The Wedither U.S. Weather. Bursau Forecast ‘ Cold wave tonight.. ™ ney ‘ (Detaile Page 2) noth YEAR * = * * ’ PONTIAC, MIGHTGAN, Fripay, DECEMBER 19, 1958—42 “PAGES: onrrad PRES RARE cnt a 3 = ashen * aa eat = es se Sa a oe call rs ? Py sc erie wn ei em ses - 5 Sea Sa | . av f 4 , ’ NEIGHBORS COME,TO AID — Clothing and other necessities were being contributed today by neighbors and friends for this Leonard couple and their seven children, left homeless yesterday when fire destroyed their six-room frame house, wife, Mildred, . Their Home Was Rati aeck Pontiac Press Phoie Frank J. Sandor comforts his 12-month-old son, Teddy, at a neighbor's home after the blaze. His is holding their daughter, Tina Marie, 242, as she ponders their future. Five older children were in school. J ourney to Jesus Is Rigorous, Long’ (The Three Ki s of the ovat were tr fact kings only 4 vaewiedae Professional sch 4rs-mwore advanced than any others in their age But their decision to- search for a Divine King was not welcomed by all their learned . colleagues Here's: # description of their odyssey second of five articles on the Mac's. fourney to Jesus.) By GEORGE W. CORNELL AP Religious, Writer {HE CARAVAN stood in readiness. It had taken nearly three months to prepare for the 1,200-mile journey. Shouts of leatber-shirted Revaley of Be mingled ad the | baw! of animals as supplies we oe Somewhere . . tion. The chief camoleer rushed about, yelling instructions and gesturing violently, as sweating slaves hoisted rope crates and grain bags to the backs of kneeling freight beasts. Dust swirled in the bright Persian sunlight. Blankets, tents, foodstuffs, water casks and other ne- cessities, along with chests of rare treasures, were stowed on the wooden pack saddles, divided equally by weight en either side, and bound to the uprights. Since it would be a rigorous trip, only about 400 pounds of cargo, two-thirds the usual maximum, was placed on each camel. A crowd of jostling townspeople looked on, wom- en veiled in their chadors; dark, hirsute men with laughing eyes. . somewhere in Tedee ... Was the dealing * * * “A fool's expedition! Those greybeards chase the wind.” THREE ARE SELECTED Behind a brick wall. inside the palace of the roya] Magian Council, a cirele of white-gowned men sat around a fire, staring silently into its leaping flames Among them were the three (the number and their identifications are matters of divergent ancient accounts, but the most common listing is used here) who had de- termined to track the genesis of a star. They were Melchior, pale, old, white-bearded; Gaspar, a tall, ruddy young priest, and black-skinned Balthasar, medium age and stature, whose ancestors may have come to Persia in the days when its empire stretched to Ethiopia. Not all their fellow Magi condoned this quest to honor a hypothetical “Blessed One’ of afien birth. Nor would they. as the ensuing years proved, accept its validity. It smacked of national disloyalty. * * * But the tenacity of High Magus Melchior and his sup- porters had overcome this narrow view. The strange mis- sion was decreed. Seeking Divine guidance, the counsellors sat now to “contemplate the beams of the fire with a most pious mind.” | £o their prophet, Zarathrustra, had taught. So Moses heard « God on fiery Sinai and in a burning bush. Finally, the group rose and filed out of the altar room. After farewell embraces, the three travelers donned (Continued on Page 9, Col. 3) ) S .) Leica ad nT a + | fim | te S|) y . 7 = lu By Courtesy of the Pierpont Morgan Library THE JOURNEY TO JERUSALEM — Picture in John of © Hieldesheim's story of the Three Kings. published in 1484. shows them wearing crowns and approaching a walled town. Although they were: known to the Middle Ages as “kings,” the Magi actually were professiopal scholars, and “kings” only of knowledge. 3 a 4 4 | | f x € Flames Devour ‘Best Christmas’ Leonard Area Citizens, Rush to Aid Family! Burned Out of Home By LEE WINBORN Staff Writer, Pontiac Press LEONARD — igo up in flames.”” * * * Sandor and his wife Mildred, 36, have seven children. Two of | them, Teddy, 12 months, and Tina Marie, 242, were rescued | by the mother who was | alone with them when the blaze | broke out at their six-room frame | house shortly before noon yes- | terday. 9 Sal elit e@ |Genesee County Prosecutor)in snow about Tuesday. “4 “This was going to be the best Christmas we've |had in three years.” sobbed Frank.q doctor from St. Joseph Mercy; |J. Sandor as he watched his home , Hospital, where Kierdorf mysteri- home | ay iat From Outer Space Tod . Pontiac to Get. Ten Degree Cold Tonight 4 The U.S. Weather Bureau has issued a cold-wave warning for the Pontiac area tonight with the low dipping to a frosty 10 degrees. * * * Saturday's high is expected to rise to not more than 16. The cold ;will continue through Wednesday, | with a warming trend about Tues- iday. Temperatures for the next five FLINT — Five finger-| days will average 10-15 degrees below the normal high of 34 and prints found on Frank} pormal tow of 21. |Kier dorf’s station Wagon, Precipitation will total about one jappeared to be all that third to one quarter of an inch Five Fingerprints on Kierdorf Car} Only Evidence? Prosecutor Is Mum on. Speculation He May : Spring New Facts By GEORGE T. TRUMBULL JR. Jerome F. O’Rourke had in -* * his case against Flint rycy iwc”, tas the lowest re ‘Teamster business agent Pontiac preceding 8 a.m. The mer- Jacek D. Thompson, charged! cury read 31 at 2 p.m. with arson in the burning lof,a dry cleaning pickup Teacher Mut station which police believe} e caused Kierdorf’s death. But as O'Rourke this morning, ) | Was ready to close his case vetore ON) darges Flint Municipal Judge Donald R./ Freeman, speculation mounted that be would produce new. evidence Accused of Furnishing or a secret witness to strengthen Beer to Minor $ and ;his charge against Thompson. | Gross Indecency O'Rourke, who in August had | to release Thompson from cus- hae. _ ! | tedy) er lack of eviacace, A Waterford Township High; raded 27 witnesses to the stand ‘School mathematics teacher ac- | yesterday, the first day of jcused of gross indecency and fur-., Thompson's examination. jnishing beer to minors stood mute | Included were three nurses and to both charges today before Pon- | jtiac Township Justice Robert Ww. Hodge. : = ended up Aug. 4 and died * * * | \four days after the fire, and three ‘Pontiac police officers who partici- tered by Hodge, whe ordered the| ‘pated in the early investigation of . i lithe Kierdort’ case. teacher, _Arthur Mooney, 0, of | + * “ 1651 Grimshaw St., Commerce; Throughout the 8% hours of tes-/TO¥Mship, freed on personal bond. ' | 'timony yesterday, O'Rourke ques-| Examination on the gross in- | ‘tioned witnesses who Saw the fire} decency charge, a felony carry- ‘at Latreille Dry Cleaners, and two! ing a five-year maximum se _|neighbors of Kierdorf's who de-| tence, will be Jan. 9. ' i A plea of not guilty was en-/ of | * * * | (Continued on Page 9, Col. 1) Mooney will be tried on : The five older children were: at! second charge, a misdemeanor, ‘on school the same date. i Addisoin Township Firemen w i“ Can See Satellite Oakland County sheriff's depu- | fought the blaze for over ities arrested Mooney Tuesday aft-' ‘hours attributed it ier investigating a fatal auto acci-| = phout 7.05 Tonight Ou onig icant early Saturday morning. | | Sandor, who had planned to cele-| x *« * brate his 46th birthday with his) ANN ARBOR \®—The new ‘iss! Three youths, in statements to, family when he returned home that. satellite will be visible over Mich- Qakland County Prosecutor Fred- j heated coal furnace. ievening. was at work at a serv-igan at 7:05 tonight, if the skyjerick C. Ziem, said Mooney bought ice station in Rochester. He weal i clear. ‘ itwo six-packs of beer for them ‘catled home by neighbors. ~ *& * Wilham Liller. of the University | his home, using their money | Laid off from his job at a cmachine products shop in Glan of Michigan astronomy depart-| They then went riding and hit night, a . . een in year aco) be kad! post ment, said viewers should faceja tree in West Bloomfield Town The news that a mighty Atlas, | gotten the Rochester job. , South and gaze nares up into ship. ; - missile was in orbit reached the! : * . aan iba de Slee Gee han co en a so eescns President at the White House min-| Fie 4 i, oe ws t “We were just getting ahead cae in the Big Dipper, would pass'st. was -killed. ules ketone ihe as due! 10) €0 oe S| Then this had to happen,” he said.'from west to east and should be’ The three survivors also admit- to the state dinner | | *~ & * visible for two minutes ted the gross indecencies with) He decided to share his secret | | Neighbors immediately began to. Mooney, Ziem said. i i Liller said the Atlas never gather up clothing | and supplies for actually would cross Michigan The driver of the ‘car, Captain the destitute family. skiqs. Its most northerly point, | Frank Wilson, 16, of 1043 Bos- | Relief headquarters: were set he said. would be about. 32 ton Ave., Waterford Township, | | up at a store at 79 E, Elmwood | degrees north latitude — a line | was being held by Oakland Coun. | Rd., where donations began between Atlanta, Ga., and San ty juvenile authorities. But he saved the eee ‘ae ear : ; 8 i : | wat - iment until he had shaken hands Pouring leven efere see (omnes) Picco Call: | Assistant Prosecutor. Jerome i with each of the G8 puesta ‘assem: were extinguished. ; ae ql } ; io . ce ! ope aS. But “an clear skies if should Barry said that consideration bled in the Fast Ballroom | Owenrs of the store, Mr. and be ee because of its he rah n bema piven to Sac. 5 f oh on The red-coated Marine Cor ps! Mrs Raymond Snyder, are hand- the sky. ller said ti “Conunted on Pa Be a band; unaware of the President's! ling the emergency fund. OO - | plan, had struck up a march for. * * * ‘the chief executive to lead his) Ransford Bromley put. the fam- ‘ily up last mght at his motel in iLakeville, | Besides the *, Construction Scheduled ‘on MSUO Student Center two _voungest dren, the Sandors have five ms Schedule. Instead, he turned back, Sandy, 15; Skip, <4: Corky, 13: jinto the middle of the ballroom. | 7 oe AP Wirephete ‘all students of Oxford High Sohal | ve ¢ i : ; , th There, standing beneath three VISIT OKAYED — A Soviet iTom, 12, and Terry, 11, attend Construction is slated to begin immediatel y on . glittering chandeliers and in the, request for Deputy Premier An- | ‘Leonard Elementary School. ($700, 900 Michigan State University Oakland student’ dazzle of an 18-foot Christmas, astas I. Mikoyan, to visit Wash- eS ‘center, “MSU vice president Durward B. Varner an- tree. he announced that he had: ington early next month was | something interesting to tell his. agreed to promptly by the United Reds Have No Comment nounced today. Sine wet ndne Me i dine guests 7 States yesterday. He is a close | MOSCOW (LPli--Moscow Ra- ' The building will provide a food center and head- Simply, the President reported, associate of Russian Premier | dio and the oficial Tass News quarters for student activ-* ~~ that the United States had gotten’ Nikita Khrushchev, and some Avene ee part i the E sted brickwalled structure will have @ satellite of almost 9,000 pounds’ Western European NATO. diplo- ccesfil lat vAdting, of ~ Us a At ilies, v armer said. xpec ed we TO sqiare f nf iF area with into orbit and it was expected fo: mats fear that his visit will mean » S : j j ett : me ‘ - ; : ; ti ee 7 ave i 3 : he naASse i es las missile without comment. icompletion date 18 Septem- measurements of 164x96 Tt will Stay there about 25 days. | they elt, _ bypassed ") we Raps - — * *« * cisions on the West Berlin crisis. i ‘ber, 1959. thave a basement_and first floor, Tha project is being financed|with a 48x32 one story penthouse. | The diplomats applauded. Hie. Seer H a9 : i 0. ‘ | € SNe Stor) Urs . ' . partially by a grant from the Oak-| | The dinner was the second suc- ‘Who Moved the House! | The State Board of Agriculture, é ‘In Today S Press and County Board of Supervisors, | | governing body of MSU, has ap- and partially by borrowed funds. | ts. The ee ens oteeoeee: Osmtrucn fitea conten wil | proved sia the contre “5 . \Corps ‘onstruction of the | J. A, Fredman O©o., of -7: CONNER oexecssesecisis.k tx 34 «| be such that it may be doubled | | Paddock St., is the general con- | County News ............... 26 | in size when it is necessary later, tractor. Fditorials |. ......... oeee oO tripled : * Green Empress : 1 in “row mee SM can See The board confirmed the appoint- ‘ “isla ieinid ip eialeia iment of Herbert N. Stoutenberg, |) High School =>. 23 According to Varner, the studentiyho has been serving as assistant | | Markets 0000... 88 saat a F \Obituere __ eo, | center, will have accommodations registrar, as registrar for the new | lg , ri perenne ae for seating 400 persbns at one time. yniversity. | PORE ee eres seas we iand will be adequate for a student; Varner warned the board that Theaters 27-28 it , on 500 . ‘ L ; ‘body of 1,200 to 1,500 ithe MSUO will nof be able to open! TV and Radio Programs 41 » the fall of 1959 Wilson. Ear| oo. 79 he | 7 x F apecheds uF an a a Oana Women's Pages .\...,...17-21 The bui ile ing will he constructed less the. 1959 legislature approves | in a-similar manner as the first’ ‘operating funds, including a defici! obiulding. which is the general « lass| appropriati on for the remainder of and office Huildings. Phe :this fisc al vear. ' Make Ut a Coshman Christmas 230 EB. Pike FR 446! Pe ' ; A guests from the ballroom to the, j Stale din tbers of the Washington diplomatic! Thunders Into Orbit. a sa ein : ‘AP Wirepheto START OF JOURNEY — The powerful Atlas midsile, wreathed in liquid oxygen fumes, blasts fire from its tail at the start of a 17,000 m.p.h. journey into orbit around the glebe. The “‘lox,”’ as 2 is called; is part of the missile’s liquid fuel system. lke’s Guests Hear . « Satellite News First’ WASHINGTON (P) — President Eisenhower strode diamatically into the center of a glittering White House diplomatic gathering to announce that the United States, ‘had placed a nearly 9,000-pound satellite in orbit. He gave his dinner guests—top-ranking San db 4 | from 41 ather nations—the>— first word of the great sci- | LJ ‘Friday night from a grocery near entific advance Thursday] Coming with his dinner guests even be- | fore his press secretary, James | Hagerty, made the news | kagwn to the rest of the world. nny room * * follow the But peer hower didn t cessive white tie affair for mem- MIAMI (UPI)—Robert H, Bat- tle is still looking for his little foreign car which he parked for a $1 fee in someofie’s backyard | jJast Saturday night while he at- SHOPPING : DAYS TO | fice ne Hea CHRISTMAS | = End Chrysler Strike DETROIT (#—An 18-day strike | which had idied 44.000 workers in Chryslér Corp. plants | the chuntry was settled today. t . ACTOSS Hall for Convenien! rent for s«peclal eccasions Ample parking. FE 4-710 J | * {Sunday closing ( . 5 a we. 4%,-Ton Atlas Now Circling Around Earth Moon 3. Times Size of Sputnik Ill to Be Clearly Visible From Our News Wires CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. —The United, States dra- matically launched the Space age’s biggest satellite last night, a giant Atlas ‘missile which could — in a few hours—broadcast:Presi- dent Eisenhower’s voice back to earth. The “talking” satellite weighs nearly four and a ‘half tons, is twice as long as ‘a city bus and twice the weight of Russia’s Sputnik Ill. : It was fully guided into a space lorbit by radio signal. It was the |Air Force’s first. try at satellite jlaunching — and the first time the $5-foot long Atlas ICBM has been hurled outward from the at- mosphere. The Defense Department an- nounced the satellite — called ‘Score,’ for satellite cpmmunica- tions orbit relay experiment — would swing around the earth once See Related Stories. on Pages 12, 28 and 36 | ; = every 100 minutes for about 20 days. It was reaching 625 statute miles from the earth at its farthest point and 118 miles at the closest. Scientists said the big assem- bly should be plainly visible in the southern part of the United States, shining most brightly at dusk. = It had been a closely-kept secret, not only as to the attempt to put the Atlas in orbit but as to the special communications system stowed through the missile's carcass. | The new satellite, tumbling through space on an orbit between 118 and 625 statute miles above the ‘earth, was 200 times heavier than the largest of the three previous U S. satellites. And.it was* expect- ed to be the most clearly visible iduring its relatively short expected jlife span — only 20 days. But in that fime, scientists hoped to ‘‘toad”’ its tape recorder “memory” mechanism with spoken messages radioed from earth stations, then have the whizzing space station relay i them back. Special stations at Los Angeles, iFt. Huachuca, Ariz., Ft. Sam Hous- jton, Tex., "and Ft. Stewart, Ga., began ‘feeding’ the spoken mes- sages — possibly President Eisen- ‘hower's own voice — to the satel- lite almost me | | At. Fort Monmouth, N. Army | (Continued on Page 2 a 3) Area Residents Favor Halt to Sunday Sales The question of whether the city ‘should adopt an ordinance making iit unl@wfuF for merchants in the idowntown area to remain open Sun- ‘days was backed by Pontiac area ‘residents this week. | According to officials at Simms Department Store, who ran a ballot in The Pontiac Press last Saturday for the public to vote either for or lagainst stores staying open, the public is firmly in favor of the stores closing on Sunday. The store has been receiving an estimated 100 ballots or more | each day plus numerous letters | from area residents, they said. The totals today showed that out of slightly more than 1,000 hal- lots, only two voted in favor of allowing stores to stay open s¢év- en days a week. ithat Sunday should be set aside as 1a day of worship and should be looked upon as a day of Test. j * * : Those against closing -on Stin- ,days argued that Sunday business [wi ould go to merchants. at the jcity: = Letters received also upheld the . The majority. felt. , THER PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. DEC EMBER 19. 1958 be ‘ieatielae From Page ‘One) —_ “youth “from “fiivenile cx he can be tried for mansla iter. Ziem said) | Mooney admitted tak- tna nt liberties .with thé “youths ‘apd other students,. but ‘didn't remember whether he had _ bought beer for tour Friday night. Mooney said he was too drunk to recall. . “But if they said I did, I guess it's so," Mooney said. Mooney waa suspended by Wa- terford Township Superintendent ef Schools William Shunck Wednes- Wyandotte Man _ Strangles Wife Just Too Much Nagging | Newly-Reconciled Mate . - Tells Police WYANDOTTE ® — A 36-vear- old Wyandotte man was held in cify jail today after telling police he strangled his wife because she nagged him. _o* * * Detective Sgt. John Shopp said! that Charies R. Schweikert ad-| mitted killing his wife, Martina, 39, last night with a rope. <“Tt was just too much nagging,” he told the detective. “She slapped me, so I put the card it, _ around. her neck, wrapped around twice and knotted it." The couple had reconciled last week following a six-year separa- tion. His wife had lived in Potts- ville, Pa., with their two sons, 13 and 17, before the reconciliation. She had charged him, with deser- tien but dropped the charges after Schweikert agreed to go back to! her, police said. Teacher Stands M ute linvestigated complaints that teen- ‘eps the students smelled of ~beer. present during the talk, agreed with him, Shunck said, * ; Injuries Fatal che Waterford’ ' tin Septeritiey, * 1956: Complaints "abba M@Pney 10 Truck Driver: reached the Pontiac State Police Post in September, On Sept. 21, two state troopers age vouths were hanging around Mooney’s apartment, The teacher's landiord told troop? Avon Monday » = The ‘eve ofan Oakland Coun- Mooney then lived in Pontiac ty Road Commission road-salting| ‘Township, ‘truck which. collided with a train . Investigation of the charges at an Avon” Township ‘Crossing | tailed to turn up any positive evi- Monday died at 4:30 this morning ark. N. J, after the first of the dence and the troopers, after talk- at Pontiac General Hospital. ing with Mooney, bowed out. Donald W. Chambefs,. 30, of 79| Before they did.. however, they Dennison St. Oxford, had te- informed Shunck of the complaints. es Last night, just prior to the Oakland ‘Waterford Township Board of : Education meeting, Shanck told Highw 8Y| with severe head; The reporters he called Meeney into Toll and chest | his office and confronted him in ’58 ries. with the complaint that he was | providing students with alcoholic | 8 8 Avon. road, beverages. The teacher denied he was, road truck was struck by an east Shunck said. “After our talk, I was convinced he was clean.” Principal James Fry, who was bound Grand Trunk freight train. Both Chambers and the engineer. a A. Martell, 51, of 8 Dwigh t Mooney was a principal ‘of an alongside the road. elementary school in Chicago. Be-' fore coming to Waterford, how- ever, he had taken a year's’ leave lof absence to go to Japan, work-, ling on an educational project for the Army. Mooney’s record in Chicago was clean, the superintendent said. vshamek_ said be sunpended 4-Ton US. Satellite mad vecnarrenet. Circles Around Earth been arrested. (Continued From Page Bne) torch, Mooney told the prosecutor's of- fice that he hag committed acts of gross indecency since 1957, several) of them quite recently. A bachelor, Mooney lived with his mother in Chicago. It was after \Shunck said. ishe died that he decided to move from. the city, Mooney told him, |te. Washington. Cost $1 Million satellite launchings concerning School Interest Could New Debt Looms for State EAST LANSING (®#—The business of borrowing from Peter to pay Paul has opened up, the prospect of a new debt burden for the ailing state meourry: ‘* *. The qecersing board of Michigan State University agreed yesterday to float a bank loan of $2,555,000 to meet its December payroll and _.other obligations. Bat the State Board of Agricul- ture, MSU governing body, said it expected the state to pick up the bill for the interest. The borrowing was forced be- cause the state has withheld two monthly payments totaling $4,218,-| 000. State payments have also | Lower Michigan Now Assured of White Christmas By The Associated Press Michigan's brief respite from @ teeth-chattering cold wave that blew into ‘the state on Thanks- giving weekend is over. Anew cold wave is racing in ‘and it will drive thermometers to as much as 15 below zero in the!: Upper Peninsula and into the 5 to 19 above er: soins * There oes cheer in the five-day outlook. Michigan apparently is assured a white Christmas. There was snow aground everywhere, with 44 inches; at Grand Marais, and more is” forecast into Tuesday. * * * Houghton, high on the Kewepnaw Peninsula, had its 26th consecutive --day of snow today, with the heavy; fall cutting visibility to less than! = il forbid kéeping stores open on Sun- half a mile. And ‘t was coming down on 3.4 inches that had fallen over the 24 hours previous. The Weather 8. Weather Bureau Report pow} “c AND VIC ee ers is a A tew rain show oe afternoon and ¥ partly aren 7, dimin- pare some vonight. Teday in “hy Pontia jae Lowest temperature ——- sam At 3 am. and velocity o mph Direction—Cal Sun sets Priday at 6.02 pm Sun rises Saturday at 7:57 am Moon sets Friday at 1:17 pm Moon rises Saturday at 236 a.m. Dewntewnh Pesaperetecee lam 6 A.M....6.-9-- 33 TO.m.....e0:.-.35 12 m. +1) BA Be OMcvceosvees 37 HOSE, seepogs 22] 8 a.m ..........36 acim 1@ am. * r.-3T Thursday in Pontiac tAs recorded seentcen! Highest temperature ...... . 30 Lowest temperature soit Mean temperature 2... tweens, 24 Weather-—Pair One Year Age in Pontiae Highest temperature ...... gas ee se Lowest temperature ......s.eeres.: mage ise weer racere secre i <5 eathe Righest ané Lowest T demented This ‘Date in 8 Yea 38 in 1087. “4 in we Thersday’ * The gonsee: Chart ne 3 : 4 i i nals received, length of time rei ceived and the frequency o which they were cated “This is a different type of | thing altogether,” a ee | at the satelitie tracking station said. “Any comment | would have to come out of | Washington,” he added, ‘America's latest and the piss largest satellite contained a been withheld from the University of Michigan and Wayne State Un- versity. * * * The three universities have been notified they can’t expect any aid before March because the bottom of the state barrel is being scraped for cash. Philip J. May, MSU comptroller, estimated the interest would mount ‘up to $200,000... Michigan and |Wayne are expected to seek loans which could boost the total to more | intercontinental spokesman said: “Draw your own conclusions.” Launching of the nation’s Atla omy one speck of! ’-\some Federal stores had to be ,any legal or voluntary move to for- [bid them,”’ Behrend said. pi A 26 Margiette oe 15 a 20 Memrhis 60 ® Miami 73 48 53 Milwaukee “4 «7? 29 Minneapolis 37 20 7 New Orleans 68 40 32 New York 8 Oe 32 Omaha | 50 i 28 Peliston \ 2 14 3® Phoenix 72, 45) 8 Pittsburkh 33° (30 3 St.Louis 82 42 27 8 Francisco! 66 &2) m2 S88 Mer 7.4 @ 3b Wekngae 42 is” " ® Th \ ri . Tf Beattie = 72 48 Tampa . than half a million if they also|¥@S the most spectacular fireworks, idemand repayment. aseplay oan eal rocket test! Elaine’ McNab is chairman of! I x center yet offe: jthe homerpom committee at Bir-) wat in the background | The rocket, 224,000 pounds of mingham High School which has as the possibility that state power coated with stainless stee],|————— school districts, which have bor- | stood free of its service tower for = ee rowed $41,893,242 to date to an- | more than an hour before the spec- | The Perfect GIFT for ticipation of school aid payments, tacular launching. iy th might also demand refund of |. It turned crimson as the rays} e SMOKER on Your - interest. of the setting sun reflected off the | LIST—Buy and SAVE! % The “State Municipal Finance a case. Later it shone in the | MAIN FLOOR BARGAINS Commission estimated that if the/beams of powerful floodlights. | As ae’ present rate of borrowing con- Then at 6:02 p.m., the count. | Mee ey Sper tinues, interest could amount to) down announcer shouted ‘Zero’ | : RON SON ‘ more than one million dollars, just; and a brilliant flash of white a on a six-month basis. flame shot from the tail of the & Cigarette LIGHTERS r x *« * “Big A.” ; _ j Lynn M. Bartlett, state superin-| There was a pause. and then ‘ $050 = a tendent of public .instruction, has|the mighty rocket struggled aloft % ' publicly complained about the — slowly at first — with its three ¥ - 95 ‘money the school districts are los-|engines blazing. it began to accel- j ing because of: interest payments. erate atop a tapered tail of white ¥ . : He had no comment on the possi- | flame. [bility that the schools would fol.! The cape turned to daylight for, fn chreee ‘low the wake of MSU in asking for miles around as the monster weap- y Dlated. en- ‘return of interest. on soared. The thunder of its @ pa soe i'three-engine power package rocked @ ithe stline. i ee ee Zippo Lighters 4 | The Atlas is unique as far as big rockets go in that the full | power of the engines is built up | on the ground, After about 60 seconds. Federal’ s to Back Sunday Closings the At- An official of Federal Depart- las — just a bright fireball now —, ment Stores said teday that his, curved high in the sky and droned firm would support any move to toward the east. | Because conditions were per tect. | |the Atlas was in sight for abBu * * * Seven minutes before it Vice president and general man- faded out like a fiery meteor. ager, M. Behrend of Detroit. said Decorating Contest Deadline Extended days. {kept open for three Sundays prior ‘to Christmas ‘‘because the compet itive picture was such in those areas that it was the prudent thing to do.” These stores, however, wil] not be open Sundays after Christmas, he stressed. * * * “In spite of the steps we were ‘forced to take, we will support pouneed tetny, for last night. Forgette said all at 486 Orchard Lake Ave, and To Sing at Tel-Huron Benedict Schoo] Choir will offer a program of Christmas car- Mayor Phillip Rowston, Paul Hen. ‘ols at the Tel-Huron Shopping Cen- ry of Consumers Power Co.: \Mrs.| night Sunday. St: ter at 6:30 this evening. The choir Jean Smith. Pontiac Central High! and Charles of Detroit Edison Co. ‘is under the direction of Sister|School art teacher. SE phen. In Mathews, Dies This Morning Afier = Donald J. Parry of 836 Mohegan mained on the Parnie* who also vacated the post critical list since|When the family moved out of bein g admitted the Binningham School. District. told deputies their view was © cut off by a steep embankment sheriff's deputies and a welder| ‘tried to cut him loose with a cial communications system Oe. goods at $60. veloped in part by Army Signal’ technicians here. Asked if this new this morning that many residents. system had any relation to the have heeded the warning to notify |B news blackout here last night, the the police when they are leaving finally | The deadline for entering the ;Pontiac Area Junior Chamber of! Commerce's house light decorating contest has been extended to Sun-! iday, Tom Forgette, chairman, an-: The deadline was originally set entries must be mailed to him | postmarked not later than mid- | Judges for the contest will be _BIRM INGH AM — The Birming- Collision With Train in bam Board of Education is prepar- ing to seleet a successor for, Mrs. St..A Board of Education member since September 1957. Mrs. Parry, resigned this week because her husband has accepted a position ‘that will take the familv to New- year. * * * Mrs. Parry. succeeded Mrs. Alec i The Day i in Birmingham Mrs. dD. sf Belaca Resians_ oe marheaded a Christmas hasket ive for all homerooms.’ in the vee ee A representative of the Salvation _Army from Pontiac visited the high schoo! here this morning, spoke to a general assembly and accepted the 59 baskets for needy families Each basket contained a complete ftiurkey dinner with all the: trim- mings. Mrs, Victor Fr. Brown Service for Mrs. Victor F. tAg- iment, te be made . inju-) soon, will be for the balance of inity Congregational Church of La: i the fiseal year, Going west OM|- are parry, a lifelong resident | Forest Hills Cemetery, Ann Arbor, just. of Birmingham, has been active in. east of Livernois many community affairs in the Bailey Funeral Home. Birmingham Chambers’ field of education and youth. She’ until 11:30 a.m, tomorrow. ibas worked in scouting, PTA and) church groups as well as the Bir- ‘mingham Chapter of the Amer-, t ican Assn. of University Women. | Piety Hill Chapter, DAR, has ‘meade its annual Good Citzenship’ Chambers was pinned under-the aWard to Linda Burkman, daugh-- cab of the dump truck for nearly ter of Dr. and Mrs. N. Weir aa 30 minutes; while Oakland County man of 719 Westwood Ave. nes) Brown. 91, of 712 Woodcrest St.. Royal Oak: will be held at 1 p.m. Saturday at the Commu- ithrup Village. Burial will be in The body will be at the Manley- { a .prominen‘ ister in Michigan. : inal win B. Cable, ‘Accident ‘assignment. They were accused by a 22-year- old mother of two of attacking wre pee * * assault ~ ® Mrs. Brown died this morning at the Community Hospital, How- ell, of injuries received. in an auto accident near Howell Nov. , M4 She was a member of the Com- Jmunity Congregational Church of ° ‘Lathrup "Vilage. She was of the late ie Victor F. Brown, The selection committee includ- ed Mrs. Robert A. Benton of the | chapter and Mrs. Carel Darling, | i dean of students at Birmingham High School. * * * Linda, a high school senior,. was chosen on the basis of her civic and social] activities in the school ‘and for outstanding scholarship. ‘She will receive a $100 U.S. Sav- | | {Signal Corps spokesmen refused ings Bond if she is selected as the today to disclose whether they outstanding high snot citizen in: were receiving radio signals from the state. the world’s largest artificia) satel. The Pyads, young adult group of They referred all queries to) Fira Presbyterian Church, wil! | sing Christmas carols for shut-ins This was in sharp contrast to beginning at 8 tonight. The carol- quick disclosures on al} previous ¢"S will return to the chyrch for _ refreshments and a Christmas par- ity afterward. | Following the theft of Christmas packages, a bowling ball and a ‘Spare tire from an unlocked car) trunk last night, police are again’ iwarning motorists to lock mY parked vehicles. | The car is owned by James Me- s Farian of 1212 Webster St. Police | estimated the value of stolen Det. Lt. Merlin Holmquist. said: home for extended trips. He urged others to follow the example and | S\thus to help protect their homes | 4t ballistic missile. from burglaries. —for MEN —for LADIES 4 f : i i’ : ! 4 t! MRRP BRIM RRR BAT I.3s » Men's Lighter 4 Brush Finish y Ladies’ Lighter ¥ New Slim Style Ww wi ° *” stvles and prices Choice of a up to $5 Shencers Read Paper First Food Ads Affect Buying EAST LANSING #® — Michigan | State University economists isl say food advertisements in newspapers influence what Rrocertes | | homemakers shop for and where. James Shaffer, MSU researcher, veperts a survey of 1,200 héme- makers indicated: : A, 63. per cent read: advertisements heforé shopping; 2. 45 per cent of all homemakers and 72 2 per cent of those who read the ads believe the ads influence what groceries they shopped | %, 30 per cent of all homemakers and 49 per cent of those who | 4, 38, read the ads said the = influenced where they shopped. Re. "RITE-POINT’. Cigarette Lighters With Visible Fuel Supply. Sanee enna ata anennDnNSaRaaDeennaeES DIBBA DITIM Reg. $3.75 NOW é | §° A ONLY p As pictuéred-—Rite Point cigarette nant een the visible fuel supply you see_when vou'’te out of fina Plain Riou No emblems cee Se ee iy sy a ee a eee ee eee e's e's = M ae Floor Tobacco Dept. MEN’S | Wool and Wool Blend HOSE $50 from CLOTHIERS 18 - 20 N. Saginaw § Bour Free Parking in Webdbard Garage RRA A SAR AER RAS REE AA LAA * If YOU Are Really LOOKING for LOWEST. PRICES On pi H Famous CAMERA GIFTS a... Then YOu Must SHOP SIMMS for SURE! Here's proof, not just | or 2 specials to get you in the store—but many, many famous brands at cut prices—you get what you ask for—no switching, no substituting. These low prices for | | | F Sa Friday and Saturday. a ! ‘ ea the wife ° $0060066000000600000000008b c06G0060R00: eee ococccesesooooocooss DISCOUNT | PRICES-on e Nationally’ fapess Brands ANU * Bulova * tk * Longines — Brand New—Latest Models tor Ladies and Men 39.95 Watches, now 26.95 49.95 Watches, now 32.50 59.95 Watches, now 40.00 JEWELRY 71.50 Watches, now 47.00 (Pius 10% Fed. Tax) —Maia Floor _Seeeecccoccvcsoosesese A and five ‘eagrandeten, ‘DAccuséd Policemen . .,.Free on $5,000 Bond}: DETROIT @ = Tee “Detroit policemen ‘eae of rape and gross indecency by a waitress “ave been ‘freed on $5,000 bond each and ordered to appear for exam- ination Jan. 5. Standing” mute in Recorder's Court yesterday where they were ‘arraigned on two counts of yrim- were ‘ Patrolmen Michael T. O'Donnell, 31, and Ed-| 36, partners on Prevention Bureau 00000000000000060000000 © Ccocccvescccccceseoesuee eee Monday mara Colla le metal wauetioehs be oor weed aa a ‘ INCH ex's but New Building Hos Flow, Name Spelled Wrong . CHEYENNE, Wyo, CP) —-g pong yp on a maf son long to spot something wrong fgx with the Wyoming Highway De-| — partment’s new $1,200,000 - office raises se: + : On the metal dedicatory plaque |§ GIFT for the HOME! Wrought: tren Belling Cantons } Each. KD Model \ ee oe or most Hi-Fi e sets Complete AUTOMATIC 2 SLICE POP-UP , ‘NO. TRADE-IN Toasters Necessary ELECTRIC RAZORS Friday & Saturday MAIN FLOOR BARGAINS Regular sass Value Set control for light. dark or in- between toast - current autemati- @) Lady '& cally turns-off and toast pops-up. A! Chrome plated. Full year factory Sunbeam guarantee. Reg. ah 7 98 N. Saginaw + —2nd Floor é : AARREAAARARAW DHA DE Se MO OL OO KH ith GE - Bulbs Nationally Fanos Rrends Reg. $18.50 x : * b>. Hh a an aaa Re Men's Schick je : 1 Whiskaway ne r A | / Bal Kodak Kodacolor & BROWNIE ‘HAWKEYE’__ ¥ Reg. $22.50 i . BROWNIE ‘STARFLEX’ i Be COLOR FILMS & FLASH CAMERA SET » I & $14.95 Seller ; DELUXE Camera Set 95 Fits 30° 620. 127 € A Complete set tor 87 ¥ 24.95 Value 8 | make cameras. , B and W or col o] J td ahd a] 9 7 * | j * Fresh date. & snaps. ¥ tary “flash unit bg oe Oe ee ee we ee we we oe oe we oe oe. 5 4 = aa Me < SC ce e'e'e he te eS Et eeee reer aaa s ¢ = ee Se te} | i i . is. PF4 FLASH BULBS *| meen see fe \\ Same as PRESS 25 or No. 5 BASE for C % ; x Regular $1.28 value—famous PF4 bulbs in full car- + | Reg. $31.50 x i ons of 10. Stock up now for Christmas pictures. No + | 17° Bas imit at this price. . t * be = SS S'S 6 4-2 ese sa is CCST SCC CLE Ne ee Tie thie hae I + 4 Choice of 2 Models in = ¥ Se. - Bal 853.50 scurcn atto. 8 x * Slide Viewers § BED etescet es _ _ 218.95 te A Reg. $7.95 ¥ i MEN'S SUNBEAM ‘G’ 7 a 7 Y | Reg. $29.50 x md 47: | : *« f ayy Uluminated ¥ of 95 , INT ‘ atyles Saucer *& 5 3 fs = ied Vine 4 ro oo ee we oe ee ee we oe ~~ ~ xi 2 MOVIE BARLITE of Tecrie Raz x A W of Electric Razor * a “4 a & a | 4 % ‘A 4 4 Gift for the Entire Family >) $13.00. y EXPOSURE METERS ot on ¥ $5.95 Walz Meter 7 95 x POLAROID 87 4 Direct Reading ..... 58 Ix PICTURE-IN-A-MINUTE iPr ei j $9.95 Alpex Meter 687 4 ef With Case . , 1 ( 4 New compact unit ¥ $10.95 CEM | Reming! ! 4 Athe ascot nN e ing On. i qd me Fas; includes ‘storage : Save now for gifts .. 887 Rollectric Bad Wh Flash, Case, Bulbs, Film aif rote ar with & $18.50 Weston Dr d 587 *| Reg. $32.50 x $110 Value a 4 Direct Reading |... | For Arpes C-3 or ogus C-4 ; Buy now er ete 1487 “i yy 1/” , ¥ 4 . fe Q37 : TELEPHOTO or 4 hee fen ine aboxe m pete or * | A H stoce now cut prices oat 1 \ WIDE-ANGLE LENS ¥ citi pe fere-noms "19.49 $19.95 Value ¥% Edna-Lite n-1 Comb. Sf] ~~ eT eS See @ Finished Pletures Pie 87 ¥ Telephoto & Wide Angle of Men's Norelco 5 4 Big Abdel ; ; ’ 8mm LENS bo +} RAZOR on ms Ose feed Come tent YOUR CHOICE ¥ oe vee “Reg. $24.95 makes every shot sure and easy # Choice of 2 power telephoto or % Ad because you can check-it 60 & wide-angle lens with 50°. bf |) 99 seconds later’ The ideale gift B greater area. Easy to install y Fitp Kodak. Bell & Howell. Bere ' ie that the family can use & yoursett. ¥ ssn iewinge cameras. In- BS y WCC EE CEE CEEOL LEE LLL S'E CCOC OE COC REEL * Twin blades. new rr flip-top head. De- Sabre’ FLASH CAME RA # ae any +1 _ cord Brand new Takes 12 Pictures in Color or B&W + | ee Regular $4 selier--otestocimed MEN'S BONSON BEA flash camera with eve-level CFL RAZOR U7 a en HH Main Floor ak viewfinder Shudder synchoniz- fed tor flash Use inexpensive BW 628 film and midget bulbs. 2”; 98 Saginaw =Main Floor > » i i ; ‘ s Ad . a af Gipson Add | ey LANSING # — The ‘Michigan| legislature, faced with regulating a fast-growing army of ground- * hugging vehicles, should begin j making plans for coping with a new traffic problem: The airborne automobile. Arthur V. Doble of Detroit, a member of the State Bar 2om-|@ mittee on Aeronautical Law, poses § the problem in the November /t issue of the State Bar Journal/t issued this week. Deble- notes that Chryster Corp. has under development a flying greund-vehicle designed | to give the Army a ‘highly | maneuverable air ground teetienl | machine, The Chrysler “flying jeep” is a propeller-driven vehicle with an air-cooled aircraft engine and will A MAIN FLOOR BARGAINS S CAPRI Mark 111 Model Paper Mate PENS Ist Quality — Gift Boxed $2.49 LIST PRICE Regular $1.00 value — pack of 10 top action retractable, smooth writing pens. Limit 1 set. 4-Pen Desk Sets. ar 49° matching ball Four point desk pens with one pen holder as carey & 100 pound Youd at abou a a 187 ‘Top Action’ RETRACTABLE &\™ im BeBe Wee Bis oD De De ‘sa: - —_——_— y , , 4 2 a Cae tt ak shown. rit 0 mph. Traffic —~% Deluxe Features jo 9 8 $2.95 Value j * Hidden Compartment Choice of caliskin, cordovan, pig- J * Plain and Zipper skin, goatskin, etc. Natural grain Solt Quilted ESTRON THE PONTIAC: PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER, 1958 | just ARRIVED! -aG@enuine ‘CARWOOD'—1st Quality CORDUROY “IVY-LEAGUE Style Trousers & =—for Men & Young Men WHY: PAY an ok ee . is PRICES. GOOD While Just Because It's Cubana” * You Shouldn't Pay Full Prices on. Nationally Advertised @ Popular Buckle-Backs @ Guaranteed Washable @ Wheat & Tan Colors Usually priced $450 or more, buy now at savings. Pull cut SN and well made. P rd . 3 rig fy a $1 H. H. Ayers Trio , ae Cologne Sets 71° Saeed MEN'S WEAR —Basement aK = < Re CS $18. H. Ayers Duet | Woodsey Cologne & Lotion .. * $24 Lucien Lelong Set gr | Pee NS . §-Piece Perfume .......... Max Factor Parfum 15° Sophisti-cat vial ........ be Max Factor Spray Primitif Cologne .... “3 Max Factor Primitif . Parfum Cologne—2 ozs. Christmas Gift Special CHILDREN’S 3-PIECE ¢: Sno-Suits | Water-Repellent Poplin Selle $788 Seller Sizes 4 to 62 Only Regular Lined with quilted cotton flannel, plaid trim on cuffs of jacket and cuffs of leggings. Red hooded jacket with navy or grey leggings. Styled as shown. JIMM BROTHERS ———— meetnatterevecneetict : ; 1" 3 Evening in Paris—5-Piece Glamour Gift Set. 98 N. SAGINAW Main Floor As shown. Lined in satin box with Polding car seat with $2 95 ry : fale a 4 steering whee! hooks over front seat of car. red. black, tan or gold Le Mom, wife, sweet- Genuine eather ip colors. Ideal at heart. (10% . i ‘988 North ; Saginaw ! Street i% - =< == Ideal GIFT for the LADIES - WOOL with LEATHER PALMS Ladies’ Gloves Regular $2.29 Per Pair 100% wool gloves with leather Ime are ideal for driving in ld weather. Imported with " Rolling CASTERS | ‘4 Play. Pens , i j ¥ 1 Ob , . iw bm | = ai ag 44 iit Reg. ae f iv Le i® be d i: f , 7 i: ,. J i , i i Phase mnsapiatiteaiie oi el $12.00 Folding style play pen, sand- 4 ed hardwood reinforced 3) y floors. Has play: bead panel. @ | fine stitching. Grey or beige 40 x 40-inch size. j in af! sizes. Small, medium, large. JIMM).. BROTHERS 98 N. Saginaw , , : NOVELTY DEPT. —Main Floor &|¥ RPMI RI MMM RW” F —Main Floor Au #)second h Men's Wrist Watch a $17.95 Value & Shock resistant, sweep - a —— Se ee ey tomatic SELF-WIND WATERPROOF CONT! HAIR DRYER Regular $24.95 Value and, stainless steel 2 Easy to Set Dial for Precisi special | bent oF strai top quality steel: ow prices. $2.50 Value YOUR CHOICE 29 [ 98 North Saginaw Street SIMM) Controlled Heat aS Se ee Se SS ee ee oe ee ee ee ee = The new way to dry hair—hands are left free at * st times . more comfortable, fan forced heat is concentrated on hair, not ’ face, neck and shoulders. Exactly as pictured, factory guaranteed j OCONEE by SUNBEAM. 98 North ((, COSMETICS | Saginaw P| mM Mm » iss «6 Main Floor i cf i agg ‘ 100% WOOL Tops--LEA THER Soles MEN’S and LADIES’ Slipper Sox , i j First Quality, American Made Compore to 87 $4 Sellers PER PAIR _AT SIMMS .« All Sizes 10 to 12 1% Color rfully decorated sox with snug i knit at ankles. Com-. ! fortable, soft leather soles, Buy for Mom and Dad! WOOL TOPS—LEATHER SOLES BOYS’ & bee ans” Slipper Sox Regular $2.49 PAIR j . j Washable ankle length sox T 5 9 ; , A for boys or girls. Assorted tops, leather soles, , All sizes, small, , medium and large. 98 North Saginaw Sock @ Counters ¢ boll SIMMS oe TAERS Floor 4 Evening in Paris—6-PIECE $5.00 Vatue, i i Pm bic oge talcum, Eau de lette cologne and arate eee eeEEESETTTTTTTEETESTET SIT | Fitted Music Box = ve bertume Mo: sal c ' Most Practical Gifts of All! | $10 Vétee 1 ee 2.66 ry ae Music box holds perfume, Desting Pewter ....... ENDICO T T - JOHNSON crystals, sachet, talcum, 94 Rventas in Lg : a Eau de toilette & con. 1 . | Simms price. Sachet and Eao es Tollette BOYS’ and GIRLS’ Footwear Choose From 17 Smart Styles Children's Sizes 4-9 *1” Lentheric 5-Pe. Set Classics in Fragrance $3 Lentheric 2-Pe. Set 466 Cologne, Bath Powder Boys’ & Girls’ 842-12 . Youths & Misses 1-3 Desert Flower. Set 1 Toilet Water, Lotion. ~ Houbigant Chantilly 50 Toilet Water, Powder 3 Houbigant 3-Pe. Set 500 ‘Toilette, Powder, Sachet .. = HoubigantPerfumeSet % Colorful Cowboy Boots | Toilette, Skin Sachet. 3° * Jr. Combat Boots . % School & Dress Shoes $1.50 Lentheric 17 , Tweed Cologne .... i $1 Wrisleys Flower uy Vase Bubble Bath . Genuine leather uppers . . . composi- tion soles... rubber heels... etc, Ra Guaranteed FIRST quality, money- ap back guarantee. BF oeeoeeee iHoubigant Perfume 1°° n Swivelstik ...... Still Big Selections—Complete Size Ranges ICE SKATES tr for BOYS and GIRLS y& for MEN and WOMEN BUY NOW: Don't wait until Simms are "'sold out” and have to pay full prices. BOYS’ & GIRLS' SKATES Leather shoes in white or black. Figur r hoc ee ee 6.49 LADIES FIGURE SKATES White leather shoes, 7.98 chrome steel blades. Sizes YOUTHS HOCKEY SKATES Just a Few of Many Items Gillette Blades Blue Blades—Pkg. 100. $1.89 Schick Razor 1“ Hydromagic Kit ..... . 1'° $1.59 Gillette Gift Set Razor, kit and foam shave . 4 to 9. Pro d oe, feather Z shoes. Tempered “real 7:98 $1.58 Barbasol Gift Set 1'° blades. Sizes 1 to 5. Twin pak shave ....... vee ‘MENS HOCKEY SKATES 3-Piece Gift Sets Tubular steel blades, genuine leather shoes. Colgate or Palmolive . $1 Seaforth Sentry Duo Shave lotion arid cologne Old Spice Set 2-Pc. Lotion and cologne ... 2° $1.25 Sportsman Kool Kat set .......... . 99° $2.10 Kingsmen Lotion and cologne $3 Mens 2-Pc. Sets 248 Cologne and shave lotion. . 69a Seaforth Gifts 44 Pre-Electric or after shave .... 8.98 For Boys & Girls — 2 to 6 Years Beginners’ Sled Skates $1.00 Quality 89° Four runner, exactly as pic- PYTTUTITILILILIL LT yirirrrrrrrrrrr rrr tured, Adjustable extension Nationally Advertised - ALL FIRST Quality Sizes 6 to: 12, EEE EEX XEXE EXERC XE EX EXE EE EE EEEEEY EXE YE SEY EESESSSSSSSIETTTTOOOOEIT sizes. All steel. ( . x) Now Under-Priced $2 Wrisleys Town House OV for Men 88 Shave ‘lotion and cologne .. & ven $5.95 Shoe Shine Valet 4s SIZES By ‘Esquire’ for men ...seeee @ Hardwood maple wheels, dou-; ble bell bearings. Genuine | leather shoes, built-in arch,' le These Prices Plus Taxes black or white. 98 North Pontiac's Saginaw OWN Store B4 og . Street é & Pa a THE PONTIAC PRES. S, FRIDAY. DECEMBER 19, 1958 ¢ FOUR “The King Ranch in Texas ia er the coats of the Santa not have any barbed wire or “jn its fences because they. might! = Gertrudis cattle. The fencing is tied t6 fenceposts with wire. Britain Plans to Pay Se een m" Make the Ideal Christmas Gifts We believe that we have the best selection in Oakland County 1.50 to 835 12” Long Playing Religious Records Over 200 for your Selection Christian Literature Sales 39 Oakland “FE 4-9591 <= LONDON ¢ on American Loan terest . loans. of Commons. “* * * ed. government's ain’s land prospects. * * * The payments due Dec. 31-i American loan, i previous deferments. Sales of Food Increase ‘last year. ~ ae Phe British} government is to pay ther full 186; million pag hd in pyincipa] and in- due. this year on its out- standing American and Canadian The decision was announced by ‘Chancellor of the Exchequer Der- ick Heathcoat Amory in the House The announcement was expect- It reflects the conservative confidence in Brit- le «+ current financial ~ position clude $37 million dollars on the | more than 37%4| ‘million on the “Canadian loan, and |more than 5'¢ million in interest Two years ago, after the Suez invasion, Britain asked for a waiver, Britain was granted the iright to ask for deferment of up ito seven of the annual payments. | NEW YORK—The United -States food industry reports that its vol- iume of sales rose from 16 billion dollars in 1939 to 75 billion in 1957. Sales during 1958 so far have been’ ‘ship, and his friends have ranged ‘soaring about 10 per cent ahead of jfrom Jack Dempsey and the late (Hal Boyle Says: ——— St NEW" YORK (APS - It takes’a real laugh master to retain the true comely touch for. three decades. One who has. never lost his skill at tickling the nationa) funnybone is Hollywood director Leo Mc- Carey, : “I'm- accused of being the laz- iest man in the business,” said iLeo, who has a weatherbeaten face and dark snapping eyes. .“In over 30 years I've only made about 25 pictures. Some men in that time have turned out '200, or even 300.” But McCarey has won three Os- cars and been nominated for two more. And his roster of films in- elude such landmarks as “The Awful Truth,” ::Ruggles of Red Gap,” “My Favorite Wife,”’ ‘In- “The Bells. of St. Mary's.” Leo over the years has been ‘one of Hollywood’s top money earners. He also has a reputation of being one of its softest touches for any- one in the industry down on his luck. a a ae He has a great gift for friend- Jack Barrymore to a host of color- Soop reli ful discreet, * “Going My Way,” and’ F) wot aS Set OSs ion in mers every walk of life. An associate -said this is Mc- Carey’s unspoken creed; ‘(Never go up -the hill alone.” Son of a famous West Coast boxing promoter, Leo became a lawyer and still brags he retired ‘from active practice with a per- fect record: He never won a case. |, “The writer is the pice teller,, ‘land .the future of movies is to have more directors who are also! : writers. *- & Ff “T find it easier to direct char- acters I have created rather than those created by. someone else. You know them better as people.” ey ae - Between his film chores Leo bas also written some 30 songs, A stout defender of Hollywood, McCarey says its biggest~ need now—end always bas been—fresh ideas, “The truth is,” he added, “that every, time you have a novel idea, it is-hard to find people willing ‘Laziest Man’ Keeps. His Comedy. ‘Touch. ay es senaieane pene to put their money into 4 be! catise it doesn't remind them. of something . else that has successful." vbeen. = Helium, the second lightest ele ment, is inert, odorless, colorless and tasteless but not completely - weightless. * * * He started in pictures as a script cleri® directed a number of the Charlie Chase and Laurel and Hardy comedies. They gave him a love for pantomime that has never left him, and he still likes to write with his camera as much as his typewriter. : “Everything, I do is partly vis- ual,”’ he remarked. ‘I love pan- tomime. I reve] in it. Words are necessary, but the movies are still a very visual art. I like wherever possible to let action tell the story. * * * “T spent a lot of time with Char-; lie Chaplin in the old days, and| one of my happiest memories is' of sitting up late at night with! him figuring out visual gags,’ Whether he takes a writing | credit or not, Leo almost always takes a firm hand in shaping the final script. *‘Nobody should tell a story who | is not a story teller,” he said. | At eae derrete . . In Keego Harbor LTTE | my PTA wonderful T_T The quality performance fentures of all Magnavox instruments are unsur- > passed! You can now enjoy a thrilling new world of listening pleasure from Magnavox Stereo... at prices far below what you would _ expect to pay. Give your family the mir- acle of new dimensional sound ... MagnavoxStereo...the gift that keeps on giving! Use CLAYTON'S Convenient Credit Ternis Buy Now — Pay Next Year the magnificent Magnavox Stereophonic High Fidelity The Constellation 21” e® MORE VALUE PER DOLLAR would expect only on sets much more: 262 Sq. in. optically fil- tered screen. Full-transformer chassis. Area selector switch. Convenient top controls, Magnavox 8” high fidelity j speaker. In mahogany, a or cherry ;, finishes. In mahogany . Diagonal measure ONLY RIGHT AT OUR FRONT DOOR FREE PARKING Big Value TV: Magnavox quality at modest price! ; This full console has features you $7399 There is a Magnavox style for every setting...a price for every budget! CLAYTON'S “The Store That Proves Quality Neen Not Be Expensive” space for over 90 new gifts of lasting value NEW PORTASBLE STEREO HI-F!... lets you take your stereo music with you every- where! Stereo Diamond Pick-up. Precision changer shuts off automatically after last record. Two-channel amplifier. Record storage space | in companion stereo speaker cabinet. Beautiful two-tone colors. The Riviera complete only costing Se etapa AMAR SA AAA AA ARIE TWO COMPLETE SOUND SYSTEMS .. . in one beautiful cabinet. Six Magnavox speakers — in- cluding two 15° bass. Powerful dual-channel amplifier. Stereo Diamond Pick-up. Gliding top for access to changer and controls. Library Select from mahogany, oak, cherry or American walnut finishes. Optional-extra FM-AM radio. YOU MUST NEAR IT..: TO BELIEVE IT ; 299” _ In Mahogany 1 1 FUR $99 Waite’s! You saw it in LIFE a pille™ Beautiful fit is priceless SALE Ras SOR Lae plus Fed. tax A timely special purchase makes possible this one low price on so many lovely scarfs and stoles! These beautiful new furs are the gift of gifts for Christmas—the best values are at SCARFS Two Skin Conteur Natural Stone Marten Three Skin Netural Baum Marten Three Skin Notural Stone Marten Four Skin Netural Four Skin Natural Four Skin Natural Four Skin’ Natural Pastel Mink Four Skin Natural Four Skin Natural Four Skin Netural Four Skin Natural Waite's Fashion Furs SIZES | SMALL | MEDIUM | LARGE | X-LARGE SS RAE ETS with NO Credit Office «+ FURNITURE CARPETS _— APPLIANCES 3065 Orchard Lake Road -- Keego Harbor -- - Telephone F E 5-9474 Ww. .yet the millions who wear Biflex I buy it for $[00 y 1 f OPEN EVENINGS UNTIL 9:00 P. M. UNTIL CHRISTMAS Style 143 -“ANGLE-ACTION” BRA Here’s perfect uplift from beneath as well as from above. Magic “Angle Action” straps eliminate shoulder strap tug and strain. 4-section ill stitched eups mold Lari ding . Fine cotton Broase oth. Wer habe, white only. A cups 32-36, B { 32-38, “a cups, 3440. baat, 24-26 | 27-28 | 29-90 31-32 Charge Yours at Waite’s— Notions oo - Street Floor SHOP ‘TIL 9 EVERY NIGHT ‘TIL CHRISTMAS Wild Mink Desert Gold Mink Lutetia Mink Breath-of-Spring Silver Blue Mink Ranch Mink Royal Pastel Mink Sapphire Mink STOLES Dyed Russian Squirrel Pocket Stoles Dyed Russian Squirrel Clutch Stoles Dyed Russian Squirrel Regulation Stoles All Furs Labeled to Show Country of Origin of Imported Furs . «« Third Floor en a Conven! ccc, ACCOUNT Take 6 Months fo ies DOWN PAYMENT ifth Floot ient Siac: ence ys pe: ee Ate cen oa oad calomel President / Roosevelty{stronger Navy for the U.S. “It is ia oa ea = not poset” he sald, “to impre-| May Deny Alford * Cn ge 5a) en ae __tine pow tic PRESS, {FRIDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1958 out.” t Seat Pending Probe. sas fo He wee GTON @AP) ~ The age-hlaed élection dispute moved |today toward a possibly bitter fight that could rock the House. A special House committee vot- ied 3-2 Wednesday to recommend igithat Dr. Dale Alford, Little Rock Rm |Segregationist, be denied a seat m\pehding an _ investigation into | charges of irregularities and fraud eae ee Rete Fore ise vO fe s\in his election. The two no votes Rollectric Micame from Senet: : bg * Reg. $32.50 Alford, who trotted ‘ha badlsta NOW pihe was elected honestly, promised $! 9 5 to push his case at once. Alford entered the November) with election at virtually the last min- trade ute. Add $2.00 With- Running as a write-in candidate, out Brand Trade eine beat Rep, Brodks Hays (D- HOME Ark), an avowed moderate on -Y segregation, by about 1,200 votes. : and ° ko * * | AUTO The committee's Southerners, | Chairman Clifford Davis (D-Tenn) "$1695 and Robert Jones (D-Ala), agreed | the election should be investigat- ' With Trade #R\ed. But they said Alford should be seated pending the outcome of the inquiry. This, they said, would be y\in line with past procedure. The Southerners were outvoted by Representatives Thomas O'Neill (D-Mass), Kenneth Keat- ing (R-NY) and "David — (R-Ohio). REMINGTON PRINCESS Reg. =. 7.50 Now $ with trade Add $2.00 Without Brand Trade Nationalist Spy Present When Mao Story Broke TAIPEI, Formosa (AP)—A Na- tionalist Chinese agent was pres- ent when the Chinese Communist | party’s Central Committee decid- | ed not to nominate Mao Tze-tung | for re-election as president, a Tai- | pei newspaper reported today, | > The English-language China| News, an independent daily, said | the informer was present as a de- voted, high-ranking member of the party. imitate Siete yy Py FE ria fr Fe fe Fe The newspaper said the agent! had news of the decision radioed | to Taipei only hours after it was | made. | Shop ‘til 9 Every Night ‘til Christmas. ax WHITE ROUND BOBBIN MACHINE Equipped for Reg. $122.50 Models . 619 . 658 Low Down While They Payment . Lastl Easy Terms COMPLETE in THIS CABINET x Same Machine iit a Portable ........$79.95 LOOK AT THESE FEATURES! @ Embroiders ®@ Hems @ Appliques @ Darns e Forward ‘or Reverse © Built-in Light @ Sews Over Pins @ Monograms ® Patches @ Sews on’ Zippers @ Automatic Bobbin Winder - Your Choice of walnut or mahogany cabinet— - _ Medel 4615 2 4 = White Sewing Center—Waite's... Fourth Floor 4 A new exciting gift idea! Brass Finish . ... Wall ELECTRIC “WATCH” CLOCK Sere: the novel touch _is wanted! It's a $ king size 8’ diameter watch with 18” chain e done in gleaming brass finsh. All metal, elec- tric. A different gift! Waite's Gifts . . . Filth Floor . eI a a eS | EARLY AMERICAN 14-Pc. CRYSTAL PUNCH SET Barer © e 9- -pint bow! @ | punch bow! stand @ 12 punch cups 14-Pe. Milk Glass Punch Sets............ $12.98 Waite's Gifts ... Fitth Floor mye SR eR eg Contoured... Washable... Sleep Guard G.E. AUTOMATIC ELECTRIC BLANKET - Twin : "Completely washable miracle fab- Si $29.95 ric by Chatham. 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Beige, - blue, pink, yellow, green. sa Waite's ... Fourth Floor i Pe. “get OO ORAS > GNEN ge THE PONTIAC PRESS» " . ze ; ‘ Voice ofthe al Ad ntra-Ci HAROLD & eenuse ‘ “Editorial Page MEMBER OF THE President end Publisher | Qwned and Published Locally ASSOCIATED PRESS a _) RRIDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1958 a a 3 = Little Rock’s Schools Show Striking Contrasts One of several strange contrasts seen in the- school situation in Little Rock, Ark., stems from the fact that the Negro schools are continuing to function.on what seems to be a com- pletely normal basis. The determined effort of white leaders to prevent integration of that city’s. public schools, however, has left the white schools closed. Some of the white students have entered segregated schools in other southern cities. * * * The vast majority have not been able to do this. So informal classes have been set up in churches, halls, and even in pri- vate homes. The white children attending these classes are con- tinuing their scholastic education under considerable difficulty. They do not know whether any college will recognize the credits they will receive in these informal, unoffi- cial “schools.” One organized pri- vate school has been set up. * * *~ _ Many of the public school teach- ers, those who formerly taught in the white schools, are teaching — some’ prefer to refer to it as tutoring — in these informal local classes. However, they are not recognized as formal schools, so they have no official status. It may develop that only’the Negro children will receive official grades in Little Rock this year. Possibly the white children who seek to go to col- lege or university will have to take entrance examinations in view of the lack of official reports for the year or years they miss from their. closed high school. Perhaps the work they do in ~ their informa] tutoring classes will be recognized by southern colleges. Perhaps not. It is ex- tremely doubtful that they would be recognized by any northern - college. — These are only two of the many questions which arise from the clos- ing of Little Rock’s white high school. The future of the teachers affected is another problem which may prove far more serious. xk * x Many of these teachers have indicated that if the school is still closed by mid-year, they will be forced to look elsewhere for reg- ular teaching jobs. While they may be paid for their tutoring, the whole setup is so uncertain that they will not care to continue on a month to month basis with no permanent security. . xk «wk * Thus, if the present situation con- tinues, Little Rock undoubtedly will lose many of its qualified teachers. And once they move away and secure positions elsewhere, it may prove difficult to replace them in view of the nationwide’ teacher shortage. This is another reason why the white children of Little Rock prob- ably will-be the biggest losers, in the long run, from the battle over in- tegration. Soviet Union Cheated by Own Secret Code Secrecy prevented the Russians from discovering the band of cosmic radiation which surrounds the earth and is a major threat to man’s ex- ploration of space. Lite Soviet Union did not ake THE PONTIAC PRESS Puiteneg by Tue Pontiac Press Company 43 W. Pontiac, Michigan Trade Mark Daily Except Sunday Rvseet Basserr, Jomn A. Rm: Executive Vice President — Aavertdng and Advertising Director Mana Howaay M. Prrecenato tr, Bag. M. TREADWweit, Vice President end ¢ - Circulation Manager Business Manager Marsmatt Jorpan, Jorn W. Preeoenaze, * vocal A dvertising “Secretary and Editor reneaee, Harner J. Rerp, Gronoz C. Inman, Managing Editor Classified Manager Py gros “Press is entitied exclusively to the of all local news printed tn this nape rs poe as al] AP news dispatches Parss is delivered by carrier for 40 cents rage b cod — fs not available, by mail ti Macomb, Lapeer and 12.00 i bes T; ‘elsewhere in Places he erry ‘States t; An mall Jeol able in hes been an, Mem aid st the a or rate ad ABC. ‘ 2 we public the code in which their sput-. niks sent back information. The re- sult was that the only data received came when the Sputniks were in their low orbits over Russia where cosmic radiation didn’t affect their instru- ments. Those outside that area who did receive the signals couldn’t trans- _ late them. * * * It remained for the United States Army’s Explorer III to tell the world of the deadly band of radiation above the earth. Before the first Sputnik startled humanity our scientists missed ad- vance information because we ignored Russian scientific publications. Now, although prepared to translate Sput- nik signals, Russian secrecy prevent-_ ed it and deprived Russia of an im- portant discovery. * * * Secrecy in science bars exchange of ddeas and in many cases, particu- larly with our Allies in regard to the atom bomb, necessitates costly re- search in others. The Man About flee We Now Have One First Old Fashioned Winter Here in Many Years: Early shopper: A_ well-inten- tioned person, but prone to mix with the late shoppers. Now that the ground is frozen deeper than in most whole winters—and that even before winter has officially arrived, the lakes are frozen over so most of them are safe, ice-caught fish is driving beef, pork and other meats off the menu, our fuel consumption already has reached the usual Jan. 10 level, and we've had a lower average December temperature than for over a third of a century, don’t say anything to us about An Old Fashioned Winter, because we're wrestling with one right now. To be sure, the snowfall has been light, and that made it easy for Jack Frost to burrow deeper into the ground and ex- tend the thickness of the ice on the lakes, but already it is a winter like the ones our grandparents tell about. And the al- manac says that winter doesn’t actually begin until the early hours of day after tomorrow. This column is quite in agreement with ' the sentiments of Mrs. Rodney Worthman of Birmingham, who writes me a letter deploring the fact that our nation’s song writers do not seem able to get up a good Christmas song any more, but each year go back to that duo about a red nosed reindeer and two front teeth. Elmwood School’s fourth grade chil- dren, taught by . Mary Sadler and Erma Waun, are thrilled by a letter from Bahk-Moon.-Il, a Korean orphan whom they “adopted” a year ago. He thanks. them for “being so kind to keep me in the good home, wish- ing you all good health, and hope you will be joyous in the soon Christmas coming.” What better way could there be to teach peace on earth, good will to men? Verbal Orchids to- Mr. and Mrs. Leslie C. Bibby of 56 Euclid Ave. 53rd wedding anniver- sary. Mr. and Mrs. Edward E. Gardner of 363 North Paddock St.; golden wedding. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Hamner of Keego Harbor; 5ilst wedding anniver- sary. Mrs. Rebecca Peckham of Auburn Heights; 82nd birthday. Mrs. Evelyn Sheldrick of Keego Harbor; 83rd birthday. Wilson Harger of Orchard Lake; 87th birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Daniel W. Symons of Birmingham; 69th wedding anniver- sary. ‘Mr. and Mrs. Frank Metz of Rochester; 58th wedding anniversary. Mrs. Anna Hathaway of Birmingham; 86th birthday. Jonathan Prince of Rochester; 81st birthday. ‘Mr. and Mrs. Fletcher Osmun of Birmingham; 51st wedding anniversary. Mrs. Nora Elderman of Walled Lake; 82nd birthday. . Mrs. Phoebe Driggs - of Drayton Plains; 80th birthday. Mrs. May Newton of Oxford; 83rd birthday. : Orestas Malcolm of Metamora; 84th birthday. ' sor in a radio broadcast The Knife Changes Hands David Lawrence Says: W ASHINGTON— Some headlines and news dispatches in the last 48 hours have given an erroneous im- pression of the way the House of Representatives deals with the seating of newly elected members. The report was widely published that a House com- mittee had rec- ommended that a recently elected member not be given his seat. Actually, the Fars House committee LAWRENCE which made the “recommendation” has no jurisdic- tion over the case. Unlike the Senate, the House of Representa- tives is not now, and never has been, what is known as a “‘con- tinuing body.” * * * The candidates elected last month for the Congress that meets in January are not passed upon by and do not have to submit their qualifications to any commit- tee of the present House. * * * What was printed in the news- papers this week might better have been described as just a piece of politics engineered for publicity reasons by three members of the present House of Representatives, two of whom will not even be mem- bers of the House in January. Yet it was widely proclaimed that, by a vote of these three members, a newly elected mem- ber was about to be denied his seat in Congress, Every House of Representatives at the end of two years ceases to ~exist and does not have any au- thority over the succeeding House. x * * All bills pending in the House now and all committees thereof lose their official or legal status at the end of the two-year period, _which happens in this instance to be on Jan. 6, 1959, with the new Congress convening the next day. _ The House committee which the ether day took up the subject of the Arkansas election in which Rep. Brooks Hays (D) was de- feated by an independent, Dr. Dale Alferd, has no jurisdiction at all over admission of the members of the next Congress. The House appointed this com- mittee to watch the congressional campaign while it was in progress, so that any evidence of irregulari- ties could be collected, * * * But the committee collected none with reference to the Arkansas election, though it now has. per- mitted a witness to file charges. Any current committee of the House of Representatives — or » any member, for that matter— can “recommend” or “suggest” er even “demand” that some member not be seated in the . future. But this has about as much legal value as if it had been recom- mended in a newspaper editorial by any pra ivate individual, It is, after all, The Country Parson “We conquer miountains and stumble over cl know the dahger~of mountains and ignore the clod.” Ed * about bevanse we » merely a bit of controversial de- bate designed to influence public opinion. When the House ,of Representa- tives meets in January, it will be confronted by an Arkansas man with a formal certificate issued by the State of Arkansas declaring that he has been duly elected to Congress. If the House of Representa- tives wishes the new member to “stand aside” while an investi- gation is made by the House elections commitiee, it may do so. But such a step would be virtually unprecedented. It would mean that, solely on an unsubstantiated charge in the newspapers and without a single claim by the person or party most interested — the defeated candi- date — a formal step would be taken to deprive an elected mem- ber of his vote on current legis- lation. wae" Old House Can’t Oust New Solon A member of Congress is pre- sumed to have been legally clected until it is conclusively established otherwise. With all the legal aspects in- volved, it was incorrect to give the impression to the American people that a committee of the present House has any right to pass upon the admission or re- jection of a member elected to the Congress which convenes next month. ko ok It will be a sorry day for Ameri- ca if there is a return to the events of reconstruction days, when “‘radi- cals” in the North — after the war between the states was over—voted to unseat Southern members of both Houses of Congress and vio- lated the Constitution by depriving certain states of their representa- tion in Congress without their consent. (Copyright 1958) eer ee Dr. William Brady Says: ‘ “Modern Obstetrics Keep Husband at Wife’s Side “Last spring I read in your col- umn that the professor of obstetrics at Jefferson Medical College Hos- pital said a hus- band's place is at his wife’s side in the delivery room when their baby is being born. “Thought you might like to know Jefferson Medical College Hospital obstetricians prac- tice what they Preach. On your pg. BRADY suggestion, I asked the Maternity Center As- sociation in New York City for a hospital which would endorse nat- ural childbirth . . . they recom- mended Jefferson Medical College Hospital in Philadelphia. “Now I am happy to feport that I and several ‘classmates’ (from the prenatal class) have found that all is as was promised in our instructional sessions .. . My gratitude for steering me to a natural atmosphere for the birth of my baby... (Mrs. G. J. A.)" This is the way of 20th Century obstetrics. So is rooming-in — a main feature of which is that the baby remains always in mother's care and is never kept in the show windew with other waifs. So is natural childbirth — if the expectant mother wants it that way. Incidentally, in natural child- birth an anesthetic is always avail- able if or when the woman in labor wants it. * * * Old-fashioned 19th century hos- pitals still snatch the baby away from the mother right after birth and keep it on exhibition in the show window called the nursery for the newborn — where, all too often, infectious diarrhea and oth- er diseases are spread from one infant to the next, often with fatal consequence. The theory on which this harsh practice was and is based (for it is still practiced in many im- stitutions) was that the young baby has no need for mother love and that it is crude and un- refined for a mother to want to cuddle, love, nurse, protect and hum a lullaby — that stuff is . not scientific. _ In my booklet Preparing for Ma- ternity — for expectant husbands and wives — I recommend books natural childbirth, which will be of great help in any case, whether the couple go for natural childbirth ‘or not. ' (For booklet ~ send me, in care of this paper’ 35 cents and a stamped, self-ad- . dressed govelope.) 2) The only way I can suggest at present, if you want to find a hospital or a doctor up to date in the obstetric department, is that you canvass the field by letter, by, telephone or by personal call. * * * Signed letters not more than one page or 100 words jong pertaining ‘to persona! health and hygiene, not dis- ease. diagnosis, or treatment. will be answered by Dr William Brady, if a stamped self-addressed envelope Is sent to The Pontiac Press, Pontiac, Michigan. (Copyright 1958) ~ ‘Sai elie s0;cthe aaah: Phdes bop toring to promote a something which champlinabllt football game. It's _PCHS Student Supports 2 ity. Football Game; Dc maieaiqel hee Bape meR TAME, ouehiteenns £ id give a boost to this community’s spirit. Perhaps this rivalry is just the thing that will finally make Pontiac truly interested in its high school teams. Certainly everyone would support such a game arid in time it would become as big an wren: as Flint's traditional battle, Verifies Wilson’s Story About Estate I read Earl Wilson's story about his visit to Elvis Presley’s home. “In October we were lucky enough to be allowed inside the estate. Everything was just as Mr. Wilson mentioned. He seems to be well liked around Memphis, éspecially since his success hasn’t made any ‘difference in his attitude toward friends ang employes. Mae Hopper ‘Post Office Should Have Told Public’ In previous years the postal rate on unsealed Christmas cards to Canada was the same as those delivered in the U.S. August 1 the postal rate was raised ‘and the public was so informed. It seemed logical to assume. the ‘one-cent raise would apply to Christmas eards. On Dec. 16, with our eards in the mail, the public is informed their cards can't be delivered be- cause of insufficient postage. 89 W. Longfellow ‘Such People Ruin Others’ Christmas’ The Christmas spirit is some- thing different to some. My daugh- ter, 15, saved $6 from baby sitting and was thrilled to think she could buy Christmas presents with her own money. * * * Forgetting to remove it from her purse, she carried to to school and locked it in her lock- er, When she returned the $6. was missing, along with a pair of capri pants, a jacket —_ blouse she had bought with he own savings. x~ *& * I hope whoever took these things needed a ‘Tore than my little girl. ? Distllusioned Doesn’t Go / Along With Such Ideas The ‘‘all men are wonderful’ routine of the letter by American Men Are the Greatest doesn't ex- plain the divorce rate. the deser- tions or the fact that many mar- riages are held together only by children. Marriage, in many cases, is a wonderful experience, but we can’t solve anything by pretend- ing this is always true or that women are always to blame when it isn’t. * * * The number of desertions by women is negligible and when it does happen, the husband’s mother enters the picture again, according to the experts. When A. M. A. T. G. grows up. if ever, she'll learn cheerful ig- norance doesn't help her. Pat a ts not of a Barb St rahg PCHS . ‘It's Up to Voters to Remedy This’ Considering the tragic fme in Chicago, let's reflect on how safe Roosevelt School is. The schoel board appealed last spring for funds to remodel! this old building. * * * Among the emergency needs right then were a new boiler fer ‘the furnace, new ventilating sy8- tem, not te mention the old wood- en stairs to the third floor, plus many other fnusts. These were needed right then and are more needed now. The bond issue was defeated. * * * It’s imperative that these repairs be made for the safety and well- being of our children. The school board must appeal again for these funds in the near future and must keep on appealing until the needs are met. It must be done. Will you bear this in mind and give them your support? M. Crawford Sylvan Lake TmGladtoGet —- Back to The Press’ When I go away from home and read papers in other localities. [sm always glad to get back to The Pontiac Press. I don't find other papers nearly so gvod. - Traveling Salesman Feels Justified - _in Complaining _ I'm another who can hardly vead the phone book. I read the hag- wash about doing jt to save money, We pay. a good price for the use of our phones and | think they owe us a phone bogk we can read. We don't squawk when they up the rates, so I don’t think people are out of order to demand decent size type. Shortie All jetters for Volce of the People must tain the name and addre-s of the writer. This tnformation will be withheld upon request it ne lether critica) nat Letters must be under 200 words land Tie Pontiac Press reserves the ‘ight to edit all letters. u * Portraits By JAMES J. METO\TER Please do not think of me when you . . 7 Go Christmas shopping, dear ... Please do not give me anything . . . From Santa Clais this year .. , Because there is ho gift on earth . . . That you could offer me . . . More wonderful and special than . . . Yeur love and loyalty . . . And those good gifts already are... My own to keep forever . . . The heart vou gave me and the vow That you would leave me never . There is no jewel in a vauil! Or bauble on display .. 9 Ta magnity the joy that. I... Have vou on Christmas Day . 0. The only extra present I, . Would like to get is this... A whispered “Merry Christmas” with . , . Your sweet and loving kiss. (Copyright, 1958) Case Records of a Psychologist: Help Newlyweds the Right Way Sally eloped. Now her weal- thy parents are arguing. about how to subsidize the newlyweds. Be sue to study this case care- fully, for the in-laws can often predispose a young couple to divorce by their misguided gen- erosity with cash. Don’t spoil the fun of young married cou- ples by eliminating their need to budget and skimp! By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE CASE A-405: recently eloped. Sally R., aged 23 “Dr. Crane, she said she did so to avoid a tiresome big wedding,”’ her wealthy father ex- “plained. “And I can sympathize with her on that score. Besides, she mar- ried a smart young fellow with a lot of gumption and horse sense. DR. CRANE “My wife was quite upset about the elopement, for you know how women are concerning big. church weddings. * * * “And now my wife thinks we should subsidize Sally with a hb- eral monthly allowance, for her husband is making $100 per week and my wife thinks Sally can't pos- sibly drop down to that scale of liv- ing. “Sally ts our only child. And we have a fair amount of this wortid's goods, so I could easily subsidize the young couple: “But I hate to spoil their fin and make my new soOn-in-law into ~ a ‘remittance man,’ ” * * o “My Wife and I started outefrom §cratch and ate olf a packing box \ in lieu of a table for'several weeks, but she has gone societyfied and now wants to outfit the newlyweds and help finance them to a higher standard of living than they can afford. “Is that wise, Dr. Crane? Yet I feel I should give them some sort of wedding present, but what?” Sally’s father is a very under- standing parent. He is showing much more gumption than her mother. For the skimping and budget- ing are part of the fun of eariy marriage. I¢ also makes the young couple more appreciative of the value of money and the need to operate on a rigid house- hold. budget. Sally’s parents could easily give her a $500 allowance check every month, _ But that would be wrong! For it would make the young husband fee] unimportant. * * * He'd soon grow caustic and irt- able ag being a ‘“‘squaw man.” He'd probamy develop the ‘'remitiance man" personality and start living on an inflated scale that wasn't justified by his own efforts. | Moreover, it would kill much of the joy they'd share when he got his first monthly salary raise of $25, for such a sum would be dwarfed hy the big cash gifts of Sally’s parents, So won’t you wealthy parents please use “horse sense’ and let your married children have the fun of trying to live like other young folks who must depend on their own efforts? Quit trying to run their financing their daily with a cash allowance, HOW GIVE GIFTS /¢ ..- If you do wish to offer the new- lyweds, a gift that will not ruin f lives by expenses rj é 6 their morale or inffate their scale of living, make a suitable down payment on a little home for them. Then let them pay off the bal- ance in monthly installments, us- ing the same sum they'd other- ’ wise devote to their monthly rent. _ This type of capital investment does not disturh their budgeting of the young husband's salary. And it does help stabilize them in the same community so their children will be happier and make higher schoo] marks. , And if you wealthy parents wish to_add a little incentive for a larg- er number of grandchildren, offer “baby bonus” them a of some sort for each new grandchild they give you, for babies are capital in- vestments and warrant a little subsidy. * * * To help make sure they set up a stable and permanently HAP PY home, also send-them the booklet “Sex Problems in Marriage.”’ en- closing a stamped return —_ plus 20 cents (non- profit) It's excellent insure ince "against divorce. = 4 Always Write to Dr. George W Crane) in care of The Pontiac Pres« ,Pontiac, Michigan. enclos ing @ Jong 4c stam pec, self-addressed envelope and 20c to coyer typing and printing costs w! gt vou send for his psychological charts and ola us phiets. (Copyright 195%) ¢ Shadow Boxes Extond-a-Bonch Framed Pictures Use it as a cock. Many a rorite Ps gift! 3s tail table hi-fi jects! an cpemenved tee or TV tab! ettes with sm ee Glea mm mieror! bench! Wale it or Sensationally g! mn orous 1 , eS * » . = i 1 f > eS Fi . : . Fa > , ut 2 j f ‘ “A % : 7” , ee . Re . > ’ Fs : By = a " * . 5 2 4 + : . . if . ‘ ‘ : a f oe » . ne 5 ; ‘ - ¢ , ae 4 : : } 4 “ ij eS fad eS - 2 * 2 ¥ tn cee te =p: - =e t. rat t : Sa = ‘. 3 ber vier HE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 19.1958 DIAL ani . REFRIGERAT OR New |} cubic foot refrigerator with full-width. freezer. ®@ Two Mini-Cube Ice Trays. _ © Butter compartment. sites $919* PRICE With Trade } SPACEMAKER ELECTRIC RANGE Wide-opening 23-in. Master Oven with removable door... better for cooking, easier for oven cleaning. * Automatic oven timer.. ®@ Pushbutton controls. ®@ Focused heat broiler. ac” $1995 PRICE Trade HIGH-SPEED DRYER 3-Pc. Curved Sectional Imagine all the thrilling room arrangements you can j “ have with this handsome 3-piece sectional! It’s up- aren holstered in good quality frieze and boasts Artistic’s wonderful cushionized construction. Regular $329.50 Value SALE PRICE Only $28 Down typical load of family wash in as little as 35 minutes. © Adjustable time and temperature controls. ®@ Porcelain top and clothes basket. © Operates on regular 115 or 230 volt circuits (Drying times are longer on 115-volfs.) Mes: $199.95" $4 59°95 PRICE Trade 2-CYCLE FILTER-FLO WASHER Normal wash. rinse and spin cycles for cottons and linens. ‘Short cycles for delicate silks and synthetics. ® Filter-Flo Washing System. ®@ Big 10-pound clothes capacity. @ Water saver for small loads. Reg. $279.95* $ ae 219°> PRICE Trade bac si Suds Saver Feature at slightly extra cost e se °. Gorgeous Living Room Suite — struction ond. reversible, innerspring. cashions tor $499 °° mm TELEVISION added years of wear. Upholstered in modern frieze in your choice of decorator colors Regular $239.50 Value SALE PRICE Only $20 Down —%19.' 7 inch over-all diagonal screen . . . 155 square-inch picture Wide-angle 1f0° Aluminized Picture Tube. OPEN EVERY EVENING UNTIL CHRISTMAS _ ° “"Set-and-Forget” Volume Control ® Dramatic New Ultra Slim Styling (7V2" Deep) © Weighs Only 40 Pounds Ample Free Parking MAGNETIC SAFETY DOOR. Has © Two adjustable door shelves High speed drying at safe, low temperatures. Dries a i 36) SOUTH SAGINAW STREET +» PONTIAC . frames’ From or Priced trom ebony a : | vs ; a E 19, 1958 ‘ poke Se RIGHT See : THE PON TIAC PRESS FRIDAY, DECEMR R — me . , —) 2 howhdia toneunte odnt.; the tak, tinmn: approximate ——— — . | ‘baeoten to kia forts = Sanken Boat Vields [os czar Sst | e lcent ae gad the area in ghe Charles Kumpala of Eagle Har-|, ‘- trom. < \q ps e @) Dh AN’S ‘Stas Rural Areas: 7 on eqfshorman's Body be enemas Sa Poel Drag es GOODMAN: os Me. ‘PLEASANT * = New ex- ‘expressways, which will soak it Walter ‘Vienna. 44, 2 Chanel th ‘ an agreement ie ough cg Discount as, aes ore. tation boomin faral Mtr Pieene| and tourist ik sites! peered ie yh ogbreag 33 Die as Truck Falls BASE, Calif. (AP)—The purdbe Pacific Tared mt, cma Sa : Ee ee Piped eS eS ee ee a -ADANA, Turkey (AP)—Thirty- aes. oe scheduled" tain esairganee The} Gala Woet-Ead Christmas | eo = aie: _ He advised planning now to’ ome Loge when a 28-foot three Turkish workmen were «. *:2 , Bois ‘stice etna ae ay ee olh | fF: 5s Frank W..Suggitt of the Mich- capitalize: on changes that will be plywood fishing boat sank after|\killed today when a truck they) The question of which has prior.| Schedu h Jay I the ba | as < : igan State University resource ushered in with the opening of colliding about 1,000 yards offshore| were riding in plunged 450 feet | iity — train or missile — came up as — each side 0: se | development department said the |new highways. twit a steelhulled boat, also aldowna ravine. “Eight others Tuesday during the first West moe. 4 counties had gained less than 5) a fishing craft. The collision was off|jumped clear as the vehicle rolled | Coast launching of-a*Thor inter- " a per cent in population hetnesia| About 96 per cent of Egypt is'Gay in the Keweenaw Peninsula.|toward.the brink of the = mena er range ballistic missile. an three mil nae mare 150 ‘and 1957 compared’ to the | uninhabitable desert. A Naval Reserve diver recovered|road. | Several trains were waved! women than ‘men voters in the | ; , ssnarecimninenesioinas 5 m ‘Sl . | FINAL WEEK of STEWART - GLENN Co. fh]. Oren Toman w 10 P. T Hi] Open SATURDAY ‘til 10 P. M. MOST ALL PI ECES) Ladies’ Nylon Tricot “ rT PANTIES LEFT Are PRIC ED , Reg. 59c $4.00 : For now 3 ™ *] VY. OFF or MORE of a ee 2 | Boys’ Corday THEIR ORIGINAL _| PANTS: | Reg. $3.98 SELLING PRICES! wow $15 IN ONE MORE WEEK WE WILL VACATE THIS rye Se rs 3 CAR | ‘LOCATION — WE HAVE TWO FLOORS FILLED Rea $6.95 WITH ODDS AND ENDS THAT MUST BE SOLD Now *2” : Boys’, Blue--White--Red, 6 to 16 . Reg. $1.79 MAHOGANY TABLES DANISH 3-Pc. SET 3-Pc. CURVED SET GENUINE RATTAN __Now 97 ¢ Curved style Reg. $399.50 Finest hand pull Reg. $499.50 6-PC. GROUP Reg. $289.50 F t and quality . .. © 3-Pc. Sectional ; ee 2 Otf back cantons! $ 50 foam chin 24 50 ae Say “144” pOvs LEATHER CAPS end Hekman Walnut. tan arm, modern Corner Ta . styling © Cocktail Table With Ear Flaps = . Reg. $1.95 ; . ¢ 3 Pc, BEDROOM SET 2-Pc, BEDROOM SET LAMP MODERN DINETTE __Now 97 By Kroehler. Double Reg. $339.50 Large doubleReg. $289.50 Fine toble lamps Your Choice Fatension table G Reg. $194.50 Men’s resser, rawer r ran n me r upholstered ‘hier ne bed, § oS Pook $ 50 that sold for as § 95 chaies in blond $ 00 T- SHIRTS finest consteuction — ook. 99 much as $29.95. mahogany, or can't mar téps. limed oak. Reg. 359c MATTRESS SET | | TUFTLESS MATT. JUVENILE SET 3-Pc, RATTAN SECT. ove: Reg. $89.00 | Reg. $139.00 Reg. $169.50 te re. Reg. $289.50 SPORT SHIRTS Mattress ond box Twin size set with $ 50 Crib and chif- $ 00 curved sty e i: $ 50 Styles ing set — full matching box ferobe. Double versible cushions, Assorted = dick “— ‘4 4” a ‘69 drop side crib. 229 zipper cushions. 144 Plannel—Cowboy—Ivy League Reg. $1.95 ¢ = _nowQG SOFA BED MAPLE CHAIRS DINING ROOM SET 2-Pc, SECTIONAL lene ps H solid Reg. $49.50 m built — <0 sae ema RL maple frame with $@ M5 | | cuectsion soeie, RCE $259.50 | | Custom baile 5 Reg. $329.5 Flannel Sport Shirts ding compart- $ 50 spring cushions oy 4 : china and four $ 50 lon cover, large $ 00 L Reg. $2. 79 “ment. reversible back | chairs. size. $ 44 , cushion. 2 Colers NOW ] WES ; Now ODDS and ENDS of BROADLOOM CARPET Girls’ and Boys’ $189.50 Kroehler 2-Pc. Living Room Suite, 100% Nylon $99.50 was NOW CORDUROY SHIRT and 399.50 Karpen 2-Pc. Sectional, Mod. Style, Foam Cushions 199.00 $ 995 27x54 Carpet Samples ................. re $ 3.95 FLANNEL LINED PANTS - 59.50 Modern Lounge Chair ..................... 29.50 49.50 5x12 Cotton Carpet, Blue ..............; “... ~—16.95 Reg. $3.95 49.50 Armless Occasional Chair ................... 24.95 150.50 9x12 Wool-Twist Mixture Nylon and Wool, Beige.. 74.50 & $ 87 219.50 Danish Sofa, Genuine Import................. 99.00 24.95 9x12 Deltox Porch Rugs.............. 17.80 | NOW ] 169.50 2-Pe. Settee, Functional Modern, Foam Cushions. E 89.50 79.50 6x9 Oval Braided Rug, All Linen. ..............., 59.50 139.95 Metal 3-Pe. Dinette Set, 3-Leaf Extension ..... 79.50 90 DAYS SAME AS CASH . FREE INFANTS CREEPERS ‘249.00 Modern d/I Table, Solid Tawny Birch ......... 174.00 , rotch = - 299.50 60” Triple Dresser, Panel Bed, Finest Quality... 17950 LONGER TERMS AVAILABLE DELIVERY nap © Reg. $1.98 499. 00 3-Pe. Mahogany Bedroom Suite, 12-Drawer Dresser, Panel Bed, Chest, Finest Quality. ............ 349.00 Artist's Drawing of Our Modern Furniture Home Near Completion . ihe 49° 299.50 Double Dresser, Chest and Bed, Modern. ........ 179.50 Vent 109.50 Large Bedroom Chest, Walnut, 5-Drawer........ 59.50 | 249.50 Maple Arm Sofa Bed and Swivel Rocker ...... 149.00 | UN ION SU ITS 69.50 Round Mahogany Cocktail Table, Fine Inlaid Top 24.00 Reg. $2.95 49.95 End Tables, Genuine Leather Top by Imperial... 24.95 NOW *T 45 | 299.95 Kelvinator Automatic Washer .—_............. 225.00 | | 189.70 Mahogany Hutch China, Sliding Door........... 139.00 ’ | 29.50 Mahogany Cocktail Table by Brandt.......... 12.50 After 41 years on South Saginaw St. opposite Auburn Ave., Stewart-Glenn | LADI ES SLI PS y . . é Co. will move to the New Store pictured above. An extreme effort will be White, Red, Lime, Pink 49.50 French Provincial Cocktail Table ee ee 22.50 made to close-out our present stocks in order to vacate our present building | No-Rip Seams—-Guoranteed. 49.50 Torchier Lomp eee eceees 24.50 eee shortest possible time to save the inconvenience and expense of Reg. $2.95 22.95 Limed Oak Cocktail Tables... ae 12.50 : NOW *] 88 169.50 Modern Walnut Chino...» sw... 69.00 ; | 264.00 Cushman Maple Round Table and 5 Choirs 132.00 OPEN EVERY NIGHT “TIL CHRISTMAS | , : 159.50 Birch Round Table and 4 Side Chairs, Nat. Finish 79.50 I 229.80 Sleeper Lounge... 129.00 | GOO DM AN S 3 129.50 Hollywood Headboard for 2 Twin Beds, Swing Out 79.50 | - . |. | 9.95 2-Shelf Utility Tables with Casters............. 3.00 lewart- Conn C | Discount Department Store | - 29.99 Odd Blond Night Stand ee Toe ee @ = soe © 2 alee © 16:95 : 520 South ‘Saginaw Street : 29.50 Wrought Iron Beverage Cart ...,.....,....... 9.00 86 to 96 South Saginaw Street Opposite Auburn Avenue 2 Blocks North of South Blvd. , _| : 7 a . : ; ; j SS THE PONTIAC PRESS. Puna. DECEMBER 19, 1958, is t + Swear st aewenet emir ep Ags: ne Liga - ‘From Page One) ee eee Fave his home several times on the night of the fire. = At the ‘conclusion, of the day's | Stestimony, ‘O'Rourke had not as | t placed the 41-year-old Thomp- “pon at the cleanéts, and had only 2Thompson’s fingerprints on Kier- "s ear to remotely link him Sto post-fire activities at the Kier- Silorf home. 2 The prosecutor continued to dis- Play a “wait-and-see” attitude to Fewsmen when queried about what Secret evidence he might have had get Thompson bound over to enesée Circuit Court for trial on e arson charge. POTENTIAL BOMBSHELL? = Although he said the fingerprints| ~ Were “a key” in his case, he re- sed to say they were the key, us indicating again a potential Bombshell he possibly holds to sew Bp his case. = Not even Thompson’s attoriay.: Sdames E. Haggerty, attorney for Smany high-ranking Teamsters of- ficial could) purap f rom 40’ Rourke’s witnesses what evi- “lence he might have that he Saidn’t have before. = “tn your investigation since Aug. 8 have you ascertained the exist- @nce of any additional eye wit Siesses to the alleged arson com- itted to the burning of the build- gz?’ Haggerty askeq during his $ross-examination of Flint State Police Detective Ralph S. Baney, who directed the investigation. = Judge Freeman overruled ®’Rourke’s strenuous objections to is ques¥ion, and Baney was care- 1 to be specific in his answer. =No, Mot at Latreille’s,” he re; ied. * Two sets of fincerpHints figured Thursday*s testimony, < * * One, those of Kierdorf taken at e hospital by Pontiac Police Of- Zicer Ray E. Denton, which later ‘resulted in Kierdorf's identifica- _ Bion, were not allowed by the dge to be identified in court as aggerty said they had not been Wonnected “up until this point” Svith the charge against his client. The. judge agreed, saying, =There should be some order of SProvt connecting the twe.” + te = It was an 18-year veteran of the Fiint police identification bureau Fingerprints “I found three prints’ as belng those from Jack’ Thompson's left right fing-finger, and one-half of a print not identifiable," Loughéed said. He saiq analysis of the prints showed they were put on the window anywhere from’ one to. 36 hours before he took them from the car on the afternoon of Aug. 4, ‘ Under cross-examination by Hag- gerty, he said “they were closer to the one-hour oie than to the 36. *» Another fagecni'es expert, Law- rence P, Stackable, superintendent “key witness to Kierdort’s abouts just mintites after the Latreille fire was his next door neighbor, Mrs. Edna Bergeron. She said she saw the 56-year- old Kierdorf drive his station A wagon into his garage. shortly after what appeared to be a black Cadillac ‘had pulled into the Kierdorf driveway, “I saw Mr. Kierdorf, dressed in light clothes, put the station wagon in the garage, then walk onto his porch where T heard men’s voices,” Mrs. Bergeron testified. “There were no lights on in the house then, but later I saw one in the kitchen, At one time J saw Mr. Kierdorf in a bathrobe.” pod saan “4 saw two ‘nen, one was Mr. Kierdorf in a light-colored bath- robe and another was dressed in light clothing and about Mr, Kier- dorf's size. They were carrying packages of some kind and putting them into the black car.” “They looked like pillows and they were carrying them out very fast. They must have made eight or 10 trips, passing these packages from one man on the porch, down to the other, who would put them in the back séat | of the car. It later backed out | of the driveway with its lights out,"’ Mrs. Beparon & said she had nev- er seen Thompson before yeSter- day. WW. ® ov When Kierdorf, a fellow business of Thompson with Flint Lo- BR ee ae Sg he was wearing only a. yellow and. black checkered robe, ‘blue’ socks, and black shoes, ~ APPROACHED ON ORGANTZING Owner George W. Latreille, 29, testified Thursday that two years ago a union ‘official, unknown to) him, approached him on organiz- ing with a union, but since then he had no such visits, only ‘‘rum- blings’”’ that a competitor across the street was displeased about, him opening up his business July 1.) Latreille sai@ he had received no threats that his small! pickup. station would be destroyed if he didn’t close, Four eyewitnesses to the fire, which occurred at arolind 10:52 p.m., testified they saw a station wagon speed away from the clean- : ly Kierdorf Case Evidenos? fi ad ‘he stumbled into the hospital ets after two men were seen scurrying about the premises. their dromedaries. ‘banners. QUEST BEGINS - ““Khikh!” The gutteral command burst from the cam- oleers. They jerked at the halters, and the beasts rose, growling, to their feet. ‘The troop of mounted bowmen moved forward, the golden eagle of Persia fluttering on their ” | yagi . | 4 Long Voyage Brings Magi to Jerusalem their cloaks, ses ect ta te watag tack and mounted - losopher, said the Magi “behold the| books of nature with more acute perception than usual." A conten porary Roman scholar, Apuleius, calls them “Divinely wise." LOVERS OF TRUTH ‘The Wisdom of Solomon says the “seek for,God being conver- Philo, then an Alexandrian Phi-jently did not guide them, for Judea lay to the west beside the Mediter- ranean—not to the east. . * &® Part of their secret may have been in their “Zendavesta,” the hoary, mystical record of which only one of 21 books survive. Or it may have been in the labyrinth. ine, dateless processes of the past The long trek was on. In what tity the march began is uncertain, but since the Magian priesthood served as one of the two councils to the king, it way have been at Hecatompylos, the northern capital “of a hundred gates.” * Or, they may have left from the winter castle in Ctesi- phon, with its sately domes and arcades, or from the former hundred-columned capitol at Persepolis, or the once- sovereign western city, Susa. x * * At any rate, despite some traditions saying each of them came from different places such, as Media, India, Tharsis, Arabia, Nubla and Ethiopia, this is flatly refuted by the Apostle Matthew who cites a single homeland—“their own country.” The overriding evidence is that this was Persia. In the original Greek, Matthew's gospel specifies the “Magi,” who at the time of Jesus’ birth and for centuries before were widely known a? the learned priestly caste of Persia. - Matthew’s original language also connotes “the Far East,” and comparisons with other documents of the era show * this was the common phrase used for the area of Persia, * * * 4 4 77 1959 Pl ew Most Models ams Savoys ¢ Belvederes FREE! i Nothing to Buy Sport row" COME IN AND 7 REGISTER - ; FOR THE + 8-ft. Christmas Stocking... 550 of _ Educational Toys @ Absolutely Free @ rvwwy ee To Be Given Awoy December 23rd, 1958 ven oe oN 724 Oakland Ave. ymouths | Prices Start boat STR 5S 20 seam Immediate Delivery 1 R&R motors, inc. The weight of tradition agrees. | It may be that other nationalities | sometimes mentioned refer to ra- cial backgrounds, since in the past lheydey of Persian empire, their regions had been included. Somte still were. Thus, the venturesome Magi, leaving behind Persia's barren ex- panse of Drangiana with its salf- ater lakes and yapping jackals, | traveled on through the wooded) foothills of the Zagros. The caravan climbed the steep) Available for Dix. Wagons sant with His works.’ The ancient | linking their stored-up lore. and Greek geographer, Herodotus, said, ‘monotheistic beliefs with Judaism, that in all the world’s ignorance |and its yearning for the king of was one shining exception—the truth-loving Magi. * * * Many other ancient scholars, Plu- tarch, Diogenes, Laertius, Pliny, all speak of the Magian actity. They were official tutors of princes, Persian and Parthian jalike, But none of this explains the . impetus that took them hundreds of miles, in broiling heat of day and chill of night, across the wide Syrian desert to Haleb or Tudmor, and on along the dusty kings. - ~ Whatever the explanation, the Magi’s final decision was precip- itated by a star, and as Ignatius described it in the First Cen- tury, it “shone in ‘heaven beyond all other stars... Its light was inexpressible . . . Men’s ignor- ance Was taken away.” It was in that instant, in a flare of intuition and conviction, that the Magi had known heaven had touched earth. So they traveled on and on, south along the great trade route from Damascus, along the/ highway to Damascus. They camped at night in their) black goat-hair tents, for it would | not be fittng for regal personages | ito stop in foreign hostels, with their; dancers, boxers, knife- throwers | and comedians balancing underted| jinfants atop poles. The brilliant star they had seen, iin the east’’ or more specific ally ltranslated “‘at the rising’ appar- { eastern shore of Galilee, across the Jericho ford over the Jordan, and to Jerusalem. They arrived there, not with “any | map or preordained itinerary or| R directional signals, but with the iburning force with which they tarted — the force that outruns lall transient ‘nowedge — their faith, * TOMORROW: “Where is he?” | Hospital Severs. Building Pacts | | Board Drops Contracts for Construction After 594 which fs presently being with- held from the contracts ander the construction retention clause, | he said. Willman said, in explaining the | jnecessity for quick action, that the old contracts had to be closed out| before the renovation of the old wing could be considered. * * * (7 2.99 Doll-E-Crib ® 14,00 Baby Grand Piano. Large 20” Fully Dressed BRIDE DOLL Worth 5.99 Toys. Dolls at Discounts 7.99 Tiny Tears Doll......5.99 w0 00s 24D 7.15 Fury Suburban trails into the mountains on) “We've got to get the new beds'| ‘2.99 Washer and Wringer. 2.49 Wagons = Persia’s western rim, and descend-| Talk With Commission in operation there before a bal- 3.99 Rocket Launcher .... 2.99 led into the lowlands beyond, Wild ‘anced operation is possible,” Har- | 2.99 Baseball, Golf ......2.49 boars, chectahs and other carni- In Mio meeting last night at old B. Euler, hospital scone 4 4.99 Armed Forces Set... 3.99 vores infested the area, and bulbuls pontiac General Hospital, city tor said. L 2.99 Roy Rogers Set. 2.49 sang from the box trees. lcommissioners and hospital trus-| Although the east wing is de-! The military ae teal psoas tees came to grips with the prob- signed to house 155 beds, only 32 CLOTHES MAKE las a routine to such reyal entour- | - ospi struct are now used stated. Seed, cich thoug the fratricidal 7 ooo! ‘hospital construction fi- are now used, he leer ——— GIFTS + King Phraates TV, dominated by| ae send aceasta arias an Italian concubine he called ‘ ‘the | Upon the recommendation of Atlas Bypasses Russia Sonia Sweaters .......6+...2.99 godess Musa,” had no taste for! City Manager Walter K. Willman me Girls’ Dresses ............2.99 the mission. 'they agreed to cancel present con- WASHINGTON (UPI)—The At- A St. Mary's Coats . soth Aa The squadron of helmeted arch- |struction contracts in the east las satellite launched last night | J Boys’ Shirts ...°. Sdoccodus- 99¢ ers, with their fine-limbed horses, wing with three firms. The can-| Will not travel over Russian ter- / Boys’ Jackets ......45.-+..8.99 led the column down into the plain ‘cellation settlement amounts to Titory, a Defense Department t Boys’ Sweaters ........... 2.9 f Appolloniatis, on past the proud-/g4op 499, spokesman said. iG) ly independent city of Seleucia be-| + «£ o* = =* side the Tigris, and as far as the Euphrates bridge. NTINUE ALONE have appeared warlike. The Magi and their retinue of servants likely | continued from there alone, A long, hard road, of many months, ahead, lay They tramped on, The saddles chaffed their legs: the sun burned their skin and dust caked their eyes. The trip took six months to a year, other travel logs of the period indicate. The annals of that time tell of FE 4-35 ail wtheir knowledge and insight, nent nee — For them to go farther might) The action came after Willman | | reported that costs the city must bear to replace worn out heat- ing, lighting and plumbing fix- tures in the east wing of the hospital exceeded estimates. The higher costs, |were reported this fall when in- |spectors opened up the walls of the jold_hospital building for the first time Willman said, | * * * In the $4120.490 figure | Willman gave as necessary to wash | lout tHe contracts is about $60.000/ “The Show. Place of Pontiac” What kind of men were these!” Lee ; suabeeb ena « ° who discerned a still smal} voice- pmaterials ordered for the new| § Chrysler, Plymouth, Imperial and pursued it across a Reinet 2 | ie which willl be kept by the | . - _ hospital. The figure also includes $212,- *aig, “he consolidates all your debts. FREE APPRAISALS w _ & Room Add. * Basements * Furnaces * Shell Homes . Completed \ 1 _ * Bathrooms “. & Kitchens Big Bea C * Attics 92 W. Huron St: Home Improvements “No Additional Monthly Payments With a Big Bear CONSOLIDATION MORTGAGE. HOW? It pays off your existing Land Contract or Mortgage and traction Co. which Buy All Your Gifts on Credit ORLON WOOL PERMANENTLY PLEATED 12" Jerseys for Christmas and Ves S4 Love! New and . Floral prints gay solids. Outstanding values for the price. Washable, needs no dry cleaning. Sizes for misses. 12 to 20—141 to Going Strong “SAMPLE COAT SALE 29.99 Pan Give Her a Box of Sheer | Mojuds in new holiday 8 3, wll styles from af- ternoon sheers to the finest, sheerest in dark, plain or | seamless styles. Be te 11 in proportioned lengths, with every 3 pair get a free doll. © BUDGET 2 4 NYLONS ....... for rev VveTVTCCCrC0" 7% ‘ewrrererrwreyryY* ‘~rrrrrrerere” Neth al et ef aaa. ~ ee rrTrryrr reel e eh > 2 2 2 4 > 7 > a 4 4 $ 4 $ > 3 3 ; 3 : > 4 ; $ z 3 2 : > $ > 3 ; 3 ; 3 > 4 $s > 4 4 4 , > > > é 4 4 4 «a 3 DRIVING 3 $ $ CLOVESS $ 2 $ 2.99 P 4 z $ PES OCS SSE TS Fe (yryrYrYVYTyTYe-yTY? FSP SS OTST TESS i i i i i i i i hi hi he rTrTryrrrerere rere rTrrvrvrYreeYeYrYrYee. a Save $2.00 on Gift NYLON Soft washable nylon in pat- terns of all colors. Sizes 10 to 18. Here is the gift she will appreciate the most. Ship ‘n’ Shora Blouses .2.99 Gift Skirts ......+..3.99 Flannel Slacks ......8.99 ‘errr rTTTerT eT rewrrreFferfteeeeereeeeeeeereerereeee wwweFreeet'''''''''*r-rrrrrt” > 2 2 a > 4 a 4 > 4 d 4 7 4 4 2 $ GIFT WALLETS } ORLON SHRUGS [ * # * > _~wrreFsr"eg#eeevrYTTT';'',v""T* wrevreereerervrerrY EAR WARMERS 1,00 ‘ewrwfeweweveywrT?** TwrrwrrerrererrTeeeS rvrwrv"vevweveYeYeweveYeYr,, a ll lls i i i i i Mi i tn Mi i i Mi Mi Mi hi in hin iti ns For Sheer Luxury It’s Vanity Fair NYLON SLIPS _ Wonderful Sips that are easy to’: wear and oh-so-easy to care for. All in the finest nylon tricot with lovely lace, embroidery or pleating. The excellent quality belie the tiny price tag. Sizes 32-44. Vanity Fair Gowns. ..... 5.95 Vanity Fair Panties......1.15 Vanity Fair Half Slips... .3.95 ec} fo) fel ee NEWPORT'S EBL lOmny.NClin’-Oa wryrevevereT. Training Center has announced a) neg \ . ‘ = 1. ‘THE PONTIAC’ PRESS. FRIDAY, DECEMUER 19, 1958 sm ama cae se Nena Naval ° Reserve commendation directed: to _ staff member, Commissaryman 1c Francis A. St. Arno, who recently returned from a two-week training cruise to Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, aboard the USS Gilligan, a destroy- er escort. The letter commended. St. Arno for the ‘outstanding manner in which he performed his duties, as well ag the * exemplary atti- tude and loyalty displayed toward his shipmates." St. Arno resides at 4388 Sedum Glen with his wife, Norma, and their two children, Pamela and James. * Army Pvt. John R. Gormley re- eently completed eight weeks of basic combat training with the 2nd Armored Division at Fort Hood Tex. A 1958 graduate of John Car-| rel] University, Cleveland. Ohio, he is the son of Mr. and Mrs. John P.; Dr., Birmingham GORMLEY Promoted to the rank of corporal) this month at Camp Pendleton,) Calif. was Marine Thomas B. Kin- dig, son of Mrs. Stanley R. Graf, ot R ey ol Gene. Neer ay Pontiac. and Ben C. ‘Kindig, of California. A former West Bloomfield Town- ship High school student, Cpl, Kin- dig entered the service Feb. 13. 1957 and received basic training at San Diego. He resides in Vista, Calif. with his ‘wife, the former Betty, Ase Decoteau. : an coe Searcy, Ark.,. he com- LOCKEY DOOLEY Stationed at Bremington Navy Base, Wash., is Marine Pvt. Larry Gormley, of 744C Jackson Park) Lockey who is serving with the Military Police. A May graduate of Harding — ees: cont ae ee basic es “combat training} at San Diego and Camp Pendleton, Calif. He is the son of Mrs, Vivian Green, of 455 Valencia Dr. A3:C. Lynval €. Dooley, gon of! Mr, and Mrs. Ralph Dittmar of 508} | Lowell St., recently was home on} eave after completing basic train-| ling at Lackland Air Force Base, Tex. ° He is now stationed in Missis- | sippi, where he is attending school, studying aircraft control and warn- | ing operation. A3.C Lynval C. Dooley, AF |16602777, Box 714, CMR 3. Keesler AFB, Miss ’ Plenty of Free Whisky on the Rocks in Philly ° PHILADELPHIA (UPI) — There was plenty of free whisky on the rocks here yesterday. A tractor-trailer loaded © with barrels of corn whisky upset on a bridge over the Schuylkill River, splitting many barrels and block- ing traffic. Firemen washed away. the spilled whisky with hoses. JUST A REMINDER! Dr. A. Miles Is Now Located at 103 N. SAGINAW ST. ‘Across trom SIMMS—Next to PONTIAC OPTICAL CENTER JACOBSEN’S Flowers) FE 2-2912 we All Garments Purchased Will Be Ready By Christmas! Compromise on Quality” For the Holiday Season Choose blue from Osmun’s ! fine selection of suits in superb taste Hl That well dressed look... that : feeling of well being are naturals in a handsome blue suit. We've a . ‘fine, new selection for your choice: striped blues, solids, pin dots and | herringbones . . sdcial life leads holidays. Martinelli Wool Flannel ......... $55.00 Botany 500 Worsted ........... $65.00 Martinelli 2-Trouser Gabardine ... $71.50 | Timely Plateeu - _....... $75.00 | Petrocelli Superfine Worsted ... $89.50 “Shop the Stores That Never Downtown Pontiac 1] OPEN AN OSMUN’S CHARGE ACCOUNT = all slimly styled, carefully tailored, and fashionably correct wherever your business or ! Come choose a | new blue suit tomorrow and present - Hl your best appearance during the Tel-Huron Center ! : Open Until 9 P.M. Every if Evening ‘til Christmos | His address is: 'f- lovely it for her! more to save! ’ oe '. give her MORE leg beauty with Penney’s GA YMODES... THEY OUT-WEAR, OUT-COMPARE ANY NYLONS IN THE COUNTRY! give every woman her GAYMODE favorites... MESH, STRETCHABLES, DARK SEAM, DOUBLE-LOOP SHEERS for extra protection against runs. (two threads are better than one) Seif color and dark seams. Sizes 81% to 11. All Proportioned to Fit You! pair 98¢ STRETCHABLE SHEERS .. . frame your legs in perfect proportions. Full-fash- ioned, Plain, dark seams. SERVICE SHEER for ness. This is 51 gauye, 30 denier. Plain seam. Sizes 815 to 11. pair 98¢ Pair 98¢ extra wear plus sheer-, v tO ok tok tk tk kt tke give her MORE flauery without a seam in sight! give her SEAMLESS GAYMODES! C No more twisted: seams, they never need special attention, ' sheathed in one soft mist of color, in Gay- modes, conventional and micro mesh styles. Your legs will look trimmer, slimmer. STRETCHAEBLE, seamless .. .ethis is a double sheer loop that’s sure to, beautify your legs. Sizés midge, norm and long. Pair 98¢ | Penney’s Satin Bowed Duster for Her Q?> Sizes 10 to 18 Sizes 38 to 42... 10.95 Personal Life! Lovely and luxurious quilted nylon tricot in beautiful pastel and rich colorful shades. This robe machine washes, and drip dries... easy to - care for, lovely to wear. Penney’s Aneel’s Touch Nylon Tricot Slips Unequalled at This Price More’ than a slip, Penney’s Angel Touch proportioned slips are wonderful fashion for you who love extrava- gant flattery. More lace, more embroidery, more crystal pleating trims in richer deluxe nylon tricot that’s naturally opaque, silkken-soft. A slip that pampers you because it needs less care. Just suds it and drip dry. Angel’s’ Touch needs no ironing. Proportioned fit to make your slip beauty more fit- ting ‘neath your fashion! Sizes 32 to 44 BOTH PENNEY'’S, STORES OPEN EVERY EVENING ‘til 9 + Y , = cs 3 ae “ ‘ + | IMPORTED ° Ficm DENMARK Direct on the S.S. MONICA-SMITH - $.S. Monica Smith tying up at port of Detroit direct from Copenhagen. Fl N EST TO P GRAI N Beautiful Gifts LEATH ER Imported by Lewis ~ | Same as used in last year's Cadillac Eldorado! PR eee eS Peano 00% This past summer we purchased these beautiful gift items in Copenhagen and they were shipped - pad ‘to Detroit! Beautiful wood pieces in teak Sale $ . 5 0 and rosewood—done by Danish master craftsmen r e In wood making! Price eal Rosewood Candlesticks. 19.50 pr. Teak Salad Bowls $25 ~ $15 Delivers It! Bamboo Mobiles $10 , These handpicked chairs were made Rosewood Salad Servers $ 10 pr. available to us at a big saving and we're passing it along to you! Hardwood frames Teak Trays 12.50 Cigarette Boxes 7.50 =< comfortable Mechel! cushions! fen coil spring interiors! And on easy rolling Teak Chairs $95 Safari Chairs 39.50 casters! Remarkable value! Rawhide Tan or Lustre Blue. and Many More! ~\ IMPORTED TABLES a, *50 Special holiday selling of imported marble top tables with brass legs! The kind of tables you've seen at $15 to $20 higher than our attractive price! Bay severe! wile this reduced price Modern Snack Tables 32” ROUND COCKTAIL TABLE. $50 18x28” END or LAMP TABLE. $50 Exactly as Pictured ; In sturdy steel, attractively decorated! ted! $ Has raised edge to avoid spitting. One % ceeeeeeee es 950 20x48” COCKTAIL TABLE . table makes serving cart! A. most welcome gift for any home. SELECT A BAR! Priced From $49.50 to $119.50 Convenience and utility if attractive furniture patterns! Woods are mahogany, oak or black lacquer! Chodse from several. styles. Other Snack Tables from $9.95 to $69.50 Peg EE wn Ae LOOK! No marks where 200 lit cigorettes burned! Even flaming lighter fluid didn’t burn this teble WE ARE DISCONTINUING os TOY DEPARTMENT P ICTURES. | YOU’LL SAVE From 25- 50% SAMSON TABLES . “© WAS NOW 7 WAS NOW | : Contemporary—Colonial $1.50 to $40 Sewing Machines that sew ....... 6.95 3.95 Mickey Mouse Phono. & 6 Records 12.95 4.95 RESIST B U RNS - . ect . Baby Grand Piano & Bench ...... 34.95 22.80 Spring Action Horse ........ .... 9.95 6.80 The newest Sammon table ther even Pictures maie welcome gifts! A large assortment iust Dropgide Doll Crib & Mattress ... 5.95 3.95 Telephone Repairman Tricycle ... 17.95 12.80 careless use will_not_harm! New $95 L * pavaiuasuy y decor! Large Size Crib & Mattress ...... 9.95 6.95 Red & White Plastic Rocker ...... 795 G93 rca weed seen Cale ‘ Upholstered Doll High Chair...... 3.98 1.99 Toy Chest with Black Board Front 14.95 9.95 to match, 8.95 ea. Colonial Maple Rocker ...... .. 498 2.98 Colonial Rocker with Music Box .. 6.95 3.95 NO DOWN PAYMENT 21” Maple Roll Top Desk & Chair _ 18.95 12.95 Maple Table and 2 Chairs ....... 8.95 4.95 Table & 2 Chairs Nubian Oak .... 26.95 13.95 23x40 Burrough’s Pool Table... 17.95 9.95 : Steel Saucer Sleds, 6 left ...... .. 4.95 2.66 37'2x50 Burroughs Pool Table .. 37.50 24.80 : Sturdy Supermarket Play Store ... 3.49 1.98 29x52 Burrough’s Pool Table .... 57.50 38.80 @ Double Bowling Alley, only 5 left. 9.95 6.60 Deluxe Doll Layette ........ .... 349 2.60 j All Metal Doll-E-High Chair ..... 4.49 2.80 Doll-E-Bath with Accessories .... 4.49 2.80 ‘ Pretty Pac-Travel Kit, 6 oly .... 4.98 3.60 Complete Doctor's Kit ...... .... 9.95 3.80 a Kid-E-Clinic and Tray Cart ...... 8.°8 5.80 Prettily Dressed Dolls, 2 only .... 8.95 4.48 F Large Upholstered Rocker ........ 12.95 9.95 Comfortable Plastic Rocker ...... 10.95 7.95 | Model Shown ; $79.50 ® ® s sge If Undecided, There Is Always a Lewis Gift Certificate i if you just can’t decide what to give, buy a Lewis Gift Certificate in ‘ Give a Lane and You Give the Finest 3 amounts from $5 up and let the recipient select the gifts! Cedar Chest $ 95 | : | PARK BEHIND STORE : 2 Cannon Blankets 49. : i \ : A A special holiday offer! 2 Cannon blankets included with * e e Popular Circle Chair Comfortable rattan circle chair with $ ° 99 : wrought iron base! You'll love the way any Lane cedar chest! Many medels from which to ores —in many beautiful woods! $5.00 Delivers, Budget the Balance | te hte ae ig De AR a EA, ic it sits and it is so light it can be moved : easily to any room in the house! NO DOWN PAYMENT yo _* ~ §0UTH “SAGINAW ST. at ORCHARD LAKE AVE. x } | Te ) i? VA ye FS f 5 > ic | u . . = | c . . C ae Cee ee eed # me * « * % « * * missile with the instinct of a . hunter. end of the flame deflector. ? slowly from the pad—gradually > gaining speed. The separate : engines are finally visible. > img out some 150,000) pounds of ‘ thrust each—and the central sus- ’ tainer engine with another 100,000 ; pounds of thrust push the missile : aloft. : have burned their fuels, they shuck off like two unneeded wings - Army Missile’ Site Uses - Shepherd Dogs to Guard - Sentries at a nearby Army mis- - sile site are named Fritz, Pupsie, : Buddy and Junior. * gressiveness. “And don’t let the : Ben Mullins, chief dog trainer. -" Los Angeles area Nike Hercules » installations. : Lop "THE PO ' ¥ \ i ae ICBM Missile. Could Strike Right on Target After 6,000-Mile Flight NEW YORK (AP)—Atlas is a It can—and Thursday night it did—steer into an orbit in chart- report, it can be a superaccura’ military missile as- well. In fact, an industry souree has indicated an Atlas. can strike close to target—perhaps within a mile—at the end of a 6,000-mile flight. : The $5foot missile made its first intercontinesital trip just 22 days agu—spanning 6.325 miles} from Cape Canaveral, Fla., to the coastal area of Africa. * *x* * Thursday night the Defense De- partment called the November feat a precise demonstration of - {intercontinental capability for dis- tances of more than 6,000 miles. The Atlas probably costs some- thing like two million dollars. "In spite of its enormous size, it is said to be so delicate that you can drive a hammer into it with a good solid blow. Its thin walls act not only as fuselage, | . but also as fuel tanks. . Loaded for its space duties, ft weighs about 122 tons. The propel-}. lants fleshed out its sides, gave it substance and weight. * * * The history of Atlas goes back to 1946 when Convair Division of General Dynamics Corp. was awarded the first research and development contract. Defense Department cutbacks. canceled the program in 11. Convair kept ‘some work on its own until the Korean brought increased military monies in 1951. . In June 1957, the Atlas was fired for the first time. That was only about 18 months ago. In a tour of the Cape Canaveral launching ground, there is no question “ which are the Atlas launching pads. * * * They are enormous structures. They rise well over 150 feet high,| . their red and white gantry cranes towering even above the missiles. The missiles stand on concrete pedestals well over two stories high. Through these pedestals bends a long funnel—a sort of horn of plenty with. its small end ready to receive the fire of the Atlas engines. When the huge missiles blast off, the exhaust flames from the engines pour through the funnel —cooled by some 30,000 gallons of water a minute. Even then the flames sear almost the full length of a football field from the open Flame, steam and running water pour over the concrete spillway. Then the missile begins to rise tongues of flame from the three The two booster engines, churn- After the big booster engines and the Atlas burns onward with its sustained engine alone, CHATSWORTH, Calif. (AP) — They're German and Belgian shepherds, picked for their ag- names fool you,”’ cautioned M.Sgt. “They're tough.” : The dog guards, trained at Ft. Benning, Ga., are the first of many to be stationed at other Military Hunter | “ KITCHENS Designed and Installed We specialize in the com- plete design and installation of kitchens . . . bathrooms ..« porch additions ... and other home improvements! ‘CALL TODAY . For Free Estimate cee mete ei “ante ar t - Magnavox a” 2 | -—RCAVICTOR ‘ NTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1958 N eo MAGNAVOX Hi-Fidelity 2l-Inch Mahogany Console Combines spatersaving console and big, picture 21"’ TV. Corivenient top- tuning, reflection barrier, large speaker for better tone. family gift! Mahogany. Magnavox a A wonderful No Money Down. $3.00 Weekly! $21990 RCA VICTOR 21" Console *“High-Sharp-and-easy” Mahogany cabinet. in Beautiful Mahogany New kind of console—sleek and slender. - tuning with new - “One-Touch” on-off control. Rich, balanced fidelity sound. 262 sq. in. of picture area. Neo Money Down... $3.00 Weekly $21990 | Your Choice... — a. | 90 _No Money Down — 2 Years to Pay Give Your Family Years of Viewing Pleasure With a Super-Powexéd ZENITH! ~ The new look in sight and sound! Big 21 TV con- solette on swivel base with these exclusive Zenith features . . . top tuning with “pull-push” on-off switch ... pullout antenna . . . spotlite channel num- ber dial—static free FM sound. . . all in the new-for- 1959 Zenith Special! No Money Down. $3.00 Weekly $2 99990 cy See The Rose Bowl Game, New Year's Day on New ‘59 TV If your old set is giving you trouble, trade it in at WKC and save plenty! Admiral Ac-DC Compact Table Radio Tune in ona perfect Christmas with this com- | pact AC-DC Admiral radio. Printed circuit ' chassis, large speaker. 50c Weekly opis WEBSTER’S DICTIONAR and : TABLE With Your * L.C. Smith Typewriter ’ All For Only | $5493 $1.00 Weekly! Fully reconditioned type- writers with new ma- chine guarantee.. Full - standard keyboards. Phone FEderal 3.7114 108 NORTH SAGINAW te TELECTRO 2-Speed Tape Recorder Has 334 ips for extended record/play back time, 72 ips for that added measure of fidelity. Pushbutton speed control. Single réc- ord and play control. . $1.00 Weekly... Useful Colorful Hassocks Prices start at... , = 4 $ B tee | JUST ADD TO YOUR ACCOUNT | Rugged plastic covers in choice of colors and sizes Washable and easy to keep clean. Also colorful fabric upholstered styles to choose from. t ca * ' ; : t , A fan ~ ‘ \ f ‘. A - Bs ‘ ; ip \ i ; . ; . ¢ a - < . d ; ; gs . ; ' . . ; { : ia if oo ; : 1] i ae : daw ‘JHE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. DECEMBER 19, ‘1958 _ . -s iF 1 ere 108 NORTH SAGINAW , WA é C ri i AMERICA © FIRST GIFT CHOICE : ee IEKICA § FIKST 6 USE YOUR CREDIT & NO MONEY..DOWN = tng, 7 q" ; ~ ledy’s BULOVA = Man's BULOVA = Lady's BULOVA = Man’s BULOVA. Ledy’s ELGIN 2 Diemonds Sell-Wind 21 Jewels 21 Jewels 2 Diemends Lady’s BENRUS 17 Jewels 23 Jewels Expansion Bend = Expansion Band 19 Jewels 17 Jewels ‘25 Jewels 2 Diamonds $49" 559° 71" 71° $5g% 159% 159% 179% ~)\~ $1.00 WEEKLY -$ias weeny _ $1.50 wamay $1.50 WaEKLY 91.25 WEEKLY ‘91.25 Westy 91.29 Weekly 51.75 Wai / | » ; Gq , SPEED BROIL \ ofA OVENETTE 4; ct 1 \S9 ELGIN WATCHES . S / Wy g Man's or tady’s @ ft Broils © It Toasts W/ 19 JEWEL ee Ui, @ It Grills and Fries Td fe Now $3 4* @ it Warms_ Only $106 WheeLy Great news for all gift shoppers —now you can give so much ‘ «more for less, Thrilling new style ‘dainty lady’s watch in sleek de- sign. Man's watch, shock resistant. = = . ~~) \ ; \. _ | _ Now Only No Money Down—50c Weekly $F Prag ° This 4-in-1 Speed Broil has a range type VA _F rN ) 95 tubular heating element with infra-red heat ) | AGL that cooks quicker, preserves good taste. Easy a\e . Pg FS ; to clean, unbreakable and safe. | Wr , y i ay \ Sa AF eee , ( WY STEEL BACK > , ON _ Belforte by Automatic Steam Big 15-Cup Auto. Automatic Electric ~ . BENRUS ‘ . Dry Ir offee Maker Pop-Up Toaster r Floor Conditioner Has ne ih Has “ e " ing N use Has lei res ng nd SHOCK PRGGe KtGH Waxes, scrubs, polishes, house Thermostat Reg- Therfhostat. Large deluxe house Thermostat. Reg- a buffs and cleans rugs. ular 15.95 size. ular 1995, Regular § * B83 0 hn = winks, SEBERIS Mite Tor SQRGR Mey SEIS 2%, SBBO 2995 | G6 | . : ; 50c Weekly | : } For the active man on your list a smart modern : , be . FR EE watch that can take rough use. Just what he needs 3 ent: ” Ph ane for work and sports. Smart for dress wear too. 7 OPEN EVERY anemee PARKING ud | Sheaffer Pen and GEr?! ‘ Pencil Sets * NIGHT Til 2 VitZ | pode abe “ Famous erode pen and : 3-/114 In Lot Cuff Link Sets salty baie 108 NORTH Behind er a te “, 4 e * f 3 o\ = i! a a N + ¥ 4, ig ¥ . ref V x ; ay 2 bY es oo : y 4. \ ios I gaa | u es : 4 “ ar Cre : %, at | . ~ . ¢ ‘ . 4 ar ~~ ae << * iF ce ee a" ; 4 . i 2 Fee = Ny r; - is f ? ts a % 4, i ! . . ; . . : : ‘ . i i : — Pes 2 a Pe THK pontiac PRESS. FRIDAY. DECEMBER 19, 1958 | - | : ; Sia att Palatino ass : =e : — i , ' ——— a | the art intormed ber cl “oe te “Boy. you sure ike talking,” he ‘tow tr do we gt tong” The Bieiies fit "Flotida Iislcranes, herons, “hises ‘and other : Sha |weight.” me . “But you'd better stop) inquired the Admiral, the: nation's last great expanse of specimens of wildlife ‘fourish in — a ae ‘about the customers; you're | — An- prema ri can the dense, een rig a noo Seay peices dap etal saath Sec * ero tae Se Se arenes te ee e-e oot fis are, inet eee eg ee ny oneaigh-or-two? apa = | (Copyright 1958), poy Elizabeth Cadell ae pam re | & you on Even : osked Mr ‘ie. . : sat waiting for 1 nen on ti "One. "We may 10 tights at THE sTORT: ws Graham. tm the right to join in te conversa- fon : WKeep. Beynai Fi , walided out of the Navy. is amused uth ‘sh the Sile ( ED TOMORROW) py Sei by fir Ch s jtions | have with my brother. _ bles and ced them in’ the 2 leot Se ay ut iis ‘ Cat’ olla” gy ery joo | ‘a sun _ 7 In r take anything aie tradiitien. Did we know Sus tour in Rurtpen Wes Tiling 10” DIDN'T EXPECT ANSWER thank you,” ‘be’ been in the Navy?” s- tour in ri «He's filling . = x eal The t whe ore When ‘at last the women a “ “ P, Stri 6 for hu Bm Tigh Bes us Be when we. were talking Bae ered. their aur was te fe ne | ‘That tsa. pity. It would do | “Jn the Navy, huh?” Mr, Holt) aper it e oes Senger list eotnds” impressive SOMebody just now, -] said to my|Pe $ you good.” She leoked at the (tured an interested gaze on Angus. Lore Lorrimer, father of « Navy |brother ‘IT wish you had his flair’ ture of a dress parade, Angela and| ' “Why'd t. out?” * et Clason cea lie toetet - <= and Maurice Tarrant turned Miss Seton first, in pretty, light| other == stout, sensible yO get ou ele “une, & is sec 4 é “ ie a Vigne! Yule. seriously ic love wi ‘vourid and said to me, ‘Nonsense, Woolen dresses, Mrs, Denby-Warre | shoes. “Where do you buy your Janthropis » . : ai is wile: Rascal Beceteon and she's too young for him.’ Am 1,” in a severe suit of dark gray, ister. Mrs. Denbv-Warre, young an and . ‘to. put up with that! ilast of all, Mrs. Zoller, dazzling in ithroughout the journey ?” \ | Angus, at a-loss for “| } ae “Maurice Tarrant. whe has an (ste demanded, * irrepressible manner: Stanton Holt ar American. about 40. whe asks to meet Miss Seton. im her late 1! ties with Warm, humerous I gent eves. Angela tells Aneus she has adored hit ever since brother, Oliver. brought hin on a visit an d accuses hin Rie cat nooaes were OO New York City Maurice, “I—" Mrs. Denby-Warre hesitat- vad asked Mr. Holt sym- NEW YORK (AP)—New York ee ers face a second weekend with- out nine major city dailies, The) — g Wday-old newspaper strike, ° Sweet drive ; seemed likely to continue at least| ° LUBRI-MAC He saw that Lord Lorrimer had was glad to find that she-did not , her iexpect one. She had risen. and, when Angus had opened the door Ancela thinks her father loo) = for her. © Weighs enly 17 “Rugger accident,” said An- gus. “Knee weut.’’ ta a oe al nla teed err A professional-quality saw ata risen and soon they were all seated pw iced — |. budget price! The new Mac D30 is S : im and at th mid ite ia 1 air Joint talks between the striking! ¢ Only $165.30 lightweight but powerful — idea! 2 she looked up at him and out on the terrace, drowsy’ with’! 1, id the Publ With 18 Bar and ing. limbi ke wh ad fi ' atchi ,, {Union and the Publishers Assn. of = Mar {8B for clearing land, pruning, limbing i wh ridge , spoke with obvious sincerity. i ae — Mies ae = iNew York City, broken off last) Pintall Chain © for cutting fenceposts, sawlogs wus to interest 1 at i A - coffee as it rip slowly from tin ¢ ' 7 ~ : : L evervthing to make him fo get hi ‘It's so nice te have someone | 7 fay a ~ ne Tuesday, are scheduled to resume | . CHAPTER \ That's what makes these Em. | Back — Until then, Sehernt mnnavatote = “Tt knew Maurice Tarrant s fa- presses so comfertable. The last | ck once more in his own com- ther many years ago.” said Mrs time 1 traveled en an ordinary | Denby-Warre. “He was a quiet, Coach, we were shepherded about partment, Angus told himself that |W comfer separately with the, publishers and the deliverers. “If Pigg sehogps \ King Br os. he was fortunate to have got the? eincamumancee a arrant.’ i igh trade-ims. |job. eareful man ard he built up a by a dreadful man whe ad. | large fortune. And now this young dressed us through a megaphone. | man is running through it wi the me- Come in for 2391 Pontiac Road, Cor. Opdyke Rd. | diation service’ said, ‘an earlier) 9 demonstration It was unbelievably pleasant— joint meeting will be scheduled.” FE 4-0734 - FE 4-1112 th dis) 1 said-te him at last ‘My good | ‘and it was easy. Or it would be : graceful speed man,J am net a film star.’ ”’ | easy if Angela Clunes behaved al! * = * She seemed to think this a good “He's the only child, and his | exit line. Angus thought so too.’ mother never had the slightest COM smiling to himself he gathered | trol over him. It’s a pity they didn’t )). papers together and prepared | put him into the Navy to learn @ for the formalities of the crossing, ; little discipline. the way as she Wad behaved at. Million Dollar — Lunch, making no move to join him or to talk to him. Tera eae st pace Life Insurance : Uo Is ihe thought. If there was mockery Policy Sales Up i Christmas Specia . in her eyes 4 hen they met his, he | ry f could ignore it: she had caught | SPRINGFIELD: Mass, (AP) ze F r H ISTMAS him off guard once and it wouldn'tisaie of millien-dollar’ life insur- IDEAL GIFTS : C R do to give her a second chance. ance policies are going up. He looked out of his window. ® 5 . $ | Massachusetts Mutual Life In| Children $ Rockers coer ereerres 3.95 They were passing sleepy Nor- surance Co., with headquarters | _ man ‘VMlages, the fields were ‘here, reports 19 new policies for Ottomans ee eee r asec teens eee $ 4,25 | green and gray and pale gold. —_— one million dollars or more were _. * | Timbered cottages with thatched peers ee the first 11 months Platform Swivel Rockers se ees $27.50 the presence of Lord Lorrimer, or ‘roofs flashed by and then there /°! this year ee ithe reputation of the Green Em-)} “This suit,’* NEW “59 WAGONS 86 press , Mrs. Denby-Warre informed coldly, “Is not winter was a glimpse of a faded-looking |presses, sent them through the cus-| weight.” " RADIO $1995 itoms with a speed x The sea, he saw presently, was) “Do you know that he has al- blue, and so mirror-smooth that it) ready called Lord Lorrimer ‘my seemed to be another proof of Sir dear fellow’ several times?" Claud’s excellent planning. Across’ “T don’t think he means to offend the water was France. and 4n people.’’ _ France the journey would really “! wonder.” she said darkly begin Angus felt his spirits rising “As you know, he’s sitting in front * © * of me—but that) coesn't give hi im. The crossing was uneventful, and cwicen such patos were is Recliner Ohairs ............ 553.50 ‘manor set in a wild garden, or a’ sued during all of 1957, The com: | and ease chateau half hidden among trees. pany sold no mili telly poli- ; HEATER |amounting almost to diplomatic The coach followed the bend of a |Cl€S_ on Single applications prior immunity ja close-fitting skirt and a peasant. ed and looked appealing at Angus. river, and Angus saw quiet teflec-/t? 1954. BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER I" No sooner had they touched: istyle blouse worn per ilously low on! Mi 6-3900 |French soil than it seemed they the shoulders “You should go always to Flor- tions mirrored in the water. bhi Among “the Ne hares ~ : ‘ence to buy your shoes.”’ said Mrs. | . . |lionaires covere oy Massacnu- iwere ro lling onward, on towards’) There was no noticeable enthu- Zoller. “You have good feet, so; UM OF CONVERSATION ‘setts Mutual policies are TV_ co- ‘the South, where some of France's 5!@5m when, after a discourse on you should wear good shoes. Have! He saw the Admiral come in to median ‘George Gobel, SPEC D SERVICE loveliest scenery awaited them the specialties of Picardy, 1 Mile East of Auburn Heights - FURNITURE SALES 3345 Auburn Rd. © (M-59) two house- the you someone to write the address? Speak to him. He left the door|wives, and four oilmen brothers. You Always Buy for Less at L & S ‘}landlord offered them a pot au feu! And if you wish to buy perteaes open, and from the coach. a hum) |The largest amount of insurance 9-¢ MON, Thre SAT.—FRI. ‘til 9—FE 5-924! France, Spain, Portugal. Angus imade of frogs’ legs. || know a shop in Madrid, , , * (of conversation sounded. The talk. issued for an individual is two a “ oT.V. | petting away bis papers. alowed * + * < *« « - ‘appeared to have become general, |lion dollars his mind te leap ahead through . e HI Fi the. successive stages of the jour. Tht Chose. instead, partridges = Mesmerized, Mrs. Denby-Warre ney. lroasted in butter, with a sauce of found herself bringing out a bat-' e@ TAPE RECORDERS Ne eee i |apples and tne a teu tone little address book and bor-, one of it wou new im, aiting for the fc they fell row a pencil from Angus. | @ RECORD CHANGERS al] of it would be full of memories. jinto groups, chatting or nee ag . “ eo P. A. SYSTEMS sitting | He was to see it all again—and|silent or dozing. Mrs. Denby 3 e 10S |this time, he wouldn't be paying to jcame across to talk to An see it. He Was actually being paid.' presently they wer e OFFICE. INTERCOMMS He was confident that he could ‘Zoller, rf s d | e@ WEBCOR FACTORY perform his duties wel Handing it to her, he supposed | -Warre |that she could not bring herself to’ gus, and ‘scratch out the eyes of the woman e joined by Mrs. |who used them to giscover that she who had little Only 4 Shopping Days Left No need to worry! Grant’s has ao wealth of last minute gift ideas. Every department is laden with exciting values. . . so x Every- first, being occupied in v itaring @ io canieel feet eee an , head straight for Grant's now . . . save time, steps and money thin e felt, was . 2 ie was reliev when lanc G SERVICE | Woes oc Teeny car anurans Sicslees at the dreseet aalasamcsd! (sanscice ‘tacraut SHOP TONIGHT AND EVERY NIGHT UNTIL 9 P.M. - 2 Nothing could go wrong. | and Mr. Helt came to jein him at | - BLAKE OK 24 HOURS | Having given Mrs. Denby- his table, and he spent the meal . | And for twenty-four hours, noth. Warre ® lomg look, she put a fistening to their ‘comments on & R ADIO - TV ing did. - question. ; | the other passengers. “h @ EA | They stopped for lunch at a “You do not.” she asked her.| Mr. Holt said little, Maurice a ‘GuAR 3149 W. Huron smal] village not for from Class. “feel yourself too warm in those little too much. and at last the oth- FE 4-579] On their arrival at the Inn, Ferdy winter clothes?” er man leaned back in his chair iwas kept busy carrying aS ases, pis) suit.”’ Mrs. Denby-Warre and looked at him wonderingly. i “SWISS WATCHES .. listed at 19.98 © Shock resistant 4 © Electronically timed ¢ Luminous dials | ee © Non-tarnishing cases ; * Unbreakable crystals ¢ Leather or expansion bands * Beautifully gift-boxed . plus tox 5 iin FREE ‘Till Jan. Ist 8-0z. Chocolate Milk Shake With This Coupon BONUS COUPON Return This Ad FOR CASH VALUE 25¢ On $3.00 Purchase , worth VACATIONER ROYAL | every cent of 19.98, at a pin-money price like this ‘ What a gift...What a low price! .. possible only because we bought in huge quan- ies tities. Come running! Scoop these up at over 50% ‘ saving. 32 smart models for men and ponent , 3-pc. MATCHED LUGGAGE e Train Case « 21" Weekender © 25” Puliman Imagine! Quality Swiss-made watches — on Ge oe eee et ee ee ee ee “see eee eee we GermSsmecomonnoosc Teese weeeeeee 3-ply veneer box; washable vinvl-coated fabric cover- 88 ing in copen blue, white, _ sef tan. Rayon linings, brass plated locks, sturdy plastic handles, Plus tax. 1.25 week on on oe oe oe oe oe on om ae oe ae om oe am oe om Whipping Cream ...69¢ PL; 391, Pt. 2 | Cottage Cheese... rou 19¢ “ an Vitamin D. F or tified LJ HOMOGENIZED . *Quart . eee. ' GLASS BOTTLE » : ar) ory, Case of 8 or More a F 36c % Gel. wise rea aE Money Off the Tree BUY CASH of Fy Se ade. eae eigen Frent |» oget ip coat a * - Famous “Pennleighs” — superb for gifts! rn : - . gaa) and CARRY! a WASH ‘NW’ WEAR SHIRTS . ° .. a é "= Handsome good looks at a price ; ; ; that gives your budget a holiday ! i End Thet Big Milk Bill _ | 10” DELUXE TRICYCLES S| Chomse from pine cotton and 98 STOP AND EAT LUNCH WHILE YOU SHOP To hi ith of Cupioni with; metallic buttons ; ‘ dccat aces oe $88 “ and pocket insignia, or from . Pee me +s: — . Sh combed cotton with sewn-in stays, Ic ar son rar airy OPEN Sturdy tubular steel with adjustable handleBars and pearlized buttons. Also washable 4348 Dixie Highway Near Sashabaw saddle. Semi-pneumatic, puncture-proof rubber tires. 12-inch size 9.88 ~ SUNDAY ‘til 10 P.M. 7350 Highland Road DRAYTON PLAINS NEAR WILLIAMS LAKE RD. OR 3-7512 © OPEN TIL 10 P. M. OR 3-7512 ravons. Small, Medium, Large. 16-inch size__ 10.88 MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING . W. T. GRANT CO. Open 10 A.M. to9 P.M. - CENTER “You Really Get Your Money's‘ Worth at Grants’ Mon. Thru Sat. 3 ; : eS een «OS fi 4 ; | 7 | | . t pl a 4 F = oe i | __ .There weais also a, 50-tonner. Be- -ground atomic tests in Nevada| 3? . xh - That is, 2,310 miles from the Ne- \ TNT. It Science oval Soon ; ‘Quakes, Crust | Ww ASHINGTON (AP) ~ Undér-|S -* Christmas “must” for every man... Evans HAND TURNED . last fall promise to improve Sci} entists’: spotting of distant earth-|i quakes. and add te their wi-| a edge of the earth's ‘crust. bs One Nevada explosion Oct. 30|3 shook delicate instruments far! & away in Japan, Sweden, Peru and ( “zechoslovakia. Se o&® o® ‘“ ap The first figures on the record-|% ing of this and three other blasts in the underground series were given to @ reporter by earthquake sleuths of the U.S, Coast and Geodetic Survey. The Oct, 30 shot, code-named Blanca, was the biggest. It packed a wallop equal to 3,000 tons of jiggled seismographs | \5,500 miles away \ In the United States and Can- Ada most of 110 regular and tem- ai seismology stations reeord- * * | = on the three earlier and| smajler tests: came only from United States territory. However, || one of them — equivalent to the| & force \of 1,000 tons of TNT—was detectad at Fairbanks, Alaska. vada test site. The smaller blast — a compara- tive pipsqueak of 20 tons TNT) & power —\was recorded only out) # to 820 miles at Rapid City, S.D./¥ cause its axplosive impact shot down into the ground the earth shocks traveled only a few thou-. sand feet. \ You give a gift he expects and enjoys, when you present him with Evans Slippers. See our complete selection of styles and prices to fit your gift list needs. 2) a ri Capt. Elliott Roberts and L. M.| Murphy of the Coast and Geodetic Survey's seismology branch said it will take six months to study findings fully. \ : “But the prosperts are,” Rob-| a erts said, “that sci¢nce Suna to! gain new knowledge vf the earth's , 4 crust which extends to a depth of 20 miles, and possibly get some | & new information about \the earth's mantle, extending from, 20 miles| to a depth of 1,900 miles.” He said information obtained will enable seismologists to do a better job of locating earthquakes. Cowpuncher Cowboy BOOTS You get more sturdy, comfortable wear from Cowpuncher Cowboy Boots than from any other foot- wear. Pier Angeli Wins Divorce From Vic Damone ae rns With full toe an low. voree fee ginger Vic Demons walking heel. o1 with on testimony that he was. ‘insane: regular western heel lv jealous for no réasén whatso- and toe. Handsome ever.’ colors. * * * Sobbing, she testified; “His tele- phone eallg woud disturb me five or six times a day while I was working here and abroad, He treated me badly and insulted me.” $495, $q5° ~ Ladies’ Moccasin Slippers PS tke * * * Miss Angeli was awarded cus- tody of their son Perry, 3. She| will receive $500 monthly for the | bow $ support and a ae of Damone’s earnings | Miss Angeli, 26, and Damone. | 24. were married in 1954. American women used up 95,- 568,192 tubes of beauty prepara- tions in 1957, according to the Collapsible Tube Manufacturers Agsociation. Leathers in blue or pink with dyed to match fur trim. a Ladies’ Velvet Mules The powder puff mule with a rosebud in large fur pom pom. istmas Time :. Lion ‘were aa —— — ee face Qpen a Convenient A . , ¥ Lion Charge_ , | ty : With Option Terms SCHIEFFELIN &CO.,NEW ae rs") .. VILE Ly 484 sacri becaee tena _ i x sep ee Tae ns SRP ieccempien oe ; ‘ : ‘ $ enpiiee 2 cenicaes ey es renters eS ¢ Pendleton. for Men and Women The finest in virgin wool sportswear. LADIES— 49 er Jacket 17.95 and 19.95 Skirts 9 ........... 14.95 Sweaters ........7.95 up Slacks .. -17.95 and 19.95 , : . MIRACLE MILE ONLY Nylon quilts in . pretty feminine MEN— colors. Easy Topster Jacket ..... 17.56 to.care for, Shirts Robes . ....11.95 and 13.95 .. 25.00 they're wash- “able, a pift she will enjoy. \ Men’s All Wool Worsted Flannel SLACKS TRI-TAPER® by od | A Vie Harmony trim tailoring found only in better slacks.. Cambridge, Oxford, charcoal grey, and brown. 30-46. Regulars, shorts, longs. Others 7.95 to 18.95 SMARTER: The beautifully cohtouted design _ makes aes most fashionable luggage ohtainable anywhere ay. . LIGHTER: The lightest luggage you've ever carried. Actually pounds lighter than other luggage. ROOMIER: Packs up to 25% more aothes than comparable cize luggage. . *Patented Wegieces s l 3° 2A” ww *4 4” FOR WOMEN: Ten sizes in 3 smart colors. FOR MEN: Nine sizes in 2 smart colors, eis y -qemet au * : rh ut we ¥ Men’‘s Sport Shirts by Van Heusen — Shapely — Eldorado Ps ee Wash and wear Ivy League or regular collar. Plaids, stripes, checks and solids, Other Sport Shirts. . .4.95 to 7.95 m6 Open Every Night til 9 Men's Bulk Orion Argyles Cashmere soft, machine washable. Reinforced at heel and toe. 101 to 138. Men’s and Ladies’ Val hvas | $ Smart plaids in a practical type. Gabaae: , They’re smart looking and wil] do the job. All Items Gift Boxed Free! ‘A9 § *. [= i f [x es THE PON TAC PRESS. FRIDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1958 es Fogel SURTEREN ANY PURCHASES MADE ble TUESDAY WILL BE DELIVERED BY CHRISTMAS! << ee DD WIP 20 U nbreakable | CHRISTMAS TREE ORNAMENTS — 10 BALLS ! > STARS | 5 BELLS : Yes, Truly Unbreakable 2099: Reg. $2.59 CASH and CARRY a Mie Mine Tae Mas Wa as Me es es WHILE THEY LAST ALL Oe en Se te tee ——— All Bedroom ‘Suites REDUCED for CLEARANCE Special Christmas Offer ADMIRAL RADIOS Transistor Portable Radio Complete With Leather Carrying Case and Ear Plug Chock Radios--Table Radios Furniture Pictured Tywatees Similar Selections ORCHAR Phone FE 58114-5 FURNITURE COMPANY [164 ORCHARD LAKE AVENUE + PONTIAC. La }} 3 BLOCKS WEST OF SOUTH SAGINAW ALL SECTIONALS REDUCED FOR CLEARANCE : CHAIR SPECIALS | (25% 50% Off __ RRARARAWIRARRAAAMBRWARART HTD BWDP DD DRI IRI RI BIBURD B.DdiD- DP Dedede ddd ‘- * WEL BE OPEN TONIGHT, MONDAY AND TUESDAY re m = : can Gees Sectional Group in a Sweeping Curve! Nylon Covers All 3 Sections 178"|= ONLY $18 DOWN ; WHILE THEY LAST ~~ 10-Pc. Modern LIVING ROOM 4 Only- $13 DOWN ‘Sans, Se ee ——s ; Here’s Whaf You Get... j é ; © Distinctive Sofa or Sofa Bed 4 @ Matching Chair — Choice of & Colors & @ 2 Decorator's Table Lamps & @ Coffee Tables and Two Step 4 Tables 8 @ 2 Throw Pillows & @ Wrought Iron Smaker Nationally Advertised 4 REMPEL ® STRATOLOUNGERS © Platform ROCKERS © SWIVEL ROCKERS ® RECLINERS ® Occasional CHAIRS © SWIVEL CHAIRS bee am Ls ea MULTIPLE WIRING If one goes out 15° i 98 uss the rest still burn. CASH and CARRY — Limit Quantity ALL SUITES REDUCED FOR CLEARANCE - Life-Like Pony This beautiful pony will light up any child’s eyes. Body is steel supported and covered in pure natural rubber Chrome Plate Steel e $T ass a egular $29.95 ee eee eS eee ee eee eS ee eb ee et ee ee eS ee = ES EEE NE EE ee — New GOO GIANT ~ {CIRCUS WAGER TOY CHEST 2s 4 SSS Ss eS _S44'4"5 INCLUDED _AT_NO EXTRA CHARGE: L SALAD and PIECE worth $1.49 3 GIANT ANIMALS SPICE SET g ® Station Wagon [Bibad bf © Convertible /# | © Pick-Up Truck Made of Sturdy, Durable, Metal RAMI BIA BDRMrwIWRA BARDWwR Bsus oe 7 | THAT ALWAYS LAND ON THEIR: FEET SANA Aa @ GAY RED AND BLACK DESIGN ON CLEAN WHITE BACKGROUND ® CAN-BE CLEANED WITH DAMP CLOTH © CHECKER GAME BOARD ON TOP © 3 GIANT INFLATABLE TOYS @ WOOD TRIMMED AND REINFORCED ® HOLDS ALL THE YOUNGSTERS’ TOYS @ STRONG ENOUGH TO HOLD 2 ADULTS ® A GREAT BIG 31” x 15” x 15” 98 Reg. $6.95 CASH aod CARRY ." PE de Bee he He Bi We ft, — $ While they last bad ; Only Bs < RRB IR. 3.88 he Ba - | é ‘ \ “DOLLS MIRACLE VINYL—Unbreakable ® RED RIDING HOOD & @® POLLY THE BEAUTY & ® NANCY THE NURSE | 24 inches high — Rooted Hoir CASH and CARRY — COLE ‘[5-pe. Dinette © EXTENSION TABLE © 4 MATCHING CHAIRS © FORMICA TOP ‘$35% ] ONLY $4 DOWN =e Reg. $9.98 —$15.98 EOE Cee ere € ( pa PONTIAC 2mES S, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 1 19, "1958 The first exhibit of the Young Peoples’ Art Cen- ter at Cranbrook Academy of Art is on exhibit now through February. Organized by the Academy and the-Junior League of Birmingham, the center conducts & Children's Art ' a workshop offering classes to all Oakland County children from 8 to 14. Pictured at the American Indian display are Joey Fauver, left, and Benjamin xhibit Mills. 2 ' a Pontiac Preis Phetos Featured at Cranbrook Currently on display at the Cranbrook Academy of Art Gal- leries, Saturdays and Sundays from 2 until 5 p. m., exhibit of the Young Peoples Art Center ‘display through February is the first The exhibit will be on The exhibition is a cross-section of all the art mediums in which children in Oakland County have been participating during the past 10 weeks * * The American Indians which 8-and 9-vear-old children carved from dried apples and dressed in authentic costumes is an out- standing display. MOSAICS, PAINTINGS Colorful mosaic patterns created from bits of tile is the project of the 1l-vear-olds. On every wall are numerous paintings in oils and water colors, and one is a life-size painting. * * The Center was originated through the combined efforts of the Cranbrook Academy of Art Galleries and the Jumor League of Students Stage Operetta An @peretta “Merry Christmas, Mr. Snowman.” was presented by the students of Baldwin School Thurs day afternoon ‘Leading characters and al- ternateg included Janice Cor- nette, announcer; Gary Rich- Faust, Richard Marker, Fred Fravis, Loren Fvens, Linda Taylor, Alana Cargle, Cherv! Pointer, and Alice Cunnifig ham. Also participating were Bert Bojexen. Larry Haskins, Linda Wall. and Patricia Jamieson The school's Hanor Choir pro- vided background music, with first grade students portvaving toys and second graders snow ided Gail Ann flakes. These inc! Fetters, Sharon Heaton. Karen ~ Dobbins, Hope Flores, Margar- Patricia Jamieson. Belinda Kiefer, Laune Dennis Brenda Carney, Beverly Hem- ming, Martha Yaeger, Pamela Siple. Barbara Wevant, and Sandra Carey, snowflakes. * * * Acting as toys were Trene Andritsis, Joyce Stricklen, Vicke Baragar. Judy Evens, Jean Harris, Mary Ward, Don- na Johnson, Gayle Faust, Gail Vine and Barbara Caldwell Soldiers were Allen McFar- land, Jeff Brown, Ronald Hibbs Walter Post, Larry Wo! fenbarger, Garvl Roberts, Alan Bowman Jimmy Ewald and Kenneth Dudley et Johnson A festive dress for the approaching holiday season is this flower printed silk surah by Suzy Perette. The shirt is nide at the hips and fapers ta a hobhle hem. The neckline dips low in hoth and back. front Birmingham. In their workshop, they offer five classes a week to all children in Oakland County between the ages of 8 and 14 New this fall, the art classes run 10 weeks and are held to 2% students per class. Classes are held each week on Monday, Wednes- day and Saturdays, but each student takes only one class each week MICHAELS TEACHES Supervisor and instructor is Glen Michaels who received his Three classes each day ‘are under instruction. masters degree in art from Cranbrook Academy of Art. a degree in music from Yale University and a degree from Washington State University Stimulating and well-planned projects are set wp for each class. A ballet dancer performing to music, a weaver at her spinning wheel, and a native of India pose for the young students. * * Mrs Robert Wardrop, chairman of the Junior League commit- tee, sthtes, “What we are attempting is to give additional training to youngsters who want more art than the regular school course ” provides, Rae. 5 ee OS rR ea ee ee « a ee ek eh Have You Tried This? = * oe a © es GI a oO, lege Ry JANET ODELL was made by Mrs Tt is serving. * * * se ig ain Se Mrs brunette, work ehor HOLIDAY SALAD By Mra. James Absher 1 package lime gelatin } package lemon ge'atin * l package strawberrs Tsamall can crushed drained 1g pint whi 1 package (° ene gelatin ing cream Wa vs, Pontiac Press Home Editor Z One of the prettiest salads . we have seen in a long time James Absher for a recent limcheon just right for holiday Absher, an attractive is active in church She also sings in the Pineappie or) cream cheese Use drained pineapple juice to dissolve lime gelatin, add- Gay Christmas Salad Is : Red, White and Green ing enough hot water to make 1 2/3 cups. Dissolve each of the other gelatins in 1 2/3 cups water also. Let chill unti] partially set, Add the pineapple and '4 cup of the lemon gelatin to the lime gelatin. Pour into a deep pan, 8x8 or 7x12. Let chill anti! firm. Beat cream cheese into re maining jemon_ gelatin fold in cream that has heea whipped. Pour over green layer. After this igs firm pour red layer over it and chill unti] serving time. “Makes 9 large servings. and - oi Story League Hosts Walled Lake Group Pontiac Story League enter- tained members of the Walled Lake Story League at the an- nual Christmas meeting held Thursday evening at Adah Shelly Library. * & t Laura Cobb of the Pontiae League and Mrs. Cecil David- son of Walled Lake were hos- tesses, Stories were told by mem- bers and guests. Billy Flury and Regina Childress told orig- inal stories Others were “Friendly World.” by Mrs. J. R. Shaffer; “The Little Girl in the Yellow Dress,’ by Miss Cobb; “The Man Who Missed Christmas” hy Mrs Hutson: and “Granny Glittens and Her Amazing Vitrens.’ by Mrs. WOM Twichel * * ® Others were The (jreatest Story Ever Told’ by Grace Clark: ‘Lullaby.’ by Mrs. T. Pp. Fauble, and = "Dobris Christmas,” by Mr¢é. John. Eq- dy. ‘ Fete Karen Hayden Karen Kaye Hayden who ill marry Kenneth Larry En- nis Saturday. was honored at a bridal shower Wednesday evening at the North Perry street home nf Pnth Ann Van Woert. Betty Miller was co- hostes« , r Five pages today in Women’s Section Elmer... Guests were \irs. Eddy, chil- dren's librarian at Pontiac Citv Library; Anna ® Weborg of Walled Lake Regina Childress and BHily Flurv. fourth grade students at Qwen School. RIE OME shs08 SC RLENE' pies Jane Shimmin and John King dis- cuss the picture of a weaver at her | spinning wheel which Miss Shimmin Individuals with ‘interest- has drawn, ing backgrounds or occupations visit Supertisor and _instructor for the children’s art workshop is Glen Ward, Vichaels. center, who resides at Cran- W ardrop. brook. Here, he quietly observes Epsilon Sigma Alpha Event Set Saturday the classes periodically to pose for the young artists who are becoming adept at expressing themselves from observa- tion. progress on an oil portrait of Nancy heing painted by Connie Home Parties to Precede Ball Parties are being held Saturday the Christmas of Alpha Alpha Chapter of Epsilon. Sigma Alpha. The dance is to be held at the Oakland County evening preceding Ball Sportsmen’ s Club. The Donald Moores are hosting a buffet supper at their West Iroquois Jack St. Gloss. road home. Guests will be Mr. and Mrs. Bert Anselmy, Earl Smith, Mr. of Ft. Wayne, Ind. ~*~ *& * gathering before the dance at the and Mrs. Norm Nelson of Orchid street will be Mr. and Mrs. Phil Christos, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hors- Robert Andrews. Mr. and Mrs. Greg Raft, home of Mr. Hockins, Jey. Mr. and Mrs. Stealing Is Serious— Abby Mr. and Mrs. George; Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Moore and Mr. and Mrs. John Moore also of Fort Wayne. © and Mrs. James Herb Leh. William Bray, Mr. Milner, Mr. land, Mr. and Mrs. merville and Mr. John and Mr. and Mrs. Other guests are Mr. and Mrs. and Mrs. Donald and Mrs. Robert Wie- Donald Som- and Mrs. Irwin x & * Guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Smiley of Anoka drive will be Mr. and Mrs. David Maylen, Mr. and Mrs. James Doyle, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Brooks, Mr. and Mrs. Gene Hilky and Mr. and Mrs. Jack Frickey. Mr. and Mr. and Mrs. Dover road have asked Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Stranick,.Mr. and Mrs. Al Stauffactter, Mr. and Mrs. Chuck Jacobs, Mr. and Mrs. John Maturo, -Mr. and Mrs. Neil Clauser and Mr. and Marvin Jones. Keith Clauser of This Is Time to Speak Up, Aunty y ABIGAIL VAN BUREN “DEAR ABBY: You may say this is not my problem but I am very much disturbed and don't know what to do Our on. who is 15. pale around with his bov cousin who is the same age. Our son started to avoid his cousin and when we ques- tioned him he said the bov can’t go Into a place downtown without steal- ing one or two smal! articles “We know anv brother and his wife have no idea their gon does these things We hate to tattle.tale but we are afraid if we let it go on, the boy will be caught and taken to the police station. His father is a wel] liked, prominent busi- nessman in Should I ABBY toun give them some hint or stav out of it altogether?” AUNTY DEAR AUNTY: This is no time for “hints” A frank heart-to-heart talk is the only For the hoy s as a favor to his irge vou fo tell them eahition good. and parente 7 at once, + + “DEAR ABBY:. Is it mght for a hushand to avoid poker games which he doesn't care for with the excuse, ‘My wife objects.’ He also tells sales- men to ‘talk to the wife’ aft- er he’s instructed me to turn them down. Isn't there more to heing ‘the man of the house’ than just signing the checks?’ CONFUSED DEAR CONFUSED: A “man” iand [ yse the term loogely) who constantly Ses his wife a¢ the goat is a site bov grown tall + + “DEAR ABBY IT have a sis ter whom [ cal! on the tele- _Bhone and she is m) problem own +. would like to Say The minute she hears my voice she says, ‘Wait a second un- til I find a cigarette.’ When she returns I ask her what she is doing and she sav« Nothing.” About half an hour later she says, ‘I have to rin, someone side in the car for me‘ and bang goes the receiver [e thie a nice way to treat an elder sister” THE ELDEST DEAR ELDEST Half an hour on the telephone should he a pretty complete chat. She could be more courteous, but perhaps if you brought the con- versation to a close earlier, she'd be happier to chat with VOU there's, waiting ont * * * “DEAR ABBY: I see so munch ahouf - married men getting mixed up with single women who'd just as break. up fheir homes as not I have bean around a lot and that no man has fy break. up his home if he doesn't want Yo. Here are THREE, good. excuses he can use when his girl friend puts Soon the pressure on him. (They work, too, because I have used them.) 1. “You are a good kid and deserve better than me so I am turning you loose for your myn good.” 2. “T can’t stay true te one woman as you can plainly sre “Atv wife is crazy and I can't leave her in that con- dition.’ “BEEN AROU ND” + * * “DEAR ABBY: Why do some Parents object to ROCK AND ROLL? There is nothing wrong with it and let me tell you something — my mother has a pile of old records and I played them and if vou think rock and roll is bad you should hear the one that was popular in her day called ‘MINNIE THE MOQOCHER.’ Wow!” CAROL t* * kor a personal reply, write to ABBY in care of this’ paper: Enclose a Sell-addressed, stamped envelope. . he ‘weeks ago ‘ By EMILY POST | Mrs. Post: Several I telephoned a friend of ours ooha asked if she was going to-be home on Sunday as we were thinking of driving ever to see them. She said she was very sorty but they had another engagement and would not be home. She did not set another time for us to come.- ‘‘My husband wants to go out and visit them this week, but I refuse to go as I think it is now up to her to call and ask us out to visit them. My hus- band thinks 1 stand too much “Dear on ceremony. What is ‘your opinion?” Answer: I think you are - right and that the next move is up to them. Had she réally wanted to see you, she would have either mentioned another time when you were talking with her, or she would have called you since to make a . date, “Dear Mrs. Post: My son is to be married in several weeks and it will be a small wedding. I would like to know if it would be proper for me to give a-pre-wedding party. at my house about a week before the wedding for his many friends who will not be invited to the reception. Will you please tell me how the invitations should be worded and also what kind of a party would be best to give?’' Answer: It would be entirely proper to give a party for, your son and his fiancee at any time. It could be a small dance or just a supper, or whatever you can best give in your house, The invitations would read ‘‘Smal] Dance” or (‘Supper’') for Mary and John, and the time and day, Dear Mrs. Post: Would it seem forward .of me to send a birthday greeting to a young man I met last summer and who took me out while I vis- ited a cousin, but from whom T haven't heard since? I. know it will be his birthday soon, but I don’t want to have him think I'm running after him.” Answer: Sending a birthday card is certainly a very proper gesture if its message is im- personal * Program on Carols Presented Students of Wisner School and music teacher Mrs. Eve- , lyn Weiss presented a musical program explaining how Christmas carols originated; when Wisner PTA met Thurs- day. x * * a PTA members voted to open a blood bank and polio clinic at the school. The date for these projects will be deter- mined later in the year. Co-chairmen of the refresh- ment committee were Mrs. Martin Bacak and Mrs. Paul Maddox, assisted by Mrs. Reu- ben Deytrom, Mrs. Jack Bres- ler, Mrs. Arthur Clarkson and Mrs. LeRoy Koch. * * * Hospitality committee mem- bers were Mrs. John Appleton, Mrs.qWilbur Hinsperger and Mrs. Fred Froede, Exchange Students to Be Feted American Field Service stu- dents and their ‘‘families” will attend a supper party at the home of Dr. and Mrs. L. Je- rome Fink Sunday on Ottawa drive. The party is sponsored by the American Field Service branch at Pontiac Central High School. Attending will be some 40 people, including American students who studied abroad last summer and students from foreign countries in this area who are sponsored by the pro- gram. Child Culture Club Gathers The feading, “The Christmas Story," was given by Mrs. Calvin King at a meeting of the Child Culture Club, held Thurs- day at the home of Mrs. Charles L. Bowers on Bar- ington road. Christmas carols wehe_yang a secret pals’ gifts ex- changed. Mys. Neil Nelson, pre nt, arsisted with the me . The January’ meliies will he ‘held at the home of Mrs. Nel- son on South Anderwon street. EIGHTEEN ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 19, 19358 | 'Serious Little Discussion’ Isn't Enough. - , BY MURIEL LAWRENCE rs his is encouraging ” them to, _ques-|s studio se: Gina. ae The TY psychologist had received tion everything I say so that | get gan turning her wor into wave “a letter from a viewer, In effectiarguments from ‘them icon-/Patterns which other complicated it asked, ‘What can I do about'stantly . . ‘machinery in our TV sets Rpompt- my mother-in-law? She's always! The TV psychologist started: ity changed back into words. ’ Hy cking on me before m children. ‘broadcasting her reply. In_ her The answer resulting from a a atlas ide : =. the ci ‘this glectronic activity was this: ok oe ae ae '“Why don’t you have a serious, * x e be oT alk wi J her-in- * si 9 * > Ss “ Ra little talk with your mother- wi Sl Ke K * ‘law, pointing out what her picking 2 ‘¥ on you is doing to your parental eBook nl ‘ rs Christmas Trees Sprayed) 92% authori? ee ey It seemed to me a waste of - en . *2* the electronic activity, =< FR : People who want to undermine} a? : . our parenta] authority are seldom) =" For Our Customers & Friends deflected from their purpose by “y 1 Tree Limit “serious little talks.” Since “their = ee. need to display their superiority} ‘.. White — Turquoise — Pink to us is stronger than their rea-; she son, their ears are closed to rea-/ «3 sonable words, va BROWN BROTHERS So if we're ‘obliged to maintain: +" = 704 West Huron Samet contact with such people, our so-| : ; > 5 A lution is not asking. them to stop) Me” ‘a? Ao 3 “Sat A Sut SES ‘criticizing us but changing our own WE OE ee De is response to their criticism. nee price on the HOOVER (Govan z-larlel (= DOUBLE TRADE SALE YOUR OLD SWEEPER WORTH TO +40 cleaners in one! . on a New LOW LOW Prices begin ot 49.95 HOOVER Authorized Factory Service on all HOOVER Sweepers BAGS, BELTS, BRUSHES Pick Up Service — Delivery 24 HOUR REPAIR SERVICE Call FE 5-9101 BARNES-HARGRAVES ACROSS FROM THE POST OFFICE 742 W. HURON OPEN SUN. 10 to 2 Model 65 Beats, as it sweeps, as it cleans! @ 50% more suction with attach- ments e@ Really two machinery be-|. nds. “Martin, Mrs. _ When -sne_mothes-in Jaw. ts. “fault with -the way we're pre- paring baby's vegetables or deal- ing with Tommy’s defiance, what is it in us that finds her fault: finding disturbing? | Isri’t it our expectations of feu less performance trom ourselves? Of course jt is. If we didn't feel we should be able to provide per- ifect meals for baby and dlways ibe ready with the exact answer {to Tommy's defiance, our mother- in-law’s suggestion that our methods are faulty wouldn't dis- ‘turb us. ~ Once we dissolve this need, crit- ‘icism’s power to scare us dis- 'solves with it. To the mother-in-law iwho’s just criticized us, we just | Say cheerfully, “‘Look here, Moth- ‘er So-and-So, I do things wrong as often as I do them right. Per- |haps more often. I’m used to it —~ and it's high time you started esting used to it, ke ie | Students Stage ‘Yule Play tor McConnell PTA Children of McConnell] School presented the Christmas play, “The Little Lost Angel.” before members of the PTA Thursday afternoon. . * * * Youngsters from kindergar- ten through the sixth grades sang -traditional Christmas car- ols. Chairman of the program was Mrs. Francis Schell, as- sisted by Mrs. James Bayley, Mrs, Walter Bennett, Doris Eustace Thibo- Ernest Wil- } deau and Mrs. Hams, Mrs, Olive Hurst directed music and Joseph Buono pre- sented the school’s string or- chestra in several] patriotic and holiday numbers, at Jan. 7 Meet of ABWA Unit George A. Dondero wil] be guest speaker at the Jan 7 meeting of Tipacon Chapter of American Business Women's Association. He will discuss the St. Lawrence Seaway. its background and legislation and show his film, ‘The Fighth Sea." The group held its Christ- mas party Wednesday at the Rosewood drive home of Mrs. Henry Healy. Frances Phil- lips led games and there was a surprise visit from Santa Claus for the exchange of gifts. = Her new Pendleton has the 59 look jacket a wardrobe ‘must. Look ¢ tradition. Look, and look again, and new solids .. . vibrant colors . « textures and flannels... 6] : Beautifull y Berkeley Square 49’er, 10-20, $17. ton Slim Jim menswear flannel 7 As Wrapped Free $14.95, and Pendleton classic 34 ) : ; 34 to 42, $8.95. eS 2, HURON et TELEGRAPH Gift x Park Free Rear of Store x The new look and spirited freshness that’s in every- thing Pendleton this year mark the Pendleton 49’er for the new soft, natural shoulder line and classic detailing true-to- at new patterns and muted ones in all. Shown: 95, with Pendle- skirt, 10 to 20, length slipon, Open Every Night Until Christmas Sundey 2 to '5 Dondero to Talk. | Yule Program ' : re Z 3 2 7 Children of Hawthorne School gave a Christmas school. program for their parents: Thursday evening at the Pontiag Press Photo Portraying the Three Wise Men were, left to o right, Bobb) Stephens, Jim Falk and Danny Auten. ED Skit, Carols Highlight Emerson PTA Meéting The assembly of joined them in singing Christ- mas carols. Alcott School Students Give A skit, “Birth of Christ.” | students was presented by children at Emerson School for the Christ- Mas program, presented at a “Why the Chimes Ring’’ was the title of the Christmas pro- gram presented by children at Alcott School Thursday. Mrs. PTA meeting Wednesday after- Decorations were made by Royal Exline was musical di- noon. Taking part were Rob- 3Ce nn Mrs. Alexander rector. : ert Ochoa. Linda Thompson, Kirkpatrick's and Mrs. Lillie Walter's rooms. Kirk McLauchlin The program was planned * * * Gary Nor- Jane Danton and Mrs. Mabel man, Louis Campbell, Teddy oe tt 7 oS Outen were in charge of deco- Peak Edward Threet, Ray- under ‘ ne direction * max rations. Others directing and mond Koop and Bruce Mc- sem ners. Mrs. Laura ey — helping with costumes were Cullen Betty Waish, with Mrs. Evelyn ; ane 7 . | Woodw $s accompanist. Mrs. Lorena Adams, principal; | Others taking part in the codworth as sy Costumes were made by | Mrs. Merrell Stephens, Mrs skit were Gai] Baskett, Kath- mothers. Lewis Cornell, Mrs. Howard erine Mortimore, Carolyn . . Booker, Ruth Ann Harman, | Trent, Patsy Pritchard, Chris- aia whe cualee hed Lois. Buchbinder, Mrs. Alice tine Barton. Sharry Johnson a \\ rh) cA / gy ( | ry q /& . | & | .? t » remote | & TV N . \ tuning / ah ones «© ° « now only \ ‘ 2, S paPeaea carer seaen ea OOO $ QF ig ( | j | 5 Less a Trade-in N “al | GES i / Tune TV from your é Easy Chair, with no re wires Changes \ channels. Turns \ consolette- =) ‘"g@ ~—- sound off or on. j d . : LJ i} No Money Down With Trade It ° ob! |ner meeting on Jan. 8 when the! "= Remove ‘an old scent from — a perfume atomizer before re- - filling the container, Do this by filling the — pentane with rubbing alcohol. « 2: * kk, Let stand an hour, then re- fill with hot suds and rinse. thoroughly, Also wash cap and let both dry before fillixig with new perfume. Bug and insect extermina- tion is a 150-million-dollar-a- year business in the U. S._ a Music Co. 119 N. Saginaw © FE 5-822? rierpiliciacticer sittin tian iiaiaime PV ewest 19 - rut oa 5 av i ba % > | ' ; ~ ‘ ~ | AS PICTURED : cy 95 Wi || STORES 57 LBS. |}| FROZEN. FOOD ‘|| SMART NEW ‘BUILT-IN’ LOOK Dr. B. R. Bermon We Also ana Same Location Feature 17 N. Saginaw St. CONTACT \s . \— 2 FE 4-7071 LENSES ff . } | PRE-INVENTORY SALE . NOW 2 RCA Record Players 45EY2 $34.85 $19.95 ea. 3 RCA Record Players 45EY4 $54.95 $29.95 ea. i 2 VM All Speed Record Players $22.95 $14.95 ea. 3 Sparton 3-Way Port. Radios $32.95 $19.95 ea. 2 RCA Port. Radios (battery) $24.95 $14.95 ea. 2 Zenith Radios, push-button tuning ............... $39.95 $24.95 ea. § 2 Hamilton Beach Food Mixers $46.95 $24.95 ea. B® 1 Zenith 3 Band P’table Radio $89.95 $49.95 1 Sparton TV Console 21” .. $299.95 $99.95 1 Sentinel 21° TV with doors $399.95 $199.95 2 BCA Color TVs Models 21087815 ..... $524.95 $399. 95 ea. Stefanski Radio & Television 1157 W. Huron St. FE 2-6967 i See Our Selection of i. Grates. and Accessories 3127' W. Huron. - pee Christmas Gifts that warm the Hearth | Masterscreen Ne. 50-1. Gleaming solid brass cos epy with black or brass finished curtein. Basily ond avickly atteched te your fireplece. Ne heles te drill. Adjusts te fit yewr fireplace. Veriety of fin- ishes. Standard Mastersereen fits fireplece open- ings 26” te 30” high end 30” te 40" wide Fireset Me. 678. Four > preee black finish adds the modern touch. Set in- eludes shevel, brush and send” eenes Ornamentals Wide selection 4 sacle pela Weedhelder Me. B42. Attractive — of styles ° Cavy cast brass decorates your hearth...keeps waod handy negaiee amd Diack Le fire. Sturdy finish resists weer, Choice of and finishes. A Note of basket finish, with bleck hondle end feet. = Contemporary AE af Shr emooe bh eeaepompedece $13.00 Lexsery, 30" $18.50 f INLAND LAKES SALES OPEN DAILY FROM 9 A.M. TO 8 P.M. SUNDAY 10 A.M. TO 6 P.M. Shop Leisurely—-Park at Our Front Door .. With color For distinctive Christmas gifts to warm the heart as well as the hearth, see our complete _ selection of fireplace screens and accessories. Available in 14 frame finishes and 7 mesh curtain finishes. UNUSUAL FIREPLACES... We can screen them! | } . $29.00 fireset in sotin poker. gi Whatever its size or shape, we can supply custom built screens for your fireplace. 4 Bring your = firescreen problems to us... ‘FEderal 4-7121 | Free Delivery! Free Warranty! NORGE Automatic ‘Washer WITH TERRES CONTROL 1-Yr. Service Buy Now for Christmas Delivery NORGE Full Size DRYER Giant 21” Fan Provides Greatest Air Flow of Any Dryer Made! — 4 Rinses, Spin Dries 1 Fills, Washes, | and Shuts Off |. Automatically Specially Priced at Only 168 WITH TRADE FREE INSTALLATION ON GAS DRYERS COMPLETE LINE OF NORGE WASHERS “AND DRYERS ON DISPLAY No DOWN PAYMENT— 2 YEARS TO PAY Your Electrical Appliance Specialist 121 N. Saginw » Every Night, “i ee sae Chrisunas 5-618 at ve - _* | Se PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY,/DECEMBER*19, 1098 | ee eee . ae. THE TREASURED GIFTS THAT WILL MAKE EVERY DAY SEEM LIKE CHRISTMAS! - DIAMONDS TO BE EVER BRILLIANT and Priced to Suit Any Desire or Budget! gx » al ma, oS Ke ; 2 F ‘ . . | ; P i BEAUTIFUL . . . DEPENDABLE WATCHES of QUALITY! — eae Se _ = | Choose From Hamilton . . . Movado . . . Tissot . . . Girard wy Perregaux . .. Croton . .. and many of the World's finest PRICED FROM $19.50-$250 — DIAMOND WATCHES from $89.50 eeoeeeeee%e#eeeee#8e8eeee20e0808080 8008080808080 ®@ SUGGESTIONS for THE MAN in YOUR LIFE= i ooeoeoeoeoe3sc++*#eeeeeeee?ee SUGGESTIONS for THE LITTLE WOMAN (SFA); 3 + M4, tertaining Buy One Piece or a Complete Set : 7 T EF MI AT te Oo, ee THE IDEAL GIFT FOR THE HOME Crystal and China by Tiffin — Duncan Miller — Lenox — Castleton — Flintridge — Syracuse — Royal Jackson and Many Others. : We invite you to come in and browse around — We will be : pleased to just have you look, or we will offer suggestions, : . J F W EL E RS as you wish — There is no obligation — We will also he glad : a | “4 : a an . 16 W. Huron St. 1 ' FE 2.0294 to gift wrap your purchase at no added cost — Just say SILVER, BY INTERNATIONAL — TOWLE— CERTIFIED GEMOLOGISTS — REGISTERED JEWELERS GORHAM «- WALLACE — HEIRLOOM — ONE YT ane : : 7 LUNT — AND MANY OTHERS eS £ _ ° “Charge It’ or use our convenient budget payanent plan. ‘ AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY LE “ * & « . i 4 $ q $ 4 * ~ ay \ ‘Is Your-High School «ss ( Represented!" in The Press? = PONTIAC PRESS | » FRIDAY, DECEMBER 19. 1958 _- late Concert at Waterford Drama Pupils Prepare} ‘Face of Master Paddlin’ for Tuesday Assembly -|vacation, which begins Wednesday. |Marillyn McClintoc, secretary and| water ballet club, are secretly pre- They want to practice the steps/ Phil Frances, treasurer. paring for the group’s water show : : By JEAN REXFORD they have learned thus far. “KING AND I’ TRYOUTS slated for early spring. This year,| The Y-Teeng and Hi-Y clubs wil __ Waterford Township High School vocal and dramatic students. will present a Christmas assembly pro- gram Tuesday. The play, “The Farce of Mas- ter Paddlin,” will have a cast five. They are Bob Luther, endy Meyers, Connie Shafto, Tim Patterson and Jim Rutledge. Fred Gross will reail a Christmas story prior to the choir's three holiday songs, which will conclude the assembly. “Tilusions in Ice” is the name of a senior class-sponsored dance slated for 9 p.m; Dec, 27. Dance chairmen are Fran Spencer, deco-| . rations; Pat Heiple and Marvin Brackett, band and publicity: Martie Haviland, favors and tick- ets; Marcia Adair, refreshments and John Pilkington, cleanup. WTHS band and concert group presented its annual Christmas ‘concert Wednesday at the school. Thirteen boys were initiated into the Hi-Y Club reeently. They. in- clude Dan Chamberlain, Gary well, Dave Woodman, Wayne Zilka, Bob Newman, Roger Bomsta, Bob Ellixson, and Dave Bills. Others are Nick Garyet, Bud Cook, Lanny Younger, Harold Patterson and Jim Hetherington. The Future Nurses Club met last night to wrap gifts for. patients at the Oakland County Infirmary. NORTHERN’S TOP ROOTERS — Sporting ¥ -____ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, * Pontiac Presi Pho PCH ‘| Others ¥' By JOANNE WOOD. Pohtiac Central High School stu- dents who are members of the schdol’s newest club, the Ski Club, are looking forward to Christmas The club, under the direction of Mrs. Marjorie Jackson, is the first of its type in the school’s history, They meet every other Tuesday afternoon at Grampian To Dance in Snow, Ice at St. Michael's By SHELAGH O0’ROURKE “Winter Whirl” is the title of the dance scheduled for Dec. 27 and sponsored by the seniors of St. Michael’s High Scheoh Those attending will dance in artifical snow and ice fo the music of the Rythm Knites from 8:30 to 11:30 p.m, Admission to the semi-formal dance will be $1.50 a couple. Committee chairmen include, Gloria Barnowsky and Jim Zugras, decorations; Joan Gibb and Joe (Gallardo, tickets; Delores Ardelan and Shelagh O’Rourke, publicity. * * * are Judy Merithew and Carol Bauer, entertainment; Don Ginell, refreshments, and Barb Mc- Ginnis and Kathleen Donely, ar- rangemets. * * * Mrs. George Heacox, member Mountain for lessons on snowy slopes. Officers elected this week to lead the local club were Jim Ruth, pres- ident; Char Osmun, vice president: the Tryouts for the next production of the Playcrafters will be held Monday and Tuesday, according to Garth Errington, director, The group is planning to present ‘“The]: King and 1.” x *§ & . The Dolphins, Central’s female they will present it at Pontiac Northern's pool, Eight Central cheerleaders at- combine their musical talents next of the Pontiac Visiting Nurses Association, discussed the average day of a visiting nurse when she spoke to the Future Nurses Club. this week. fellow St. Others are Cynthia Sach, 323 E. Bev- erly St. (center), and Sharon Nichols of 97 E, Chicago Ave., both juniors. Senior Sherri Everett of 557 Lowell St., the group's captain, is kneeling. their new uniforms in a snappy cheering routine are these four Pontiac Northern High School varsity cheerleaders. The highest kicker at the left is Joan Humphrey, a senior, -of 86 E. Long- Northern's Rooters Don | New Red, White Uniforms ' reversible red or white skirts with the white outside. Northern -also has a mascot. |) He's been attending all of the \games. Frosty, a husky dog owned | * by Mary Lynn Mann, a sophomore, | . - is light tan with a dark brown : ok + face. He, too, wears the school’s Clarkston Clubs to Buy colors, a red jacket with a white Captain Sherri Everett, a sen- |..,,,, ed N. Clothes for Ne : y for, wears all white — a white * By JOAN PAYNE oe ee Ga boatneck sweater and white cot- Members of the Clarkston High) ton twill skirt. The other three School High-Y Club and Y-Teens! | - Saadeen td Hum. Club will take 16 needy students yermey cece eee et aia phrey, a senior, and Sharon shopping this weekend to purchase Nickels and-Grathin clothing for them with the $200} , chols . Sach, both | janiors, wear white sweaters and the group raised. = ss The clubs raised the money by) selling candy, Christmas trees and wreaths. BEGINNER’S LUCK — Jim Ruth of 2038 N. Hammond Lake Dr., a Pontiac Central High” ‘Se-t School senior, is having trouble trying to ski, but seniacs. All hope to he also has attractive instructors to assist him, holiday vacation, They are Joanne Walled Lake Collects 999 Books in Drive By SALLY COLLINS Frank Fink, a student at Walled Lake High School, has been award- ed “Horace,” a statue of a horse, for collecting the highest number | of books in the school’s drive. Frank, who collected 338 of the 999 books, was followed by Jim Owens and Karen Gammel, 272 and 167, respectively. In Time for... Christmas Giving Genuine Leather Lined ALLIGATOR Hand Bags +g” By BARBARA SHAVER The books will be distributed by Pontiac Northern High School's members of the Bibliophiles, the |first cheerleaders, selected recent- library club, to the boys at the St. ly, are now jumping, rooting and Francis Home before Christmas. |,icking in their new red and white uniforms. Necklaces and 14 K. Gold Jewelry special purchase | from the world’s largest importer < 23 to Choose From * * The new cheerleaders are com- posing cheers and routines for the spectators: The group, under the sponsorship of Betty Murphy, Eng- lish teacher and counselor, plans to sell sweatshirts, schol emblems and pins to raise money for the ‘uniforms, ‘TO DANCE TUESDAY | The senior class and Student} Council will co-sponsor the semi |forma] Christmas dance Tuesday ‘at Northern. At least one student Begin Holiday Tuesday Is Deadline | Vacation Today | Tuesday is the deadline fot stu- at Emmanuel dents at West Bloomfield High of the couple must attend North- School to apply to become a foreign By ANNE MERCER ern, . ~ % crohange, stunt eat sme |” Before Emmanuel Cristian High] The voc department wil pre thall, member of the screening |?" students began their Christ-| sent a program, “The Christmas |: committee. mas vacation today, student offi-\ctory,” at § tonight in the school’s |’ The student must be in the junior CCTs, Were busy preparing for @/new auditorium. Donations will be| | ™ | given to the choir robe fund. class, a United States citizen, in noliay pega re good health and have a good aca- The play, “Christmas Dreams demic record. Come True,’ was presented un- der the direction of Judy Carie and Sue Davidson. Today's high school page will] “The cast included Judy Span- be the ast of the year due tolgler, Jim Mercer, Kitty LaBresh, the closing of schools for a holiday |Lillie Wilson, Sonny Green and Bn Nan oh Sa ae Band Yule Program. at Avondale Tomorrow By CAROL MAZUREK Avondale High School band mem- bers will entertain their parents) Last Page This Year vacation. | Eddie White. and friends beginning at 8 p.m.) The next page wil] be published | x * * tomorrow at the group’s annual) January 9. | Anne Mercer gave a reading on Christmas concert. We wish you a joyful as well/the Swedish version of “‘The Night as relaxing Christmas and a safe|Before Christmas’ and the glee and successful new year, club, under the direction of : SYLVIA COLE Charles Joss, sang a medley of School Editor} Christmas carols. Included in the selections will be “A Christmas Festival,” ‘‘The Dam Busters,”’ ‘‘White Christmas,’’| ' “The Nations Prayer,” and “‘First|; Romanian Rhapsody.’ ; r% > Sat ome tae cana Bin S* , bs Coe Voice of Music | No. 557 a Stereofonic S Everyone gets pleasure from this gift! It’s authentic high fidelity —in an attractive, com- pact portable phonograph! Two speakers play records of all four speeds! Smart two-tone gray leatherette. priced fer aunasual savings What a wonderful opportunity te own er to give precious Imperial Cultured Pearl jewelry. Come in and see this magnific¢ent collection of necklaces, bracelets, rings. pins, charms and earrings —and all at this unusual special purchase price. Many of the pieces are combined with genuine rubles, sapphires and diamonds and only now ean they be yours at a price formerly paid for costume jewelry. lilustrated are only a few from our tremendous selection, From 4 5" : ee . - a VACATION BOUND — These four Emmanuel Christian High School :students plan to do quite a it of tobogganing during their holiday vacation. The school recessed today until after the first of the year. From left. are:, Ted Wickman, 2951 Pontiac Press Phot Glenbore St., Keego Harbor, senior; Sharon Smith, 1407 Bielby St., junioy; Nancy. Portin, 264 N. Johnson St,, sophomore, and Bill Pittman, 3975 Motorway Dr., senior, © Assured Satisfaction LEONA R D'S © Guaranteed Quality i ~ FE 4-4503 ate 20 NORTH PERRY STREET (DOWNTOWN PONTIAC) — Sana - eae Jo eee sai coral ~ Vist film of his momentous life in that- industry. La THE PONTIAC rare FRIDAY. DECEMBER 19, 1958, E eMil NEW YORK — Cecil B. DeMille, TT years young, is in town with his! pot. new -film, ‘The Buccaneer,” the euth cal be Ones tel ou s eri got fired by Paramount the first time I made ‘The Ten Com- The swashbuckler -pits Charlton|™andments,’ the -keen-eyed vet. Heston, as Gen. Andrew Jackson, against a fur-bearing Yul Brynner, as Jean LaFitte. In there also are | Pocket. eran said, pacing the floor and rattling the silver eoins in_ his “The next time I made it, Charles Boyer, Claire Bloom, Inger well, that was a little different. Stevens, and costly and elena The picture has now grossed reproductions of the Battle of New | 596-000,000 and it has played hardly Orleans, * * * ' He likes this one, and the Para- mount publicity men hovering in the next room of DeMille’s Plaza Hotel -suite would have wished the titan talked more about it to the PP od — gs > gr = Pe yigelace eee pee American Academy of Dramatic| bands when he takes power? /like i we and poses Dpople. 12s eee Soe cA 158 Oakland “FE 4-1515 very — Art, circa 1900, had interrupted) The Boy Scouts . . . all youth (found the Russian, people peo-|} Frozen Brine Shrimp in Stock ‘til 9:00 Mond: id a ia te hey chose ap 4 ~~ iness se —— eet = his work for this interview. movements. Well, by God, the ple, provided I could talk to them at All Times Open ‘tl 9:06 Mepday and Fridey. Free'Resking in Rect things that are a part of this |a poy mee er lls aoe mus work aw tls nent picture, | =" didn’t yawn after that!” jin the middle of a wheat field.” a fifth of the available theaters. It will do better than $100,000,000.”" It sounded to the reporter like a bold assertion that movies are better, or at least bigger, than ever. “Of course they’re bigger,” he said. ‘Take that box in the corner le’s S Lateit Epic Out, R Read single showing of 4&3 nun.; Bunk. A big film could never be shown on present-day sets. sequence from ‘The Ten‘ Com- mandments” on THAT screen!” He had made his point with great emphasis, but plainly he doesn’t underestimate the guile of the toll-TV people. “Of course,”’ DeMille added, “they’ ll probably provide big screens for their clients one of these days ., .” x « * There was a book spread on his coffee table, portions of the opened pages marked with red ink. Cecil DeMille, actor, author, entepreneur, with a career that reaches back in the theater to the “Could you imagine The Exodus | Sir Robert Baden-Powell, foun. der of the Boy Scouts. “A man yawned when I told him that in Atlanta the other night,” DeMille said. levelly. . “Yawned! |So I drew him a few word pictures of Britain's wars in the Sudan and in South Africa, and of the de- fender of Maleking for seven ter- century, and how the terrible fact dawned on him, as he lay in a Pit, that a greater and ghastlier|.n4 institutions than the Soviet ‘Union. He has seen more of the war would follow, and that the| boys who would be called upon) to fight it must be prepared tol, face their ordeal. “What's the first thing a tyrant or a dictator destroys or dis- « Leukemia Up in Japan rible months at the turn of the) y for Next se hte a that’ts. ‘tege ee ec'dhs “What's x ths gatacs bepond Gel one?” we a “T call it Project x." ‘DeMille the United . States said. ake we ee DeMille, who is a keen st world had better let China sleep, udent|. About: three hundred years of history, believes that a warning/ one-third of the United States oe of Napoleon, to the effect that the | covered by tangled swamps, is taking terrible shape and sub- stance. He agrees with his friends Churchill, MacArthur and ‘Ade- nauer that China may represent more of a menace to, free men U gai than gnost men, by the) ee Walked 1,200 miles down the Volga back in 1933,” he recalled. “Mrs. DeMille went by boat. J BRENDEL'S . To Work Like New! —————S 21 and 24-INCH ; GE— MUNTZ— MOTOROLA | SYLVANIA — HOTPOINT — PHILCO. . ELECTRO MART FE GIVE You just couldn’t give ‘sorb odors. Copper . Covers. A LEE TIME WEPEH THES 7-PIECE PIENNEY-REV ERE FAMOUS COPPER-CLAD STAINLESS STEEL! VAPOR-SEAL COVERS! more impressive cookware than this renowned maker’s! Perfect for mother, young homemaker, the couple or family you know —even the hobby chef himself will love it. Heavy ‘gauge stainless steel keeps flavors in, won’t ab- clad bottoms, Vapor-seal covers mean more nutri tioxs cooking. Heat-retard give her MORE for the home| and save more too! te ae 1 Fp GIk I y Spy! k 4 @ | e Includes: 16-inch skillet with cover [ 3-quart saucepan with cover 2-quart double-beller insert | 2-quart saucepan hanging same all boxed ready for giving! Sunbeam - TOASTER 3% -The- only completely . automatic toaster, bread lowers automatically, no levers to push! Toast rises silently! Adjusts itself automatically to kind of bread toasted. Sunbeam PERCOLATOR | i Finest automatic perco- lator made—copper with heavy nickel and chrome. plating inside and out. Strength selector dial. and signal lights. In 8 and 10-cup models. ‘assures you years of Controlled Even Heat FRYPAN 13° Makes everything taste 1 more delicious. Choice of | 3 sizes. Covers optional. } Heavy gauge aluminum and -fine workmanship service! 11”. .16.88 Lid. .3.88 |} 12”. .18.88 Lid. 3.88 -PENNEY'S MIRACLE MILE ONLY! || ‘STORE OPEN EVERYDAY 10:00 Al M. to 9:00 P. M. Member F.D.LC. 1 CHRISTMAS CLUB NOW... and put aT the gifts you'd like to place under the tree next December .. . There’s a size club for your budget. EVERY TWO WEEKS DEPOSIT 32 | $4 | S10 | $20 Branches at W. Huron at Tilden... N. Perry at Glenwood . » +. WallediLake .. . Union Loke ... Lake Orion... Mil NEXT NOVEMBER YOU'LL RECEIVE: National | Bank $100 | $250 | $500 Open your club at our main bank or any one of our conveniently located branches POoOntT tI! A € i iterd Harbor Waterford . .'. Bloomfield Hills —_-—~— A 4 sreceseam bd we OR ON oe — oe SE see ICS THE PONTTAC 5 PRESS. FRIDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1958 ~ Knit. Shirts for All Men “es pe %. » ae ». ® K » t Rk. i * ceerecereceeneeete DOWNTOWN | -PONTIACE® RRR aR A KOR EG ee Sf 8 2 # Has 4 j ee wed Bd obs bb 86 bd 1hd od BOYS’ or GIRLS’ 20” BICYCLE with training wheels $25 | * Heavy Duty Frame Reg. $29.95 A Asal al led thd th areata} a lh dhe cB db Bd Bd : & we % ; 7 Whether he's 16 or 60, OSMUN’S has the knit a & * New Popular Middleweight Tire Size shirt that’s sure to please him on iu ston bh os a : orn... . Sturdy washable cottons, soft orlons, ric . a wool biends and fine imported wool worsteds LR ae Adjustable Seat and Handle Bars . make up our extensive list. Sizes, small, medrum, 4 ant large and extra large. ‘ya i %- %* Coaster Brake ) ry i KNIT SHIRTS 3% & Boy's in Red — Girl's in Blue $4.95 ™ $16.50 Compromise on Quality” sooioinioiio sci icioicte x 8. Le wach 5 Par x Downtown Pontiac Tel-Huron Center x Open Until 9 P.M. Every Evening ‘til Christmes es 2 % Kok doko eK Se Se ee ‘ c ; “Shop the Stores That Never oh. & Waite's Toyland .. . Downstairs 30% to 60% Discounts 24” — 4-Cycle 1959 * 3-H. P. Clinton Engine * Standup Recoil Stact. = *4ge Gient 24” LAWN EER Reg. $29.95 *16” - SUPER BARGAIN CENTER 178 NORTH SAGINAW at OAKLAND Open Every Night ‘til 9 P.M. ee eS Truckloads of Toys Arriving Daily Truckloads of Toys Arriving Dally POWER MOWERS — as as & THE GIFT of THOUGHTFULNESS Here’s a new, novel way to give a gift he really wants—a gay miniature hat box .. . hanging brightly on the Christmas tree! The tiny hat and certificate inside will be the tip-off that a Stetson Hat awaits him. He chooses from our vast selection of styles and colors. From $10.95. Dickcinsons ed SAGINAW at LAWRENCE 272 W. Maple Birmingham a Toys Arriving Daily 30% to 60% Discounts a Truckload With Cover Big 21 Gol. are | | Stainless. L GARBAGE 4 i “oan Si | FLATWARE | Bissell Shampoo Master SUPER BARGAIN CENTER .178 NORTH SAGINAW at OAKLAND Open Every Night ‘til 9 P.M. fi) Ne eid 3 Truckloads of Toys Arriving Daily 30% to 60% Discounts & 30% to 60% Discounts e- A taf @ With a Sallan Diamond + EEE EEE ee eee eee ee ee eT EEE Take a Year to Pay at No Extra Cost as $20 Giant Reg. $6 Reg. $6 > PING PONG oes ; ee D OLL The Famous Cute Bubbling No Carryi oe Me Nw eer ice Charge’ BABY DRINKING | MONKEY 8 LEGS $ No Carrying Charge Yo Service Charge ) ° a Rooted Heir | BEAR NOW SUPER CHRISTMAS SPECIAL SUPER BARGAIN. CENTER. 178 NORTH SAGINAW at OAKLAND - Open Every Night ‘til 9 P.M, 7 sass , sae ‘SUPER BARGAIN CENTER .178 NORTH SAGINAW at OAKLAND Open Every Night ‘til 9 P. M. Open ’Til 9 P.M. Each Evening JEWELERS — é 88 N. SAGINAW | & spnennnnnopannsssasADaneannnnnnnne ~ 66,000 PARK : 2 "SPACES! | UNTIL. : CHRISTMAS! ® LOOK AT THESE. _ VALUES! > a % = : 3 ia * SPECTACULAR CHRISTMAS GIFT VALUE " SAVES vou eT rms Ve ALL NEW 4 SPEEI RECORD | » PLAYER - ere = soa Ss 2995 VALUE z7 Tad r MONEY DOWN 50° A e,yoney oom Look at the Wonderful Features: Plays with fine % Compact, but what performance. quality true tone. % Unique step-in on 2 tone cabinet edges tor perfect lid closing. % Featherweight tone-erm; retractable pivot. —— - % Clip for anchoring tene' arm while in transport. % Universal sapphire-tipped needle % High goin crystal cartridge. *% Unitized master control; Off-en and volume. % Self-contained adaptor for 45 rpm records. ShawS "MICHIGAN'S LARGEST JEWELERS" 24 NORTH SAGINAW ST. Pontiac State Bank Seis ar whd STM TCH COED E REET H TEESE ETE H ES ERE EEOROERESEERE OST ED, you can play carols by : Christmas morning! pede eee ee ee ee ee) learn on a LOWREY organ at our studios | eaeed to wait. n to learn to play. You can take private lessons on the Lowrey sto our studios. Use our quiet, private practice rooms as much as you like at no charge. It's fun—and easy—to learn to play*the Lowrey. Priced from .~.... $995 FREE ORGAN LESSONS — For Stereo Phonograph ZENITH and RCA % New and Used Pianos * Used Grand Pianos «- * Used Spinets and Apartment Size —— : * Gift Certificates DOWNTOWN PONTIAC” 18 E. Huron St. ¢ Open Every Evening ‘til 9 P, M, ‘Until (Christmas _ an ra aes 0. Come in, ask about it. e. - start learning now. You don’t have to own ah. PEderal 40566. | aed Je ra =: if #, ee ee Tikocbee Plan to Stage Play ‘at Rest Haven Technicality Blocks Referendum Attempt By LEE WINBORN Staff Writer, Pontiac Press SHELBY TOWNSHIP a ! y 1 \t GREEN LAKE — The Brownie school. .in the passage of the re-zoning Scouts of Troop 88 will present a lamendment by the Shelby Zoning play. titled “Chmstmas Dolls.” for — Some ‘and Township boards on Nov. 12 elderly people at the Green Lake 12. el £5 Shelby Township home owners The istien steied thai the” Rest Haven Home at 4 p.m. Sun- so gienes petitions asking for a 4, ing amendment, permit, > The girls will sing a number refer ote on the proposed |... Sone * of Christmas carols fo ‘ir finale eferéndum vote on the proposed ting aute racing en the Curtiss- yf Chi Sumas 4 arols for thetr finz auto race track in their area have Wright rty, weul@ become € * * prope ~ @ . = been left holding an empty bag i In years past the Green Lake : : : effective teday, This is legally - ss * - true, Reberts said, but the law The leaders of the auto race requires that petitions be filed track opposition movement Were: within 30 days after passage of under the erroneous impression) the amendment — in other words that they had until 4 p.m. yester-. pee. 12. Troop Leader Mrs. Bernard Cor-| day to file their petitions. The Shelby Homeowners’ Coun- ' aire of 6344 Commerce Rd. said For 2a month they mk a cil, the group which circulated the vs rs ~~. seeking support in an ef te ‘petitions, is now screaming ‘‘dirty | resent The play will be presented under) <= question ved "E politics,” declaring the legal point the direction of Mrs. Florence Neal, the Curtiss-Wright Corporation that caused their efforts to go for of 6280 Commerce Rd. | Brownies made favors available nate their he is a new member of the teach- known the principal there for more staff,” Scharer said. than 18 years. : caused cross many times since Gentges|of becoming a coach afid take up entered kindergarten at Elmwood teaching. In 1957, he received his each Christmas for the Rest Haven ;Uume residents, but they decided to do-|Elmwoed School principal. Now he 7 AUGHT IN REMUS time and talents thisjis principal of Avondale year by staging their show instead, | High. looking for a teaching position in} a ee es ee Ss ee Saat xPupil | Teaches ae ey all through eshosk, so when he | ated wo me or «teaching has! mend him for a position on may AUBURN HEIGHTS — ‘Although the young couple moved to 7344 §, Francis St:, Pontiac. “I was supposed to go into the Army last summer, but then I found out I didn’t have to report for duty until Feb. 1,” Gentges From high school, Gentges went ‘said, “Mr, Scharer was kind * * * _ on to Central Michigan College at enough to give me this job for A series of coineidences has'Mt. Pleasant. While there he de-/JUSt one semester,” he added. the two men’s paths to cided to give up his origina) idea WIFE ALSO TEACHER ng staff at Avondale Junior High! Jack Gentges, 23, last spring, 1 was glad te recom: lee Lighting Sing _AUBURN HEIGHTS. ~~ For. the ‘| first time, a :Christmas tree ene ‘ing ceremony and community sing will be held here tomorrow night. The event, to be held at Auburn Heights Park from 7:30 to 9 p.m., is s) by American. Legion */ Post 143, the Lions Club and the ‘Pontiac Township firemen, accord- ing to Donald Dodman, legionaire. Santa Claus will arrive in 4 sleigh and candy, coffee and do- nuts will be available for children and adults respectively. x * * The event will replace the an- nual Christmas party which had } Mrs. Gentges is a teacher at! ‘Longfellow Elementary School,; |Pontiac. She will éontinue teaching | |until June while her husband is taking a basic officer's course in | The broad- shouldered youn g Baltimore, Md. Then she will join icivies and history teacher taught|him at his assigned duty station. schoo! in Remus last year while| Scharer says he’s “delighted’” shis wife, Shirley, was in her senior |to have his former student on his iyear at Central’ Michigan. After staff “even though it's only for a Mrs. Gentgés received her diploma, toe ief period.” Elementary School in 1940. At that|bachelor of science degree in edu-| Lawrence Scharer was the cation, Junior; i ? * * * Last spring when Gentges was the Pontiac area, he contacted Seharer. and an old friendship was, renewed. te a vete. The ¢75-acre tract is located between Mound road and | Van Dyke, and 22 and 2%3-Mile | reads, to them. oe “All we wanted was - time hw the issue further and let ee cipal recalled with a smile, “but “1 still remember Jack in | grade school. He used to make his eights upside down,”’ the prin- property to permit aute racing (naught should have been explained It was not until’ they received|pepple decide,” a council spokes- a letter trom township. attorney, man said today. +t Walled Lake. “a Parade Also Features : Girl Selected as ‘Miss Merry Christmas’ WALLED LAKE te town jn — Santa Claus will come a parade. Santa and his court will ride in two wagons, each drawn by six ponies from the Ivory Polo Farm, Accompanying them will be the VFW color-bearers, the Walled Lake Senior High School Marching Band, the Dryer sis- ters, champion baten twirlers from Orchard Lake, eight two- | F. Roberts, that they: learned the deadline had already yctere wa cn adviascs ca Now 4 passed. It was 4 p.m. last Friday. | favoring the te-sening af the Cur. The misunderstanding arose * tiss-Wright. property by a 2 to 1 from the legal terminology used majority. | It was after this vote that the ‘ : Shetby Zoning and Township F boards acted to approve the re- Madison Group zoning amendment. . Soon alter that the residents op- ® posing the track began meeting tomorrow afternoon, nccompanied| each week to report on their work | »y 35 girls selected from the ele Ing CCd in rallying support to their cause areas schools in the distrigt. * * * | One of the girls will be named = e had 885 homeowners’ signa- Miss Merry Christmas and occupy Disgruntled Residents aren on our petitidns, and we the seat of honor next to Santa ' Circulate Petitions On ‘could have had hundreds more.’ in the parade which will leave ‘Joseph M. Bailey, one of the lead- Lakeside Market at 2 p.m, Mayor, 5 Councilmen ers of the opposition to the track. ‘\said today. MADISON HEIGHTS — Petitions; «4 jo¢ of people who voted for demanding a recall election against! the track changed their minds Mayor George S. Hockey and five! gue te opinions we received trom of the six council members are) mortgage companies, veterans’ being circulated here by @ rouP organizations and traffic and po- teagan recent: lice officials,” Bailey said. About soety fairly new residents; “Our trouble was we believed in: horse teams of Roman riders, of the community are behind the °VT elected officials and township KF attorney. We were told we had 30 also from the Ivory Farm, movement to oust the officials. days ae publication to file,’ unit of thee Oakland County The group has registered dis- (Bailey asserted. Mounted Sheriff's Posse and the gust with the running battle be- ; « & | Walled Lake Fire Dept. tween council members and for- | The final passage date and the’ The parade will pass through | ‘mer City Manager Jack P_ Sweif- (day the amendment was to go into town, on Main street @nd turn) rer. Petitioners fee] that the council, te same, he added. "Plaza Shopping Center, and on to with the exception of one mem-| “We are guilty pf not having had the Junior High School where | ber, Billy S. Huffman, was shov- !ega! advice. wé admit, We as-'Santa will dismount at the Christ- ing. Sweitzer around, making him ‘sumed that our township officials mag scene panel. prepared by the hire people promiscuously, it was Were honest and above board.” Senior High arts department un- stated today by former Mayor |$aid Bailey. He went on to explain der Mrs, James Lobdell, The pa-| Lloyd Ferguson. ‘that the letter from the township’ rade will then return 4o-Lakeside x ve * }attorney was dated Dec. 15, three santa will receive visitors at Ferguson said he has signed one days after the deadline. the Junior High site until 8 p.m ofthe petitions, but maintains) “We did go ahead and file Saturday. On Monday and Tues- he had nothing to do with its} our petitions yesterday anyway. | inception. The petition was also’ but the clerks receipt stipulated to 8 signed by a defeated candidate for that they were filed late,” the day from 1 to 4 p.m. council, Mrs. Virginia Solberg. | council spokesman added. ' Whie Santa is on duty, groups . of carolers from schools and local Sweitzer resigned Dec. 1 from | “It was an honest mistake On Qhurches will present programs of the city manager pest on the ‘our part and we hope that the Christmas music. The entire pro- request of the council, which (township officials will realize this, gram is sponsored by the Walled decided he jacked the ability jand make an effort to recognize | ake Chamber of’ Commerce. reqiiired for the job. ‘the work we've put into this is- Huffman was the only member 9" " he went on to say. ; ef the council who did not. favor i..." obstacles to the Curtiss. Sweitzer's removal. \Wright race track apparently re- Jail Sees Overflow imoved, company officials are mov- TOMS RIVER, N. J. (UPI) — . |ing ahead with their plans for de- There were 72 prisoners in the Romeo Fire Department ivelopment of the property for Ocean County Jail, which has a legal capacity of 28, so Sheff Har- ry Roe boarded out the overflow ‘in prisons of five” other counties major auto races, preparatory to Banquet Set Saturday | presenting the entire proposition ROMEO — Members of the to the home office in the east. Romeo Fire Dept. will enterta{) ————————— their families at the annual: Christmas party and banquet at 7 p.m. Saturday in the Fire Hall; on South Rawles street. Safita Claus will be on hand to give gifts to the youngsters, and games will be played. Some 50 to 60 persons are ex- pected to attend the affair, accord e : ing to cochairmen Ed Kleinhans HAIN SAWS and William Herfert Dryden Vets to Stage e 1t" Party for Children cd cae = DRYDEN — The Dryden Vet- . ©@ Diaphragm Carb. erans Group will stage its annual 7 ra =) Christmas party for all children —— ONLY 10 OF THESE —— in the community at 6:30 p.m Monday in the Fire Hall on Vain It'll have to be ona first-come, first-served basis with only 10 of these saws available! These are street. Jack West, chairman of the all brand new—not used—at this ridiculous low price! event. said the program will be highlighted by the appearance of NEW BATTERIES FROM $9.95 EXCHANGE Santa Claus who will hand out a bag of candy to every youngster. | Use Your Credit OPEN EVENINGS — OPEN SAT. and SUN. Another feature of the evening's. L E E’S SALES and. entertainment will be group carol SERVICE , 921 Mt. Clemens St. ; \ Christmas tree to be set up in the: Greatest Bargain hall for this special eae Anywhere! a ( SpeEOWAY TTT UFO oe Ry FUEL OIL FOR PLEASANT WINTER LIVING - ee ee ee . f ; 4 Oakland fool 8 ‘ & Pain ’ "te Sess singing around a gaily decorated | FE 3-9830 ay ae ee | a lot has happened to both of jhe played seftball under Scharer, jathletic director when effect should have been one and onto Pontiac Trail to the Maple! day he will be on hand from 95:30) 30 p.m. and again on Wednes. , _us since those days."’ * * * When he was in the lower grades | \Gentges was a safety patrol cap- tain and consequently had to work closely With his principal. Later, when the persenable voung teacher was @ seventh and eighth grader, “so T knew him pretty well then,” Gentges said, FRIEN DSHIP RIPE NS The friendship ripened at Avon. | dale High School were Scharer was Gentges, \ as a student, was a member of the track and football teams. mile | administrator | ey | aaa him Ge “Jack excelled in the run,”’ the school bible ha Burglars Break In DETROIT WW — Burglars, appar- lently seeking a hidden safe, broke ,into the suburban. Grosse Pointe |Park home of George S. Fitzger-| ald, a Teamsters Union attorney, Thursday. Fitzgerald, vacationing; jin Key Biscayne, Fla., told police} lby phone that he has no safe in = | house. Pentiac Press Phote BACK ON HOME GROUNDS — Eighteen years ago Jack Gentges, left, entered kindergarten in the Avondale school system. This fall he returned to the system, this time as a teacher of civics and history in the Avondale Junior High School. Going over new assignments with their teacher are Roger Bauer and Karin Walters, both 13. Who proud to own and proud to give. almost incredible savings. We urge an early visit! e@ Coated 3-Element Lens @ Brand New in Polaroid Land Camera @ Reg TERMS OF COURSE! Webcor Record Player $72.98 @ i-Speed Changer 5-PC. CHROME DINETTE Formica Top Table | $ 4 Plastic Washable Chairs BIG BEDROOM BARGAINS! Reg. 189.00 Double Dresser and Bed. Grey Panmeenny: 8 finish. Dust proof, center guided drawers 85 $ I 14 Reg. 199.00 Double Dresset,. chest and bookcase bed. Maple finish. Complete ; , 128 Reg. 209.00 Double Dresser Suite. Sea Mist finish, cheat and § 1 58 Dual Purpose Sofas Many different styles and designs. Hide- Away Beds, Soft Lounges and Studio Couches, Prices low as with chest and bookcase bed Reg. 219.00 Limed Oak Bedroom. Double presen chest, and bookcase bed .... Reg. 289.00 Mink Mahogany Deuple Dresses bookcase bed. Must be seen S Christmas Values! SHOP WITH CONFIDENCE THAT YOU GET MORE FOR YOUR MONEY!: Slashing price reductions_is always a tradition at MODERN AGE at Christmas time. The quality of the merchandise is the kind you'll be The variety is wide, and presents @ unique opportunity to purchase nationally known products .. . at ~ IMAGINE! SOFA rice matcning q Mammoth gift special! Massive, durable nylon fabric. Soja by Day—Bed by Night been previously sponsored by the)” ithree groups. Files for JP Nomination in Farmington Township FARMINGTON TOWNSHIP — Robert H. Nelson, lawyer and certified public accountant, an nounced today he is seeking the Republican nomination for’ Farm- ington Township Justice of the Peace. i * © * | Petitions are being circulated in ;his behalf for the primary election ito. be held Feb. 16. Nominees \selected at that time will run in|! ; the April election for one of the itwo J. P. positions to which the |toewnship is entitled. | The expiring term is that of Allen C. Ingle. James P. Lawson |has several years remaining . to jhis term of office. Dryden Music Groups to Present Program DRY DEN—Three Dryden musi- cal aggregations will join in pre ‘senting a Christmas program at ‘8 p.m. auditorium The Dryden High School Chorus | and Band will perform, in addition | ito the 25-member’ Community ‘Chorus which will be featured in a’ ishort cantata, “The Birth ‘Christ.”’ | All three groups in the finale, ‘‘Three |Christmas.”’ | The entire production is under the direction of Richard Krebs, ' Dryden Community Schools music| jteacher. Songs for | Total area of Brazil is greater ‘than that of the continental U, S. ‘by about 250,000 square miles. jin Ortonville Rite ~ ORTONVILLE coe Newly-elected officers of - Ortonville Masonic Lodge, No, 339,. F&AM, wil] be installed during’ public ceremonies Saturday evening in the Masonic Temple on South street. 5 -@° £¢ * The installation will follow. a lodge dinner to be served at 6:30. Edwin Ulshafer is the new wor- shipful master. Other officers are Richard Blue, senior warden; Ben Westerby, junior warden; Gaylen Whipple, secretary, and Clarence Kier, treasurer, «x. * * Others to take office are Frank- lin Hitchcock, senior deacon; Kir+ by Bess, junior deacon; .Dane Guis- hert and Burl Glendenning, stew- ards; and Past Master Parker Jarvis, tiler. Commerce Masons to Install Officers COMMERCE — The Commerce Lodge No. < ree. will hold its 100th ann ation of new officers at 8’p.m. Saturday in the Masonic Temple at 4825 Broadway St. Ceremonies will be open to Tuesday in the high school| will take part | the public. y *x* * * Wilbert J. Chynoweth Sr. of 3431 Oakleaf Rd. Orchard Lake, will be installed as worshipful master. Others to be installed are Earl Gotham, senior warden; Charles Graves, junior warden; Carlton Richmond, treasurer: Arthur Robert W. Thom- ison, chaplain; Lawrence Ridley, senior deacon: Gilbert Richmond, junior deacon; and John Nemyer, .'Hancel Boatright, Keith. Johnson, Elmer Barnuin, stewards: Ralph jBunting, marshal; Max Francis, Lawrence A. Morse, pianist. Ward, secretary; ityler; { ‘Women Jurors Present of Cake to the Courtroom LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP)—There was a cake in the courtroom after Mrs. Josephine Foley and Mrs. Margaret Cull served as jurors | They liked the work so well each baked a cake for Criminal ‘Court Judge Thomas Knight and the court officers. : They said they started their first jury duty with “fear and trepidation’ but soon changed their minds. Ne a) , > 2 A — eal * LOUNGE CHAIR. NYLON FABRIC. Reg. 219.00 ‘ Vow Only ~ ‘Reg. 839.59 MOTOROLA PHONO 4-Bpeca Pertabie , $ Centineous Range Control 119 luxurious sofa with 36 f : : © Reg. 1.95 value are! eatrants ultra smart fashion detail- } e Wei Ais C Cartens « i . @ Limited Quantity - ng and matching lounge sie cfd Ball 7 ‘oint Pen a Reg. $109.95 chairs. Choice of colors on © Gitt Packaged ‘Parker T-Ball Jotter DECORATOR TABLE LAMPS Open Modern, period and Every contemporary styles Evening in this fabulous sell- $ ing! In China, Bristol ‘til 9 P. M. Glass or Ceramic. A fine selection as low as Use Our Easy ‘Lay Away Plan! LS _ WE SELL SPECIAL BEDDING BUYS Reg. 39.50 INNERSPRING MATTRESS . . Reg. 49.50 INNERSPRING MATTRESS . Reg. 59.50 INNERSPRING MATTRESS .. Reg. 69.50 INNERSPRING MATTRESS .. Reg. 79.50 INNERSPRING MATTRESS .. Choose from such famous brands: Sealy. Serta, Simmons. Restokraft, Grenadier, Restonic. etc. FURNITURE - THE FINEST GIFT OF ALL! AT PRICES LOWER THAN EVER!! [ee 16.00 26.00 30.00: .. 38.50 . 44.00 oe see es BRAND NAMES FOR LESS TWENTY-Stx = ae PON TIAC : PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1958 a Loe ‘ "Shelby Track Petition Ruled Too L Hits as ves nel | - te ee ee ies = |. THE PONTIAC PRESS PRIDAY, DECEMBER 19,'1958- ae "TWENTY.SEVEN : ; “ s “ = a "i : 2 | i ' ar £ | | ae 3 a rs Babi Wr : Ride S : Es , : ; ‘ . | ° . . * * > 7 ? and , a ‘ the e ¢ Deaths in Pontiac and’Nearby Areas (es%-xerz*. Once-Proud Bulganin Crawls. 2is=7se3 Mrs; Charles H: (Cosa E.) Hamp-|&: ba PF Ashley Jr.,.of, Milford; a sister|chirps loudly'as her nest goes by ‘shire,,86, of 34 E. Longfellow st,,| _ Service will be at 2:30 p.m. Mon-|and three grandchildren. every day. ‘ i died unexpectedly yesterday while/2Y trom the Harvey A. Neely | aoe Se visiting her son, Charles, of 2005 _ Dexter Rd. She was a member of the North- Funeral Home. 16540 Meyers. Rd., Detroit, with burial in Grand Lawn Cemetery, - bert R.; a daiighter, Mrs,’ Noble FRANK MATAS | LAPEER TOWNSHIP — Frank Matas, 69, of 1466 W. Sutton Rd., the “dashboard of Sam Dawson's The wren built: the nest under By. THOMAS P. WHITNEY = cfse directly ta the people, whom Lazar-Kaganovich was running a AP Foreign News Analyst "Sick, tired old Nikolai Bulganin or Big Red Boss Khru he is wooing with promises that industrial and agricultural innova- factory. ‘ + ke wm. bring up enough party supporters ” to outvote and exile them. Bul- os : car. And everyday Dawson drives ; — ~ Community Church, the WCTU DONALD CHAMBERS died this morning at Lapeer Coun-|his car to work. groveled before Nikita Khrush-|tions will mean better living. Bulganin came out of semire-|ganin then turned ‘coat and ended 3 Order of Eastern Star of North — Donald Chambers,|ty General Hospital Yollowing a ‘** @ *% chev Thursday and begged to be ts * ot tirement in southern Russia to/up backing the’ winner, — rears 30, of 79 Dennison St., died thisjheart attack. , ,_ | ‘The -wren is always waiting!allowed to live out his days in| Bulganin’ fessi speak agair committee | himself lasted only a few m Mrs wan S teety ee morning in. Pontiae General Hos-| Muir Brothers Funeral Home isiwhen the car returns. The nest peace. : shreckchev'e we watchs om oa where os = > - cnt longer, iis = George Stiles, both of Pontiac, and pital of injuries received in a)making funeral arrangements. —_/has two baby wrens in it. Bulganin admitted to .the Com- |fiye-man : voice, As premier from 1955 until} He plunged from pPageag . Mrs. Walter Davis of Fairgrove; two sons, Charles FE. of. Pontiac Township and Cecil J. of Pontiac; 15 grandchildren: 32 great-grand- truck-train accident Monday in Avon Township. Funeral arrangements will be announced later, BASIL TOTTINGHAM JR. WATERFORD TOWNSHIP Service for Basi! Tottingham Jr., one-day-old son of Mr. and Mrs. — Deaths Elsewhere munist Party Central Committee that he had conspired against the Soviet Premier said Premier party. The 63-year-old former: “antiparty group” are dégigned to discredit al] who pose Khrushchev, : Confrite speeches were one of MOBILE, Ala. (AP)—Carl- Fox, last March, while party boss Khrushchev actually ran the country, Bulganin’s stout, goateed| figure became world famous. s ‘He traveled to India, Britain’ director-of the state bank to of a regional economic council at Stavropol, a post he indicated he till held. ‘Nikita Khrushchev was right in| the devices used by Stalin to dis- accusing him and four other ousf-|credit his opponents, They were ed leaders of reactionary activi-'a prelude to execution then. None ties. jof the antiparty five is kmown to MRS. HERBERT RK. COGGER " WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP — Service for Mrs. Herbert R. (Mary) children: a brother, Duncan Me-/. Vean of Pontiac; and a sister, Mrs. Mary Craig of Royal Oak. ‘Service will be at 11 a.m. Satur- and other countries with Khrush- chev. He posed for pictures with President Eisenhower in Geneva Charms Man Into Jail —. RALEIGH, N.C. = ‘The fel- Basil Tottingham of 140 Hospital 95 ceneral solicitor of the Gulf. Rd. was held 2 p.m. today timobile & Ohio Railroad Co. since Sharpe Funeral Home, Clarkston-j1949 “ied Thursday after a short day from the Moore Chapel of the | COBe?: 75, of 1120 Mi Heights| Burial was in Lakeview Cemetery. |iiness, He 4oined the legal staff, kk * & ‘have met a fate worse thaniin 1955 and signed numerous jow looked at the pretty police- Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home, Au- Dr., will be held at 2:30 p.m. Sat- Clarkston. dica W ten ndad at Bt of the old Mobile & Ohio Railroad) Khrushchev apparently staged banishment to a small-fry job in/ letters to the White House. woman and shook his head sadly. burn Heights. yy. \urday at the DonelsonJohns Fu-| The baby “\in 1912 and had been with the line the humilitation of his old travel-|the provinces, x & ks ; . : Her body will be taken to the Maple Grove Cemetery: at North Branch for burial. GAYLE G. JOHNSON “She arrested me once already,” he sighed. “TI told her that. it would be nice if we could go to her house and talk it over. And I was so taken by her that she was Joseph Merey Hospital, Pontiac. Surviving besides his parents are grandparents Mr, and Mrs. Wil- liam Tottingham of Clarkston and Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Head of But, Bulganin said Thursday, “when in 1957 the antiparty acti- vities of (the other four) actively developed, I joined them.” As premier, he added, “I not only and its successor since. * * * NASHUA, N.H. (AP) — Former Gov. Francis P, Murphy, million- aire industrialist and prominent neral Home, Pentiac.. Burial will be in Oakview Cemetery, Royal Oak. * ing companion as a weapon! against continued corfservative op- position to his radica] adaptations of Communist doctrine to Soviet economic conditions. Former Premier Georgi Malen- kov was last reported running a power - station, former Foreign Minister V. M, Molotov was serv- ing as ambassador to Outer Mon- * Mrs. Cogger was killed Wednes- * Peres = need a Sage day morning in a head-on auto ac-| Pontiac. Catholic layman and philanthrop-| By making the proceedings of|golia, former Foreign Minister|became their accomplice but alsojon the jail elevator before I knew ae oo in trom the( cident six miles west of Ann Ar MRS. CLARA STEPLES ist, died today at his home, He|the committee meeting public im-|Dmitri Shepilov was teaching|nominally their leader. _ gee gr dite or to me. m. . nile oh ing i ! : : Khrush is |school onetime economic boss! ‘ tiparty group met in my! “She me for drunk.” Huntoon Funeral Home, with bur-| ber while she was riding in a cae ORTONVILLE -—- Ma Care was 81 é mediately, chev took his and ime ic be The an p y driven by_her husband. ial in White Chapel Memorial | ‘Steples, 84, af 193 Mill St., died Cemetery. She was a member of the Pres-| ot night at Green Valley Rest byterian Church in Milford. : son died yesterday after MMe. Johnson died yestertey Surviving are her -husband,- Her- a long illness. MRS. JOHN LEACH Mrs. John (Grace M.) Leach, 80. a former resident of Pontiac, died yesterday in the Maplelawn Hospital, Hillsdale, after an_ ill- ness of seven years. She was a member of the Order of Eastern Star. Surviving are, two ‘daughters, Mrs. Latona Beeman of Ozona, Fla., and Mrs. Norma Arft of Auburn Heights; a son, Wiliam B. Ewing of Richfield; six grand- children; and a sister. Service will be at 2 p.m. Sunday : from the Miller Hylliard Funeral Home in Reading.’ Her body will) | be taken to the ehapel of the’! Highland Cemetery, Ypsilanti, for} | a prayer service and burial at 2 p.m. Monday. ELLIS E. PETHERBRIDGE Ellis E. Petherbridge, 41, of 535) Hillelift St., died yesterday at the | Veterans’ Hospital, Ann Arbor, aft- er an illness of a year.. ; He was a furniture upholsterer | and a member of the Lutheran Church of The Ascension. Surviving besides his wife, Doro- thy are his stepfather, Peter Frick, of Pontiac; four children, Bruce, Kathy, Robert and Richard Pether- bridge; two brothers, Raymond Petherbridge and Oren Frick, both of Ortonville and three sisters. Mr. Petherbridge’s body will be] following several, ‘Home, Holly, months illness. ; : Funeral arrangements are being) made by C. F. Sherman Fenee Sunday Services = MES. RAY WILSON for B. §. Ousnamer * ROCHESTER—Service for Mrs. Ray (Hattie) Wilson, = of 415 OXFORD — Service for Burton|Pine_ St., will be heff 2 p.m. S. Ousnamer, 62, 4 Crawford | Monday at the William aa Raag |St., will be held at 2 p.m. Sunday| Funeral Home. Burial will be in jat the Bossardet and Reid Funeral Mt. Avon Cemetery. Home. Burial will be in Ridgelawn - Mrs, Wilson died last night at Cemetery under the auspices of her home following a long illness. Oxford Lodge 84, F&AM. Surviving are two daughters,| . . ,_ Mrs. Wesley Holyolk- and Mrs. Jo-! ee cement died at his home seph Sadier. both of Rochester: ai i elle ¥ | son, Cramer, of Pontiac, and two} He was the treasurer of the. grandchildren. | Village of Leonard and a con struction foreman for the Oak-. land County Road Commission. . He was a member of the Ox- ford. F&AM 84, the OES 266 and the Past Patron Club. Surviving are his wife, Emma; and a brother, Clare of Oxford. a. GENERAL WAREHOUSE CO.3°=4 2258 DIXIE HIGHWAY — 1 BLOCK NORTH OF TELEGRAPH ROAD fa 4° [Se OPEN UNTIL 9 P. M. EVERY NIGHT ‘TIL CHRISTMAS OPEN SUNDAYS 10:30 A. M. ‘TIL 2:30 P. M. ee Le k TREE LIGHTS LAMPS BURN INDEPENDENTLY 1 LIGHT SET (Indoor) .... .89%¢ 15 LIGHT SET (Outd'r) .....3.29 25 LIGHT SET (Outd’r) .... 5.98 REPLACEMENT BULBS PACKAGE OF 5—39c TOYS oe eee eee No Safety Anywhere EDMONTON, Alberta (®—Police | here reported a 17-compartment | bird house was broken into and | $25 damage done. Several bird leggs were stolen. { nae | AMAZING DEMONSTRATION | SATURDAY and SUNDAY—Dec. (9th & 20th os he ee sores! Ferre! .98 Doctor or Nurse Kits ........$1.19 Home until noon Monday it | will be taken to the Lutheran) 2.98 Golden Sli att oenecooGos $1.69 Church of The Ascension, 96 Wil- | 2.98 “Mink Stole’ ............. $1.69 liams St. for service at 1 p.m. | Burial will be in the Hadley Cem- | etery. 1 & The family said contributions | may be made to the memorial fund of his church. MRS. LOUIS F. SALOW 2 Mrs. Louis F. (Grace I.) Salow, | Closeout prices on Tiny Tears, Reveton, Horst- man, Ideal and other fine makes. Before buying, get our prices. MISCELLANEOUS form \ an per onal Ve “Anis teed in ‘ ith 7, of 274 Liberty St., died last | A wuld case: night at the home of her daugh- | Westinghouse Steam-Dry Iron cece $12.95 carryiné ter, Mrs. Thelma Collins, of 17319 | Delaware St., Detroit. She had| been ill since March. | Mrs. Salow was a member of | Central Methodist Church, the | Women's Socity of her church | and the Orient Chapter 77, Order , of Eastern Star, at Northville. Surviving besides Mrs. Collins | ‘is another daughter, Mrs. Betty | Pillow of Pontiac with whom she | made her home; a son, Alburn | _ of Detroit; six grandchildren; three | oe ee ee 12” Fry Pan and Cover wee 912.95 Mirromatic Elec. Coffee Maker ..... .$6.95 Electric Hair Clipping Set ... $7.49 | 3’ High Artificial Christmas Tree .... .79 Sheaffer Pen and Pencil Sets .... .50°/, Off Deluxe Bath Scales—Modern ...... $5.88 SNOW SHOVELS — +] 39 see ewe FACTORY EXPERT WILL AMAZE YOU You are invited to see how the new A.M.P. DeWalt Power Shop performs near-miracies of precision operations — sawing, mitering, routing grooving, mortising, fluting, radius cutting, etc., ete. Demonstrations daily from 10: a.m. to ciosing time. You will find it’ entertaining, educational and profitable. Don't miss it! GENERAL WAREHOUSE CO. 2258 DIXIE HWY.—NEAR JCT. OF TELEGRAPH 18" wide galvanized steel blade securely riveted to hardwood han- dle with spade grip. coy JIGSAW — 7 $14.98 MERRY CHRISTMAS with MUSIC! All Regular $3.98 L. P. CHRISTMAS ALBUMS And REGULAR STOCK ALBUMS 2 All Sound Track and Stereo Albums Reduced $y 00 Off Regular Price Regular $19.95 | Seller FULL MOTOR SANDER Now Only Choose From These Albums and Many More © Christmas Sing Along with Mitch © Bing Crosby ®@ Johnny Mathis © Lawrence Welk Reg. $19.95 BURGESS ELECTRIC ® Bill Duggett j © Fred Waring © Kes earns PAINT SPRAYER ° Tonmowwe Ernie © Mentaveai Genuine Sapphire $8 49 Fs © Norman Luboff © Ethel Smith Sisidael aie ° SS Choir ® Tannenbaum MUSICAL TOYS | FAMOUS EMENEE BRAND Phore an 7.95 Piano Accordion ..... 4.19 ‘ hy 3.98 Trumpet .............2.39 3-714 3.98 Clarinet ........4.....2.39 ** * 3.69 * eee @¢ © 108 NORTH SAGINAW 5.98 Saxaphone .... a ¢ 2 ‘iti. _ Yor. Tt said: ‘“‘The American stride TWENTY aGieT” $ “a * Zé, es iy » t _ _ Le oa _THE PONTIAC PRESS, bamay, DECEMBER 19, 1058 ” “American Scienée Impresses. World . WASTIINGTON (A) -_ Ameri-theavier than the Siesest Soviet Sputnik. ca’s scientific and ,military pres-| tige, a key element in the cold), war, rebounded high today from/' the lows of double disaster a year ago, A mighty U. S, Atlas pocket roared into orbit around the earth Thursday night. It became a satellite weighing between 8,700, and 8,800 pounds—thxee times understood by the man in the street in London, Moscow and New Delhi. the military officer and govern- ment official: had a missile with power and Prestige Soars ‘Up V With Satellite * * That was a comparison easily e It cartied significance too for the United States ee Space Achievement Praised Western Europe Rejoices LONDON (AP)—Jubilation was expressed in Western Europe to- day over the launching of the four- ton American earth satellite. * * * “Good,” said the man on the Moscow street. “It gives us com- petition.” Late editions of Britain's biggest newspapers révamped their front pages to carry the news. * * * “Amazing U.S. space triumph,’ trumpeted the tabloid Daily Mir- forward into space proves the. Americans. now have a super rotket that can serve a dual role =~ blasting Russia's secret centers or enabling the United States to put big research ‘labora- tories crammed with instruments operators of the world’s largest radio telescope, which has tracked - jother American satellites and the Pioneer moon shots, apparently were as much surprised as the rest of the world. the telescope was engaged in rou- tine astronomical observation, and four Amerieans who have helped ,|in previous trackings of U.S. space) were off duty. ‘people about the orbiting Aflas some eight hours after the first eran nrcement in Washington. Mos- Wali cow radio broadcasts in both Rus- sian and English told ‘of the mis- sile advance without any com- At Jodrell Bank, England, the te At the time of the launching, control. to — a ‘nuclear. ware) head on a target on another ¢on- tinent. Of such stuff is made prestige that can bolster friends, pause to enemies and nudge the vital in-betweeners who want to lean with the winning side. The U, S. comeback séemed in- credible in view of the shatfering |Seviet success starting wth Sput- inik Harbor Day for U, On into orbit Sputnik Il, little dog Laika, The weight this time: a half ton. On Dec. 6, Pearl Harbor again so far as U. S. prestige was, concerned, America's first satel- lite-bearing rocket—a Navy Van- guard—blew up on its launching pad. did the United States’ get its first foot in the satellite race. But the |Army’s Explorér I weighed only '31 pounds, a midget against its iSoviet rivals. On March” iT ‘the “y ay finally | got a satellite into orbit too, | shooting Vanguard I to a record far point of 2,246 miles to give its satellite a top life expectancy of 200 years. But Vanguard I was a Lilligutian 344: pounds. On May 15 the Russians oe | up Sputnik Ill, 2,929 pounds, I still going. | give * * * * * . Yet “. American scientific | show was coming to life, An) atomic sub nosed under the arctic | icecap, The Air force and the’ Army tried roc kets that, soared a. third of the way to the moon. | 6,325 miles across‘ the Atlantic. | * * 8 i Soviet Premier Nikita Khrush | i 197 a Pearl S. prestige. 3 the Russian threw ‘i carrying | I Oct. 4. Nov. -Day | chev said the Russians had a ete ;capens of going 8,700 miles. U. S, officials underscored the A “capable,” discounting x * Cémmunist possessién of any Not until] Jan, 31 of this year least two years, * * * American authorities deny) Thursday night’s launching was a) propaganda move. They said y {i * * * The Soviet. regime first told its, ef many kinds into space. *x * * “Tt also brings very much near- er the day when man makes the = trip into space.’ Indiana Bank Robber'é Held in South Bend SOUTH BEND, Ind. (® — Hugh Barr, 53. was held in South Bend today after failing to post $25,000) bond on federal charges of rob-| bing .the First Commercial Bank‘ of Edwardsburg. Mich. x * * Police said Barr admitted hold-, ing up the bank twice in the past) featurin H |THE 3 LITTLE WORDS" | ~~ ORCHESTRA MUSIC CLOSED SUNDAYS 6 NIGHTS A WEEK four months, Wednesday for $3,581. | t Barr, an unemployed South Bend salesman,,was captured near the entrance to the University of Notre Dame by city policemen less than an hour after the second holdup. * * * He was. returned to jail after he failed to post the $25,000 bail. ' Authorities were still considering additional charges to be filed against him. x * & Barr will not have to be extra- | PLAN TO ATTEND OUR NEW YEAR'S EVE PARTY HATS NOISE-MAKERS “ MIS. FURNISHED - $1.00 PER SEAT RESERVED SEATS ONLY UL 2-1020 Dancing Thurs., Fri., Sat., Sun. PAUL BARBER’S MID-WESTERN BAND | OLD DUTCH MILL Auburn Heights e Auburn at Churchill Rd. LIQUOR Hillbilly and Western Swing pee with ) JOE POLZIN at the ORGAN | Make Reservation. Now For Gala New Year's P NO COVER CHARGE FINE FOODS and LIQUORS CLUB dited to he tried, because the Edwardsburg bank is a member of the Federal Reserve System and fhe case will go to a federal court. TAHOE 3442 Dixie Highway Phone OR 3-9754 JEFFS ~ HARMONY JACKS Dixieland. Modern and Square Dance Band GLENN EASTMAN calling PLAN YOUR BANQUETS HERE! Choice | Liquors | Elizabeth Lake Re. ee Medium Size Sunbeam Electric FRY PAN ws 5 Large Size Sunbeam Fry Pan with Cover 19 » © @ 8 6 CHRISTMAS Tree Stands No, 85, Reg. $9.95 CAROM BOARDS 12-Inch—Balloon Tire TRICYCLE Save $2.50 99> c b) fA Vi W.) Vi Cn ec ec i er TC) Men’s Insulated BOOTS 712” Leather or Rubber # 133H Stenley SCREWDRIVER ira 225) sont 9” SUNDAY -“ Good Selection of Skates, Sleds and Toys We Toke Trade-Ins on A boll & “CHRISTMAS SHOPPING HOURS: Taapage ® bye rc opmpeelgh ag M. to 9 P. M. EY SHELL Lr 10 to 2 : reer tl reel | Plan to Attend Our Giont “Open ‘House = NEW YEAR'S EVE PARTY: 1 ' No reservation necessary — no coverage charge. i= ! “Sully entertaining at the Catalina Piano Bar with | 1 free noise makers — hats — favors to all. SAT. SPECIAL SMORGASBORD With 20 different salads = = Tonight FISH FRY & Chicken Smorgasbord MT and relishes and ROAST =| All You Can Eat = 5:30 to 10:30 | SEEF with coffee, desert = 1.25 | 1.95 z MANNY IS cocrthis'iGunce NOTICE » No frees Family pose will Be Served on Dec. 24 and 31 ii ces IN WATERFORD itl Food Experily Served! | recommended by Duncan Hines — AAA — Southeastern Tourist Asso ciation — National Restaurant Association. New Years Eve Party We are going to have a big JAMBOREE like never before! Make your party plans now and call us for reservations. There will be a dance band in the dining room. IRENE BADER | Irene and her singers will be in the grill. Faricy hats, noise makers, balloons, streamers —all will be furnished. NO COVER CHARGE TELEPHONE OR. 3-1907 Old Mill Tavern On the Dixie ane. — Waterford a such operational weapon for at} a ue big enough to be seenjing playbacks are wit the ned eye ty the. lone for worldvidde rebroad-|[ the - heavily populated jeasting by the’ ‘Youes of America. | igen peat ek Waste siatanes 4b pe ee eae is " was aimed, And its tape record: highly con- [Now SERVING BREAKFAST from’7 a.m. ; Bring the Family PIZZA | to Clark’s for DINNER -- GOOD FOOD! Plus Reasonable Family Prices Chicken COMPLETE TAKE-OUT SERVICE PHL. FE ery CLARK’S. cs Open 7:00 AM. to 12:30 Midnight Corner of Baldwin Ave. MUSIC: MUSIC-MUSIC Friday Saturday Sunday 9 to 2 8 to 2 7 to ? WESTERN and HILLBILLY MUSIC _ Guest Artists This Weekend: “ANNABELLE” Featuring PAUL CARPENTER and his Starlight Rhythm Rangers playing all your Favorite Tunes Pau! Carpenter Shorty Singer on the bass SPADAFORE’S BAR 6 N. CASS AVENUE, COR. OF HURON Johnny Tipton Lead Guitar Plan Now To Attend Our Big New Year's Eve Party FREE NOISEMAKERS — FAVORS — NO COVER CHARGE | =a ; And a Great Time at Scrib’s ... SMORGASBORD } HATS - GAMES DANCING “ NOISE-MAKERS 6 By Reservation Only y Tickets Available SCRIB'S weSttuine © 130 S. Telegraph FE aot ) Dancin NOTE! ng al inter Regular Favors Wonder- Menu English Lak. land From ., Break fas t Cones ay je 3-8 ' Commerce, L | served at 3:00 a.m. i Birmingham | Make Your Reservations Now! ! for a Gala NEW YEAR’S. EVE CELEBRATION Gourmet Dinner Served from 8:30 SPECIAL ENTERTAINMENT Woodward, South of Long Lake Road: Midwest 4-1400 Fe HAVE FUN. + 4195 Dixie OR 3. 7161 9 « . « : DANCING DURING THE HOLIDAYS to the Music of the BOB LAWSON TRIO , Stop tor Our Noonday’ Lunches ) Ve Secure a Date Here tor Your Private Christmas Party in Person for Our Big NEW YEAR'S EVE PARTY. sorters = on SSS ar 1 i ri Bis PAUL LENON Comedy M.C, PHYLLIS. FOX LARRY | GRAY WITH TWO FABULOUS FLOOR SHOWS EVERY FRIDAY and Tomecios cod ; SATURDAY anil AND 7 NIGHTS JAM SESSION TUESDAY WIT ~FRANK PERRY and HIS SWINGMASTERS | Dell's Inn Lake and Case Lake Corner of Elizabeth 1 Short “Dleck West Resorts i. 2-2981 . Coming ‘Holidays Visit the GREEN PARROT Specializing in Good Food SUNDAY SPECIAL STRIP SIRLOIN STEAK . . . Potatoes, Gravy, Chef's Salad with choice of J: Dressings, Vegetable, $] 50 Hot Roll and Butter....... LARGE PRIVATE ROOMS FOR YOUR HOLIDAY PARTIES Enjoy the 21” Color TV in Our Cocktail Lounge Open Daily 9 A. M. to 2 A. M. Sunday 2 P. M. te 2 A. M. Plenty of Free Parking 1650 N. Perry at Pontiac Road FE 3-9732 ¥ Miracle Mile Shopping Center, Telegraph at Square Lake Road Enjoy Yourself AT Slonaker’s Miracle Lounge Ockiand County's Newest Most. Beautiful Cocktail Lounge Nl , oreresTe Specializing in... Char-Broiled Steaks Roast Prime Rib of Beef and of course—Your Favorite Cocktail For Party Reservations... Phone FE 5-8060 Now George and Bob Slonaker “Your Hosts” e BUSINESSMEN’S LUNCH SERVED DAILY e Open 11 A. M. to 2 A. M. Slonaker’s Miracle Lounge See THURSDAY THRU SUNDAY—9 P.M. TO 2 A.M. | TAKE OUT SERVICE (Mui'steccay tor fon" Bob’s Chicken House Presents... BETTY RIDLEY ot the Piano .and Organ CHICKEN — FISH SERVED IN OUR STEAK — SHRIMP BEAUTIFUL SCALLOPS Y DINING ROOM Meet Your Friends in Our Beeutitul Cocktail Bar BOB’S CHICKEN HOUSE 497 Elizabeth Lake Road FEderal 3-9821 —e | i { | ; mand { rd ys HERE'S A NEW CLUB AT AN OLD FAVORITE LOCATION NOW SERVING PIZZA PIES From Our New Pizza Oven All Popular Varieties — Served or Take Out STEAK — LOBSTER — CHICKEN BAR-B-Q RIBS — FISH Enjoy a fine dinner in friendly surroundings TAKE-OUT ORDERS, PHONE OR 3-9987 . Kitchen Open from 5:00 P.M. ‘ti] 1:00 A.M. NOONDAY LUNCHES 11:30 A. M. to 2 P.M. BEER, WINES \ ‘ a) & LIQUORS SERVED em FIVE 5. spot | Se Q 7 2585 Dixie Hwy. Pontiac My Preminger Wins* Rights. over 11 months. rd ae a * Stine, ee o Oe CRISTEA: A sk of . TMA A Yuletide Stéry THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, pEeMann 19, 1958’ BY WALT scorn - : = , By EARL WILSON to be away from Vivien Leigh for the first half of 1959, In | : N.Y. to do “The Moon and Sixpense” on TV | he then goes to Hollywood to film “Spartacus,” _. all of which takes him up to June, Viv’s busy | in England being a grandmother. You gossip- mongers who claim all is not well, make of it} what you will. I have no comment. h ME 1958 by WEA Bervice, ine. Hollywood Headlines: to ‘Anatomy of Murder’ sent the script to Susah Kohner and wants her for the part of Laura. Susan likes it very mach so it’s only a matter of time By LOUELLA 0. PARSONS HOLLYWOOD — All the fighting: and disputing is over and Otto Preminger comes up the winner inks in the hassle over which Holly-| "re Ste tks the papers. wood producer will bring ‘“Anat-| Every top ‘actor in town has omy of Murder” to the screen. It|been rumored for the male lead ‘was a prize worth battling for asiof the lawyer, including Bill Robert Traver’s exciting novel has'| ‘Holden, Gary Cooper and Bob! son t wee ee 'Mitctiam—but Preminger says no t. Otto isn't wasting any time jone _™ e *« ¢ getting activated now the court | ecided- . | Recently when Howard Keel aes == Leta = = = ‘came to see. me he said he wanted ito continue singing on the screen, [LAKE THEATER?:; |which is a switch. ‘Most of the isingers Want non-warbling roles. Dedicate Chapel =" 5 at State Prison ‘and Jewish faiths, ‘Well J. ‘Arthur Rank has offered Hioierd the screen biography of! |the great Russian opera star i\Feodor Chaliapin and Howard is) ivery interested. * we fk One again ‘‘true love’ bites the dust in favor of a Hollywood ‘eareer. Evy Norlund. who won | ‘fame as “Miss Denmark” in the Miss Universe contest and along Eddie Fisher’s weathered his TV crisis apparently—the mail to his spon- sors is more kindly (such as “So the kid made amistake, give him another chance”) and he seems likely to keep working through March .. ’ Marie McDon- were divorced no provision was “With Power's death alimony! to Miss Christian ceased,’ he said. “For this reason, support for the children must come from the es- tate.” WILSON ald’s reportedly latched onto a rich Houstonian, Mike Gor- don, who's a ‘bachelor, yet! Aren’t they having Hollywood Christmas together? ... Myrno Loy goes on George Gobel’s ' TV show Jan. 13 from Hollywood with Jimmy Stewart. But she says George would probably belt her if she tipped off the sketch they’re going to do. Could it be a Thin Man bit? Jimmy’s thin enough. Building for All Faiths Raised Money From Red Scientists Visit inmates, Private Donors! West Coast Labs JACKSON (UPI) — A modern, Kim Novak, her hair darkened slightly, wasn't recognized 700-capacity chapel was dedicated’ SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — It as Kim Novak when she came into Lindy’s for lunch. yesterday within the walls of| looked like camera day with the Kim had been rehearsing at the Palladium ballroom on Southern Michigan Prison at Jack-! visiting Russians Thursday, And. ‘Broadway, home of the mambo and cha-cha-cha: for “Middle |it was a two-way picture taking.) of the Night.” _ Rome of ‘the OF Ramian scien. g her next film, with Frederic March. Unglam } The chapel, constructed to con- oured up at that point, s A Sis city oc ‘Catto Peegoues tists visiting the Bay area toured p point, she seemed to be just another paying com tiene University of California labora. customer, instead of a star. with more than $11,500 for fur- tories. Most carried cameras, and * * * nishings coming through doriations. “ed them freely. | Ava Gardner claimed to be glad there was’ a newsapaper Inmates contributed $2,000 EA xk ‘strike on when she left NY. to visit her relatives in South individual donations for the fur-| The Russians Se the So- Carolina — and she probably was, for her Italian boy friend, nishings arid much of the rest was/Viet laboratory ship Vitvaz, which ato. walter Chiari, was with her. from private citizens and inmates’ has been doing oceanographic re-| families. 'search for the International Geo | physical Year. More than 1,000 Americans| visited the Vityaz, on which Capt. | Igor Sergeev held open house. | |Many of them snapped pictures. | Walter'll probably accompany her to Hollywood, and possibly to Australia, where she’s to film “On The Beach.” Curiously, when this flying reporter was in Rome about 10 days ago Chiari’s agents told me he couldn't possibly come to America with her because he had TV and movies to do in Italy. Se who’s boss? Him . .. his agents . «- or Ava? A couple of years ago, when Dore Schary was bounced. ‘rom his top Hollywood job, friends felt sorry for the poor fel-| * * * Tie chapel is in the center of the giant prison’s yard and easily seen from most of the inmate. facilities. Corrections Director Gus Har- rison said it was the first chapel building at any of the State pris- Rudolph the Reindeer NEW YORK — Speaking of the low-down. on: the higher- if ups, as we often do. here, “Sir Larry” Olivier is evidently going | ‘ment is over. ‘Klaus Pad}, has a job that keeps | with it a contract at Columbia, | is heading home to break the news. ito her boy friend that their engage- on facilities. He said more than | half the inmates attended wor, ship services previously in an William J Is Source of Trouble low. Today he’s about “the hottest property” around — not y 4, ¥, dg\t a "f men “ . PUAN ed 2” AL eee THE BLACK wits MOAN DEERY. M. «8 counoia ectute SATURDAY MATINEE — EXTRA! “CAPTAIN VIDEO” Chepter #5 COMEDY “SCHEMING SCHEMERS” CARTOON “LEAVE US CHASE IT” KANSAS CITY. Kan. (AP) — only does he have “Sunrise at Campobello,” a new movie called : Wilsop notified the, Lonelyhearts.” and five TV shows to produce for a network, | auditorium. The young man, whose name is Warden William H. Bannan pre-, ‘sheriff the other day that fis pet but he’s directing “Majority of One.” a B’way-to-be show stars ‘deer Rudolph had ‘been stolen. [ring Sir Cedrick Hardwicke and Gertrude Berg. Schary pulled| + * * jup stakes in Hollywood and moved “here—and the big thing jhim in Denmark, and Evy is now ‘convinced that her heart and in- ‘terests are in Hollywood. She be- | jlieves that no marriage will stand lup under the pressure of long "| separations, and she’s going all: ithe way home to fell Klaus in |person. SQUARE ond ROUND DANCING GARDEN CENTER * * * One of the nicest Christmas gifts lof any season was given to Gilbert Roland by Ernest Hemingway BALLROOM When Gil was in Cuba with . 2957 Woodward. Detroit =f pharaoh and the Cleopatra,’ Hem- ~ Dancing Every ‘Ingway presented him with the, Thursday, Saturday, Sunday [film rights to-a short story ‘“‘The Capitol of the World,” because said Hemingway. “‘no one but you should attempt to star in it.” | Gilbert plans to set up his own company and make of the World” in Spain inasmuch jas it involves bull fighting. a story —AtLso— CAMPUS BALLROOM VENKED!. ana cavenwcrs perk imock bull fight. and it has all the ‘color and adventure of the usual) |Hemingway tales. * * * | Snapshots of Hollywood collected at random: Clint (‘Cheyerme’) Walker ‘plans to return to his home state of Illinois to live. Mod. and ienare Dancin Every TUES., FRI, SA’ FINEST ORCHESTRAS - Everything for the CHRISTMAS PARTY .tate for support of each of their the Topeka Zoo. “The Capitol ; It's | about a man who acci-| dentally kills a friend during al dicted attendance would now in-| crease 25 per cent. | -Two men returned Rudolph and jis, he’s happy. Must be rich, too. The chapel is a contemporary 4Pologized. explaining they * * * t they h h ild | erin contrasting 10 the other oe eI Ne On EARL'S PEARLS: A woman will buy anything she thinks prison structures . That's earl, | A game warden heard about the ‘a store is losing money on.”"—Bill Doggett. arrested | brother. | (Copyright 1958) incident and promptly |Wilson for capturing and possess- | | ing a game agimal. i x * * Calif. (AP) — Wilson pleaded guilty’ and was wants $6930 a fined $107. Game wardens gave Rudolph to, Linda Christian Seeking Part of Power's Estate HOLLYWOOD, Linda Christian month from Tyrone Power's es-| two daughters. | + * ! Phoenix, Ariz.. maintains a Her attorney James Fizzolio ‘city’ park as a recreation area. said he will ask Superior Court for its citizens and tourists: Tt is to authorize the payment because 85 miles outside the city limits of when Power and Miss Christian Phoenix. Open 6:30 P.M. Show Storts 7 00 P.M. Friday | Sulte London is back from a) | long, hard location on ‘‘Wonder. | | ful Country” in Mexico so tired | |. that she's in 16 mood to even | | think of marriage. | May Britt is being tested at | U I for a role in Kirk Douglas’ Spartacus.” Jane Withers is taking her doll | collection out of storage for the) ‘first time in 15 years and will put. it on display at Pacific Ocean ‘Park over the holidays. SMOKING SECTION | —_—_— | Coffee Served “On the House.” The jurist who drafted the Imported Chocolates. eaten ot ae en | ead Candice: vi ar we Mississippian named Lucius Quintus Cincinnatus 14 Mile Rd. —2 Miles EF. of Woodward j|Lamar. Later he was an associ- | } $-397 puted dl late Sustice of the Supreme Court. Tricks — Jokes — Novelties Pipers Magazine Outlet 38 Auburn Ave. FE 4-8240 Have You Visited The CLAWSON PLAYHOUSE Oakiand County's Only Theater — Presenting Outstanding Films from the Four Corners of the World. BLUE 2150 OPDYKE RD, FE 4-461] waar LOLA wavs ae x %& 7\\ 1 BHM: OK wi 2? agen : Pte sy EOE ABB ") comes | RUSS TAMBLIN GLORIA TALBOT in “YOUNG GUNS” THE LATEST THE FINEST HEATERS IN-A-CA TONITE & Opens 6:0 SATURDAY Starts 6: P P.M. 5:30 P.M., Starts 6 P.M. | the J. TONIGHT! 4 UNIT SHOW EXCLUSIVE! FIRST SHOWING! PROUD YOUNG REBELS THE TRUE STORY OF TODAY'S YOUTH! what mus? o good girl say to “belong” HIGH 7 & 10:20 _wwwwevrvrrwrewewvr?vTT??TTTTTTTeTTe eee ee 2 ee OOO OOOO UC CC CCC OO OOOO COC Cee. lll il i in le dis ies) et ye Xl | rors) ee ee ee oe ee LAST DAY! Feature ot STARTS 2:52 - 6:33 - 10:14 TOMORROW! mee _- see algae Me MASCOPE| “bre POWELL - Tony MARTIN Debbve REYNOLDS - Walter PIOGEON Vie DAMONE - Gene RAYMOND Ann MILLER - Russ TAMBLYN sa Klay ARMER - | Carrol KAISH - Richard ANDERSON - lane ORWELL Feature at 1:00 - 4:40 - 8:20, THe ruth MTS wich SCHOOL S I even MORE tore CILENTO Coc PARKER TRY. KIDS! LOOK! SPECIAL SATURDAY MATINEE “SNOWFIRE” and —-TwTerwrreT TTT CCT eT eT TC Cee ee ee eT eC ee eT ee ee eC CC Cr Cee ll POO DOP PP PPP FF FPP PFPA PG P.M.|SUNDAY ONLY—Open | oN COLOR— Well, What Would You Do? —ADDED. EXTRA— “Zorro’s Fighting Legion” WE HAVE IN-A-CAR HEATERS in OWES) Saly fon PC “THE LITTLEST HOBO” PLUS LOTS OF FUNNY CARTOONS FEATURES START SAT. AS FOLLOWS: "LITTLEST HOBO” AT 1:00 G 4:00 ° "SNOWFIRE” AT 2:17 G 5:20 "LADY TAKES A FLYER” AT 6:45 & 10:00 “THIS HAPPY FEELING” AT 8:20 & 11:30 ! Pa. as Bi te te dn tn de ~~ ere eee eee eee = ate ee ee + as Z or Gala Christmas Holiday Show! . Wonderful Musical Adventure & RE apg fo Headlights WELCOME, SCOOTER — Ray (Scooter) Mc- Lean Aright) gets an official welcome from De- troit Lions’ head coach George W president Edwin J. Anderson at a reception yes- ilson (left) and terday. McLean quit as head coach of the Green Bay Packers and was immediately hired. as Lions’ backfield coach replacing Red Cochran. a AP Wirephete The Bloomfield Hills junior high hoop team is off to a good start with easy victories over Clarks- ‘ton and West Bloomfield to its credit. Art Tregenza and Roger Stewart have been the top scorers. * * * . Former St. Michael coach Bob Mineweaser and ex-Walled Lake star John Walker, now a . Patrick's. -teammate Larry Hughes, in basketball for U. of D. and ex-St. Mike gridder Jerry Ohngren, now at Michigan State, were other guests, * * * Temple coach Harry Litweck says the trouble with officiating in tf National Baiketball Asso- ciation is due to the coaches. He is amazed the owners stand for the way the coaches jump off the/' benches trying to incite fouls, Lit-} wack says Boston’s Red Auerbach admits his pre-game strategy de- pends on the officials assigned. * * * Nick Kamenoff and Bill Byrd of Hazel Park-have been signed * Taking 10 of 12 matches, Thurs- ton High's matmen last night de- feated RO Dondero, for its 4th straight dual win, Thurston com- piled a 30-8 count, including three pins, * * * Shaw's Jewelers and Glenn’s Mo- tors were winners of City League basketball exhibitions last night at Pontiac Central. Dick Ayling scored 23 points to lead the Jewel- ers to a 62-48 victory over the 28th Group and Jim Douglas netted 17 points as Glenn's co the Vikings, 53-40. - - * * * City YMCA Community League basketball action resumes tonight with three games in the Pontiac “Y" gym. Oakland Avenue Unit- ed Presbyterian plays the ‘Hi-Y Hawks at 6:30, First Baptist meets the Hi-Y Pistons at 7:30 and Stone|' Baptist faces the Rochester Hi-Y at 8:30. MICHIGAN COLLEGE SCORES Baseball Alma 15, Calvin 73. — 84, Lawrence Tech. 66. Alpena Community calege 48, High- land Park JC California who never before had tion, shook off an early case of jitters and defeated the flashy _|Italian champion, geli, 5-7, 10-8, 6-0, 6-1. _jgames—dropping 14 in a row at one stage. Games for Athletics Other players will report Feb. 26. Golden Gloves Deadline for Entries Dec.. 31st Training facilities for amateur and novice baxers have been set up at 18 N. Perry St. in the basement leve] of Pontiac Recreation where Golden Gloves entries have started workouts, The training area will operate daily starting at 6:00 p.m. and American Pair Beats Italians Olmedo, Richardson Get 2-0 Lead in Davis Cup Interzone Match PERTH, Australia “—A nervous Alex Olmedo, playing in his first Davis Cup match, and poised Ham Richardson sent the United States off to a 2-0 lead over Italy today in the interzone tennis final. * * Olmedo, a 22-year-old Peruvian from the University of Southern even seen a Davis Cup competi- Nicola Pietran- Pietrangeli, his fine game in tat- ters, won only one of the last 16 * * * Then Richardson. a_ former Rhodes Scholar from Arlington, Va., stepped front and center at the Royal Kings Park Club and. despite the 90 degree tempera- tures, cut down titantic, 6-7 Or- lando Sirola 6-4, 6-2. 7-5. This match was like a matador | against a big bull. 30 Training Season KANSAS CITY (AP)—The Kan- sas City Athletics announced to- day a 30-game exhibition schedule cees, sponsors of the 1959 Golden except a 50-cent registration fee if necessary on Saturdays. It is being operated by the Pontiac Jay- Gloves which will be held Jan. 31 and Feb. 7 at Pontiac Central High School. | * * * Any boy 16 years of age and | over can submit his entry for the Golden Gloves, and he will be able to use the Jaycee facilities to train. Deadline for entries is Dec. 31st since jt is required by the AAU that each boy be in training for 30 days before his bout. * * * Boys need only their own shoes and trunks, all other equipment will be furnished by the Jaycees. It ls expected that 60 boxers will participate in the Pontiac fights. Eliminations will be held Saturday, Jan. 3ist and _ the finals Feb, 7th. (Art Van Ryzin After 13th Win in FC Series Flint Central’s High Scoring Quint Rated Favorite Tonight By BRUNO L. KEARNS Sports Editer, Pontiac Press The number in the charmed circle for coach Art Van Ryzin is “13" and the Chief mentor is ready to find out the facts about these superstitious digits. ‘This marks Van Ryzin’s 13th season as head coach of the Chiefs and the big game tonight against Flint Central will either mark the 13th win or, the 13th loss against the Indians during his coaching career. Since the 1946-47 season, when Van Ryzin started at) PCH, Pon- | tiae Central and Flint Central each has won 12 games. The basketball series has been hectic since Flint Central is | Pontiac’s oldest athletié rival, but tonight's clash on the PCH court could be one of the most crucial meetings between the .two. * * * ‘ Both teams are highly ranked. | Flint Central, the defendin? cham- pion of the Saginaw Valley, is favored to repeat. Pontiac Centra] is considered a strong challenger. Each team has swept the two-game series in one season three times. Flint Central won twice in 1946-47, 1952-53 and 1957-58. Pontiac Central swept the season series in 1948-49, 1949-50 and 1956-57. The other six seasons during Van Ryzin’s regime has seen each team winning at home and losing on the road. * * * “We are worried about tonight's game,” said Joe Dowdy, coach of Flint Central, the number one team in the current state prep ratings. The Indians have shown good balanced scoring with six players having hit in double figures at Pontiac winners will then be sent to Grand Rapids for the state fi- nals and from there to Chicago for the Midwest championships. * * J There is no entry fee for boys for the AAU. Organizations such as Boys’ Clubs have entered representa- tive teams into the Golden Gloves, which will make their first appearance in Pontiac since . 1949, Last year Pontiac Central Was used for some of the fights trom the Detroit regionals. Entry blanks can be obtained by writing to the Pontiac Junior Chamber of Commerce, 1] Mt. Clemens St., or they can be picked up at the North Perry training cen. iP ter. * * * Tickets for the fights wil) go on sale at numerous sporting goods stores in Oakland County and Pon- tiac business establishments with least once in the three games played. Keith Richardson hit 22, 13 and six; Dale Lucas hit 16, 13 and 12; Marcellus Wilson got 11 and 20 in two games. These are the top four pointmakers for the Indians. Pontiac Central has scored 181 points in posting a 3-0 mark while Flint Central has hit for 205 points in as many games. “TI think our kids are ready for this game,” said Van Ryzin, ‘‘they realize they have to win at home because it will be tough winning up there the next time.” Available tickets will be put on Sale at 6:15 at the PCH ticket windows. Game time is 8:00 p.m. \NUMERICAL ROSTERS GT Rackov ee CHEST HIGH — Detroit Red Wing center Charlie Burns (left) fires the disc at’ New York Ranger goalie Lorne Worsley who made the save ERR = si MAE ies x“ 2 Sa the hard way. made 14 saves beat the Wings, Cousins’ Stage Revol AP Wirephete It hit him in the chest. Worsley in the first period. The Rangers 2-0, at the Olympia last night. ‘Laker Rookie Cets 36; Celts Trip Royals MINNEAPOLIS w — A little. less of Elgin Baylor on the basketball floor would have suited the De- troit Pistons just fine last ‘night’ The Minneapolis rookie scored 26 points to fire the Lakers to a 113-104 National Basketball Assn. victory. Besides snapping a four-game losing streak, Minneapolis closed the gap to a 2'2 game deficit Farmington Matmen Win Farmington won its four matches then lost the next six, however the Falcons still managed to beat Livonia Bentley in wrestling yes- terday, 26-24. This is the summary: 95 und—Bob Mazur (F) 8-3 over on Gen lix 103—Chariey Rogers (F) 17-9 over Paul Pelice (LB). 112—Don Hendricks (F) pinned Gor- don Hisayasu (LB) 120— Hisayasu (LB). 127 (LB) -0. aoe ier Paul (LB) pinned Dennis Ltt Diek Hoebler (LB) pinned Dick ein Unverzagt (LB) beat Larry by pester tew Papineau (LB) pinned Dick To; Dick Albrecht (LB) beat Prank soph Spat 8-5. general admission starting at 90 : cents. Ne. PCH FGT No. Fc Lj 0 Bandy 6-3 10 a 6-2 12 Roach 6-0 Il Nee! 6-3 14 Barge 12 pope de 5-9 20 Rabaja 5-6 13 gories 6-7 22 Patterson 5-10 14 ipe 5-9 24 Staley 5-0 15 Hudson 6-0 30 McCauley 5-8 20 Richardson 6-2 32 Robertson 5-11 31 Wilson 6-0 34 Bailey 6-1 22 McDonald 6-0 40 Hayward 6-2 23 cas 5-10 50 Munson 6-1 24 Bates 6-3 52 6-2 25 Williamson 6-0 4 Pritchett 6-3 32 Latham 6-1 Thomas 6-0 118—Dan Ressler (F) pinned Chuck Thompson. Heavy—George Fawcett (F) pinned Dick Marien. Tom Peckham (FP) pinned Dennis. beat Lester) Too Much Baylor for Pistons, 113-105 in its battle with Detroit for second place in the Western Di- vision, The Pistons have won 14 and lost 14, The Lakers have a 10-15 record. Baylor’s 26 points against De- .troit moved him into a second ‘place’ tie with Philadelphia's Paul |Arizin in the league individual scoring race. Baytor and Arizin now have 637 each. Detroit lost a hard-fought battle. Through the first three quarters it was a nip-and-tuck struggle with no more than six points separat- ing the teams at any one point. The Pistons were ahead at the end of the third quarter, 80-79, after trailing after the first quar- ter and at halftime, Lakers led 99-97. In an outbfirst. of scoring, they poured in 12 points ¢ to 3 for the Pistons in the next! , three minutes, George Yardley led Detroit with 27 points. Phil Jordon had 24. ter but they swung into high gear in the second period, against the Royals. ; for their spring training session in Florida. The club will play 26) Holiday Tournaments Begin games against American League teams and 10 against National Leaguers. * * * General Manager Parke Carroll said the club will open training at West Palm Beach Feb. 22 with drills for pitchers and catchers. The A’s will begin ‘exhibition play March 7 against Baltimore. END ADVANCE | GLENN HIGHT [J Transmission “Let us assist Merry Christmas ‘Use this check Have A Safe Car For a Happy Holiday C Windshield wipers | O Exhaust system you in your ketball tournaments starts spin- ning in full swing tonight, Four college launch this frantic period that will stretch past New Year's Day. a pair of the opening classics. The Kentucky place at Lexington while the Blue Grass Festival begins at Louis-) , fi ville. Cage Whirl Starts Tonight With Four Dixie Events By the Associated Press The merry whirl of holiday was! festivals in the south The state of Kentucky will house Invitational will take * * * Birmingham Classic gets The under way at Birmingham, Ala., while the Citadel Invitational is held at Charleston, S.C. First round games in all four tourneys will be played tonight. The finals will be Saturday night, Kentucky, the 1957-58 national champion and the second-ranked team in the weekly Associated Press poll, is host in its own sixth annual invitational, The Wildcats (6-0) meet Ohio State (1-2) in the er. * * * faces Notre Dame (1-3) in the first game of the third annual Blue Grass Festival, Northwestern (3- 0) listed sixth nationally, goes against host Louisville (4-2) in the afterpiece. Pairings for the sixth annual second game after seventh-ranked West Virginia (6-1), the tourna- ment’s defending titlist,* opposes list to insure your family’s safety” 1) Brakes 0 Heaters: DD Steering C Battery C) Tires Martini . ARROW LIQUEURS CORP, DETROIT 7, MICH, The modern drinker . and Arrow is bubble light.. ite drink taste more delicious. For a smoother . Screwdriver . other’ mixed drinks or straight . Arrow Vodka tenet! Birmingham classic are 13th- ranked Auburn (3-0) vs. Wyoming (2-3) in the lid-lifter and Alabama (3-2) vs. Texas A&M (40) in -the nightcap. The Citadel (3-1) is the host in its first invitational and meets Georgia .(3-1) in the second game of the doubleheader, Miami (4-2) clashes with Florida State (3-3) in the opener. The fifth annual Quantico Ma-. rines Christmas Invitational tour-| ney ended last night with host} Quantico capturing the champion- Oklahoma State (2-2) in the open-| They outscored the Royals, rines defeated American Univer- sity 69-63 with the losers, Willie iJones voted the most valuable Tenth-rated North Carolina (3-0) | player by the coaches. The semifinals of the annual NAIA South-Central Tipoff Tour- ney will take place at Nashville, Tenn., tonight with Villa Madonna 4Ky.) meeting Kentucky State and host, Tennessee A&I opposing Pan- handle. In yesterday's opening round games ‘Kentucky State ousted An- derson, [nd. 63-56, Villa Madonna eliminated Peru, Neb. State 73-72, Panhandle, sent Fisk, Tenn, to the sidelines 5453 and top-seeded Ten- nessee A&I ‘the winner of last sea- son's NAIA tourney, erased Berea. Ky. 106-54. ‘ Tennessee, No, 5, was the only member of the nation’s top 10 teams in action, last night. The undefeated Vols overcame a five- point halftime deficjt to whip Dav- idson 67-52 for their, oh straight ship for the fourth time. The Ma- victory. prefers a light drink . -makes your favor- Bloody Mary. « ask for | 80 and 100 PROOF; DISTILLED From GRAIN | Richard D, Kubn Fri., Sat. ay Clean Car Rides Better, Lasts Longer” KUHN: AUTO WASH 148 W. Huren and San. Across from Firestone | * oe “i ; a With 414 minutes to play, the is The Celtics, out-rebounded and_| guilty of loose ball handling, fell! F behind, 27-19, in the opening quar- , 33-14, to take a 652-4) halftime lead and never were behind again although the Cincinnatians cut the margin te 72-70 at one time in the fourth quarter. In their big second quarter, the Celts tied the score at 28-28 on Tom Heinsohn's field goa] and went ahead for the first time on Frank Ramsey's fielder. Ramsey's three 2-foot set shots were big factors in the second period drive. Boston held a 72-69 lead going into the third quarter and Jim Palmer cut the lead to two points. The Celts pulled away after that with Bob Cousel contributing nine points, DETROIT MINNEAPOLIS Grr GF ri eeu. 9 927 Baylor 810 %6| 2 1 5 Mikkelsen 14 6 Holup 1 6 2 Ellis 6 0 6 2 3 7 Hamilton 4311 Soeaes 10 424 Krebs 5 313 eeuey 2 2 6 Foust 3 612 1 2 4 Garmaker € 113 MeGuire 5 0 10 Leonard 6 315 7 #317 Fleming 10 3 Noble 1 © 2 Hundley *6@ 315 Totals 4 24104 Totals 33113 Detroit ; 22 2 3 M—I104 Minneapolis 4 2 7 M113 Gang’ Tourney Begins Dec. 29 Entries are now being accepted for the 3rd annual YMCA “Gang” basketball tournament, which will ‘begin Monday morning, Déc. 29. in the Pontiac “Y"’ gym. The tour- the North Kiwanis Club of this icity. It is a single elimination tour- ney and competition will be held in two divisions, the prep divi- sion for boys from 1@ through 12 years of age and the junior class for 13 and 14-year-old boys. Any group of six to eight boys wishing to enter thé “‘Gang’’ tour- an entry blank at the YMCA, 131 Mt. Clemens St., and returning it to Art Mann, “Y” physical direc- tor. Deadline for entries is next Monday, Dec. 22. coach or manager at all games. Individual trophies will be award- ed to the players on the winning ney is again being sponsored by! nament may do so by obtaining | Each team must have an adult, day night at Clarkston High gym. 2 bee es 0 Wer cae Worsley Shines ee Jas Rangers Top \Red Wings, 2- 0: ‘Gump: Posts Shutout; New York Takes First Win Over Detroit By BILL CORNWELL DETROIT — Those ‘cousins’? from New York were downright nasty Thursday. night, After being pushed around al- most at will by the Detroit Red Wings in five previous meetings this year, the Rangers discarded their role of bignty relatives and staged a revol With ui: Lorne (Gump). Worsley sparkling in the New York cage and Andy Hebenton taking care of the scoring de- « tails, the Rangers handed the Wings a 2-0 setback last night before 9,112 fans in Olympia Sta- dium, Hebenton’s two goals came in the 4th minute of the 1st period and the 15-minute mark of the 3rd stanza and they were just as good as 100 counters for Worsley, whé was a giant goaltender from stars to finish. he Wings peppered Worsleg with 38 shots and the chunky New York goalie kicked out every oné of them, including half a dozea phenomenal saves from point blank range with no, protection in front of him. It was Worsley’s Ist eeree Of the 1958-59 season and New. York’s Ist win over the Red< shirts, The shutout was the 5th against the Red Wings this year, - three of them on Olympia ice. Terry Sawchyk also did a her culean job in thé Detroit net. turn ing aside a total of 28 Ranger shots, but the Wing goalie wag twice punctured by Hebenton oh scoring efforts that he was help- less to stop. Hebenton’s 1st goal was a quiek blast of Harry Howell's rebound from 15 feet. A clever bit of fak- ery produced the 2nd tally as He- benton skated around defenseman Pete Goegan, drew Sawchuk out of position and hit the open corner. Worsley made spectacular saves In the scoreless 2nd pe. riod, blocking shets by Alex Del: vecchio and Red Kelly on solo breakaways and others by Jack McIntyre, Geordie Howe and Norm Ullman. Ullman, who mixed it up with Rocket Richard last Sunday night: in Detroit's game with Montreal at Olympia, entered the act again yesterday as he and rookie Ed Shack of the Rangers engaged in a stick duel at the final buzzer. Shack received a two-minute high sticking penalty and Ullman was given a major for slashing, both penalties called after the game ended. The defeat caused the Red Wings to lose ground to Montreal in their fight for 1st place in the National Hockey League. The Canadiens trounced the Toronto Maple Leafs by a 41 score yesterday in the Montreal Forum and now lead the 2nd place Wings by six points. Rec Cage Loop Available for Clarkston Men A recreation basketball league will be started in Clarkston for adults. Games will be played each Mon- Interested plavers and team spon- sors can call Ed Hintz at the high jteam in each division. There is school, no entry fee for the tourney. For Meeting and practice sessions More information, call the “Y'', will be held Monday Dec. 22 ard at FE 35-6116. iDec. 29th at 7:00 p.m. DETROIT (® — The University of Detroit has received about 50 lapplications for the head football coaching job. . “About 30 of them are worth very serious consideration.” said} university vice president John Mul. roy of the faculty athletic commit- ‘ tee. ; “ghrprisingty,” he said, “some ‘ ‘applications still” are drifting in. and some of them look good. In the last couple of days we got 50 Affer Titan Grid Job coaches by officials of the uni- versity. : * * * Mulroy said he still hoped to have the coach named around the first of the year, but added, ‘we've got a long way to go.” The job came open when the | ambitious U. of D. fired Wally Fromhart Dec. 2. Fromhart fin- Islied his fifth season as the Ti- tans’ head coath,with a disap- polating 4-4-1 record. Johnny Ray, an. assistant coac! several applications that we con- sider worth fop_ cotisideration.” jhave been held wt prospective’ under Fromhart bor: four yekrs. : | So tar nine personal interviews is considered one Of! the leading candidates. Np gh Se Aa 7 THE PONTIAC. PRESS, ¥nipay, DECEMBER, 19, 1958, | ! Pee Wee Quits sidan cul ave hr i Shortstopping < nodiger the LOS ANGELES (APY — = Alter a brilliant 16-year career Pee Wee| Oscar Rel Cinch ti Reese is retiring as a shortstop He | : off to a fast so defense ot|t@ become a coach for the Los An- ee runs ae ‘ geles Dodgers. and walks (1,210); and is'second in|. his major college basketball aCor)"' v1.0 sresident Buzzie Bavasiltotal hits (2170, +. The Braves’ ay armen ior soorn batons Gries hy, Sow lout Jin petra Sor ft mound p z it) mn a “Shed a’ tear for Rochester High School, the latest vic- f last Sa {tim of a rule instituted last year by the Michigan High't Through games o turday, he 6-5 star of the top-ranked| ¢ School Athletic Association for the purpose of creating |Bearcats had seored 128 points in| 8 (PLYMOUTH Pinte Class A schools tn the state of Michigan, —-—_|*ige_ games for a 42.7 points| es ARKET Ti RE C Late last week a letter arrived at Rochester from * & Genuine GRADES: : .| The NCAA Service Bureau sta- ‘o. Charles Forsythe, state director of prep athletics, offi-|, The NCAA Service Bureau st. | Sido DESKS THRU 10 77 Ww; ‘Huron St. . FE 8 0424 cially notifying the Falcons that they had moved intolinat Bailey Howell of Mississippi | Ce ' ahaha Badd acitt the Class. A ranks. is - the runner-up position with] ’ i) beep Mabaghish (aa rderela tl desks with tilt. ; ee _— a ave! 4 i — Suffice it to say, the annotincement was not exactly me 6 oe ee pe. avs.| and hours of exlaiest wits. 1. Oscar Robertson, Cincinnati -s.3 44 40 128 42. | " ‘ one of these sturdy desks. Helps iss. State ..,.2 27 2 my with homework,* too! For Building Supplies Seo , , ae a 3 | | Now — at Our Special Christmas Price Vacs Class B high schools in an operate on a three-grade ae Gee em — Ry — ad «Hi aga" . 70 al newe mem 0. * eeee ¥ i growing list-of small “A” schools. "recuse sce 3 38 9. | SOME I HING for DAD: Rochester’s enroliment in the |. R20mIDE ..---¢ 41 38 V4" Jacobs Chuck Sat die io eouees f By is upper three grades is 744. 4 third a Tech .. 12" of that total fs 24x, which must |* fom Marre 0 0 0 Ae ELECTRIC DRILL be added to' 744, Thus, Roches- Joe Ruklick, Weller ter has an official register of 992 N’western; tle ..3 32 17 . ; SABRE SAW - — and 900 is the dividing Electric | ine ree noe Ast ® Chief Tankers Face | 2) SOLDERING GUN | | on ALL Hand and Power Tools The Falcons are currently un- FOR THE FAMILY five guines ‘nd. Kenley was ent, OfTONG Indian Team BEAUTIFUL W. PINE CUPOLAS........... think we have good chance to| Flint Central’s pool, Coach Gene| ns reach the quarter-finals.” Norris will “take both varsity and| Colored Paste-On Patterns [> \tiously optimistic about their | chances of making headway in the A full squad will represent Pon- Hf anything could smother their |Jayvees, as the meet is a two-way hopes quicker than their eleva. |¢vent. | Santa — Sleigh — Angels | j|State tournament next March. tiac. Central High today in the Following their easy victory over|Chiefs’ second Saginaw Valley Pontiac Northern, “Kenley said, “‘I)swimming meet of the winter, in I] tion to Class A status, we don’t | Chiets will again be spearheaded | know what it is. Now the Fal- |by their ace breaststroker, Bruce} cons will enter the “A” district |Norvel, who has twice broken the} Sas Eee] | AUBURN LUMBER CO. | Central and nine other schools, |5 _ | and their chances of survival are a * - * the 70 S. Squirrel Rd. Auburn Heights FE 5-9293 © | slim indeed. ang are ra as one 0 Ld * : It was early Jast March, just meet should be a very interesting ||before the district tournaments|aftair. Pontiac will be shooting for © | started, that this writer penned Blits 3rd victory, and its: first in three-part series of articles dealing/ine Valley. Chiets bowed to. de piwith the state’s classification! tending champion Arthur Hill, last | _| problems, their inequalities and the Friday ap, | definite need for realignment. , * * * The need for a change fs still Hughes to Start just as great. The situation has not : : changed one ‘iota and thelfor Titan Five classification system continues to ° ; operate in an unfair manner and Saturday Night Ford Dealers Chain Saw schools are apes into a realm ao, OF A of competition they cannot handle.| Larry Hughes, sophomore | Six high schools in the Oakland | ‘Tm Walled Lake, has taken over have the EnDer. 7 mechanics, \ as low as County area — Walled Lake, |2 starting position with the U. of $ 50* Farmington Lapeer, Van Dyke D. basketball team for — A 2 eet ight’ inst West - if 1695¢ Bogen eee Gas CG pine, G4 know ow” NEW , oar a year ago by the MHSAA’s | Hughes, who ‘scored 25 points | HOMELITE | "=. _ | against Assumption Tuesday and Jo Lorilee Used CHS : Now Rochester has {joined the oer ccs at tree eae ect Gun A eta ap Ueno before offering them ‘ing additions to this company, | Position. | *« * * “He’s a scrapper and with a : / Pontiac Central has an enroll-|little more experience he should for ge: ment of 2,100 in its top three|do an outstanding job for us,”’ said | Chisels. Screwdrivers Brace and Bits ’ Electric Power Tools Nigrades while Rochester has 744,|Titan coach Bob Calihan. This huge difference, according to} Hughes was one of Oakland the MHSAA, fs a fair method of|County’s outstanding prep cagers OPEN SATURDAY 8 - 3 Classification while at Walled Lake two seasons If MHSAA officials can convince | 88°. He led the Vikings into the ae oe CLIFF DREYER | Rochester of this reasoning, they) State quarter-finals in 1956-57. ] ideserve a gold medal. They'll have ; GUN AND SPORTS a mighty hard time convincing us. AA Swimmers Claim CENTER “Where the Home Begins’”’ 152101 Helly Read NHL STANDINGS ‘Medley Relay Mark T Pis. GF GA Montreal voscsesaes. V7 5 3110 64 Holly, Mich. Detroit... 1513 3 33 73 73 | ANN ARBOR (® — An Ann Arbor 4495 Dixie Highway, Drayton Plains OR 3-1211 | Open 7 Doys a Week 8-8) Wine tok BE s #: s¢ high school quartet splashed to a . Chleago os... 1012.7, 21,79 9 ‘national high school swimming rec: ord last night in the 200-yard med- ley relay. eines ‘| Steve Thrasher, Bob Clark, Jim , Griffith and Owen Kleinschmidt chopped better than a second off! the old mark with a time of 1:47.4. a} é 4 . The old clocking of 1:48.5 set last year, was held jointly by Bat- tle Creek and Grosse Pointe high schools. 6 ° Ann Arbor coach Paul Clifford , MOOTHEST WHISKEY = | 22228© | kL for certification of the new mark. , {It’s Alma in Overtime THIS SIDE OF CANADA Ath edn — Aina i lege came from behind to tie up the game and then downed Calvin in an overtime period, 75-73. . Alma’s Ferris Saxton set the , ) Y Oo W E Ni S pace for his -team, scoring 26 . ¢ points. Calvin was led by Ralph Honderd, with 20. 147 South Saginaw Street - Phone FE cad) We're Beating the Drum aes 1: { } 7 Vex] (i ima | ! { “ is dll ¢ Sint Lovis Gote, Quebec Smooth, mellow Corby’s is now in a new gaily striped holiday carton. Lucky fellow who opens that carton. He’ll find the smoothest whiskey this side of Canada. ~ This year give several bottles of Corby’s! CORBY'S Just a few of the things she'll love about the Big M And So Will You When ERCURY (Eset (L)weoux are the largest windshield of any car, wipers that ) You See the New Mercury! clean the entire windshield, lower floor tunnel that All on Display at lets three people sit comfortably. See all the Russ Dawson's models at Russ Dawson’s . . . and they're all avail- able for inneciote delivery. t A GREAT AMERICAN WHISKEY R ; SS D. ‘ LA S JAS. BARCLAY 800. LIMITED, PEORIA, LANE ALENT 5 GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS 232 SOUTH SAGIN Aw STREET : | ’ . of Sunflower Maize, 10 Ibs. eee Salt Nu Kleer A 28 jackson : FEED for WILD Bl RDS , Reg al Wild. Bird Feed An attractive and nutritious blend Kaffir Canary Seed and Buckwheat. 5 Lb. Bag... 10 Lb. Bag .... 25 Lb. Beg .... 50 Lb. Bag... Sunflower Seed Lb. ] 9s Cracked Corn, Wheat and Buckwheat Mix 10 Lbs. for 65c SALT for thawing and for water-softeners Granulated ....$1,70 Rock Salt ..... Med. Flake eeee 2.05 Salt Pellets.... 2.05 REGAL Feed & Supply Co. 4266 Dixie yg oe 3-244) We Deliver Seed, Millet, Milo Corn, Wheat, $ .60 1.10 2.50 4.85 e | { [Fite 5 |i | i | | i Per 100 1.70 2.05 ek... 2.15 FE 2-049! + esahabs| e@ PORCHES e@ ADDI- TIONS : LITTLE AD~ eum BIG DEAL ELLIS INC. Since 1945 Free Estimates FE 2-2671 lsome of these games could give ‘expecting a busy time of jof the top performers in this 'sector with 69 points. ley) is host to this year’s favorite jis 0-2. The same is true of Port| | ville needing a strong showing by | figured another tossup. Big George The early part of the: 1958-59 areg high school hoop season ‘comes to a close until after the jholidays tonight with a 28-game schedule featuring some important contests. It is far too soon. to determing te chew up Ortonville. Each team ball. Inlay City, perennial scc cham- gym where the Wildcats attempt| has been losing but playing £004) big steps’ towards another title pien, plays .at Millington in the| Capee, 1-1. Armada was the other contest seeking its 2nd win.| tep pre-season choice to give Almont trouble but AHS takes an 02 to Brown City. | Memphis is at New Haven and) and will be at home to meet Capac at Anchor Bay in others. INDEPENDENTS Amman ihe siren takin tap Lapeer will be heavily favored to leven he record at 2-2: playing att ngton. South Lyon visits Hartland, Royal Oak.Dondero is host! to Wyandotte. --Farmington Our Lady plays at St. Agatha and Mt. Clemens visits Davison led by Jerry Benni Roseville. how any of the league races are igoing to wind up but the results of Delaware, Biiseetiah Coaches Ex-Wolverines a strong indication of what. to ex- pect come January and February. INTER - LAKES Waterford plays on its friendly home court for the Ist time as - hest te Farmington still seeking its first victory — league or otherwise. Farmington has beat- en only Ciarenceville in three outings. Each is 0-1 in the league. % Walled Lake goes after its 2nd straight league victory and 4th overall at home against Van Dyke it. Viking Kirk Evans has been one A pair of ec weanis get the opportunity to haunt their Alma Michigan basketball] team takes Mater when the University of the court for its next two games. vades Yost fieldhouse to meet the Wolverines who boast a 3-1] mark to date. : Coach of the Delaware team is Irv Wisniewski who lettered * x * The defending champion (Berk- (Southfield) in the other game. Berkley is unbeaten and South- . . _ fielq 3-1. Each has won its only| The Wolverines then adjourn for ys and get back into the Motor City Classic, F ue Tomorrow night, Delaware in-|. - |pon has guided Princeton to three - \Ivy League titles including a 20-6 First opponent on opening night|his Tigers to the Motor City Clas- will be Princeton also coached by sic intent on whipping his Alma! a Michigan alumnus, Cappy Cap-| Mater. ° = Michigan, however, has been Cappon, a native of Holland, | named the favorite for the 7th graduated from U. of M. in 1924 | annual tournament which also as an all-conference gridder and | includes Army and University of regular on the basketball team. | Detroit. From 1930 through 1938 Cappon The Cadets and U. of D. will coached the Wolverine cagers and meetin in the opening game, Dec. in eight seasons his teams posted 29th at 7:30 and Michigan and a 92-60 record. Princeton tipoff at 9:30. * * x For the past 10 seasons, Cap- The Wolverines have good bal- anced height up front led by for- wards, M. C. Burton (6-5) and ex- Highland Park ace George Lee; (6-4). At center coach Bill Perigo ‘has gone with Gordon Rogers (6-6) of Utica. Outstanding player thus far has been guard John Tidwell a 6-3 sophomore who leads the | merk last year for a co-champion- ship. * * * Princeton is expecting another outstanding season this year and Cappon let it be known he brings | team in scoring with a 19.5 average. Tidwell is a native of Herron, Ml. — East Detroit is at Fern- | visits Pert Huron en the ast | Mt. Christie in Operation | ae con Winkel bes bear es | potas Sy Newest Winter S sorts — Maples have certainly had two rugged warmups posting a) one - point triumph and losing by three in overtime. Hazel Park Mt. Christie, newest and most spectacular of the winter sports areas in the Pontiac area will open officially Saturday morning. The new location is located off M24, five and one-half miles north Flint Northern and Hamtramck. “Ferndale is winless in two while East Detroit whipped Roseville in its only oppearance. WAYNE « OAKLAND road, Primarily devoted to skiing, the Area Opens Tomorrow | of Oxford, on the Davison Lak e| Clarkston goes after a big victory at home against North- new area will have the additional facility of three 700-foot concrte| toboggan chutes with rope tow re- turns, and will permit only the use of Mt. Christie toboggans. Ski-wise, Mt._Christle towers 174 feet, will have a run of 1200 feet. The run will be serviced by an 1100 foot Poma lift and four double rope tows. The Poma lift can handle 950 skiers per hour. A full professional staff has been named by the nine Detroiters who comprise the principal ownership. x * * Heading the five man staff is 27-year-old Miche] Turcotte from Jasper-in-Quebec. Turcotte will be available at all times. Assisting him in night and weekend instruc- tion will be Jack Germaine, well known Michigan professional whose background includes teach- ing at the Otsego Ski Club, Au Sa- ble, and Thunder Mountain; Gene Hill, formerly of Boyne Mountain rookies Billi Powell, Larry Lan- don and Dick Caverly to turn the trick. The Holly at Brighton tussle is McDaniels could make the differ- ence, Bloomfield Hills is at West Bloomfield in another dandy. Mil- ford ig favored to end its losing string at home against Clarence- ville but not with ease. Eyery team in the league has lost at least once, OAKLAND B Troy seeks its 2nd straight league triumph at home against Madison in the only game. The Colts are gunning for a repeat championship. SOUTH CENTRAL A will lead to the small Oxford FACTORY SECONDS ORIGINAL EQUIPMENT QUALITY + U. S. Royal Safety 8 670/15 750/14 800/14 WHITEWALL ...... : aad Cie 702°." 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Purchases 95 West Pike St. retary-Treasurer; and a Board of |Directors including the officers as Cales IIT, James Kurtz, Al Simon, Dr. Al Block, and Tom Davis. | Alumni Cagers Face 'M' 5 Tickets for the Motor City Clas- si ean oe oe eS of D. fieldhouse, and can be or- dered by phone, HOW TO IMPRESS YOUR BEST CUSTOMERS AT Thousands of smart business men have discovered in flowers nesslike way to express their gratitude and the kindli- ness of the season toward cus- tomers. Bring us your lise. Use our experience to select appro- fae plants and fresh flowers. Jse our flowers-by-wire service . to speed out-of-town orders. JACOBSEN'S FLOWERS Open Nights ‘Til Christmas 101 N. Saginaw FE 3-7165) . even ~ the look of it brings good ch wherever $380 . Code Ne 0 $239 Pint : Code Ne. 441 fa Ss * 4 WHO LIKE ACTION LIKE , ~ KESsuer | SMOOTH AS SILK JULIUS KESSLER COMPANY, LAWRENCEBURG, INDIANA, BLENDED WHISKEY, 88 PROOF. 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Benedict Bees We Prederteh o- Bberhardt Bier : P _A. Dona: medy . Cc Massucei Keller G Storen Pocs G By H. GUY MOATS The chips were down today for two of the three unbeaten at the top of the Suburban Cath- olic League, One is certain to fall out of the select category, in which Orchard Lake St.. Mary is already ensconced, Pontiac’s St, Frederick club, winner over Royal Oak St. Mary and St, Michael, in leop play, goes against Highland Park St. Benedict im the circuit's top contest of the week, -tonight. Game is set for the Ravens’ gymnasium on John RK, four blocks south (right) of Six-Mile road (on west side of John R). The match is rated a tossup. Orion Comeback Dumps Clawson Down by 18, Dragons | Rally for 58-51 Win, in Oakland 8 Game | Never-say-die Lake Orion recov- ered from an 18-point deficit to defeat Clawson, 58-51, in an Oak- land B League basketball game Thursday night et Clawson. It was Orion’s 3rd victory in, four starts this season and gave, 1 the Dragons a 1-] record in the | Oakland B. The Dragons were unable to make a field geal for nearty six minutes and trailed early in the | contest, 13-1. They scored only | three points in the 1st quarter and faced q 25-7 deficit midway through the 2nd period. With center Bob Shuler and sophomore Tom Reed showing the way, the Dragons finally caught up with Clawson at 47-47 in the lst minute of the final quarter. From there they pulled steadily away to grab the decision. Shuler paced the Orion attack | with 16 points and Reed, who came off the bench halfway through the 3rd stanza, was next with 13. Jim Recknagel netted 12 points, eight, from the foul line. Bill O'Dell and! Ron Hewlett tallied 15 apiece for Clawson. LAKE ORION CLAWSON GFT GFtTt Callison 21-2 5 Thomas 21-2 5 Wiltams 10-0 2 O'Dell 7 1-2 15 Riekn'gl. 2 6-123 12 Boss 36-7 11 Shuler 7:32-4:16 Act 63-6 3 Reed: 6 1-3 13 Hewlett @ 3-7 18 sill 40-0 8 Ahif 00-1 0 Craven 02-32 2 Flatt 032-2 2 Totals 23 14-33 58 — 18 15-27 61. Lake Orion ...+.+. 14 21 20—de Clawson ...... Seineslviere 13 14 #16 =«=6—61 ES Ravens have won over ent and Ferndale St, SCL: competition. They defeated Lourdes in a non-league’ battle by 7|2 two-point margin, The Rams de- feated Detroit St, Elizabeth in their only yoni ir “atonal bitten Art Massucci, whose teams are always tough opponents for any teams|club, defeated Gene Wright’s Rams scoring boys from that contest!. back this year, headed by ‘‘young”’ Art Massucci, currently the club’ leading scorer. Art has hit for| ad some 38 points, including a 21- point production against St, Clem- ent, last week. of last ness” again, including ace point- maker Tom Derocher, who had a cold night in last year’s St. Benedict game, with only one bas- Ravens’ coe Sapo oat ‘eet. Tol bit toe 28 pelts B last, week’s game against RO St, Mary. Rams starters are unchanged from last week’s contest, and the same condition applies tor St, Benedict, In other Suburban Catholic Leaioe contests tonight Pontiac St. Michael is at St. Rita (0-2) and St, James of Ferndale tackles RO St. Mary in Royal Oak. : Clem. ‘ames in ‘St. benedict, canieed by hard- in last winter’s meeting: 46-21, x &® *& Ravens have most of the top- ' eoach Jim Niebauer is seeking his first league victory, and. his quintet is rated a fa- vorite to achieve that result. He had plarted to start the same combination that made a good bat- tle against OL St, Mary last Fri- day night, Eaglets won 4430, for their 2nd SCL win. The Orchard Lake club has al- ready won three loop tests, and will share the lead with the winner of tonight’s Ram-Raven battle, Eaglets will be idle now *. * *- The Pontiac club has all but one year’s starters in “har- until the seoand wes ary (Jan, 9), All other SOL clubs resume Jan. 6, SALE BOWLING |< BAGS Gift Certificates Issued in Any Amount Motor Inn Recreation FE 5-6032 HUBBARD BUILDING — = j i ] j ] 7 J for the Gifts ~ BRUNSWICK BOWLING BAG Colors and styles for men and women .......---- from $3.95 BRUNSWICK BOWLING SHOES Comfortable, well-fitted. Choose from our wide selection, or give a gift certificate. 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The mobs were loose in the “ping from the skles flew thickly. . this choice months later, in De ~ Gaulle’s constitutiona] referendum ’ Gaulle broadcast his appeal to a prostrate France on June 18, 1940. . war. (“An anonymous but wide- |. . this to France has lost a battle; *- has the absolute duty of continuing . resistance. Soldiers of France, : sisted om forming a full-fledged * hd * * =~ nearly eee eee Ow PEO we Ree > Assembly confirmed De Gaulle as @ Po é ” THE PONTIAC PRESS, , : a - j a as PARIS (UPI¥—Last May- 29 the highest personage of the French stood before a palpitating cham- ber-full of deputies and inveked the name of Gen. Charles de Gaulle. There was a historic iney itability, about it. ' streets of Algiers, resttive in the streets of Algiers, restive in the had been canceled; the Champs- Elysees Was af armed camp. Rumors of paratroopers drop- For the National Assembly and for France, the choice was be- tween. on the-one hand, revolution. anarchy of dictatorship—possibly all three—or the one man whose in- tegrity nobody questioned, how- ever much they might question his politics: De Gaulle. * * * The Assembly gratefully’ chose De Gaulle ang the nation ratified of Sept. 28, 1957, by an 80 per) cent vote for him. Yet 18 years earlier when De few Frenchmen had ever heard of him. “This war is not over with the battle of France,” De Gaulle said then. “This war is a world awake publicist later changed she has not lost the war.’’) De Gaulle went on, “Every Frenchman who still bears arms De Gaulle not only had no of- ficial blessing from Paris; within free French government. On Nov. 30, 1945, the constituent Premier by a unanimous 555-0 over. * *« The following month the Com- The Socialists opposed him over the size of the defense budget. Other parties were chafing at De! Gaulle’s impatitnce with parlia- mentary procedure. His return to power was char- acteristically dramatic. The morning after May 13, 1958, Frenchmen awoke to find that set- tlers and soldiers in Algiers had carried out a bloodless mutiny to demonstrate their fears of . French giveaway of Algeria. They were denying the avw- therity of Paris and demanding the return of De Gaulle. | we On May 19 De Gaulle came to surrounded by the greatest se- curity precautions that security- _leonscious Paris had ever seen, announced, “If the people want it, I am ready to take the leader- ship...” : an * * . On June 1, 1958, De Gaulle re- turned to the chamber he had so abruptly walked out of 12 years before. Without preliminaries he began, “‘The degradation of the state is rapidly becoming worse.” as in the preceding-national crisis,) Paris and at a press conference|come FRIDAY, DHCEMBER,19, 1958 * esy = | Perhaps his moat historic | overseas was who favored De Gaulle most. WHO.T COULD The Communists suffered their worst postwar defeat. = Ise a TS PSOAage MY ACTINITIES IN BEHALF OF A NEEDY » 1950 by MEA Servion, inc TIL fing. US Pot HOOPLE'S THE NAME -~ MASOR AMOS BARNABY HOOPLE, THE INVENTOR! uw HAR-RUMPH / a4 I'VE MEANT TO STOP BY, BUT BOARDING HOUSE Yyy Y THAT MY W ZF NER On. r-. 60 SECONDS BEFO POTS IN HERE THAN A CHINA SHOP'S REPAIR DEPARTMENT! RIGHT NOW THE ONLY INVENTION TM papi rthaae IN IS ACHAIR ILL LT LOONIES OUT INDOW BLT I'LL GWE You REL PUSHA {__—= BUTTON THAT WILL DROPA NET Jim YOUR HEAD NEVER MIND THE WIND-UP, GIVE ME V// THE PITCH’ I GET MORE CRACKED Yj L i. « RECONER HIS SPEECH = Y Wy) Gy Wt Attorne. re : <= aoe SE TL OUT OUR WAY — IN “THIS FORGIN'-- LITTLE MORE / THERE! ine WAY, ie —_ ° f . Su crtacuat nt { ( ae = wt OLLIE. ZZ NO MIOOLEMEN —,' MUU NY ——, OLD DAN ALWAys RESENTED THEM GUYS BEIN’ MADE FOREMEN OVER HIM AND THAT'S JUST ONE WAY fm : GE = 12-14 J.RWILLIAMS © 1958 dy NEA Rervice, ine, T.M. Reg, U.S Pat. Off. DONALD DUCK da 4 WONDER GRY TIO WITH WET By McEvoy and Strieber Nereis emees | Pe Y SR J N at | By | By T. V. Hamlin te yy % wee bi Zs ee D7 NS AON La | © 1008 by MEA Rervten, mw. VAL Mag US Pon OF By Leslie Turner “ CAPTAIN EASY LKNOW. 6UT THE STATE UNIVERSITY 1S LOSING A DIRECTOR IN THEIR DRAMA DEPARTMENT THIS YEAR... -— HEAD is a perfect little Christmas gift for those who do me little services for you. | Popular—inexpensive. |] _ You'll F ind PROFITABLE OPPORTUNITIES Every Day in the Pontiac Press Want Ad Section Take adva ot this easy way to solve alf'yqur buying and selling ofoblems. | To Place Your WANT AD ~- - DIAL FE 2-818} “Now there's MY idea of a white Christmas:”’ MAX WESBER HAS INFLUENCE THERE. HE SAYS MOTHER GET THAT JOS NEXT FALL! THE OF THE DEPARTMENT KNEW HER WHEN SHE WAS A SUCCESS CAN KNE! WW THE THEATRE: uf Pat. ¢ XO By Ernie Bushmiller 28 a Disney NANCY ! by King Peateres Symdicats, SSS eee ~ ERNE [5Rm.| i : 3 BUSHMILLER. I WISH AUNT . \ FRITZ! DIDN'T 4 Lx SEND SO MANY “|| | CHRISTMAS CARDS 7, oe | “—~ & \Gz —s os os SS BOy--- I'VE BEEN. AT THIS FOR THREE ton fing. UE et OF o AN ghee mnerret Cage, 138 by Untned Poamen tyndieate, ten PEC. —' 8 YOU HAVE ALL OF THE VIRTUES THAT MOST GIRLS DON'T HAVE ANY MORE, NOWADAYS © 1958 by NEA Service, Inc. T.M. Rag. U.S. Pat. Off, By Dick Cavalli fy YOU'RE A REAL _ GIRL’ J OLD FASHIONED ( —_—— DEAN 9 By Che¥tec Kohn | BUT, GRANOMA, WE CAN'T AFFORD T’ EAT IN THERE.’ BUT IT DOESN'T cOsT) ANYTHING T? WALK YEAH, I GUESS THEIR PRICES ARE KINDA ‘cas. | UMN: | Bae - - eile: Petioees Profedeer pr Benefit. 7 oy ' _AT&T 3- for-I Stock: Split Is Firm's First - 4 x 4 the company in obtaining -large cutcaao, “Dee. = Pars (AP) —Opening amounts of equity capital needed|**ains: : Oe for expansion, They expect the 65%| The follo are t ces split will widen the market for the| iy” **’*| covering ei locally aevalt stock, Se i ‘- ‘a1, produce brought to the Farmer's The proposal sent AT&T stock a 14% Sly cts 1.18% Market by growers and sold by skyrocketing on the New York) som emi ard’ (aramsi *ithem in’ wholesale package lots. ' Stock Exchange, An avalanche of mee sreseee L16% Jam oo... 25/Quotations are furnished by the buying orders forced suspension of 24, sv ++: 118. Det-oit Bureau of Markets, as of trading, When trading resumed Thursday. Firm Pays 7c Dividend Nib YORK ‘dPck silos aus eid ot ns Was ngs seanct: coated, Mhilith eta Kcson from Port Chester, N.¥., an Okla- through sale of securities. er market for the stock is essen- The. board declared, expendi-|tial, fessor| ‘ures of this magnitude are ex-| In its statement, the board said Pected to continue. Tf these large| additional shares resulting. trom — a sizable ‘paper profit on their| Construction programs are to be|the split would probably be : & pend seed Yon % ee el | + atonal carnegie gihy sd Bh z annual rate of $3.30 a share. That would be $9.90 a share on the old stock in American Telephone & Telegraph Co. . f Directors of the world’s biggest 2 publie utility recommended a 3-| 0 for-1 stock split and a 10 per cent hike in the dividend Wednesday. It's the first stock split in com- pany history and the first dividend change in 37 years. * * * Company directors said the split would Strengthen the position of Grain Prices 1% hours later, the stock was up $23 at $225, breaking a 27-year Detroit Produce newsboy, the Indian princess or the college professor? They prob- Have to Stand Trial | te ably won’t take down their paper) for Beatings profits by selling. They've held i their AT&T stock five years or SHEBOYGAN, Wis. HW — A de-| more, _ | tective testified yesterday that for-| They are part of AT&T's 1,625.-/mer UAW union organizer John) SSRs ssS8aues s nensivemee se w tm Defective Bares ee rare the day, on a volume of 110,200 . Apples, Delicious. bu. ......0.......84.00 shares. - * ' ° vecerances Aeets, 6 ou 5 coaces 180 AT&T closed at $223.75, up unacd § Boast perdu ronan eee e ee cennees 1 $23.% on the Pacific Coast Ex-| Horseradish, No. 1 Dk. .c.sccclene 3 change. | Pa os 3 ‘eane os » = What does this mean to the) Said He Would Never | (Paraley Root (och doe peperrore 1. mips ee assueseee 1 ’ toes (bag? ene Radish Setveuce Oat dace bagel Meteus Ou... gees Hothee.. om Vem mm z Meet ong topped. bu. ven Me Poultry and Eggs or The is the big-/Gunaca of Detroit admitted beat: DETROIT POULTRY | es! ra mL the) j DETROIT, De 18 (AP) — Prices) B ce PS ly in ing two non-striking Kohler Co.! , atl Wet pean Tau. Dereiiter nel total of owners inthe three next! workers but said he would never | kw quality live poultry: biggest concerns: General Motors)», | Heavy type hens 18-20: Nght ty > ave to stand trial. i rs | Corp., Standard Oil Co. (New! bens ll: heavy type heer and oye . . . “Sarge, this will never do |2,%5 4 Ibs. whites 17-18':; Barred Roc Jersey) and General Electric Co. , = |22-23: caponettes 412-7 Tbs 20- ae | you any good. Mazey will never {ducklings 27-30; geese 29-30, swan * *® * | leave Soapy send me back to = oa ou Sern Saad aye young 4 ! : Ihens 29-30: voung toms 29-23. These three are among the) Wisconsin,” Det. Sgt. Conrad Ko- 812,900 little investors who have! netshny ef the Michigan. State . DETROIT EGGS 5 . — held 15 shares or less. of AT&T| Police quoted Gunaca as saying. oy "iSeiroit Tia ‘Mase Mots teatfel ee eee oe Ree The officer said Gunaca was [sate grades: ee. ss insti eo — er / m If one of the trio, for instance, referring te Emil Mazey, sec- wid. avg. 50: Extra levee 43-47 wid had purchased 10 shares at the! re¢ary.treasurer of the UAW, and | = .y 4 edtum Se. 36. wtd 331 email! 1954 low of $156 a share, it would) Michigan Gev. G. Mennen Wil- (28.30, wtd. eve. 28%: grade B large have cost him $1,560, plus broker 30-41, wtd avg. 60: browns — erade liams. A extra large 47: large 41-43: wtd fees. In five years, he would have collected $450 in dividends. ‘q shn : ‘+ | SF 42; medium 37; small 30; grade Konetshny was a surprise wit-|C"Sarge 33, Checks 29'5-33, wid. ave ness at Gunaca’s preliminary hear- 31. MARKETS |Mart Advances in Active Trade NEW YORK ® — General - Dy- namic, builder of the giant Atlas satellite, and other missile-related stecks rose today. The Stock Mar- ket advanced irregularly in active early rete: * * FOR CEREBRAL PALSY — Howard Palmer, (left) president of the United Cerebral Palsy As- | sociation of Pontiac, presents Vernon Schiller, Pontiac Board of Education treasurer, with a check for $2,036.48 from the United Cerebral Palsy Association of Michigan, a United Fund yesterday. agency. The money paid for the six-week summer recreation program held in Pontiac this year for 20 handicapped children, which the board of edv- cation ' financed. Pontiae Preas Photo The’ presentation was made Gains of fractions to a point! were the general rule among key ‘stocks but there were plenty of losses in the same range. General Dynamics rose 2@< te 6633 on an opening block of 7,000 shares and then clipped a sizable fraction from the gain. This stock rose 2% yesterday in advance of the big news and brokers were at a loss for the reason. * * * Burroughs rose more than a ‘point and General Electric a frac- ‘tion. Both firms worked on the traffic accidents during holiday period. | Atlas, Thiokol, the rocket-fuel stock. day, Dec. 27. jumped about 7 before paring a) «hose deaths need not couple of points from the rise. & * * Eastman Kodak was up around 4, Goodyear and Du Pont more than a point each. Moderate gains were made by Ford, Chrysler, Goodrich, Sperry cur,” the council said. And it provided this pre: staying alive: Start early, cut speed to Rand, Kennecott, Royal Dutch | Sleepy. and Loillard. If you've been drinking, American Telephone was off| drive. Holiday Traffic Deaths Estimated 620 Americans May Die CHICAGO (‘P—The National Safety Council to- day estimated that 620 Americans will be killed in - ‘The period will begin at 6 p.m. (local time) Wednesday, Dec. 24, and will end at midnight Sun- conditions, pull off the road if you feel tired or the four-day Christmas occur and should not oc- scription for driving and meet traffic and weather the council added, don’t © about a point. Losses were also taken by Lowe’s, Air Reduction, Liggett & Myers and Merck, the latter off about a point. ‘Treated Washington Properly’ New York Stocks He also could have participated). ; Commercially graded: in one rights offering to buy new|'"& on two charges of felonious srenites — grade ) sfumee 4: jerte stoek and several rights offerings 2Sault. Tig hearing was scheduled|jiowns —"gerace A large 38-39, medium to buy convertible debentures at to continue today. 11,32; small 26-27 favorable prices. Or, if he didn’t} Gunaca, a former member of a) have the extra funds, he could) Detroit UAW local, is charged with’ : k have sold those rights for a tota) beating William Bersch Jr., and Livestoc |his late father, William Sr., on DETROIT LIVESTOCK of more than $60 in cash. + * - = ye . duly 4, 1954. “pcal , 2 i gg re cleanup effats “prices wucies cia acum: pia ae ean | ne ; tert ti [ — On 10 shares he could have col- j a the UAW struck the Kohler andere. aed sotterings “30.00-25 25° Admiral -. 182 Kimb Clk ... 64 5! oes ARBOR ad Did George lected $2,230. less broker fees. at| Plum ing ware firm on April 5,/utiity cows 18.00-1900: canners and aes sae iy) mresas. Ss... 33.3] Washington die because his physi- Wednesday night's New York clos- ne The company resumed pro, |csiters 10 tei? aoa wal pa aie te most: | Allied ars Lt Bs Leni & PF 3 . 38. é\cians were incompetent, as _his- ‘duction with new worke ly 50c lower; full decline on weights Allis Chal .... 2 cN&L ... | ? ing price. That's a capital gain in| trik rs and non-| | ceer 116s Ba. cows caaaly: waite levenay Alem Lad. lll Ligg @ My _ aaa tory sometimes states? five years of $670. if rikers about eight weeks after! (> strong: most good and choice 900-1200. Alcoa is: a6 Loe b Aire ... ee | Some of the first President’s | OO% 'S eae 2 He probably wouldn't sel] the strike began. The company re- Gan reeks od nie ie eernra}| none: Am Can...) 49.3 Lorillard. go 1| Contemporaries went to their though, Because if he and. the /mains in production and the strike iesd high choice to prime 1230 Ib. steers pes See: Lab uerca dee 2) graves claiming his personal doc- other stockholders approve the (Cale nog sects Sele? cesall gectags Gries AE! Motors". 287. Merck 762\ tors were to blame. proposed stock-split at the next) Konetshny said Gunaca made 25 I» vearling steers 29.00. few prmte re pels ‘3 exgen tees ‘ ae - x annual meeting on April 15, his the statement Sept. 9 when taken ts iow. ea atecta 3 Fo38 28. utitity sects *. tag Mp's Hon 1192) But a modern physician says 10 shares will become 30. And his/ into custody by the officer in a sictre,?1,00.23.28: most, good and shele/Armeo St! | 67 Minn Ral... 24 no. . . dividends would fnerease from) Detroit tavern on a Wisconsin fugi- “choice to’ prime 1010 Ib. heifers 2759 Armour & Co. 221 sfonsan Ch .. 38.7 . 90 0 99 itive warrant. & ndard gies good heifers 23.50-25.25 Lpemnee ae Mont Ward .. 41 | “Dr. Darrell A, Campbell, sur- on 0 sh me ai Rttery 2,230" win cage Bane Sud” 4g} Met Ne si 6| gical director of Wayne County year on shares. 00- ; @annérs and cutters 14 Beth Stee) || 49.7 Motorola so UU 18.00: urlitte. bulls 23.00-25.60: cutter |Boeing A! 477 Mueller Br. 275) General Hospital, comes to earl * bulls 20 0-23.00.” Bond Mrs... 21 Murray Cp ... 33 y nee oon face eel. Booth Newspapers Reng opp geen Soi ay em 22) American- doctors’ defeme In an generally has. been around a: 4's prime! Fealers 0 ee-liee carly ter eek. muy ee ree id rs ear < 4 a j . ope aon ed mee. Or Settle Labor Dispute |i: sxx aenwent arr rmcecines et te ele an roo eu an ut ¥ c 9 N Am v dendia_on the new stock will be| Thin See Burroughs a2) No, Am AY 2 ood Sweeping ee coud Put we DETROIT (UPI) — Publication sales Compared last week, staushver CRD Soup 486 OPO One - a3 “_ in the range of $65 to $70 was expected to resume today at|‘ambs 0-100 lower: slaughter mals aes IS) Owens Gi 8 Ivi lans as ’ steady to wea most and ro chocie tee Gé lap ie ae ieee four of nine Booth newspapers wooled slaughter lambs 19 00-21.00 |Cepatal a He Pan A W Air NP P ll AT&T and its Be Bell t "hat closed down since Nov. 24 by algise-aiis. lend’ rime weeks tar Sts 1 201 Barem pict. § a8 rom ayro , us System have ctrike of International Typograph- | 22.00: load late up to 22.25: utility to Cater rae 884 Parke Da... 28 pent more than two billion dol cal Union printers and appren- (7 sid, Dolce, feeder lambe 29.00: (Cor ter is ane ES RR... a? WASHINGTON (AP)—Costs and iZ- Foole slaughte am dg = isi ola . lars for rlew construction. ices. |!9 00-18 50. few k loads choice. “to prime pea =a = Pfizer ewe 193 ¢ ‘weapons advances have triggered: Since the end of World War IL. oes and apprentices All thee chotesstnaehtal Cees eee ie ae ric lCoce (Coll c. 120.6 Phill Pet. ’’, 47.3, sweeping Navy. cutback in shore, more than 17 billion dollars have Ann Arbor News, Bay City Times. y'¢ £00¢ td choice feeder lambs 20.00- eos ae = a Frost =o = a establishments and spelled ig been laid out for expansion. The Kalamazoo Gazette and Muskegon | eon N oss : “; RCA oon 45 end to 4 major missile program | Chronicle voted late yesterday to! ConLGan 57 pga Neb aa j24_ To keep pace with cutdowns in’ |accept a contract offer made last) Copter to the Rescue cone elie : ve rae tees is: its operating forces, the Navy =a 1 ‘Friday by Booth Newspapers, Inc. Cont Oil 614 Roral Dut ... 482 Thursday night, 30 ground bases 2 llion ars. ITU members at three other SIMSBURY. Conn, (UPh — It copes at nates oi in 17 states, will be closed, reduced ‘Booth papers, the Flint Journal, took Charles H. Kaman only five |Decre : te Scovitt oot 23.7 7\or merged. : ia J & selene ‘ i Saginaw News and Jackson Citi minutes to get home from work Soug Aire .)) $71 Bhell Oil -.... 812) ‘The announcement spoke of | zen-Patriot, have been ordered by, When notified his house was on Dow Chem 73 Sea 3, rising prices and higher labor the ‘internatiofial union to vote on, fire. Kaman. president of Kaman fest sir L © 343 Sou Pac 1... 6 bs : | Aircraft, ff h th fi last Red... 1 gon ws | costs. About 9,000 civilian jo the offer by midnight Sunday AIrCT ew home-with fire ex-igaton Mtg ||. 56 Sperry Rd... 25 will be abolished over the next The vote at the Saginaw News is tinguishers—in one of his helicop-|E' & Mus ... 84 std Ol! Cai .. 59.4 1 Erie RR ...... 11.5 Std Ot] Ind 46.6; Several years. Janupry- March Output scheduled for today. ters. Ex-Cell-O 40.6 Std Of1 NJ... §73 N basi be Pairb Mor ... 324 gtd Ol! Oh ... 85.7 Canceled after an outlay e 78 Would Be Higher Than ony ono ee muered on the Food Mach ... $46 stevens. JP -- 36-4/ mittion doll the Regulus |< ke g contract proposal at the two Booth Although the United. States has Sadat ipy pene in Leonia a . ae ae ided as - 2 Th Last Year’s Figure |papers in Grand Rapids, the approximatel$ 40 per cent of the |Froen Tra |. 20 Swift & Co .. 443) L Sul missile program. The Press cand the Herald. Local id’ Gen Dynem - $4 gyiv Bi Pd |, 596/air-breathing missil@ can soar TESS a e Hera al 1s-'world’s coal reserves, neighboring iGen giec ..... 13 - Texas Co y..° 86.7 than 1,000 mil wns the sues are still being negotiated in'Canada has only about two. per |Gen Fds . 163 Tex G Sul 91.7| More L les At ce 2 pe: : DETROIT « — Auto industry Grand Rapids. icent.. Se at es 21.2) speed. of sound. It flew* fo about planning for next year’s first quar- — Gen Time... 262 Timk R Bear.. 444/40 successful tests. ter indicates the car makers ex- Gea ote : s: Tran W At nel ‘The Navy figured that by jetti- pect a 544 million unit production, Goedel B - if Twenty Cen 37 soning Regulus II now it could in 1959, Ward’s Automotive Reports | year... 1194 Un Carbide. 1234|/Save more than 100 million dollars says in its current issue. n on Sue, Grab Paige: at Ga) Eee i a3 for other projects. It said ballistic u i r n bs * 7 Fs The industry is scheduling 1.644.- Gulf Oi ..... 126.2 nit Aire s0.4|missiles — shot more like bullets! . 000 car assemblies for the eee Homecte 2. 418 ee .-- 3$4/— have better potential than the March quarter, the agency says. . , # Rooker = = BRS 4s.5| air-breathers guided like pilotiess That total would compare with Indust Ray ee a6 Tob: “!).. 24.1 planes. 1,238,710 car assemblies in the first Ineptr Cop 378 Went Genrer 23) «The Navy is now developing 1958 quarter. Int Hare WO Waste Oy Ok-: aby, the Polaris 1,500-mile range bal- . Int Paper ...115.7 White Mot ... 624 listic missile. Like the R s Ward's notes that in recent | b Waterford Townst gistencd « ; Int Bhoe 335 Wilsoh & Co. 301 a ok years January-March output has | aterfore ownship régistered school and the purchase of a fu-; jint TeleTet 6 Woolworth 325| the Polaris could be fired w : ¢ . AC i ick - 4 . it s! Crk Coal . ¢ ale & Tor 30.6 7 je amounted to approximately 30 “oters will be asked. to approve ture school site. Jonns Man .. 49 Ynest SneT.tie4| © Muclear warhead from sub per cent of the year's total pro. 7 Proposed S> million hond issue} Although this was a suggested jones & L .. $@ Zenith Red ise marines. i = : “a ai enneco! duction: . for an extensite cone eee program, Shunck stressed the im- ; | F. O.- Detweiler, president of program, plus a five-mill tax in-)portance of maintaining flexibility STOCK AVERAGES 'Chance Vought Aircraft Inc. It says all produc ers will par- crease foy school operations. 'in drafting the plan so that the ticipate in the upswing. The ois The Board of Education last Board can spread the building duction projections include an in-,ight approved Supt. William funds to obtain) maximum construc. soos by ote ee '0 Shunck’s rechmmendations to call tion. p 4.000 assemblies from 3 in the 4 special election late in February first_1958 quarter and to 38,000 by or early March. He added that because of the Studebaker-Packard from 9,320 yw io Ge Ge a ' attendance and assessed valua- tion, the borrowing of building | funds now would nof produce as lange an obligation percentage- wise as did the $1,400,000 bond issue approved by voters in 1950, which has been paid. The superintendent's report stat- ed that not all of the construction ‘program would be put into imme- diate operation even though funds | were available. . & * * was authorized by units. The projection is subject to cRange, Ward's says, but it adds: | “Phe 1,644,000 figure is ‘not just, a statistical throw of the dice. It : ; : is @ total comprised of individual," 18 not changed. company expectations based on! Rates for retiring earlier bond facts calculated from: nationwide, issues have heen held at such mafket investigation.” a level that the $5 million and five mills for operation could be paid off more rapidly than was originally scheduled. Tf the bond issue and the millage hike are approved, Shunck ‘said ‘there would be no increase in taxes provided assessed property valua. ROYAL OAK — Sherman Prod-| In a detailed report on the pro- ucts, Ine., has declared a yearend posed building program, Shunck. the Shunck. dividend: of 7 cents a share pay-|recommendetl construction of a. ‘Board to contact bonding attorney | able Dec. .21 to shareholders of /fully equipped senior high school. Claude Stephens and proceed with) _tecord Dec. 24. The company ‘man- five elementary schools, five addi- plans for the special election. earth tions to present schools, mainte-| A definite date will be set at the. nance and board of education jhest regular Board mbeting, Jan the remodeling of one/21. ufactures tractor - mounted, moving, sofl preparing and ma- térials handling equipment, ‘ ‘buildings; i Paper Strike Continues Bnine major newspapers since Dec. | ‘jumped 18 per cent and ‘their mis- NEW YORK—iCompiled by the sociated Press): 4s which held the Regulus develop- 30 16 18 60 ‘ment contract, said the cancella- eer. der Indust. Rais Uul Stocks tion will leave ‘‘a void that Cannot Weer ago 303-4 131.8 90.8 206.9 be filled by any other weapon in Year sae tees 220.0 if ns ti31 existence or planned.” He blamed ans SO : 6 210.1 oe eran 2 me lee the Navy action solely-on budget 1957 high ..,..280.0 1347 775 188.8: limits. 1957 low ». 226.0 78.2 66.2 150.9 The biggest Navy center slated for shutdown is the overhaul and irepair activity at the naval ¢air station in Corpus Christi, Tex. DETROIT STOCKS (C. J, Nephier Co.) Pisareel after decimal cy oe eighths we oon Allen Elec, & Equip. Co. 2.1 21 2.1/This is to be closed by next July, Roes Gen mee 12 H4{putting 3,015 civilians out of jobs. GL, Olt & Cheth. Co.* 14 16 Howell Elec, Mtr , 69 62 62 ; Poninswiar 1. Prod. Co 85. 124|Music Reduces Errors Foleho Efison Co. 18 Musi K oie wale: eid 0 waved CHICAGO — Musie in the back- ground makes workérs produce miore and reduces their errors, ac- leording to one test. It showed that ‘listening to music while- working NEW YORK (UPI) — No break increased mail inserters’ perform- was in sight today in the 10-day-old. ‘ance 8 per cent: check typers’ er- . deliverers’ strike which has stilled rors dropped 38 per tetit; key- ‘the presses of New York City’ spunch operators’ production 10. takes dropped 37 per cént, i Re -|Defends George's Docs for Starkweather ordered mass-killer Charles of Robert article in the University of Mich- igan Alumnus Quarterly Review. Campbell writes that Washing-| ton's final illness was diagnosed properly as -cynanche trachealis. Today the disease is called strep | * * * “Washington's illness was $0) short and unexpected as to bring | much criticism upon those who at. | jtended him,” Campbell says. was perhaps the same diagnosis that would be made today. “In the light of knowledge available in those days, the treat- ment was adequately and honest- ly carried out. There is little doubt that the repeated blood letting was a conributory fac- tor (in death). * | throat. | * * “But years thereafter, the medical pro- fession as a whole — and not) just the three attending physicians — lay under the error of adher- ence to this concept of treat- ment.’ Campbell says Washington him- self asked for blood letting. News in Brief A break-in at Deni’s Food Market, 1450 Square Lake Rd., was’ reported to Pontiac police yester-' Nothing was reported miss- | day. ing. Thieves broke into the Robert Hall Clothiers shop, 200 N. Sagi-: naw St., last night, Pontiac police report. Twelve tires were stolen from a gas station at 605 S. Saginaw St., it was reported to police today. he Democrats will meeting of t oe held at the “Greveend Town- ae Hall on Saturday, Dec. 20 at iclosed today that a nest of 16 Nike- ‘been set up at Belle Isle on. the “Tt | at that time and for 50; Atomic-Capable Missiles Nesting on Belle Isle DETROIT # — The Army dis- Hercules guided missiles, capable of carrying atomic warheads, has East Side of Detroit. , * * * Col. John R. Romlein, command- er of the Detroit Nike District, said security regulations prohibited any disclosure of whether the mis- siles actually are armed with nv- clear warheads. ting flourishes in a bull market and during periods of increasing business activity when a company ~ needs to raise new. nioney. for growth, pocket dividend hike, as company’s was, the hope is that the split means the Dividend Actual Mathematical ‘py SAM DAWSON — NEW YORK (AP)—Stock split- * * * It pleases shareholders almost as much as raising the dividend— althoygh in cold réality only the latter does them any mathemati- cal good. * * * A stock split like the one pro- posed by directors’ of American Telephone & Telegraph actually leaves the present stock owner with the same share of equity in the company’s assets. Thus, when JAT&T stockholders get three new shares for the one they hold to- day it will mean that each of the come thick and fast of late. A - * * * He said the Army is converting Soran So far in 1958 there have been t other Nike sites at Commerce Lake, 26 splits or pr et wells cf Harrison Township and Monroe to accommodate the new missiles. * * * The Nike-Hercules, which has a range of 85 miles, replaces the Nike Ajax, which was a smalier, shorter- range missile incapable of carry- ing an atomic warhead. Parks occupy 27,114 acres of New York City, or about 10 per cent. mcniGan ‘Giteois bts bow much or @ebts or bills when agate fe NO SECURITY OR ENDORSERS REQUIRED _ c - ONE PLACE TO PAY : Member American Association ef Credit Counsellors “Let 9 Years of Credit Counseling Experience Assist You” Hours: Daily 9 to $ Wed. and Sat. 9 to 1 Evenings by App’t. MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSEL 716 Pontiac State Bank Bid —— SS Michigan BUSINESS GuIDE | Throughout Michigan. INTRODUCING A NEW Bh Ly FOR YOU WITH THE TU EVERY PACE. Be sure your business, farm of. in- vestment is listed in the next issue Guide.” Business of All Kinds Investments, Too! OWNERS ATTENTION! of “Partridge’s Michigan Business NO CHARGE TO you Realtor Partridge ond Associates 1050 W. Huron St. FE 4-358 24 Chase St., Pontiac | Industrial Rustprooting Nu-Brite Plating Co. FE 5.3484 Nu-Brite Mig. Ce. 8 p.m. All interested are fasted —ady. Death Penalty Ruled LINCOLN, Neb. (AP)—The Ne- braska Supreme Court today up- held ‘a District Court decision and R. Starkweather to die in the electric chair March 27, 1959. The high court issued its order ,jafter review of Starkweather’s sentence, an automatic procedure for all death sentences handed down in Nebraska. He originally had been scheduled .to die last Wednesday. Starkweather was convicted of first-degree murder, and murder while in perpetration of robbery, Jensen, 17, Bennet. Neb., high school student. Jensen fell victim .to Starkweather dur- ing a killing spree last January in which .10 persons were slain. Starkweather’s sweetheart, Caril ‘Ann Fugate, %, has been sen-| tenced to life imprisonment for aiding and abetting Starkweather in the murder of Jensen. Caril was his companion on the murder spree, ; ii a wl lal } é . the Cross County Parkway on Oct. WASHINGTON, “TAP) ~~ The United States, trfumphant at hurl- ing a four-ton satellite into orbit, raised its space sights eaeier _notch today. The men who built ibe earth- circling device, which dwarfs the Soviet Union's 1'2-ton Sputnik TII, talked about putting a man aboard another one &nd sending it to Venus or Mars * * * : President Eisenhower called it “a distinet step forward. . (which) opens new opportunities to the United States and all man- kind.’ The Pentagon echoed his words, accenting the peaceful as- Goldfine Found Guilty by Court Boston Industralist Is Convicted of Criminal Contempt Today BOSTON, Mass. (AP)—Industri-) alist Bernard Goldfine was con- victed of criminal! contempt today Yor failure to comply with a fed- eral court order to produce books of the Lebanon Mills, Lebanon, N.H., in connection with a probe of his tax affairs. * * * U.S. Dist. Judge Charles E Wyzanski Jr. handed down his de- cision in a surprise announce- ment. He had indicated Thursday) he would return his. verdict on Monday. The 67- year-old Goldfine was ac- quitted on two counts: regarding books of Lebandale Mills of Leb- anon, N.H., and George Moffett & Sons Co., of Plymouth, Mass. * * & ; Goldfine’s secretary, Miss Mil- dred Paperman, was convicted of criminal contempt in connection with records of the Strathmore Mills of Boston, and the North- field Mills of Northfield, Vt. MOUNT VERNON, N.Y. (AP) —Solomon J. Goldfine of Scars- dale, son of Boston industrialist Bernard Goldfine, was fined $50 Thursday S a — charge. City Judge P. Raymond Sirigna- no also suspended his driving license for having been involved in three traffic violations within ~18 months. . * *x* Parkway police accused Gold- fine of driving at 530 miles an hour in a 35-mile-limit section of Obedience Class Graduates Told for Fall Term Top dogs for the fall graduating classes at Daniel Whitfield and Bloomfield High Schools were named this week. These classes| are conducted by Southern Mich- igan Obedience Training Club at a number of area schools, Plans are underway now for the spring classes. Leading “pupils” at Whitfield School were Topper, owned by Mrs. Ladwig, Pontiac (Manches- ter), 199 points; Mandy, Bert Mosher, Pontiac, (Brittany) 191; Veep (Doberman), Charles Pier- son, Pontiac, 189; Pierre (poodle), Nancy Scribner, Sylvan Lake, 181; Lady (cocker), Georgiana Keiffer, Pontiac, 175. The 8:30 class—Jinks (springer), Ron- ald -Inscho, Waterford. 1874: Gretchen ‘Daimation}, Jack Nicholas, Pontiac, 187; Tammy (fox terrier), Evelyn Jackolow. Pontiac, 185; Fawn (boxer), Sid Jones, . German. shepherd, 192 points. At Bloomfield Hills—Lady (Poodle). Betty Breediove, 195, plus Boots ‘poodle’, Gerry Breedlove, Birmingham, 195 pits: Tassy Jgolden retriever), Eileen Radiske, Birm., and Twinkie Toe (min. poodle). Helen Cikity, Birm.; 9 o'clock class— Suzette (poodle), Julie Dahlberg, Sioom. Hills, 197; Ivanhoe (boxer), Sue Daley: Susie (boxer), Harve ey Slade: Missie ‘alredale), William atehiey, all of Bir- mingham. Arson Found Cause of High School Fire DETROIT — Fire department investigators say definite evidence bers of Congress indicated a pref- erence to dwell on what it means favorable. said: istate dinner for diplomats, White ‘Hagerty and Pentagon officials Chris Ferryman’s pects of launching a satellite thel size of a Pullman car, a a ee a t But early comment from mem- in military terms, And een in Moscow, cslende ing the 3.008th orbiting of Sputnik Ill, man-in-the-street reaction was American reporters, bereft of any -official comment, approached a cab driver who “Good. It gives us competi- * * & Eisenhower broke the news, dramatically at a White House) House press secretary James C. spread *the word to reporters and the world, The . Atlas . intercontinental _ bal- listic missile avas launched at 6:02 p.m. Thursday from Cape Canaveral, Fla. The whole thing, 8 feet long and 10 feet wide, went into orbit. It is the biggest known man- made object swinging around the globe. Its weight, between 8,700 and 8,800 pounds, nearly doubles the 2,919 pounds of Soviet Sputnik lll, fired last- May 15. Sputnik III’s rocket, variously estimated to weigh between two and five tons, trailed it until, being _bumed up by air friction’ Dec. | The. ‘Atlas’ orbit girdles the earth every 100 minutes at alti- tudes varying between 118 to 625 miles. Most ‘Americans can see it, glowing like a star, especially at ‘dusk and in the South, Its esti- mated life aloft is 20 days. Radio signals for tracking pur-| Poses are coming from the giant) artificial moon on two frequencies’ 107.97 megacycles and 107.94 meg- acycles, * * Moonwatchers at El Paso Tex., were first to report spotting it’ ae p.m, that it glowed at 12 magni- Stars in the Milky Way, lite Operation Score. first letters of the words signal, communications, They ‘Teparted at 30) periment. These’ cums up purposes except for the basic one. This was to see if the Allas -would fly as faithfully as it did two weeks. ago, when it. traveled ia prescribed 6.325-mile course over the Atlantic, Of = night’ s can, & ude. just a bit brighter “than the The Air Force dubbed its satel- aiter the orbit, relay ex- the * * a, ontene eald: "Most a * jthe United States But it did much more, as the Pentagon pointed out in a ‘state- ment: The entire vehicle achieved an orbit. As such, it is the largest satellite that has been put into orbit by the United States. More importantly, this marks the first time’ that a high accuracy -missile guidance system has been used to steer such a vehicle into its orbital trajectory.” - Thus, in a matter of minutes, proved once more that it has a dependable ICBM and also took the wind out of Soviet Premier Nikita Khrush- chev’s taunts about ‘lemon-size”’ U.S. satellites. x * * There was a novel twist to the launching which sent the Atlas soaring at 17,000 miles an hour. ‘i its nose ‘cone was a Sunique cc com- munications system—~and +~there was ‘speculation that its tape re- cordings included the voice of Eisenhower. Newsmen expressed this specu- lation to Pentagon officials, who would neither confirm nor deny it. The communications system is part of the 150-pound payload in the rocket’s nose cone. It records messages sent to if and, on a command signal later, sends the messages back to earth. The Atlas weighed 100 tons on the ground. The combined thrust of its three rocket engines at sea level was 359,000 pounds, Once fired, its two booster engines dropped off and what -was left, the instrumented carcass and burned- out third engine, went into orbit. Powered flight lasted 4'2 minutes. Offer Monitor $155,000 NEW ROCHELLE, N.Y. (AP) — (Godfrey Schmidt, a court appoint- ed monitor over Teamsters Union affairs, said today that the me offered to pay him the $155,000 it ‘owes him if he would quit- his post. Schmidt, a New York attorney, represented rank-and-file sters a year ago when they brought a suit that temporarily | _|kept James R. Hoffa from taking, office as Teamsters president. * * * Schmidt said from his home here that the sum owed him in- AP Wirephete ATLAS BLASTS OFF — The mighty 100-ton Atlas interconti- nental ballistic missile, churning out 360,000 pounds of thrust, aims for the skies after takeoff at Cape Canaveral, Fla. last night. Pres- ident Eisenhower announced later that the missile was in orbit. 4 Atlas Boosts Human Flight | By ALTON BLAKESLEE Associated Press Science Writer (t NEW YORK (AP)—Atlas’ tri-'t and astounding space laboratories a big step closer. Sprung from well-kept secrecy. t for the round trip, were ordered for a period of nine months. That is sufficient time. he said, to determine the public’s reaction. Woman Batters Her Head After Killing 3 Children| EUGENE, Ore. (AP) — Police found the woman in a field. She hugged her knees and shivered. Blood streamed down her face. “I did this with a rock to my- self,” said Mrs. Donna Mae Rut- of arson has been uncovered in a $50,000 fire that swept through a portion of Eastern High School | Wednesday a * The high ee third floor auditorium and two study halls were damaged in the fire. Firemen found evidence of ' arson at the scene. Police found arson evidence -ester- day. Detective John Adams said a burned book of matches was found near two teachers’ desks in which separate fires had ‘een deliberately set. * * * Meanwhile fire inspectors or- “dered a lunchroom’ at Northeastern High School closed unti] fire escapes are provided. North- eastern is the fourth public schod! “in which rooms have been ordered closed as a safety precaution. ledge, 27. “I got three kids. They’re over there in the ditch. I ‘drowned them.” * * * Police, found the hbddies face down in a foot of water. The dead were Mrs. Rutledge's j three children: Mark Elliott Rut- ledge, 5: Darlene “Ann Sh 4; and Tammia aude 2 * Mrs. ieee - was arrested. held without forma] charge and then placed under guard in a hos- pital here, Police said her hus: band Donald was somewhere in California. SEC Chairman Makes Apology to Ford Motor $ WASHINGTON (# — The chair- man of the Securities and Ex- change Commission has apologized for implying in a recent speech that Ford Motor Co. illegally pub- licized its big public offering of common stock in 1956. A Commission official said yes: Man Leaps Nearer Space ipossesses the heaviest as well as sun. umph brings human space flight,way to the moon. it could spur the Russians to push some space experts are puzzled Shots for Venus and Mars he most It has sent. are among U. S. current plans. satellites, wo probes nearly : third of the Before man looks down at earth . from a sky perch, much _ hard Temporarily, America leads ‘work remains to be done. But the Soviet Union could play he next trump soon. Indeed, * ® * = i | We must learn how to recover {. “The members cludes a fee of $105,000 as counsel | ‘for the insurgents and $60,000 for @ year's services as one of the ‘union's three monitors. The story appeared Thursday night in the Minneapolis Tribune and the Des Moines Register and, Was copyrighted by them. The Tribune and Register story | said: * * * of the Hoffa | igroup have tried to put a gloss on! this offer by calling it a settle-| ment.’ Schmidt said, “‘but it is a, flat bribe to get me out of the| case and | have rejected it. “They haven't paid me because| they are trying to starve me out.’ Schmidt and Martin Donoghue. | monitor chairman, have formed a majority on the monitors’ board. iin adopting a policy of toughness against Hoffa. They have demand-| ed that racketeers who dominat Teamster Bribe Claimed ‘Wells, attorney for the Hoffa-dom-, inated Southern Conference of. Teamsters. * * * Schmidt said the latest of sev- ‘eral offers for bim to get out was ‘made since U.S. Dist. Judge F. ‘that the monitors have full power) to make recommendations or issue | Team- | Dickinson Letts ruled last week | orders to clean up unsavory 2) ments in the Teamsters. Comment from Hoffa and the Teamsters Was not immediately available. Largest Ore Carrier to Be Built at Once MANITOWOC, Wis. > — Work on the largest ore carrier ever | designed for the Great Lakes trade will be started immediate- ly at the Anitowoe Shipbuilding Co., on order of Inland Steel. Inland Vice President P. D. Block said the vessel will be christened the Edward L, Ryer- son, after Inland’s former beard chairman and long-time Chicago civic feader. The vessel will cost about 8 million dollars and be 730 feet long. Biggest carrier on the lakes now is Inland’s Wilfred Sykes, a 678-foot boat which cost § mil- < the tectiv -stock -ap- locals in some areas be eliminat- lion dollars. harder and nes in their always why she hasn't done something 1), > ther ak ice aa Saeed. ° Launching is scheduled for the secret space plans. ispectacular sinte the 1%2-ton Sput- 4.3. ae : “J ; = r 7 Wg | third m t s iL. N. | 1 Just 14% months ago, man was/nik soared up last May. _ mena cree ee and ite thst monitor 6 b. &, De ee still earthbound. Then Sputnik I| The main significa.ice 6? Atlas being vigorously es ee | Fe ac “Tr a Ts Tc =o Th startled, and shocked, the West-is in advancing the ability aa R ‘ g - weil yo iene cette ‘ ° ; ern world. - jeurately to thrust big and heavy come re ira controls must be-| Ae I 5 m) « *& satellites into space ai nteer i cee fo give any) Now the United States has a A ; no eer a rally good chance “7 dae lt 5 % 1 scored a prodigious comeback. It. Big enough to carry men | Aaking tes round-trip. pps cere ; +s | eee 2 : ; 13 Wing-shaped ; Big enough to watch the world’s ‘4 sa gage \weather in the makirig through: Siisten Boy, 3, 18 meter iq y Ak 1G TV eyes, tracking hurricanes, | 18 Sorcery : ; 5 Railroad Cuts Fares 7 vastly improving forecasts. Has Christmas a secrneuts we a , ae ; 20 Removes A . Or act as great communications 21 Chemical x x | ” =| are : hearin | | suffix: % 28 Pct. in January ic entrals, instantaneously relaying DOr1y This Year ae ee esord J ree ja vast volume of cables, ‘‘mail’’ \24 —— and ? Z F, T AY , it | CHICAGO (AP)—Reversing the, and TV shows to any point on [Para N Xo MAB) = Little 56 Greek goddess X yoAN % trend in the fice busi-| ‘earth. aul Reiferson, sufering from a/27 High Z ae ness. the Rock I a ; ae ta Li | Or to carry telescopes seeing Kidney ailment doctors fear incur- 3. Girls name 40 cutting its first-class romniing oer emiverme) witty Vawesome jand apie nad vhie iChrisimasia) week Pinas a 4c SRG “iA We z rewarding new clarity is- early. \34 ¥ mak Oo passenger fares 28 per cent Jan. S ne ee unis e+ Jas Madelw nome. () 5 5 oh fare t affected |turbed by the earth's shimmering, * \ eee pita 4s ” 1 25. Coa S are not allected. oir | Santa Claus paid the 3-year-old a 36 Watch - e * * * * * ‘visit at the hospital Thursday and 39 Heed hero ” P ( . ; i s sdaday 3 ardv heroine my eon beige — All these are eagerly anticipat- filled his bed with toys. © ase ry 4 ] reductions on some ca rrie rs ests * * * al ae . : . ioe i Sa 2 ; . 42 Here and —— which parallel Rock Island from The Atlas missile will be a Charles Howard, who runs 4 43 Having a. 5 2 : i main workhorse toward these school here for department store picky parts 2 Mediey 19 Asiatic nation 40 An instant Chicago to Western destinations. als until fz ' : Ae /49 Porgiveness 3 Finish 23 Put in type 41 Cornbreads There waa no Mnedisie react goals il far more powerful Santas from all over the country, |51 Exist 4 Adhesive 24 His and —— 42 Allowance — ; cuon lrockets are developed. put on his best red and white 33 Manis name § Century pisnt) 1125 Toward the for waste . avity n 8 t d sid 4 —_- from a rallzoeds. Atlas, with smaller rockets Christmas suit to do the job. ee fs religious sect 26 Prenchman : Leander ; ‘arry fco 7 Wile a 4 Give forth R. E, King, Rock Island gen- staged atop it. could also launch! Paul, the youngest of five chil- 3 All's wel} that 8 Fracas 27 Every other ta Tonaveland ce . ; instrumented probes investigating | dren of Mr. and Mrs. Hal Reifer- .. —— ¥é!l § Russian City 28 Falsehoods to --— eral passenger traffic manager, Venus end nit Yeh : i t f Ibi 57 S-shaped 10 “The Gloomy 29 Cushions 47 Goddess said the reduced fare tickets. é or going into|son of Albion, has been in and) worm _ Dean 31 Saltpeters 48 Lairs SR Ey es ee orbit .as artificial planets of the'out of hospitals for many months.! , Acc : + Dregs a} Fell Hewes 50 That female Je 30-day — terday that SEC Chairman Edward N. Gadsby had sent a telegram to, Wiiliam T. Gossett, Ford vice pres. | ident and: general | ceunse] w: ho had * objected to Gadsby’ s remarks. The telegram was not madé pub. lic but the SEC said it amounted ae fo an apology. - BRING GLAD TIDINGS — Singing groups from nine. Pontiac schools are participating in the {3th annual Christmas musical ‘program at the Pontiac State Bank. Among the choirs performing St. Michael's High School, vesterday: Jefferson Junior High School, neon today; St. Frederick's: High School, Saturday, ij ; 11 a. m.; Pohtiac Northern, Mor « School, Tuesday noon, and Washin vane Chorus Le Baron Element ig 1 School were the first to sing. 6 & ¥ i Pontiac Press Phote Webster E lementary gton Junior High School, Wednes- iday noon; ary School and Pontiac i Central | ied 1] a. m. Shown here is the Madison Junior High School Ninth | | - Building Service page Vey ares Frandehil : Saturday. Dec. 20, at 330° p.m. from the Donelson‘Johns Pr H with . . Charles Cemetery, Raval Oak. Mrs. Cogger ” a ine Sonelson- Johns Funera wikeheatae bee -=% ie ME. ft. hs mother of Mrs, Eldon Mra. George Davis, Char! Mary Crals gnd Duncan un gine sureive 4 od by 18 meee deere: and at are Fu- with Rev. Harry Schlosser ‘of Interment in Maple y. North Branch. Mrs. Hampshire will Me in state at the Moore Chapel of Sparks- Griffin Puneral Home, Auburn a H : RPER. , 1958, L ORINNE beloved husband of Harper; pm father of Mrs. Jack Cooper, Capt. Don P., Rob- _ ert and Carrol! G. , Clarence O. Harper; vived by 16 grandchildren and two great-grandehildren. Funeral service will be held Saturday, Dec. 20, at 1 p.m. from Denelson- Johns Puneral Home with inter- ment in Perry Mt. Park Ceme- tery, Mr. Harper is at ‘the _Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. - 18, 1958, GAYLE 28 W. New York St.: haleced husband of Mrs. Johnson: dear father of Jane &., Peter Gienn and Stephen G, Johnson; dear brother of Mrs. Audrey McDonald, Maynard, Rod- Shirley, Simon and Dr. . Johnson. Funeral serv- be held Saturdev. Dec 20, at 3 o.m. from the Hantoon Funera]) Home, with Dr. Joseph Chapman offictating. Interment in White ¢ Chapel Cemetery. MORGAN, DEC. 17, 1958, OWEN $29 Judson Ct.; age 46; beloved husband of Mrs. Blanche Morgan; dear father of Gwen and Ronald : dear Mrs adie Thomas, Horace and Frank Morgan. FPu- neral service will be held Satur- day, Dec. m. from the Huntoon Puneral ome with interment in White Chapel Ceme- tery. Mr. Morgan wil! We in state at the Huntoon Puneral Home. | PETHERBRIDGE, DEC. 18, 1958, | “Ellis 636 Hillclift, age 41: ve- loved husband of Mrs. rothy Petherbridge; stepson of Peter Prick; dear father of Robert, | Richard, Bruce and Kathy Peth- erbridge: dear brother of Mrs | Leonard Gamble, Mrs. Robert | Crosby. Mrs. Frank Cooper, Ray- | mond Petherbridge and Oren | Prick. Funeral service will be held | Monday, Dec. 22, at 1 p.m. from Ascension Lutherah Church, with Pastor Wm. LaPountain officiat- ing. Interment in Hadley Ceme- tery. Mr. Petherbridge is at the Deneleon - Johns Funeral Home | nd will be taken to the As- — ranean Lutheran Church at noon Monday. Pamily suggests contri- butions to the memorial fund at Ascension Lutheran Church, 9¢ Williams street. Funeral! arrange- | ments by the Donelson-Johns Fu- neral Home. Ld Box Keplies At 10 a.m. today there were replies at the Press office in. th following boxes: 17, 28, 31, 32%. 63, 74, 76, 96, 103, 118. CLASSIFICATIONS INDEX ANNOUNCEMENTS Card of Thanks in Memoriam Flowe Funeral Directors Mouuments Cemetery Lote EMPKOY MENT Help -Wanted Male Help Wanted Female Help Wanted Employment Agencie Instructions Work Wanted Male Work Wanted Female SERVICES erento ~ : Foam wr eu i ose = sas W | | Bullding Supplies | Business Services Son Bookkeeping & Tazes Chiropodist Foot Specialist . as Dressmaking & Tailoring» poses Uy Furniture efinishing weewee ERA Garden Plowing .....-.-:- 16B {Income Tax Service .......- 17 [Insurance Agencies cicw TTA Laundry Service imac Ne Landscaping —...s-.+.. 18A Moving & Trucking ......... 19 Painting & Decorating ......... 20 Photos & Accessories Physio-Therapy Television Service z Typewriter Service . Upholstering ac NOTICES Lost & Found Hobbies & Supplies Notices & Personals Trave! Aencies WANTED Wtd Children to Board ..... 26 Wtd. Household Goods ....... 27 Wtd. Miscellaneous Diaersense:, Money Wanted Sesceesce tL) Wanted to Rent ~~ ......... 2 Share Living Quarters ...... 30 Wtd, Transportation : we 3! Wtd Contracts, Mtgs er Wanted Real Pstate RENTAL OFFERED tent Apts Furnished ........ 33 Rent Apts Onfurnished .......- 34 Rent Houses Furnished ....... 3 Rent Houses Unfurnished ..... 36 Rent Lake Cottages .......... 36A For Rent Rooms ............- 37 Rooms With Board .....-....- 38 Convalescent Homes ........... 38A Hote] Roome © oo .cnccscene ss 39 Rent Stores «_-— sew ene ees 40 Rent Office Space Rent Lease Bus Prop. Rent Farm Property For Rent Miscellaneous REAL ESTATE FOR SALE For Sale Houses 43 Income Property so. ATA For Sale Lake Property ..... 44 For Sale Resort Property ..... 44A Suburban Property ......... 454 For Sale Lote ss. ss ss ee ees 4 Sale Lots Sale Industrial Prop. For Sale Acreage “or Sale Farms = ale Business Property For Sale or Exchange FINANCIAL S3usiness Opportunities tale Land Contracts Money to Loan Het euros oe Mortgage Loans - MERCHANDISE JWaps soe lejaie sieie svereioiere For Sale Clothing ............ Scrap & Iron Sale Household Goods Valentine Gifts Christmas Gifts Christmas Trees For Sale Miscellaneous Machinery Do It Yourself ec Cameras & Equipment ...... Sale Musical Goods coceee 62 Musical Instruction ........ 62A Sale Office Equipment ........ 63 Sale Store Equipment ....... 64 Sale Sporting Goods _......... 65 Hunting Accommocations, 654 Bait, Minnows, Ete. 65B Sand Gravel & Dirt cs seas cece: 66 Wood, Coa] & Puel.......... 67 Plants. Trees Shrubs ...... 68 For Sale Pets 69 Hunting Dogs Dogs Trained Boarded FARM MERCHANDISE Hay Grain & Feed 0 For Sale Livestock Wanted -Livestock For Sale Poultry Sale Farm Produce Sale Farm Equipment .... Auction Sales AUTOMOBILE For Sale Housetrailers -......... 78 Rent Traller Space S9068 Auto Accessories For Sale Tires Service ue Motor Scooters For Sale Motorcycles For Sale Bicycles ~ Boats & Accessories For Sale Airplanes 86 Transportation Offered ........ 87 Wanted Used Cars -p. 0 Wanted Used Trucke .....-. a. ‘Used Truck Parts ........ 89A ‘or Sale Used Trick, ....... 90 uto Insurance . .. 90A | Foreign & Sports Cars ...:.... 9B | For Saje Used Cara ........... 91 & ~*~ émoriam. who De « ORY OF lius ‘(Alice) Jewell 3 years Ago; wl pot farewell, odbye reer sid Wo hear Saas veaeed te Bae, atl oe Set panting saw tha : And the bills were bard to climD; he — your vagy eyes, d whispered “Peace B ine, Sadly “mlased bv his wife. “sons _ daughter ” Funeral Directors _4 thou ght ful ful Service FE eal Voorhees-Siple FUNERAL HOME Ambulance Service - Piane or Motor PE 2.8378 ort ‘A WOMELIKE “ATMOSPHERE” COATS FUNERAL HOME Drayton Plains OR 3-0187 Donelson- on-lohns FUNERAL HOM “Designed for Punerais” Cemetery Lots 5 PER- BEAUTIFUL 6 GRAVE LOT. Mt Park Cemetery, Will di-. FE 4-0682. ty vide. Rene __ Ly PEL-TWO GRAVES. tins unree 806, LI 23-2167 or LI ~_Help, Wanted Male 6 3 MECHANICS For lift truck service steady work. Cal) Detroit, Mich, TOwn- send 44. EXPERIENCED SERVICE. is tlon attendant. over No oe Bloomfield Shell, 1580 Wood- ward, cor. Long Lake. EXPERIENCED DRY “CLEANING route man over 30. Main Clean- ers. 4480 Elizabaeth Lake Rd. FACTORY Branch now ac oF = appitce- tong Apple 10 fs a.m 1066 W. Hur ‘oD, MARRIED MAN WITH CAR F established Puller Brush route. No tnvestment. $89 per week plus expenses guaranteed if qualified. Also need one part time man. For interWiew, hone Fuller Brush _Company GE 2-2318 PHARMACIST WTD. Must be licensed and registered & days. 40 hours. Hospital phar- macy, Starting salary $445 per mo Time and os ha'f for over- time Opportunity fer promotion within 1 vear Usual other em- ploye benefits. Please reply Pon- _tiac Press Box i ~ REAL ESTATE Experience Preferred For Pontiac or High'and office in the lake area Exceptione) money to right person, Arrange for confidential pet Cc. between 10 and . SCHUETT. Realtor an W. Huron St. 3001 Highland Rd SALES OPPORTUNITY. WILL train ‘wo men to handle whole- sale food accounts 28 to 40 vears of age Capacity for bard work more {mportant than exp Will train Car necessary Weekly earn- ing and income discussed at tn- terview Apply @:°30 to 12 pm Mor threes Fri. 4713 Dine te Ask for Mr Holt __ WANTED: TENOR 8AX AND BASS players for rock and roll band Contact Nick Firu_ FE 61430 WTD REAI &STAIF SALESMEN __Apply at 66 & Furon Help Wanted Female 7 PLL LOLOL LLL LALO LLLP 3 LADIES TO PRESENT cmp study program to young mothers for Parents Magazine ours § to 5. Monday thru Friday. Salary comm. & bonus) EMpire 3-0490 after BABYSITTER WITH TRANS. TO care for school-age children dur- ine Christmas Molidays. FE 8.8068 vI- OR BABYSITTING WANTED IN cinitv of Waterford Drive In 485 “FOR ELDERLY light work. FE 55-3756 CORSETIERE We have an opening [onan ex- perienced corsetiere. COMPANION ubera emp.cye Beners Apply Personnel Dept Sth "oor VAITE’S __ Saginaw ot Huron GIRLS. 25 TO 40. FOR MODERN hamburger grill, must be neat and willing to work. Will tnter- view 3toS pm. Thurs. & Fri, Dec 18th and 18th. 32 8. Tele- graph, Lake's Hamburger EXPERIENCED SHIRT FOLDER & bosom operator. Must be et- perienced & qualified minded, for work tn air condit'nned dry cleaning plant MI 6-8733. EXPERIENCED GIRL FOR GEN- eral office work in Doctors of- fice. Write Pontiac Press Box 118 giving age details and ref- erences EXP MAID WITH REFERENCES for general Must provide own transportation stay 3 nichts Thur®e @& every Sun. off MAr- fair 6-6236 : KITCHEN HELP WANTED. WITH grill experience Apply Big Boy Drive In. 2490 Dixie Hwy LADY TO CARE FOR ELDERLY lady ght housekeeping. 5-dar Box i $45 Write Pontiac Press ox 1 MIDDLEAGED WOMAN FOR housekeever and care of elderiy lady. Will furnish a good home and wages, Murt be of gooc char- acter and live in. Fm 48221 MAREKET RESEARCH INTER- viewers for Pontiac area. Part- time. Late afternoons. Car essen- tial Salary & exnenses. Write Qualifications to Box Pon- _tlae Tess. ~ Onening Tanuarv Sth Por women with ambition. person- ality & poise career or part time, car necessary, Write, stating qual- {fications & -vhone number. to Pontiac Press Box 172. RELIABLE AND DEPENDABLE erson to care for 2 children, nomy home From 4 to 2? am. FE 42018 SHIRT PRESSING OPERATOR. Birminghem (Cleaners 1253 8 Wood ward Mi 44620 a WOMAN OR YOUNG GIRI TO care.for 2 children About 24 brs wk C*arkston area MA 5-4101, after 6:30 __ WANTED SALESWOMEN FOR local mator fog service tf you have personality appearance and Perseverance tht- ts the fob for vou Earnings unlimited For anv- palntment call FE 4-0871 between 8:30 a.m and 1pm... or contact Mise Kav at 471% Dixle Hwr. Drayton Plains WOMAN TO CARE FOR “9 9 CHIT- dren while mother ts in hospital FE 5-7493. call before 3 p.m WOOL PRESSER ALSO MTtet be able to work on shirt unit Anny Main Cleaners 4480 Eliza- beth Lake Rd Help Wanted & AAAS PAP PPR PPR ARE YOU WANTING WORK OR looking, hoping you don’t find !t? Have opening for man or woman Can meke above averese wage. 150 N. Perry 6 te 12 a.m. MANAGER s Local branch of large established company requires person with Se ed ability ~ ENT EARNINGS Reply oe Metter stating past ex- perience and management “nt romotional work. Write Box ontiac Press. Employment Agencies 8A Immediate SECRETARY Aged 19-39 with good skills At- tractive and potred for reception and secretarial duties. Midwest Employment 406 Pontiac State _Bank Bidg. FR 5-9227, GET !T QUICK, through Classified Ads! Yes, whatever it is — dial FR 28181 for an ad- writer and get it! * a * by ore PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY: DECEMBER 19, 1958 Notices & Personals 25, Wanted Real Estate 32A RECEPTIONIST STEN oO work, You lots of intere rating ople and must be alert, ef ee and ot. Call EVELYN bbe 24% E. Huron. — ete. Satisfaction Gafanteed. PE 8-8256. ‘i ALL KINDS OF ALTERATIONS Ladies dresses specialty, FE _ 5-6258. ORESSMAEING, TAILORING AND alte Mrs odell. FE tees DRESSMAKING TAILORING, terations, drapes & formals dens in my home. Call FE 5-84 §-8455. Landscaping _ A-1 ACE TREE SERVICE. moval and ‘rimming Get our bid. FE 2-1188 PE SUSTOM BULLDOZING. Dé eked Titlog. erading. _=M one “Moving rs Treckiag 19 ING & RUBBISH, 8-014. - 18A rae EX Reasonable FE 5-3458 2-2008 CLEAN-UP AND LIGHT HAUL- ° Work Wanted Male 10 a1 ae WORK, Re FE 4-4210 A-t SETTING. DTERIS R & EX terior. Free estimate Reas $-3752_or 17. : AVAL NOW. CARPENTER and — A gore. New and re- OR| NEW -— jing Call Bil) FE 5-5933. |HAULING & RUBBISH WAME!| O| “your price Any thme FE 8.0095 “|fIGHT HAULING « y MOVING OF any kind Reai cheap. FE 8-249 | _anvtime |LIGHT AND HEAVY TRUCKING | Rubbish fill dirt, grave) and front end loading. \MAN WITH % TON TRUCK wants work, Call aayenis: FE 8-6348. 5 ock, FE 23-7861. = 7 R AND CARPEN- Kitcbens a specialty. FE CARPENTER WORK AND RE- pair, painting OR 3-7617, CA TER —_ Reasonable. Call FE 6-943. é VWISTELRA EL? EXP. kitchens a specialty. OR 3-3204. EXP. WOOL man BULL LL OR part time. FE 4-0752. _ HANDICAPPED MAN. 25. AGE wants steady job. OR 3-6145 Ack tor Tom LICEN SED ANY. after 6. JOURNEYMA Tl '~O'DELL CARTAGE {Local and lohg distance moving. Phone FE 5-6806 _| SMITH MOVING Loca! or long distance moving Low rates FE 4-4864 Trucks t to Rent TRUCKS ACTORS AND EQUIPMENT | teow Pickups 1'e-ton stakes Dump trucks Semi-trailers Pontiae Farr and Industrial Tractor Co. electrician would Uke work Exp on controls and electronics. UL’ 625 8. WOODWARD 23-1328. Open Daily meee. ies OLD FASHION HANDYMAN, NO FE_¢0461 job too smal) No hr. too late UNWANTED ARTICLES PICKED or early, FE 46809. _up free of charge. FE 5-4638. YOUNG EX.- ae ie Wants a steady job Eleven sales experience. Once a mem of the Junior amver of Com _merce §-2"1 _Work Wanted Female 3 2 WOMEN WANT WALL WASHING’ and house cleaning. FE 3}-7581. Aqqurn Averue Nurses Exchange NURSES AVAILABLE — Dey & Night—Licensed & Bonded J FE 2-5402 | BA RBYEITTING. ie G CARE. EGLORED WOMAN WiTH REF- erences Wa day work, $7.50. FE 5-6661. WA 1 00 ous seni . FE 2-63 HOUSEWORK OR oR babysitting, wre da i week. In, your home. PIECE OR 4-7288. TRONINGS BY THE r base]. FE aIREROORAPHING Bato $2 pe retaria) service. a RESISTANT Sea. ; enced & BM.R. Hemo- odin, , Urinals _ injections & eneral office wor atotrennd wy HOME OR ita! zor FE Wa fakd N A RINGS Pickup and aaliver FE 5-074 Building Service 12 AAA Floor Sanding c_BUD Bits. — "PE. $2088 SAND & FINISH. FE 5-3722. Pontiac Hardwood Floor service ANY Or begat . en custom drawn OL 3-4931. Painting & Decorating¢ 20, |18T CLASS PAINTING AND DEC- orating. Cash or terms. UL 4 LADY INTERIOR DECORATOR _Papering. PE 86-0343 | A=] - PAINTING. PAPER eee aper removed. FE 4-6018 | Ay PAINTING na) PAPERING | Mason Thompson FE 48364. 4-1 PAINTING INTERIOR - EX- terior. 10 per cent disc for cash. Guaranteed Free est. FE 4-8205. \{8T CLASS DEGORATINO CAINT- ing and wall papering 4-0255. CS PAINTING & DECORATING. | vears experience. Reasonabie. \ Prec eatme one FE 4-0850. _PAPERHANGING — PAINTING, plaster rep- Stephen Navarre, UL PAINTING & DECORATING. REAS | Immediate service. FE 5-5006. | PAINTING: PAPERING & WASH- ing, Guar. Reasonable FE 2-2312 =| - Television Service Se ee DAY OR NIGHT TV 8VC CALLS | Rayal Electronics. PE 4-2418. | ~DaY_OR lor TV_SERVICE Ls 206 FE Lids ‘STRAKA JENSEN 3 TV SERVICE APTER- -| noon & evening calls FE 2-0405 Uphoistering 23 RAR RRR AI Se BEADLE DRAPES, SLIPCOVERS and materials. FE 5-1927 EAKLE'S CUSTOM UPHOLSTER- ra 8174 Cooley Lake Rd. THOMA, UPHOLS there 197 NORTH | 33 W. HURON A. Johnson FE 5-8888. ; 24 A-1| COMPLETE BUILDING SERV- ioe: Quality work, licensed. Bow- _ker. MA 42253 or FE 5-3608. BRICK, BLOCK A.) STONE,: Sree Work guaranteed OR) BRICK, BLOCK AND CEMENT work, also chimneys. No fob too large Residential and commer- Guaranteed work. Ph. MY at | BLOCK & Gna WORE BUILDING EFA aS LKSTERING | eased block, cement work FE BLOCK BRICK, eet WORK __and fireplaces. MA 5-03 ' ~ CEMENT & BLOCK pn WORK FE 5-0782 ; CUSTOM HOMEs BY LICENSED builder. Free estimates. UL 2-6175_ CEMENT 18 OUR SPECIALTY Floors, basements EM 3 CERAMIC TILE FREE ESTIMATES, TERMS : Advance Floor Co. OR 38701 DRY WALL TAPING AND FINISH. | FE at fan estimates. FE 5-346) or FREE SeTiWATes ON WIRING, | for Water heaters. dryers. FE 5-843! _Electrie Co. 1060 W Huton._ ELECTRICAL SERV. FREE EST _Partney Electric, FE 5-6439 GUARANTEED ROOFS mt kinds, Est 1918. Hugus Marsh, 353. N. Cass. FE, 2-3021, FE 5-7775., HANDYMAN FIX, BUILD OR REPAIR™ JUST ABOUT ANYTHING EM _ 3-2256 HOUSEMOVIN GS equipped, FE 4-8450 HOME, GARAGE. CABINS. tiens. Licensed builder terms. FE MASON WORK, HOUSE aaa foundations, basements, etc. FULLY La. Young ADDI FHA M Building Service. FE Ay a eves. OR 3-2276. PLASTERING NEW & REPAIR Vern Keller UL 2-1760. PLASTERING & REPAIR REAS Pat Lee, FE 2-7922 R. G. SNYDER. FLOOR LAYING, sanding and finishing. Phone FE 5-0502 ROOF REPAIRS EAVESTROUGHING FE 40444, TRENCHING ING EXCAVATING FOR. septic tanks, Field tile footings: Ditches _& baat_1 well. UL 2-540 Business Services mid AL ", MAKES or FOUNTAIN | PENS repaired by factory trained man at our office Genera) Printing & Office Supply Co. 17 aw. rence St. Phone FE 36136 BLOOMFIELD WALL CLEANERS | Wal! and windows Reasonable FE 2-1631. A&G HEATING CO.. COMPLETE furnace installations, repairs and) service, Gag conversions. $150.| Completé forced air meee in- | stalled as iow as 4 «br service. Lice cared,” Quaranteed & Reasonable. MT_ 67350 | Chimneys and Fireplaces ‘pairing fireplaces and. imneys of ow vehte Get them cleaned, for Christmas, We also oe ang PAINT BY NUMBER PICTURES a Lost & Found | STREET WED | Lady's change purse Cal] at Classified Ad Dept. Front Office, Pontiac } Press_ | FOUND: IRISH SETTER, } MALE, Approx. 1 yr. old. Vic. Clarkston, | sicx, taken to Oakland County | Jee Shelter, Telegraph Rd. MA 493 FOUND: ON rouND FEMALE AND MALE beagies OA 8-322%. 3300 Oakwood Rd, Oxford. |\FOUND: GERMAN SHEPHERD. 1 yr. old. Vic. Drarton | Plains, 2 months ago. MA 54-2403 after 3 SEED AGREE ANGORA CAT. 5-8207 | LOST: oat Soke SPANTEL. 10 MO. old, rust ead answers to the name of Chi in the vi- cinity of Drips, Plains. Reward OR. 3-7359. LOST DARK GRAY RIM & SILVER | trim glasses. maroon case. _2-8773 | LOST — 1 YR. OLD ENGLISH | Setter male Vic. Maceday & | Lott us_I sakes OR 3-416) | LOST OXER PUPPY, strayed in vie. Judah Lk, Es-— tates Child's pet. FE 86-2281 LOBT DARK FRAME GLASSES. Please call FE 5-0540. Lost BRITTANY SPANIEL puppy. vicinity of Mark 8t. rE LOST — SABLE % WHITE FE. male collie license No. 18585. re- ward. OA 8-2129, REWARD FOR white stripe extendin eqiiar around nec weertu al: choker chain. Vic 8 Blvd. Crooks Call Dale Robinson, ut 2-3002 7 oe YOUNG AIREDALE, 41g MO. OLD Biack and tan lost in the vicinity of Scott Lake Rd and Otsego ; _ Children’s pet. Reward. FE 46100 — Hobbies & ‘Supplies 24A eee PPLE LOST BEAGLE. into white Scrabble games Backenstose Book Store, 15 E. Lawrence St. PAINT BY eer. $1.69 9X12 frames, $1.30. sizes. Grum- bacher Art 8w ies Sherwin Wil- _iiams, 71_W, Huron. _ Notices .& Personals 25 POL A COMPI ETE COLD WAVE, is 50 - Decors: 500 N Perry. FE 27-1244 i ALI “ap, aTYLES SOF )F APRONS $1. Fr 2-8426 "_ AEROTREDS KNAPP SHOFS Fred Herman OR 3-1582 “& ANY GIRL OR WOMAN NEEDING - a friendly advisor phone FE 2-8734. Confidential The Salvation Army A COMPLETE f COLD | WAVE, $6.50 M & AA Style-Rite OR 3-3421. Wil- liams Lake Rd. &nd M59 | | DAINTY MAID SUPPLIES - Menominee. Mrs. Wallace. BEAUTY IS EVERYONE'S DUTY Face lifting, face peeling & Swe- dish massage, Stockholm gradu- ate A young akin is sure to win. 772 © Maple {across from Kro- gers) Birmingham MI 6-T972 DAINTY MAID SUPPLIES. MRS. A. Taylor, 56 Gillespie, FE 3-7293. 730 FE a » s “ z & 2 * oe — es isterea company FE 8-0020. ELECTRIC MOTOR SERVICE RE iring and a ita 218 EF Pike Ph 81. FURNACES. TCEANED AND serviced, C. L, Nelson, FE 58-1788 . HANDY MAW TRUCK TO - home ne Na ‘oe 70° ee tio any eal FE 8-27) ee PLANg DRAWN. With! 8 : ications. Cail EM 3-0202. In Debt? If you are having trouble meeting your payments, us pa MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSEL- LORS, INC, Ropm 716. Pontiac _State Bank k Bidg. } FE § 8-0456., KNITTING © Home knitted slipperettes booties for sale. Make wonderful | gifts, Call Lois at FE §-7710.| and |. CHARLES CHESTER thot Wid Sree eae Al LICENSED HOME NEAR Pontiac Motors, FE 2-8031. Wed. | Household Goods 27 CASH FOR USED TVs_ FURNI- ture & misc. FE 2-0367. CASH FOR FURNITURE AND AP- Prompt. Qdd pieces or house full. pt. courteous service. FE Fur RNITUR E NEEDED pe home or od seh it for you e OR WANTED TO ah =A TYPES _of furniture. Wtd. Miscellaneous 28 CHURCH WANTS GOOD UsED pianos. Phone FH. 6-0067. WTD: LEATHER SEWING TREA- dle actg Be machine. Will pay up Money ; Wanted 28A oe 85.000 auc coop INT _AND | sane ecurity, Pontiac Press | WANTED. $2500 AT 6 PER CENT. Secured by first mortgage = pore home 30 x 35. Can mo. Please write Pon jae | Press Box 62. i Wanted ta Rent 29 LANDLORDS We have over 30 rental appll- cants. Wanted homes end apts. All areas. Furn or unfurn. ARRO RLTY 5143 Cass-Elizabeth Rd. FE 5§-3030 Wtd. Contracts, Mtgs. 32) ATTENTION! WE NEED oo LAND CON- TRACT. CAS BUYERS bofee ly ING, REASONABLE DISCOUN ASK FOR R. HAYDEN. NO CE ete SANDER, Realtor _FE 3 CASH FOR LAND CONTRACTS. No obligation. Call FE 24526 or OR Ask for ike Wideman. SMITH - WIDEMAN REAL ESTATE OPEN EVES FE 4-4526 412 W HURON CONTRACTS WANTED Clark Rea) Estate '362 W Huron, og 4-6402 or PE 44813 Ask for 6 walto Clars ‘ WE NEED LAND CONTRACTS QUICK CLOSING NO HIDDEN FEES Nicholie & Harger Co. FE 5-8183 CASH AVAILABLE FOR LAND CON- TRACTS AND HOME EQUITIES NO OBLIGATION. CALL REALTOR FE ¢2533 ____ 1704.8. Telegraph Rd. CASH FOR LAND CONTRACTS. J vaaven niger Dixie Hwy. ~ CASH for land contracts, and ee ne and sea Reasonabie discount, no obligation. Let experienced man consult with you. Call FE ¢. or 75, sy hour. Ask for Ted Mc- jough ARRO_ REALTY $143 Cass-Elizabeth Rd. IMMEDIATE ACTION On any good jand contract. New. or seasoned Your cash upon sat- isfacto inspection of property and title Ase Ken Tempieton. K. L.. Templeton, Realtor 2339 Orchard Lake Rd FE 44563 Ready. Willing and Able Cash buyers wa'tting for your land Call Realtor rtridge, contract. _FE 4-358) Wanted Real Estate 32A ALL CASH FOR GI AND FHA EQUITIES For houses, flats, farms or acre- age even if under foreclosure. Immediate depo R. 1. W ICKERSHAM 7195 W. Maple MAyfatr 6-6250 "LISTINGS WANTED - LET Sell Us You hos EN Ener Gren Soaks tes pine Hwy OR 30701 0 WANTED: IM MEDisATELY Homes. farms, lake prope: ne land contracts. Buyers wail Paul = Jones, Real Est. 832_W. FE 4-550 Rent . Apts. Furnished 33 BEDROOM FURN. INCL. HEAT & Nantes: Market 4-1292. On Ox- bow Lake : 1 CLEAN LARGE “3 ROOM APT. | steam heat, utilities furn., $65 month. $416 Elizabeth Lake Rd. FE 2-6919 1 AND 2- BEDROOM LAKEFRONT __apts. Partly furnished OR 3-0105. i. & 2ROOM APTS. CLOSE IN. FE 43612". ng WOREING LADY, rythi: linen service, _ $10 | & wee £ fre B a3 $1. 77 Douglas. 1-RM. KITCHENETTE APT. PVT. Entr., shower, util. furn., West M39, on Pontiac Lake. $15 and $17 _wkiy. onayal Motel, OR 3-4555. ] RM AND. KITCHEN, 1 ¢ close in, washing, $10. FE 2-0663 1 BEDROOM APT. FOR LEASE. $100 per mo. Adults 130 Seaeeels Bel Air Manor F® 4-1559 1 &2RM MOTEL. $35 WE. “APTS. for $16, st ady rent. FE 8-0058._ 1 & 2 ROOM APTS. cra OSE. TO new high school FE 4- OTR. janes MODEST MAIDENS : bv Jay Alan PF Newalgn' ieee 12-19 “It has to have a very long cord, you see, I walk in my sleep!” Rent Apts. Furnishéd 33 33 Rent Apts. Unfurnished 34 Ore ea | ORCHARD Cl APTS. @! ntrance FE 4-2 AIR CONDITIONED | IST FLOOR EATED TAME FLAT. LARGE LOVELY 3 AND BATH. 3 washing faeilities, children al-| Utilities furnished. N trport.| Pontiac's most exclusive west lowed mo. References. EM) ad duc OR 3193 |e Oba a Semone MODERN 3 ROOM AND BATH, i auuitl kitchens with stor d 7 nus PVT ENTRANCE AND | MODERN, gas heat, private en-| refrig. furnished” Auto. heat and bath, gas heat furn.. 111 N. Tele-} trance, soft water, 4 blocks to} hot water also furnished Adults graph. , center and transporta-| only. Ready for immediate occu- FLOOR. 2 — & eas tion. Sneterenens, MY 3-2880, pancy, oh in . —_ Petar Ate utilities furnish DER STALI manager. Mr. Gerdner - GMC. very nice, $75 mo. Adults ere. ah Biase ond a as heat,{ mer Bt. or call at only. FE before 5 pm.) Purn . §18 Orchard Lave FE 8-6918 2 LARGE FURN. ROOMS. CALL 2-5907. “OPEN DAILY & SUNDAY between 12 & 6. FE 2-0970. MODERN, 5 vases oe 10 A.M THROUGH 9 PM. 2 AND }3-ROOM ee pvt. ent. a a very nice an scar Gowotewn. FE _clean close-in, adults. PB 1832. | PARTLY TORN ee A or 2 GLEAN ROOMS. SneeE OR | MOTEL KITCHENETTE A APTS. Green. FE 45804. : _lady. $ 11 Wk. PE _5-2585. Pees Te aoe oe at ONION LAKE — 3 ROOM & BATH 2RMS PVT BATH & ENT. UTIL. - ch etyle apt. Heat furn, Ev- _& washer furn. PE 26226 __ | PVT 3 Tose On Si BATH AT WIL-| ersthing private. Adults. EM 2ROOM, $10 — WEEK, 3-ROOM emer ess 35-4285. up, furn. 106 Center. 2 LARGE RMS mth al fe tis td furn, 1 or 2 persons. FE 5. 2-ROOM PRIVATE SE TRANOR Util furn. Ideal for bachelor or retired couple, MY 2-1981. 2 LARGE ROOMS NICELY FUR- nished, near Bell Telephone and ae drinking. PE 2-218). ? AND 3-RM HOUSEKEEPING 468 Broadway, take Orion. §! 3-0058. 2 OR ROOMS, CLEAN AND warm FE 8-2512 or MAple 5-3185. 2 RM & BATH. ALL PVT. 161 _ Mt. Clemens FE 5-8588. 2 AND 3 ROOMS eer , BATH 7 70 __ Clark 8t._A 2 CLEAN WARM. thea CLOSE. CLOSE- in. $13, wk FE 5-1600, 2 ROOMS ADULTS ONLY. NO drinkers 315 Voorhets, ' LARGE RM. BRICK furnished. Inquire 22 Auburn, of- fice in rear. 2 & 3 RM. APTS, EVERYTHING furn., pvt. ent. 285 Whittemore. 2 RM. FURNISHED APT. CLEAN @& warm. Main foor. $16 wk. _85 Auburn 2 RMS. & BATH NICELY FURN. Adjacent to high -school 102 Washington 2 CLEAN ROOMS WITH UTILI- ties, $12 wkly. Single man. FE 5-0019 - RMS AND BATH. UTIL FURN. East of Auburn Hgts. Couple only UL 2-4027 23 ROOM APTS. NEWLY DEC- orated. Pvt. -ntrance 4145 Clin- _tonville Rd. OR 39-4708. 2 2 RMS. NEWLY DECORATED, __couple or only. 3 319 N. Saginaw. 2 ROOM BUNGALOW — EVERY- thing furn Also sleeping rooms, = “at 52 Norton or phone MAple * 2 LARGE ROOMS, CLOSE IN. 24 Florence Ave FE 8-1987. ROOM AP. WITH PVT ENTR. Share bath. a welcome. $12 per week. FE 8-143) 2% ROOM MODERN APT. ON gel an sponsible person. OR 3-5292 r 5 p.m. 3&4 ecaia WITH BATH, UTIL- ities, Pvt ent. west side, in- quire 85 Dwight. 3 ROOMS MODERN, HEATED couple only, ref. Call 8 to 10, 14 3 RMS. & BATH UTIL, FURN Lower. 10@ Williams. FE $0784. 3 & BATH. ALL UTIL. RM& Adults, OR 3-5866 3 RMS & BATH FURNISHED, $16 er x. Apply after 4:30 65 E. neffie! 3 ees AND BATH APT. EM 3-3474, TWO 3-ROOM na OR 3-138" Rent nt Apts. Unfurnished 34 1 AND 2? BEDROOM LAKEFRONT apts ae furnished. OR 3-01065. UTICA 4 RM. fd BATH, ELEC. _Stove, $60. 2-T585. rE aera AND Washington Jr. High area — 5 Tooms, g& heat, §90 mo. 3 akong upper apt. Wisner and 8105 Lincoln bre em inet $65 mo 18T FLOO i 3 RMS HEATED | Call before or after apt. Mest decorated. FE2-1425.| _5. FE 7 4+ROOM APTS 15 aot SINE APTS Downtown sh rta- APTS 1 5-RM APT NC sof i eniaren TELE el. tion within 2 jocks: Scnosie only one block away. Children wel- come. Nice and warm. a, decorated -and wel) mat 2 BEDROOM TE RRAC —~ sbawanctiadhans EGS E. Waiton PE 8-0461 3 & BATH “Gas Hear. wae wet sul & radio le & child OR 3381 or OR 3-4773 ~ ha * ieee $125 wpe meg tie: Part- 1. ‘mo. @ ir ridge, FE: 4-3581. M BRI COAL ace. $60 FE 48641 J BEr hor paiaa BRICK Hc WOME. FE 5-3014 INE % rae e, gas heat. $75.00 per Inquire 109 E. Brooklyn. 2 p.m. to 8 p.m. 3 BEDRM MODERN ws MO. 2 bedrm modern $55 a —— Cc. Pangus, Realtor, NA 17-2815. 3 ROOMS AND BA ALL UTI tles furnished $13.50 week y. Cal! at 288 N. Perry 3-BEDROOM., NEW FULL BASE- ment, corner of Beecherest and Farnsworth per month _gin 6-8125. S & BATH 1 FULL 1 BASE- ment with Rec. room, FE 2-T619. ‘Hotel Rooms 39, ~ HOTEL AUBUR IN had 2 we OR 40311. Rent ‘Stores @. BUILDING, 1300 8Q. FT. ON M59 wpe for small business, EM Rent. Office aeae) 41 $90 SQ. FT. arr$ CONDITIONED office space in new building. Pe itol Savings & Loan Co, 7 Huron n St, FE 4-0561 STORE AND OFFICES. 3. PARKING, 2611-2615-2617 Dixie Highway Ph. _OR 32-1391 | Rent Lease Bus. Prop. 41A ¢ ROOMS & BATE. | MAIN FLOOR on N. Johnson. Suitable for of: fees, Beauty Shop, ete. Call Real- _tor Partridge, FE 4-3581 § ROOM HOUSE ON LAKE Ga- pi: sant with option to buy ATTRACTIVE OFFICE : SPACE ‘and approximately 5,000 square feet warehousing area. $200 per 6 RMS, FULL BASEMENT. 2-CAR month. Located 1663 South Tele- garage dren welcome. 2'2| graph. FE 4-2597. miles from Lincoln- eo t| FOR LEASE 10,000 8Q PT. WITH- at Wixom. ACade or; in city limits of Pontiac Excel. AC 17-1771, : for light manufacturing or ight ROOMS AND BATH, NEAR storage. r infor. one Mr. school. FE 23-5381. } _White, FE 32-8101, 5-ROOM TERR LACE, aa) A MONTH. FE 5-643 For Sale Houses 43 5 RMS. O3L HEAT. RAERURN & Paddock, $60 month. 4-3136. § RMS. MOD, GAs witen HEAT- & refrig., $55, OR FIVE ROOM HOUSE anghen ae rage. Cass Lake Rd. FE 5-4 RMS. AND UTILITY. Coit. pe redecorated, ab ao __Lake priv. References. OR 3-489 6 ROOMS AND BATH, NEWLY decorated, was heat. FE 2-0661. After 6 FE 55322. 6 RM HOUSE & GA to & = M ae E ? BED- RMS. Children OK. 2685 Orchard La Ave. $59.50 Corner lot. 3 bedrm. with base- ment & attachea garage. $180 down. Buy iike rent. FE 6-0885. Builder. $99 — LAKEFRONT 3 Bedrooms 1% baths, rec. room, 2 car attached garage, exclusive Lake Wood Village, EM 3-0242. AT #4021 DUCK LAKE RD. E. anu. large six rm, house, £ car attached basement and nmedia pdéssession. will decorate. Call FE- 4-5862. E LOCATED ON Jefferson 8t. Rentals of 849 for 3 rooms and pi daylight basement, ga- _ bh G geand parking, #05 « mo, = siead on Hates 8. FE 2 ROOM EFFICIENCY, priv, ent. and beth, stove TERFORD VILLAG and Ace furn. Seminole, 3. {NEWLY REDECORATED just 2 blocks from Huron, — sped = sak and utility upper $45 a mo. LARGE 2 ROOM EFF'- “Ww HITE "BROS. CIENCY, 645 Auburn Ave. OR 3-1205 SES furn, $55 a mo. Call 5660 Dixie Hwy. . Paul A Kern Inc. FE Open Eves. ‘til @; Sun, 10 ‘th §& FRM APT GAS BEAT, 412.50 WE. Rent Houses Furnished 35 313 8. Paddock. FE 2 +ROOM PLUS ner ee “aprTs |! BEDROOM HOME KNOTTY interior, nicely furnished. Partly furnished tf desired. One} Briton Lake privileges. EM 36367 talrs and one downstairs, uttl- Ie ee fe furnished. 1 garage avail- ee ee HOME, COZY, CLEAN, able Extra per mo. 197/ _ util FE 2-4855. Sanderson, Pontiac. 2 "BEDROOMS ia mont soe 3 ROOMS OTILITIES | y furn mon’ 3 ROOMS OUTIL FURN. _ 33303 oF MU 466 Ve doce lots of heat 309 N. Saginaw 7 BEDRM WAtLeD: eo Logi Close to city. Reas. MA ¢ 2 eee a ecors yTNe om grand Ae $70 a month 2 ROOMS. “an HEAT. $30 MONTH. 1 _Downing Ct. 2 BEDROOM WITH GARAGE, $50. secant deposit required. M ce Boon AND BATH. PVT. ENT. _and utilities FE s-O15¢ 00 3 3 LARGE ROOMS AND BATH, BATH, 92 Seneca’ FE 47407. 3 ROOMS EACH IN 4 FAMILY brick, newly decornted eareg® wt. bath & entrance, nice dis- _trict. FE 2-5573 3+-ROOM UPPER APARTMENT ON Oakland Ave. near Baldwin. Pri- vate bath and entrance. Heat — 3 7 paneosee NEAR OT OR- fon. 878 mo. MY 3-1360 hot water furnished, $50. 3 BEDROOM HOME, S, CLARKSTON _ 44807. c¥ pac area. $95 mo. MA 5-1366. 3 LOVELY ROOMS ole EC-|3 RMS. & BATH. UTILITIES. FUR- ORATED, HEAT FURNISHED. |" nace heat. 4708 Highland Rd. STOVE & REFRIG. OR 31131. }-BEDRM NEW RANCH HOME. J ROOM WITH POSSIBLE GOOD |~ oj] heat. TV Auto washer and sales job in real estate. 407 N. dryer Main Hwy. Next door to : Sood. 4-4088. - high school. UL 2-2043. RM. & BATH, NEWLY DECO- EMENT. PON- re, ‘agai ney sooee | “GeOuaee oR Soe PO ve After p.m — Hine Te eh 3 ROOMS AND BATH FOR COU-| or: 1 block from Perry FE le, nr. Blue Sky theater. Excep- #1998. FE 4-7321 Gonally_nice. PE_3-7437. 3 ROOMS MODERN IN KEEGO. __ $50. TO 5-3289 2071 Willowbeach. 6 ROOMS IN DRAYTON, 4410 SEE- den, Drayton Plains. 6 ROOM ie PARTLY FURN. Fireplace. 7 LAKE SaORE eat 2 BED- 0 adults or smal! fam- fites. references regere’: $80. Jack Loveland, FE 2-487: BEAUTIFUL NEW RANCH rri. $150 month FE 8-9046. FURNISHED HOUSES — 235 ME- _chanic. FE 8-2526 3 RMS. PVT. ENT CHILDREN _ welcome. 319 E Pike 3 UPR FLATS: TWO | 2BEDRMS . $60: and l-bedrm., $55 Desirable location near Lincoln Jr ee School on — street FE 4-25: or FE 56-1172 ‘ & BATH, PVT., Williams Lake Couple only. on 3-7734 3 RM. LOWER UNFURNISHED apt. Tile bath oak floors, gas heat, Clean. 90 Care o Inquire 115 Seminole. FE 4-54 3 RM. NICE APT. CLEAN. QNE child welcome. 4-4686. ‘ 3 CASH | FOR YOUR EQUITY—We A sell and trade List with us for, fast & efficient service We strive | ied please 20 vears serving Pon- | _ — and vicinity, Open 9-9 13 _H. BROWN, Realtor | W Huron Ph FE 22-4810. Multiple Listing Service CALL US IMMEDIATELY (tf you have | a farm or income property. Home | _ Sovere waitin a Open Eves. = u 83 N Telegraph '~ Pie 2 a | GT AND FHA | CASH FOR YOUR HOME Yes, We can sell your home for cash with very small down pay-. ment Call us or further informa. | tion. Do not fee] obligated We? will appraise your property and. tell you the cach you can receive Oe to vou WE BUILD TRADE DORRIS & PEON ‘REALTORS 752 W. Huron Phone FE 4-1557 HI] $$$ DOLLAR HOME EQUITIES LAND CONTRACTS Wright & Valuet REALTCRS 345 OAKLAND AVENUE 22 5-944) FE 53-0683 | ~ — i -HAVE CASH, ie WILL TRAVEL: "We will trav-l to see you and! show rou how tc et cash for your home, land con tract or acre- age Call now for a 30-minute RD No charge. R. RIL EY. Broker se. _ Elizabeth Lake fe, FE ¢i1 E 44821 IMPORTANT AUST maces G 3 OR bedroom home. large lot, on weil side or close in, suburban _Pontiac area. Phone FE 2-7911 Immediate Action We can dy Reg house WHITE BROS. REAL ESTATE OR. 3; 0 Dixie Fw "til 6; Sunday 1 ti) 8. 566 Open Eves. |3R ‘ ls Humphries RMS. & BATH, PVT. ENT. Lights, gas, heat furn. Clean. fn Auburn Heights, FE 3-932 3 LARGE ROOMS AND BATH, Pvt. Ent. Gas and hest furn Auburn Heights UL 2-2066. 3 ROOMS AND PRIVATE BATH Newly decorated. Baby welcome 210 10S Anderson. }-RM. FURNISHED APT. CHIL- dren welcome. $13 wk. All uti- _ties furn. 20 Willard _FPE 4-1490. 3 ROOMS @ BATH, BABY WEL- come, 29 Voorhels Rd 3 RM. APTS.,, COUPLE ONLY. $70 to $$ mo. t ‘all private FE. 6-4032 RMS. PVT BATH & ENT. (WEST side FE 8-6523 - ‘RM 18T FLOOR. MODN®* 1 _child, mo drinkers 72 Washington. 3 LARGE ROOMS. BRICK TER- trace Pvt. Entrance and bath. Main floor, 22 Auburn in rear 3 RMS. & BATH — NEWLY ‘DECO- rated Heated, outside entrance. Cues 6-0041 after T pm. OL. 3-ROOM APARTMENT, PRIVATE bath and entrance children wel-, come 904 ROOMS PRIVATE BATH AND enuance gas heated 87S. Parke 3 BEDROOM FURN. INCLUDING heat & lights MArket 41292 4 paaue AND BATH, a ‘AND | FURN. OR UNFURNISHED 4RMS. furn. 454° Auburn. Palm & bath. Utilities. Laundryrm. ¢708 _ vile Apts. FE 2-6859, _Highland Rd ; 4 ROOMS & BATH ON WEST|LAKE ORION 1-BEDROOM, sds Children welcome. $12.50 per auto heat and H.W: privacy, ap- _ Week FE 5-7731 _bly 160 ) Heights Rd. MY 3-1284. 4 RMS. AND BATH. UPPER. ? bedrms. West side. Clean Util- | ities furn. No drinkers Available _ gan. Ist. FE 47850. @RMS. & BATH UPPER DUPLEX. Couple onl No drinkers Pvt. ent Util, furn, FE 4-6084. Sa 4 ROOM MODERN HEATED APT 4102 Dixie over Keego Hardware. _$55 per month. FE 2-2944. 4 RMS AND BATH REFRIGER- ator & stove Garage Near Dray- eee la! Center Upper. OR oad MODERN SMALL HOUSE, REA- sonsble 204 Ferry FE 46604 | MODERN ? BEDRM, CHILDREN welcore Laundry & elec dryer $15 wk or $53 mo 1 mile East of Commerce 1355 Fox EM 3-4005 MODERN 4 ROOMS. FORNISHED SYLVAN LAKEFRONT Neat 2bedroom for edults or small au Good references re- quir $80. Jack Loveland. FE 7-488. SMALL FURN. HOUSE. 8 STRICTLY | modern, $40 mo. MY 2-49 SMALL HOUSES FOR ~ es IN- 4 ROOMS, NEWLY DECORATED _ 68 §. Francis, FE 43239. 5 RM. UPPER FLAT. TOF’ vat. ity Adults $65. FE 6 RMS. & BATH ena APT. guire at 1676 Taylor Rd ask Clea: conveniently ‘ocated. 3. for_ Lonnie Weaver. FE ¢2031._ Jessia FE 5-8439. TWO BEDROOM HOME IN ELIZ- . + Caos ell led) Lia abeth Lake area, Rent unti) June Winterized. Newly decorated. Plus _garage $59 mo. OR 3-4817. Ist. Call FE 5-T710 before 2:30 § ROOM APT. REFRIG. & BTOVE| °™- _furnished $80 month. FE 56-3321. | WALLED LAKE. 3 ROOMS FUR- aah? ene heated Adults. MArk- Rent Houses Unfurh. POPP APA PALA AAA § ROOMS AND BATH, UPPER flat, heated, near St. Michaels. 173 Beach St. FE 5-536). 4 5 RM. & BATH. CLOSE IN, NR bus, FE 2-6332 or PE 2-5788. 4 RM. WARM APT. ___ FE 4-0808 5 RMS AND | Bae CHILDREN __melcome, RE 2-3 6-ROOM, owen rat FURN except gas and lights Gas heat 366 § djth, FE 5-2252, after 5 APARTMENT “FOR LADIES. EV- ervihing furnished. near down- town 25 Williams St A 2 RM & BATH NEWLY RE- conditioned apt $10 per wk. Ox- Lake privileges OR _3-B°63 bow e_priviles BACHELOR APT FURN. PvT ent., ground floor. Crescent Lake | Ra FE 5-8500 ; BACHELOR APARTMENT. TWO rooms and bath All utilities fur- nished $13 weekly. Cail at 288 N Perry. BACHELOR APARTMENT, SHARP. pss bath and entrance, TV, . end. FE 24376, BACHELOR'S HOUSETRAILER, Srean apt. with TV. $8 per wk. FE CITT COTTAGE, 2 LARGE ROOMS and bath warm and ciean, all util furn, including washer and: TV, child welcome. FE 56-2707 and FE 2.6048. CLEAN, 1-BEDROOM, KITCHEN- ette and living rm. Pyt. Ent & bath. Utilities. nr. Genera! Hos- _pital, adults, after 5. FE 2-5662 SAVE ENERGY, USE, WANT ADS! To find a) job, place to. live or al good ‘used car, see Classi- fied pow | 1 f rms. ae ep = 6 ROOM UPPER FLAT, 3 BED-|1 BEDRM. MODERN. 13 MILE 3& *4 5 ee NT BATHS) cave) alll modern locnveniences | ont 1 Dikis! $40 «month MApie ze GOA GEREN BEDROOME athe resiGente! cea dada close __5-7086. PER, schools ent reasonable to tiv, bath and ent. util furn desirable tenants, con owner. FE 1 BEDRM. ;AOUETS td age, base |__Very nice FE_ 3-5502 4-8462 or FE 2-5258 _ment, St. Mike I District. J ee tre 8.648: 4 ROOMS & BATH. UTILITIES,| A 2 RM & BATH, NEWL RE-| [BEDROOM BR BRICK. ze ee except lights, washer. 731 Young. conditioned apt..$10 per wk OX- 2 an ful! basement, gas heat, dren welcome. 658 Mt Clemens St . FE § 5-0737. __bow Lake privil eges. OR 3-8863. BASEM'T GRADE LEVEL 2 RM. cS around rental 8990 Pontiac | k Rad ALL RENTAL NEEDS SATISFIED Homes & apartments furnished or unfurnished. ail areas & price 3 ARR TY $143 Cass-Elisabothe ha FE 5-3030 BUNGALOW Near Tel-Huron. Idea] for working in gas heat, newly decorated v. ros = —— Bedrooms dress- wn Los rate Bee Mr. ani Tealter, 1 1011 W. Huron. FE STRMINGHANE & ROOMS, rage, basement, 875. UL aise. CLEAN 6 ROOMS. AUTOMATIC heat Full basement. Good _ neighborhood, FE 5-0712. CLOSE-IN }BEDROOM MODERN home, garage. Quick peasserin: $65. Floyd. = ecg 62% N Saginaw St, 5-6106. COMPLETELY TEODSLED AND redecorated, 3 bedroom duplex. $85. Phone FE 5-6768 - FOR COLORED 4 rooms and bath with basement. Large back yard, East side loca- tion. FE 48136. GAS HEAT. REDECORATED 6 rm duplex garage, off State. MYrt i IDEAL WEST LOCA’ : Clean 6-room brick duplex. Tile bath and gas he heat. 8-3338 LEASE — LARGE MODERN Bedrm. house mi. east of heuer “Heights. ¥ Ful snanemack: $50 OA per mi JOANGAY, —_ WATER = o* Sa ranc: as hea mo. ‘Garfield 11210” LOWER STRAITS LAKE, 3 BED- room, year around home, $65 a mo. EM 3-3077. LAKE ORION. 4 BEDRM. STORMS _& screens, $65 mo. FE 68-6819. MODERN 2 “BEDRM. ——o AT _Lake Louise FE 4-119 MODERN 2-BEDRM. | SOuE FOL FUL- ly_ insulated, MA_ 5-3596. NEW 2-BEDRM. _ HOME IN ROCH- —ester._ $135 month. OL _1-1255 NEARLY NEW 6 ROOM HOME, all on ome floor, near bus and schools. Ol] heat and automatic washer and dryer. Also have an 8 room home for rent on West Huron street, R. J. Valuet, Real- _tor. M6 Oakiand Ave. FE 5-0693. ONLY 850 — nancn TYPE. 4 large rooms and On M50 and lake. Modern, wu, secoree: MUtual 44295 or EM 3. 3 ehh RMS. & UTIL. ae LOGR. TIO’ MOD., STOVE & REF. _FURN, $55 MO. OR Sen RENT MY NEW 3 BEDROOM home, “E0080 * for 3 years, _call | F RENT WITH OPTION TO BUY _ Cheerful 6 rooms acre on Marion &t., Also 3-room home in Garage. $40 month FE SAM WARWICK HAS IN ~SYLVAN Lake 2 bedrooms, $100 3 bed- rooms $125: also a two-story 3 bedroom for ue Call FE 4-5000 or FE 2-3105 UNION LAKE — LARGE 3 BED.- room house Close to village. _EM _ 3.4285 For Rent Rooms 37 AT BUS STOP IN NICE HOME, comfortable room. FE 35-7332 | A SLEEPING ROOM FOR MAN. Pvt. ent Light cooking. FE 4-9713 207 Huron PAL es BUSINESS PEOPLE SHOWER, i. priv. E lroquois BUS STOP, COOKING LAUNDRY _ Parking. Pvt. ent, 499 W. Huron CLEAN, COMFORTABLE ROOM, pr. bus atop, on weet side, for __fentieman. FE 2-806! GLEAN RM FE =e peor’ ee CLEAN ROOM FOR A MAN. PVT ent cs shower, 7 awk FE. 209 Whitie- 23-2416 CLEAN TOP RATED $5 PARK- ing. 23 8 Paddock. FE ween CLEAN SLEEPING R -. lg block from city hospital. a Lin- coin. POR COLORED, ALL UTILITIES furnished, Cail between 9 a.m. & 4pm 58-8114. apt. Kitchen & bath Steam heat, ui wasber & dryer furn FE 2 al CLEAN, OTL HEAT. 2? BEDROOM TERRACE furnished, $75 month 1559 2 BEDRM. MODN, eantee hak es Rowley Drayton Pils. FE _4and bath. Lotus Lake, OR €0237. “FRANKLIN APTS Close to downtown shopping cen- ter and transpoytation. These all- modern, 3-room apts. with private bath, afford economical, attrac- tive living quarters with no costly upkeep, Nice and warm. Newly decorated and wel] maintained. Quiet friendly neighbors. Adults only tn this building, per mo. heat, hot and cold wa- ter Hempstead, 1 E. Hu- fesies St. Pe 4-8884 or after 5. FE FLAT FOR. RENT, CLEAN. EM 3-3053_ “HOLLYWOOD APTS: | Furnished or unfurnished 2 & 3 bath & utflities furnishe 414 E. Howard St. FE 21834 @ Faeecon a MODERN, NEAR school, $65 month FE 4-2883. 2-BEDROOM HOUSE, JUST OFF Auburn,. between John R & De- gene inquire 3161 Harrison, L 2-4560. , FULL BASEMENT Willis School area. 2 BEDROOMS and garage 7 BEDROOM H with option, EM 35861 Aa 2-BEDROOM HOUSE GAS HEAT fencedin back vard. 40 W Strathmore, Near Fisher inquire FE 8-0746 _Ciose to city Reas MA 4-2293.. 2, )) BEDROOM HOME IN AUBURN Heights Amromntie heat & hot |, NEAR CENTRAL HIGH ENT Body d;,2 BEDRM WALLED LK. MOD) COMFORTABLE, UNFURNISHED oe AMO 4room heated apartment Cen- -#mona Terrace OR 3-07 trally located in Birmingham 2 BEDROOM, MODERN, — ae Available at once M1 41220 ment. Keego Harbor, $75 mo EM | COLORED - APT ror RENT 2%) __ Se I MYrtle 2-0181_ i ke. - Hone warren < yke vicinity Gas heat 1 bik CLRANTIST FUCOR 2 BEDRCOM | from Soc cotary. school, $60 mo | mo FE 47581 or FE: 4.0090 UL-2 CLEAN SHOOK APT evn ERT). seDROOM TERRACE _ peARTLy { { H i | LARGE CLEAN ROOM FOR GEN- tlemen Pvt. entrance 245 Nel- son, FE +073 _Rooms With Board 38 HOMESTYL E FE EXTRA meets CLEAN TV. 14 Matthews, §-0377 MEN. GOOD FOOD CLEAN “MOD- ern home. FE 2-0 'OLD AGE P Sn ; ome _brivileges. Downtown, FE 3-9100. Convalescent Homes 38A a aaa A VACARCY FoR MAN OR woman. Flexible Pais 24 hour care, OR _3-5320, CONVALESCENT HOME — MOD- ern, fully equipped fireproof build- ing. 21 bed capactiy. 4 acres of land for expansion. Now operating at capacity val waiting ist. Very favorable terms to responsible buyer Phone OR 4-0306, : _ Taylor, Realtor. NOW OPEN Glen Acres Nursing Home New construction, sound proof walls, ground floor., equipment’ by Si mons Telephone by each TV piugs, 4 miles North, of Pon- tiac on M24,then West 1%4 miles on Silverbell Road. 24 ‘hot nure- ing care. Flexible rates Ly in- vite your inspection, 1225 W_ 8il- verbeli Road. Pontiac. FE 42225. §-room with bath fust decorated.| Water Gara per meets. Of] heat, firepince. A nice apart | w Ga. WH TCOMB RLTR. ment and’ gon rement to BOLLE | UL 3-2 ie Call ye NICHOLIE. | BEDROOM MODERN HOME IN HARGER, 33 w. “Huron. FE nubs. ant Orion, $55 per mo, FE PERSONAL ATTENTION TO TIDY, eideriy, lovely pvt. home, FE a a. r rm SYLVAN LAKE Sem Warwick has. new 3}-bedroom brick, tri-level ranch home. Fire- ce built-ins. 2-car garage 185 t. seeded lot exclusive commu- nity sewer water, paved streets, lake Titto “be $24,500, © = bag m4 1780 Sherwood F COMPARE THIS Custom bullt 1.200 sq. ft. 3 bed- ace home, Full q m brick basement, 2 fireplaces, slate en- tra: . hs ceramic tile nce. 1% bat with vanity. Plastered walls oak floors, 22x24 plastered garage. Al) _ this for $17,000, on your lot, E. J. DUN Custom Builder PE 86-1198 NEW RANCH HOME 99.600 EASY TERMS DLORAH BLDG. Co Bildor of be nee Homes FOR SALE What !s your choice of a dream home? Ranch, conventional fam- fly house or a modern contem- peraise Full brick. Full basement. City sewer & water. Gas heat. Paved streets. We have ro choice tn Milford Manor Sub. nothin —. fe GI's or nar low A te Mode] ieseiod 4 = 171 Manor Corner Commerce Rd, in Milfo Leg M. R. Wilson Realty MUtual 41815 or - EM 3-6556. Immediate Possession New - 1054, Be — modern home. d leges, Paige noe. win aoe ee down CRAWFORD AGENCY MY 3-1143 609 EB. Fiint Bt. 4 ROOMS $300 WN 3 rooms and utiltt with tile bath, 1 ee kland bus. Pull price $3.300. $30 mo. What a deal! 794 Corwin Court or Ph. FE 44088, OA 8-2918: NO DOWN PAYMENT 3 bedroom starter homies with full basement and rough wir- ing. kon "wri lot Metnall dow build on our sma’ ow ment. PF. C. stab. —— Wilisme take noe & MS5e. After 6, OR 3-7038. $6,250 rooms and bath. Hardwood floors. Plastered and painted walls. eae Oh furnace. 2 - — y $1,000 down, CUCKLER REALTY 236 N. Saginaw FE Pe 7-RM. MODERN HOUSE IN AU- Will trade, Also of ‘homes in Pontiac. Easy terms, P. W. DINNAN 66 West Huron nt NOTHING DOWN 2 BEDROOMS — Tile bath. Just decorated, Hardwood floors, Gas heat, full ment. About $275 closing costs and § per cent in- 1-RM. burn Lore 4-2377 TOn St, 5-81) mites call Bob Castell, GEORGE R. ol INCOME rear porch A good ie Neat and clean. Let's iook. BEDROOM BRICK Located west side with ceramic tile lar ced kitchen, peted liv basement, etait ea a ans a nicely land- sca) . Can be handled with & reasonable uown payment. VACANT East side 2 bednoom home with unfinished ati, tiled bath, oak floors full basement with auto- matic heat and hot water, water softener also storms and screens. We have the key let's look! GEORGE R. IRWIN, REALTOR 269 BALDWIN FE MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE we - ARRO a : TED MeCULLOUGH, RE, sa Cass-Eligabeth Rd. 5-1284 = oy 9 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. of NO MONEY Tri-level starter Be your lot, wiring, rough ae a alum. siding, G. Piaition = 30482 © GENES ORIVE — NEAR Very nice og m= Seat, late tot, gue! gow Supe eat, large ma amen a re a. T THE gy Ls ol. Ths spit-ievel 3-be in an idea! se ‘ting ase lan, huge + r out, Receention room, nese sine end b e. pegs leas ~~ will take old- ome ‘ Buys this ch Bown and juys this chee yooms bath. 2-3 acre on Marton St, | BROKER, FE 4-5203 + 3 | Bedroom HOMES $100 DOWN Moves You In . so WHY PAY RENT? ° BUILT IN RANGES & OVENS LOADS OP MODERN FEATURES MODEL OPEN WEEKDAYS & sUrDeT To # CEPT FRIDAY : WESTOWN WN’REALTY FE 86-2763 or |_or Eves Ly 24677 IMMEDIATE POSSESSION NEW - RANCH HOMES Boots Northers igh Sehoot Easy FHA Terms TOTAL PRICE $8, en oe SOLS — ASSOCIATE — — = 3-Bedroom Ranch FULL BASEMENT — Gas = Sme'l down i bees e in by Christmas g 443 ORCHARD LAKE AVE Established tp 1016 SPACTOUS - Brick ranch home, 3-Bedrm: Par pone garage. $29, ,Sendition at fe water softener, al. roughout, “Nicely landsca’ ood beach, 9 wee exgtha BEDRM in "56, — liv rm., nice pa ken. be fence and lamp post ineluded., 2 car garage nice landscaping. $19,900 terms, cote on terms. fast aes MACEDAY LAKE PRIV, must be brick, We br: oe! ne Lar W. o ingham. fast at $24,900 — terms, Floyd Kent Inc., Realtor =~ = Hwy, at a oe a AMPLE ; PARKING MULTILAKES REALTY ranch type home large lot, immediate — 2 bedroom. car attached garage, lake priv 6500 down, poss’ Hurry on this one. S38. Commerce Rd. MA 4-157 $900: DOWN 2 bedroom home & garage Liv- ing room carpeted, gas heat, Bates cote) large well land- scaped lot MODEL HOME Now for sale: 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, heated garage. driveway. birch cupboards wall to wall woo! carpeting throughout. Hot water heat. ermopane windows, rice, $17,900, will consider small free & clear home. ia information calle — FE bag HERBERT C, DAVIS __$915 IRWINDALE DRIVE ou CITY BRICK RANCH mt 900 — 3 bedrooms, attractive room Youngstown tile bath, a PUL LL gas. of town owner. AUBURN HEIGHTS by out $11,900 — gleamin FRAME Wy mw with carpeted Uving room i dining room, both have lov: large picture 1 windows, GORGEO OUs ree kiteh- en with another picture window overlooking>lovely Lapa ty eget flower garden & many shade & fruit tfees in ood ad bac’ core Pull basement fenced yard, 2 car se tage — near schools, " HOYT REAL TY ab _ GUIDE TO GOLD: Sell things you're not usin | through’ Classitied Adst SYLVAN LAKE 4 bedroom brick bungalow. ints living an wi — Brod ag 1m md tassnaas oa fa on Oe A heat. 2-car ¢ mae and many other fine fea- tures. Shown ment ys WEST Large tamil h ~ 2 Dedisome up. ‘Livihe™ with Hh eran Lar, and a a ee petior heat i ‘basement. On & lot mans : close = Centra High chool wast enone ban alow with ¥ halt livi a $xil hen and, bree large | — C = a? $8,950 with $950 NEAR LINCOLN JR. HIGH Large 3 bedroom home with glassed-in front Porch. Full basement with ~ oil-steam heat. Fireplace. Price re- duced to $6,950 with $950, down and $60 per month, IVAN W. SCHRAM REALTOR _ FE 5-9471 & SUNDAYS } LISTING SER Immediate Possession $430 DOWN MORTGAGE 3 — — terford frame homes, paonuiy ta bah fer, full For Sale Houses 43 bout $68 per ge eh taxes and tesurence, : ron ae bom with ne down tment. rut —— bath, auto. NICHOLIE 2 sete... 0 C PANGUS, ako 1918 M15, Ortonville — - NA 17-2816 ME, 1 Aub $6500 oe quick _aale. UL ie, Nothing Down ee ee 1 Ie » oes ee. we 4 BEDROOM BRICK RANCH, fe | ( rtord. or Eves. If oly area on & poco 50 x 200 ft. lot, Cali. UL 2-244 Will build starter home on your joy the attractive compact home | Swaee Pace A tea dea ~ with excellent beach, within ten | Tels Gn sat on EY Gas, plastered wai (eek! frees, ers sof : and a fan basement. $10,900 total. | & HARGER CO.. STOUT'S SPORTSMEN!. LAKEFRONT! _» Give yourself and family an ‘NORTH SIDE extra. aie to to inthe sum- | mer - thouf “the. leng drive | te some Gistent lake. ve. it en- | Make us an er on the down payment Home is insulated and has excellent aeons | bed som: Call now! More in this 7 NS : = “Do you have a sympathy card for a girl whose telephone is out of order?” 2 For Sale Houses 43, SO OXBOW LAKE 3 bedroom geome. Fireplace Glassed in porch. Close to. Dublin & St. Patrick Schools. EM 3-2324. Roy Annett, Inc. 28 EF. Huron VALUES | EAST SIDE-—Corner of eamrei| and Chandler, older home with 2. large bedrooms and- bath up { Large living room, rbomy kitchen | and pantry down Full basement. Bus line at door It's vacant. | Full tee only $7950, low down payment OFP JOSLYN —3 bedroom ranch | built in 1956. Brick front. Perma- , stone sides and rear Living | room, dining room. full bath. j modern kitchen with table top| range and built-in oven Auto- matic oi! heat. Washer and dryer | included. Out of state owner, must sell. Price reduced to $11.950, rms. ROCHESTER — Attractive brick ranch 4 years old. built with many excelient features and ex- pertiy landscaped. Located he- tween Hamlin and Auburn roads just west of Rochester road. large bedrooms with large cilos- ets and mirrored doors, carpeted | living room, planter, Rontau | brick fireplace, full ceramic tile | bath, attractive kitchen with loads of cupboards ceramic tile work area. dining area Attached 2?-car | garage and enclosed breezeway. | 20.500, terms, OWner may con-, sider lease. \ AUBURN HEIGHTS-—Brick ranch | with Dear attached garage. 3 bed- rooms, or 2 and den. Living room with fireplace, 1‘ baths, modern kitchen with double sink, GE ta- |, ble top range, built in oven wall, type refrigerator and freezer and | mahogany cupboards Full base. | ment gas furnace and fireplace. | Lot 100x350. Full price only $21.- | $00 with terms. | } APARTMENT BUILDING 4) identical apartments, each with living room dining room, kitchen, full ceramic tile bath 2 bed- rooms and separate basements, utilities, gas furnace and gas wa- ter heaters. Convenient to down- town. Bus stop at door $25,000, reasonable terms Realtors since 1923 FEderal 8-0466 Open Evenings and Sunday 1-4 | DECEMBER SPECIA , Evenings J 536 DIXIE HWY JOLL © MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE OWNER GOING TO ENGLAND | And says we must sell this 3 bed- , room home near Baldwin Nice basement with gas furnace and gas automatic hot water heater. Lot 50x150 with jJ-car garage. lack topped street Close to schools, stores. Immetiiate posses- sion. Make your own terms. This 2 bedroom moe with privi- | leges on Elizabeth Lake. Owner has moved and will give immedi- ate possession. Close to bus, store and school. Only $250 moves you in. Payments $50 per month. after 6 call OR 3-1875 J JOLL, REALTOR FE 44361 Ever think of having a nice | 33_W, HURON FE 5-8183. RANCH HOME, in the City. 3. 4 BI | bedreoms. x ving room ‘ Sin ceemscar en aa canons Farm size kitchen and featuring torm. Teens, $i4,-/ B ‘ B built-in oven and range. Ceramic . hae oo ra ee ee ee est uys ‘ tile bath and extra ‘4s bath. Plas-_ : = : tered walls, oak floors. Formica | : FOR COLORED Today ke — top Ene ma would s Roel oxT . boc onictan fete = $1,500 DOWN: opportunity , 4 P coat baths. Liv. Room. to fs tool ‘thelr aprar’ of ene) : ; . pice som Epes Bee ree | TELL SANTA too. CALL NOw! | AS ® S878" rontraat, Wak £4558 before 5 p.m. > ansnee piped ovpinel STREET ou can mov: oatheran Church. G tonteee moe cosy 4 room bun gate by | ] ] I he) Iles ern Only $8, a Eeroranie Si cae ha With privi- | ne Fhooe 3 * leges = Cass Lake. Plas- a3 ON. Teer Eves Byer, > 2a HOME TN IN:) METC4_ Walls and oak floors. FE 2- 923% 0 RM. wumee Eacel cond. Nice!) %°? down: MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE | E neighborhood. Close to schools | HANG YOUR HURON GARDENS i ; and shopping center. $18,500 ota pled real Vacant 5 rms. Full basement, ; 2760 for appointment. 4 STOCKING . Suto. oil furnace & Boar arses: : BY ’ OWNER. FOR M¥ GI PEQUITY.. Near that attractive corner _ $9075. Full price. 1 : 3 bedroom, 1% bath brick shoe ee fireplace which is the focal | BY OWNER. 2 come a | 4 fibergias insulated, ob *% acre lot " nt in the living room of | Ddasement, ol! heat. Newly dec-. 4 ny in Clarkston. OR_3-0837 this fine 3 bedroom contem- orated. 4 blks from Fisher Body. | : } RMS. AND E BATH LOW DOWN) porary. Step saving kitchen _FE 3-6601, payment. EM 3-0705 = — Tange and oven, .3 ROOM HOUSE” PARTL ¥ FURN. | ber sar — Hos @ garden 5) Drayton area. e pot. Lakefront ietsiveak bie ix ese a down payment. re 2-1104. m-built lake | Modern ranch beme, overlooking “BUILD-AND SAVE Hammond Lake, 6 large rooms, HOW MANY? through our «volume purchases | big kitchen, paneled rec. room, 5 and direct to you sales. We have | 2 fireplaces, 242 complete tiled; Bedrooms do you need? 2 $00 plans of estimate vours, We'll H baths, 2car attached garage. now = maybe another la- secure : ldrge lot, tmmediate Session. ter? Then see ; BUI “EXCHANGE | Owner moving to we led a bedrin FE 3-7210 2-348 | Joslyn District Full basement of |< $00 own A very neat 5-year-old modern with a heat, ai pst : : pune ne ~ pa i) fas geo yang uotar nese ene | room, tiled ba Jiste oi} fur- MR. LANDLORD a weneunt oie ritchen, Sher? | ceret 2 very handy to grade and . wees you be interested in VACANT, MOVE INTO | aes NICE, high sehesla, $2000 down. choice income? Let us ranch-type home now Few min. | Income show rt ce eae polere utes from Pontiac, Oniy $500 Very conveniently located 2-famits:| floor. Ol heat, tile. Noors, one. F 5-room modern y tiled 2 car garage Located in Vacant 1*2-story, near Union Lake, | - bath down, 4 rooms and. Sab _—_ Jakes area and price at $11.- ar garage 2 lots. Only $500) ; Bled entrances, ~ mye aay Both now rented and dow : to schools, ¢ returning $150 per month. RICHARD — Beet TOR | ’ WILLIS M. ‘BREW ER. 135 _W. Highland Rd MU_4-2045 | JOSEPH F. REISZ, SALES MGR 74% ACRES at wire Se BED- 53-55 N. Pai 81) Located inside City Limits. room thodern, city, UL 24289 Eves FE with feet frontage on Walton Bivd. A choice lo- RILEY cen aeee. with @ special price. NOTHING DOWN) neat ohr K. For this 2 becroom home ¥ ‘dw. Stout, Realtor . Ee sred rend. Payments. of TUN, Saginaw 8. rE bps IRWIN ? NORTH SIDE 2 FAMILY LARGE FAMILY? @ nice rooms and bath on lst bedroom home, West 2 jarge rooms and bath | suburban on 100 x 450 ft up. Full basement. gas heat, | with ray & ga- awed street. Priced at only. rage. Ree room & — 0,500 Small down payment ement. Oak floors, ' walls, kitchen, 1'— bath, ‘ | NORTH ies NO MONEY DOWN | & A DREAM : Cute 3 a) recto home available A) on : Roo wena Perales Cag of ae son John K. Irwin & Sons } place extra iar living — peed) t ; i tile bath with giass enclosed tub; 7% YEARS OF SERVICE 33_West Huron. Street | utiful - ock.| 4 REAL BARGAIN Phone FE $0441 or FE 24031, Outside g ons ft. Owner has moved and will sac- EVE. . Call % now at only) rifice this 3 bedroom modern | BEDROOM aaa cae $2000 $12,900. 8 = e at 28 S&S. aoe down to new FHA. OR 3-9465 Elizabeth Lake Rd. arage, encosed front Bey $500 DOWN FE 41157 PE 44621 1) asem«nt for only $8, cl 2 bed: hi full bas with smal) cown payment or aon room home So will t rent with to buy. aay bnew furnace. op Marcus sh sor just west of Dixie Hwy.. in —— 3 awe only yee needy rset 4 L_) m possession. - _ ONLY $8,750 TOTAL a pcaule 6 reek wick C. SCHUETT, Realtor eso pd hd oe oa = 460 W_ Huron FE 2-791! m: : cones — = tre nae — : best. Taree, Tandsce q tot 1 Home for Christmas 8 down: 4 room: ¥ rms stoves and two refrigerators eeiwal wate ir 6 enetens mea ae baamee an aes et nen in home. lot 77x216 no down payment each apt. Choice westside | Evenings after 6 call PE 8-2936 or er nate tee “hey: — FE 23381 OL 17511 or OL_1-1194 Leslie R. R. Tripp, p, Realtor A. J HEIs On: Rea MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE pais 1704 S. Telegra | . FE sisi or FE oar THREE BATHS FE 42533 » CHRISTMAS GIFT _ | NO DOWN PAYMENT | $1,000 DOWN OUR OWN HOME — A little! 3 bedroom bungalow, only 2 ye: Lt If your eredit is good you . “son good credit and job can) old Newly decorated inside and can own this excellent 3 you in this attractive 5 room) out. Located abaw road bath, 7.room home for only ungalow stairs to ‘| mear Woodhull Lake. 5 per cent $10,500. New siding glass up, full ent, gas heat, eat contract. Home ts now va- porch and a host of fine fea- — ds Amor oot ures. pe this our & Ww dsca: gy ban ® more, — #12. F.C. Wood Co. =e . Corer Williams Lake Ré. & M59 NOTHING DOWN ' : 1 J. R. Hiltz Gl's SUSIN. LAKE FRONT : Realtor 2 bed t- $8,000 — st. Michael and 1011 W. Huron YE 58-6181 fon Fa esting soa cmt Baldwin Schools — very. at- oe 4 eas ocean $800 DOWN inside and out. edrooms. | / i 4 room, 2 bedroom house. about full basement, ofl heat 1'- | ! s 1% Ss ahaha ee bombed Desirable neigh- | area, ore é rhoo : WATKINS LAKE FRONT ; ranch fireplace, carpeting | ‘PRI E 2 ; mie room, family dining rm., i 3-Bedroom net — peek ie veel Sarees.) i D. ; Eeiagie pane a REDUCE : West Suburban ° You will want to see this, | Ww walking distance QUALITY-BUILT none, for quick sale on im 5 ee # to new elementary school. Fea- room West side bungalow : tures full separate dining room. ‘ Full basement, gas heat. F heated sun room or’ den, Hor f I it ~- carpets, water softener. i basement, 2 car S&T ise ft | washer and piano included | ees ES ced (ane ‘ ' at only $11,950, | shrubs. Priced FINANCE CO. | MAIN 3% $8 Saginaw St 4-0535 | Mortgage | Loans 54 ARE YO! LOOKING FOR a Busi. Want A Good Mortgage? tf your home needs an (mprove- ness? Get the free ‘Michigan Business Guide’ from Realtor | Partridge & Associates. i Ww Huron, Pontiac FE 4-3581. ATTENTION — WALLED clay AREA. PENDFROFF RESIDENTS FE_8-6580 62 Wom Man tnterested in develop- i das acon ing @ fuel oil route in | Walled Lake area. Financial \ Swaps 55 &ssistance available. Cal] I ee ae FE 4-0595. |6 CU. FQOT REFRIGERATOR BAR & PROPERTY FOR SALE trade for single bedrm. set or by owner $20,000 dn Schoeller's chest of drawers. Will sell. Call | Bar, M59 patter EM 331 FOR LEASE: 2 BAY SERVICE| 80 FOOT ON WATKINS LAKE | station at Joslyn & Montcalm.{~ Road. Want good car or small. Pontiac Low investment Good housetrailer so 120 bass ac- neighborhood. Heat & water furn. A real opportunity to own your, [957 own business FE 46-9526 or FE 3-3433 after'4 p.m. MODERN, FUL LY EQUIPPED: snack bar -In bowling alley rent or lease. FE 2-7448 “LETS TALK BUSINESS” UP 10 DATE Super Markt with SDM. Small town location, but big city volume. Owner's health requires drier climate Any reasonable offer will be considered BAR NONE This is strictir a top notch caaee County Tavern. No you i 2 lovely ood — fust drinks Pres- ent volume near $60. 1f rou re, considering the avern usinese this bar will fit all of vour require- ments ue HGS Fo nan LES CORPORATION Sonn a LANDMFSSER a CASH FO 137 S Telegraph Rd PARK AT OUR FRONT DOOR _ FE 4-1582 SUPER MARKET _ One-stop market with SDD it cense. marvelous money making opportunity ‘or partners or ee pertenced grocery man. High vol- ume business Excellent equip- ment, good brick building, gas hea.t good lease, option to buy building. Be prepared to make respectable down payment. Come in and see us. WILLIS M. BREWER 53 - 55 N. Parke WE COVER THE ST. ATE MOST COMPLETE COVERAGE | of business properties for sale in. Michigan. Listings from 30 asso- | ctated offices throughout state to” choose from S— AER RE- HOTELS — TELS SORTS ORnoceRinn ~— GAS STATIONS--FTC We have what you Want im your price range will accept trade ' Many SATISFIED CUSTOMERS — ,OUR STATEWIDE “Real ree Service of Pont) ine D. CHAR, LAL B ES RE 1717 8. Telegraph 4 FE 0821 I ment. and your debts call or see us at once Don't wait. 4 | 5'g per cent interest onsolidated t ADMIRAL DELUXE REFRIGERA- tor, Ige. deep freeze. auto de- frost. 5 year warranty. Frig- daire electric range, balance §2 Per week Schick's, MY 3-3711. ., AUTOMATIC EL -ECTRIC RANGE — Gibson double oven, almost new. ee 2933 Glenbroke, Keego Har- ipcut ak ANYTHING 3 et Oe, WANT FOR Don HOME AN BE FOUN Les sal A ites on, of the way but a iot less to pay Furniture and appli- ances of all kinds. NEW & USED. Visit ceed trade dept. te real bargains out free RI ‘ miles FE. of _Rad A BUY _ SMALI A $12. FE 58155 RADIOS. s§ To ‘ontiac or 1 mile of eure Gene op Au bura | TWIN BABY BUTLER. GOOL _ condition OR 3-4742 Poe coed 'BLOND TWIN BEDS. 1 BOX cordion for what? FE 2-2684. good 1953 car ments. FE +645 MERCURY HARDTOP FOR | - monthiy pay-| 6 ROOMS $4,950 TOTAL PRICE Where can vou bear { eo & Inner- . 53 & ‘51 Packard's $105 Power steering, power brakes. A NICE SELECTION OF LATE) 1953 Merc H.T...$ 495 No money down MOD NOMY USED CARS| y 2 tas ‘naw. FE 4-2 | 1953 F cord § “82. ‘s a 1958 «DR ROET SATION ike new. ® money "SL wagon 1 owner Excelient Tron bi Mercury 395 tou. $000, Cuil aa 48772 Nee Ge H. T. $2205 es PONTIAC STARCHIEF. 2 "2 DR r. Steering & brakes ~ stom Catalina. I owner. c tie & heater. Like new ... a5 19356 DeSoto, 156 Ford V-8. 2 4r. Customline | full power ...S$1245) — SS $1955 Lincoln H.T. $1195 1986 Chevrolet 210 4 dr. V-8. Diack Capri. full power . & white, Radio & heater -. $1195 1936 Chrys. H.T. ..$1395 1957 Chevrolet 2 dr wagon. Radio,’ New Yorker, full power Pe heater. Powerglide. eke (1954 Ford ......--.- § 675 bd SD aes i Fordomatic. Radio & beater. 1 a tar. _ Montclair: P. steering and Lor Pontiac 4 dr. Hydramatic. Re-| brak dio & heater, Exc. cond. $ 895 1957 "Hord W agon 1968 Chevrolet \2 ton pickup. 5.000), 4 clean P. steering and* 11795) sharp $1,650. EM 3-0081 11952. Ford Wagon ..$ 445 | 'Christmas Specials "8 PONTIAC 4-Dr. Cat., | air ride, like new $2995 Starchief full power, 30 OLDS 98 H'top Cpe. 4 actual miles. Radio & eater.; | fall yower, perfect Washers & ture signals. Like: ion “Dodge Wagon $1995 | I » | vee Power steering & brakes condition ......$1995 1953 Radio. Heaters Dh dr. ows tie (1950 Cadillac ..... § 395 ynafio -= = owe 5081957 Chrysler 300 . $2495 | HOMER AICHE MTRS| 1957 Chry sler L aBaon “1§ Minutes from Pontise’” | Imperial . Oxford, Michigan OA 8-2528| Full power. 16,000 actual miles & (1953 Pontiac 2-dr...$ 295 $2595 | ‘7 PLYMOUTH Station \ agon, 9-pass . power 1855 DODGE CORONET 2DOOR.| 4 cylinder Automatic coe No. steering. auto. trans- A one owner beauty Has been ® money gown ; i family car. Our stock No. 4663 | Z : a . Priced to sell at $688 : BOB FROST MMSSION 2.006 Syuds U } INC. ex preane Roe Hunter Bivd. at 8. wecnenrd | Axe 9390 HUNTER BLVD” MI 6-6834 36 CHEVY: Del Rav V8. Birmingham Mj 42735 iBy-Pass Afound BHam: | ; = (1983 FORD CUSTOM +DR FR & H ~P rgiide. s harp ..S$1343 ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Assume payments of $8 64 mo. Moen ma Mr ee os at My 00 arold Turner »-- syn 5 foe oa MOTORS, INC. Ford. PONTIAC Starchief 1958 Sia ONE oo IRE | | 7 a ‘ _ "§? MORRIS-Minor Sedan . new tistmas specia 2.295 | ardtup, 2 to choose Here’s what you're been lookine| Cail oe Eddie Steel Ford I . for — one owner car — only _FE _ 5-0204 - erie 20,000 miles and you get 35 miles CAR PAYMENTS TOU BURDEN- | trom as eee ees Sh] 2 to the gallon. Come and see this, some? Let us help vou adjust to cutie — really sharp! some less expensive mode! *34 PONTIAC 4 Dr $595 Lake Orion Motor Sales 22 ae . . : 8 Cylinder. This blue beauty has | M24 AT CLARKSTON RD SS PONTIAC Convert- radio & heater. new seat covers. FORD — MERCURY MY_2-2611 hydrematic. excejlent tires, bar- 3; #ORD. 2 DR. BLACK AND ‘ple new tin ee and _ gain price? Te ain R&H 6 cylinder i ord FE DE GUS he u lie Smith. Eddie Steele For E "52 DODGE CORONET $395 9) eae e10At REAL NICE CAR, you'll be — oe -___ rakes Ge ensep sl proud to own. Has white tires. radio. heater, low mileage — sale priced zap 7 = Shoreline ‘33 CHEVROLET 210 4 DR $395 PONTEAC Starchiet pind-d your searching — poe 4 what vou want at a price jus INT Sa Nye re | = 2 AY es age Pia dec Chrtt@es. PONTIAC-CADILLA¢ 4-Dr. sedan, full pow 33. PLYMOUTH $345 ei, pert. cond, .. $1195 A good transportation buy — ex- LA st : =i celient tires & engine 2 eLyMour A nice choice of c lean cars . $295 <3 3 ~ : _ REAL NICE hew seat covers — FROM S3I® -7 (TIEN Y Bel Air Con- fust the car for running back : ‘ and forth econgmicaliy. ‘83 CHEVROLET $350 Economy plus — clean as a pin CUSTOM SUBURBAN ful.c radio, heater lovely blue finish equipped Includes power A 5 , Sharp car "83 DODGE CORONET $325 $7395 Here is the second car rou need = for Mamma — real nice with radio & heater. “§)// FORD Extra Specials RETRACTABLE. beautiful boue & white with continental kit) This car has on'e 4.000 miles and ON THESE SUPERB DEM- show room condition $1905 ONSTRATORS SAVE UP TO $1500, ‘88 CHRYSLER SAVE SARATOGA 4 DR SEDAN. Torqueflite, power steering, radio. ‘9 PONTIAC STAR CHIEF CONVERTIBI F heater. special tu-tone paint cower steering & brakec , and power brakes. captive air tires, leaded Cwith ceccessones | Clan: bumper guards. remote side view throughout : , — mirror. fuscicus green & white. “ . S0015 really sharp as a tack 3609 aSeNS) miles. as 1 i $8 SPORT SUBURBAN $AVE 57 EVY @ passenger wagon, radio, heater Ww 58 PLYMOUTH _ vert. all black ..S$1605 PLENTY OF & ANSPORTATION SPECIALS TO. CHOOSE FROM UNDER $500 RUSS JOHNSON MOTOR | = et sere Fetes. Pec «4 DR STATION WAGON V8 besuliful ‘yellow & white vee radio, heater. Powerglide A rer deal on thi, e! and white beauty. One owner: he trade | $8 BELVEDERE CONVERT SAVE $1795 An aj! rear round ~— e tay 2 with Rees steering rakes. t ‘ torqueflite F cocpirs ined power | oe PONTI AC @eats, tinted giass. white sre) worgeous blue colon | 2 DOOR With radio heater $495 Wilson Pontiae-C 1350 N. adiliae Hr- | dramatic. Readv to rofl and onic | _ .SALES AUT. HORIZED oo ER DEALE , E 1 AUTHORIZED PONTIAC DEALER 51 N Broadwar Lake rien MY 2.2871 +o PCGKand averse = Woodward — -~ 4-3528.) Pontiac Bam MI 4-1930 | ae RD Le ake Gunn NO MONEY DOWN -matic. Power steering. R&H. In- ~ plata bli | ¢greepter cna 13,500 mi.’ $3200; ON THE FOLLOWING | _ for test de market 41682. . : ; 1 RD V-8 : : ara ‘ ~ 4 /~-REPOSSESSION= Ties uaa coe ga , $189 full” Payments only ee as cpayeeasens: $10.90 m riect engine i B Nash Rambler 20200 000.. | Good body and tires. Radio an panel ......... $385, heater Mr. Bell. Great Lakes ie Sereeiet panel ....:..- Ba EB 22551 1845 RAMBLER “GO” OUGHTEN & SON YOUR FRIENDLY SLs DEALER FOREIGN CAR SALES i oan nee oP ot 1-9761 ain, CHesrer, b | EW & USED CARS y LN. Main, Rocheset, 5a PLYMOUTH, RUNS GOOD. $35 BILL SPEXCE | “\e8 ‘Lakeside Drive. FE 43304 RAMBLER SALES & Lenard | 154 PLYMOUTH SEDAN. "RUNS 211_5. Saginaw -4541 good, $296 FE 3-542. H. Riggins. Time Place 7 4T ovr eh “om , PLATES ; \ ‘57 PLYMOUTH PLAZA BLK. | To Buy peeuty Only $1085" MApyfair __6-3619. | Buy your wile aue of these for - CHR: ‘88 Ford Customline 3 ar. $198, MOTOR SALES, INC. ‘83 Chevy Bel Air H.top . $495 21 W. Montcalm + FE 8-8423 ‘p94 Henry J. 6 cylinder $295 | ““RodER's ole copy RAR DSM! 7 2-DOOR | 695 Auburn Ave. EB 2 WIyDRAT R @ HLA wort eery | HYDRA. NO MONEY DOWN. Assume pay- ments of $11.46 mo. Call Credit | er. MI Harold Turner Ford. 1954 “98 OLDS HOLIDAY COUPE. | full power except windows. OR 32-8688. _HOME OF THE R RUGGED JEEP 1966 LINCOLN | PREMIER, 3 DR. sedan, yellow, black top, leather upholstery, white side wells, full power, 1 owner, MI ¢-5580. R ¢: * Rambler See us for the best deal on a uew Rambler or a good used ¢ar. Our Slogan: WE CAN BEAT ANY me HOLIPAY SPECTALS sharpie ete of a Lee EM_3-4155 or M 3-4156., 6 ie 2 ~ — jaa MERCURY, FOUR-DOOR REH | "54 Olds ® r. se ERCURY “SI FOUR-DO Of Ben | - Chevrolet stationwagon. Brook- ood 4 dr. with pow First $100 takes it 8. Austin Healy, priced to sell _F FE 8-0083 ‘Get Wise. Economize ~ JEROME “Bright Spot” 80 FINE CARS OPEN ‘TIL 10 P.M HAUPT | | | Pontiac Sales | eee eae a Orchard Lake at Cass FE 8-0488 SF Starchie ear. ardtop ull BEAUTIFUL 2 TONE 1956 PLYM- power Hydra Radio Heater. outh Suburban Has power steer- hitewalls. Low mileage. | ing, power brakes Automatic 1957 Studebaker. Stwer Hawk Au- transmission Like new. Check tomatic transmission Radio & this right away Bob Lynaday heater. Rear seat speaker. White- Eddie Steele Ford. FE 5-0204. PLYMOUTH 197 BELVEDERE. 8 -cyl. 4dr. delux. Bronze-tone color White walls, Radio. beater, auto- matic shift. Low, mileage $1595 , Pvt. owner EM 32511 or after 6 pm EM 340% walls $195 down 1957 Pontiac 2-dr Catalina Mydra. Radio Heater. Whitewalls. $1605 | 1953 Pontiac 4-dr sedan. Hydra. Ra- dio and heater. No money-— down 1943 Pontiac 2-dr. Catalina. Hydra Radio and heater All leather trim. Just pay the sales tax — 1954 “PONTIAc LIKE NEW 1 finance the balance owner. 2 dr. Has radio, heater, 1958 Pontiac 4dr. Starchief hard- Hydramatic trans. Cail Jim Gil- mer, Eddie Steele Ford. FE 5-0204 top. Full power, Air-Ride Hydra | Radio. Heater Whitewalls. mee 1953. PONTIAC VERY CLEAN cise cer less than 5.000° miles $365. MA 5-1846_ I ow down payment. 1958 Buick Braciat: Q-dr Riviera ! 1058) FONTIAL | SONVERTIBLE : | Danalow Radio Heater Waite «1517 : v | wa ow mi w w 5 | wna | ie 6 PONTIAC 4 DR” WAGON. HY- | Also t s tl dra ower. te side walls ar as Dorauoe epeciels Clocks Radio Heater Spotlight . ust se Open nights ‘til 9 | MAple $-5566 or MAple. S-1141 (1958 MAICO. * OWNER. 60 MILE ee ee 1983 PONTIAC STATIONWAGON, iss} MER CORY 2DR_ MERCO 3 seater Excellent cond Take | pAESOLUTELSY WO MONE y | _c’er_ payments” Ub Get | “DOWN. Assume payments of $8.65 | 58 PONTIAC, STARCHIEF, 4 DR Windshield washers EM ‘22. 34 PONTIAC. STATIONWAGON, UL 2-3807 mo. Call Credit Mgr. Mr. Parks| Catalina Loaded with extras. at MI 47500. Harold Turner Ford | Power steering. power arene | ae Nee | JOHNSON. MY 22871 oo. BOM | = ee . _J (SON. Ns j REPOSSESSION 1952 PONTIAC, TWO-DOOR . R&A $149 full price. $940 month No’ FE 64001 | cash needed. Bell Great PONTIAC 1957 41 +R. 2. HT. SUPER- Chief. white walls. power steering & brakes Undercoated 4Darre carb. Dua] exhaust.‘ $1,725. FE 5-6047. Mr Lakes. FE 8-0402. | te OLDS 98 4D R SHARP CAR | money down, Lucky Auto, _ Bales. 193 S Saginaw. FE pee. Al, LAWRENCE a $850 convertibis power steer. | ri. i ' , i { | "HURRY" FOR THESE ERRIFIC- CAR- _ -BUYS- "Slashed All Prices DOWN TO ROCK BOTTOM Must Be Sold BEFORE JANUARY Ist OPEN EVES. ‘TIL 9 P.M. ‘34 Chevrolet ‘5S Pontiac 2-DOOR 2-DOOR SEDAN Radio and Heater Radio and Heater. H 23,000 actual miles om cuer yarematic $895 ‘99 Olds HOLIDAY CLUB COUPE Ey Powergilde, eee $295 ‘59 Pontiac STARCHIEF CATALINA CPE Radio and Heater Powe Racio and Heater Hvdramatic brakes and Power steering $1195 $1195 i] SB Ford 96 Olds OF 4-DOOR SEDAN *2DOOR Radio and Heater. Hydramatic Radio and Heater Straight AS) BE Stick $1395 S005 ‘00 Ponti Be Buick ontiac N STARCHIEF CONVERTIBLE STATION WAGON Radio and Heater. Hvdramatic 4- Door Radio and Heater Power brakes. Power steering Streicht Stick Padded dash Brand ne® Vinv! 1 395 lop g $1295 ‘57 Bones SUPERCHF CATATINA CPE 5/ Cadiliac 4-DOOR HARDTOP Radio and Heater. Power steer- | ing and Power brakes. Power Radio and Heater Hydramatic windows Air conditioning. Power steering and Power brakes. $3205 $1005 ‘58 Buick CONVERTIBLE ‘58 Pontiac B VILLE CONVERTIBLE Radio and Heater Power +} i 3 r steeripe and Power brakes. Joules He Met: Hvce smi mts Bucket seats Power windows. ot 2-Tone biue LOOT $3495 S245 '58 Edsel 4DOOR HARDTOP 58 Pontiac STARCHIEF CATALINA CPE Radio and Heater Power Padio and Heater Automatic. steering and Power brakes Alr transmission ride $2595 $20 FACTORY BRANCH PONTIAC RETAIL STORE | “GOODWILL USED CARS" MT. CLEMENS ST. FE 3-7)17 (BEHIND THE POST OFFICE) _ 65 ct X CARRYOVERS THIS” YEAR = “OUT THEY GO IN OUR ANNUAL YEAR-END ‘CLEAR- ANCE SALE . No aca Till February 58 BUICK ..............$2695 SPECIAL 2-DR. HARDTOP. A nice one owner car BUICK Soocce cere ee $2595 SPECIAL ESTATE WAGON. Another one owner car BUICK ..............$2595 08 98 SPECIAL 4-DR. HARDTOP. Real nice owner car. SUPER. 2-DR HARDTOP: MERCURY (oes ee. $1995 STATION WAGON. beautiful | ‘ 2 SUPER 4DR. HARDTOPS. 00 BUICK ..............$2495 SPECIAL 2-DR. HARDTOP. Buy now and save BUICK ..............$1995] ROADMASTER 2-DR. HARDTOP. Real sharp car BUICK ..............$1895 Save—save—save. | BUICK ..............$1995 Your thoice BUICK ..............$1495 2 CENTURY ¢DR. HARDTOPS, BUICK ..............$1395 2 SPECIAL 2DR. HARDTOPS. PONTIAC ...........$1495 Your choice «DOOR HARDTOP. Clean inside and out AND NUMEROUS OTHER CHOICE SPECIALS TO TRANSPOR TATION CHEVROLET ....... . $595 2 SCLEAN 2-DOORS. Your choice Fit YOUR EVERY NEED: SEE HANK or GLENN USED CAR BARGAIN PONTIACS OLIVER MOTOR SALES. INCORPORATED 210 ORCHARD LAKE AVE. low mileage one Your choice e peciai 4-door E black ae Special Victoria wa Special BARONS FE 2-9101 Custom 4 jhead because he "wouldn't sit es ber soon be drinking their own & Penney’s) _—_—— { | Electro-Voice. High Fidelity f Open Friday ae There Is a difference in high-fidelity equipment. You can hear i . yOu can see it in Electro-Voice! Widest choice of models. For everything in high fidelity, there is no finer choice than Come in and see our complete E-V line! 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Gable and Colbert, have passed away for one basic reason: Holly- | wood and Broadway think Mr. and. Mrs, Doe are too sophisticated for outright sentiment, Who needs love? Leve was geod enough fer the depression era. Now we've got money, so we can afford to enjoy mean- ness, insanity and high-budget crime. The picture makes Leo McCarey a bit sad, McCarey is the gentle director jwhose reputation ‘was built on the} light romance, the human_ touch. He won Oscars’ for “The Awful Truth’ and “Going My Way,” and award nominations for “Love Af- fair,” ‘The Bells of St. Mary’s” and ‘‘My Son, John.” he ok © “t don’t try to go along with the trend, myself,” he said quiet- ly, “because I can’t peur out my heart on a story of degenerates. I'm behind the times, I guess. “I think Tennessee Williams started this whole thing with ‘A Streetcar Named Desire.” And ail the writers started to copy him. The critics seem to love the sordid things. And, from that, it’s as- sumed that the audiences do too.” He shrugged. * * * “So a writer who expresses too much sentiment is behind the times. If Alfred Tennyson were alive today, they'd blast him. THE. PONTIAC Press, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1958. Death, Despair, Degradation Replace Love Altair to ‘Remember, a the upcoming “Rally Round . the picture.’ I said, ‘Yes, I know.’ Blast him? They'd “throw a “tet over him,”’ x * * ; MeCarey’s insight into the sweet, human nature of his movie charac- ters made him a fortune up until 1952. Since then (since, you might say, the celluloid curtain was dropped on pufe tenderness) he * has, made only two fillms, “An Flag, Boys.” personally, have the fun Two Against Curb of Rules Committee WASHINGTON (AP) — Two in- fluential committee chairmen voiced opposition today to curbing the power of the House Rules Committee. Chairmen Clarence Cannon (D- Mo) of the Appropriations Com- mittee and Francis E. Walter (D-f reviews.’ timentalist. oe He is in New York Ps the pre- mier of the latter. unhappy about this city's newspapers being on strike. , “It will be good,” he said, “to movie without Baring to read the McCarey is an me and out sen- His tear ducts went inte ac- tion, for example, when he re- called the night he won his first Oscar. It was for- best direction of the film, “‘The Awful Truth.” “T'll never forget it. turned to the table, my wife whis- pered, ‘Oh, darling, it’s wonderful in. "ST, and|—but you won it for the wrong)” ; . In that same year, he explained, Le he had directed. a movie called “Make Way for Tomorrow,’ star-|, ring Victor Moore and Beulah Bondi as an. elderly couple. ahout ‘And he is not, x * Perhaps They Couldn't Carry Anything More DALLAS (AP) — Driver W. D. Haggard was relieved to know that the thirst of the two mer who stole his liquor truck Thursday was easily satisfied. Haggard, making a delivery, saw two unidentified men climb ‘into his truck and drive away. The only items missing from the |$5,000 cargo when the truck was found abandoned 15 minutes later of seeing my own * * As I re- to be. separated. ‘It was $0 full of love, it tore your heart out,” _ . But even thén, in 1937; pure Ipve ‘|couldn’t win an dcademy award. love, I guess,” said McCarey wist- fully... “in airy medium be sides. reality, - Successful Saleimen : : MILO, Maine (UPI) — Bobby Ellison, 13, returned to school $60 richer after selling more than 6,- 000 worms to fishermen this sum- FS erential rete (Advertisemen t) Don't Neglect Slipping FALSE TEETH © Do faise teeth drup, si!p or wobble when re talk, = 8 ‘auah od sneeze? Don't be annoyed and emive by such nandieape FASTEETH, lag line (non-acid) powder fo Ragen kle on your plates, Keeps false more firmly set. Gives confident feel- ing of security one added comfort, iwere two cases of vodka and one case of gin. L seo oma 4 socer asty taste or feele ing. Get F. H today at counters aves. .|Pa) of the Committee on Un- A Secure Future in A Business Career _a reasonable cost. Psychology, subjects. Day, Haf-Day VETERAN APPROVED The Business Institute 7 W. Lawrence St., Pontiac There are no “hard times” themselves indispensable to their employers as sec- retaries, accountants and executive assistants. | can learn business skills quickly, then enjoy a life- time of security, good income, and opportunity. You can train at the Institute in minimium time and at Plan To Enroll NOW in Gregg Shorthand, Speedwriting Shorthand, Type- writing, Accounting, Business English, Business Comptometer, Calculator, and other American Activities both argued the change might clear the way for passage of undesirable legisla- tion. * * * for those who make ~You and Evening Phone FE 2-3551 | playbill. In separate interviews, Cannon ‘and Walter said the 21-day rule, which a group of liberals seeks to | restore in the new House, proved junworkable when tried out 10 iyears ago. It was discarded two years later. * * The 2i-day rule provided that a legislative committee which has approved a bill may call it up for a House vote ,if a request for clearance is ignored by the Rules Committee for 21 days. Famous Name Returns to Theater—New Bearer CANTON, Ohio (AP) — Sarah! Bernhardt’s name is back on the) But this Sarah is a 21- veer-old Canton girl who is studying thea-' ter arts at Emerson College in |Boston, Mass. She is appearing jin the college’s musical comedy. Dough Changes Hands | THOMPSON, Conn. 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