAKE RD. FE 53177 _____ FE 58-0861 SPECIAL, 1953 RED AND WHITE Gedamonte- Sharp. Teacher's car fro Minnesota. R&C Motor Bales. EM 3-4155. 1955 OLDS. GOOD CONDITION Reasonable price. 1 owner. FE _ 46448 after 5:30 p.m.y $5 DOWN | ‘S53 OLDS Super “88° H-Top. A real nice car. —$16.75 PER MO.— Eddie Steele — FORD — W. HURON AT ELIZ. LAKE RD. FE 5-3177 FE 5-0861 ; ~FORD DEALER— A-1 Used Car Shopping Center 55 OLDSMOBILE 4 DOOR $545 ‘Cy’ Owens! 147 8. SAGINAW STREET FE 5-4101 | ¢ SEETHE . WONDERFUL | New world of Pords, Palcons, T- Birds and trucks. Now in stock. See what you get and get what you pay for (no-fooling). Mer- cheat of transport from 1930 to BEATTIE “Your FORD Dealer Since 1930" 5806 DIXIE HWY. OR 3-1291 At the Stoplight in Waterford 1956 PLYMoUtce BELVEDERE No Money Dn. Gun metal and white. Absolutely immaculate in and out. you buy it $845 BIRMINGHAM-RAMBLER 66 8. WOODWARD Of Seles Prune” | wanes “tabee MI 6-3900 1955 PLYMOUTH: ‘2a tee teat BEATTIE | ' Eddie Steele — FORD — * FE. 53171 SEE OUR SELECTION eg ACK COLE, INC. ple at Pontiac Trafl MA 4-451) ‘54 OLDS 88. $495. eed CARL'S Motor Sales. 62° Oakland CAR PAYMENTS aoe BURDEN. some? Come pod us ae you aah to w fies DON'S- ‘USED CARS €71 8. Lapeer _Rd., Lake Orion MY 2-204) : 1955 PLYMOUTH N, R honey Bo UTELY NO ig WN. Assume pay- Credit Mer’ ir . = Mi 41500, Harold tre Ford. 1959 Plymouth BRAND NEW 2 door Belvedere Sedan, Power- flite. Radio & H = Whitewalls. All taxes & tra: $2467. 80 R&R Mrs. 724 OAKLAND FE 4-3528 | Moot oar. Mae bbe migee PLYMOUTH a ok oa AUTO. transmission; ~ Mi. Sport- tone , on & wacparpl $645. MI FACTORY BRANCH 59 PONTIAC CATALINA VISTA Power steering & Power brakes. Radio & Heater, -Hydramatic. Solid White paint. $2695 Pontiac . Retail Store (| 1853 PONTIAC OAKLAND TE 4-3528 © or eg ky | SEE * Schutz Motors, Inc. n12. 8. Woodward MI_6-5302 FACTORY BRANCH 57 PONTIAC: 8-CHIEF CATALINA Radio & Heater, matic. Power $1695 PE = Pontiac Retail ‘Store| FE 3-7117 @5 MT. €LEMENS ST. naeEAD THE POST OFFICE 55 PO! 4 DOOR, GOOD Seg a ily car Pet equipped, mandy ‘ve fio “Oriana owner. This is nice. , PE 5-6959. Price No. family car. wn with $090, Priced at 'y $5 down, ‘North Chev. Hunter Blvd. at 8. Weetwerd Ave. ingham MI 4-2735 Our only Birmin _1955 PONTIAC. ERS plea Radio. Heater. $795 . HOMER HIGHT MTRS. “15 winnie from eet Oxford, A -8-2528 "33 PONTI C. 4 DR. a a VERY good con: EM 3-4386. "33 RED FOS TAS CONVERTIBLE. = arp! $345. Carl's Motor ales . WILL ACCEPT oats. boats, refrigere- nee Ss, ete new toe mblers or any + good used car as part payment. BILL SPENCE “RAMBLER” - —S8ALES:& SERVICE— 256 S SAGINAW FE -8-4541 1954 PONTIAC CATALINA HT — Very clean. Full No meney down. Make payments Rd $17 mo. Mr. White. King Auto 115 8S. Saginaw. FE —FORD DEALER— A-1 Used Car Shopping Center 54 PONTIAC 2 DOOR $295 FE 3-7117 MT. CLEMENS ST. BEHIND THE POST OFFICE Cy’ Owens || MAZUREK STUDEBA No Money Dn. Certified actual miles, factory e 's car. Full de- tails, he A 666 5. WOODWARD MI 6-3900 1984 : IAN, RA & HEATER, OVERD! e LUTELY NO MON DOWN. jaune ee ge wer at MI 47500. Harold Turner 1956 RAMBLER 2 DOOR No Money Down 29.000 actual miles. AMC Offi- elal's wife’s car. A-1 2 0 heater, No. rust. ea 1957 RAMBLER 4DOOR SEDAN, 6 cylinder engine, standard shift. eae = you tons ou tots of | ge Sy save Our stock No. 1028, sD price ts only , $999 North Chev. unter med. at 8S. Woodward Ave. irmingham MI 4-2733 1956 AMBASSADOR CUSTOM No Money Down We sold it new. Sharp. Red, black & white. Automatic, power, Ra- dio, Low nies $798 AM-RAMBLER WARD “MI 6- 1958 AMBASSADOR RAMBLER Custom, Factory Offical’s car, air conditioned, power & brakes. Continental tire. Hurry. $1795. Over $4200 new, 30 pay- old trade. BIRMINGHAM-RAM- BLER. 666 S. WOODWARD. MI 6-300. 1953 RAMBLER (BEATNIK) FEN- ders about to fall off but nat e is tien. “see. this! NK Huron Ri Next to the OR 40301. kenlladd ) SALES South Bivd at Saginaw 4-9587 1953 WILLYS ene "CLEAN — rrins Auto., 115 8. “past: a naw. — WILL — — PAY.YOU — < BE SURE TO ASK FOR THIS SPECIAL DEAL _ $149 DOWN — .’59 FORD CUSTOM “300” 4-Door — Radio and Heater, Pordomatic. — FINANCE $1,605 — — t49 DowN — / ‘58 FORD °° — FPAIRLANE ‘'500" ib ‘ou — Fe . Clu Pe eater. rdomatic Cc Radio and ~— FINANCE $1,195 — ~ $14 DOWN —. 58 FORD. COUNTRY SEDAN 4-Door — 6 Passenger, Pordo- nd. Heater. 100 matic, Radio and — FINANCE $1,445 — _ = $99 DOWN ~ 57 FORD VICTORIA HARDTOP Fordomatic, Radio and Heater. ~- FINANCE $1,195 —~ = WITH THE PU RCHASE OF ANY N 1960 FORD — $149 DOWN —— ’59 RAMBLER _ @UPEq HARDTOP + uto. Trans., “Radio tne hese $1,795 — “ ws _ = sae ROWN — 58 MERCURY CONVERTIBLE Mere Mate. B Radio and Heater and _ FINANCE $1,695 — : _ + $99 DOWN — 57 FORD COUNTRY SEDAN EOS Radle “ank Monue ~ oo wa $1,295 — i — $9 DOWN — 'S6 RAMBLER . STATION WAGON ‘Cross-Country Aue. _Trans., ~ PINANCE $705 — * a1 Eddie Steele Ford-.a1 $50 IN CASH _EW 1960 FORD — USED CAR — OR TRUCK Monday - Tuesday - Wednesday ron “It's Easy to Deal With Eddie Steele” You. can drive a BRAND NEW If you have no cash, just pay $14.27 per month for ™ months. present car, YOU WON’T NEED ANY CASH. — IF you have $249.99 in cash, you won't need a trade — . You have the FULL DOWN PAYMENT. APTER DOWN PAYMENT, you make 36 payments of $5.58 each. NO TRICKS-NO GIMMICKS THIS IS THE EXACT DEAL YOU CAN MAKE AT EDDIE STEELE FORD Fairlane Club Sedan -—- DOWN FOR LOWER MONTHLY ‘PAYMENTS SEE THESE A-1 USED CARS: - #9 DOWN — 56 CHEVROLET DELUXE 2DOOR _ Powerglide. Radio and Heater. _— FINANCE ™ a “A Y — 49 DOWN ~ _’ °56 FORD PAIRLANE 4DOOR V8 Fordomatic, Radio and Heater. — FINANCE $8705 — 5 — $ DOWN ~ 56 PLYMOUTH STATION WAGON Guburban 2Door — Radio and — $71 PER MONTH — — #5 DOWN — ’55 CHEVROLE BEL AIR HARDTOP Radio and Heater, 2Tone. - $1 PER MONTH — —IP you have $240.99 equity fp your. > $3 CHEV ROLET. BE SURE TO ASK THIS SPECIAL DEAL PAYMENT? * — $5 DOWN — “35 FORD . CUSTOM 2DOOR v-8 Straight Stick, Radio & Heater. — $2? PER MONTH — t L. $8 Down - 55 DODGE +DOOR V-8 Auto. Trang. Radio eh yfienter. . j — % DOWN — 54 FORD CUSTOM 2-DOOR 8 Fordomatic, Radio & Heater, | “= $19.88 PER MONTH — Down. — _ BEL AIR 2-DOOR Powerglide, Radio and Heater, "= $14.00 PER MONTH — . ments, $51.50. Low cash down or” : | : ! ) Masq Party 4(D Shirley Temple Story Book. Fairy Tales: Rowdy! nursery Thyme the mayor, “Summer Holiday,” version of O’Neil’s “Ah Wilderness,” (4). 8:00 (2):The Texan. _ (4) Love and Marriage. (7) Cheyenne (cont.) - (9) Movie (began at 7:30 pm, 8:30 (2) Father Knows Best. (4) Wells Fargo. (7) Bourbon Street, * .°(9) Movie (began at iT 30 p.m.) 9:00 (2) Danny Thomas. (4) Peter Gunn. (7) Bourbon. Street {cont.) (9). Don Messers Jubilee. 9:30 (4) Ann Southern. (4) Theater. (1) Adventure in Paradise. (9) Music ’60. 10:00 (2) Hennesey. (4) Steve Allen Show (color). Variety: Gene Autry sings Christmas songs including “Rudolf, the Red-Nosed Rein- deer,” his hit record; Patti Page sings songs from ‘‘The Sound of Music.’ (7) Paradise (cont.) (9) Music {cont,) (2) June Allyson. (4) Steve Allen (cont.) (T) Man With Camera. (9) The Town Above. 10:30 11:00 (2) (4) (7) (9) News, weath- er, sports. 11:20 (2) Nightwatch Theater. Drama: Victor Mature, William Bendix, “Gambling House,” (°51). (9) Telescope: 11:30 (4) Jack Paar. (7) After Hours Club. (9) Starlight Theater. Drama: Elizabeth Taylor, Georgé¢ Murphy, Spring! Byington, Mary “Cynthia,"’ (47), TUESDAY MORNING . 12:45 (2) Guiding Light. Astor, ! 11:90 (2) December Bride. (4). Concentration. - (9) Six-Gun Judge. 11:45 (7) Detroit Today. "TUESDAY AFTERNOON | 12:00 (2) Love o: Life. (9) On Safari - 12:30 (2) Search for Tomorrcw. (4) (color) It Could Be au. (1) Love That Reb. : ~ (9) Mary Morgan. (9) News. (2) Gur Miss Brooks, (4) NBC Playhouse. (7) Music Bifiget (9) Movie.” 1:30 (2) As The World Turne (7) ‘Topper. 1:55 (4) Faye Elizabeth. 2:00 (2) Medic (4) Queen for a Day. (7) Day in Court. 2:30 (2) House Party. (4) Thin Man. (7) Gale Storm. 3:00 (2) Star Showcase (4) Young Dr. Malone. TV Won'tLet Anyone Forget: It's Christmas By CYNTHIA LOWRY NEW YORK i® — After a weekend of off and on television watching, I am suffering from a severe case of snow blindness and an overdose of Santa Claus | plots. * * aX Even a little bey on “Wanted give kim a gun for Christmas. Everywhere, the dial could turn on the TV set there were twinkling Christmas trees and ground frosted with snow, i * * * Between the commercials ev- erybody except Perry Mason was | a-blowin’ on their chilly hands, '' a stampin’ the cold feet and de- livering gift-wrapped bundles. 123 Million Americans ‘Have Health Insurance ~—Dead or Alive” asked Santa to | (2) Movie. {4 (color) George Pierrot. (9) Looney Tunes, 6:30 (7) Rin Tin Tin ~ Power T ool Gift Very Perplexing - Settle for Only the Best When You're Shopping for ‘His’ Present - Buying somebdne- power tools for Christmas can be perplexing. How- ever, the question of how and what a woman should select in the tool line is greatly simplified by: following a few simple hints. The first essential in equipment _|for the home handyman is never settle for less than the best. The) — buyer should insist on well-made, easy-to-use tools and should select the most basic tools first. Examine the equipment care- fully and ask for a demonstra- tion before buying. It's better to purchase a few good pieces at a time and make additions later as + the wallet or purse allows. The basic power tool for begin ner and seasoned amateur alike is a quarter-inch drill. This versatile favorite can be equipped with a full assortment of A-to-Z attach- ments to tackle most craft,. main- tenance and repair chores. * * * The safest and easiest type of drill to operate, according to tool makers, is one with a pistol grip and a’ switch conveniently located at the base of the handle. * * * ; This trigger switch should have a push-button locking device so that it-can be instantly used or re- leased by the thumb. ‘The chuck,. or part which holds) the drill bit or attachment, should! jmotor which will not overheat. |is a kit which contains the quarter- ‘inch drill, as well as an _assort- yment of attachments | trom” boring holes in wood or metal! One of the most popular gifts held up. ART OR “MERCHANDISE”? - ~ Sculptor Louis Diugosz pon. | ders his clay statuette of Albert Einstein in Toronto,-Canada. Cana- dian customs authorities are holding 18 of Diugosz’s works on the grounds that they are ‘merchandise’ They were headed for an exhibition in Toronto when they were TV News and Reviews _ By. FRED, DANTZIG NEW YORK (UPD—One suc-) cessfully cartoon-based family se- ries deserves another, I suppose. kt ok * Last night, CBS-TV’s GE Theater | written by Louis Pelletier. Bert Lahr starred as the | and Ronny, Howard was his little | pal, Barnaby. The approach was slowed by ia refreshing, perky spirit. * * * I especially enjoyed the sight, ‘of Lahr as he flapped around,’ for Jobs |or grumbled about nose cones and | roc kets in his flight path, or the Jekyll-Hyde character, no one in Keeps her-in pain, that the poor thing sings isad songs so realistically) (in N.Y.-Cornell Hospital for a checkup) . To Critic Brooks Atkinson, who'll do-a ‘Kaye eee eT | bad > EE. z Hicwl, ae (at Airport, for Alaska) — a ito sariding and polishing. ability < li 6:00 (4) Continental Classroom _ jutter wt leone ma, and _unrelia- 6:30 (2) Contenenial Classroom) NEW YORK (UPI) — More than “When , ao oo i you want a leprechaun, (eglor). 123 million Americans were pro- Tramp, Tramp, you never cait find it," he snorted. | €:50 (2) Meditations. tected by some kind of-health in- T h ‘Gi I Se cei ell ey ee | Roce he 7:06 (4) y surance Institute . . | aDys (2) TV College. yesterday. Goes Marching || tte trend, “People will think -| (7) Big Show. x * * | you’re goofy if you, go around 7:50 (2) Cartoon Clessroom. The institute said regular insur-{ LONDON (AP) —~Dr.. Bar bara| imagining you don’t see things.” (7) Breakfast Time. ‘ance companies provided health Moore, the world’s walkingest Although Master Howard was 8:15 (2) Capt. Kangusoo. ~ insurance for 72 million persons,|Woman. still. plodded on her Way) strident and Dody Goodmanish at $:30 7) Johnny Ginger while Blue Cross-Blue Shield cov-|from Edinburgh to London early'times the videotape was badly 9:00 (2) For Better or Worse. ered 55 million and other plans) today after a five-hour rest. corrugated and the saccharine was (4) Bold Journey. five million. The 56-year-old marathon walk-| mishandled, I'll -go on record as ~acRoss ————> 20 Greek letter The weather has improved a lit- a Go “back tle. Earlier she ag os soaked| After Garner captured _ this 34 Toy ro iby rain and buffeted by high) 37 Nemes ‘winds which once blew her into a_ 38 if Ttallen, money U iditch. wy “ a Y ] TV Sh a Sstin - Dr. Moore, a Russian-born di- «2 _—— - etician, lives an a diet of fruit ule Ow 44 Waste juices, honey and water. She is Toni ht Unites 1¢ Wore tore. . {against drinking and says that life g 49 Grates Fy | with “‘mastered sex’ is the key Musical Greats pr ge aad ~— —e ‘to. her powers of endurance. : < * * : $6 Scottish. eyes Sree ee. eee 2 en wet This is ball third long-distance) NEW YORK (UPI)—To Marian 51. Piddling ihe 32 Come in 43 Solitary Anderson, who-owns one of the pawl aebed 4 Opera by 24 Russian sea 45 Stories walk in less than a month, She t voices.of | “a. the sacted| 58 Operatic Bell 5 name” 46 Woody plant undertook the first walk to prove|8?e4t voices of her era, the sacred) oo [aetieins $ Pouch 26 Outward 47 Motber ‘of | she was as tough as a succession|™USiC of the Christmas season : q ion t i ‘ i | Reary feet wom Wate Beg Jot yong men competing to seers cmrrtumty ot oly of — > Bekoven 39 Nautical term ~ $1 Coin “ot yhe soe walk the 110 miles frome re-| 1 Woman's 40 Slovan Indian =. — poetry 52 Gaiter a actant tune © on im Miss Anderson will sing and! ee eee ; fl c read from the Gospel of St. Luke| © 6 , — tonight on the “Christmas Star- t ’ ‘ SS eh time’. prograrn on NBC-TV. It : : will be her fitst joint broadcast Today's Radio Programs waite th ea bore A : stein and the New York Philhar- wis, oe) Uktw, (oer ww, ee) ha (tise Warn, cm WPRON, 11480) W4BK, (1500) | monic. oo & * * TONIGHT 11:00—-WWJ, Ne Showcase “It seems good for people at 600K ew Ww, Beivert weit 3 wea, ae least once a year to get back to} - ae hers aE. a oC jews, Reid sacred music,"’ she said in an in- Fett terview. ‘“‘When they go to chureh WPO! IR, Showense = re 78K: ireres say Howe Maxwell’ they sometimes hear it super. oT Wee’ eee = jficially, sometimes give it only . R ng gd Date 11:30—WIR, Music lip ‘service... CKLW, Knowles "GREW News, ahitiore Shittbreak “But at Christmas, even walking i down Fifth Avenue you can hear “Wee. aswel the music coming out of the stores, and. I remember how I enjoyed it so when I was a little en” Does Take-Off! ee (UPIT—Comedian his eighth Christmas tour of mili: joe ands rope will visit a a, Bob Hope took off yesterday for) Mr. O'Malley and Barnaby Perks on 7.9 Cylinders | town wanted te punish able bandit, Up to the three-quart But writer Leonard — presum t t 'seemed to run out of gimmicks cess of pony mig the ore. at that point and finished off with Relatives sented Crocket Johnson's old car-|S0me standard western flourishes death of toon characters, Mr. O'Malley and/@nd some puzzling exits that only, Barnaby in a half-hour colorcast diluted the show's quality. .THE CHANNEL SWIM: winged, cigar-smoking, fumbling |Workshop, the CBS-TV series that fairy godfather} Mr. O'Malley, jwill feature new talent in original | |TV -works, i Jan. (EST)... makes its 24, from noon fo 12 Vacation rep @for NBC-TV's Jack Paar: Arlene! be geared and have a key, And|Schmaltz-slippery path, but in gen- prancis for the the drill should have a powerful! ral, it succeeded in showing off| ing Dec. 28; jweek of Jan. 4. - The public affairs prog and thus subject to duty. the plot was suitably entertaining, | breezy and easy to take, Inspired 10 Commandments fe rT Ty By BOB THOMAS AP Movie-TV Writer ‘HOLLYWOOD Now that the super-apecial TV season is well along, it seems time to agseas the wights and wrongs of the system, | as * * * The 1959-60 TV year must be al source. of satisfaction to Pat Weaver. It was he who. conceived the idea of the special (he called ‘erm spectaculars) during his bril- liant, brief career as NBC chief. He theorjzed that. viewers would suffer boredom from the weekly) diet of series. What a blessing the specihl has Big Suits Filed inHeater Deaths | _ $1.5 Million in Damages: | Sought for 5 Who Died’ | in Trailers ah A SOUTH BEND, Ind. ® — ‘Suits | asking almost 1'4 million dollars ‘damages for the gas heater as-| |phyxiation deaths of three men) ‘and two women have been filed in! _ U, S. District Court here. x *« * | Named defendant in all the suits was the Thurm Engineering Co., ‘Elkhart, Ind., maker of low-cost. trailer heaters blamed for 16 ‘deaths across the country this fall. Fan Trailer Co., Wakarusa, _ three suits, and Layton Homes, Elkhart, in two. | Damages totaling $1,275,000 were asked from Thurm and Fan ‘suits by the survivors of three! hunters who died at Grayling, Mich., Nov. 14. * * * asked $350,000 for the Mn Macyda, West M the love- er mark, | Praskins Dearbern, ch., owner of the jtrailer; $425,000 fer Joseph Zak- 'ruzewski, Detroit; and $500,000 for ‘Stanle Damilowicz, Dearborn. Sunday y Thurm and Layton by the hus- debut on’ nds of Mrs. Sylvester An- 2:55 p.m.| thony, McClellandtown, Pa., an lacements) Mrs. Danny M. Viad, Detroit. The two womeh died while at- first week, start: tending a religious meeting at Di- for the station's over-all news per- Joey Bishop for the mondalé, Mich., Sept. 17. * * * rams that and his four Anthony oe More ( Ugh) S ‘istage together is not enough. They | Ind., was named codefendant in | Two suits asked $100,000 from | children news analysis as well as special been this year! Never han the pro-) especially gram of series been so lacklustre|Let | -the steady,. violent outpouring of) But. 1 gunalingers, both in chaps ze blue serge. The season has seen no truly original series intwoduced ito weekly programming. * * * | The specials have sqved the day. jSome were bound to be good—- there are so many of them. There|"® is still plenty of room for im- |provement. Perhaps we can ue- vise 10 commandments for special jmakers, drawing from the hits jand errors of the season thus far: Don’t be name-crazy. Putting ‘Jack Benny, Eddie Cantor, Georze iJessel and George Burns on a | maut have something good to do. 2. Strive for a different combi- ‘ation of names. Too many stars ihave been seen together too much ~—Frank Sinatra-Dean Martin, * 3; Take Time. If-it's special, eserves special care, not sloppy lwork. . Fred Astaire’s success shows how adequate rehearsal can. ipay off Miss Ameri as Featured JACKSON, Miss. (UPI): t/ Ann Mobley, Miss America plans to serve as a regular fea . vocalist on .a network television > : iseries of variety shows, beginning No k * Jan. 27. -~S | 4, Spend: for writing. A beauti- | Devi Wille cd Beabdoe baie ifully written version of “Turn Of said her daughter signed a three- ithe Screw’ with. Ingrid Bergman year contract with CBS-TV as a in be a hit while a sloppy job) singer on a new series, “Be Our “The Jazz Singer’ with Jerry. |Guest.” : Lewis can flop. 5, Make sure it's something spe- ‘cial, You've: got to provide more ‘dimension than having Jimmy Du- ‘rante or Maurice Chevalier repeat their standard routines. 6. Don't rely on tape or film. | The quality of good specials is| the .excitement of- a Broadway show’ Canned. stuff robs spon- | Member ef Riectrenten Assn. - FE 4.1515 C& V ELECTRO MART jtaneity. } | * * ‘ | By DAY WEEK | 7. Don't underestimate your au-| . idience. There are* no sticks any |more: the folks are getting more ihep all the time, 8. Don't get carried away with scenery. The play is still the thing, RCA COLOR T¥ Sweet’s Radio TV | Open Mon. & Fri Might. ron St FE RCA Color TV SALES and SERVICE . Buy Your TV From A Technician CONDON'S TV ee by om Tel-Huren SONOTONE House of Hearing Sales and Detroit Prof to Head TV Station Newscasting DETROIT #—WJBK-TV has ap: pointed Dr. John W. Dempsey as| the station's news and publié al-) ‘fairs director effective Jan. 4. Dr. Dempsey wilf continue to; teach at the University -of Detroit, | where he is a professor of Po-| litical science. * * * He will be given responsibility FE 4- ond formance and at the same time continue his nightly program of ee eed Free Hearing Tests replace NBC-TV's Five Fingers’ ang Vjad and his two children sur- Programs and “interviews. Dr. starting Saturday, Jan. 23, will Vived in a neighboring trailer ‘Dempsey joined the WJBK-TV) —_——nhaee reeere come in under the title of World _ ‘staff in 1958. Bank Bid Wide 60 . The comedy team of ‘Wayne and Shuster will offer a Japan's 1959 rice crop has been [alah foe obec erle Shc N | sequel to their ‘Julius Caesar’’ estimated at 12.1 million metric) | sketch on the Jan. 10 Ed Sullivan|tons, one per cent above last year’s |Show. It's called, \of Rome." ‘ “The Burning |production but two per cent below 'the 1955 record. The P f Ook : ° eons Never rae eel founty HIGH SCHOOL are invited to write for FREE booklet. Tells how you can iN Even New York D. J.'s Are in Hot Water Now By EARL WILSON _ NEW YORK — Now into the stealing. Three affidavits c those New York disc jockeys are » getting harging one of the local boys with a | payola system which earned him $60,000 in one year (he | * 12, 1960. (It's beeau got 1 cent for each record that a big com- pany sold) are down at D. A. Hogan's of- fice—and the disc jockey'll be down there with them very soon. * HAPPY CHRISTMAS CARDS to: Edith Piaf, down highway robber when soaked. | Who just agreed. to open at the Waldorf Sept. * se of arthritis, which To Sammy WILSON twice-weekly column: on culture when he quits reviewing at) ithe end of this year . since going on that salt- free diet at Doctors Hospital: To Judy Garland, 20 pounds: lighter | They ‘say she'll be down to 120 in a month. Ethel Merman—though “amicably” separated from air- lines chief Bob Six—goes. with him and her children to Montego Bay for Ch children,” says Ethel. to go our own way,” ‘are sleeping in. the ¢ and we've got the Rolls in the kids’ bedroom.” THE MIDNIGHT EARL .. . Christmas comes a year—to TV stars. taping so they can h .. Beautiful babes Nichols with Ray Ka with Warren Beatty w aflame over . bye, Charlie” Jayne Mansfield’s asking a 10G ad- vance.for her memoirs . Young heit Pat Paterno and duo: isinger June Valli balist’s sore’ at his “77 Sunset Strip”: bosses —— they won’t let him do “Butterfield 8” with Lig Taylor.| Denise Darcel’s most frequent escort is her ex-husband, Peter Crosby. BARL'S PEARLS:— Some people think the way to tighten one’s belt is to eat more. - \ leealis stallations in Alaska to some. | Wane Oh Yak 3RA) American servicemen. The, De with the government. —L, 8. MeCandless. advance. to all Mayall Civil Service employes.) . Practically all are . Playwright George Axelrod had broken ribs for the “Good- opening— on stage to-embrace the cast in Phila- ristmas’“We-couldn't-disappoint the “We're just two peopte-who decided she adds. “The kids arage,” he said, week. early this ave the holiday dept.: Barbara tz, Joan Collins hom she’s reaily from jumping . Harwyn Efrem Zim- BARBARA don’t. know if he’s diéd or taken a job (With apologies in “A diverce? Who knows %- me Comedian Alan King was, telling fellow millionaire Red Buty membrance of warm times past. tons about his new Rolls, NN When you read that a man’ 's gone‘to| . That's earl) earn your American School Diploma. wn AT HOME | IN SPARE TIME AMERICAN SCHOOL P_P. 12-91 P. 0. Bex 24 Kensington Branch Detroit 24, Michigan Send rie your FREE 5@-Page High Schoo] Booklet Name . : Address ... .. Age Phone Lh ichachachachachdichahcdte DO be ed rH ‘ithe: of SAVINGS! IMPERIAL MARK 12 Admiral 30” Electric ; $11.88 CAMERA RANGE — $269.95 with FLASH, only $2.98 | $100.00