a ey “eae ee a ee ee ee é The Weather = : , | : | a Details page two - ! - ft é foc ue | 113th YEAR xkaek PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1955—52 PAGES MSSOCIATENTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE, | i. ee | Press Aids Goodfellow Drive KICK-OFF — A $100 check from The Pontiac Press starts off the 1955 Goodfellow Drive, which will be conducted by the Pontiac Metropolitan Club tomorrow. The donation is présented, above, to Patrolman Jess Quick, club president, by Russell Bassett eral employes 2 Pontiac Press Photo , national advertising manager of The Pontiac Press. Policemen, firemen and fed- will sell copies of The Press and use proceeds to provide needy families with a merry Christmas. = , The Coming of the King | V—Tidings of Great J By NORMAN VINCENT PEALE | While Jesus was being born in the stable at Bethle- hem, there were some shepherds on the nearby hills, watching their flocks through the night. Today, if you visit those hills and , i fields, you. will still see the flocks graz- ing, and whiteclad \ shepherds, who might almost be! the same shep- 7; herds, standing by . that no wolf or fox comes down from the hills to steal a lamb. This oné night several of them * . were talking to-(..:; ** gether ds they \~ guarded their! \ | sheep. Suddenly, it “x 7" eo ag ae al seemed to them astm <2”. though the very “~~ “> skies opened up They were troubled about this miracle and couldn't understand it. Then an angel explained to them and comforted them: “Fear not: for, behold, I bring you tidings of great joy, which shall be to all people. unto you is born this day in the city of David a Saviour, which is Christ the Lord.” Then the angel told them that they could easily recognize the baby. They would find Him wrapped in clothes and lying in a angels left, the shepherds decided that they would go to Bethlehem and see for themselves this great thing the angel had told them about. : As fast as they could, they hurried to the inn at Bethlehem and there, just as the angel had said, they found the stable, the manger and the child. And so these simple men from the countfyside be- came the first people, other than Mary and Joseph, to look upon the face of Jesus. - , (Copyright 1955, the Hall Syndicate, Inc.) Tomorrow: Wise Men From the East. Edison fo Erect Office Building Completion. Date Set | for June; Will Occupy _ Present Location ‘ing to house Detroit Edison dis- Vi) 2 trict headquarters and local cus-| tomer service facilities were an- 'field, manager of the firm's Oak- land District, { 26 years. 5 { r | Construction is expected te be- | gin in January and be completed in Jute, Canfield said, |Edison’s 7,600 square-mile serv- iheat and cool the buiiding. Oustomer service offices have — been transferred to a building at the rear of the future headquar- ters site, istrict offices have been temporarily moved to the com- pany’s Service Center on Or- chard Lake Rd. The building will be the head- on Council Seat F i Ee up-today by cracking ‘the. _| Deadlocked in the battle 19 cote mee Se Na sear for the seat being vacated) + Plans te eonstruct a new build-. Sroka icibetthip = |nounced yesterday by Howard Can- into the U.N. at the 1956 Assem- | The one-story structure will be jlocated at the corner of W. Huron on record as considering Japan | St. and Pine, and will replace a|’‘fully qualified” for memberhip in iwhite frame building which the | the UL N, ‘company has occupied for the past | | The building will enclose three they had before them a letter from } | Favor Social U.N. Assembly } Zs _ _ = ieee s {o Ballot Again By REBA HEINTZELMAN Press Milford Correspondent Michigan's oldest resident will jtake another birthday in stride to- |day. Mrs. Eliza Beaumont Taylor | ‘is only 106. | No fancy celebrations are in| ‘order, and no trips. will be made. ; Philippines, Yugoslavia Still Deadlocked; Reds jhome to receive a few friends in FROM OUR WIRE SERVICES lan unofficial open house in High- UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. land. —The U.N. Assembly winds; Born during the gold rush in | 1849, Mrs. Taylor was one of stalemate over the Security Council vacancy. in the White Lake area, Her father and mother settled in a log cabin near the lake and | Renew Veto-of Japan —(Mrs.—-Taylor ts~staymg- right ~at/ nine chitdren” who were raised | = | at the age of 90, after having . Last year, Mrs. Taylor received! celebrated his 69th wedding anni- | birthday congratulations from versary. | President Eisentiower, Governor) . |Williams and George Dondero, A daughter, Mrs.*Keller, who is' among many other famous digni-| 86, takes care of her mother and taries. Up until this year, she her appearance, too, belies her; has voted in every single election. age. She is a neat trim little wom-| Asked about her fine health at| an who bakes, sews and keeps 106, Mrs. Taylor said, ‘It must} the house in ‘apple-pie-order’... be this good Highland-air.”’- | drawn plow used by her father by Turkey are the Philip-| to till the land. \pines and. Yugoslavia The 76-nation Assembly "ansportation in. those days, she meets today for the sixth Every morning Mrs. Ta#or gets : 4 ‘her daughter, Mrs. Frank Keller, gins its 30th ballot. A two-|\C) (ORT te lives, She then thirds majority of those | walks around the house, without present and voting is re- the aid of a cane. Weather per- quired for election. ‘the spacious yard that surrounds The admission to the U-. N. the old house on Center street. Wednesday of 16 new members,! Mrs. Taylor's eyesight ig failing, jwith South Africa boycotting the and her hearing is slightly im- ‘Assembly, thus raised the neces- paired, but she can hear and un-|: sary minimum from 40 to 50 or : \derstand her closest friends who 2. : visit her daily. | The Security Council yesterday | Longevity seems to run in the Oxen weré the only mode of / time on the issue and be- up and dresses, with the help of} . }mitting, she is helped outdoors inj|- | afternoon ran afoul of the 76th family. Mr. Taylor, who was a Soviet veto in 10 years on the | Civiy war veteran, died in 1939 MRS. ELIZA BEAUMONT TAYLOR | | Soviet Delegate Arkady A. So- bolev cast the veto to block a \U. S. motion giving Japan entry £2." Dulles Debating NATO Troubles Fighting in Middle East Heaping New Worries on Ministers in Paris bly session, © The council! adjourned until next |Wednesday to consider a British ‘proposal to put the Il-nation group | Announcing Today Kefauver Climbing in Ring for 1956 Dem Nomination WASHINGTON (INS) —Sen. Estes Kefauver (D- Tenn), who led the field of candidates up to the last ‘ballot of the 1952 Democratic convention, announces his Security. Highland Resident Mrs. Eliza Taylor leachers Vote ‘Marks 106th Birthday Very Quietly — to Come Under Federal Plan Balloting Here 10 to 1 for Move; State Totals Not Yet Tabulated First reports from pre- cincts in Pontiac and Oak- land County in a statewide school _employes——election—--——-~ held yesterday and Wednes- -|day indicates voting was 10 | _|to1_in fayor of bringing school employes under the federal social security sys- tem. An unofficial tally of Pon- ‘|tiae’s 26 precincts showed 850 in favor and 99 against co-ordinating present state pension systems with fed- eral social security. __ In Pontiac, 949 of the . jestimated 955 eligible vot- in to Dr. William J. Emerson, i soe uaums uae te Oe ee presidential candidacy.today. : x cil debate on "s charge of | PARIS (INS) — The foreign min-| The 52-year-old Democrat called a news conference) state.” ; Loracli aggreqsion, ister of the 15 North Atlantie/for 11 a.m. to declare his “intentions”—that he would! In separate elections held Mon- As the 11 council members gath- ered to take up the Syrian protest, The ministers, with only two,as- al situation as a report came from | Nasser pointed out that Egypt | Damascus of another Syrian-Israeli Syrian military patrols fought for a half-hour with Israeli forces today near the scene of last Sun- ja raid on her : 7alllee . Con- flicting reports have put the death) ‘toll as high as 59. Nasser’s letter said Egypt must oF force with force and was \“about to deal with the situation herself” with her land, air and inaval forces. Warmer Saturday, The rising tension in the Holy Land is regarded as a direct result of Soviet intervention in the area, which Dulles has described as a jump into the Democratic race against Adlai Stevenson the 1952 nominee. : Nov. 15. The Tennessean tipped his hand in advance of his Suspected Slayer ‘fe Frank Fas ‘Democratic Is Declared Insane day on a similar plan in Detroit, */78 per cent of Detroit public school employes and 82 per cent Stevenson announced his candidacy for "56 onjof Wayne University employes voted in favor of social security. In the state election yesterday and Wednesday, some 61,000 public _ school employes and 2,200 employ- the referendum, state retirement ail national committeeman in Honolulu, made public by Fasi last night, he said he ; murdering! Kefauver Fasi: “ a pretty Flint mother of three, +, advise og I am pllcoawey will be committed to the Ionia'ing my candidacy for the Demo- State Hoospital ofor the Criminally) cratic nomination for President at fog 0 meaiy be carn PA tomorrow (Friday), Oakland County Circuit Judge “During the course of the cam- George B. Hartrick said he will) Palzm T shall do my utmost to sign a committment ‘order on the) @dd to the unity and strength basis of testimony by two psychia-| Of O¥F party. trists who examined Goff after his} Kefauver's plans for entering quarters for operations which manger. So, after th€iserve more than 550,000 residents. of the Oakland District. The firm Weatherman Says also operates 13 customer offices in the area, Tomorrow will be warmer with as 'a high near 33 degrees according \Let’s Hope He Enjoys It {to Weather Bureau reports. COVINGTON, Ky, & — Someone! There will be snow flurries this’ who swiped $100 worth of candy afternoon and the low tonight will from the nearby Latonia Baptist be from 14 to 18 degrees. Church yesterday has earned the) The lowest temperature preced- title of “meanest thief of the year." ing 8 a.m. was 16 degrees. The The candy was to be used at a thermometer registered 2% at Christmas party for youngsters. 1. p.m. jdiscussion started at the opening | whatever he regarded as vital to attorneys filed notice of an insanity defense Oct: 24. The 32-year-old former Flint fac- sessions of the three-day Atlantic|tory worker is charged with the “new front” in the cold war. Today’s session was to pursue presidential primary elections may make news — particularly if he should decide to challenge Stey- Pence wae: we Cu ke ~ system will be supplemented by federal social security old age ben- efits. , (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) lower benefits, Council meeting on Soviet military fatal shooting of Mrs. Rita M. capabilities =i political intentions.|Cummings, 27, in a-car parked on M87 near Holly last Aug. 26. There was no fixed agenda. b . They agreed that Goff is suf Each minister could bring up fering from a “serious” mental| illness which renders him emo-| the severity - i ; Wibertahs oss kas cay... 52. e0s 6 |meeting chipped in $1 each to build sachin fon = Deo Rev. R. C. Plant is bitter over Sports.........34, 35, 36, 97, 38 & float, when they heard the school] *|liquid celebrations of ‘ Christmas.| . Theaters ................4%, 43 [would not have one in the tradi-| A student loan bureau, a lost | He descrities the present-day model TV & Radio Programs....... 51 tional ceremonies before the game.| #=d found department and an im- [of Santa Claus as: “Nothing but Wilson, Eart.................4% | But when Chamber of Commerce} formation center will be set up to |, jed-faced, pot-bellied, drunken) Women’s Pages. ..22, 23, 24, 25 (president Ralph Norvell contacted| Belp take care of any problems ~: of materialism.” wise Ay tc 0, tee bodeen Galen Kessler, director, of MSU) ‘Set “= f Gptch bev tne tnilnatigs One Oatine Alumni Relations, he was in-| Students will pick up their gafne ~ Cs Sire Tense AY Sto i that us trom they get to Los An See 8 a nae Blomfield Foshte Tae dee oa [used and, ot a floating’ on the herd og y bog pa spd pecan ly we Meh in ae ) Seturday; Dee.| a. seb : = hard-to-get, RO a | was given ‘ iat ’ ; Malone } ; Bayi 4 i ‘ ! » : x i j : ae | : , ‘ ; K 4 A . Dotnet 4 7 ‘ye : \ * > : ‘% | Let There Be Light aa f THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1955 FUTURE DETROIT EDISON OFFICE—Head- quarters for the firm's operations District will be this modern, one-story building which will replace the frame The Day in Birmingham’ ’ ee Greeewalt eid” in _amnomeing! Weather Balloon Takes ) ont CVEdiS |" = Three Years to Land PI C il Studi courage more young. men. and| WAYNESBURG, Pa. i — What anning ouncl uqaies School G courage more young men and| WAYNESBURG, Pa, @ — What women go . goes up come even Commuting Problems COO UANIS [zene nie mee AN prgemaraeed Little Werner my has srady Benefits for Universities ay aremaieaee 2 ppoeean re ville, found @ weather balloon with ems of re irming-| received package, . parach ttached hanging . = and aenates north and south} parents write, from “people in Total Over $900,000; — ee pos a = are being put to careful study by; am unknown land whe are s | Haif for Teaching , engineers.” . Inscribed on the instrument box Se eee eee ere » omal met wes a ey councu, ing to ~ s W City Planner Herbert Herzberg,| Mrs, George Ochm’s Mrs, | WILMINGTON, Del. w—Grants|. About 2.8 million Americans live a eee July Nee ne dr can) ant | Ge, ee totaling more than $900,000 to : New way of using , public school music » direct- 1 and has stood at the corner of W. Huron and Pine | motored cars that can detach from) ed special nmusic and group sing kin ge agar pnatars : in the Oakland for 26 years. Construction will begin in January a chain to branch toward a dif-| ing. : year were announced and is expected to be completed in June. (See |ferent destination is a method be- wlio . * ty E, 1. du Pont de Nemours and structure that — story on Page One), ing used supceastully in other met-| a Theendvie an E. Ruts-(COv ite. The figure was $100,000 Judoe to Rule on Sewer Suit Waterford Plans Appeal of Court Decision on Drainage Hookup Pontiac Deaths - Jesse Leroy Diller Jesse Leroy Diller, 31, of 68 Hilldale Dr. died Wednesday \St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. a had! been in ill health eight months. | Born in Shelby June 28, 1924, ;Walters Diller, Port Huron Circuit Judge Eugene F. Black today was ex- oer er ney evee Serene pected to make final ae decree years, coming to Pontiac from Shelby with his parents, He was The case will be immediately appealed to the “State Supreme! pore agai ethene : Kefauver Announces |": ~ "56 Campaign Plan (Continued From Page One) ; filed the suit Aug. 31 claiming Waterford’s attempt to “S un sutomobite giass installer and ) had worked for the Service Glass Ca, brothers and two sisters, Mrs. Gladys Edwards of Dearborn, S- Sgt. Leo of the U. S. Air Force, Las Vegas, Nev., Glenn, Donald vand: Mrs tiae, Mr, Diller is at the Pursley Fu- caring veer eg wig modes Liniartad held at 10:30 a.m, Saturday, The Rev. Paul R, Havens of the First Methodist Church will officiate with burial in Perry Mt. Park Cemetery, John_S. Erickson “|\diana Ave., Detroit. Besides his wife, Esther, he is survived by three children, Mrs. Earl: Palmer ot Cleveland, Mrs. Al Harris Funeral Home, 14751 W. MeNichols Rd., Detroit. Burial will ‘be in Grand Lawn wn Cemetery, |Louis A. Hiller Louis A. Hiller, 82, a Se con tral Ave,. died at his home this morning. He had been ill three| He was born in Germany July 1, 1873 and married Alma Schrieter in Forestville 59 years ago. Coming here from Onaway, he Pec, Guan cas oe tee Paul Catholic Church and Knights of Columbus, primary Wednesday. He also sald he would enter primaries in Flor- ida, Pennsylvania and” Illinois. - primary in New Hamp- shire against a slate of Truman delegates. Friends expect him to go again in New Hampshire which has the nation’s first presidential primary on March 13. Kefauver's problems on pri- maries were increased this week by the announcement of Gov. Frank Dausche of Ohio that he will be a “favorite son” candidate for the presidency in his state. Kefauver never held less than half of Ohio's delegate votes on ~all three ballots at the 1952 Demo- _ ¢ratie convention. He has been re- . garded as a probable contender in county 40 years, had retired from the General Motors Truck & Coach Division, ._ Besides his' wife, he is survived . survivors include a broth- Roberta Lynne Shults Prayer service for Roberta Donel and Esther W. Eshelman afternoon i o'clock in or Dombisen-Jobak Funeral Home. Burial followed in « Alternate Plan he was the son of Leo A. and Lulu! __ Surviving are-his.mother;. three! ‘Babcock said that” a “imeeting! , aa ot “Pony "those from 1941 on, and throw away Detroit Paper t Paper Strike Mr, Hiller, a resident of th e/Strike-closed metropolitan daily ; News 16 days ago. Lynne Shultz, day-olé daughter of.gains for all three papers, met ~ Board Studying. ropolitan areas, the council learned at its recent meeting in Hazel Park. The Grand Trunk, which day, claims to be operating at a loss. Train and crew have to re- Hospital Officials Mull | Microfilming Records at Night Meeting ing alternate plans in case a pro- posed $3,000,000 expansion program costs more — wad original esti- Hmate, - At a ‘Beard of Trustees meet- ing- last night, Chairman William of executive and staff building com- mittees discussed the problem. “Let's be frank about it,” Trus-- don’t know right now if we can build what we want for $3,000,000. “We won't know untll we let out the bids,” he explained. Two other difficulties involving construction. of thé mew addition turned up at last night’s meeting. Miss Lauretta Paul, hospital di- rector, asked the board to make a decision on how 3,000,000 case histories are going to be micro- ifilmed. The board referred . the matter to a comniittee. 7 ' Trustee Harold B. Euler, rec- ommended that the . micro-film- ing be entrusted to a private firm te avoid any mix-up in the records, ° Bat Miss Paul pointed out that facilities for paler amine rec-. ords Were: pro lor in-the new | hospital addition. * The hospital plans to save all from 1950 on, microfilm all others which the law does‘ not require to be saved. The board also must decide where to store present records, which must be moved when con- struction’ begins. Last night it! sought a dry, weatherproof loca-| tion, handy to the hospital, but couldn't find one. Pontiac General Hospital is mak- Tapa time, and gives you time to ;main in Detroit for the night re- ‘turn. Herzberg is planning a meet- ing, open to the public, but ex- pressly for re of suburban cities, in which Lynn give a slide and movie illustrat. ed lecture on the small car com- | ner, died at William Beaumont |®™° burial will be in Oak Hill Ceme- '_itery, Pontiac. : times a minute. The average person irostnes 7 muter trains, Date has not been set. Here's o Beautiful _“The commuting plan has_mer- 4 it,” says Herzberg, whose group || eyes all ways to relieve traffic|) congestion, ‘‘and commuting al-| ie saves that parking problem ---hbad-weather —driving, read. or even sleep.” 2s Dr. John : ant 280 Aspen road, has received his graduation certificate on his recent _ comple- tion. of the evacuation course at the reacral Civil Defense Admin-. istration’s staff college, Battle Creek, He is medical’ coordinator for Oakland county with headquar- ters in Pontiac. Se Light fingered ones in Birming- ham have thadé away with Christ- mas tree lights from the Pilgrim home of Mrs. Edith Small Suffield home of Edward G. as well as hub-caps from seve: Bowling alley, and several had sim- ilar thefts early this week in city!” parking lot, police said. a) Zoning Board fe has denied a building permit for M. E. Green, Detroit builder. Gift for the Home! EPSOM SALTS % pound for........ soeoe ee i be eb CLEANSING ‘TISSUES e > Box 200 Sheets........... .|? HINKLES CASCARA ¢ 100 Tablets for...... ont 14° he gs > SODA MINTS: ¢ a Eecetly o0 Platered é 200 Tablets........... 19 : Wrought lron ‘Spider’ 4 MILE .- MAGNESIA . 19° y E > a ey * Wall Clock. » ‘VAPORIZING BALM ¢ |i Regular $5.95 Value ; Se size for............ .19 - ‘\[ IODIN RATIO ; 95 ‘ ‘ 125 Tablets... x beveeee 29° » PINE D =NVECEANT oo mnoTRIC > Full 12 ISENT! seeecesss, 29° ee As shown, electric wall clock wil! ‘ SHOWER SPRAY ¢ (re earay Sed aid Nice ee ered . 39 Clear Sane nemere® a : ccane Diack face @ wroug | fron frame. Fire-red hands, white > DOANS PILLS 39 sweep hand. Ideal Christmas gift. 90c size for......... Awe | (10% Ped. tax) DENTAL ADHESIVE sv eeee _ ABSORBEX LINIMENT | ~ $1.25 size ee ace) Green will probably cut his pro- posed nine-unit apartment dwell- ing down to eight units to comply with ordinance. The beard ruled land enough for eight and a half a The board gave a building go- ahead to James R. Longwell, 288 Faces Fresh Threat DETROIT W#—Detroit’s three) newspapers faced a new strike threat ‘today. AFL-CIO Teamsters Union| members who drive the newspaper delivery trucks when they are rolling said their interpational| union has sanctioned a strike, if. they desire, but that no decision! had been reached. _A walkout of AFL-CIO Stereo- | Ravine, and William F. Peschel, 1651 Latham, for garages, decifing their odd-shaped lots created a hardship in respect to the zoning limit for garage sites. ; Altrusans have received word from parents of the Australian 'y unionists cur- rently and officially on strike— | closed the morning Free Press and the afternoon Times and | The Mailers Union, a branch of the AFL-CIO International Typo- graphical Union, has asked for strike sanction by the parent: union. So has the AFL-CIO Plate and Paper Handlers Union. The mailers and Qetroit News- paper Publishers Assn., which bar- ‘four and a half hours last night.| .|They reported progress, but said they still were apart on several issues and that no new meetings had been scheduled’ between them. White Chapel. Memorial Cemetery. | ived by her fer._She was born z Ohio’s 196 primary. Whether Lausche's “favorite son” candi- dacy will deter him remains to be seen. snow y. teday 23-27, It was Stevie’s third birthday, low tenigh: high “near 88. "Wenteriy "wings “vo-vs|vesterday—if he is still alive. His ee th Y/parents, Air “Force Sgt. Jerry and Marilyn Damman, are observing Teds eon 7 im Pontiac 2 am their 4 today. At 8 om.: Wind i Weak velocity 13 m.p.h. ) wom rises Friday at 5:01 im Tises Saturday at 7: raat Sewn ete Pons 7:21 p.m Moon rises Sa Saturday at 10°02 a.m. Shiny Tricycle Awaits Little Stevie Damman eateg sekeyete be waiting for a B- recey|ccitnsagh be quay moves eos it rN. _Y.. — Stevie Damman for Christmas| sic. not lost hope. . ; - Be ssccossct8 Yam] in addition to Christmas Sams | More+ 28ifor their daughter. Pamela, We mM... 18 months, they bought a new tricy- Thersday in Pontise cle for Stevie, . just in’ case (As recorded downtown) omy eee ocr saaceete 18 Mean temperature. inti: HiTwe More Arrested : on Morals Charges Att e: - Lo BS=sso8 ba, Boy, 4, Does It Himself Va Can't Buy Better \ fourth__wedding— anniversary | COLUMBUS, Ohio wW—The “‘do- it-yourself” craze apparently knows no bounds. When 4-year-old Billy Hawkins thought his father a little slow showing up with a promised] Christmas tree the other day, Billy GIVE HIM A GIFT WRAPPED BOX OF Wolf Bros. CROOKS STRAIGHTS INSIST ON THE; ORIGINAL eum SOAKEO Bon of $0 “DIPPED | lavas as OTHERS 98 N. Seginaw —Main Floor ‘acted on his own. He took a small ‘saw from his tool kit and cut down a young cedar tree in the back-| jyard of the Hawkins’ Columbus home. WHY PAY MORE? Tree Stands Holds to 6 Ft. Christmas Tree 19: For 8 Ft. Tree * Shears Make Nice Gifts | $2.95 ACME 4 Pinking . Shears | = for Auto Ounass! ppbenctoaaate BALM ork iar) SHAVE LOTION SOc Woodburys....... PEPSODENT om 63c size for 59c ia enon for tots.. or BAYERS ASPIRIN Te oer ew weee Co aria 1 49° . 4 § Easy to Clean—Sturdy , —_ Seal Cover Scoot lace len ie eh ca Ba none ercater than Du Pont's grants last) ——|j yourself, 39° 39" | 47° EVENING iN PARIS fitted evening bag $7.50 __.. .W’s.@ glittering evening bog! t's a treosure-trove-ot Evening in Paris océenories! 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DECEMBER 16. 1935 Motor City Court Sets Condemnation Value DETROIT w —A_ Recorder's Court jury set a condemnation value of $1,275,158 on property to but Won't Say Why He lm ar wanes tate Left Red Chinese © pastry l siete ergemarcng The property is along the west SEATTLE (#—Richard R. Tenne- side of Woodward between Fort sn, z2yercld Alden, Min tr a coat, returned last night from Red by 61 feet from Fort to Jefferson China to the country he once re- The city plans to acquire a similar nounced but he wouldn't say why west side strip between Congress he is back. : and Jefferson. “we pow of the money allowed by i Hest Bil Hi ithe ~f as #3 ii is {=A bus fell into ‘a 150-foot rav- ct Crash Kills 9 iicreceonn CASABLANCA, French Morocco} lt. = CLASSES BEGIN DAY Scheel—Jas. 3, 1956 WIGHT.Scheel—Feb. 13, 1966 and said things which were not true just to put themselves in a good light.” He did not explain this] but added: “The men who are remaining feel like I do about the three.” He said-he had seen all the other| sot eran he had operated a lathe in a paper mill in China. | Health, Accident Ads Draw FIC Probe ~~ others interested to seek a “uni-| form corrective solution’. to_ the Labora agency has been studying! eyo baa or eee years, and has charged 41 com- panies with using false and mis- Obstinate Door Nips Attempted Burglary Thieves who attempted a break. in at DeClerck’s Market on Au- ti _fed, navy, green, charcoal and khaki. Hurry in a | A chic little “cold weather cover-up of fluffy . give him lounging comfort in styles exclusively at Waite's! Men's Beautiful Cotton Flannel Luxurious Robes > 905 © Sanforized ene Flannelette! _ © Fully Cut and comely) _ Washable! _ | © Lightweight Warmth and ‘Luxuriously Soft! » Choice Selections of Neats, Tattersal Checks, Plaids, Blue, _Red and Wine! ¢ 2 on Gey Cera i All Expertly_Tailored! | | — ——Style-right for the man in your life! ! Smartly tailored exclusively for Waite's in softest cotton flannelghat is soft and warm, yet without weight + os too ea $s | erniietitee dryness! A luxury .. that’s practical . . . one he'll thank you for over and over. See the elegant new patterns, the handsome classic style with large shawl collar, loose cuffs, wrap-sash. A magnificent Christmas gift for under $10, any man would love! Lights, darks, bolds and neats. S-M-L-XL. Hurry in today or tongiht ‘til 9! ~ Waite’s Men’s Furnishings—Street Floor + a i i i a f sah stbor tne... ¢ + ra ; Zam ' Go Pretty.. “ Go Warm Jeweled Angora Ear Warmers 1.69 nh angora aglitter with rhinestones, pearls or lain... so flattering . . . so toasty-warm. You'll wont one for yourself -. . and several for Christmas Gifts. In white Guth Huny in .todey or tonight ‘til 9! -Waite's Millinery—Third Floor of Fashion SANTA’S FAVORITE SELECTIONS! “EVERY FEATURE AND STYLE TO ASSURE HER A COVETED “WHITE” CHRISTMAS! 3-DAY SALE Boys’ Fur-Lined Parka | Wool Quilted Lining . | 9.98 __ A hooded parka jocket with drawstring hood and 100% wool quilt lining! 2 deep roomy slash pockets | “that -will-keep your hands warm: Cotton poplin shell outer fabric sheds rain and snow. (Knit wristlets and elastic waistband for snug fit and extra warmth, Sizes 4 to 12 ” Waite’s ‘Boyswear—Second Fie ook a amen i a Saar ws SPECIAL TABLE L suey SAVE! Gigantic aaa Removal Famous [Og ERAS Machines You'll be a practical Senta if you aie her sewing reachine from this selected group . . . Portable . . . Console . . . Desk Model. . . all priced to save you many dollars on her Christmas oift. Your choice “of Walnut or Mahogany to match her furniture. bye in today or tonight! $144 Full Rotary Round Bobbin “Complete_with New White self locking Bobbin Case— sew with 6 strand embroidery thread and metallic thread! NO MONEY DOWN WITH EASIEST TERMS AT WAITE’S TODAY $159 Efficient Nite-Table Style, Light and Compact consoe S49 4) Famous Dressmaster Sewing unit in a beautiful console styled cabinet. Sews Forward and Reverse, mends, darns, embroiders with Multi-speed control. Gome in today or tonight for Waite’s White Christmas Sale! SEWING LESSONS WITH EVERY MACHINE — HURRY IN TODAY OR TONITE $189 Convenient Three Drawer, ~. Roomy Storage Space ee 57 ee by ses canta unit! DESK MODEL® 9 + - Bara working ence and entre storage sce with this hahdiome ee model, Automatic tensions , » Automatic bobbin" winder with this | Waite's White Sewing Center—Fourth Floor coats _y-av-washes. beautifully-and-hangs tod. yeer ‘round dress in luxury 8.98 nylon Puckered Nylon Through the Holidays J399 Richest nylon fabric that is a steal at 8.98 now being offered at this tiny price! -.Lovely window pane, puck- ered nylon effect in dressy or casual styles. Weor it with or without a belt through every Christmas occasion, Sizes 12-20, 142-242... 5 colors! Hurry in_ today or tonight! Waite's Dresses—Third Floor of Fashion COMPARE! | See Waite’s vastly - superior, finer quality | | dyed mouton 4 processed lamb 4 soccer ee, a oe z = = | shy méuton — a cious ft for years to come! Rich ps charcoal, taupe nauane brown. Roll and matched ‘ Collars. Wide cuffed sleeves with flare or flat backs. 4 pelt expertly hand picked . ’, every pelt with @ soft, q sparkling glow! Easiest terms at Waite’s . . . wear it as you ~ pay! Hurry in today or tonight ‘til 9. “ell Bye products gy raondid ve country of origin of furs. = Wales Pw Saoe—fad Two Peg a as ST Tat ee ey Hanes Seamless ~ Nylons — Walte’s carries and sells more Haneés seamless nylons than any store in Pontiac! Seamiess beauty with hidden strength! No seams to straighten — absolutely no worry over crooked seams. Choose several in regular, non- run mesh and year- round knee length style. 8'4-11 in proportioned » lengths. Shades of barely there, bali rose, South Pacitic. Also Nude Heel at 1.65. Hurry in today or tonight Ideal Christmas gifts! han Waite's Hosery—Streei Floor a (7 3 _ Pontiac’ 8 store r “THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1955 : sensational action toy for every boy or girl on your Christmas list... | SLIDIN’ SNOW SA U CER i © 26” Diameter, Heavy O38 ee: | £|. 20-Gauge Steel with | © Ten Times the Thrill | “Rolled Safety Edges! of Any Ordinary Sled! save 299 * regularly 1098 “Whee! AWAY WE GO! @ Super Fast, Sensational Thrills! -@ Ideal Christmas Gift for Children! © Rolled Edge Won't Cut Children or Clothing! ~ @ Come in Today or Tonight While —They Last! Everyone gets into the act with this sen- sational new Slidin’ Saucer! It whirls and twirls as it spins down hill with maximum control assured by leaning in any direc- tion. It's ideal, too, as a pull toy, and Mom will be borrowing it to go grocery shopping on snowy days. Hurry in today or tonight while they last at Waite’s! Waite's Toys—Downstairs Store = @ Water-Repelient | Cotton Poplin WY with Metal_____ _& Buckles and Detachable Hoods! Girl’s every plete plaid 8-oz. popular coat for winter sport, com- with warm, quilted flannel lining wool interlined, 2 large pockets. Choose yours in red or navy. Sizes 7-14. utty in today — or tonight * til 9! Waite's Girlswear—Second Floor coast te coast women choose Warner's for daytime te dancing foundation wear For Captivating... Christmas Fashions... Capture “her” Heart With COTY F ragrances for HET “3 Here are just a few of the ‘'stors” in Coty’s all-star Christmas Playhouse '. of fine fragrance gifts. Four famous L'AIMANT _ starting at. nani ewe Coty fragrances: L'ORIGAN starting at.. 500 For extraordinary elegance this Christmas make sure that you look your best with Warner's. No matter which Warner's styles you choose ... know you're buying the finest, lighest materials . . . the experience of top- notch designers . . . the artistic best to keep you looking beautiful. Hurry in - today or tonight. EMERAUDE tonight ‘til 9. © “PARIS. Hurry in today or BLACK SWAN: jeweled Coty Lipstick Perfume purser and toi! oe Water in exoti ic iragrancees. Asuma, Muse, Styx and 6.00 Chypre aeeeonear PERFUMME HARP: In your choite. of the heavenly fragrances L'‘Origan, L’Aimant, ‘Paris’ or Emer- eude Perfume 3.50 bee eone, FINE FRAGRANCE: Golden jewel box containing jalcons of Toilet Water in L'Aimant and Emeraude plus two matching ee Perfume Starlets .. .....,. GOLDEN SLEIGHS: Carrying . L’Aimant and Emeraude Per- fume in oem? oval sk pei Nylon Bra tlowered sheer. | Warner's original Merry Contour hug- Widow Cinch-bra with Hed in 32 to sheer cufis that dip low. 8. ABC cups. In back or white nylon White embroidered ma rquis- only .... 5.00 ette. A to C cups . .12.50 Werner's dded Mery idow, a! i —, y light, Coe ‘elas- ; tic. a B's a “pry, : ee Por 3 . oe Waite's Corsets and Brassi $ d Floor. ‘practical gift to wake up to favorite music or news program | General Electric Clock Radio e ees Ivory -@ No Down Payment or Pink Self- starting clock move- ment turns radio on at 4 any time, you set. _ -off automaticall any time you set. all venient receptacle for use with other appliances. ‘Luminous hands, slumber switch, clock alarm, phono joc k. UL approved. AC only. ecet gift for Christmas! sag in today or toni t! Wailte's BuO Store z Warner's Wonderful Merry Widows Save 1.99 on famous “Mirafoam” pillows in vivid colors Foam Latex Pillows With Gay, We ashable Corduroy, Zip-Off Covers .. . ti e Regularly 5.98 Value! } © Four Smart Shapes! Color and comfort combined in the greatest throw pillow value of the season! Comfortable, allergy- free foam rubber with zip-off covers. mag Perfectly detailed with box edges : and corded sears. A big, big collection, corduroy in radiant colors for dramatic room accents. — Sit on ‘em, lean on ‘em, love ‘em . . use them on sofas, beds and window seats. Red, green, gold, cocoa, rose, olive and black, © Hurry in today or tonight. Waite's Domestics—Fourth Floor sop ics red ad ee corse eet hel - short Streamlite Sa wesonite _ Fits ‘em All... Tl 50 Lady's 13” Train Case 21” Ladies’ Overnight 19.50... .21” Ledies’ Wardrobe $25 @iné “Better-Than-Leather” Finishes! © Withstands Hard Wear, Wipes Clean With a Damp Cloth! © Tongue-in-Groove Closure Keeps Out Dust and Dampness! - @ Strong Enough to Standon.. . Lasts and ; Lasts and Lasts! Why worry about which size of what she weors or what size of which is for him, Give wonderful Samsonite luggage, perfectly (and makes your money look so big!) Vinyl from handsome shades of raw- hide, brown, alligator, blue, and green. Samsonite * Aerowotion to. Motch! ‘i the gift that fits everybody” _ Plastic covering, brass hordware, ~~” luxurious linings, Choose THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DEC EMBER 16, 1955 jatomic torpedoes. against enemy | ala eee (INS) — Adm./transition from oil: Arleigh A. Burke states That sub-| energy. Dies “ marines of the ‘near future’’ be able to launch high to nuclear; He continued: will = speed | | pared remarks that the “nuclear: powered submarine Nautilus ts (capable the “most deadly in existence,” | marines, surface and undersea’ vessels. ~ - - a * z The chief of Naval operations' mentioned the new weapon in a) speech contending that “navies | are of increasing importance as) nations make the revolutionary! premacy,” but is ‘‘only the pref- ace to the Navy’s book on atomic propulsion. ~ Addressing the National ns pe capable not only of making high Club, Berke sald in bis pre- (5 atomic torpedo attacks on homeland. All of them will have enemy cofivoys, but they will. be two or more capabilites. All will of killing enemy sub- be multi-purpose.” TWO UNDERWATER | and of providing early, has “demonstrated undersea su- | warning from enemy threats ap-| | proaching by air Co. sea. “Nuclear- powered and supporting seaplanes, of land-: ae | submarines of the near future will|ing marines on hostile shores, of ‘launching guided missiles against targets at sea and on the enemy's Only two underwater atomic ex-|the coast of California last spring, | premacy” is “the most signifi- plosions are known to have been could have been a “They will be capable of ‘fueling set off in history, tS re en (Burke <. Subs Firing Atomic Tormadoue i in ‘Near Fature’ The first, at Bikini in 1946, | Burke also said: raised a column. of water, 6,000- . 1. feet high and sank two battie- ships, an aircraft carrier and several smaller vessels that had been placed in a 2,000-yard cir- cle for testing purposes. The second, staged secretly off: ‘1 He declared the Soviets The guided missile cruiser seek to control all, the seas ‘Boston is the first of ‘literally; around the Eurasian continent, dozens of men-of-war that will ‘mount guided missiles within the next few years—all kinds of mis- |siles.”” 2. Russia's “bid for sea su- 3. Except for the most critical items, surface transport is su- | Per ior to air transport. He con- tended that “‘one ton of air transport to Korea requires that four tons of gasoline be surface- test of a war- cant development of Soviet shipped in advance of each ght SICK-A-BED fans can enjoy their turbing Mother. A remote control | _--T¥—-anit--has-all-the~diats of the? regular televisjon set. | Cowman Fights for Land Rights | iif Operations Hurt cata Grazing Areas “TUCSON, Ariz. (INS)\—A legal battle shaped up today between the century-old Arizona cattle in-| dustry and modern urenke hunters. * »* The test case, which will be determined by Arizona State Land |] Cammissioner Roger Ernst, in-| volves the 10,500 acres leased from the government by Rancher) Joseph A. Moller. | Ernst has the delicate problem f of determining whether Moller’s | ranch operations on the sun- | baked land are more valuable | than 640 acres of uranium claims filed by Dr. E. T. Anderson, | Moller entered the battle over | surface and mineral: rights when. Anderson filed a complaint | against three Tucson men—Bruce | Dr. Thomas, Russell Grina, and Ray Hathaway. Dr. Anderson -alleged “fraud’’ when the trio located three 20 acres claims of uranium | rights on the sprawling ranch lands. LIKE A BATTLEFIELD As State Land Commission Representative Ellis King accom- + panied the contesting miners over 4 the disputed uranium _ claims, Moller charged into the scene declaring that his ranch ‘‘re-_ sembles a battlefield. He asserted uranium hunters damage surface land, road and gates and that they were not helping his cattle busi- ness. —“The showdown battle, set for Dec. 23 at Phoenix, is whether the land should be maintained for the good of cattlemen or whether miners rights should Dr. Anderson's attorney, Hale Tognoni, pointed out that the work of Charies Steen, ‘‘America’s Uranium King."’ has ‘opened up economic benefits to inhabitants of Steen is oiling for Dr. Ander- | gon on other uncontested claims | on Moller’s ranch. ; IMPORTANCE OF -CASE Moller | We wit | au “ENGGASS GIFT | SCECIMS Lovely Sterling Silver Baby Spoon 97¢ = -targe— = Selection of Men's Leather Billfolds Lo. bb men followed the disputing parties as they tramped over the land. Dr. Anderson summed up the importance of the case by declar- ing: “This” hearing is unprece- dented. It will determine 7 a | 4 CuTr CawikKksS -dlia Tie Clasp- Set $3.50 $1.95 SS - 1847 Rogers Bros. -Piece complaint against the three Tucson | men that their uranium claims, were never validly locafed and . that they faile dto do legal location work. , * * ®# | In his request for a hearing to the land commissioner, he as- serted the trio’s ‘false statements constitute fraud and are grounds for lease coneeinton.”: SEES ELS LEG IIOPS OEE Sis ae é \ Baby Set $2.25 Mastercase Lighter and Case Combination $12.80 JEWELS by why Trier SAVE $2.50 Reg. $8.75 Parker ‘21’ Pen and Pencil Set NECKLACE $7.60 EARRINGS $4.00 _ BRACELET $6.00 (net shown) “Dolphin” pretend pearls-tove_ ingly interlaced-_with golden Trifanium. Enggass features a wide selection of Trifari and Other nationally) advertised As ~ Man's Handsome > Birthstone Ring $19.75 17-Jewel Webster With Expansion Band $19.95 @ 13” Tuck- Awey Train 594° Cese..... @ 21” Whirl- . Weekender e 26” Paeck- Awoy . ‘Pullman 8 a9 8s © FBG VEN cot ‘will 17 WATIONALLY ROTERTESES LUGGAGE Jewel Bulova “Miss America thead for an atomic torpedo. | grand strategy since World War | flight.” ~~ * For the 90th Christmas . _ It's ENGGASS for _ Jewelry Gifts o ) the Finest Quality! Since 1865, discriminating Christmas shoppers hove enjoyed selecting gifts” a, at ENGGASS. For the store “Where Grandpa and Grandma Bought’’ offers >, quality gifts in an infinite variety for men, women and children . . . honestly bs ‘ priced .. . AVAILABLE ON EASY TERMS. Visit ENGGASS for your gifts. =" = You, too, will find shopping here a most enjoyable experience. Exguiaite 3-ROW BRIDAL PAIR set with 1 AQ: ASS MADE TO SELL FOR $150. ‘ Fraternal Rings » For All Lodges $19.75 » ‘Man's Diamond Solitaire $99.00 Lady's Exquisite Birthstone Ring $9.75 Man's 17-Jewel Hamilton $33.95 ‘Man's 19-Jewel Longines $71.50 Croton Self-Winding Aquamatic $35.75 $39.95 Nationally Known Pop-Up Toasters ‘Q” AMO GCRANOMA BOL Cm gia) soeeeneatonn) J esx Gace arapst. ae OR ee -_ pan gee Pe er 3 ner Spee ey ns | od d Ls | \ © THE. PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 16.1055 Uh 7 ’ : gi . . < a . : a | x ; : ° ° cal on with a “ad The cigar originated Poe) | : | State Administrative Board Building Unit §nyrned Lover sre sects ome Oat me SS iow a phere - NILES i” — Accused in the shot-| wounds in his head. Approves Lease for Kalkaska Air Base |). | py fastens cscs tangle are casy OMOrTOW: Killed in Chase fen Center is being held for Cir. [ts box BUY A GOODFELLOW felonious. assault .with intent PAPER! = F says the National Geographic Blue Sky Drive-In Th LANSING W—The way now ap-| Targonski said he was Satisfied, neighboring land, thus draining pears Clear for approval of ajall the ‘wrinkles’ had been ironed: off reserves under the air base | lease between the state and the/out during a conference with Air) itself, Air Force for the 8,000-acre Kal-|Force officers Wednesday. “A}| In addition, he said, the ori ral Lawmen Track Down 'comimt murder... Hef i rah kaska jet base site. that remains now is the wording . ety. |Emanuel, 43, is reportedAin fair es ; A for , of the les mare 1 Youth, Who Slayed 3 ~ —_ ao The building committee of the|of some of the provisions but | !orm of the lease was not clear | State Administrative Board ap-|don’t expect any trouble there,’'}on reclamation of the land if the and Wounded 2 Others | proved the lease after raising sev-|he said. |state wants to recover the site. 4 [eral questions about munting 2nd gpopampizep micwrs |, 1,2! cbiected that te state] VANDERGRIFT, Pa. W® — A. ; : —lug- ' ; Leis eriier | ceive ~Air| ALWAYS the perfect, gift—lug rights and payment of the so-called Targonski had objected earlier |; for) (al @year lease! but ovecrazed youth who killed three) ernighter will | &hts a aaa! , the : cundéa tw ) gage.- This leather overnigh “swamp tax.” that the lease would allow eS ene $300 a year in “swamp taxes’”| Persons and wounded two others, find its use among every membes Air Force to run its own private| a . a. — a f ‘ Aud, Gen, Victor Targonski, S . ee \to Kalkaska County. The state/died last night six hours after he of the family. But there’s a piece/ ee of the building com. |$unting and fishing preserve in the | uggag ervone from ca — pays the swamp tax on the basis was shot down in a gun fight with, oe kit oa beech oak mittee, said a final draft of the ton 5 of 10 cents an acre in lieu of/a posse that hunted him for 16 _— : ‘| lease would probably be ready In its original form, “he said, {local taxes. hours. Pick for durability. for submission to the Adminis- | it. might have jeopardized state | trative Board at its meeting next | oll and mineral rights by allow. |WHY NOT BUY LAND - John Fallone, 17, died at near- Alaska has only one college. ‘Tuesday. . . ing private drillers to drill on Committee members also| by Armstrong County Memorial i —————— — —'pressed Air Force officers at the| Hospital, where his would-be /Meeting for an explanation as to! girt friend Gladys Smail, 15, lay |why the Air Force could not buy! in critical condition from shots | “the land-from “the stat®~ at its fired into-her chest by the ber- ‘market value | serk boy. — Lt. Col. William R. Nerton of | Her parents, Mr. and Mrs.-3-- the Air Force real estate divi. [Warren Smail, and her uncle, sion in Washington, D. C., said | William Smail, were shot by Fal-; ‘the Air Force policy is to obtain |lone Wednesday night in this rural state lands by lease, although in | community. { EXTRA PLATED a) LV ERD some instances it buys private | Policeman Gus Zanos of Apollo,: land. wounded by Fallone as the nearly . ope SO-PIECE SERVICE FOR 8 “Cot. Morton said the Kalkaska *-™man posse closed in on the} : - : -base, which aveuld cost an initial ees cow vis Saab in| a : $ . 95 — 25 million dollars, would be an *? condition. issed : 39 : £E ‘economic blessing to the northern’death bya fraction of an inch a USUAL e VALUE | asy ‘part of the state. +asa—bullet—-hit him under the 5 pe = ._ & The state, he said. will receive Tight eye and’ ranged upward to an estimated $90,000 a year in lodge under his’ skull. 4 ae : . CR EDI T sales taxes ffom base personnel./ yoUTH WELL ARMED Yours ~ we Eventually, the Air Force may) About 100 shots were fired be- Qo spend another 950 million dollars | ¢ 46 a sharpshooting state police- : 4 | developing the base, he added. |. | TERMS | HE Col. Morton told the committee "am Picked off Fallone as. he| only = e =. d = ee “Pp the federal government would fi- ae : ed - = F = : = ‘nance construction of new schools | C® stump. Falione was found ' Take 90 eee vceary ij | with @-.22-ealiber automatic rifle “ days to pay made necessary by the infux of| a 500 comands ol cnition : 3 A oe , on our 90-De 'some 5,000 people into the area. /2"¢ 9 of arom y ( Et 8s | MAHOGANY Fihast — y Pay- | eae ee | his side. He never regained con- ¥ ; ; FREE ment Plan . . . at no 'Sciousness. he TS AA LB ” ANTLTARNISH CHEST | extra charge! ©, He invaded the Smail home F yhoo | * Or, if |Wednesday with a rifle and a er ee you prefer, pay noth- ‘package of dynamite. His efforts rea eS \\\ Be Toke home for only . ing down and take up to explode the dynamite after the Ay ’ | 4 to 2 Years te P killings were unslecessful. * © Pay! | Gladys said she had dated Fal- J . mh | ST AN LEY lone several months ago and that : ; ' re 1 ; her parents had forbidden her to ~S 7; = ‘ see him again. le Aes - a | She said after the date Fallone DOWN | ‘ was so jealous he ‘“‘wouldn’t let || me talk to other boys.” Fallone had theatened “to get’’ the entire | Small family, she said. Today, relatives are caring for’ the five younger Smail children. .Fallone'’s father Ernest said: “He was going with her and then -it broke up. He never seemed to iget over it.” Dinette Group Beautifully styled drop leaf, pedestal table ... .- TABLE and fashioned in lovely Limed Oak. The 3-leaf table 4 CHAIRS e extends to a giant 94-inches. Chairs made~with $ 95 soft foam rubber cushions, and come in a choice. a | f : you RECEIVE eee 16 Teaspoons Spoons CONVENIENT TERMS! ORTABLE MIXER | Usual 19% Value <)95 LIMITED ONLY $100 DOWN | Westinghouse, Cid Talks Still Stymied PITTSBURGH (®—Westinghouse .Electric Corp. and its two biggest! trodmone!, you'll like the Kimboll _unions—locked in a strike that is that echoes the rich quiet dignity \casting both sides millions of dol- of centuries post; or # modern, jlars—appear as far apart today as. you'll be thrilled by the Kimboll \when the first plants closed last| thot reflects the smart functional \Oct. 17. ° - ‘ lines of 1 papalapancy cagetale Kicket Wages, time studies of work- from over 45 style ond finish com. | ers jobs and length of contract binotions—the gift incomporoble } are the big issues. Both sides =lor its unsurpassed beauty ond agree that recent negotiations musical qualities, beched by 99 | have made no progress toward yeors of fine piono experience. | agreement on the key issues. | Westinghouse says the dispute is costing some 55,000 striking em-} ployes $950.000 a day in wages. ‘About 40,000 other employes are _furloughed. ' The company declines to com- ment on its own losses but sources close to the operation estimate pro- of red or gold. % China Cabinet or Buffet to Match * ! Large Selection of Good Quality | BREAKFAST SETS.... . “89.95 ” Styled in either Chrome or Wrought Iron Leg$ QUANTITIES a ee 7 ; Furniture & Appliances ‘un folure "Tact oem Tiacck . j . < : 7 = » ,P include maintenance_costs in the OPEN | PHONES: FE 5-8811 and FE 5-8974 _ BESS H jpeeds ‘ ™ Every Night 3065 Orchard Lake Rd. KEEGO HARBOR Renamed by Williams @ neavy Duty Motor i . - Prices Start at $645.00 }, , ; e Fin r Ti Control -Until ; : | | LANSING W—Gov. Williams to-| . ger tip n ; -FREE PARKING GALLAGHER _ }22y. tearointed Frank Burke Jr. Full Si ; i { Colma as mber of the State | Beaters Christmas No traffic jams, no parking problems at Clayton’s . . . drive out tonight MUSIC CO. sick Resources Corfantscicn ti ca ‘| @ uv ze j 1 i os ‘term expiring July 1, 1958.” & PARK FREE RIGHT AT OUR FOONT DOOR! 161s E. Huron Street Gabe cag Soy ee ° Stand on End _ ate confirmation. , e Lightweight » © White Beked-cnemel Finish © Stores casily in « drawer . 1.98 Toy Dish $739 PPLE SEE RS ee ; roe Gift Problems the Easy Way! nee .. Solve Your | Give Osmun's Gift Certificates — arr a | Stop worrying about what to give... get Osmun’s . ae rd Nas : +4 —-Gift Certificates and-the persons who receive them ae + | f can choose their own gift from either of our two Toy Grand © $] 495 TREE STAND | Piero ........ Secret code 1.99 Holster big stores... ooh 2% 98+ Set... .. $19 ‘s . , . +e : ; 5 Reg. $3.95 Heavy a; metal holds tree 1.95 Point ’ 4 | Available in Any Size Denominations soe AL firmly. fakes from 1" wr Ete $139 | : Yes, you can get gift certificates for $1, $20... or for higher amounts ... and you can use your charge. With a gift certificate you're sure they'll get what they want! - cea MOTOROLA TV|IBy 22, $525) *1399> ” | BARGER ie Mia... 930 43 LOW AS WneTER TRACTION 5695 $4.95 500 down Racer (ightweight) ; _ 5995 ¢f We Take Trade-ins— Left tee 452% Liberal Allowance! | _s (malddleweight) : J<— BOTH STORES 7, OPEN “Two Fine Stores to Serve You Better” | EVERY DOWNTOWN “‘TEL-HURON | NIGHT _ \ 51 N. Saginaw St. Shopping Center ' ‘til Christmas 4 | * 4 SiS. iy i Me. ea, one” 4 Re eee ee ee WW di/U a ‘Bate ‘d ee site Will. Benefit Members Plan Many Parties Preceding Annual Event at Hotel Pontiac The annual ball of Epsilon Sigma Alpha sorority to be held Saturday will benefit Pontiac State Hospital's Child Psychiatry Service. The group is sponsoring “study workshop” at the hospital and will donate al proceeds of the dance to the hospital to fu program. The ball, scheduled for Saturday from 9:30 p.m. to 1:30 a.m. at the Hotel Pontiac, will also mark the beginning of the holiday season for members of the sorority. Mrs. Rex Parker, dance chairman, has worked. with other committee chairmen for the success of the dance. Mrs. Donald Giordano made, orchestra arrangements, | and tickets were arranged for and distributed by Mrs. Frank Jalosky Jr. Patrons were solicited by Mrs. Edmund Smith. Mrs, Norman Nel-| son planned and made decorations’ for the affair and Mrs. Edward, Hummel Jr. handled publicity. Mrs. Smith tas announced her fist of patrons for the . They include Dr. and’ Mrs. _dames M. McHugh, Dr, and Mrs. _| I, E, Gordon, Mr, and Mrs, Le- land A. Clemence, Mr. and Mrs, Floyd A. Levely, Mr, and Mrs. George R, Oliver, Mr. and Mrs. Richard 0, Paschke and Dr. and Mrs, Lynn D, Allen Jr. Others serving as patrons are Mr. and Mrs, Theodore Jolinson, Mr. and Mrs, Fred Gaukler, Dr. and Mrs. Maxwell L. Shadley, Dr. and Mrs. M. C. Worster, Mr, and Mrs. William Dean, Mr. and Mrs. B. W. McKibben, Mr. and Mrs. H, J. Applegate, Dr, and Mrs. Mrs, Edgar Geist. Preceding the dance, many so- Mrs. Rex Parker (left) of West Princ tuck to the gown to be worn by Mrs. Albert Anselmy of West Huron street, They are both members of Epsilon Sigma Alpha sorority which is sponsoring its annyal ball Saturday {rom 9:30 p.m. to 1:30 a.m. at ‘Child Psychiatry Service oe * i iw i eee eton avenue is giving a final From Dance rther the ——— ———— ney and Donald Ducat will be ‘guests at a party to be given by the Harry Woodmans of Gateway drive, Mr. and Mrs, Earl Smith Jr. \of West Lawrence street are also Alpha Prep Hotel Pontiac. The dance will benefit Pontiac State H Psychiatry Service. The group is sponsoring a the hospital. in the party whirl. They are hold- ing an open house for all Epsilon husbands and guests. 40 WILL ATTEND Forty members are expected to attend, with guests including Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Gronaw, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Willis, Mr. and Mrs. James Kinney, Dorothy Brim and Jeane La Vine, and Betty Lou \De Groot and Charles I. Bingham. ef Cleveland. * Iva Pinkston of Mohawk road ald McCandless, the Ralph Wil- sons, the Theodore Johnsons, Edna ~~ fi Pentiae Press Photes ospital’s Child. “study workshop” at wt ‘ * & ~ ER sag eR Oo SORE SOAPS RRP Shown greeting dance committee The women are mem- members at a recent meeting held in her home on Osage circle is Mrs. Edward Hummel Jr. Mrs. Frank Jalosky Jr. of “Drayton Plains (center) and Mrs. Ed- mund QO. Smith of Alice avenue (right) were among those attending the final Women's Section FRIDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1955 planning session. bers of Epsilon Sigma Alpha sorority which is sponsoring its annual ball at Hotel Pontiac Saturday evening. The proceeds will be used for a “study work- shop” for the Child Psychiatry Service at Pontiac State Hospital. PAGES 22-25 s - 2 ERS ARE RGR MRR gg em AR a -+--What— she —says--is;—‘You—don't By PHYLLIS BATTELLE NEW YORK (INS) — Marlene Dietrich has been around for some time now—delighting men and ig- bly she knows whereof she speaks when the subject is sex appeal. Thave to be beaiitiful to be beau-_ tiful.”’ It’s the illusion you create that 5 its aware that you are with them through your vitality, your. self- Dietrich, Designer Agree Worldwide That Beauty Is an Illusion Dances Are | niting jealous women — and pre-| - “If there are characteristics you do not like, try to minimize them. Concentrate on the good points, both mentally and physically. ‘Presented An enthusiastic audience respond. “See that your grodming is as ¢d to curtain call after curtain call perfect as it can be, and learn last night after the splendid per- how to walk and stand in the (formance of Carola Goya and Mat- most graceful and easy wa . |teo.in their “Dances of the World.” “sible. mae =. 2 The_concert-in Crary_Junior- High ,School was the first of four to. be re gael words.” ae Figee. presented this season by the Watere ~ get to know yourself thoroughly ford Township Civic Association, —as—others —see = Wa - The program in the form of a * 2 s&s lecture-recital was narrated for er ree you.” Pinkston and George Ralick, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hasse, Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Rhodes, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Bell, the Frank Jaloskys Jr. ,and Mr, and Mrs. Edward Hum.- ' mel Jr, The. Russel) McGlincheys of Waterford will have as their guests for dinner Mr. and Mrs. dames Jones and Mr. and Mrs. Henry Barens. Mr. and Mrs. Sigma ‘Alpha’s annual ball — aaa alice, pa agar (left to right) Mrs. Donald Max Clark will visit the McGilin- Armed with the total kriowledge, the most part by Matteo. A ver- of how you look, fortified by the| satile performer, he has traveled (mental buildup -you have given to! extensively to make a close study lyour good features, you will face) °f the dances of various lands, confidence and the pride of your ‘bearing. “If people are more aware of Preparing decorations for the Epsilon Brookdale road and Mrs. Norman Nelson Nata, * Sery > ~ . s | chairman of the building com- |5Uting and fishing preserve in the; ; A Ke pays the Swamp tax on the basis’ was shot down in a gun fight with e 3 _ ae . arene = ee ne mittee, said a final draft of the reservation. : of 10 cents an acre in lieu ofa posse that hunted him for 16) ¥ Boagge se oo : oile jt lease would probably be ready In Its original form, he said, | jocal taxes. hours. | ean { _ Pick for durability. for submission to the Adminis- | ft might have jeopardized state | |. . : E eel : ‘ 5 | trative Board at its meeting mext | oll and mineral rights by allow. | WHY NOT BUY LAND - John Fallone, 17, died at near. — Alaska has only one college. Tuesday. ing private drillers to drill on | Committee members also| by Armstrong County Memorial : La —'‘pressed Air Force officers at the| Hospital, where his would-be ORI G IN AL ; . ; ,meeting for an explanation as to! girt triend Gladys Smail, 15, lay | — [hb & a ; a | ‘ _why the Air Force could not buy! in critical condition from shots ‘the land from the state at its! fired imto her chest by the ber- market value serk boy. Lt. Col. William R. Norton of | Her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J.) the Air Force real estate divi. |Warren Smail, and her uncle,| sion in Washington, D. C., said | William Smail, were shot by Fai-| the Air Force policy is te obtain |lone Wednesday night in this rural state lands by lease, although In | community. some instances it buys private | Policeman Gus Zanes of Apollo, | land. wounded by Fallone as the nearly Col, Morton said the Kalkaska 30-man posse closed in ‘on the) base, which would cost an initial Youth yesterday, eh “reported ip 25 million dollars, would be an S@tsfactory condition. He missed) ‘economic blessing to the northern|death by a fraction .of an inch ‘part of the state ——=———S—*{ a8 @ bullet hit him under the The state, he said, will receive; "ight -eye and’ ranged upward to an estimated $90,000 a year in, lodge under his skull. sales taxes from base personnel ‘YOUTH WELL ARMED spend varoiher 50 million. ollars _, About 100 shots were fired be-| developing the hase he added. |£0'@ & Sharpshooting state police- eveloping the base, he added. | icked off Fallone he Col. Morton told the committee ame Le S eel sthe federal government would gj. , Stuck his head out from ars nance construction of new schools |e ee F allceee ) was found made necessary by the infux ef ne ge some 5,000 people into the area. | and 500 rounds of ammunition by} | es ee ee his side. He never regained con- sciousness. He invaded the Smail home Wednesday with a rifle and a package of dynamite. His efforts to explode the dynamite after the Your N |killings were unsUccessful. Giatsintts | Gladys said she had dated Fal- at | lone several months ago and that yj her parents had forbidden her to KIMBALL 4) aap y » ry, SILVERPLATE EXTRA PLATED see «= SO-PIECE SERVICE FOR Q —usuat $39%5 vaiue. Take 90 days to pay On our 90-Day Pay- ment Plan . . . at no extra charge! Or, if you prefer, Pay noth- ing down and take up to 2 Years to Pay! STANLEY {Dinette Group Beautifully styled drop leaf, pedestal table... TABLE and fashioned in lovely Limed Oak. The 3-leaf table 4 CHAIRS = extends to a giant 94-inches. Chairs made with S. 9 5 a soft foam rubber cushions, and come in a choice il of red or gold. She said after the date Fallone was so jealous he ‘wouldn't let | me talk to other boys.” Fallone had theatened “to get” the entire | Smail family, she said. Today, relatives are caring for é e,° Traditional or ‘the five younger Smail children. _Fallone’s father Ernest said: ‘He Modern? was going: with her and then it broke up. He never seemed to }get over it.” : HERE'S WHAT ee, YOU RECEIVE... 16 Teaspoons Spoons CONVENIENT TERMS! PORTABLE MIXER — Usual 519% Value ow Westinghouse, C10 | Talks Still Stymied PITTSBURGH &®—Westinghouse| Electric Corp. and its two biggest! W troda onal, you'll like the Kimball \unions—locked in q strike that is’ that echoes the rich quiel dignity costing both sides millions of dol-; of centuries post; of if modera, lars—appear as far apart today as. you'll be thrilled by the Kimboll »when the first plants closed last} % China Cabinet or Buffet to Match Large Selection of Good Quality . S thot reflects the smart functional 1Oct. 17. , : . BREAKF AST S S 59 95 a ent choose @ Kimbo | Wages, time studies of work- : ET eeeee s from pecas style ond Anish com. ff) CFS Jobs and length of contract Styled in either Chrome or Wrought Iron Legs areiyeaatee a . ! cag — hey enotiations musical qualities, becked by 99 | have made no progress toward yeors of fine piono experience. agreement on the key issues, NOW Westingh the dispute i 3 , we ee 55 900 sealing ea LIMITED | loyes $950,000 a day in wages. FAbout 40,000 other employes are QUANTITIES ) furloughed. ; eee -|- The -deelines to—com-| _. aaaw. / ~~ ment bale oon senes tas soured ONLY $100 DOWN , close to the operation estimate pro- m —— auction losses fo pa ea eee = i 7 : i 1 million dollars. at doesn ) ,; include maint costs in th _@ Twos . OPEN | PHONES: FE 5-881] and FE 5-8974 inchate,mealnenance coats in the Two peeds - f . . Every Night & 3065 Orchard Lake Rd. | KEEGO HARBOR §/ Renamed by Williams ~ eavy uty Moto i Prices Start at $645.00 } _ e Fine Ti Control Until j FREE PARKING | LANSING (®—Gov. Williams to- ger tip 4 | i : fday reappointed Frank Burke Jr.| . j ' ; : GALLAGHER Sf Ostia aaa member of the State e Full Size Beaters Christmas Ne trattic jams, mo parking problems at Clayton's . . « drive out tonight 2 MUSIC CO. Water Resources Conuntesice for a -* ‘ A term expiring July 1, 1958. A oe = se PARK FREE RICHT AT OUR FRONT DOOR! 16-18 Haron Street ewe eet oS ries @ Stand on E :, ate confirmation. ; 4 e Ligh ight | Je eee ee hs iwe a } Santa! Sol Y G Wav! » @White Beked-enemel Finish Stores casily in © drewer Bs O1ve our e : . 3 is an a eoee : y y 1.98 Toy Dish $139 a Set... .. | is Ad $ : eee. 2.98 Hurdy $195 i lve YSMUNS Gill CeLUlicates [een | i . 1.98 Mirro $] 39 < ‘ Bake Set .... F Stop worrying about what to give. . get Osmun 8 an ee Tey Greni $] 495 -_ |4 Gift Certificates and the persons who receive them WRIST RADIO TREE STAND | Picno........ © *~ »1 can choose their own gift from either of our two To, war oles trang son Heliees ‘| big stores... Soom a 98¢ Set ..... vee 31° P ; ee . se A ‘ Reg. $3.95 ~ ‘Heavy-gauge metal holds tree |) 95 point ' (1 Available in Any Size Denominations speci drmiy Takes from 1” to ¥ | 1.95 Point = $139 ; g i Yes, you can get gift certificates for $1, $20... or | SCHWINN MOTOROLA TV j for higher amounts ... and you can use your charge. BI CYCLES f With a gift certificate you're sure they'll get what $9.54 $ 295 $1 3 99 5 Up s ; ' ° e theyiwant! Hornet ..... p) . Jr. Miss .... 37 ‘1 oo s WINTER * 6. n : 695 $4995] $5 Down Il pecaps 2 for : (lightweight) . Od a RE 59.95 $ 5 295 We Take Trade-ins— 6.70-18 - BOTH STORES apis Hoare Liberal Allowance! 4 ~ OPEN a : “Two Fine Stores to Serve You Better” EVERY : -* DOWNTOWN _ TEL-HURON | NIGHT - = 51 N. Saginaw St. Shopping Center * ‘til Christmas { | | | s oo | ; : Sik ate ae loeatane fig Wile shies 7 EE GA ies ented. ei ali alll : te . t i os * L i ‘“ « a \‘° i 4 5 ~ s a a | } | ‘ . ; u 1 a a . é } i‘ ; ; { ! epee ~~, Gordon, Mr. and Mrs, -Le- om oe Mrs. Rex Parker (left) of West Princeton avenue is giving a final tuck to the gown to be worn by Mrs. Albert Anselmy of West Huron street, an /;, in di J They are both members of Epsilon Sigma Alpha sorority which is sponsoring its annual ball Saturday from 9:30 p.m. to 1:30 a.m. at Child Psychiatry Service Will Benefit. Members Plan Ma From Dance ny Parties Preced ing Annual Event at Hotel Pontiac The annual ball of Epsilon Sigma Alpha sorority to be held Saturday will benefit Pontiac State Hospital's Child Psychiatry Service. The group is sponsoring “study workshop” at the hospital and will donate al proceeds of the dance to t program. he hospital to further ~ The ball, scheduled for Saturday from 9:30 p.m. to 1:30 am. at the season for members of the sorority. Mrs. Rex .Parker, dance. chairman, has worked with! other committee chairmen for the success of the dance. Mrs. Donald Giordano made, orchestra. arrangements, | and tickets were arranged for and distributed by Mrs. Frank Jalosky Jr. Patrons were solicited by Mrs. Edmund Smith. Mrs. Norman Nel- son planned and made decorations for the affair and Mrs. Edward, Hummel Jr, handled publicity, Mrs. Smith has announced her fist of patrons for the dance. They include Dr. and Mrs. James M. McHugh, Dr. and Mrs. t land A. Clemence, Mr. and Mrs. Floyd A, Levely, Mr, and Mrs. George R, Oliver, Mr, and Mrs. Richard 0, Paschke and Dr. and Mrs, Lynn D, Allen Jr. . Others serving as patrons are) Mr. and Mrs, Theodore Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Gaukler, Dr and Mrs. Maxwell L. Shadicy, Dr. and Mrs. M. C. Worster, Mr, and Mrs. William Dean, Mr. and Mrs. W. McKibben, Mr. and Mrs. H, J. Applegate, Dr, and Mrs. Mrs, Edgar Geist. Preceding the dance, many so- rority members will entertain. Among those giving pre-dance par- ties are the Walter H. Kresges of South Avery road, Guests at their home will be) Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Hudson, | ties preceding the ball is one being given by Mr. and Mrs. George Hote} Pontiac, will also mark the beginning of the holiday*-———— jney and Donald Ducat will be | guests at a party to be given by ‘the Harry Woodmans of Gateway idrive, Mr. and Mrs; Earl Smith Jr. of West Lawrence street are also in the party whirl. They are hold- ing an open house for all Epsilon husbands and guests, 40 WILL ATTEND Forty members are expected to attefd, with guests including Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Gronaw, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Willis, Mr. and Mrs. James Kinney, Dorothy Brim and Jeane La Vine, and Betty Lou ‘De Groot and Charles I. Bingham of Cleveland. * *® @ Iva Pinkston of Mohawk road will have as her guests Dr. Don- ald McCandless, the Ralph Wil- sons, the Theodore Johnsons, Edna Pinkston and George Ralick, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hasse, Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Rhodes, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Bell, the Frank Jaloskys Jr. and Mr, and Mrs. Edward Hum- mel Jr, The Russel} McGlincheys of Waterford will have as their guests for dinner Mr. and Mrs. dames Jones and Mr. and Mrs. Henry Barens. Mr, and Mrs. dack: Dawson, Mr. and Mrs, Paul Isies of Flint, Mary Kendall and Max Clark will visit the McGilin- chey home later in the evening ¢—————-———— Talk on Israel Heard by Zonta Club and go on to the dance with le Completing the list of gay par- Heenan. At their Seminole avenue} home, they will entertain Mr. and Mrs. Ross Walls, Mr. and Mrs. Charlies Elliott, “Mr. and Mrs. Harry Bell and the William Bur- ders. _Also guests of the Heenans will, be Mr. and Mrs. Jack Sandberg) ‘and Mr, and Mrs. Eugene Bur-; dette. Mr, and Mrs, Kenneth Neulin, Mr. and Mrs. Clemence, the Richard Reiters and Mr. and Mrs, Clement, LaBarge. ANOTHER PARTY. Mr, and Mrs, Ralph O. Allen of Cooley Lake road will entértain the) Donald Murphys, the Lewis Ir-) wins, Mr, and Mrs. Jack E, An- dress and Mr. and Mrs. Robert the hospital. Preparing decorations for the Epsilon Sigma Alpha’s annual ball (left to right) Mrs. Donald Giordana of Brookdale road and Mrs. Norman Nelson Hotel Pontiac. Psychiatry Service. Pontiac State Service. The Saturday are The group is sponsoring a of Orchard avenue. The ball will benefit urdey evening at Hotel Pontiac. mated : Prepares | AGA, ie Roots oreo, * Pentiac Press Photes Theidance will Rene Pontiac State Hospital's Child “study workshop” at Hospital's Child Psychiatry dance is scheduled for Sat- Mrs. Herman B. Stenbuck told of her visit to Israel and the Holy Land at the Thursday meeting of the Zonta Club of Pontiac. * * * The speaker told the group gath- ering at Hotel Waldron that the trip has become a very real part of her life, something. she lives) jevery day, for to her visiting Israel | is a “living experience.’ Passineau. Those completing the Allen guest list are Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Ferrer of Berkley and Mr. and Mrs, John Orosey of Royal Handicapped om... Joys of Christmas Giving The Frank Oosterhofs and the Reginald Rippbergers will be co- hosts to sorority members attend- ing the dance. The Oosterhof home on Devonshire road will be the scene of a party. Those attending will be Dr. and Mrs, Gordon, Dr. and Mrs, G, N. Petroff, Dr. and Mrs, John Schmidt, Dr, and Mrs. Donald * ¢ ¢ Bergeron, Mr. and Mrs, Rick | Tots in the pre-nursery cerebral ard- Boeckeloo and the Dale palsy class of the Oakland County Carneys. ; |Society for Crippled Children dem- Mr, and Mrs. Clark Heenan, the onstrated this at a Christmas party John Oleys, Mr. and Mrs, Jamesjheld for their parents this morn- Davis, the James Stones, Ann Tier- Giving is not limited to the af- fluent and the physically fit. Its joy is universal, and even a handi- icappéd child — one with cerebral palsy, for instance, whose physical movements don’t coordinate with the mind — can know the happiness of making and giving a simple Christmas present. | Coming Events a Oe Lyre atign’ wil meet seen: Mon-| the parents, There were waste day at 2 pm. at the home of Mrs.F A | baskets for the dads, made of niversary party ‘ ¥ tall ‘cans covered. with contex omens: i itt att) Pitted ccreghosa, > c pa a : j wee x ad pm, There There was a h Tots Learn children sang their parts’ and played small musical instruments| direction of their teacher, Mrs. Leon Skelley, and speech ther- apist Mrs. FE. F. Lau. e * * Parents were often incredulous to see a child accomplish an unusual feat of speech or hand coordina- tion — often something the school rhad worked months to teach. Classes for the 3 to 6-year-old handicapped tots are held Tues- day, Thursday and Friday miorn- ings in the center at 152 W. La St, They are paid for by the society’s Easter seal fund @tive and individual contribu- tions. Classe for the 6 to l2year age group are held in the afternoons. Elizabeth Kirkhy is executive sec- retary for the Oakland Courity! society, = Explaining Hadassah, the or- ganization dedicated to helping israel, Mrs. Stenbuck told of its hespitals and education cen- ters. In Israel, the speaker said, you derful present and a very thrilling potential for the future. The people living in Israel, she \explained, are a dedicated people. They fought for their land, and they knew for what purpose they were fighting. They fought for a itiny strip of land where they, might know i * Entering this land, Mrs. Sten-, comes the origin of the three major themselves what had inspired these in time with the piano, under ay tata but as they traveled on \their way, they. knew the an- jswer. Because from this little area comes th eorigin of the three major Itaiths, Christian, Moslem and Jew- lish. Isract represented to them their right te freedom of wor- ship and freedom to live in a democratic land without fear, The speaker told of going down into Nazareth, the old, old city and of its primitive existence. * * * In closing Mrs, Stenbuck said, “There is a destiny that makes us brothers becatise.no one can live by himself aloné, and the help that:we give to others al- ways comes back to be our own," There are four pages in’ today’s ss hotrsard Section’ 4 Mrs. Thomas Horwitz intro- nationally known fashion designer —probably the only designer of don't make the woman. , . women wearing my gowns who might as Shown greeting dance committee members at a recent meeting held in her home on Osage circle is Mrs. Edward Hummel Jr. Mrs. Frank Jalosky Jr. of “Drayton Plains (center) and Mrs. Ed- mund O. Smuth of Alice avenue (right) uere among those attending the final proceeds will for Saturday Ball ed planning session. The women are mem- bers of Epsilon Sigma Alpha sorority which is sponsoring its annual ball at Hotel Pontiac Saturday evening. The be used for a “study work- shop” for the Child Psychiatry Service at Pontiac State Hospital. Womens Section FRIDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1955 PAGES 22-25 > Dietrich, Designer Agree Worldwide That Beauty Is an Illusion Dances Are By PHYLLIS BATTELLE NEW YORK ¢INS) — Marlene) Dietrich has been around for some time now—delighting men and ig- niting jealous women — and pre- sumably she knows whereof she {speaks when the subject is sex appeal. What she says is, “You don't have. to be beautiful to be beau- tiful.”’ It’s the illusion you create that hits people. It’s making people aware that you are with them through your vitality, your wself- confidence and the pride of your “if people are more aware of you than of anyone else in the room, then you are the most beau-) ~ttiful person there.” These are the words, not of Miss! Elgee, at the idealistic age of 20, is a note who concedes that ‘clothes make the clothes." ‘PICTURE FRAMES’ At the risk of losing business, he declares; “I have seen women “If there are characteristics you do not like, try to minimize tnemn \Concentrate on the good po both mentally and oun “See that your grodming is as perfect as it can be, and learn how to walk and stand in the most graceful and easy way pos- sible. “In other words,” says Elgee,' “‘get to know yourself thoroughly and intimately — as others see you.” *. 8 ¢ of how you look, fortified by the | self-confidence and vitality, “Like Marlene Dietrich.” say 8’ Dietrich, but of Elgee Bove, one of Elgee, swooning youthfully. her greatest admirers and a fel- low student of sex -appeal. “Then,”’ says Elgee, ‘‘you will be the picture everybody looks at, | no matter what kind of frame you're wearing.” ” (He adds, however.-that—Bigée+- Bove frames are slenderizing this season.) '4 New Members Welcomed by YTC ~ Four new members were eén- Armed with the total knowledge) mental buildup you have given to! jyour good features, you will face, ithe world with more. poise and| Presented | An enthusiastic audience respond- ‘ed to curtain call after curtain call ‘last night after the splendid per- |formance of Carola Goya and Mat- |teo in their ‘Dances of the World.” | The concert in Crary Junior High |School was the first of four to be presented this season by the Water ford Township Civic Association, lecture-recital was narrated for the most part by Matteo. A ver- satile performer, he has traveled éxtensively to make a close study of the dances of various lands, =| The program in the form of a | | Not only perfecting himself in rl techniques but learning their. origin, sources of inspira- lea! motivation and history. He explained how the philosophy, religion and geographical location of a country are interwoven into that country’s native dances, I * * * shor With his partner, the lovely Care \ola Goya, a living journal of the lcustoms and costumes of Spain, \Italy, was projected last. night. India, Scotland and Ceylon Acclaimed ‘“‘queen of the casta- nets"’ in Spain, Miss Goya's per- see a terrific past, but a won-/ duced the speaker and Mrs. Fotis Takis conducted the business meeting. ° Announcement’ was made that club member Sarah VanHoosen Jones Will leave Jan. 20 for a trip; around the world, returning May 7. Pageant Viewed soon have bought a dress for $8.95. Money plays no part in the art of; being beautiful.” Elgee, an usher at the Palace. Theater only six years ago, is: wholesale dress firm and also! clothes- some of the fanciest fig- ures in the U. S., including Mari- lyn Monroe, Denise Darcel, Judy Garland and his chief inspiration, E il hi Marlene, by ellows IP “And I have found that it's he ‘projection’ in the lady's A Christmas pageant, ‘‘Star_of| t : ; | own personality that makes her Glory,” was presented pa the! look well. dressed,” he sayd. iChristian Women's Fellowship’ of: First Christian Church when the fama are simply the frame group met Tuesday evening in the fF ® Picture of & woman. church parlors. | “The frame may be extravagant Participating in the pageant|4nd spectacular or pure and sim- were Mrs. William Hoyt, Mrs. ple, in its own right. But if the James DeVail, Mrs. Lowell Mount, {Picture's a dud, nobody's going Mrs. Maurice Cucksey, Mrs.| look at it for long. 7 Harold Aeschliman and Mrs,|_ It’s hard to describe this “‘pro- Eleanor Clark. jection” that young Bove talks about, except to say that it’s a They were assisted by a girls’ self - confidence that a woman trio from the Junior Choir com- {flings out, like waves of elec- posed of Sharon Pardo, Wanda jtricity. It hits people and warms Sue Vaughn and Mary Alice them and makes them feel im- Kissick. Mrs. James Vaughn |mensely stimulated to in her accompanied the trio. presence." Games, toys and books were|MIND AND MIRROR rolled in the Ethel E. Little Youth formance with these instruments Temperance Council at the-group's) “8S “mazing. In the duet, too, nore Chretooe cany and mest, the castanets literally “talked.” ‘ing at the Frank Deaver home on Outstanding among the dances (Cottage street, Enrolled were presented were those -from India. Ruth Ann and Gene Hargett: “gestures used, the audience made jan excursion into the life of the Charles Boatey led the group Hindu, and the full wonder of the in the singing of Christmas carols, dance of that country was brought and plans were made for a candle- home when he performed to ed light dedication service for mem- Kilmer’s * ‘Trees.” bers welcomed in the past three Climaxing the program was oer months. Gifts were exchanged by formance of the classic Spanish he group followed by the serving dance, El Amor Brujo, executed of refreshments. ‘isuperbly by both -daneers.——- C. E. Wilsons to Entertain at Christmas Open House and daughfer, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Mrs. C. E. Wilson returned from Washington, D.C., to her home. Wiest of Weodland avenue. Mrs. “Longmeadow,” in Bloomfield Cressy will remain in the city Hills Thursday. Secretary of De-| until after the betidays. we fense and Mrs, Wilson will enter- tain at their traditional open house at their home on Christmas morn- ing. * 3 Mr. and Mrs. Robert Johnson and sons, Stephen and Mark, ar- Florida eee is nice, bat Mra, Maude Wagner of Cameron aves nue’ says there is no place like Pontiac, according to word ree ceived while she is vacationing af Ocean Park, Fla. gathered for the children of the Mission to the Yakima Indians at White Swan, Wash. This mission! is a part of the program of the! Disciples of Christ in the United * States. Naomi Circle of the church served refreshments from tables) decorated in the traditional Christmas motif, These waves of personality are not something you're born with, Elgee believes, but something you ‘develop. He suggests the easiest way to kindle yor own —= rived today by plane from their home in Los Angeles. They -will spend the holidays with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. _ Harry Yeager of Hickory Grove road is this: “Maintain an open “muind, and buy.a full-length mirror “Look in the, mirgor and analyze: ‘your complete self. / % and Mr..and Mrs. F. N. Johnson of Detroit. Mis. William #. Creasy of Manchester, N, 4, is wi | at the home of her’ son Before returning to her home she will spend Christmas with her son and daughter-indaw, Mr. and Mrs, R."H. Powell, in Decatur, nL * Spending the holidays with her son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Homer: Harbage of Lenox inow_the designer for “Elfreda,” ai Eleanor _ Kent, Ronald_ Highlen, With | the_ Mateo. explanation of the series pa i avenue, is ie hbase. gas. 188 4) Bs 44 4s Confesses Stealing Licenses in Church “A 29-year-old Dearborn mother | NEW YORK (®—U.S. newsprint| of pig has aa oes driv-'consumption during November er's opporane pd pass of soared to a new high, almost 10, identification in cashing worthless P*t on we November, 1954. the checks, Dearborn police said to. American Newspaper Publishers) day , Assn. reports. be * 8 # Mrs. June K. Smith told officers that she cashed checks in Pontiac! Stocks of newsprint in the hands) and other Oakland County areas, jof U.S. publishers’ remained at the Ann Arbor and Grosse Pointe. She. said that she had netted between’. $1,500 and $2,000 in the post two years, _ Mrs,_Smith—was- arrested after| she cashed a check in a Farming- ton supermarket using the license} of a Garden City woman who said! it had been stolen from her in a Dearborn church nursery school, Police found Mrs. Smith caring for children in the nursery, She| faces a Jan, 9 hearing in Oakland. County Circuit Court. S peak. Total consumption for Novem- ber rose to 607,693 tons, 9.9 per cent over the 553,187 tons in the same month last year. For the first 11 months of the year, con- sumption totaled a record 6,036,- 546 tons, 8.2 per cent over the 5,625,945 tons for the same pe- riod of 1954. These are totals for all ‘kinds of uses of newsprint. The ANPA said stocks of news- Bus Passenger the end of November were 27 days’ | supply for the average of all daily newspapers reporting to the asso- Helps Victims, Then Falters ciation, the. same as on Oct. 31, There were 37 days’ supply at the| LONGVIEW, Wash, w — A_bus'end of November last year and 39 stopped at a highway scene near here yesterday. The years ago. driver and passengers helped or| * * *¢ carried aboard the ‘four persons (8.3 PER CENT RISE who appeared to have been in-! jured, | North, American - production of One was unconscious. "Iie was |Dewsprint in November amounted carried carefully < rr Simei eyo rs ¥ £&AP REG. PRICE os $259.95 ~Gs ’ WITH TRADE ~bs-h4- ~ Pi P| o/.4e ar) ao ary p20 N. eee Street FIRST PAYMENT IN FEBRUARY OPEN EVERY NIGHT "UNTIL CHRISTMAS WAYNE GABERT | Your Electrical Appliance Specialist Y <« “2 fp fr [role orer ep (rir fr iP fr re FE 5.6189 * ror te le | ] “i » . 5 i . - t a is : ao os i Bs 4 a . ’ i CALVERT DISTILLERS COMPANY, NEW YORK city. BLENDED WHISKEY ° 86.8 PROOF ..’65% GRATNH WEUTRAL SPIRITS: CALVER $55 4/5 QUART “ Every man on your list will be flattered with in its brilliant new for only Lord Calvert Fortunate is the man who receives | Gilt Decanter says: “Fs a. Man of Disti ti Lord Calvert, for this delightful . whiskey is known the world over as the finest compliment a man can pay to friends. And now it comes in a brilliant decanter designed by the noted George Nelson—gift-boxed, and with greeting card a at no extra cost. welcome gift! 4 7t ey ttached— ’ The Gift of Distinction For Men of Distinction Lord Calvert is always available in the distinguished “regular” ee bottle. It is always the same: | superb whiskey—always a most Sig y About | 19| milion checks ate |day, and the average _ ino 3 mites cha wlan, ont ya YIAO IVY ’ Hit With Early Icebergs = HELD OVER! ae ol Pontiac’s Own Fabulous Singing Sensations— Direct from successful road tour of the West Coast. A new ga this week .. . new songs COCKTAIL LOUNGE 1222 W. Huron Se. in Huron Bow! Bidg. Me reer rn, Th a Te A ETT tend Oe pm coerce 1 ~. . Rew novelties ... they're terrific . . . come _ out and see why! Des Davies 1 chetter you'll enjoy! Gene Willson Acrobetic and Tap. Dancer... “SPECIAL TEENAGERS? Show Every Sunday 2 to 4 No Liquor or Alcoholic Beverages Served Make New Year’s Reservations Now! FLOOR SHOW Friday and Saturday Comedy MC MAUREEN Lovely Exotic EDDIE COLLINS and his Banjo Ait Tita isi tii iii ri ti i i = : Plus ALVIN WALLS and His Orchestra Come In and Make Your New Year’s Reservations Now ~ JAM SESSION EVERY TUESDAY EVE. | Musie by SO-PHIS-TO-CATS ‘ ee ene oS ao ee Open 7 Days and 7 Nights MARK ANDREWS Saeesnuenat APPAR ECTTTRSTEEPERTRIT ECO BUSINESS LUNCHEONS Served tp coe Dene Reem. PRIVATE ee end BANQUET TELEUELEULELIS PEPE LELDECEORER PLE ras Sea < . | Grand Hoven ‘Shoreline stretching 20 to 00 feet otfshore|_ and with mounds six to eight feet high, have been reported in the| snow until about February, CHICKEN HOUSE 497 Elizabeth Lake Road at Telegraph “The Man of Rhythm” AT THE PIANO and ORGAN Greetings ‘from Kingsley THE PONTIAC PRESS, Grand Haven shoreline area of Lake Michigan. They are more than two weeks ahead of schedule, BOB'S FEATURING ~ “SULLY” Appearing Nightly * ) RAP. susuezeusueseuans DINNERS TO TAKE OUT * Call FE 3-982! . . Your Food . Will Be esas RELEPLEEPETEEIUAES sons AN —Last_winter- the -Grand- Haven} oval was free of heavy ice and) - ~firto Money "Decorator = ¥ bills and pasted them on corre-|has no political aspirations and a|the bottom will bear the words accepted his own hour of tribute AR Mtem FRIDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1955 Jury Clears Doctor jin Death of Woman After hearing four hours of tes- timony yesterday and deliberating 15 minutes, a coroner’s jury found ~ Royal Oak osteopath innocent of any blame in the death of & Southfield Township woman in his office Nov. 11. Mrs. D. W. Campbell, 33, of 17325 W. Fourteen Mile Rd. died shortly after she entered the doc- tor’s office for the second time within an hour. She suffered a reaction: from a shot of anti- biotic drug. The jury,- meeting in Oakland County Probate Court, riled the doctor was not guilty of oe , and | | ] PRESIDENT STEPS DOWN—Bruce J., Annett Michigan cities were several from the Pontiac | of 2799 Sylvan Shores (left},-retiring president of | the Michigan Real Estate Association, turns over P. T. Smith of Rochester and Vern K. Archer | his gavel of office to his successor, Stewart E. of Pontiac. Smith completed a term as president | Butts of Ann Arbor, during recent inauguration of the Pontiac Real Estate ‘Board while Archer ; ceremonies in Lansing. Among realtors from 25 is the preside it-elect. j | tong Beach Loses Le fers. Seaioh Stamp . 4 i Going on Sale on January 17 A special three-cent postage’ stamp commemorating .the 250th) Insisting anniversary of Benjamin Franklin's ibirthday will be placed on sale, Jan. 17, Postmaster General Ar-| thur E. Summerfield announced. this week. LONG BEACH, Calif. eames] those traffic violators who paid fines yesterday at. the Police Traf- fic Division there lurks a swindler. | He gypped the city out of $9 right (under the eyes of the law. Clerk A. A. Williams, counting the receipts from fines, came across a $1 bill among the $10 jbills. He hadn't spotted it right away because, at the corners, it) NEW YORK uw — Former Gov.| The central subject of the stamp looked like a 10-spot. 'Thomas E. Dewey met last night|!§ @ TeProduction of a painting The culprit, said Williams, had with seven state REpublican toad entitled ‘Franklin Taking Elec- snipped one corner off of four $10 ers. He insisted, however, that he|'Ticity from the Sky.” A panel at Wit GP Men Ex - Governor Talk With 7 State Chiefs: Was ‘Strictly Social’ responding corners of the $1 bill. | spokesman for the party leaders) Benjamin Franklin 250th Anniver- | There’s Holiday --area who made-up a delegation headed by [7 Cheer Always at _ Wilkins! —.. @ Steaks @ Seafood @ Chops @ Fowl The Finest in Foods Since 1921 “y | PHIL'S IN For an enjoyable evening of music and _ entertainment, come to Phil's JACK EDWARDS Screwball Comedy MC VIRGINIA PAGE Sensational Acrobatic Dancer Direct from Chicago DAWN TAYLOR Songs and Rhythm Tap at ADAMS RD. g ‘Silast night with a becoming shy- 3982 AUBURN | [ness that would have warmed his father’s heart. Colin P. Kelly III, son of the | United States’ first hero of World |War II, received his Eagle Scout | award in a solemn ceremony be- fore a group of neighbors and ' friends in a church hall in this | tiny Philadelphia suburb. For “Corky” Kelly it was an ‘important event. It represented inearly four years of community and camping enterprises that to- DANCE Every Nite of ti the Week “3 LITTLE WORDS” smashing of! popularity eccords! DELICIOUS FOODS Sone Sat We Serve Banquets and Cis Tanoe 3412 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-9754 taled 21 hard-earned merit badges. Only an average of two scouts in jevery “wendred reach this goal. The slim, erect 15-year-old, who ‘looks strikingly like his late father, was 80 with “scout italk” with friends that he paid , “There is no news tonight. od it will have a vertical shape Eagle Scout Award N, Y., chairman of the State As- Job he aspirés to.” LOS ANGELES #—The popula- am completely nePey Asiatic countries, says Luis Quin-| can leaders yesterday was Dew-| He forecasts that by the end of . in Latin America. Williams has been elected treasur-jfigure on the percentage of the | “strictly | S4TY have nothing today,” Dewey told|and be printed in sheets of 50. CONCORDVILLE, Pa. @—A tall, sembly Ways and Means Com- “I don't want any, now or any|tion of the combined North and tanilla, ambassador of Mexico to: ey’s first since he left office as the century there will be a popula- Gannett Newspapers Asia cannot boast of its huge er of the Gannett Co., Inc., and present rate of growth. Asia has and ind FOOD bin SERVICE MAKE YOUR RESERVATIONS FOR OUR GALA NEW YEAR'S PARTY - NOWH No Finer Place to Dine = at the Bloomfield nn. Try our iy tender broiled filet mignon. Our fried chicken. Our lobster tails—broiled over charcoal right before your eyes.- - Henry’s Bloomfield Inn DINE and DANCE TO THE MUSIC OF JOE BANKET’S TRIO A Sensational Combo Every Night Except Sunday » COCKTAILS—.WINES—BEER ee No Cover or Minimum Charge OPEN 4 P. M. TO 2 A. M. DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY. FOOD SERVED UNTIL 1 A. a ae 1420 —_ Telegraph Road at Orchard Lake — For Reservations Phone FE. 5-8060 Stars of Radio, Records and TV . NOBLE LEE Friday 9 to 2 A. M. SPADAFORE'S BAR FINE hevent. The Gannett Co. controls a group room, to expand.” | A of 23 newspapers, three radio sta-| a ae ENTERTAINMENT “ ° tions and two television stations | Featuring ‘Hall Believes Florida ‘a Soc etates. The Socudelicn is To Tell_Exam Results ‘Will Join GOP Ranks a philanthropic corporation cre- DETROIT W—The State Board Introducing 9to2 A. M. isaid the meeting was . . social.” Although its color has not been Colin Kelly ill Given se made public, Summerfield stated newsmen. . iL) MacKenzie of Belmont, p d A 2 a redicts Americas red-haired boy with a ready grin { Se ee ees | 0 h 0 sat dat_‘Dewes. “te my 10 Quigrow the Orient time,’ Dewey, twice Republican Latin American countries in time, presidential candidate, replied. “I| will dwarf the manpower boast of Dewey is ee law here.|the Organization of American The meeting with state Republi-; States. governor after three terms. tion total of about 800 million; 250 __ millions in North America, 500 mil- nol EVOct 2 New Officials population then,” Quintanilla | ROCHESTER, N. Y. w—Cyril| said yesterday in an interview. “I of the Frank E. Gannett News-|reached stagnancy in population in- | paper Foundation, Inc. creases. We have room, plenty of scant attention to the cameramen }and reporters on hang to cover the ated by Gannett to perpetuate of Law Examiners said Friday the ownership of the newspaper group. reguits of bar ‘examinations taken Williams will succeed Herbert |lagt t September by 323 Michigan W. Cruickshank, who retired &S/law school graduates will be an- treasurer after retiring as ge’ jnounced sometime in mid-January. manager earlier this year. FSS F. Deeb of Grand Rapids, The election of Williams was po arg chairman, said results nor- announced yesterday at meetings: mally are announced between of the boards of directors. of both; Christmas and New Year's but a | corporations. recent investigation into allega- —_— tions of cheating in the exam have *- Michigan Man Killed caused the delay. MIAMI, Fla. — Leonard W. |Hall, Republican national chair- | man, today expressed optimism lover GOP chances-of winning Flo- rida again in 1956. Hall, who arrived last night from | Washington for a vacation of sey; leral days, brushed aside questions jconcerning President Eisenhower's) future status but spoke command ‘of Republican prospects next yea: a believe Florida will be ee Noxman Nazarr Comedy MC Atti bn be bn tp tt tne a tt te tt te, tt tt 4904 Elizabeth Lake Rd. Half BARBECUE it i first Southern state to join the Rel Missouri Jury Rules © ———————_—_ a predicted. parma WAYNESVILLE, Mo. ® — A Expects Big Mail Load meee Special Sh aS ee ees coroner's jury has decided that a} WASHINGTON #—The Post Ot- | F Flint man whose body was foun = s sAud Saturday Night! Charity Rep near Waynesville was killed mice Devartmert coumated, taey Sherry Coy Nan Topping Exotic Dancer Singer @ WINE — @ LIQUORS it will handle something more | than 17 billion pieces of mail in} said it did not the final quarter of this year. The! IONIA #—The 300 office em- Skull fractures inflicted by a blunt, ployes of the Ionia Manufacturing '™strument. Co. voted to dispense with seal But the jury ae bal Airdrie le Hr tl Ls Ld Ls ts an dnd a annual Christmas party and gi money to the Junior Charaher Com peer a Kelley's decomposed body was e | know who inflicted the wounds on) © Dalton Pozey Kelley, 27, of Flint, | last seen in his home town Aug. 13. needy children. The -office staff sound recently near Waynesville. turned over a check for $1,000 to \A Flint dentist said the teeth DICK ‘DENGATE and HIS ESQUIRES for Your Dancing Pleasure on . Ane: AY and options nea bh _ SUNDAY MATINEE 3. M.—VERN ST BUSINESSMEN'S are Dey, Open 7 AM. “sae Noon to # AM the Jaycees. lwere those’ af Kelley” for every family in America. 1é ‘| Marriage License & ° : I{ Foop (O98 = Catalina Piano | Applications ._ \e i a | Delightfully Ciiffora P Ayotte, 825 Robinhood a . Nancy L. Mariarty, 79 Beldwin i 7 | Delicious neorhi Peg 0rd japorconanl 2 Formerly at P vu eres: | Soe Fe VILLA INN CAN ete N eeersoaa aise van: ayecte s m Hotel Schroeder j| Rive our peer ee ACRE | AND EAT Sam Contl, 77 W. = athmore | | |] WHERE DINING Hiale J. Winlams, 77 W. Strathmore : Yeamen's | 1S A PLEASANT Benara "a, Notre, 918 Lincoln 7 5 | a“ i@ ~=—-—dDine’s Terrace Room j ADVENTURE " Manford D. Plake Jr., 340 E. 8. IH LANSING | For Reservations Wanda J. Brewer, 196 W. evaiboere lm MY 2.6193 Mary r ives: fare "Horace | chao MY 2-9258 He dood L. bil fa —— ‘s , foaes’ oat i ce eto ig SALT LAKE CITY + Santt, 4 Billy G. Powell, 114 Dresden a House of Oscar one asset ta, | | COLORADO SPRINGS re Sag wit, Walled leet tas 5 games B E. “Black od ae 8. Marshall is ethos Herbert J. Larsen, 1375 Pontiac Lake : > ah B. Anderson, 96 Mechanic ) : nia : — Scr fe "Wier Px resmanta 4 ce 8 aks Cleveland ag 40 Bagley, Lillies huces, 0 ‘Bagley My nad “t le. \figure, about a billion pieces high-! er than that for the last three! er than that for the last -three) months of 1954, amounts to an average of .more. than 300 pieces | *tis the Season to Be Jolly! For a good time, any time, our hospitality can’t be beat. e Kitchen Open Daily 10 A. M. e 8 P. M. e Family Style Chicken Dinner, Sunday 12-9. Phone OR 3-9325. Bar Entertinment MANNY'S "gr8 * Haetarncetarenanemmel sakes | ‘ | Me ae MANNY'S Presents Al Lloyd at the Nightly Except DANCING Every Wednesday a os B. stannic: siete | = | — THE PONTIAC PRESS, TY-FIVE Grains Starting MARKETS | Holiday Slump— seer mms DETROIT. Dec. 14 (AP)—The follow- ing prices cover sales of locally grown Stocks Break }-Day Decline asual holiday period lethargy “A ‘ enurte spoon. pDeticious. fer. ea i Board - ay. -| bu; No, 1, 3.50- uu; apples, Jonathon, the rd of Trade today De fancy, 3.50 bu; No. 1, 32.50-3.00 bu:/ day decline ings were slow and price changes /Mctntqsh. fancy 325 bu. No. 1, 2.80- . 3.00 bu: Northern oy fancy, ¢.00 bu 3.00-3.50 bu; Wolf Celery, No. 1 : Celery Corn tilted a little lower while Paced fl pend ib nae tned Capel camel | Rye scored fairly good gains in thy with the wheat upturn Wheat near the end of the first . y. fancy, . 1.65-1.85 50-1b bag. hs. at a smalf loss. ~ r - —— produce of No. 1}, and fancy grades : CHICAGO W -—Grains gave aly brought ) te farmers’ markets NEW YORK wW — General im- ‘ F jy | OY ‘growers an y them whole- : x F every indication of going into their) 37) Oackage lots provement in early dealings in the stock market today capped a five- Prices weren't up very much 8 zs . No. 1. River, fancy, Wheat and soybeans firmed, The 3.80 ba: No. 1 328-3 1S bu Cae as and the move ahead wasn't very M sina 00- 4-gal. case. ears, ose.) apturn in wheat was led by the |i.’ <00 but No. 1, 3.00-3.50 bu. vigorous, but prices as a whole December contract, in which there, ETABLES—Misc.: Beets, topped. |... sai * s iderable short covering. |N2. 1. 1.80-2.06 bu. Cabbage, No. 1 1.15-) Were definitely higher. anys ab ie ae _~ ~ peat ars 1, —— bu, red, * od : a utures | No. 1, 0-6. iu, Ch ge, sprouts, i od xt To — No. £ 1.00-150 bu. Carrots topped, Gains and losses spread over a ands esday. fancy, 275 bu.:. No, 1, 200-256 bu'|range of around a point with gainers holding the upper hand. sats showed small gains and losses. | 190-150 doz. ‘behs, celery, root, No. 1) General Motors, yesterday's sec- Cash corn receipts totaled 104 cars.|!.00-150 dos behs. | Fennel, No. 1; 125-444 most active issue up ¥%, opened| °. 1, ney ony on 10,000 shares off % at 46'2. The stock continued active b No. a, 1351.1 a bu. rote) __ - toes, farcy, 1 “lb. bag. No. | i . 120-130 S0-Ib bagy” Madistes, bisex,| o/enn Martin, yescrany eighth No. 1. 1.80-2.00 bu. Radishes, hot-| Most active issue up 144. opened jRouse. No. 1,150 doz behs. Squash./ today on 5,000 shares up %s at 38%. lacorn No 1, 1.00-1.25 bu. Squash, But- ternul. No. 1 1.00-1.25 bu.; Squash! Among advancing stocks were Parsnips, ger $2.10%s; corn unchanged to % lower, December $1.2414: oats) ‘a lower to 4% higher, December 334; rye 1 to 1'2 higher, Decem- ver $1.15%; soybeans 's to 1 cent De re oot aera Squash Schering, Climax Molybdenum, nigher, January $2.3644, and lard! hothouse. No.4 "2.00-2.40 #1 pbaske: |ULS. Steel. Chrysler, Seiberling 5 : | rT . No. -50-2.00 5 ° x 2 to 5 cents a hundred pounds | Tyr o be ne Cubecee ae i 35-175 bu. Rubber, Boeing. Kennecott Copper, F ower, December $10.50. |Coliard No. 1, 100-150 bu Kale, No’ Dy Pont, General Electric, Ameri- =. 1 No. 1, 1.35- = Vas pe 20 De Spinach, No. 1, 175° (an Tobacco. and RKO Pictures. Business Notes Gordnch as reed a also lower-were American Cyana- DETROIT PRODUCE DETROIT. Dec 15 ‘AP)—Eggs. f o n i : ; . ‘Detroit, cases imcluded, federal-stae Mid, 2th Century-Fox, and -— _ The_election -of Roy Abernethy grades ———"__“" "8 __ “SIA aati Pacific Railtoad- fe to the newly-created position of | Whites—Grade A jumbo 58-67 weighted * * : 5 ‘ h, f fo ee 59's, large 52-5612 wid. are F vice president in charge of auto- 534,, medium 48-50 wtd. avg 49%, small The market has declined in an if notive distribution and market- | #0-42 wtd. avg. 41; grade B large 49-51). ~~. ‘ 2 td. avg. $044. irregular manner for the past five -. - ing was‘ announced yesterday by; Mrowns—Grade A large 52-56 wtd. avg | 4... : Dress aver-| American Motors President Roy °4'2: medium 50, small 42; grade p days. The Associated Press aver-' | : : ; y large 60-53‘, wid avg. 53%, grade C/age of 60 stocks yesterday: lost 20 Abernethy. ae i owe lcents at $178.20. That's not too a In his new post. Abernethy will! Commercial grades: far away from the record high of ~ Wi American Motors cars, a Tunc-" Browns Grade A extra large #4. large matched a week ago last Monday tion carried out personally by 50-52 medium 41-47'); grade B large 48, : be Market steady Supplies of iarge fully Romney during the reorganization ample, mediums about New York Stocks ample, under i coordinate the sales programs Gl eciet cima A extra large 55. large $181.50 first reached Sept. 23 and. 1 fe | | AT AWARDS DINNER — M. presenting a watch to George Lotvenas at the J. Olson, (left) plant manager, Fisher Body Division, is shown 1930. sixth annual 25 year service recognition dinner. |denly Wednesday. Lotvenas began work with the division January 7, of GM p.m. Saturday from the Thayer| Funeral Home in Farmington with Stockholders Number burial in Oakland Hills Cemetery. Mrs. Claghorn was killed in. an 540,947 for Quarter, auto accident early yesterday, Says . President morning. ; ‘She is survived by her husband, Morrison’ ce amet Mrs.| NEW YORK (INS) — General Raymond Maple of Wayne and Motors President Harlow H. Curtice ee ne sal one son, Larry, announced yesterday that owners at home; her mother, Mrs. of GM stock soared to a new rec- Beare ci of A920 od gh af 9 he * Ms i ual : ‘Township. SS Gg es Frank F. Johnson Curtice said the figure marked OAKWOD—Service for Frank F.|a gain of almost 31,000 since last ~~ Johnson, 74, 641 Hurd St., will be;May. He added that there were ‘held at 2 p.m. Sunday from Boe lace 143,000 more shareholders : 6 . bo 7, AD Jor tl... The re) | a 2 Goan mf Record High — with ‘burial to follow in Mt.|GM official declared: | Pleasant Cemetery. Mr. Johnson | “They represent every walk of died Thursday. "| fife and every section of the | He is survived by one daughter, | ; ‘ Mrs. Josephine Groover, where he | lived. » United States is a | nation of capitalists and our Charles A. Jarvis | American industrial and econom. | CEDAR ISLAND LAKE—Service, 'e system can truly be called the for Charles A. Jarvis, 70, 923, the people's capitalism. akeview Dr., will be held at 3 “In addition, there are. General ‘y.m. Saturday from Sparks-Griffin) yotors shareholdsers in most of i} Cemetery. Mr. Jarvis died sud-| Holders of common stock reached a total of 513,055 in the fourth ae is survived by a brother, | quart l record. Jacob, of Sudbury, Ont. " i aed Fisher Body lonors at Service Award Event Honors 37 period following the merger of fMGtind be fen ene short Over ‘Late Morning Quotetions Thirty-seven veteran Pontiac em- ee cae and Hudson 19 cuicaco pot eon Bb 713 Mont wera . 053 Ployes of the Fisher Body Division George Lotvenas, Joseph H. Mc- : She is survived by a* daughter Paper Firm Proposes months ago. a GO POTATOES ome wu Y : he ad fe -omplet 25K, Elbert MeVay le W Mrs. Helen Hoskins of Pontiac : CHICAGO, Dec ~-Potat Armco Stl _ 54 Motor Pd 31 were honore or completing 5 Kone, Elbert A. MeVay, Merle i Abernethy formerly served as rivals en eal ateek S30 cade total U8, |Armour&Co + 357 Motorola, M$ years of service when they were Merriam, Ben Monetta, Clarence Foresees No Records and three sons, Wiliam Edwards 2-for-1 Stock Split vice president in charge of Nashit ya oraplies moderate, —40-/4t1 Refin ‘11: 387 Nat Bisc . . 39 presented engraved watches at the R. Passmore, Joseph Rembach, Unless Current Rate o! Dexter, John Heatley of Detroit NEW YORK (®—Minnesota & Motors | Division sales. so heer emcee) $3.60- Baie ey hig es ue aye < a firm's sixth annual service award Paul J. Ruge, Harold Saunders, | Is Increased and Frank Heatley of Milford; SiX Ontario Paper Co. directors have ; ‘nesota-North Dakote Pontiacs §2'80-2.90. ec’ te Met Gres 522 dinner this week. | Edgar R. Springer, Raymond Stan. | S grandchildren and two great-/ raised the quarterly dividend and N . Brief “Sashed and waxed. Betts Steel... 163 ues Tegel . bei * * @ ‘ley, Peter VanderHoek, Frank L.| grandchildren, proposed a two-fomone stock split. — ews in Petepppeol ae He Nia M Pow 33 Main speaker at the event was|Webber, Roy D. Weese, Albert 3} By DAVID J. WILKIE Mrs. Mary Lillian Perry They declared a quarterly of 70 | ‘ a , eat . A before Municipal = Poultry beers Warcer bel No Am Av . §3.4, Production ee rR. H. sever Weisenbertert, Harold E. Welch. | Associated Press Automotive LAKE ORION—Service for Mrs. Cents—up from 60 cents—payable Judge Cecil McCallum yesterday,| prrrorr, ies 16 (ABT oPcices paid Brus “Baie” say Nest Airline 19.4), 2 pele i e oan — t/Anges I. Wheeler. Floyd L. Wilson’ Editor ‘Mary Lillian (Adam) Perry, 85,| Feb. 1 to stockhplders of record = Nesley T. Johnston, 18, of 245 W.|Pet ,pound "fo. Detroft for No. 1 Budd Co... na) oer Be Ce a ao agen oa me srt fase Joseph L. Winter. | DETROIT W—New car sales 316 E. Flint St., will be held at/Jan. 6 A special stockholders’ _. Rutgers Ave., Donald G. Murphy,| Heavy hens 21-28, light hens 17, heavy CalumetAM "| 131 Pan AW Air 17 eee - Seems! GIT aa : ‘will need a sharp boost if the 2 P-M. Monday from Allen's Fu-' meeting will be held Feb. 14 to ! 18. of 2946 Oak Knoll Rd.; William /Protlers Ga Aid ome malts gee a en i ei year ahead ia to brine additional neral Home wiith burial in East approve the split. i. Spicer, 20, of 45 Allen St., and/caponettes (5-8'%.. lb. average) 33-34°:Cdn Pac... 332 Parke Da .. 40: Watches were presented to the | in @ oman a) te) Lawn Cemetery. Mrs. Perry -died ~-—-—— ee ' fiemas Joyce, 17, of 584 E. Bivd.,| eee, 2!: peta Reas vig es tom paeBers) comnts reste 7. rena ~ ” 3n 4, toltewing cenpioves by Plant Man- ' records to the auto industry. | Thursday . | Pontiac Pesual Gevaarra Loan Assos. f » at, Sod 0 e ceipts -'C¢ tees i , ¢ | : | fi = q all were fined $50 and given ad chad sod oe Ovesett trage tiow. aacpiies cose: ne ine i832 Algal Cola a ager M. J. Olson: a Retail deliveties this year Mrs. Perry was a charter icecen a rnp ba eb peeeeer os jays in jail for disorderly conduct.|/nens “"°OP* fo © few fancy colored Chien Trac... 4 Phelps D $16) Thomas J. Alldred, George A. jfhrough November are estimated’ member of the Lake Orion Wom- Pup eb pore ln yy) Gpenerrare eat ees — Pedal an eerety®;. Market fut! steady on nens Cities Svi .. $8 Palco ree rate oo : re as 0 a an at 6,550,000 units. That tops the’... laid an bck ee [cee ee trae oe: | Neil Gotting, 19, of 36 Bloomfield and steady on toms. Receipts and de. Climax Mo .. 6 | Philip Mor 45) Beehler, E. Dale Boner, Joseph! otal of any. full years industry |e en on RY re ee ee ee y : Ave., and Timothy Jeka, 22, of 25| mane Mant. Qe ee hens Colg Palm |, 36.1 Proct & 96 3/ Boothroy, Abel R. Borey, Edmund : records, Nevertheless surveys nid member of the group. jcalled for. wit te. matted to those ré- ‘ : | mee ‘ man . <5 . . . is. 2 m S 5s = . - Judson St., were charged yester- —_——- corCres 7 AS2) Bare 0d . g11,H. Benyan, George W. Crews! Julia Live L -To dicate the 1956 ‘model y. She is survived by her husband,” "“SiStes CLARKBON. lay with contributing to the delin- CHICAGO POULTRY Con Edis 467 RCA 42 Hap Downer, Clarence G. Green,| 24 ives in Lean-to oo dior abe | ered! AUP on. G . Executive Vice President quency of a minor before Water-|,, CHICAGO, Dec, 18 (AP) tive pouttry (Consim Poe 485 fexvDrus ‘#6 Ralph B. Guy, James B. Heath-| on Storm-Swept. Island ee Ee cee tal eae eee ine eran Oeccouer 8 tern” steady: receipts in coops 601 ‘yesterday /ConPow ‘5 Rey Met r : st aera @ sales. s, 3; zl te crs tord Township Justice Willis D. Le-}si9 “< pee 00,063 f. ®. oe paying Gent OU... 02 Rey, Tob B ai 2|cott, Henry Hughes, Edwin B. Ives, Off South America ‘ children and seven great-grandchil- Dee. 16, 1985 ____Furgy. Pleading guilty, each WAS |Light ene _16-5.15.6: bretiors ey fap ei|Custion We. 388 Safeway St 34, Homer V._ Johnson. Michael _1.; | Registration figures have been (dren. | wor NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE fined $35 with $15 costs and sen-[2f2 id oon i¢h bh” ctpemeielBeer ic gad Be dey gas HulKatich, T. Floyd Kempf. James Hej oe oe . eee ee tenced to 30 days in Oakland Coun-| young tom turkeys over 30 Ib 27-28 Ing, (Dow Chem .. 566 Scoville: Mfg . 6.3) Kinney and Car] J. Lindahl. | WASHINGTON — The last full- show 576,045 new cars were Ai F Jundersigned will sell at pubiic sale to y Jail. |faresre 26-2 Beene FE Sette Hocd eee pe —— inlooded Yahgan Indian of Tierra, lcewsed by the various states AUT FOTCE SAVES jhe hives, Sdger tor tah. one ‘ese ———— dey Lite a6 She: qT h p ft 0 ‘ ~ ,| during that month. The total 7° | 41030623 79 Oaki a Charged with selling maribuana, _ CHICAGO BUTTER AND rags JE! Auta Tite 28 Sinclair Sad) eac ing Osis N} cer Fuego and the southernmost) [Te Sd tha Voters ] i ] li Michigan. Said motor vehicle’ le stored \9-year-old Andrew Shegar pleaded s:eacy receipts 07.260, wholesale bar, Eme? fad; 123 Bou Pac "$6.2 aborigine in the world is an old, Marked the first drop below the (at atid address and may be Inapected at aa “inno cent _ yest sterd 4 ay - pefore Berk-'[5¢ prices wachanged: 63, score ta 878. stoi "eee oo poop Hl 2? at Overseas Stations ; woman living in a ramshackle shel. 600,000 mark in eight months. on Lon Undies \the. How te: waa home es — ——-ey Justice Ralph H. Finley, Un-90 B 5735-'00-c $33. © CT Ser*ipairy Mor. 382 Std Ou Callt $94) |ter on a storm-swept island at the, Automotive News reports in- a | CORPORATION oe able to furnish $3,000 bond, Shegar "£5" reed: Asi ca 10,402, wbolesale Gen Bak 02 Std gi g2 Di ; ; jtip of South America. ,dications are the November sales) NEW YORK, (INS) — When the, By: M D. FOX, lew Pp anged: US. largeiGen Dynam .. 633 5¢ Appitcants for teaching positions * * »* ltotal wi ' : ; | Collection Mgr was committed to Oakland County sas; meatans, “a0. Us mundatar ch: Gen Elec... 534 Sto5Back” | itd in the overseas Dependent Schools} Her name is Julia. Her age noe will amount to about 515,000.'U. S. Air Force decided not to oe tere ee i vaiti Ci ‘ Teas S 48: iGen Fads . 027 | : a. | Fi e Chr . : Jail while awaiting trial in ace a irties 36, checks 38; eurrent receipts Gen Mills Bae we eee fledue’ .. 402 System are currently being sought /one knows; estimates top 90. Rel mee oe ae nae omen issue long underwear to all its far- ee, eer roe BIDS -ourt, jot Se | : : ; = : j tee : bs . ot e ar ‘ . ; . | : Gen Tel, “* As cast wes , Hiss AD Sina een cently a National Geographic So General Motors had all its new Jung personnel, the American tax- natleoh : No 2, Practional ‘ot Bloomtieia A bowling ball, bowling ; Livestock Olle Alum -» 109 | (ally at Selfri ir Force'ciety writer and photographer, Toy if re ; rer. Was saved nahtp ani joomfield Hills City, wees tte 403 Al 80.4) pciety | |models in dealers’ hands early in Payer was saved a crisp $1,000,000.| Pontiac. Michigan, will receiv led ind a pair of fencing foils were “CHICAGO LIVESTOCK Goebel Br... 8 Am Airline... 261) Base. ae team, circling the rim of the South November. It must be noted ion * © « ee nese ee and com Teton j Me c weee 3 Am Can..-:... | : har 5 ’ Yr . : = | ‘ emen stolen from his Sk yesteraey. cmcaco, Dec. 15 (AP)—Salabie hogs Goodyear 64 Am cyan. 1: 43] The schools _are_maintainsa in! Atlantic, visited her on Chile’s Na- that the October_ registrations | Another $2,000,000 was saved | Btoomstield Township, Michigan anti 6:00 ms — a a an parr oereamess a a Flap ad Ha re Mardy... 8 |11 foreign: countries to. provide Varino as . ~ {clude a substantial number’ of| when the General Services Ad- the of . of saa, Banna a ‘Ra feo Flan t rag by breaking a door | #9400 sume.No) sredee under Taaties Greyhound. 148 Am N Gas... 287 /educational opportunities for de- evan ee by the Tetatl-| ministration in Washington found |Sicomfield Township and’ Bloomfiesd ore oer oe “Se t home. |2°T* Mostly steady; all interests in trade Quit Of] 42 Am Rad. -.. 217/pendents of military and civilian There it found a few part-Yah- ers in their outgoing model clean-| it didn’t have to order another | Hills City, 156 East Square Leake : ck we HE NaS Dares St nome: Tnteeig butchers water Mis ip score monte". 38° es Fe 18g personnel stationed overseas, fa" sheepherders and their fam up drives. | half-million blankets Pisce ah eal St be bain pi 2 Pleading gullty to reckless driv. 9%! mixed grade lots No. 1 to 3s 190-/Hooker Ei... 496 Am Tod Si4 A cording to Air F: jlies, grandchildren and great-) Obviously, the first half of 1956) ‘, __..__|tead aloud. Leena esd es y we ap 220 Jb butchers 10.75-11.15: mostly No. 3 Indust Rey .. 48.4 am Viscose “62 ecording to Air Force spokes: srandchildren of Julia, who are will bring several months with! The tax foundation's publication! Separate proposals will be received as ng, 34-year-old Justin Hancock c srade below 11.00; atound 350 [tag Rend Oe ee ics men, 90 per cent of the-avattable ihe inst of a oncetierss trie that! eS as wit called “Monthly Tax Feature” to ‘lls ¥ : a $100 t mostiy No. 1 and 2 190-210 Ib atiIniand Stl ae ; a once-fierce tr at-sales well above current levets» Base Bid A—Genera! Constructien 9 Judson Si., was fine - SCOl 4900+. most anined—N6--2--and—e--230-200'Tnt Bus Mach ¢o7¢ Te G Sul .. 367 positions are in the elementary i shores nd iene Gay added up some of the econo-| Base Bid B—Mechanical Trad | iv , : i "| gg Tran W Air 254 : ~- ruled bleak island shores south of|Demand for new cars always rises 9 pene enews o jail for five days) and placed on > 0.75-1075, mostly 10.60 and below: Int Harv. 365 ‘grades. Salaries range from $377 A aes 5 Z Base Bid C—Electrical Trades day ti esterday by owt 7 _9.25-0.75; @ load sround|Int Nick 81.1 Thompson Pd 533 ithe Strait of Magellan. {toward the end of the year’s first |S reported by various govern-| Base Bid D—Kitchen Equipment 10 days probation yesterday Dy 345 i» butchers at 9.25: most 380-600 Ib Int Paper 1113 Trassamer $12: to $492 a month. ‘quarter and continues at high MeMt agencies over the past year), Proposals must be on forms furnished Pontiac Municipal Judge Cecil Mc- aan eon a Dead (Ramter ve Logg < Pa Un Carbide 108 — “Julia herself is undoubtedly levela th ns ba _ = and a half and found they mounted,” bie Senate sectiearenese iene —allum, . Salabie cattle 2,500: salable calves 200;\Johns Man 86.4 Gait Air Lin 402 Applications, consisting of Stand: the world's most independent. |‘©Y!S rough July. ‘roughly to $169,000,000, or nearly) “mount of 5% of the proposal submitted. Detroiter William Wallace $2, better endl battery ttandy liseer (pada |e eee oe Catt) ire go7 ard Form 57. are available at) minded woman,” reports New- | Even if the monthly average one dollar for every. American, |tained on and afer Wednesder, Dactn sieaded guilty to drunk driving|higuer"tiancer bean: Vale ta% woat-|Ripe “he. 83 OG G84," - H|ted before Jan. 15 to the Overseas| sam Pumetcad, sssintaat chiet | tor 855 should not exceed 5i6.. | RDA RE ; I Suseerena Bf aomang - 382 US Lines... a3 | ore Jan. 15 to the @5| of the National Geographic map | 000 the over-all total would rank \,;: ; 7 ‘ Scie vesterday papas ieee Town ‘Steady . Seok ent aber Gnaies is iow oe &P. 4 us spe! xd Recruitment Representative, Civil- section ~ second only to this year’s in- Widow of Caruso Dies Mich Bh aaaaaind nnn Lahr ome Sst Ce A eee cee rec gez2 Mtg Part Wed 860) Lige & My . 682 US Too... is lian Personnel Office, Selfridge Air) | dicated deliveries of around 7/, ‘of Cancer in Baltimore — |suomitea as a tacnani oe must be was fined Fe te ee oe eed et, prime 1104 To. steers: 23.00; 8! Loew's 19.2 woe on Te. 37 3| Force Base, Michigan. Her family wants her to uve! million units. j Heeadnrped a e to be i = : > ‘00: A eee 31. e - : opel tas | refun L] 4 went ~ ae |gocd ie seni? cae pies 11'50-1n. se: | eeruera : neh wos fat LLioac at : with them in a welt built ; | The ind ape | BALTIMORE {INS)—Mrs. Doro- Specifications, ‘ne pool condition "within ~ounty Jail. | oereea! to low 12.50-1559; ai May D str . 42.4 wee, icone uM { . { A { d house. But not Julia—she insists on “3 e im lustry built more than thy Caruso, widow of the great| ten (10) days of the ning of bids. "argues Fenstace @s. af 188 Ri. | cece pee maar) ep me on moet | Merck 27.1 Woolworth a7 | 0 Oris [ res e staying by herself in a flimsy log, 5.000 cars in November. If the tenor, Enrico Caruso, died today) rurnisn calatuanasy | Parmcuceen se nd ir i, 45, of dr yj! mercial cows 9.76-11.60: eanners and woe ae cn oan ee ean-to, covered with scraps of gld ¢stimate of retail deliveries for!at Union Memorial Hospital in)®"¢ Labor and Material Bond, each jn ‘era Dr., was charged with drunk’ cutters $0010.60; utility and com-| 'wood, fabric, and corrugated iron. the month is approximately cor- galt; f Ghe was € (ns atsivect ct cue ee iriving yesterday before West mercial bulls 13.00-18.25; good to prime; —- - STOCK AVERAGES | er u eh ras " ' : |Baltimore of cancer. She was 62.)the total cogt of which shail . id Township Justice El-.{CRiers, 20.00-26.00: cull and commercial) new YORK—iCompiled by the As- ‘She has a smoky fire for warmth "ect. dealer inventories now! She married Caruso in 1918, In >Y, the accepted bidder ___ 3loom: eld_ ownship justice ‘s bees ee good and choice 175-1,078 Ib [sotiated Press): line | : ‘should be around the 800,000 unit i aft the Itali Ly All proposals submitted shell remain ner C, Dieterle, Pleading guilty, '°6#ts 15.25-16.75; r 3% 8618 «1860 ae —_______and_cooking. and askin laid on. ark® Tesi einedi ai hen 1923 two years after jan firm for a period of thirty (30) days ‘ : E aroufid 875 Ib. Holstein feeders 11.35. Indust Rails Util Stocks| TWO persons went. to the hos-'the bare ground on which to sleep. Mark. They stood at 575.266 cars star's death. st _jafter official opening of bids ae was fined $75 with $25 costs. Salabie sheep 3.000; moderately active: prey da : , ; ee jopera star's death, she was Mar-| The Board of ‘Education reserves the . | : | y . 2832 135.7 728 178.2 pital and one went to jail after a. h iNov. 1. | a . : ; : lambs 25-80 lower; 5 about steady:|weex ago ..... 2572 1392 133 1813) L |And thus she lives, though it can-: ried to Capt. E. A. Ingram in/right to reject any or all bids in whole Pleading guilty to driving under £°°4 ‘© Prime wooled lambs 100 Ib andiMonth ago |... 228.4 134.8 73.2 179.0;headon collision early this morn- not be for much longer.” | Surveys at the factory level a London, but they later were di-/°%.'",Patt, and to waive any informali- he infl ps fli "ye Gad \ibcias er) Getty ne eel wueaS|Yesr/ ene <1... 206.9 1209 675 152.4); ‘month ago indicated all the car-| yorced : {ties there. SOARD-OF EDUCATION uence of liquor, < ar > - mostly. choice gra 11965 high ...... j . a . | ; = | L A uc Peter Mikulik of Maze Park yes-jand. ipeneen er es ie oe 188 low. 22. dou] Lae 67a 148 | Marion K. Taylor, 112 Palmer WHEN SHE DIES makers were scheduling record ; She. devoted most of her time| Tioomfield. Townshi es ————erday was fined $95 with $5 costs.No. 1 and fall shorn pelts 1778: cull tojiee, MSP “tase ‘Gta ssa toro St and his passenger, Walter! When Julia dies, the hardy,Yah-|December output. Now the word jn recent years to writing and trav-| Bloomfield Hills City, Pontiac, aad by Ferndale Justice Eart “noice slaughter ewes 4.25-6 50. i Thompson, 119 Wessen St., were|gan people: will have passed. is getting around that some of eling. She .was.the author of "| ieee le acecn on NS. Nash a poadebeaiald tcvadnad released after treatment in Pon- gs £ 8 them have revised their schedules! biography of Caruso and an auto-| "| Becretary, See : : I ke Retur ning Pigures after decimal gemia ase eighths tiac General Hospital. The) Yahgans were first vinited | downward. : . | biography, and had been working! ; ee * pep cogimeed, pny fap oye Ipaidwin Rupvers ....'™ 1G “ies! The other driver, Cleveland G./DY the French explorer Jacques’ Even if Decenfber production on a volume of Caruso’s Tecipes.| opin ORE. OF, PUBLIC BALE Baron Ave., was fined $100 and Hospitality Today sens huenteers eae -24 26 Tademy, 31, of 268 W. Wilson St.,|L Hermite in 1624. More than two should fall short of original pro-, ee 29th day of December at 10:00 am. the sent to jail for five days, after be-|": pieenes) Eretecis 26 32 was charged with being drunk and centuries passed, however, before|jections the prospect still is good’ AC Steal euch highaat wiseert fac ocuk “ecenabes ng found guilty Upeatibns by Mu to Colorado Pal Midwest Abrasive “an 13 . 8.2 disorderly. any serious study was given to the|the year’s total car ‘assemblies ean otea Hudson Sedan. Motor Mn 0d Serial vicipal Judge Cecil McCallum on a. . Wayne lOtee*) 11 13! Taylor told Pontiac Police that S0uthernmost people of the world. | will hit the oft-estimated eight mil-| HOUSTON, Tex. —Classified ad fen “Seid” metne Stele. We stoned at of drunk and d charge being in! is) GETTYSBURG, Pa. Uh — Presi-| “No sale: bid and asked. \Tademy was driving on the wrong/ Then came the famed voyages of lion’ mark. The production count in the House for Sale cclumns of | ssid sédress ang may Be ineperted sé wederly. ,dent Eisenhower pays back some’ ‘side of the road when the accident|the Beagle, on which Charles Dar-|Passed the 72 million mark last a local newspaper, Southgate —|the right to bid at the sate. z | A Urgent that we must contact/Colorado hospitality today, show-Fair Brings In $572 woman driving two-tone green ing his old friend and fishing com-| HILLSDALE — Despite bad Buick at scene of accident on panion Aksel Neilsen around the weather, the Hillsdale County Fair M-59, Wed., Dec. 7, 9:55. amr Eisenhower farm. C. Davies, 2117 Penobscot. 5-4800. Call collect. —Adv.. Nielsen, Denver mortgage | banker who owns the Rocky Donald Mapp, 27, of 32 Maple’ fountain fishing lodge where St., was fined $50_and sentenced the President—hasoften stayed, 0 10 days in jail for illegal sales} was the second old friend to by Municipal Judge Cecil Mc- drop in im two days. “, , | ~allum yesterday. Eisenhower had lunch yesterday Christmas trees. Largest selee- with Clifford Roberts, the New tion of Scotch pine, spruce and York investment broker who was balsam at large American Legion on his way where the President lot, corner Auburn-and Paddock. would be going now but for his ; . —AGV.'heart attack—to Augusta Ga. Na- . Auction. Christmas gifts, home tional Golf Club. Roberts is board furnishings: new building mate- chairman of Augusta National. _fials, At Oxford Community Auc-| The President's brother Dr. Mil- tion, Sat. Dec. 17th at 1 p. m. ton S. Eisenhower also visited the OA 8-2681. —Adv.' farm yesterday and stayed over- - Merle Berry, 47 Oliver St., tora TBht. se « _, _ Pontiac Police that his bicycle was; ' stolen- from in front of-64 Glen- State Uni : : Sead State University. Several White, wood Ave. yesterday. ’ | House staff members also were’ Rummage sale. Clean clothes, dinner guests of the Chief Execu- bedding, toys, furn., rugs, electric tive. % He is president of Pennsylvania ete va mt bomen : 3 ) ov &. m-9 p.m. 48. 2 * a4 ‘theme “eth ino dean TOKYO #—Typhoon Ruth, a gi- pared with a loss of $1,536 in 1954. grandstand receipts difference. Next year’s fair will be held Sept. 23 through 29. Won't Wait on Bandit LOUISVILLE, Ky, (®—Mrs. Win- nie Caroland, 32, doesn't figure her out cash to holdup men. So when the bandit entered the Dinette the money in the cash register, making off with $25. To Be Guest. Choir WATERFORD—The choir of the Waterford Community Church will be the guest choir on Crusade for Christ TV Channel 7, Saturday morning at 9:30. Also on Money, get it yourself.” He did, special. choral number entitled, ‘I Love Him” the choir will sing the “ Se sng Pai Detroit today announced a contract but other revenue made up the job as a waitress includes dishing grill—hand in pocket—and demand-' = told him, “If you want s Osteopathic Group | | | loccurred at S, Saginaw and Parke Sts, showed a net profit of $572, com- Fruehauf to Service | The Fruehauf Trailer Co., |to_servic® house trailers _majfttlac- tured by the Pontiac Coach Co, in Drayton Plains, The nationwide service facilities of Fruehauf, which operates 106 factory-controlled branches in the U.S, and Canada, will be available homes. Elects New Officers Dr. Bernard Horowitz, of 3513, Elizabeth Lake Rd., was elected, president of the Pontiac Osteo-| pathic Hospital at a general meet-' ing of the institution’s staff this week, He succeeds Dr, Charles Fortino, of 158 W. Huron St. « New vice president is Dr. M. .R. Randazzo, of Bloomfield Hills. Dr. of. Service reported. Constabulary. re-| Car Sales Need i Mrs. Jessie Heatley The 1955 fourth quarter share- | WIXOM-—Service for Mrs, Jessie holder total doesn’t include em- Heatley, 73, 615 Sibley St., will be|Ployes who are obtaining a com- ‘Richardson-Bird Funeral Home in,tion under the General” Motors Milford with burial Wixom Savings-stock purchase © program Cemetery. in Mrs, Heatley died that became effective Oct. 1. Also awarded watches were Ane y Wednesday - a a saa win visited Tierra del Fuego in| ‘1832. The Yahgans were canoemen. In lightweight craft made of beech bark sewn with whalebone strips or shredded saplings, they | dared cold and violent waters to hunt seale with crude harpeons. | They lived in beehive-like huts covered with grass or bark, and | Soon surrounded by piles of mus- | sel shells, Yahgans called themselves “Ya- to purchasers of Pontiac mobile} mana,” meaning “human beings” jor “the living,"”” and such is the The service will include repairs, name given to their language. In! remodeling and parts replacement. 1881 some 2,500 to 3,000 Yahgans | jdwelt in southern Tierra del Fu-) ego. Then white man's diseases; par- ticularly measles, found them with | no resistance. - Within five years there were, less than 500 teft. By 1933 they numbered only 30. ; ' Bus Bandits Kill Eight MANILA (#—Bandits ambushed a passenger bus 9) miles north of| Manila todiy, killed eight persons! and wonuded 16, Philippine News. W. R. Robinson, of 6583 Commerce Rd., was named , while opening song, and the closing in- ills, was. Dr, M. C. Jackaon, of Christan} H elected : ports Said“ the driver crashed a roadblock but the bandits riddled | whey lb 4 i | ; i ,Chapel with burial in Oxbow Lake | the foreign countries of the world.” held at 11 a.m. Saturday from the,™0M stock interest in the corpora. ” week. Another 180,000 completions: this. week would -push —the total: |above the 7,700,000 unit mark.’ | Attractive, spacious home. Three bedrooms, condition. den, 26 baths, perfect + M.D. Rieuen oy Dec. 16, 17, 1068 Le ; ee rae ae Most of the carmakers brought out their new models a month earlier than has been their. custom since World War II. Whether the Serving Good Food Since 1929! pressure to clean up stocks of, Breakfasts Luncheons outgoing models cut into éarly! RIKE |Sales of the 1956 models is being R FOUNTAIN debated widely in industry bby of Riker B . | quarters. i Es of \Just can’t help but be pleased and com- pletely thrilled with the New 1956 Cadillac . .. better see how little it costs to oWn one. . oe a ; path { VW i 3 } i ; : - * ® -, JEROME Oldsmobile - Cadillac ; 280 8. Saginaw st. Ph, FE 4.3566