f t jp j f “e THE PONTIAC PRESS __. ©. G. Weather Boreas Forecast . : Continued cold (Details on Bage 2) . : , 116th YEAR * %*%** PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, JANUARY 17, 1959 —24 PAGES OMrPeD, panos, DOTEREATIONAL ‘Te Castro Calls ally of 500,000 to Back ss Bloomfield Girl Reigns She’s State’s Junior Miss judged on personality, beauty and veamee Nearly 2 Hours A 1t-year-cold Pontiac Central judges last night, but the tears fell pace ay = eee | aoa Bloomfield Township. She won the| SW&&F Plum Fairies.” Then = Soviet Visitor Cites first Junior Miss. title over 11 other contestants sso d — sade tor her own | ‘Usefyl Exchange’ of tap dancing (nterpretation of “be | Ideas After Meeting = 2 x *¢ 2 by Poy on aa TE a. eesti on Cae ice a Winner of the statewide contest, High School senior smiled as she| was Shirley Gail Hutchison, daugh- danced into the hearts of the| io. of vr. and Mrs. Tommy Hutch- ison of 2086 Lakeward Lane, Pentiae Preas Phete MICHIGAN’S JUNIOR MISS — Selected as tops in personality, beauty and talent last night and winner of the first Michigan's Junior Miss Pageant was Shirley Hutchison, 17, of 208 Lakeward Lane, Bloomfield Township. The Pontiac Central High senior, chosen over 11 other contestants, now will School in America's Junior Miss Pageant in Mobile, Ala., in March. The Pontiac Area Junior Chamber of Commerce sponsored the state contest. talent. tiie day miniature Miss America CON-| ereetings to our prime minister,” Jaycees. A brown-eyed, brownette Shirley is a teacher at the Love School of Music & Dance in Pontiac on Saturdays and Mondays after school. This year she will work in summer stock in New London, N.H. But Shirley’s ultimate goal aft- er a dancing career is “to get Shirly received a dress by Peg- gy’s Women’s Apparel, a sweater from the Lion Store, a certificate to have her portrait taken by Has- kill Studios and one for a pair of a\@Mikoyan began by saying he iqia “useful exchange of Presidential Peek lke and Mikoyan Discuss Views 4 WASHINGTON &® —President Eisenhower and Anastas I. Mikoyan dis- cussed U.S.-Soviet differ- ences. for an hour and 45 minutes today and Mikoyan said they agreed they had views.” The Soviet deputy pre- mier delivered a personal message from Premier Nikita Khrushchev wishing Eisenhower good health and “success on the road to better relations between our two countries.” “The President thanked me and asked me to convey similar warm AP Wirephote IKE INSPECTS ATOMIC DEVICE — President Eisenhower inspects a small atomic device for production of electricity—a development hailed as a major achievement by Atomic Energy Commission officials. With the president are Maj. Gen. Donald J. Keirn, center, the AEC’s chief of aircraft réactors, and AEC Chair- man John A. McCone. Midget Atomic Battery Is Revolutionary Device Mikoyan reported. Secretary of State Dulles and ether officials participated in the conference which began at 9 a.m. in Eisenhower's office. Mikoyan, wearing his usual out- door dress of dark gray overcoat and blue plaid scarf, walked into a room where reporters hastily gathered after the conference. * * x It had been generally expected that the meeting with Eisenhower would last at least two full hours since about 50 per cent of the time was devoted to translations be- tween the Russian and English lan- supposed the newsmen had & “shower of questions” ready. But, he said, he would not be able to the power industry. 51 Feared Dead in Airliner Crash Find Only 1; Argentine Plane Plunges Into Sea Just Before Landing BUENOS AIRES (AP) — An Ar- gentine airliner with 52 persons aboard crashed into the Atlantic Ocean Friday night off the sea- side resort of Mar de] Plata. Only one survivor was found. Tsermengas Guilty; His Wite Collapses — Demitrios “Jimmy” Tsermengas’ expectant wife collapsed and was rushed to the hospital yesterday min- utes after a Circuit Court jury convicted him of second- degree murder. Tsermengas, a 40-yea r-old ex-convict from Texas Keep Your Collar his wife, Constance, seven- * was on his way back to the. Oakland County jail when answer them hecause as all could see “I have my coat on all ready and am not prepared to hold a press conference.” “I can say we held an ex- change of views on many mat- ters of mutual interest, We did not conduct negotiations but tried te find the positions of our coun- tries on many matters,” Mikoyan sald. “This was not a negotiation but a useful exchange of views. At the end, the President, the Secretary of State and we all came to the conclusion that the exchange was useful, After the brief statement, Miko-| yan broke off the session with re-, porters saying in English: ‘“Thank you and good by.’ Eisenhower and power needs of man. 30 Milkmen Protest Store's Milk Prices directly into electrical en ergy. steam, turbines, generators the aisles of an A & P supermarket’ whatsoever. ’ the store’s low milk price. WASHINGTON (UPI)—The government has come up with a trifling little gadget that may revolutionize It is a five-pound device roughly resembling an old- fashioned flatiron. Its descendants could make obsolete all the cumbersome and costly plants now supplying the This gadget, called SNAP III, was announced by the Atomic Energy Commission yesterday by way of the White House. It is a device for converting heat energy It doesn’t bother with “ Some 30 milkmen milled about or any rotating machinery in Waterford Township last night,| Col. Jack Armstrong, deputy apparently demonstrating against niey of the AEC’s aircraft reactor ge idivision, today predicted such bat- The milkmen entered the store, teryless power might also be usedjary but that he was unable to * * * Almost four hours after the va- cation flight crashed a man was Up, It's Going to Get Colder months pregnant with their fourth child, was over- found alive on the beach, his clothes burned or ripped off. All others on the twin-engine plane apparently perished. Only three bodies were recovered in predawn darkness, Searchers who were hampered by stormy waters said many of those in’ the plane presumebly were trapped inside and drowned. The airliner was on a special summertime vacation flight from Buenos Aires to Mar del Plata, The mercury will plunge to near zero tonight in southern Michigan with an expected low of about above in the Pontiac area, the U.S. Weather Bureau forecast to- trend is forecast for Sanday. To- morrow’s high will be around 16. come with grief. Six men and six women jurors had just found Tsermengas guilty 9) as charged of killing George Kean, a Texas hoodlum, after deliberat- ing one hour and 47 minutes. He could receive anywhere from one year to life in prison when Circuit|>™ Foer-the next five days tempera- to Bahia Blanca, another 260 miles west. It was coming in for a landing at Mar del Plata in windy and rainy weather when it smashed located at 949 W. Huron St. at problems of Berlin, a divided Ger- many and disarmament. Mikoyan arrived at the White House about two minutes before his 9 a.m. appointment time, He was met by Brig. Gen. Andrew J. Goodpaster, White House staff sec- retary. Soviet Ambassador Mikhail Menshikov and interpreter Oleg Troyanovsky -accompanied Miko- n. Before the meeting with Mikoyan (Continued on Page 2, Col. 8) News Flash Mikoyan presumably discussed the 6:15 p.m. and stayed 45 minutes. They took pushcarts and strolled through the aisles, All of them pur-, chased an item before leaving, according to A & P district super- visor Cyril F. Borst. “The demonstration was of- derly and they caused us he trouble,” Borst said. The store was not busy and there were enough pushearts for everyone, Borst added. He said the men were identified: ag milkmen when customers rec- ognized some persons in the group. ** * * The milkmen refused to speak to store employes, answering all questions with a “no comment.” Borst said the police were not lin the future to: Provide juice for instruments in large, unmanned satellites for long periods of time; furnish shelter heat and power for com- munications and weather instru- ments in remote areas like the arctic and antarctic; provide new types of navigational aid for air and sea traffic; and allow use of radio-controlled beacons which might forecast the devel- | opment of hurricanes, ‘Human Ice Cube’ Uses ‘Antifreeze’ SAULT STE. MARIE (UPID—A “human ice cube,"" who doctors said was kept alive for 12 hours in zero weather because of a heavy concentration of alcohol in his blood, fought today to recover, * * * Dr. William F, Mertaugh said it was a nip and tuck battle between life and death for 55-year-old Wil- Ham Korbi whose body tempera- ture had been down to a few de- grees above freezing. Korbi was frozen “stiff as a beard” when he was found along a road on Drummond Island in Upper Michigan early yesterday. Mertaugh said alcohol was 50 concentrated in Korbi's° blood hstream it literally acted as anti- freeze and prevented the blood fronivicing and bursting the blood vessels. * * * Korbi was en route to a friend’s house on the island when he |stopped to rest along the road. Two surveyors, John Hewett of Sault Ste. Marie and Leroy Adams of Detroit, rushed him to War Memorial Hospital, Mertangh said the temperature at his ankles was 39 degrees and in the toes probably was at the freezing point, Mertaugh theorized that after sit- ting down in the snow, Korbi kept taking drinks from two bottles of liquor until his arms became so frozen he couldn't raise the bottle. * * * The two nearly empty bottles were found beside him. He was conscious when found, but unable to move. Ail (Cuban Leader Raps U. $. for ‘Gunboat’ Role Mass Meeting Set Up to Demand Return of ‘War Criminals’ From Our News Wires HAVANA—Fidel Castro has called for a 500,000- man mass meeting Wednes- day to “reject foreign in- tervention” and demand that the United States re- turn “Batista war crim- inals” and their money. In a bitterly anti-Ameri- ‘can speech’ last night, Cas- tro accused the United States of resorting to “defa- mation” and “gunboat diplomacy” - against his regime because it includes no one “they can buy or bribe.” He called on his supporters to stage ‘‘the most gigantic concen- tration our nation has ever seen” outside the Cuban ‘white house” Wednesday, Castro’s attack on the United States was a reaction to con- gressional criticism of the whole- sale executions of supporters of ousted exPresident Fulgenico Ba- tista now going on throughout Cuba, He called on unions, civic or- ganizations, students, commerce x * * It would take several days, per- and industry to “assemble mas- sively before the presidential pal- haps as long as two weeks, to de-|ace in a demonstration for justice termine whether it would be nec-|and demand that the United States essary to amputate any arms or return the war criminals and the legs, the doctor said. Absolutely Not! Say Veterans Refuse to Support Plan to Use Trust Fund in State’s Financial Crisis LANSING WA flat no. That was the answer of spokes- men for organized veterans when , Gov, Williams bid for support of his plan to bail the state out of its tightening cash emergency. * * * Afterwards, Williams told news- men the state might “hit the wall” financially as early as mid-Febru- predict the time with exactness and it could be later. “This evil day keeps staring us in the face,” he sighed last night, Williams received the word about 6 p.m. from veterans leaders in the executive office where they had re- turned after an hours’ conference earlier in the day and then retiring for a private huddle. “We unanimously agree that no The device employs radioactive chemicals which convert the heat. into electricity without any mov- ing parts. The AEC calls it SNAP UI — short for system for nuclear aux- iliary power. tampering, changes or alterations affecting the 50 million dollar vet- polonium 210 as a heat source and orang trust fund are acceptable to the organized veterans,’ said a typewritten statement handed’ to him. * * * Nicholas R. Firis, state com- mander of the Marine Corps League, acted in behalf of himself and commanders of seven other major veterans organizations. In brief, theeGovernor’s plan is to lend the bulk of securities in the 4 ee into the ocean about 150 yards * * # later was released. tel in downtown Detroit today | called because there was no need| The development at present from shore. The lowest temperature in down- t the lined.| 284 police said first reports were for them. tonsixts of a five-pound device, One eyewitness said he heard|‘°W" Pontiac preceding § a.m. was) sry acca gies pron that at least two people had been | ‘They were perfectly within their) 4% inches in diameter and 5'% the plane's engines fail just be-|7 degrees. The reading at 1 p.m. P = Killed and a number of others in- |rights,” he commented, ‘Lots of| inches at resem- fore the crash. was 15. t (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) | jured. our customers are milkmen.” (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) ' A caretaker at a resort park said the plane devel- apparently oped trouble as it carne down for a landing, tried to regain altitude and then plunged into the sea, He said he heard a terrific explosion. Civil Service Nominee WASHINGTON U® — President In Today's Press" Comics eek eueeen Peete Tr li Editorials EEEET ES EEEF AEE RE He 4 Home. Section eee eee ree ee 13-16 % : La % a é * TV & Radio Programs ..... 3 oe Wilson, Pari eee ee ee ee & Pages eaeeeeeeee 7 F eee eS \ecetiee ‘ pk pa : * Pe o Son Pontiac Press Phote mainly of ginger ale and ice cream. ‘In enjoying it—are (from soa ac , . 4 t ‘ veterans fund to hard-up state uni- versities which would mortgage them with banks to raise operating cash, Firts explained that he and the other leaders were under state | convention mandates: and could give no other answer. Williams said he understood, but asked them to think more about it as +~“vitizens.”’ ‘ ‘ Later, during a dinner hour dis- cussion on the state’s plight with newsmen, Williams said he might ilaunch some sort of campaign to further impress on the public the gravity of the situation, Distribution of informative leaf- lets and television appearances were possibilities, he said. millions of dollars they took with them.” In Washington, American offi- cials said today the United States may have to return escaped sup- porters of ousted dictator Batista to Cuba to stand trial if the new rebel government accused them of serious crime such as murder, But these officials said that under the U. S.-Cuban extradition treaty this country would not have to send back persons cited only for political offenses. 450 TO DIE Castro estimates that 450 persons will die before the current wave of executions ends in Cuba, Already 250 persons have been Castro gave his estimate to a crowd of about 10,000 in front of the presidential palace Friday night, , 8 2 The Cuban people generally have applauded the trials and execu- tions. Police broke up 200 persons in front of a police station Friday demonstrating for lynching of one suspect. (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) He Wants Paper to Ask His Son to Come Home KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — A father with worry in his’ voice ‘called the Knoxville Journal Fri- day night and asked if he could “run a piece in the paper about my boy.” “He ran away from home Thursday and we haven't heard from him since,” he explained. “Il want him to please come ie. Asked his son's age, the father replied, “he's 37." Fire Routs Families Into 13 Below Cold REV. GEORGE WIDDIFIELD Baccalaureate Service Sunday Pontiac Central Class to Hear Sermon by Rev. Widdifield ..The Rev. C. George Widdifield, rector of All Saints Episcopal Church. will deliver the sermon tomorrow evening for the calaureate service of the January Pontiac Central High School class. Central Methodist Church on E. Huron street will be the scene of the service which begins at 7 30 pm * * * The 144 graduating seniors, | their parents and friends, will hear the Rev, Widdifleld speak on “Listening to Life.” A. Michael Dempsey of the PCH Vocal Music Department will give an organ recital preceding the processional, He will play ‘‘Pre- lude and Fugue in G Minor” by Bach, “Night Song’ by Schumann and “Sortie Toccata” by Dubois * * * The Rev. Danial J. Wallace, as- sociate minister of Central Metho dist Church, will read the invoca- tion and scripture following the graduates march to “Pomp and| Circumstances’ by Elgar. The Pontiac Central Cholr, un- | der the direction of George H, | _ Putnam, will sing “To Thee We Sing’ hy Sechvedov and the “Seven-fold A-Men" by Stainer, * * * The Rev. Philip W. Somers, pas-| tor of Marimont Baptist Church, will offer the prayer and pronounce the benediction. The graduating students, who will receive their diplomas Friday evening, will leave the church marching to the — recessional, “Grand March from Tannhauser’ hy Wagner. eee em a Beats Store Manager Unable to Open Safe TRAVERSE CITY (®—-A gunman attempting to hold up a Kroger store here today beat the manager unconscious “because he couldn't open the store's safe The gunman took $2 from the manager's pockets and fled in a stolen car. City and state police| and sheriff's deputies set up road blocks in the Traverse City area.|their golden anniversary, Michigan-Indiana Bo Bac- | ee ; é ‘That Gold's Mine. Says Gas Attendant CORSICANA, Tex. (UPI)—Secret iService agents from Dallas were where he had cached it, but “I | expected here today to ask a 38. lyear-old service station attendant, father of eight children, about the 1 $2,408,000 in gold bricks he says ‘he found and hid. | But the owner, if he has it, ap- peared in no hurry to give it up. * * *® gaid yesterday he asked the agents) to question D. E. Jones, and ‘‘make a demand upon him for the gold, if he has it, in behalf of the fed- eral government.” Jones, who works from 9 a.m. fo 9 p.m. in a service station to support his family, sald he found 86 bars of gold last May 17, in a berry patch east of Alto, Tex. Jones said his eye was attracted by something that looked like a jjar sticking out of the ground He | dug it up, and it was a gold bar, | weighing about 50 pounds. ‘FINDS 85 MORE | His interest aroused, he dug ‘further and found 85 bars mre. ile said he borrowed a truck to ‘haul the gold away, e | dones wouldn't say where he | stored it — although he’ denied | burying it — but stated that he held on to it for a year In | the belief that after that time no One could question his right to it, | However, Steger said an ordi- [nary citizen is pot allowed by law | ito possess more gold than the Hillings in his teeth, certain coins fand jewelry. : * * * | He added that the law provides for a fine of twice the value of |the metal, should Jones refuse to | to the government. lhand jit over |The estimated value of 86 bars of gold, weighing 50 pounds cach, Is $2,408,000 New Atomic Battery Called Revolutionary (Continued From Page One) bling a ship's barometer. Offt- clals estimate the weight could be cut to three pounds, The model cost $15,000. But AEC) spokesmen say it probably could be turned out on a production basis jfor about $200 per unit * * * Technicians for the AEC, which| isponsored the development, said lthe device is the most efficient for Its particular purpose known to ex iat anywhere—including the Soviet Union SNAP TIL was developed by the Martin Co. of Baltimore in con- junction with the Minnesota Min- ling and Manufacturing Co, of St. rai nee AE 'Paul They'll Help Youngsters ‘Mark 50th Anniversary | MOUNT PLEASANT, — Utah ‘(AP)—Mr, and Mrs, Peter Peter- ‘son, who celebrated their 80th lwedding anniversary jast month, will help the youngsters celebrate! Tuesday Their oldest son and his wife, ithe A. L. Petersons will observe rder Buried More Snow for Niles and South Bend From Our News Wires The Niles community dug itself ouf from under 20 inches of snow fodity. But the weatherman said more! Was on the way * * * “Another six inches would para- Ivze us,"' State Police Trooper Nor-| man Schenmaker said, The Berrien County community The Weather Full U, $. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Mostly cloudy, rather windy and cold today with eccaslional snow flurries, bigh M6, Partly cloudy and continued cold tenight and tomorrow with a few snow finrrles tonight ®, a little Jower in suburbs fomeorraw M# tiles, diminishing tonight Today in Pontiac Lowest temperature prececing @ aim. 7 At Bam: Wind veioctty 19-14 mph Direction: North to northwest Sun sets Baturday at 8 27 pin fin rises Munday at T Alar Moon rises Maturday at 17 19 p oni, Moon sete Munday at 2 18 ais Down m #-s + tisaes # 12 m q lpm town Temperatures oe: L It am 4 sneer teoceees & Mi wseee-.. 10 Friday in Pontiac fax recorded downtown) Highest temperature Aeea ot Lowest temperature Mean temperature Weather —now One Year Ago in Pont Highest tempereture Lowest temperature Mean temperature . ong Weather—fair Highest ana Lowest Temperatures ‘This Date in 07 Years fae in Southwestern Michigan was the hardest hit by the snow- storm which buried neighboring South Bend, Ind., yesterday, causing the Hooster City's mayor to call a state of emergency. At least 100 cars were stalled In jNiles, high schools canceled bas- iketball games and more storms iswept St. Joseph, Benton Harbor, [Buchanan and Dayton Hill. * * * Stormy weather and biting cold jstruck crippling blows across ; laries who intended to buy guns U. 8S. Attorney William “Steger jnot been disturbed in 50 years. ee ee ea THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, JANUARY 17, 1959 dones declined to tell reporters | never said I buried It, like some | pleces in the newspapers said,” he stated, “IT have it in a safe place." Smiling at suggestions the gold) might have been placed in the berry patch by Cuban revolution-; with it, Jones sald ‘“‘that gold was there a long time. ‘PECULIAR FRAGMENTS’ “T know that particular area had L talked with other persons who were pretty old and they told me they don't think that aren has been disturbed for around 105 years,” ‘he sald. . . There were “peculiar looking _ fragments” among the bars, he | | added, which might have been | | decayed wood or cowhide. Jones said he was assured by Union messenger finds the going rough as he at- tempts to get his bicyele egt and going in the snow which hit the South Bend-Niles area yester- ‘ AP Wirephote day. A state of emergency was declared by the South Bend mayor as workers attempted to unsnarl snow-stalled traffic, ‘Sorry | Shot Them: Sandah! Tells Authorities A former Waterford Township, The youth, discharged from a youth charged with the murder of California mental institution in No- he in-| his parents told authorities in Sac- vember, was charged with murder ‘iniramento (Calif.) yesterday, ‘I'm in the death of his parents, Ewald levery way.” iaary I shot them, but I'm not L. Sandahl, 52, and his wife, Eliza- | joe they're dead." jbeth Mae, 55 David K. Sandahl, 20, said he | * 6 ke Castro Calls Mass killed ble parente SLED his | The parents were shot with a .22 fo Back Executions ithe owner of the property where he found the treasure that he would |make no challenge for ownership. ‘Anything Jones gives him, the | property owner’ was reported to ‘have said would be like “getting _candy from heaven,” + * & Jones’ feelings about the treas- ure were summed up in his re- lnark that “if anybody tries to take it, I am going to act like| ithe alligator when the pond dried) jup” | _ He maintained, however, tended to help the government | father made him practice eight ‘caliber pistol Monday. Sandahl re- hours a day on the accordion, —- mained in the house, sleeping on ‘a cot four feet from his father's | * * * | “I didn't want to kill anyone body. ' * i e 4 F A | . : : ; ov (Continued From Page One) It was just that my dad_ kept! The killings were not discovered | eee “a — * until he was involved in an acci- jhammering at me to practice all q+ Wednesday evening, Highway _ covered the bodies. * * * The family, which lived at 6411 Harriet St., moved to California in April, and David spent a month in the DeWitt Sanitarium, Auburn, Calif | He was released with the rec- Anyone hay. ommendation that - outside treat- : “ment be continued ‘if possible. lturns may call the Oakland avenue | His father worked for the Aero- jet General Corp. * * * loffice, FF. 2-0208, Mondays through It was reported in Washington) Fridays, 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. ’ that career diplomat Philip A. Bon Pp t T p § { sal, presently US. ambassador to} fs | on lac r00 er en Bolivia, will be the new American Story s Moral: Stop Car envoy to Cuba, Cuban Foreign Min-|t9 Argue With Wife to tt. Ignace Post Ister Roberto Agramonte said Bon- sal would be acceptable DERBY, England (UPI)— Sidney) Pontiac State Police Trooper Ambassador Earl E. T, Smith) brown, 35, charged with speeding, Roger M. Snow is one of 18 state resigned as U.S. ambassador to|told the court yesterday that while police officers being transferred, Cuba last week, The revolutionary|driving he was having an argu- jt wag announced today by State regime had charged he had fa-|ment with his wife ‘Police Commissioner Joseph A. vored the Batista regime. “I decided to put my foot down Childs in East Lansing. = aa firmly and it went on the acceler-| Tyooper Snow will be transferred ator,” he explained. {rom the State Police Training The court fined him $11. Ignace Post. Taking his place will ———— ‘be trooper Carl N. Olson of the Are Their Faces Red! —_—_New Buffalo Post. | Snow came to the Pontiac Post LOS ANGELES (UPD—Embar-'rm the State Police Training rassed police today were looking School in East Lansing, in Nov., for one of their prowl cars that! 195d. was stolen from the police head-| The transfers are effective Feb. quarters parking lot. iL, A dispatch from Havana sald | a treasury official estimated | about three million dollars had | been paid in advance in recent days. Newspapers in Brazil, Peru, é Ecuador, Argentina and Costa jthe time. I just wanted him to Rica have called for a halt to the bloodshed, The Uryguayan y 1 ja. | ates nie . bala | His musie teacher said David | “ye | was a good player but not of President Manuel Urrutia to stop | the killings. Income Tax Filing | professional ability. atin-American delegates: 4» seal cues wo gels able Other Latin-Americ: leg: wen either (a wel a at the tN. reportedly are nian ASSIStaNCe Offered practice eight hears a day. The ning a similar appeal. U.S. Sen father told him he worked Wayne Morse (D-Ore.) suggested The Internal Revenue Service| eight hours a day anal there a 2 Washington) that cast Leas has a new and bigger office for in-| 20 reason why he shouldn't also. | UN, cenit ie the tria come tax help. | Young Sandahl quit school in the and jexecu tion nicthods | The new office is at 65 Oakland! second year of high school, and PAY ADVANCE TAXES Ave., replacing the old one at 5342 had been admitted to a mental in- Some U.S. and Cuban business-;W. Huron Ave. stitution for treatment of schizo- men and industrialists are paying| Tax experts will be on hand phrenia (split personality) while advance taxes to help the revolu- from a.m. to 4 p.m. Mondays and the family lived in Davenport, la., tionary government, the New York |F ridays until April 15, the dead- police said Times reported. line for filing returns * * * i They'll help anyone who has| questions that can’t be answered | easily over the telephone, But the local office reminded) Pontiac taxpayers that many The Cuban government named | questions can be answered simply Havana lawyer Ernesto Dihigo asiover the telephone Cuban ambassador to the United ing difficulty filing out his tax re- States, The Southland shivered in the fresh surge of frigid air, with tem- peratures dropping into the teens in northern sections of Alabama and Georgia. [t was freezing in northern Florida * The freak snowstorm spread across areas fn Michigan and In- diana for 65 miles from the south. eastern corner of Lake Michigan. Winds of 20 or more mph, whipped the heavy snowfall in the South Bend area into huge drifts. « * * ibroad sections in the eastern half lof the country today. | and storms created | Ice snow hazardous conditions in driving + { ° High many sections of the Northeast.) The storm which struck near the Winds northwesterly 14-22 Blizzard conditions were forecast eastern shore of in parts of the lower Great Lakes region TefMmperatures tumbled to 25 de grees below zero in northern Min- nesota as the huge masa of icy ‘air spread eastward to the Atlantic Coast. istrong winds carried the air inland, However, maintenance, crews worked throughout the night, clearing most of the main roads. * * * Lake Michigan was caused by cold air which was awarmed as it crossed the lake and ‘ohilled when it reached the South iBend area. Normally, the Weather Bureau said, the chill would have ideveloped at the shoreline but nme " $250,000 Sewer Grant Told by Rep. Broomfield Congresaman William 8. Broom, field (R-Oakland County) today an- nounced approval of a $250,000 fed- eral grant to defray construction coats of the North Evergreen san- 63 in 1952 “3 in 1087 itary sewer to benefit Pontiac, Bir- Friday's Temperature Chart mingham, Bloomfield Hills, Troy Bejtimore 86 0 Memphis’ 98 19/Nd Bloomfield Township, Bismarck 0 -6 Miami 16 44 * * * Buttato mf i Minneapolte Nee Broomfield received word of the 7 H j * eeiy ' Chicago 143 “6 Clncianatt 4 4 Rew ~— * it approval from the Department of Denver i : Prt . f aa Health Education, and Welfare. B wer J} ef Bt Lous «6th, At the same time, Harold K, ort Worth 43 32 8 Francisco $7 46) Schone, director of the county's _ G. Rapids 20 11 8 & Marte 17 -14 Dep: rt : rh A i? sonville ‘ i Washington Hi iW whi - nage + pgie Mhaty | A Sean ashington ch ts ing the seWer, an Kansas City 238 11 tth 8 42) , , | Los Angeles. Fa amps 6s 33. Mounced Wat the department would. make @ second application to get a similar grant.for the South Evergreen section of the huge 8',175,000 sewer system. This section will benefit South- field, the city of Lathrup Village, Westwood Village, Bingham Farms and Franklin. A first request for this segment was turned down. Schone said a tentative construc: tlon date for the North Evergreen gection has been set up March 1. Approval from the Michigan Mu. nicipal Finance Commiasion to is- sue general obligation bonds to fi- nance the sewer is pengiing, Schone tsaid, i ; AP Wirephote GOLDEN DAZE — D, E. Jones, 38, of Corsicana, Tex., who says he found almost $2\% million dollars worth of gold bara, claims he hag hidden the treasure, and won't tell where it is until he gets clear Ute to it, i } E AP Wirephote GET CUBA POST— Philip A. Bonsal, a career diplo- mat, is rumored to become the MAY new U.S. Ambassador to Cuba. He is currently ambassador to Bolivia. Earl E. T. Smith re- cently resigned as envoy to Cuba. Tsermengas Guilty; His Wife Collapses (Continued From Page One) foreman Maynard Siebert of Royal 'Oak announced the verdict. x * * Siebert later told newsmen the jury took five ballots to arrive at the decision, A unanimoug opinion is necessary for conviction. The foreman further said that Jurors were long deliberating be- cause some questioned Tsermen- gas’ intent in the December 1957 slaying of Kean in a Com- merce Township home. * * * Jurors could have acquitted him charge of manslaughter, which carries a maximum sentence of 15 years in prison. ON STAND 5 HOURS Tsermengas had spent five hours on the stand in his own defense Wednesday and Thursday, claim- ing throughout his testimony he meant no harm when he tried to strike Kean over the head with a pistol after he became unruly fol- lowing a drinking spree. t * x Tsermengas, whose back- ground includes three years of college in addition to hig crim- inal record, claimed the pistol went off accidentally, prosecutor, closed his case yester- other Texas hoodlums plotted to kill Kean, 32, because they feared for a robbery in Sault Ste, Marie. * * *® This four-man “band of badman bandits," as Barry described them, ald E. Chandler, whom Tsermen- of uniforms and a rifle to use in the planned robbery. Chandler was not connected with the killing other than being an eyewitness, The bizarre slaying came to light last September when Michigan make-shift grave outside Alpena. A tip led them to the spot. ESCAPE PROSECUTION ell E, McComb and Thoma After the verdict, Smith Janae Dey. Smith. refused to. reporters wha wanted to say. i * BIRMINGHAM — The return of snappy cold yesterday came as manna from heaven to the recrea- tion board and recreation director Robert Girardin and also offered a big boost to the Eton Park skating rink, The rink budget is running low and appeared that an appeal to city for more money would be necessary. Recreation chairman John O’Gorman, said that the rink 1s operating On a day-to-day basis. Last weekend spring-like weather put @ heavy load on the freezing mechanism to keep the ice in usable condition. Temperatures ‘like today will make it possible to operate the rink within the budget until the March 1 closing date. Today’s prediction from the Na- tional Weather Bureau of below average temperatures for the next 30 days is “just fine,’ Girardin said, Members of the Metropolitan Club Spirit 9 and the Women’s Auxiliary, will install officers at the VFW Hall in tomor- row night. A dance will follow the installation. Clup officers are Robert Schaule, president; Glenn Foltz and Harold Coldren, vice presl- dents; Howard Foete, financial secretary; Kenneth Allison, re- ice, treasurer; George K em p, Joseph Collins and George Wal- lace, trustees. Auxiliary officers are Mrs. Fos- ter Raymond, president; Mrs. Don- ald Richardson, vice’ president; Mrs. C. J, Nunneley; recording sec- retary; and Mrs. Robert Dunn, fi- nancial secretary. Others are Mrs. Howard Hatt, treasurer; Miss Winona Singers, chaplain; Mrs. Ambert Peterson, sergeant-at-arms; Mrs. George Scott, Mrs, Stanley Church and Mrs. Samuel Snell, auditors. The Rev, Paul Nicely, assistant director of the Institute of Ad- vanced Pastoral Studies in Bloom- field Hills, will preach the ser- mong in the 9:30 and 11 a.m. serv- ices tomorrow at the First Con- gregational Church in Rochester. “Courage to Receive’ will be the title of the message. The Oakland County chapter of Files $100,000 Suit in Freak Lake Accident \Wayne County or found him guilty of a lesser) | Jerome K. Barry Jr., assistant day, charging Tsermengas and two he might upset the gang’s plans stopped off at the cottage of Don- gags had met fn prison, in search The widow of a Detroit man, killed in a freak accident last sum- mer while watching water skiers on Lake Orion, has filed a $100,000 damage suit against a Lake Orion man and two other defendants. Mrs. Elsie E, Lakin, of 15091 Warwick Rd., Detroit, filed sult in Circuit Court against James FE. Shafor, of 616 Longpoint Dr., Sears Roebuck Co., and G. A. Simenson, a metal re- pairman. Shafor’s 15-year-old son, James, was using his father’s outboard ‘motor on a boat pulling a skier when a piece of the starter plate flew off and killed Edmund H. Lakin, 65, as he watched from a dock May 31. He died 10 minutes lager at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. The attorney for Mrs, Lakin claims the company was negligent in suggesting to Shafor that the motor be repaired by Simenson in- stead of sent back to the factory for proper repairs. The Day in Birmingham | Cold Snap ‘Just Fine’ With Recreation Board cording secretary; Delyle Serv: | the American Association for the United Nations will hold its annyal meeting in the Birmingham Com- munity House Monday at 8 p.m. sor of sociology Fonssogee, 4 at Wayne. State University, speak on “Barriers to World Com- munications.” 1 p.m. Monday at the Manley Bailey Funeral Home. Burial will be in Greenwood Cemetery. — x «2 Mr. Greer died yesterday at his home following a long illness. He was a retired gas station proprietor and a life member of Birmingham Lodge 44, F&AM and two years ago was honored by the Grand Lodge of Michigan for 50 years of Masonic membership. * * * Surviving is a_ sister, Blanche Greer of B Mrs, John B. McKee Requiem Mass for Mrs, John B, (Lucy) McKee, 72, of 1945 Quar- ton Rd., Bloomfield Township, will be held at 10 a.m, Monday at Holy Name Church. Burial will be in Holy Sepulchre Cemetery, Detroit, Miss x « * The body is at the Bell Chapel of William R. Hamilton Co. Mrs. McKee died Friday at her home following a nine month ill- ness, Surviving are her husband, John B.; a daughter, Mrs, A, R. Soltis of Bloomfield Township;. two sons, James W. of Detroit and John B. Jr. of New Hampshire; two broth- ers and nine grandchildren ie lke and Mikoyan Exchange Views (Continued From Page One) the President got a half-hour brief- ing from Secretary of State Dulles. Dulles arrived at the White House as scores of uniformed policemen were deployed in the streets as a security precaution. A dozen or so pickets paraded a block away from the White House as the conference went on inside the executive mansion. The pickets said they were just plain American citizens who had gotten in touch with each other and decided to make a protest. “We censure our patriots; we dine our enemies,” one sign read, apparently in reference to many dinners given for Mikoyan. “No red carpets for Reds,” read another placard. * * * A squad of motorcycle police. men accompanied Mikoyan and his party on their short drive from the Soviet Embafsy to the White House. For Mikoyan the meeting was the climax of the spectacular tour which has taken him around the United States making public and private speeches, selling the Soviet peace line, and pleading for trade and better relations. Slips Up on Insurance ZEELAND (UPI)—Ottawa Coun- ty Agricultural Agent Richard Ma- chiele said Friday he slipped and fell, i his shoulder, when he got out of bath tub to answer the telephone, When he finally got to the phone, Machiele said, it turned out to be someone who wanted to sell him a home acci- dent insurance policy. State Police and Texas Rangers. uncovered Kean's body buried in a| received by the Rangers: So far the other two men, Low: Watch the - (3 STEVE ALLEN SHOW Sunday, January 18 See ESTHER WILLIAMS “THE GREATEST ADVANCE IN HOME SWIMMING POOLS SINCE THE ROMAN BATHI" We are happy to announce thet we heve been selected as distributor for this crea. We Welcome Your Inquiries _ INLAND LAKES SALES 3127 W. Huron. FE 4-7121 or 2-6122 OPEN SUNDAYS CHANNEL 4 present —_ ‘WARDROBE Will Be Closed at Noon MONDAY, JANUARY 19th | Due to the Death of _ HAROLD O. KEIVIT CLEANERS THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, JANUARY 17, 1959 . YOU SAVE Up to 60% DURING STOCK DISPOSAL SALE TODAY and MON. . - « because Easter comes early this year, $100,000 worth of fine quality goods will be sacrificed at cost, below cost, slightly above cost . . . Our loss is your gain! DON’T BUY ‘TIL YOU'VE SEEN OUR LOW PRICES! * 74 North Saginaw St. el 40) (el a anae) ae Develop Polio ‘Belt Breather New Device Enables | Patient to Sit Up, Use | Wheel Chair | NEW YORK @ — A new breath- ing device which polio patients can wear beneath their clothing |was demonstrated at Mt. Sinai Hospital Friday. It enables them ito move about freely in wheel- | chairs. The device consists of a light- weight gray belt, about 18 inches wide, which encircles the patient’s abdomen. It is attached to a bat- |tery and a blower under the seat jof the wheelchair, | | Martin respirator center, said | the unit, costing $1,600, gives greater mobility to patients able to sit up and improves their | morale, He showed an old respirator which covers most of the patient’s | | m=ichest. Its battery and blower unit lrest on a platform instead of be- ing attached to the wheelchair. He said the new “helt breather” is in use in about 15 “March of Dime’ centers throughout the country. It was demonstrated at Mt. NO STIRRING: / Rev Satin is homogenized. You just open the can and start right in on your paint job. Even more important— you escape the pitfalls of inadequate stirring. Homogenized Rev Satin gives you a beautiful, smooth job every time. It’s perfect for every room in your home—including kitchens and bathrooms. OAKLAND FUEL & PAINT 436 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 5-6150 PARK FREE REAR of STORE Sinai by Mrs. Joan Tackett, of (Fords, N.J., who has been a patient ‘at Mt. Sinai for six weeks. She is ‘the mother of two children. Claims Extortion Try Was ‘Just a Joke’ ' LOS ANGELES (AP)—A man who officials charge tried. to ex- j tort $100,000 from movie executive |Sol Siegel says it’s ‘‘just a joke.” Herbert Strauch, 34, a commis- sary worker, told U.S. Commis- sioner Theodore Hocke Friday he wouldn't harm anybody or rane money from them. FBI men arrested Strauch) Thursday. They said he was talk-' Ang at the time on the telephone | ‘to ‘Siegel, production chief of MGM Studio, about arrangements |for paying the money. Agents isaid the lives of Siegel and his | wife, Ruth, were threatened in an extortion note. Strauch was freed on $10,000 bail pending a hearing Feb. 6. SS | Pilot Survives Crash PORTLAND, Conn. (#—A four- engined Air Force plane emerged from thick fog Thursday, crashed into a hill and burned. Two men died. Its pilot lived. He was injured. | Dr. Avrom Y. Sweet, medical | director of the hospital's Jack | |Know It’s Coming —bat When? | quake experts again are checking the blood pressure of California's San Andreas fault. to snap. They don’t know when— or whether the results will be as calamitous as they were in 1906 when a San Andreas quake destroyed San Francisco. * * * five, or 2 years, from now. The San Andreas fault, a rift in the earth's crust running north-westward half the length on IH Contract UAW Delegates of 33 Locals Approve Terms’ for 37,000 Workers CHICAGG (AP) — A new three- year contract which would end a two-month strike of 37,000 Interna-| tional Harvester Co. employes is) by the rank and file of 33 United Auto Worker locals. * * * The UAW Harvester Council, cals at 15 harvester plants and 10 depots and warehouses, approved the proposed contract Friday night The unofficial vote was 14,891) votes or the proposal and 12,562 against. * * house, UAW international vice president and head of the union’ s| Harvester department, and Wil-| liam J. Reilly, manager of labor) relations for Harvester, signed the new pact. The strike began Nov. 13. Hoff to Open Drive fo Organize Sears DALLAS, Tex. of Sears, Roebuck & Co., will be- gin Jan. 27, Teamsters’ Union Vice President M. W. (Dusty) Miler said here Friday. | Miller was named to head the| national drive by President James R. Hoffa. _ Fifteen organizers from Southern states met here Friday with Miller to map the campaign. Sears officials here had po com- ment. Two Wonderful Silverplate Specials! ‘OFFSEASON on sets and fill-in pieces SALE the lovely, contemporary MORNING STAR pastern is being discontinued. COMMUNITY 93- Pe. Service for 8 1 Butter Knife © Hollow Handle, Forged Knives *Trade-marks of Oneida Ltd. Attention “Morning Star” Owners! BIG SAVINGS on FILL-IN PIECES Regular Sale TOASPOON..ccgusseccnsncanvceseunnceses $100 $ Table Spoon. ..ccescsecescccveessesvess 250° 1.50 Te ee tk 2.00 _ 1.20 Peewee et eee ee Salad F reer 2.00 1.20 Oyster Fork. eeu HR ESR ERE RR ETHER EERE Ee 2.00 1,20 Iced Drink Spoon....c.cccseveeserereese 200 1.20 Butter Spreader. Pa eh lied ‘ 2.00 1.26 i Mile, oncs cc ccectcessccugeescccegugever 3.00 1. Cold Meat F Fork. eet eee ee 3 2.16 Gravy Ladie.. eee eee e eee een ee em ete eee 3.0 2.16 Hpeees Reetry Sore free rer s fe ee es és pabai Se Layaway! ll 1847, 1847 ” 2 V4 Y PLACE SETTING PIECES PRICED AND PACKAGED IN SETS OF 4 REGULAR SALE ITEM PRICE PRICE Teaspoons $400 «$3.00 Forks, Regular 400 0=— 608 Forks, Viende* 2000 6.08 Knives, Regular 1200 0«— 78 Knives, Viende* 1300 «4.78 Salad Forks east, bane 400 0|= 6.88 Soup Spoons { Ove’ ot Cream Style) ano. 68 Butter Spreaders $90 «68 Coektail Forks $00 06=— 6.88 toad Drink Spoons dead After Dinner Cottes Spoons = 4.00 a0 *Reg. U.S. Pot. OF. JEWELERS | (16 West Huron St. ROGERS BROS. America’s Finést Silverplate Silverware Check-Up Event LIMITED TIME OFFER! January 18—February 14, 1959 ON OPEN STOCK PRICES Plan now to bring your silverware service up-to-date! iTtw ; > Gutter Knife $2.50 1. Cold Meat Fork 4 a3 Gravy Ladic 40 3.35 Jetty Server 200 «2.8 Long Server $75 864.0 Pickie Fork 3.00 2.25 t } 300 13 Tablespoon 30 aes bever 440 3.35 Serving Spoon 4% 3.35 Suger 27.0 145 Sugar Tongs 325 #24 " squat 9tt Ragors Bros. you con Sve casualty | graciously INTERNATIONAL SILVER COMPANY They know something is going) Tt could happen tomorrow, or Rank-File Votes up for ratification this weekend = | DUE to made up of delegates from 33 lo-' after a stormy seven-hour session. | After the session, Duane Great-' (AP)—A_nation- | wide drive to organize employes, nine | | ing whe ree land pressure” ously even if they cannot forec ast |* Search Clues to Next Quake WASHINGTON (UPI) — Earth-; of California from the Mexican |in the vicinity of Petaluma, north ’ perder into the Pacific, has been spawning earthquakes for un- counted thousands ef years. Vast blocks of the crust crawling in different directions on either side of the fault.. Theories differ as to why this happens. But the experts agree that these jslow drifting movements, averag- year now, create strains that kick off quakes. about two inches a * * * Measurement of these move- ments provides diagnostic if not prognostic clues. scientists can tell when the “blood 350 million dollars worth of Prop is building up danger-|erty was destroyed. With nm the stroke will come. | The Coast and Geodetic Survey has been taking blood pressure | readings along the San ges fault fer half a century. ent decades it north of Taft. An elastic rebound is an earth: | ognizes their many quake. It is what happened to San ‘problems. His judicial Francisco on April 18-19, 1906, temperment, sincerity them,/when 452 persons were killed and and courtesy in office makes him an _ out- has wae | systematically checking and re- | | checking specific areas to meas- ure the rate of crustal. move- ments on either side of the fault. | A party of 17 men under Lt. | Jack E. Guth is now re-examining | sections of the fault, last surveyed in 1938 and 1949, south of — A similar sur- vey wilt be conducted next year | (Political Advertisement) {Political e | Promote your present CIRCUIT COURT _ COMMISSIONER as ONE of YOUR FIVE Stool COURT JUDGES Having served Odak- land County for 22 ears, and havin iof San Francisco, and at Monterey oad thousands a Bay in 1961. < ' cases as Commission- er, Mr. Hampton is The earth's rocky crust has a certain amount of elasticity. But it can't be stretched indefinitely. The time must come when there occurs what the scientists call “an elastic rebound."’ When that hap- pens, rock formations pulled too far in. one direction snap back in’ the other. | are well qualified to now serve as your Circuit Judge. As past. prési- dent of Oakland Coun- ty Bar Association, he is personally acquaint- ed with all members of : the profession and rec- | standing candidate for How to forecast just when a this important position. rebound will occur in any given : / jarea has not yet been figured out. iBut it can be determined when one is building up. Verne C. Hampton PLEDGE ONE VOTE TODAY for YOUR ASSURANCE that YOUR COURT Will Be WELL ADMINISTERED ‘SHOP MONDAY : | FOR JANUARY ! } i FIRE OUR CREDIT DEPARTMENT IS NOW OPEN at 903 PONTIAC STATE BANK BUILDING Daily 10-6 Saturday 10-1 Thank You... GOODMAN'S Dept. Store McCandless’ Clearance Sale! PADDING and LABOR! FREE | SAVINGS IN ALL DEPARTMENTS Washers... Dryers... Refrigerators .. . Ranges ... Radios ... Television ... Hi-Fi... lroners From Such Famous Manufacturers as—G-E ... RCA Whirlpool... Easy... Maytag... Hamilton ... Frigidaire... Tappan... RCA Victor... Motorola ... Zenith. . . lronrite, Etc. Come in and Compare the Savings! The GOOD HOUSEKEEPIN \Zop of PONTIAC: Open Monday and Friday ‘til 9 P. M. 51 West Huron Street FE 4-1555 INLAID LINOLEUM 5 Colors Reg. 2.95 a | 79 s« va SERVING PIECES INDIVIDUALLY PRICED AND PACKAGED : REGULAR SALE PRICE PRIC VINYL. PLASTIC LINOLEUM Reg. $1.69 . 00 s«: v4 LINOLEUM 9x12’ *4l9 . add-on ... start a new set! RUBBER TILE 9x9x Ye Reg. 69c 19° Es. ASPHALT | TILE -9-C and D Groups | BLACK and Wool Tweed Te" ma "Ya. Brown, Beige ges Sq. Yd. ALL WOOL SCROLL ALL NYLON 12° and 15° wie ices a Sq. Yd. PLUSH BLEND Tr acca , 1959 lnfant Baptism Slated Sunday Tuxis Society to Discuss United Nations at First Presbyterian Church ; Dr. William H will preach on ‘Our Witness for Christ and the Church” at the infant bap-, tismal service at 11 am Marbach EMMANUEL CHRISTIAN S¢ Sunday | in First Presbyterian Church, modate 1,000 students. Until the Under the direction of Lyndon students, the school, known as E Safathiel, the choir will sing Muel- ler’s ‘‘Hast Thou Not Known?” Arthe cater crvicts 910 iy, Deaconesses, t the earlier service at ie Rev, Galen ED Hershey associate Elders, Trustees pastor, will speak on the n We Pray.” ice Brown will sings “Oul Elected at Kirlt of the Deep Have 1 C Nou Thee O Lord” Blected trustees at the anni Edina Isenberg, April Davis, Ed meeting of Kirk in the fli MeLean and John Huntzinger Jr..|Wednesday were William Donnelly will have charge of the Pioneer) Edwin O ( ri ne, Louis CC. Goad James Tflowell, Osborn Rose Woodhouse ‘Dr vear and Richard C. Society meeting Sunday evening. Young people of the Tuxis So. clety will discuss “The United | a three-year term as Chosen for Nations” tomorrow night. Par elders were [owe AU Balmer, A tlepating will be Ronald New- ‘Lynn Bingham, Val Corradi, John man, Sally Huntoop, Becky J Lifsey and Kenneth HH. Mac Bryce, Jerry Powers and dim Queen Gibbs. Serving on the Board of Deacon esses Will be Mrs. Glen A. Carl The Women’s Prayer Group will a ae “Fine meet at the Cherokee road home al sue oe sae MI of Mrs. Hugh A Little Tuesday (“*ue i ost ales 8 a" The Women's Bible) Nelson and Mrs, William U. New morning ie s B ae 1. ay Derg Group will meet at noon Thursday . - the ‘ hutch for lunch Dr Plarald © DeWindt is minis Foll @ the dinner Wednesdity ter of the chureh located at 1510 ae Wo Long Lake Red evening the Couples Club will see the film Mackinac Bridue ices Sunday. Kay Rossier and ary Hosts and he fesses will R | M Helen Weiss will sing “Thou Art, - My and ney Donald { Weed the oger ar uis () Giod, the Lile.”” 4 Cart Helms and Mr and Mrs h The Chancel Choir wall sing “The Dale Reagan hosen airman Kine's Tichway' at the later hour a A filmstrip and discussion on Thou art a gracias Cod ind Rover TP Marquis was elected dating: will be ineluded in the pro- pts topic will be” merciful, slow te anger and Of oy inan of the Episcopal Church pram at the 6 pom meeting of great kindnes® af the Advent this week Senor Uigh Fellowship Mrs © Sanborn Hutchins: « * * * FIRST OPEN named secretary, and John The Women's Association vill URCH Binet tenure Olen memve meet for a workshop at 10 a.m BIBLE CH of the committee © tnelude | Tn Wednesday Following bluineh, the vt mely te P ) 4 1 Bleck N of Wallen Blvd Charles L. Bowers, Robe “ Ker fcny.| M Auichard will dead the Itussell Meyer Clarence Suhr and ,, ; 00 A.M t Bible study Deacons of the chureh Sunday School aA M. [ Leonard Wood Nil asa ih the © Morning Worship 1 .M. Wi esist with we ommunion Youth Service 5 30 se According to Me Wood, the (rst coryiee Evangelistic Service 7:45 P ‘Punt ef the new chich building At othe Ii ; / the Junior Tigh Fellowship Wed. Prayer Meeting 7:45 P.M. under construction on Middlebelt eu Thursday evening, the film, The baal et road will be ready for oecupancy “Building Tomorrow's America,” Teunuacarch late do Pebotars pel ve how for a PEriendly Church [he gense alinevethn ive! finan Children and parents of the faicihl fal the werd ol oun ond nursery, kindergarten and pri- Rev. T. H. Staton FE 2-6497 b fee) Panes mary departments of the church Raat stent Teenie school will meet W. Travis General Baptist Church Beymour Lake Rd. at Baldwin Rd. Sun. School 10 a.m., Morning Worship 11 a.m. Sun. Even. 7:30 p.m. Wed. Prayer 7:30 p.m. | | 67 NORTH LYNN STREET Sunday School 10 A.M. Worship 11 A.M. Evening Service 7:30 P. M. Ww. Y.P. 5S. 6:45 P.M. Wednesday Prayer and Bible Service 7:30 P.M. REV. H. L. JOUNSON, Pastor 2 CHRISTIAN TEMPLE 505 Auburn Avenue = DH OL tL MARION—Pounder pa tot AP MARION — Pastor J LUTHER SHEP PIELD— Assistant to 11:30 A.M.—Communien and Worship Service DR LOLA P MARION Sunday School Classes REY 9.45 12:18 Noon— 11:45 to 6:30 P.M:—Young People's Services 7:45 P. M.—Evangelistic Service. Rev. Bill Sharp 7:45P.M. Wedneaday—Bible Study 7:00 P.M. Thuraday—Sky Pilots Procram in which work in Sunday classes ‘HOOL The new Emmanuel Christian School now under construction on Golf drive is expected to be ready for occupancy by September. The school will accom- seminary is built for ministerial mmanuel Christian, will nee classes for elementary, junior and senior high students as well as those of the seminary. The 23 classroom building is being con- structed by Paul Johnson, Inc., of Detroit, at an approximate cost of $576,000. Eroh and Friedman are the architects. Dr. Tom Ma- lone, pastor of Emmanuel Baptist Church, is in charge of the project. The Rev. Willard Stallcup is dean of the school. Further plans include dormitories for ministerial students. and a new church. The first class was graduated from high school two years ago. Currently enrolled in the four-year seminary course are 105 students, The school was organized nine years ago. Congregation |Highland Park Pastor fo Elect Leaders Senior High Fellowship. of Orchard Lake Church to Discuss Dating Hiders, elder-trustees, and dea. Anthems, “Rejoice in the Lord” cons will be elected and the 1959 #9d “Glorious Is Thy Name’ will ‘budget adopted at the annual be sung by the choir. ‘meeting of Orchard bake Com- A native of Canada, he is a munity Church, Presbyterian at graduate of Toronte University 8 pom Tuesday with the clans of. 1930 and -at- The Rev Edward D Auchard, tended Union Theological Semi- pastor, will preside at the congre-| Rary in Mew York, from which gational meeting and Charies he was graduated in 1937. (Wright at the corporation meeting After his ordination to the Con- “No Man Is an Island” will be the pastor's sermon tople at both the 9 and Il a.m. worship serv: for a potluck dinner Saturday evening. The will give a brief they present the children iva Geisler and Betty Brown are RACK POR SPACE —Jan 18 Mschool superintendents. — Depart: 1 or ment heads are Mrs. Flo Weiss L. BAGGETT, Minister—VE 1-0000 a Ah _] Mrs Ros fleeves. Mrs ea Sharpe, Mrs Melvin Bond, Mrs WESLEYAN METHODIST |!" 8 SH wre are Sarto Evangelistic Services Continuing This Week — The Hes will specth op ay Aprosfolie Ave Mis Visian Mindingall aft the T1 1) am. and services Sunday ino the Faith Mission, 36> BE Wil SO the revival Monday, is Felder, Woo Peterson of the aba Church of God in Detroit mee ings begin each evening at 7.. "| Conducting which started SETVICES T beseech, vou, brethren that there be no divisions among; love Him A Friendly Welcome Awaiis Youl The Salvation Army & 29 W. LAWRENCE STREET Sunday School 9:45 a.m. Young People’s Legion 6-p.m. Morning Worship 11 a.m. Evangelistic Meeting 7: 30 p'm. Wednesday Prayer and Praise Meeting 7:00 p.m. CAPTAIN AND MRS. J. WILLIAM HEAVER Ist CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH Mill. E. Huron and Mt. Clemens Maleoim Ko Burton, Paster Karl Wo Ostherg, Assoc. Paster Rev Rev. | Morning Service 10:30 A. M. “WITH WHAT JUDGMENT” Good Music — Singing — True to the Word Preaching The Rev. Mr. Burton. Preaching | God Meets With Us— You Too, Are Invited - Greater Pontiae HYMN SING Sunday, January 18th, 9:00 P.M. ithe 7 p.m, ‘of Old Testament prophecy will heard, Waterford Community Church 5860 Andersonville Rd. » Worship Services _.. Sunday School ....... to Preach at Fellowship > Rev, Emerson Emke, pastor i ie Highland Park Congrega- tional Church, will be guest preacher at the 7:30 worship serv- ice of Inter-Church Fellowship Sun- day evening in First Methodist Church, South Saginaw at Judson gregational ministry in 1938, the Rev Mr. Emke served as pastor of churches in) New York and Ohio before coming to Highland Park Inter-Church Fellowship will start 115 pm. with a hymn sing followed at 6 pm. “ith a Bible Study Hour conducted by Dr. How- ard Emrick, professor of religion Incarnation” of First) Methodist refreshments at the 7:30 p.m, at REV. + a EMERSON EMKE “Women will serve social hour from 6:40 to Ohio Pastor Is Guest Speaker and churches of Inter-Church Fellow- ship include Dr. William Hl. Mar- bach of First Presbyterian, Dr. Mil ton If the Rev C. Al Saints Malcolm K Cooperating pastors Bank of Central Methodist, George Widdifield of Episcopal, the Rev Burton of First Con-) Assist in Building New gregational and the Rev. Paul T.) | Hart of First’ Methodist Educational Unit Sunday's program will he the) second in the series of five services| held for the 12h yenr. | The new Sunday School building of Cedar Crest’ Lutheran Church! will be dedicated at 3:30 and 7: 0) p.m, Sunday. (nest speaker wil] be the Rev. Paul W. Streufert, pastor of the St. | Roc ky River, Ohio. ee Ever Glorious,” he has con-) te be Author fo ) Autograph" Books After Service | Dr Reucl L. Howe, director of tributed many articles for ‘The the interdenominational Institute portals of Pr rayer.”’ for Advanced Pastoral Studies att * ok * Christ Church Cranbrook, will au-! a tograph copies of his book, “Cre! Former pastors of Cedar Crest, ative Years,’ following the 9:30) the Rev. 0, T. Diefenbach and and 1115 segvices at Christ Church, Rev. Eugene Ryding, will be Sunday | liturgists. The annual parish meting will! Men of the congregation have follow the 7 p.m. dinner Monday, given many hours of work on the Plans will be made building. The two story cinder | block educational building was con- in (suild Pall for the coming year Mrs. Theodore Wedel of Wash. Sttucted at a cost of $25,000, ington, 1), C., former president of * * * the National Counes| of United Serving on the building commit Church Women, will be guest tee were Alvin Klomp, Russell, speaker at the 12°15 luncheon of Sadler, and Vernon Carlock, Pay- the Womans Auxiliary on Feb. 3. ton Smith was contractor. Reservations may be made -— (Waraoah laps 3) Ohio Pastor to Speak s - . ‘Christians in Home’ | The speaker for both morning | ‘and to Be Pastor’s Subject — Baptist Church tomorrow will be _ ; ; jthe Rev. A, J. Ruffin, pastor of The Rev. Gerald Wo Gibson.’ jerusalem Second Baptist Church pastor, will preach on “Christ- | o¢ Urbana, Ohio. jans in the Home' at the 11 a.m. | evening services at Trinity. Men of Congregation | Thomas Lutheran Church,| Author of | 16 New Members fo Be Confirmed A elass of 26 new members will be confirmed at the 10:45 morning service Sunday at St. Paul Luth- eran Church. Eight members will be baptized. , The class and members of the families will be welcomed into the fellowship of the church at a supper on Jan. 25 in their honor. Sponsoring the affair will be the Lutheran Laymen's League and the Couples Club. A mission film, “To Every Creature’ will be shown following s the supper at 7 p.m. Pontiac Hymn Rev. B. A. Bohn Proceeds from the free-will of to I nstal] Officers fering will be used for missions. Lt) ° Sing Sunday at Crescent Hills The mouth of the righteous ‘ | talketh of wisdc nd his tong Newly elected officers of Cres-| speaketh ate a oo ‘ceht Hills Baptist Church will be} _ Recha Ross to Be Guest instalied at 10 a.m. Sunday by) }jcsmeusstimnan cae eee in| the Rev. Benjamin A. Bohn, pas-|; ; é Artist on Program in) ir ‘ite wil) speak on “The Win | Lutheran Pontiac Northern ning Team.” : cuted wmts foram Churches Recha Ross, a Negro tenor solo- Ded and nha) Leanne MISSOURI SYNOD — ist, will be guest artist at the|>Y the pastor, attended the annual | ~ Greater ‘Pontiac Hymn Sing at 9}'0Ur of the Michigan Baptist Con- Cedar Crest p.m. Sunday in Pontiac Northern\Ve "tion at the First Baptist) — High School, 1051 Arlene St. Church in Ann Arbor Friday. ” Farnsworth off Union Lk .Rd. « * * x & * \3 (Next to Dublin Schoo!) Soon after coming to Detroit in| Mrs. Charles Hazel of 4743 Dixie’ © Howard £. Claycombe. Pastor = 1932, Mr. Ross joined the Ford|Hwy. will open her home to mem-)- Services at 8:30 A. M. Dixie Eight of the Ford Motor Co.| bers of the Women’s Society at): and 11 A.M. 7:30 p.m. Wednesday. Mrs. Earl!) Sunday School . 945 A.M Director of music at St, Ste- « ‘ d Hall will speak on “Missions in © phen African Methodist Church, Mexico.” 2 he was also director and announc- ‘Ail’ church held i F: GRACE er for the “Signs of the Times church services are “held in!” ’ the Monteith Elementary School,|;, Corner Genesee and Glendale Se eer Deere Crescent Lake at Hatchery road.|” AWeok Bisel x kk * : __ sik "|| Richard S. Stuckmeyer. Pastor — Other musical numbers will be ip Church Service. .. 9.00 A.M presented by Jerry Libby, pian-| |, Sunday School .... 900 A.M. Ist the Waterford Community)! CENTRAL = | mrcs sevice 1004. Choir and the Salvation Army, e oo The Rev. Geoffrey Day, a direc- . e n jtor of the Hymn Sing, said the CHURCH 4 p e " | V.F.W. Hall—Walton Blvd. | pu lic is } Invited. | G. W. Gibson, Minister jj (Between Dixie and Sashabaw) armen omy | FE 4-0239 347 N. Saginaw | Guy B. Smith. Pastor BETHEL TABERNACLE Bible School @:4S.A.M. [2 Church Service. .. 930A.M. : First Penteceot Cherch of Pontinn [if pores Worship —_ Londoatey * Sunday School....10:45 A.M. © SS 10 a.m. Worship 11 a.m. | Laan seeviee “ro Ss k ; : vening Service ; f sara haere 5 Vid ee . Prayer Meeting and Bible ST. TRI N ITY — Rev. and Mrs. E. Crouch i aay Weensedey — | —_—s atoms - 138 Baldwin Ave. FE 5-4256 | , LESst (ese) SSS Ss = Ralph C, Claus, Pastor va i punday School .... Hy A.M... : - First Service . 8:30 A.M. =} N ti ] L th CHRISTIAN PSYCHIC Second Service ...11:00 A.M. auonai Lutmeran | : : SCIENCE CHURCH ; Council Churches 8 Wetemare treet 1 ST. PAUL * unday 7: . M. Wednesday Silver Tea SoBe ed iollad | ASCENSION ———— ee George Mahder. Pastor PONTIAC Early Service ..... 8:15AM. 96 Williams CHURCH 7 GOD Morning Service ..10:45 A.M. Wa. LaFountain, Pastor = | Sunday School .... 9:30 A. a. | néersen SUNDAY SCHOOL.. 9:45 A.M. | Sanday school, CHURCH SERVICE .11;00 A.M. Morning Worship, B LOOME | ELD. i Evening Worship, = TOWNSHIP CH RIST |] Youth Night, Wed. : Square Lake & Telegraph WATERFORD TWP. | ed bee a Wm. C. Grate, Pastor WELCOME | Church Service 10:00 A.M. - “Airport at Williams Lake Rd. “Verward tn raith” nL F, Dougtes . Sunday School . 11-00 A M.& Arvid E, Anderson, Pastor 4 Mori ripe & SUNDAY SCHOOL... 9:30 A.M. CHURCH SERVICE 11:00 A.M. ST. JOHN’S First Christian Church Discivles of Christ ST. MARK 7979 Commerce Rd. New Church Building PONTIAC Sunday School .. 10 A. M. (West Bloomfield Township) Hinailesecues + Church Service .. 11A.M. < we. C. Grate, Pastor Carl W. Nelson, Pastor 858 W. Huron Church Service oe 1s h M SUNDAY SCHOOL.. 9:45 A.M. Rev. D. D. McColl fo a erro CHURCH SERVICE ee conan : te pe = 11:00 A.M, | SHEPHERD of the LAKES WALLED LAKE Meeting at Walled Lake Elem. School [| W. Maple Near Ladd Rd. | M. Frederick Foutz, Pastor Apestoi Church of 459 CENTRAL Young People Saturday .... eee Sunday School and Worship .....10:00 A.M. Christ 7:00 P. M. CHURCH SERVICE .11:00 A.M. I] Sunday Evening Service ........ 7:00 P. M. f SUNDAY SCHOOL.. 9:30 A.M. Services Tues., Wed., Thurs., Fei. 7:00 P. M. — ——_ Church Phone FE 5-836] Service Sunday in Central Christ: | lian Chureh | ‘Giod’s Footprints in the Sands, Time’ will be his subject at worship hour. Pictur es color showing the fulfillment | of in be shown at the service | aioe a. “Friendly Ganerel Baptist Church Y. M. C. A., 131 Mt. Clemens Street Rev. R. Garner, Pastor — FE 4-7407 UL 2-5142 Bishop L. A. Parent Bishop L. A. Parent. Pastor Eye hath not scen, nor ear! neither have entered into! i the heart of man, the things which God hath prepared for them that, love him, | 351 Prospect St. | Sunday School....10 A.M. Morning Worship... 11:15 A. M. Young People......... 6:15 P.M. Eve. Worship.....7:30 Wednesday Eve. Service... 7:30 P. M. 8:30. 11 A. M, 9:45 A. M. MEMORIAL BAPTIST CHURCH BRANCH SUNDAY SCHOOL Held at | LONGFELLOW PUBLIC SCHOOL 10 A. M. | Sunday School ...... veeeeces 10:00 A.M. en ee eee DONELSON BAPTIST CHURCH Evening) Services| oT O09 PM. Elizabeth Lake Rd. at Tilden OR 3-2206 Wednesdey Prayer Service 7:30 P. M. Sunday ~owinde sooty oo » Morning Worship... .11:00 A. M. “Where Friends Meet Friends and God Meets All” Youth Service 0 ere +. $:30P.M. ——— —— Evening Church Service ee P.M. Midweek Service ......................... us 00 P.M. Wednesday Paster—REV. LEE LaLONE 8. S$. Supt.—ARTHUR EWALD Rev. Gerald H. Rapelje South Saginaw at cdr Harry J see ben NOTE NEW ADDRESS— NEW AUDITORIUM Pontiac Northern WHigh School 1051 Arlene, Off Perry St.—Near Madison Jr. High Ample Parking for Everyone ®JERRY LIBBY— Pianist e@MR. RHECHA R. ROSS—Well known Negro concert tenor soloist © WATERFORD COMMUNITY CHURCH CHOIR @ SALVATION ARMY ' BAND , Fill Up Youn Car j z and Join Us al the HYMN SING! Rev. Rober! Winne Rev. Geolfrey Day | eee ey * Williams St. The Rev © The Rev David K Mills, Cura SUNDAY SERVICES 8:00 A M —Holy Communion 9:30 AM.——Holy C Sermon by the Rect Church School 11:00 A.M.——Morning Prayer and Sermon by the Rect Church School All Saints Episcopal Church at W. Pike George Widdifleld Rector Communion and te W. W. Mall, Minteter PONTIAC CHURCH OF CHRIST Welcomes > > > > » > » > » > » » » > All Visitors din in dp dip dh hE eee FIRST METHODIST - Lerd, Assistant Pastor 10:00 A.M. MORNING WORSHIP “NO MORE mpaplnple TIME” Rev. Paul T. Hart, preac 11:15 CHURCH "SCHOOL Inter-Church Fellowship 7:30 P.M. Wed. 7:30 P. M. Bible Study and Prayer Fellowship Youth Fellowship. . caspases ernment temetem tant ea tom ae toe toe eee ea tote Paul T. Hart, Pastor .6:15 P.M. PARA - oF * ty : o# My 7" : NY or ST. GEORGE’S EPISCOPAL CHURCH Milford, Mich 8:00 A.M.—Holy Communion 0:30 A M —Pamily Service and Church Behoel 100 AM) Helly Communion and Bermon The Rev. Bertram T. White, Vicar “$T. ANDREW'S and Betmen G DAY Church School at Bach Geasion The Rev. Waldo R. Hunt, Viear Interdenominational A “FAITH RALLIES” Central America. People of afl denéminations and taiths ere cordially invited EVANGEL TEMPLE FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST Lawrence and Williams Streets Bible Study .................00.. 9:50 acm. Morning Worship .......... - 10:50 am. | eesy zee pe ‘1: ' =f Sunday Evening Worship . 6:06 p. m. Ok ell ff ' b fend § GS Wednesday Event Service .. 7:30 p.m. = — Listen erald of Trut Th CKLW-TV Channel 9 Saturdays 8:00 P.M. LG SUBJECT FOR SUNDAY- WXYZ Detroit 5:30 to 6:00 P.M. Sundays |B “LIFE” ny Everybody 1s Invited! ~ : ee S 1180 North Perry St. ] — Services and : Reading Reom Ul S 11900 A. M. 11 A. M. te § P.M. Ss, y Service 8 P. M. Friday to 8 P. M. nN Continuing Nightly A f§ cxatd EPISCOPAL, CHURCH r) CHRISTIAN $30} Hatchery Rd. Drayton ° Moos onetinty bres P sine ~ — Ss an . . © Illustrative messages increase yew faith. TB RAD TION 0:30 & 1078 A.M —I4 ! Bervices of Morning pang © Colored slides of Cuba, Alesha and 10 STA CKLW 800 K.C. | Sanday 9:45 A. M. af 1380 Mt. Clemens Tmt if i if m ah ~ TV I EVERY SUNDAY CHANNEL 7 9:30 A.M. Oe of 4 oF emen B | | Michigan Tech was the only state winner in college basketball last night beating Detroit Tech 68- 64 while Southern Illinois was strip- . ping Eastern Michigan 87-77. East- ern Iinois whippe4 Central Michi- gan 57-50. Bradley came from be- hind to wallop Toledo 92-73 and Texas A&M mangled Texas 73-29 on the national scene. ‘Texas coach . Marsh Hughes joined the ‘‘hung in ‘effigy” list following the latter game, x * * Billy Welu of Texas has taken the lead in the All-Star bowling tourney at Buffalo. Lou Campi is tnd and Lansing’s Joe Joseph 8rd. Marion Ladewig of Grand Rapids continues to pace the women, * * * Police had to separate fans and players when a brawl broke out in a hockey game at Ann Arbor last night, North Dakota won 6-1 over Michigan. The game, with 5:18 left was called out after the near riot. Paul Coppo pulled a hat trick lead- ey Michigan Tech over Minnesota Big, Little, All Kinds of Dogs PKC Entries Compete for The Press Trophy With more than 60 varieties and breeds of dogs registered for the winter show of Pontiac Kennel Club, all day Sunday, area fanciers Bulman Skaters: in Title Round Bulman’s Hardware moved into the fina] round of the Class B City Junior hockey tournament Friday night with a 5-0 whitewash- ing oon Northern B at North- dim Paschke and Jon Shaw each fired two goals and Don MacLean scored once as Bul- man’s blanked the “B” squad. Pontiac Northern A and the Mountain View Rangers were elim- inated from the double knockout tourney in yesterday’s other Class B games. Jim's Hardware skated to a 4-1 victory over the “A” team and the Rangers were nosed out by the Thunderbirds, 4-3. and those who just like dogs, have a wide range of interest in the event. Show takes place at Pon- tiac Retail Store, 63 Mt. Clemens FRIDAY St, When entries closed Jan. 6, 489 animals were registered, x «© * They come from many sections of Michigan, Wlinois, Indiana, Ohio, Wiscogsin and other areas. A large entry is listed trom southeastern Michigan, with many from Oakland County, de- spite the fact no dogs are regis- tered by PKC members, * * * Trophies, ribbons and cash awards go to winners, topped by the coveted Pontiac Press best-in- show award. Presentation of the handsome award will be made im- mediately after judging by Dr. A. A. Mitten of Rockhall, Md. Cham- pions of six variety groups will provide the competition for best-in- show honors. Group judging is set for 4 p.m. x * * The show is an unbenched, all- breed affair, and is licensed under American Kennel Club regulations. ee Clarencenile ..52 Avondale .....66 Lake Orion ....55 = ve rr Imlay City ....15 St. Frederick ..52 OLSt. Mary ...64 | W. Bloomfield aa “Madison --- Fitngerald coal Clawson 2-8 Romeo .......49 Oxford ---+- 65 St. Clement : ..40 i James _....39 Ra Se SR Hank Fonde Named ‘M’ Backfield Coach NIGHT HIGH SCHOOL SCORES Adrian 60, Coldwater 46 Almont 4, ppp. Bay a io arper 500 Avondale 66, Madicen 51 $i Baitle Creek 45, Lansing East. 41 (ot) Berkley $4, Walled Lake 37 Brighton 76, Northville 61 Belleville 59, Plymouth 80 Benton Harbor 79, seueeon 46 Brethren 65, Scottville 47 poor 55, Pinckney ~ Bay City Bt. Stanislaus 68 cmneina Peter and Feu 60 ca City “ gong: Caamaae 38, Harrison Se Corunna 47, Elsie 45 Bade peers La pe Bloomfield 49 Durand 90, C Detroit Euiheres & Bast $4, Huren @ , Dearborn Edsel 3, Dearborn 65 East Jordan 41, Gece East Grand Rapids 57, pe 4] 42 Evart 49, Parwell 36 East Lansing 68, Albion 38 East Detroit 41 nao oat Kimball 40 Escanaba 63, Ishpem lee Frankenmuth 63 82, Mtington 50 Premont 56, Zeeland at ale 62, Hazel Par Gaylord 64, Harbor Sorings 45 Greenville @3, Bt zor GR Creston 56, GR Centra] 55 GR Catholic 62, GR eit tae 55 GR South 66, GR U GR Godwin 78, Grand ovitle 73 GR Rogers 56, South epee << 4) Grosse Pointe U Oak Park 60 Grosse Pointe 50. Highland Park 49 Holly 6, Clarkston 68 Holt 63, . Lansing Everett 52 k 63, Merrill 42 oughton Lake 50, West Branch 38 Hand Christ'n 61, Ka'zoo U High 41 Houghton 71 Dollar Bay 70 d 63, ornne Haven $3 Doors open at 9 a.m., when judg- ing begins, and close at 9 p.m, Hart $1, Reed City 42 Iron Mountain a Cryste!l Palls 50 Rams, St. Mary Score Easy Wins Eaglets Wing x * * x * * 2nd Serreeation Episode Occurs fo 6th Straight League Victory Stop St. James 64-36; St. Frederick Defeats Crusaders 52-40 By H. GUY MOATS St. Frederick from Pontiac, and Orchard Lake St. Mary cagers Friday night climbed on the scor- ing wagon and rolled along to re- sounding victories in Suburban Catholic League competition. The Rams entertained visiting St. Clement with a display of bal- anced team scoring, compiling a 52-40 victory, their 5th against a single defeat. Ten of the 11 players who got in the tilt contributed to the count. While the Pontiac club was col- lecting its win, St. Mary was hav- ing an easy time recording its @th straight league victory, 64-36, over Ferndale St. James. The Eaglets’ scoring twins, Chet Wlodkowski and Gienn Hass énjoyed their 2nd consecutive “big night,” accounting for exactly the total of the entire Ferndale crew (36 points). Chet dumped in 19, Glenn 17. Eight of nine Eaglets figured in the scoring, Tim Mul- easter’s 10 led the losers. Two fast baskets by Hass set the Eaglets off to a 7-point first NBA in Mixup Again CHARLESTOWN, W.Va. u—The National Basketball Assn. found it- self involved in another segrega- tion episode today following the refusal of Elgin Baylor, Minneap- olis' rookie scoring ace, to suit up for a game here with Cincin- nati last night. Baylor, apparently miffed when he and two Negro teammates were refused permission to stay in a hotel at which the rest of the team had reservations, didn’t appear in uniform although he was on the bench during the pre-game warm- up. Cincinnati won the game 95-91. x *« * Neither the former Seattle All- America or Coach John Kundila would comment on the reason the Lakers’ top scorer was On the sidelines. To questions, Kundla replied: “Ask him." Baylor responded with’ “ask the coach.” When Minneapolis checked in at the hotel, Kundla protested upon learning that Baylor and Minneap- olis’ two other Negro players, Alex Boo Ellis and Ed Fleming, had reservations elsewhere. The Min- neapolis coach then moved the en- tire team to the hotel where the Negro players were to be quar- tered. Ellis and Fleming both played. |\the north slope will be ready Sat- William S. Bolden, manager of the Charleston Civic Center, said he advised Kundla last month that the Negro players would not Pontiac Ski Club Readies 3rd Slope This weekend \will mark the 2nd &k ke we KS be quartered in. the same hotel available to the other Lakers. The American Business Club, which sponsored the game seen by) 2,356, indicated it might protest) — Baylor's action to NBA President Maurice Podoloff. In other NBA games last night, | St. Louis snapped a five-game Sy-; racuse winning streak 102-89 as the| Hawks stretched their own streak, to five and Philadelphia tripped week's operation for Pontiac Ski Club, at Teeple Hill, in the High- land Recreation Area. Two por- tions of the area have been oper- ating, with tows in use. They will again be in use Sat- urday and Sunday and there was a possibility the beginners’ tow on urday. However, it will be in use Sunday, Arthur Kollin, secretary, said today, Ski school will also meet both days. “We were surprised last week- end when all skiers among the 60 using the area were from family groups,’’ Kollin said. There is no rental equipment at the area, but a snack bar is avail- able. Current officers include John Ir- win of Farmington, president and head of the ski school at the area. Dr. Edwin Hammer of Grosse Pte. is vice president, up high riding Boston, 105-98. Bob Pettit scored 30 for St. Louis and) Woody Sauldsberry 31 for Philly. Basketball Scores Peer: va %. Aestighl 65 ca 6 sneneen St. ‘ion maszoo Bt. Tatas 2 Ratmsees Christian 57. Muskegon Christian 3° (et) akeview 62, Warre! Bu er 66. L'Anse Creuse Lansing Sexton 60, a Lansing Resurrection 82. L Anse 61, Calumet 58 tty 84, ‘Everets ot ncoln Park 51, ¥ lanti 8 His istee 72, Cadil! Mt. Pleasant 62, _ Masa 74. Chasse! Mattawan 57 Ke ones $2 Marine City 43, Marfaville “ Mio 33. Atlanta 28 Marlette 79, Bad A xe 61 Maple Grove 8t. dienes 58 % * e ad e 4 Repids §1 Saginaw Arthur Hil) Tech 45 Monroe Catholic 64, Hillsdale 44 Merrill Seered Heart 39, w Holy Pamily 3 Milford te. Bloomfield is 49 Melvindale 67, Way: Mt. Clemens 59, Port Cerems iq New Haven 73, Armada 37 - North Branch 49, Ortonville 47 Negaunee 86, Marquette 50 Nahma 73, Powers 34 Qvoned pay Chay Handy 53 yesterday, 3 wiherville OL Bt. cea s. ‘Ferndale St. James 39 * te’ * ; 30500 W. OPEN Just Off Pontiac Central 57, rat Northern 49 One of the state's most suc- 13 Mile YEAR Northwestern Pontiac 6t. Prederick 62 Pinconning 73, Gladwin 45 Pigeon 73. Bebewaing 30 Pellston 38, Grayling 36 River Rouge 32, Ecorse 45 Remus 49, poe ley 46 Bt. Clair 66 Romulus $3. gps 62 ochester $3, Romeo 45 RO Dondero 66, RO Shrine 77. Lourdes 43 Sturgis 45, Marshall a Bouth Lyon 45, Dexter 2 Saginaw Sacred Heart is Essexville 8t. John 48 Saginaw A Hill 61, Bay City C 8t Joseph 68, Portage 67 (2 ot South Haven 63, Vieksburg 34 Sault Ste. Marie 63, Newberry Stambaugh 6, Norwa Traverse City 63, Midland 53 Three Rivers 76. BC Lakeview Troy 4, Clawson 43 Ub i 44, Elkton 42 Warren Lincoln 44. Waterford Willow Run 78, Dearborn Lowrey 50 Wyandotte 63, Monroe 40 Rooter» Ann Arbor High Mason 76 fuskevon Cath. 61 Dearborn Fordson $9 ‘Had 10 Great Years Directing The city high school wrestling teams divided matches held yes- terday. ‘ Pontiac Northern overcame defi- cits of 102 and 16-7 to down Royal Oak Dondero 24-18 at home match- New Aide and Boss is a Central win over the same 4 i school last week Elliott Old Teammates; Oe Bud Bihl had the only a { pin Chalmers Leaves Army Sophomore Winfred Miracle, Jerry Fields, Don Davis, George Graves and Bill Green all took decisions. Maurice Lackey, who remained un-| beaten, and Carl Bil Is had draws. ANN ARBOR (Two pals and )former teammates will head-up the University of Michigan's fvotball strategy of the future. City Mat Teams Divide The Huskies are now 3-2 in dual action. Pontiac Central bowed to powe erful Lansing Sexton 386 at Lan- sing. Sam Wescombe and Duke Re ‘lvea scored the only PCH points on decisions Jayvee Scores Pontiac Central 46, Flint ne thern 1 Waterford %. Van Dyke St. Frederick 44, Bt. Clement 19 St. Janes 4, OL St Mary 33 = raid 33, Lake Orion 35 Walled Lake 34. Berkley 32 Romeo 43, Rochester ¢ Imlay City 48, Oxford Lad = a ee i GLEN _ Henry (Hank) Fonde, teammate of new head coach Chalmers. (Bump) Elliott on the 1947 Michi- gan Rose Bowl champions, was named Wolverine backfield coach cessful prep coaches, Fonde, 35, was taken from Ann Arbor High School where in 10 years he had compiled a brilliant record. Obviously, Michigan hopes for much success from the Elliott Fonde combination to balance off lean recent seasons. * * * “He (Fonde) has got so used to Conventions, Banquets, Raymond E. Choueri | General Manager ent 86 Country Club Mayfair 6-2600 AROUND JOrdan 6-4662 Lunches, Cocktails and Dinners ARRANGE NOW... Meetings. Michigan's Finest 18-Hole Golf Course. Watered Fairways OAKS 5h Receptions, Dinner Dances Former General Manager HILLCREST COUNTRY CLUB (Mt. Clemens, Mich.) ' a winning way that we hope he| 50 will carry jt over with him,” said} = a Michigan spokesman. 56 At Ann Arbor High, Fonde's a teams won nine 6A League ' champlonships including feur perfect seasons and three others Vikings Edge Chief Tankers Up against a sharp Flin ern swim team yesterday, tiac Central High’s club dropped coach. a close Valley Conference meet at} x & Flint, 51-45. Chiefs missed verdict on every close race, but managed | 47, swimming coach and assistant | five firsts nevertheless. cluded stroke Win, string ot Wkice jes intact. Bruce Norvell's to keep his unbroken/pointed athletic without defeat. The teams won 69 games, lost six and tied four. All Forms The university gave Fonde al}? one-year appointment in the formal f/ t North-|capacity of instructor in physical| f Pon-|education and assistant football | oO Elsewhere, Gordon Chalmers. Wins in- athletic director at the U.S. Mili-|}] breast-'tary Academy, Friday was ap-| director at Iowa] State College. i iy Get period edge at 13-6. They went on to boost each previous period, 15-| | 17, and 19 in the finale. After setting up a 24-10 halftime count over the Crusaders, St. Fred- erick coach Gene Wright tossed in his entire bench which contin- ued to score well. Tom Derocher set the Rams’ scoring pace with 11, but game honors went to sturdy] | Ron VanHulle of Crusaders, with)” 14. Ron flipped in six goals in the; ~ final period to pull his team!” within seven points of the Rams.| | Steve Pocs bagged a pair of foul shots. Joe Keller and Pocs each added a basket to regain the long lead as time ran out. Mike Reed in his first start as a varsity member, dunked three bas-| kets, handled himself well. Crusaders gave Rams a lesson i. handling offensive rebounds get-| ting 33 to 8 for their hosts. Rams were better with defensive re- bounds, 27 to 14. In one other SCL game RO St.| Mary edged St. Rita 49-43, led by) _ Shrine to a 77-43 win over Lourdes, and AA St. Thomas defeated Far- mington OLS 65-46. ST. FREDERICK $T. CLE™ G F fT Go F Tic Oerother E14 Weber 3 a ‘ Bennedy a itt ' Bobet a a nik ¢ 3% 811 Pocs 265 9 B h 8 6 0 6 Praser 1 0 68 2 VanHulle 7 0- 0 14 Bieri 9 0-8 4 Siegher 18 3 Ritter 10 2 lL — a a. — te Tetels 21 16-12 89 Totals 18 4-13 40 St. Frederickh ........ 10 14 8 16—82 M. Clement ......416. 3 7 1940 % ot, wigT , : a HY — 7. = 7 t 243 iff Yew -i i 1 4 2-4 1 £33 Rien 9 6-6 6 LED | Be 1 EI @ B+ 87 Denher @ 1-3 * © 1 6 Man 1&8 2) claims! “We're Recommended by the Pontiac Chamber of Commerce” Reports continue to come to our attention that both door-to-door salesmen .and_ telephone solicitors claim to be approved or endorsed by the Chamber of Commerce. Beware of such The Chamber of Commerce definitely. disap- proves of the methods used by such solicitors. The only recommendation your Chaniber of: Commerce ever makes is that you deal with local, well-established firms. BUSINESS ETHICS BOARD — Pontiac Area psc of Commerce Waldron Hotel Bidg.. for from feature known brands fe ve & more quality your money retailers who ou can buy with assurance from a retailer who features known brands because you'll get the quality you expect. Phone FE 5-6148 BRAND NAMES SATISFACTION A respected Brand Name is a manufacturer's most by the retailer who sells it. For dependable quality and satisfaction you do To get the most for your money buy by Brand A Brand Name is a maker’s reputation ’ - — Brand ‘ames are built on your confidence. You and your neighbors ictate the standards a Brand Name product must meet to consistent) CONFIDENCE deliver the value and service you want. . valuable asset and he spares no effort to protect it by constantly bettering his product. A Brand Name is the maker's guarantee of satiafaction doubly endorsed better with brands you know; get to know those you see advertised in this newspaper. Name and be sure! é BRAND NAMES FOUNDATION, INC., 437 FIFTH AVENUE, NEW: YORK 16, NY ete gg eta lla: sete eam RS ae sient aenePontaay. ga Ve Beat ee ae Se Oe ae a eee er ee ee RS ee a a ee a ee ern Pe ee O88 er eye = geek = A gota 24 “ ae ee eae ee ee aay oh ge THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, JANUARY 17, 1959 = FIFTEEN MAKE OVEN PALI Bosaes sare |Must Use Special Paint | coatings and emulsion or latex) with the right adhesive, used Oil- vehicle masonry _ the man can ist properly, ” handy | If you are new at the use of adhesives, tell your hardware or building supply dealer what you intend to mend. He'll be able to recommend the most suitable stickum for your use. Read the manufacturer's in- mere to sticking things together { than spreading adhesive and waiting for it te dry. Directions may vary, but the following points are generally true for all gluing: © LOCAL TRADEMARKS, tne. M. A. BENSON CO., INC. 549 N. Saginow St., FE 4.2521 PREPARE SURFACES Come ach pace Clean, scrape and sand, Get pocbaglucngabtee _|Adhesives Rescue Man gure seecaly reeared mans. Stuck With Repair Jobs it won't spin loose. work, ‘A word about glues—The old by modern, synthetic glues. But no one glue will do aie Woodworking once called” have been replaced by caseih! Wagner’ You May-Soon See .Wet Crack First = CHICAGO (UPI) — Carpet! oughly. One of the best ways to do tightened tourniquet style with a! sweepers soon may wear “his” this is with an ordinary water pis- scrap of wood will do. and “hers” labels, if one appli-|tol. Simply shoot water at the/) 5.1 1» qaich—any Standard Sissy Tie the wood to something so! ance manufacturer has his way. crack from ‘close range. You'll get s Aluminum $26. 26.95 : “Men aren't inherently messy,’ cand wach Place small objects in the Robert S. Wagner said. ‘They’ ALWINDO CO _ jaws of a pair of pliers; hold eg pve plage = inant in| Wallpaper — and its first use ——— ertherny “Ata. tight by stretching rubber bands |, ~ & vacuum cleaner, _ can be traced back’ to ‘the around the handles. Or use 24 spend 15 minutes trying tolCHinese in 200 B.C. spring clothespins for smali | “8Ure the thing out.” Wagner, president of the E. R. oy offering new mide | re, ROY ANNETT, Ine ayerinia, oe 2 ° > Ld * * > : His Carpet Sweeper a plaster wall, you'll get a better , ALUMINUM | COMBINATION j ! : 4 4 4 ; Milwaukee, is offering new midg fish, animal and vegetable glues et sweepers that can be used to a have been pretty well replaced detorate a fireplace or living room|j * corner. + - Three-fourths of all treated poles made in the United Stat animal and fish glues. oo Southern. Pine. ates aie of Factory to You : When you're patching a crack in Save Salesman’s Commission bond if you wet the crack thor- SIZE ANY $1195 necite } */ penetration that no brush or sponge DOORS > 1788 S. Telegraph Realtors 28 E. Huron St. Ph. FE 8-0466 COMPLETE REALTY SERVICE glue and resorcinal-base glue. | Casein is mixed with water. heating needs. Our | rid of old binder. Make certain men are all highly | that joints fit before applying a trained heating ex- {new adhesive. perts. And, we handle Spread material evenly. Use a the line noted for top brush. Apply to both surfaces. uality — D . ly rar ptnee can || Geen pL RR id & 9 . to stand and become tacky be- ‘fore ing. This is especiall 9 Heating Problems Derg te nn Ti esa Join the surfaces carefully. If ) Have You sicuisre Smee excess adhesive oozes out, wipe © Air Conditioners up quickly before it sets. Some glues stain, require extra care. Clamp joints properly. The) Going in Circles? Resorcinal giues came in two | parts—liquid solvent and pow- der. Mix only what you need. Once set, a resorcinal glue is absolutely waterproof. Flexible glues — rubber base glues, clear cellulose, polyvinyl ~—different in color and properties, | but can be used on both nonpor-! ous and as porous surfaces. They) make good general househoid} cements, handy for minor Since ing debs. Genuine Glass ee preg nel | Reliable Waterproofing Complete Basement Waterproofing All Work Guaranteed — Free Estimates! $999 Soutie’ open Slows in || 24 Whitfield Phone FE 4-0777 from top and bottom— ff) price includes labor No Mone Dews = FHA Terms -Bermanent AMBASSADOR INSULATION CO. Pontiac's Oldest Insulation C: ALUMINUM AWNINGS Tre aan te neeceae @ For Wisdews @ For Patio | Do lt Now with FIBERGLAS Thrifty Aluminum Products, Inc. 725N, Park ie ait Lake Orion FEderal 5-8405 1) way you clamp them is the way they will} dry. Clamps should be tight and be keep that way for : the proper amount of time re- Heating and Sheet Metal quired for the adhesive to set. Commecees Don’t disturb the joint until it | 351 N. Paddock FE 5-6973) 1s set. Use a warm, dry room in which to work, The right tem- | perature is important when working with glue, especially. SEE US FIRST Unless the instructions tell you) . Ye, o If they have then head straight for Goodwill Automatic Heating and see the MOR-SUN Completely Automatic iit, N. Saginaw St. il , one miiae r . - ee sure tree DWI LL _ — — gel od are versatile, will| e = as NE | work for gluing as well as other, AUTOMATIC fi} {ites The | earned this seal. : ope . jobs. They're good, basic eames | 2 its NEw/I 2 to have in the home shop. HEATING jf | 3401 W. HURON meurance "Investments — ‘Treat {| otherwise, figure on working in a) jy Service. room where the temperature is) DAWSON & WATSON at least 70 degrees Fahrenheit. Gon Lo ao ‘Secamue by Soot tHowsaherying "| surfaces. Special clamps include the | _| hand screw clamp, bar clamp, ’ STOVE & OVEN Complete With Lot 10 Year * es Pune ar me WEA . Conventional Mortgage 9 Ao NOT WATT ow _. MODEL AT Aldon’s Carpet ‘ & CARPETING AND MANY 2345 Watkins Lake Rd. . OTHERS 12-8 Daily, 10-8 Sat. and Sun. in 1959 Beautiful Patterns *| bench clamp, edge clamp and | | || many more. The hand screw, | .| with its parallel wooden jaws, is .| -| the most common, the one you +| are most likely to invest in if | || you do much furniture work. | | Scraps of wood under the saws _ of the clamps will protect work; ere SR LBRO Ti WORE Ss mas | Is to be used again in a moment | If you don’t have a clamp, im-| if 4 proyise. A loop of clothesline, he 4 a ~ Protect Your Plane 1 " - < | || When a plane is not in use, the} ie a ||blade should be retracted inside | = BROWN BROS. §|the mouth to protect it from pos- | e F| sible damage. And always place| = = 704 W. Huron FE 8-931! f|a plane on its side, even when | =! = Smart Builders Specify Famous Dasa, '15,950 Special Builders’ Prices Advance Floor Decorators 3700 Sashabaw Rd., Drayton Plains OR 3-7407 W. W. ROSS HOMES, Inc. 1941 S. Telegraph Rd. FE 4-0591 Model OR 3-8021 , te Puritan Ave., Detroit Demand The * SPECIAL AFCO FEATURES x GAS and OIL * Floating Action Blower Mounted on Rubber for Quieter Operation % Slotted Port Cast Iron Burners for Greater Economy * Top Quality Controls for Safe Care-Free Operation * Permanent Type Air Filters for Lower Maintenance. Costs Recommended by Architects and Engineers -For a Guaranteed AFCO Installation Call: SR a ee eye arenes meanest ZILKA HEATING MARS HEATING Orchard Lake FE5-5461 —— Pontiac FE 8-2824 | AL PAPI HEATING GORDON BRYCE HEATING © Williams Lk. & M-59 OR 3-1093 = Drayton Plains OR 3-4676 KRUEGER & SON HEATING JOHN A. KENT HEATING Auburn Heights UL 2-1500 Pontioc FE 5-9132 THATCHER SHEET METAL CO. Oxford OA 8-3674 UNITED MACHINERY & SUPPLY CO.-Distributo | UN 3-430 . Rg. J. Spry Hugh A. Watson There are many special clamps! woe 24-HR. SERVICE Free Estimates Remember . . CALL ANYTIME NO MONEY DOWN! “HEAVENRICH HOMES” Our Price Is Right! NO CASH NEEDED! F.HLA. TERMS TO 5 YEARS © Room Additions © Kitchens © Siding and Roofing © Garages © Furnaces © Basements © Attics ree Finished B | © Shell a Completed i 8-655 3 meine VET’S "Sant wee ‘ | MICHIGAN \ we qeenaeo® =— wero VET $ $6618 aun ieee: FHA STDac FULL PRICE $12,240 FULL PRICE i — COMPARE THESE OUTSTANDING FEATURES: — @ 1959 Prize Winning Floor @ All City improvements— Plan Paved Streets @ 3 Spacious Bedrooms @ Close te Transportation, e 1% Tiled Baths . Schools, Shopping, Churches @ Birch or Mahogany Cobinets © — @ Walk-in Closets, Birch Doors © '2' x 22° Carport @ 40-Gallon Automatic Hot © Copper Plumbing Water Heater ’ @ Automatic Gas Heot , @ 50’ x 150’ Lots . © 5 Mexotions te Conte Sees in ae 10 A. M. to 8 P. M.—Model at 170 Westway FE 8-2707 [NEWTON BLDG. CO. AV 4.2900 | SPACE KING LIVING AREA GALORE Over 15,000 Sq. Ft. of Living Area unbeatable VALUE— 1370 $Q. FT. BRICK RANCH HOME WITH FULL 11 BLOCK BASE AND A LARGE TWO CAR PLASTERED GARACE Storms and screens bid Entrance is 66 sq. ft. of raised fe slate al Studie ceiling in living reom with ft acoustle plaster | Reawood paneled living reem Select oak floors i Septic tank, copper plumbing aa —AIl This for $19,950 on Your Lot— private full bath, and sliding glass! doors lead to a balcony terrace overlooking the rear yard. The main bath is “split” with a sliding door, a practical and de- strable arrangement when two bedrooms are served by the same bath, | On exteriors, women attending | ‘ the housing conference : desire for a house which, whether. traditional or modern, dorenaes the’ $ warmth of domestic architecture. | They like wood which shows its’ Only 13,990 Including 16 Fi. Lot grain, or brick which “looks like 3 Bedrooms, Livin) : Large Clesets, 11% it belongs on a house and not a Streets, Schools and Churehes Nearby. For Suburban Living it Just gas station.” Can't be Beat. pera Distance to Commuter Depot. ALL DOWN PAYMENT—F.H.A. TERMS Architect York had this in mind BELIEVE ME FOLKS, ME OF BEAUTY AND A JOY FOREVER in fashioning a contemporary ex- GO TO 6220 WILLIAMS LAKE RD., 14 MILES WEST OF DIXIE HWY. terior with a fresh, clean appear- ance, Its “homeyness” was: OPEN DAILY 1:00 P.M. TO 9:00 P.M. achieved by limiting the exterior | materials to brick, wood shingles’ Phone OR 3-4597 and flush boards. The garage is generously over- sized to previde for garden tool storage and work bench. A large i | | Plastered walls 8 large bedrooms Separate dining reom i Birch kitehen with eating space G.E, even and range 2 baghs with ceramic tile and fan 2 natural fireplaces, raised hearth The Most Astonishing Value in This or Any Other Area the United States who attended the Women’s Conference on Housing in Washington, D. C. It baths. WHAT THE WOMEN WANT — This eight- room contemporary home was designed to the Model Shown by Appoiniment : “ own rage specifications of 80 delegates from all parts of E. J. DUNLAP Custom Builders has three bedrooms, 24% Your Plans er Ours FE 8-1198 | ” i a tbe EXTRA SPACE... | AT LOW... LOW WINTER PRICES Or WOOD PANELLED e-O paett poems fi fl == DEN on FAMILY RM. T DINING RM. Jo re 134220° ipeeig4 sgemane . 4 4 mcneN oon +» cellar off the optionai lower rec- PPP PAO eo 2 a. a8. ST, S2BH4 93 Denese reation room gives ample room +f aM, to "The habiable area TORIDHEET N ‘gwo can |} _-() The habitable area of the house \ % GARAGE « is 2,193 square feet, not including , | foreane “4 © WALL-FLAME OIL HEAT &, 5 lands cool preserersrs=s=--=, = 1b4 Study Plan Order Coupon : & But : Send to The Pontiac Press, it . for the Tops . earners: §. Pontiac, Mich. i in Comfort, Convenience \ an wmrgaticganeht ; Enclosed is 35 cents in coin. : \ and Economy! \ < - Please send me a copy of the . ated ; saat plan of The Fees of it For Free Heating Survey and Estimate. Call % SS: q the Week, Design X-41. i’ % mf, t "xo stamps scenes. Pease 1 AUTOMATIC HEATING CO. N \e ( » gticky tape Ve J 4 cen ee ee | % 5,000 Successful Installations in Pontiac Area “LS | Ny 17 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 2-9124 \ . . ‘NAME . FLOOR PILAN — Wide foyer and hobbies, ette area, and a generous wood-panelled family ; (please print) \\ ae ee ee eee play or study area in the sleeping wing are two room or den. The basement plan, not shown, (|g _ 1” of the attractive features of X-41. The design includes an optional lower level recreation area : STREET .............---- ; includes a luxurious master bedroom, large and a maid's room. tocivy......... STATE.....--. i living and dining rooms, a wide kitchen and din- : : ; ADD to YOUR HOME... the family room which contains 284 Our skilled workmen * GARAGES W ll th T jout the front without crossing @’ square Ro The garage covers 7 - . can quickly add an omen Ca e une single room: 453 square feet and another 1,042, This HUGE ROOM with BATH extra wing to your * STORM io ] The living room has a bowed |square feet of space adaptable for, | H Itiple- window, instead of |finishing is enclosed by the base-| . : a “ a home... or finish off WINDOWS for Their Idea OUuSe the conventional sictere windew aon ns ” | < ae. : ? A " ’ —which found no approval at the e over-all length is eet, the, hich found pproval h Th ll length is 81 feet, th your attic or basement * KITCHENS | By DAVID 1. BOWEN tally,, was one of two women's contorene: It also has a fire- depth 45 feet. Minimum lot width, Cost? Less than you | Eighty women from all sections conferences on housing at Wash- place,?a a feature high on | recommended is 115 feet. might think! Call us of the United States traveled to} ington last fall. the delegates’ desired list. The square foot area of the | g : * ROOFING Washington recently to tell the) Qne of the moderators at the| The dining room has a ‘‘semi-| house is higher than average, Tal , , i nation’s Rome builders what they three-day conference was Herman separate’ location a en raleastcngetd rf make reom for | ake advantage of our tow wanted in a house H. York, prize-winning architect |D¢ ween the totally separate and) features delegates Gesired. winter prices on building * RECREATION | Here is a home designed to vetleas frequent designer of House of |the “L’’ shaped arrangement which! architect York reports the wom- materials now! | ROOMS specifications [the Week plans. As a participant/#ppeared equally popular among 4, at the conference were frank to PAICIIGsS OH: It has eight rooms. 2"% baths, a in the discussions, he was in an the women. admit that there were many things glamorized center hall, both a ideal position to get a detailed INFORMAL LIVING they wanted which they could not OPERATORS ON DUTY * ROOM aoe ae bene nisi picture ot ihe ‘clermersy) delecale | A special feature of X-41 is a afford. = seis nae “— s : ; . E : th inever enjoy m; 24 HOURS A DAY ADDITIONS trally located work or hobby area, modern home. Laie ne Tee eye they won't get them as soon. Here's how he them to-/ ee ee plus a family room off by itself at one end of the house. | gether: put York jing or similar activities. Architect has further increased its The plan, X-41 In the House of | the Week series, is r composite built on the main preferences expressed by delegates attend. ing the Women's Conference on FE 2-1211 G & M CONSTRUCTION CO. ENTERTAINMENT AREA multiple use by making provision The living room is in the front|for a hideaway bed and a folding | lof the house, with direct access| partition, so that when needed it| from a domed ceiling entrance|can serve as a guest sleeping foyer. This foyer, incidently, con-|room. ) 2260 Dixie Highway, N. Housing, sponsored by the Na- tional Asso. of Home Bullders and the United Industry Commit- nects with a flagstoned rear foyer two steps lower to make a ‘‘center hall’ connection so that children can come in the bac k door and go of Telegraph Rd., Pontiac In addition to this relaxation or | work room, a large family room or den is located beyond the | tee for Housing. This, nn We Have Three Million ollars Available for Mortgage Purposes! If you are planning to buy or build a new home or to improve your present home, come in and see us today! HOME LOANS OUR SPECIALTY WE BUY LAND CONTRACTS Pontiac Federal Navings Home Office 761 W. Huron Street Downtown Branch 16 E. Lawrence Street Rochester Branch 407 Main Street 4416 Dixie Highway—Waterford dining room. This room is in- tended for noisier family activi. ties and connects through sliding glass doors with the huge terrace which runs most of the length of | the house at the rear. The plans allow for yet another private family area as an optional ar- rangement In the basement. Women at the conference insist- fed that kitchens should be large} ‘enough to provide an eating space for informal meals. Most of the) delegates also wanted kitchen cab-/ jinets out of sight from the living |and dining rooms. The kitchen in X-41 not only answers these demands but al8o gives control of the rear yard play jarea. Among other desirable fea- jtures: A built-in cutting’ board, a planning desk, a broom closet, Over 80 per cent of all homes now under construction are esti- mated to contain ceiling insulation. In 1940, only one home in four was built with such protection. FRED W. MOOTE ELECTRICAL, INC. Slectrical CONTRACTOR State and City Licensed Completely assembled and finished. Mahogany paneling, tile features in bath, fully wired, electric heat, full insulation, storm windows and screens. Can be occupied day of delivery: Do it yourself or we will install it. “There Is No Substitute for Experience” Open Daily 9:00 - 5:30 Financing Up to 7 Years L} © Commercial a ” Malntenence BOB’S BUILDING SERVICE © Residential INCORPORATED _. Repair 207 W. MONTCALM 30 Years in Pontiac At the flashing white light just east of Oakland 845 West Huron St. (often overlooked nowadays). _The three bedrooms are isolated A. Murray White FE 4-9544 FE 2-3924 and FE 2-4008 5 © Precast Stone Aluminum Siding © Cement Work © Additions © Awnings © Railings COMPLETE MODERNIZATION SERVICE © Insulated Cast-Alum. ——_———_——e— Yea! | Am Interested In a Free MICHIGAN CORP. 2 CASTONE PLAYS SANTA IN JANUARY! Your House 31'x26’x8’ Including Gables) Covered With New Siding Waterproofed Glatex or Insulated Shake ‘eNO ean a mera: iii —