ete a se. 7 WR Westher Surenn Forecast 117th YEAR PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 24,1990 ‘or armuret . Z ecm epee ihr ne econ te ge aera ea ee ae irarle of the Madonna It was foretold by the bearded prophets of old. A heavenly Megsiah would come to offer a new kingdom that would be a sanctuary for mankind. | In the predictions of the prophets were neither the place nor the manner nor the day—or even the century of the coming. But now, 1959 years ago, the hour of fulfillment was come. ‘The instrument of the Lord God’s beneficence was a virgin of Nazareth, a city of Galilee. And this was the manner of the miracle: Espoused to Joseph, of the House of David, was the virgin and the virgin’s name was Mary. To her God. sent the angel Gabriel, who told her the Holy Ghost would come upon her and she would conceive und bring forth a son. ‘ the ‘ry “s name would be called. Jesus, of whose kingdom there would e no en . - And so it was. Thus, it came to pass that when Mary was great with child a decree went out from Caesar Augustus that all the people must go to Jerusalem to be counted and taxed. So Joseph and Mary went up out of Nazareth. Amid a multitude from all about who flocked into Jerusalem. ; There was no room at the inn for Joseph and Mary, whose time was nigh upon her. So they abode in a lowly manger and there Mary brought forth her firstborn son and wrapped him in swaddling clothes. And the angel of the Lord appeared, and suddenly there was with the angel a multitude of the heavenly host praising God and saying: | Glory to God in the highest and on earth peace, good will to- 4 ward men. | And thus came to pass the Miracle of the Madonna. And for all the years since, and to come, Christmas Day is a day of joy for the birth of the Prince of Peace. THE PONTIAC . PRESS, THU RSDAY, “DECEMBER, 24, 1959 Ce ee wae oo ‘(The Day in Birmingham . “ a f New Hi-Y Club to ‘Adopt’ — an Area Orphans Home Deputies, State Police versity of Detroit, will be the in All-Out Effort to Cut Decked Outi in Yuletide Best — | Ardmore Street All Aglow homes, one for Santa Claus and) the other in gingerbread fashion. | Plywood elves scamper across TONITE (Christmas Eve.) More than half the homes are, about two dozen of North Ardmore street is a little; street with a big spirit at Christ-) | decorated, mas time |them, BIRMINGHAM The newly organized Hi-Y Club for teen-age boys at Bloomfield .Hills High Army Trying It, Best: to Cheer Up Soldiers guest speaker, Olficers of the club are Mrs. Al- . ; s. usual, the _ the Lehighs’ front yard. ‘ : at field til i Stationed There ‘rms on al the “(Wo- SANTAS BELLS Lehigh and other North Ard- Holiday Traffic Deaths |schoot is planning he adopt” @n| ie’ strom, president; Mrs. Stew: lside is aglow with outdoor Christ-| Mingled among the multi-col-lmore street s have cap- . orphans’ home in the area, art Loud, vice president; Mrs. ON THE WESTERN FRONT,| mas decorations. ‘ored lights are Santa Clauses aMdityred prizes every year in the) Sheriff's deputies and State ~ *« * LeGrand Terry, secretary, and reindeer, angels and nativity Christmas lighting contest which scenes, tolling bells and messages the Pontiac Area Junior Chamber Mrs. Theodore Will, treasurer. Police said today they plan to go Women residing within the city Members will visit an orphanage (UPI) — American troops gifts and Ardmore street is a block east every week, bri ~"““@fficers and enlisted men will | ¢ spend ¢ Christmas in all out to protect Oakland Coun- halfway sect the world eres between East Pike and of cheer. of Commerce used to sponsor. | ty’g finest traffie record in years) helping as recrention leaders, ‘ac-|limits of Birmingham or Troy are their homeland. But they are| Mie gan, Many of the displays are hand The contest ig not being | during the holiday season cording to Michael Zweig of ‘the eligible for membership. their “best to make it as Police estimate that upwards of made | ee requiring severa staged this year, but lack of Christmas traditionally has the elub. . ‘ ‘Wherry as possible this year, 1,000 cars drive slowly by each;months work. | competition doesn’t seem to have | worst death, record of any holiday| Another plan to push the O M other | ‘Most of about 50,000 servicemen! night. Traffic has been routed one- For instance, Paul Lehigh, 42 | discouraged North Ardmore |in Michigan, And the New Year's) March of Dimes drive over the ne | stationed in this country will feel Jonesome being away from loved -ones during the holiday season. _ But unlike other Christmases since _ war broke out in 1950, there are s some who won't. For the first time, some 192 | celebrate Christmas with their | families in Korea. They are . members of military advisery assistance groups who were per- mitted te bring in their families beginning last July. For many other Gls who will have to spend lonesome holidays, the Army is trying hard to put them in a joyful yuletide spirit. There will ‘be religious services for men of all faiths in the 74 military chapels located through- out South Korea. They will include candlelight services for the Prot- estants and midnight masses for the Catholics. Mail is being handled around the clock to assure that each service- man receives his cards and pres- ents from home before Christmas Day. Mess sergeants are working on the usual service holiday dinner, featurng shrimp cocktail and roast young tom turkey. Barracks, mess halls and other buildings are decked out with Christmas trees and decorations. Preholiday Christmas and New Year parties are planned at sefv- jee clubs throughout Korea—from) a line company along the edge of the demilitarized zone, which sep- arates South Korea from the Com- munist North, to the quartermas- ter group in the southernmost port city of Pusan. _Although no big-name entertain- ers will visit Korea this year, such persons as veteran comedian Ros- coe Ates Los Angeles Dodgers’ world series pinch-hit batting st: ar Chuck Essegian, movie actres S| Anne Francis and Angie Dickin-| son will entertain troops here, Judge Is Santa to Mother Held on Check Count | The pony-tailed-.mether of five 7 arrested two days ago on a bad eheck charge will spend Christmas with her children, thanks to a Santa Claus in judge's robes. Mrs. Betty Lou Zograph, 26, of Center Line, told police she wrote more than $500 in bogus checks so she could buy toys and clothes for her youngsters. The merchandise was found jammed into the Detroit motel Ttoom where she and the children had been staying for three weeks until her arrest Tuesday. “"T knew they'd catch me,"’ Mrs. Zograph said. ‘I just hoped it wouldn't be until after Christmas.” x * & After the woman, expecting a sixth child in May, stood mute at her arraignment in the Southfield Municipal Court of Judge Clarence ~A. Reid,-she was locked up in the Oakland County Jail. Unable to post the $500 surety bend set by Reid, there seemed to be ne hope she would be able to spend Christmas with her children. ‘After 33 hours behind bars, Mrs. Zograph was released yesterday. at noon, on her pledge she will .appear at an examination get. for §:30°a.m. Monday in Reid’s court. “IT changed the surety bond to a personal bond," said Reid, ‘‘be- cause we thought she should spend Christmas with her kids.” The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureaw Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY «<< ‘ elomdy with light snow and light ing dritzie possible tonight, mestly cleudy. Low tonight 4. High temerrew 34 with winds southeasterly 15-25 m; p. h. way north from Pike. street is an average in Pontiac. | N. Ardmore St., began * * * treet with modest, homes. Fisher Body Division At Christmas time it tradi- tienally becomes a show place | tidy ‘are two thres-feet high BEST WISHES — Multi-colored candles fill the windows at 86-88 N. Ardmore St., home of Mr. and Mrs. Daniel J. Miller. Above the porch, ANGELS AND EVERGREEN — A closeup shows the central attraction in the display at 70 N. Ardmore St” home of Mr. and Mrs. Harold play in October, working on it | Most of the year North Ardmore, during spare time and on the residential! days he was laid off from his ' cause of the steel strike. Highlighting the Lehigh display|way the second stained glass. A bright message gleams through the-night—‘‘Best Wishes.” his dis- | street. job be- ‘Eve tour of it, ‘letters plywood) “MERRY CHRISTMAS.” Pontiac Press Photes to be of story window appears * Wesley. Bathed in a white spotlight, the red- . cheeked angels are surrounded by a glittering ~ array of colored lights sand evergreen boughs. The street glitters and for those lwho take ‘the traditional Christmas shews an upward trend in traffic the familiar mes-| ‘sage shines out in large capital seen “a decline throughout the _several times along the! i Since the war the lowest. county - traffic death toll was the 88 in 1949. hospital room. Holiday isn’t far behind. " While the rest of the state fatalities for 1969, Oakland has year, |Last year 96 were fatally injured. This was the first time since 1949 that the figure fell below 100.’ * * * So,far this year, there have been 75 traffic deaths in Oakland. At this time last year there were 92. All available state troopers will work 10-hour shifts from Thurs- day noon to midnight Sunday over both the - Christmas and New Year's holidays, according to Sgt. Mike Ahigrim, Pontiac Post com- mander. Every sheriff's patrol car avail- able will be pressed into use, said Sheriff Frank Irons. Deputies hold- ing desk jobs will be fréed for highway patrol as a blanket of police vigilance descends on coun- ty roads, . Mercy Hospital. is a good friend of Carolyn. top at the school is also being readied. The club, affiliated with. the), YMCA, is the first association of this type for teen-agers at Bloom- field Hills High, he said. Membership is open to all boys)” of the. aches! * * The sabre of the club is tol have organized recreation and dances, Zweig said. This winter the boys will meet every Monday evening to play basketball, . -. 2 Officers of the new club are Richard Ford, president; Rowe Balmer, vice president; - Bruce Geyman, treasurer, and Howard Schunemen, secretary. The Birmingham - Troy Repub- lican Women’s Club will meet Jan. 12 at 1 p.m., with the Bloomfield Hills Republican Women’s Club at Showcase, Inc. Dr, John Dempsey, professor a | palitical sclence at the Uni. Carolyn Crowned Queen = arty tas ee oa of Pontiac for Christmas Carolyn Carr is Pontiac’ s Christmas Queen. | The title and a delicate floral crown brought a smile of pleasure from the 11-year-old leukemia victim who _|maintained her slim grasp on life today at St. Joseph The honor came from the Pontiac Boys’ Club, which The club had named a younger sister, Donna Carr, its, ‘jqueen in 1956 and the?” youngest of the ‘seven Carr children, Cindy, 3, as queen last year. “Carolyn had always wanted to be a Boy's Club queen,” said her mother, Mrs. Dolores Carr, 54 N. Jessie St. ‘But she was too old to qualify.” “Last night, the club’s direc- tor, Cressy B. Larson, brought the floral crown to the hospital room -where Carolyn has lain in had her family Christinas early this year. * * * But the many. small gifts which a generous public has sent to the girl this week are coming in handy now, Mrs. Carr said. “I'm able to give her one, once lor twice a day,” she explained. With their fingers crossed, the’ Carrs are saving some of Caro- {was Has Faith in Santa WKRON, Ohio (AP)—For seven years a mysterious man has been “Santa to Helen Arnold and her nine children. - Tt started in 1953 when Mrs. Ar- nold was wandering in q depart- ment store worrying over bow she could make $37 cover the needs of all her children. . Someone pressed something into her hand. A.man's voice said, “Buy some- thing nice for the kids.” x & &, In her hand was a $20 bill. She idid not see the giver. Mrs. Arnold wrote a letter to the Akron Beacon Journal thank. | ing the mysterious stranger. She signed it “Grateful Mother.” Every year since then the mys-|. terious stranger has sent a gift for “Grateful Mother” ‘to the Beacon Journal. A reporter takes the money to Mrs. Arnold, whose ~thusband is in Ohio Penitentiary serving a sentence for grand lar-> * .* The mysterious stranger's gifts Ihave totaled $1,390. This year’s the largest. The envelope opened at the Beacon Journal con- tained seven $50 bills. Roberts to Debate Swainson on TV — Television viewers in the Pon- tiac-Detroit area will have an Op- portunity Sunday at noon to hear Rep. Farrell E. Roberts (R-West Bloomfield Township) and Demo- discuss the future of Michigan. On the “Detroit Spea’ gram at noon (WIBK-Chaneel 2), Roberts and Swainson will di cuss the just concluded 1959 tech lative session and also make pre-| dictions of what's ahead in tHe; lcoming session which will open| Jan, 13. Dr, John Dempsey will be mod- lyn’s gifts for Christmas Day. erator. critieal condition since Monday. wear it. But she held it in her’ hands and smiled when her mother told.her the news. Larson said the boys at the! club had been planning to serenade Carolyn at home with Christmas carols Christmas. Eve. But the sudden crisis in her 14-month ines put an end to this plan. -* Acting Postmaster Robert C. Miller said more than 2,000 Christmas cards have been sent to the Carr home by special delivery ‘since Monday, when public attention was called te the dying girl's desire to receive some. The cards are stacked in the A dozen of the cards are pinned up on the wall at the foot of the girl's bed. Her mother shows her others a couple at a time, Mrs, Carr and Carolyn’s father, Ear] B. Carr, a Pontiac Motor Division --employe, hoped their daughter would live to see Christ- mas Day. “Several times last night, I .| feared the end Was coming,” said Mrs, Carr, “But each time she managed somehow to pat through.” Because of her illness, ae eens Geran; y Admits Smug@ling Done by Truck Drivers AACHEN, Germany (UPD Smuggling across the German border isn't what it used to be, but In an oxygen tent, she ensee Yuletide Slumber Binge Alarms Waker-Upper NEW YORK (AP)—A_ profes- sional waker-upper who has been getting bleary-eyed New Yorkers out of bed for 20 years says this time of year is the worst. Cold weather and Christmas drinking are blamed for keeping them in the sack. Mary Woody, one “sf a ~dozen employes of Western Union's Wake-Up Service, says her cheery telephone greeting—‘‘Good morn- ing; time to get up'’—often is met with silence, snarls and curses or a banging receiver. WEDNESDAY TERRIBLE The wake-up expert ~ said Wednesday was her worst day in 10 months. ‘‘We just couldn't get)". some people out of bed,” she said. “One guy who was supposed. to be up at 7:30 a.m, didn’t answer his: phone anti! 9 o’clock, Some people even denied they had re- quested to be called, “You have jots of drinking and Christmas parties and people hate to get up during these dark and cold mornings. “Sometimes they get mad at me, They curse and say I have some nerve calling them at this hour.” ; * * * How does she know the client won't go back to sleep? Mrs, Woody said she sometimes has to talk a long time—even sing —to be sure the heavy sleepers are really awake, Often she calls them again. Her clients include doctors, nurses or patiefts taking medi- Way They Figure get used to the sound of alarm! clocks,” says Mrs. Woody, ‘‘but the telephone call has an emer- gency association." | What awakens Mrs. Woody’? An alarm clock. Cheap Insurance PLAINFIELD, N.J. @&—Maurice S. Mandell and his wife have taken out what they call ‘‘a cheap in- surance policy” that cost about $100 a person for themselves and four ch "They had a 10 by 11-foot atomic fallout shelter built into a corner of theit basement: * * * “Tt gives us a greater sense of security,"’ says Mrs. Mandell. Her family moved here two years ago trom Ohio where, she said, there’s little thought of atomic warfare. May Race at Site of Army-Navy Game ~ Philadel PHILADELPHIA as the site of the solo football game, may be converted to a part-time harness race track. Mayor Richardson Dilworth said yesterday he was making the city- owned stadium available to any E cratic Lt. Gov. John B. Swainson|— ong ‘Stadium, : known . throughout & During this Holiday Sea- son SIMMS wishes io extend to our neighbors and customers’ a full measure of health and happiness to YOU AND YOUR FAMILY! SIMMS SATURDAY STORE HOURS gan to 10 p.m. Bring in Your CHRISTMAS Movies & Snaps Seturday or Monday . for Extra AST DEVELOPING & PRINTS ‘Save at SIMMS ven COLOR PROC ESSING MOVIES (8mm Roll) 4 “(Roll of 20) All KODACHROME Film Regular $1.75 Work Mailed Direct to Your Home More? MAGAZINE Load 8mm MOVIES PROCESSING C $1.40 List—-NOW 1 §§ Yes! We Still Otfer Genuine EASTMAN DEVELOPING At Our DISCOUNT PRICES 36 Exposure 35mm COLOR SLIDES PROCESSING $2.90 List—NOW Your Christm KODACOLOR Rolls to SIMMS for Finest COLOR PRINTS Full Color ENLARGEMENT —With Color Film Brought In for Developing LIMITED TIME ONLY Regular 69c Jumbo. 4x6 inch today in Fonte customs officials still have plenty SS ee Range bd group that wants to sponsor races) | enlargement with every roll wi temperature preceding 8 a.m. of headaches. oa ship : there . you pick picture to be en. At 8 a.m. Wind velocity § mi. p. R. y’s smuggler is ely , ‘ rst, - erp arged at no extra charge. inte lynt el Toda muggler is mote likel Fi said Dilworth, th larged 9 Son “tees Thuraiey at 3:08 pa to be the driver for a reputable! . * == * = Immust pay the cOst of alterations| | Hurry in! Sun rises Friday at 8 am, firm than a professional criminal,| It costs $1.05 (plus 13 cents tax)|—which he estimated at two mil- . — 4 Moon fisee Frida at: St a. as was the case 10 years ago, when| to be awakened. One school teach-|lion dollars—to convert the 100,000- ~Q-S-t-e-s-f Downtowa Temperatures the German-Belgian border nearjer ran up a $2,000 bill in get-out-|seat stadiuni for racing use. Sec- =S- gem ag emg Aachen used to be the scene ofiof bed calls because she Was im-!ond, he said, the alterations must BLACK and WHITE giz “3% TS. -# spectacular gun battles and chases|mune to alarm clocks. be such ae not to interfere with h * oem 26 between police sind smugglers. “Doctors say that certain people| the Army-Navy gathe. % Photo Service = : sis @ your snapshots sooner when A, uetmestey ta Poittes a i : Simms prints and develops ‘em! Hype: ‘Sempernture vrs. 3 , Chief Issues Warning es ae a. Why Pay 7c-to 10c MGreather=—Clouay. Ter eeeerse nese’ sed SANTA’S HOME — It's the North Pole right a@ gingerbread house at the left: troop . a ME FADEPROOF er . i inge a left: A ‘cui itignent "anaes in Ponting domicile of Santa Claus at 42 N, Ardmore St., of elves cavort across the Lehighs’ snow-topped voi ir es. er day aye he. nl ag fc nse Photo P rints Cate tame tits as the flag proclairns above the homme of Mr. yard. isco’s | larged : $I temperature aeridbesesees, 188| and Mrs. Paul Lehigh. Santa's house ig at the Pontiac Fire. Chief James R. \that toys and clothing, euch ant ith Baltimore and St, Lou ‘ se eo er F air _ a NR ie na Nt - ames py u * White y warned families suits a ~ Mieveot a4, Lowest Tetoperatares This ae | “extra, Careful and take Tiron fh ot ot oninnammabl so treome gr paigmmemmlaal 80 in 1603 -7 th 1024 ag? cuts on both j ta a to fires.” — wae ? | Condition of Crash cr et te chet Sign No, 1 Draft werk & es os i ipeigtnenday's Temperature Chart } eae, jane possible ‘internal injuries when s warned agali bie or| “Don’t set up electric trains or "Brandt, an oittleider and third Bait it 3 Vj tim Still Serioi his car crashed into @ utility pole) SAN FRANCISCO ‘AP)—Theliightiig matches, candles, or any|spirit-fuoled i Agee the tree,/baseman, was one of the Giants : s/VICTIM SUN SEPOUS Tired over severst ames’ | "Sah J Tanciseo, fiers, Wednesday other source of flame near Cheist.[and leeep lighters, candles, andjtadct to Battimore for left-hand ie | : . ee (atta StS ele ee ne Ey eee oy ines“ omen eta tte 1 Cyrus W. Osborn, 18, 125 Mar-| tr nM rel “Den meee. Cpe Pity. Les. 4 d ‘tell Dr., Bloomfield Hilis, was still The hospital listed his condition | Dame. inks in tye bey lee, Genre equiedt * “Kod above all, if fire should * * * ‘ eat Ie fieete-e eye. asmuren bet 83 Bina Mercy foday in Mount Car-/@8, continued “‘serious’”’ today. He sivepeed mt saticend Foot.| “Yitig. sparks from "8 break out, don't try to fight it your-| Brandt labeled that trade as i Die ates —* mel Mercy Hospitak Detroit, two) \.. 7 i | and — frayed — lew Re ee ___. |ho “surprise to -him, He said he/k days after his car crashed on the) ‘The jarger\ hospitals ‘have as nal ‘enue contract thus turning | cords,” he sald, “These are “First get your family out of the/figured he. would be trade bait icle> éxpreseway in Detroit. mare larger hospit own the Los Angeles Chargers of; psig See ot holiday fires,” -\ house, then call the fire department|when the Giants’ decided last sea- Any: AS ifferent kindg | of jobs|the American Football League in san before trying to fight the fire 4 mak The youth suffered head injuries, !and- job classifications, ‘wigan wanted him. = 9, He said parents shoyld be r self,” Chief White said. - me Yodan Cove ta a bal : Pe ? - Ps 1 . bi : ‘ i ¥ : 8 * . oom 2 e ce { Mics ay ea , \ \ \> mi . ) . ‘ », \ sy. fe \ : Oey \ ‘ } 7 : 4 ( | . ‘ Fi i. 5 j \ ; ; a \ Lad ifs The Weather DA. Weather’ Bureau Ferecast ; Bmp » . 117th YEAR aati de ‘ OE ‘Not a Creature Was. Stirring SH-H-H, NO PEEKING — Tonight’s the big night, when Santa Claus makes tributing ‘gifts to children throughout the land. Here he comes upon tw® little sisters jwho | suc- es ee ee pane Chicago Gets Seven his rounds dis- a Mr. » Roc hester: Inches mesh wp “PON MAC, MIC “HIGAN, T HURSDAY, DECEMBER 34. 1950—38 eek Escalator Hike PAG Coexist, Ike Let's Not Merely cumbed to sleep while They are Susan, and Mrs. Don G. Pixley of 140 Drace { } Pentiac Press Phote | awaiting his arrival. 2, and Martha, 6, daughters Most of Midwest Under Snow By The Associated Press A blanket of white covered wide) areas in the northern half of the) country today in the wake of pre-| Christmas sndw storms that ham- mered the East and Midwest: The heaviest season hit the Midwest Wednes-'! day, dumping up-to a foot and more of*snow from the northern) plains to the Great Lakes. The storm, of the same pat- tern that whipped the Northeast Lord Halifax, to US., Dies at Home snowfalls of the: Monday and Tuesday, disrupted transportation, djscouraged holi- | | day motor travel and incon- venienced millions. The blowing, | drifting snow added te the woes | of last-minute Christmas shop- pers. The storms took a heavy Jeath ‘toll. Most of the’ 38 deaths re- ported were in traffic accidents 'on snow-covered highways or from_ ‘heart attacks due to over-exertion| lwhile shoveling snow. | | At least 23 persons diéd in the Eastern In Wisconsin, where snow piled up to more than 10 deaths Chi- cago, which was hit by more than 7 inches of snow, reported five jstorm deaths, The snow in the Midwest lashed | by gusty winds which built huge drifts in many areas, lost storms, a foot in many areas, were blamed on the storm. | much of its power during the | early morning. Driving condi- | tions still were -hazardous from Ex-Envoy i’YORK:,, England! (AP) — Lord LORD HALIFAX “t You Can Stop Dreaming of a White Christmas "Twill be a Christmas Eve with snow-- possibly! ~ occasional light mixed. with light freezing . drizzle, the weatherman forecasts. Less than an inch of new snow is likely to fall on the eve of Santa’s arrival, The mercury will dip to 2 low of 26 tonight, Mostly cloudy and little température change ts the outlook ‘for Christ- mas Day with an expected high of B. The U, S. Weather Bureau said today that no snow was expected to fall in the state Friday. ee: * * No great “temperature. changes are expected, although slightly warmer -weather is — about Friday and a. by a slight cooling tre Monday. pois hr will total: one to three ténths of an inch in ‘ diminishing snow tonight and pds- sibly a st pr 8 easterty at ind rc th an howe will become 15-25 miles. “The lowest temperature -preced: ing 8 a.m, was recorded at 22 de- grees, At 1, pam: the thermometer Morning ahs anecdged eae * ¢4ie i + ek % Lee ead -~ = > 9 er 4 WAS - | till freedom, for ourselves and oth- and|of power, Jost: ‘oti his dees Halifax died ‘at his country home) in Yorkshire Wednesday night. The gaunt, shy British statesman) who .helped swing the might of, the United States against Nazi_ Germany in World War II was 78. Former viceroy to India, foreign, secretary and wartime ambassador. to Washington, Hali-' fax had been bedfast two days with a chest complaint. His son) and heir, Lott Irwin, said his fa- ther’ ‘‘was just completely worn out.” -° In Washington, Acting Secre- | . tary of State Douglas Dillon paid tribute te the wartime an.bas- sador, “He was ever a staunch friend ofthis country,’’ said Dillon, ‘‘and during his years .of public life con-, tributed: greatly to the-strengthen-) ing of Anglo-American relations.” * <* * In London British Foreign Sec-| retary Selwyn Lloyd~said mates’ had adorned all of his ‘public ‘of-| fices with. ‘his integrity, his ideal- ism and his ability.” A conservative, deeply religious | man once called an appeaser of | Hitler for his association with the — Munich peace policy of Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain, Halifax went on to serve Winston Churchill's campaign that tri- umphed over the Axis powers. Halifax declared defiantly in 1940: ‘‘We~shall not stop fighting ers, is assured,” He went to the United States in 1941. as ambassador. His mis- sion was to persuade Americans, then on the sidelines, . to swing their sympathies toward Britain, fighting “— aa Hitler. Halifax sah tis own private price in the war. His second son, Peter, was killed in action in North Africa. His. third sen, The) Hon, Richard. Wood, now’ minister’ « a ‘Libya. ” Easy « on Sailor. Senta : ALAMEDA. Calif. (UPD)—Po- lide decided yesterday’ to over-” jobk a: department store's com- plaint that a Sante Claus was obstructing | the sidewalk. Offi- cers learned that Navy Airthan Peter R. Salveson, was playing the Santa role without. pay. *. a tiree-dhy: leave, a a ey | northern Illinois | Indiana northward. ‘South Dakota ‘Valley through the Great Lakes decide for themselves how and northern Snow fell during the night from North Dakota and _ northeastern across Minnésota into the upper Great Lakes. Freez-: ing rain accompanied the snow | near the southern end of Lake Michigan and central Indiana. * * * The snow was expected to con- tinue in the upper Mississippi! region and into parts of the Mid- ‘dle Atlantic statés and North ‘Carolina: during the afternoon. For Christmas, the Weather Bu- reau expects snow flurries or rain ltry and cloudy skies the country. a * * * Temperatures. ranged from :zero, in Vermont and New Hampshire to the 20s and 30s in the central par, of the country, Qutside the’ show zones, readings, were in the 40s and 3s along the West Coast ‘and the south central section and in the 60s and T0s in central and southern Fiorida. No Paper Tomorrow ly order that its employes ; May spend Christmas at home | with their families, The Pontiac Press will not publish a paper tomorrow. - Regular publication will be remumeg een: freedom. ‘said, Urges America Be Partners dnd Help the Needy, He Pleads in His Yule Message WASHINGTON (#)—Man- kind _needs. an open and peaceful partnership . in- stead of a bare coexistence, President Eisenhower h as told the world in his annual veuranee, described as Christmas message. The bes® way America can contribute to such.a: goal, he said, needy nations © is to give) the right! ‘sort of, spirit, * x + The President delivered his | message of peace and ‘good will | 'Wednesday wy _ ‘ing the annual Christmas pageant at ceremonies open. of peace. As part of the observance, he pressed a switch illuminating the nation’s Christmas tree in a park adjoining the White House © grounds. The program was broadcast by television and radio, Speaking 18 hours after his return trip that took him to Africa, Asia and Europe, Eisenhower addressed his remarks to his fellow countrymen and ‘‘workers for a just peace wherever you may be in the world, whatever your race or flag or tongue or creed.” | SOORNS CONFLICT The President said “our concept of the good life for humanity does not require an inevitable conflict between peoples and systems ;— in which one must triumph over the other, Nor does it offer merely a ‘bare coexistence as a satisfactory state. for mankind, “After all, an uneasy coexist- ence can be as barren and sterile, joyless and stale life for-human beings ‘as the coexistence of cell- mates in a penitentiary or labor camp.” Eisenhower said the leaders and the ‘humble men and women” lwith whom he talked during his tour share a common faith that ‘America will help lead the way toward a just peace. - - \ * * * . “They understand that we look an work toward the day when there can be open and peaceful British, 'for the northern half of the coun- jpartnership — communication — for most of interchange of goods -and ideas between all peoples; toward the day when each peopleswvill make its maximum contribution{oward ithe progress and prosperity of the world,” he added. The lands he visited, he said, seemed united on these fhree points: their friendship for Amer. ica and Americans; their fervent hope for betterment of themselves and their children; ‘and their deep-seated hunger for peace in America’s best interests, he require continued financial investment in and aid to under- ldeveloped nations. All other free nations must be persuaded to join. lin such efforts to the limit oftheir jability, he added. Harvey Lodge, Arthur Law ‘En Garde’ By GEORGE T. TRUMBULL JR. Political w rangling - may have taken a holiday in Lansing, but in. new revenue package, neatly wrapped and signed into law by, | lief tax package “‘miserable, in- | adequate and unfair." Gov. W illiams. Pontiac two chief lawmakers con- | tinued to cross words over what's ahead for Michigan next year. Sen. L. Harvey Lodge—Oakland County’s Republican voice in the State Senate—predicted a status quo until voters next November the state's money problems should be solved. oy Pontiac State Rep. Arthur J. Law, a Democrat; said he and his party won't be satisfied “‘to be our heads in the sky like the Republicans t hinking — | wit” vote an increase im ag dtaxes.”’ : Bate said he will again propose lar oul income “piggyback” | bill, probably as soon as the Legis- lature rettirns Jan. 13. Law's first one died in the midst of the ‘1959 vention’ s 175-day stalemate. eA : White Lodge and Law differed on| : ; the 1960 butlook, Michigan liad: a: & 6th Set of Twins Born to Mom, 38 —Odds Fantastic ROCHESTER, N.Y. (AP) — A 38-year-old mother has given birth to her sixth set of twins. The odds against - such a are an oc- matical improbability, 33, 626,201,009 to 1. But Mrs, Ernest Kittelberger defied the odds and delivered | Gerald and Darryl at the hos- pital Monday. Gerald weighed 6 pounds, 3 ouhees; Darryl, 6 | _ pounds, 11 ounces, The first set of twins born to Mrs. Kittleberger, a Negro, in 1942, died shortly after birth as did two other sets. , * * * Fred ‘and Pamela will observe: their 10th birthdays Friday. Gary and Barry are 4, There was no history of twins on his side of ‘the family, her jhusband said. - He's a factory worker. Slugged Grocer Listed as ‘Fair’ Robbery - Beating at City Store Was 2nd in 10 Days An elderly Pontiac grocer, vic tim of armed bandits twice in 10 days, was in fair Joseph Mercy condition at. St Hospital today. John Mekras, 72,’ was shieged and robbed of $200 shortly past noon yesterday by two handiis Merkas told Pontiac police he was alone when two men came into the store, John’s Grocery, 510 § Paddock St. One ef the robbers_.grabbed him from behind, Merkas said, and when he started to struggle, he was slugged over the head with what he described as a “blunt instrument."* The bandits scooped up the $200 in bills from the cash register and fled in a black 1952 Pontiac. |Mekras was taken _to the hospital ‘with a severe head cut . ” * * His wife, Eva. 62, collapsed upon learning of the holdup. She was treated at St. Joseph Mercy Hos- pital and released. The couple lives above the store. Mekras was held up at gunpoint ‘Dec. 13 asyhe prepared to close his store. He Junged at the lon> bandit with a butcher knife, ‘and the gunmawWhit him with the butt of his reves The Berman fled empty-handed at ‘Yt time St. Joseph Mekras was treated for head injuries af Merey Hospital. Novel Gift: Arm, Leg DALLAS, Tex. (UPI]):—Ruben Goldstein, known as “Uncle Joe the Pawhtbroker.’ has artificial limbs spread across the front of his store with the sign: “Christ- mas special. Arms. and legs $5 each.” mathe- ‘ AW, GEE DAD — If you can't keep the Here's the Solution Christmas tree, ce caer evacineetinatcin ten estm: nena sES oe then keep the Christmas tree This is the shrewd philosophy of Air Force Sgt T. Bancroft of McConnell Fourteen-month-old David SS _ verry» SOCIATED ITERATION ] Air seems @A —apeteengeer eee Court to Get Steel Wage Plea - AP Wirephote tot away from the away from the tot, and Mrs. Morris Force Base near Wichita, Kan. little disappointed, but his parents feel that’s better than his being as full of tinsel as the tree, 4 Rescue Waterford Man From Frigid Cass Lake Four men today were credited with saving the life Of and recessed the talks to Sunday a Waterford Township man who crashed threugh the when ice.in a Cass Lake cove last night while skating with his |). Christmas Editorial - A special Christmas editorial appears today on page six. The message has been written for The Press by Dr. Milton H. Bank, pastor of Central Methodist Church. the re- But the governor called 87 million dollar temporary And State Treasurer Sanford A. Brown said | | the state is moving along with many unpaid bills. Although Lodge voted against: liquidation of the 40 million dollar) Veterans Trust Fund (market) value)—“because I had pledged) veterans I would defend. it’ "he | did vote for the so-called package | of ‘nuisance taxes and the hike in’ the corporation franchise tax. | [NO JUSTICE * Law voted against all the meas: ures, saying “‘there was no atternpt | Hor justice in the thing.” It was virtually certain two of) | }more proposals on income ‘or in-! creased sales taxes would be on the ballot next November when: voters can tell lawmakers what. 3 vats of taxes to pass. delay the problents,” Law said. as tone only as an aspirin to | Pe Bev ao oat , - Counsel Also Will Request Sel, }days until Nov. 7. Retroactivity No Progress in Talks —Ike Is Given Briefing on Long Stalemate PITTSBURGH, Pa. (?) — The United Steelworkers are going to court. to try to get a four-cent-an-hour cost-of-living wage increase. | The union's general coun- Arthur J. Goldberg, said Wednesday the USW ‘would ask US. _ District ‘Court here. today to order. ithe pay hike, effective in January. The nation's steel workers were half-million basic on strike 116 A Taft-Hartley sent them back to the mills for 80 days under terms: of their old contract. Geldberg contends the work- ers are entitled to cost-of-living hikes ander the old contract be- © cause of a change In the gov- | ernment's consumer price index court injunction | for November. He also said he will ask that | first-year benefits under any new contract be made retroactive to ‘Nov. 7 . * * * The steel industry has disputed the, union contentions about coat- of-living and retroactivity. When Judge Herbert P. Sorg issued the Taft-Hartley injunction here last October, he resérved. decision on both these matters. NO -PROGRESS Union and industry negotiators nfet with federal mediators -in Washingten Wednesday in a con- tinuation of attempts to reach agreement on a new contract, Mediators reported no ‘progress talks way company-by-company slated to get under oughout the nation. Federal officials briefed Presi- are steel developments during his 1Sday good vill overseas trip. The White House made no ‘an- nouncement whether the President plans any further action to break the steel stalemate. * * The 80-day Taft-Hartley period expires Jan. 26. If no new con- tract is agreed upon by that time, the union would be free to strike * again * * * Under the Taft-Hartley Act, the ‘ National Labor Relations Board Is Lawmakers Dispute State Tax Future , would push for furtherance of his) ‘drive for economy in state govern- ‘ment. He said his interim Senate committee which investigated waste last year saved ‘the state “over a million dollars.” ECONOMY YES, BUT “T predict the Republican Senate will follow Harvey Lodge’s position of conservation of the taxpayers’ dollars,’ Lodge said. “Harvey knows that this is not the realistic - approach,” Law said. © “Economy, yes; but it won't solve the state's gtewne needs," His proposed: state income tax, figured at a suggested 7 per cent | jof_what a person pays in federal | income. taxes, would. be the “‘oply Hair ‘and equitable thing for who should be paying, the taxes," Law said, 4 will be fighting again for it cabgeipet es St SH) required to conduct a secret vote among union mémbers on man- agement's latest proposal. The results of the tattoting are merely advisory and do not mean mandatory acceptance of man- agement's proposal, The NLRB said it will conduct the vote on Jan 11-13. Industry caiculates its last offer would give workers 30 cents an _ hour more in wages.and fringe benefits. ever three ‘years * * * USW_ President’~David J. Mc- Donald said the union's own ‘se ‘cret ballot among sonie. of” Its ‘members -indicates the workers will vote heavily to reject the m- dustry offer. Gridders Visit _Youngsters in Shrine Hospital SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — East and West squads teday began heavy workouts in preparation for their Jan, 2 battle with all remem- bering yesterday’s anual visit to the Shrine Hospital . for epied children, j * & we “There isn't anything we outa not do for those kids,’ declared | Pittsburgh quarterback Ivan Ton- cic after he and the 47 other squad members. spent. the morning tale ing with the: ant me wife. Pierre: Dietrichstein, 32, of 3730 Grove Rd., WaS TCS- dent Eisenhower Wednesday on _— - cued after 20 minutes in the freezing waters. TWO J .ound us. Then the boat reached previous attempts to re@ch open water.” him, 150 feet of shore failed. Morin reached Dietrichstein and Mrs. Dietrichstein’S frantic cries palled him into the boat for help summoned Howard C * * i. Mudge Jr., 1321 Grinnell St. Carl Woods, 1327 Grinnell St, F ladders helped the senior Mudge slide the Mudge found we adeer row boat and its two occupants alongside a house. He tried slid- pack to shore ing them to the drowning man, Numb and= shivering, Dietrich- but breaking ice thwarted his fein required no medical treat- | attempts. ment With assistance from his father Howard C. Mudge, and his. cousin Fred Morin of Detroit, they added , a long board to the Jadders In Today S Press * * * . “He was still too far out,” said Mudge, “so I got my ‘row bout Christmas Cartoon 3 Fred cot in and -F pushed Comics . 3a across the ice. It was cracking. a nie County News ve it food Editorials . § Markets N Obituaries . r Sports W- 23 Theaters ,. 24-35 TV & Radio Programs 3 Wilson, Earl _ 37 Women's Pages 14-18 The freshman legislator pre- next fall for any sales tax in dicted that voter confusion over. crease proposals the past session would mean defeat * * * In the meantime, Lodge said he} RGANOKE, Va wPn-—tule Robert Ww. Spessard yesterday” - granted thé request of Conrad Carper, 40, who asked an “ational Lea jail sentence See To Ta ory (Continued From Page One) Law said. He-declined to predict its outcome. The city grocery store owner, political impasse over the crash! crisis might possibly spelt defeat | again for his bill, After defeat then “of any tax increase at the polls.in November. Law foresaw. ‘@ spécial legislative session wid mediately afterwards. HE’LE KEY BIL1, He said he would key his bill to what the governor asks jor funds in his January state-9f- the. State message in the opening days | of the 1960 session. Republicans all during the past) year fought against’ any form of income tax, saying letters from home indicated people ‘preferred the sales ‘tax increase over an ‘in- come tax. [Insure Merry Yule for Mees ‘Cubs Have Big Hearts Several ‘Cub Scout packs iChristmas, also collected foodstutts for * Find Lassiter ‘Defendant Sane Two Psychiatrists Say Charles Nash. Capable’ of Aiding Lawyer The accused genman in the gun- for-hire plot which killed Royal Oak car dealer Parvin (Bill) Lassi- The Supreme Court ruled ater jast April has been ruled GOP use (sales) tax increase un- sine. constitutional, Two court - appointed psychia- Although he said he wasn't completely satisfied with the re- sulting tax package—‘it was the best thing that could be done after the Supreme Court left no other road open’—Lodge said he was happy in that it ‘‘doesn't give them (Democrats) all the money the spenders want.” He reluctantly predicted that if; voters reject a sales tax increase, , all that would be left would be an! income tax. A constant foe of Williams, the cigar-smoking, attorney said Williams ‘‘has destroyed himself” in hopes of accomplishing further political ambitions by being ‘‘under'| the control of Reutherian (UAW President Walter Reuther) forces."’ *"Fhat's where the Michigan’ Senate has stood out.’ Lodge ex- claimed. , “It! has been our continuing 2 fight against socialism and servi- tude which has made the Senate one of the greatest bands of nfen in this fight.” UNITED trists, Dr. A. H. Hirsehfield and Dr. William E. Gordon, told Wayne County Circuit Judge Chester P. O'Hara yesterday that-Charles W. ‘Nash, 42, of Chattanooga, Tenn., was capable of aiding his attorney: during his trial, Nash, an ex-convict, ' others charged with the first- degree murder of Lassiter are expected to. be tried _ early hr ‘ebruary. ‘Lassiter, 38, owner of the Detroit Car Co., 2614 N. Woodward Ave., was robbed and shot in a private driveway off the Willow Run Ex- pressway after returning from a business-pleasure trip to the south- west, * * * Accused with Nash are Roy ©. (Buck) Hicks, 36, who’ managed Lassiter s lot, and Richard Jones, in Christmas basket. : ‘support at all,” Pontiac have seen to it that needy|ceived an award, if I can get any: |families in Pontiac have a mer ry| apd two) One boy re- ‘collected items for gift baskets. At/ the pack’s monthly meeting, David today to Cawood Poneral, Home in, Wallace and Neil Van Belle ad- yiddleshoro, Ky:, vanced into the Webelos den. Nine! burial, Local arrangements were: in ‘made by the Huntodh Funeral ‘Home. other boys received awards. * Se * * Cub Pack 200 of Alcott School presented awards to eight boys at ithe unit's December meeting. Boy Scouts have also been active Johnson Ayve., Wednesday ‘Boy Seout Troop 19, sponsored by General Hospital. in collecting gifts for the needy. the Apostolic Church of Christ, has ‘prepared four baskets to be pre- Detroit ‘school weem for matty trai. wm de sented to families in Pontiac ‘on Christmas Day. | Recess Trial of Police Chief Will Resume Tuesday; | , Ware Is Among Twelve in Goodfellow Case | The trial of Royal: Oak Town- ship's acting police chief, Capt. William Ware, who is accused of pocketing money from township Goodfellow sales, has been re- cessed until Tuesday. The second day of the trial concluded yesterday. The case is , being heard by Township Justice “Lonnie C. Cash. Ware is one of 12 persons, cluding five policemen and three firemen, arrested Dec..14 after an in-| from Georgia, another ex-cqn-| investigation by State Pdlice Rack-| viet. Nash, who was bailed out of al Chattanooga jail by Jones to [come | to Michigan, is\accused of firing: the fatal shot that killed Lassiter, | who lived at 19690 Beverly Rd., Beverly Hills. , SHIRT DISTRIBUTORS Tel-Huren Shopping Center Council Says to Drink, Stroll Is Dangerous : ven ry CHICAGO (UPI) — The Na- tional Safety Council, which often en vOeK: - eee » warns against. driving after drink- . - 0.00 ing, also warns against Sipping: CALIFORNIA .... $79.50 a WASHINGTON $20.00 and strolling, . PHILADELPHIA $20.00 The council said records show ,4 Engine Pressurized Airline /killed while. walking along the) road, crossing streets. or standing) FERRY SERVICE on curs has been drinking. Inc. ow “This means that about 1,400 OR 3-1254 © of the 5,600’ adult pedestrian Mee SE ss SF. deaths in 1958 involved drink,” the council said. ’ “The drinking pedestrian is a yo T Seen the Rest traffic problem, even when he’s) ow Try and Buy the J io¢ involved in a fatal accident,” RAMBLER AMERICAN [said Donald C. Lhotka, secretary : of the National Safety Council’s 2-Door ....... $1660.20 committee on alchohol] and drugs. | 4-Dr. Dix. Sed. $1701 40 Station Wagon $1878.20 PICK YOUR COLOR— CHOOSE YOUR EQUIPMENT BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER MI 6-3900, , ‘For ORGANS Wiegand Music Center MIRACLE MILE Shopping Center EDWARD'S Wish All a Very Merry Christmas & Happy New Year FE 2.4924 16 S. Saginaw TRIANGLE Furniture Co. 128 S. Woodward, Birmingham South of Maple Road SEASON’S GREETINGS EARL JAMES, Realtor cars to stop quickly, “He is too often oblivious to the dangers around him. He's just as likely to cause a traffic pileup as he is to*get himself killed or injured.” * * * Lhotka said the fall and winter is the period of great danger to ipedestrians who “sip , before they stroll.’ ‘More hours of darkness, road surfaces that make it hard for and more chances for drinking make the end of the year traditionally more dangerous.’’.he explained. Lhotka said special] studies in Connecticut, Maryland and Texas confirm the council's be- liet that ‘‘the drinking pedestrian is a major hazard.” Connecticut fdjmd that in ac- cidents fatal to adult pedestrians. a “wobbly walker’ in more than four out of ten in- » | stances. The check in Maryland showed nearly six out of ten pedestrians involved in accidents had drinking. . * * * 34 drivers and walkers killed in jone county, fluence of alcohol, C&H BUILDING CO. janually occur in urban areas. was involved been, The Texas survey said that of 23 were under the in- The council said persons of 65 and over are by far the most fre- quent victims of pedestrian acci- dents, that more pedestrian deaths occur at night than during the day | ‘and that 3,500 pedestrian deaths jets Squad members and Redford! State Police Post detectives. * * * One officer, Sgt. William Gate | wood, has “been acquitted. Another | ‘/man pleaded guilty,/ was fined $231 “and placed on a year’s probation. * * County * Oakland Prosecutor _George F. Taylor said today he plans to continue with the other trials regardless of the verdict in Ware's case. U.S. Charges Singer in Sewing Conspiracy WASHINGTON (UPI) — _ The! > that one out of every four adults government has filed an antitrust isuit charging the Singer Manu- facturing Ce. with conspiring with ‘an Italian -and Swiss firm to cor- jner the U.S. market for ‘‘zig-zag’’ 'cribed Singer as ‘‘virtually the sole sewing machinés, and to keep Japanese imports out * * * The Justice Defartment des- cribed Singer as ‘‘virtually the sole »|domestic manufacturer” of house- ‘hold sewing machines and the only |U S. manufacturer of automatie- ‘zig-zag’ machines. The zig-zag sewing. machine is capable of producing various or- namental irregular stitches in ad- dition ‘to a straight stitch. Italian and Swiss firms were named in the complaint as_ co- conspirators. but not as defendants. 4 | Huron St. at Telegraph aus DRAYTON PLAINS e Hwy. \ford St., died yeste Pack 66 of LeBaron School, at poet} Merey | its recent monthly meeting, col || Surviving are. Pack 58 of Emerson School, while lected toys and foodstuffs for Hour sons, Dave, Ralph, and For- however, did forecast that the old |caroling in the Perry Park area, gifts to the needy, Kleven boys | ister, all of Pontiac and* Pearl in 4) received awards. 'Kentucky, ‘Juanita Stevens, also in Kentucky,! Pack 8 of Crofoot School also thie brothers and : — = = — ne ere | wy \" Wns uri AUSTIN-NORVEL AGENCY, INC. PONTIAC L 45 N. Saginaw Downtown Pontiac 4 doors 4szom the Court House to our Electric and Natural Gas . Customers in Outstate Michigan . eee 4 CONSUMERS POWER COMPANY Fai x sre-aaynae A f a) wh Fi Johnson retired in 1958 as presielys ca. , et By dent of Hancock’s Superior Nation- al. Bank, He also had been a log- dealer. Johnson was for 14 years treas- urer of the Suomi Synod, Finnish Evangelical division of Lutheran-/. ism, and was the donor of Suomi/!"s ‘0. Brow_up. - College’s Nikander Hall. CHICAGO (UPI) —~ Rudolph the red-nosed reindeer is 20 years old But never fear, kiddies. The man who helped Santa ; find ie Younger has oop ; realizi : tng reer vin eS gy al big, shiny nose says he's, never go- land Dancer and Donner Blitzen and the other reindeer of Clement Moore's “The Night Before Christ- Rudolph came galloping out all mas.” Pi For kind thoughts—for loyal support—for hearty cooperation—for all of the courtesies extended us during the past year, we thank you sincerely. May your Christmas be joyful and your New Year FRED W. MOOTE ELECTRICAL SERVICE May looked across the snowy lawn of his home in suburban Skokie to a seven-foot-high Ru- |dolph and recalled how he doodled and doodled after his boss at | Montgomery Ward and Co, asked ‘him to write a children's story, \CINDERELLA PLOT | “I deeided I wanted an ugly- duckling kind of animal and a Cin- ‘derella plot," May said, “Finally ‘I decided upon a poor, little rein- B PONTIAC PRESS. ‘THURSDAY, DECEMBER 24. 1950 = ' |\Main Library i \Adds Multitude | ‘jot New Books | New books ready for circulation at the main library include these: | CLOSED FOR INVENTORY “ALL DAY Se A year later song writer Johnny Marks memorialized Ru- Sok te tener sur de eee ste —_— 4 tion|2, 0% “The Hit Parade” in 1949, ge dae Sie a DECEMBER 29, 1959 Baties agon in in; ken. y No. 1 in 1950. : DOWNTOWN May found -himselt “wnlieg tor amt Bs, ” : FE 90253 a reindeer.” He left Wards early 4 Mystery and Western | gts - in 1951- and set up Rudolph the ip, Born of the Sun; Gardner, The estem Z & Fri. 9:36-9:00 Red-Nosed Enterprises, Inc. A hero. fee vegnda s aeetibe Maoaee MINACLE MILE “Rudolph was awfully good to . ane. h Open 10:00-0:00 me for a few years,”” May recalled, earner, Pucctal: Laird, Mow the Queen mt pally ms: Mydans, More Than Meets the, Be ‘Sykes, Orde Wingate. General Subjecis “He bought us this nice home in the suburbs, set aside enough to/: give my six children a college edu- eation, gave us something for our old age: : “But the tax bite was tremend- ous because I had no real over-: head and- few deductable ex- penses. And nothing of a popular nature ever lasts forever. This is hase, Sailing the Seven Beas; Comfort, a nation of fads.” been installed as ~worshipful [Buffalo Chief; Hubbard, Wild Animal Business dwindled away and May| Master of Lodgé 165 F&AM at | Hunter: ay deMtenry | Reed one; returned to his old job two years Milford. imon, The Amasing Book of Birds; Stolz. | wf pope epee ai -apcater mene pe ea pore acy? UE 7 Air Force Magazine, ‘Bpace W | hemp lel My Heart Has Seventecs ms; Beebe, Pamily Grasrels Be. nt, The Dragon's Seed: 7. ted Essays; Ley, wily Ley's igeotic Zoology; 8k nner, he Ape in Me; Travel Routes Around -the world: untermeyer, The Lives of the Poets. Chiidren's SHELDON COVERT , ‘ Bendick, The First Book of Airplanes: | Sheldon Covert of 3867 Covert Bothwell, The Promise of the Rose; Brag) Rd., Waterford Township, has |doo. Luther Burbank—Nature's Helper: At Christmas... PEACE ON EARTH, GOOD ‘deer with a nose so big his broth- ers poked fun at him.” junhappy reindeer and enlisted him ‘and his “nose so bright” to guide his sleigh one mowy Chr istmas Eve, ~ Ward stores gave away 2,400,- 000 copies of the story on Ru- NOTICE WE WILL BE CLOSED Saturday, December 26th OPEN FOR BUSINESS AS USUAL MONDAY, DECEMBER 28th, 8 A. M. PONTIAG GLASS C0. 23 West Lawrence Street i ‘became a best seller. | and Rudolph | dolph's first Christmas. The tale became a favorite Christmas reading in thousands of homes { and schools. { World War II years. But for Christ-; jjmas, 1946, Wards handed out 3,- |600,000 copies of the story. Then ithe company turned the copyright lover to May, é A recording company put out a irecord album’ with a narration of |“‘Rudolph” against a musical) ‘background, Toy buyers exploited | and games. A publisher dressed up’ ithe story in a bound book and it! | In 1948 May | branched out into clothing, a watch, tree ornaments — 20 or 25 prod- | In May’s story, Santa found the _ May went sie on the sleigh ride. lwith anything not in keeping with|{otwear fr ade. ~ Rudolph snoozed unnoticed in ‘a fertile .fiéld_ for Rudolph toysiare writing Santa Claus some gift) % WILL TOWARD MEN. Bmimett's Pig, nn —_ ; a0. “Rudolph is no. longer. a mer- chandisable idea,’ May said, “but San Antonio, Texas, was founded: The United States imports more'- , : “\than. half a million Australian|in 1718 by the Spanish as a military, I hope he’ll continue to live for. station on the trail between. the noe Presidio of San Juan Bautista on are valued at about $575,000 and the Rio Grf&nde and the several are used almost exclusively by the!newiy established communities. * ' near the border of Louisiana. { ever in songs and books as part.of/kangaroO skins each year. They: the Christmas legend.” May is proud ‘that he never per- mitted Rudolph to be associated H. W. HUTTENLOCHER AGENCY 306-320 Riker Building the Christmas season, He's glad, too, he rejected many proposals that Rudolph find romance with a silver-tailed doe. } I'll never let Rudolph grow up,’”, & ‘he said, . “T’ve felt it best he remain like Peter Pan or Little Orphan | | Annie. “The kids like him bet- ter that way.” These Tots Sent a Lolli to Old Pop Christmas . DUNCAN, Okla, (AP) — If you's suggestions_a_little encouragement may not burt. Mark and Salli Edwards dropped their letter in a mailbox.) Attached to the envelope were a! small candy bar and a red sucker. | DEL MONTE range or Grapefruit = ae ss and a HAPPY and PROSPEROUS NEW YEAR { FROM ALL OF US at | onsumers |; Center |: ————— ey "t | $ Once more we come to Christmas, the day of Greetings : } $ and family gatherings, of Joy and Peace and Good Will. $ : ) ‘ : $ On this day we especially want to pause and say } : | USALITE Super Powered ‘ $ “Thanks” to you for our very pleasant association $ i : VANGUAF , : during the past year. We want to wish you a very $ ‘ C ae o ATTERIES : : Merry Christmas, with our most sincere wishes that $ i “% eee ee c : $ the New Year will bring an abundance of happiness. + Leakproof = | ¢ S Eo. Reg. 20¢ » | Sepeteetevetrebeetvetetpstravetrubyotecteatveteut [ 2 ek ee Ea. #6 , : ¥ es ae ‘DEPARTMENT STORE}? Waites — | 18 mM: Saginaw St. a0 a : MPa elds 7 ert SBN HM, inc seers cd "THURSDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1959 Owned and Panuned Locally dy The Pontiac Press Company Pecideat “and Pouluner “yates” * Business Racer J. Rew, Eart M One Prreoeeats, a clay cee baher Terapwett, Circulation Manager Jouw A, Ritey, Treasurer and Advertising Director Gerorcs C. loewcan, Maaswatt Joapan, S dvertising Classified Manager Local Adv Manager Let Christmas Spirit Guide Your Life for God’s Purpose By DR. MILTON H. BANK (in . accordance with our policy of publishing guest editorials from time {o time,.today's Christmas message has been written by Dr. Milton H. Bank, pastor .of Central Methodist Church.) _Christmas, though it-is much de- based and secularized today, is still a time of wonder and quiet wheri the remembered hap- pening of Nativity has power over us. Cluttered as our lives are with «distractions, torn by desires and pulled by the de- mands of our ma- terial existence, a momentary warmth of kindli- ness floods our hearts at Christmas. x * * How great would be the joy, how wonderful would be the change if that ‘moment of loving kindness were held alive in the hearts of people and did not die with the passing of this holy season. This is the deeper sig- nificance of Christmas that we seem “to miss. x * * It is for us at Christmas to go beyond the passiveness of wor- shiping Jesus to the activeness © of following His example. This season of joy celebrates the fact that the spirit of God dwells in man. That Divine Spirit which is in each one of us should turn _ away from our materialistic focus and make us instruments of God’s purpose on earth. Christmas is a | time for joy, but it is also a time Harold E. Howlett Pontiac loses a fine citizen in the death ‘of Harotp E. Howzetr. For more than a third of a century he has been active in a, wide variety of civic roles and he has given gener-t came to Pontiac shortly. after: graduation and ae began the practice of law which he _ followed with honor and distinction to the end. He was a director of sev- eral well known local institutions and these places went to him by virtue’ of established capabilities and ad- ministrative qualifications. x * * But, important though these achievements were, he will be re- membered best by those who knew him intimately as a quiet, soft-spoken gentleman who smiled readily and loved everybody and everything around him. His af- fairs in his world were always under control — and especially did this apply to Howlett himself. He had no “tough spots” to forgive _. or forget. A soft answér with a _ smile partly concealed, broke down all manner of opposition. xk * * In a way, the end came rapidly. Until a few months ago, few knew there was anything wrong and he ap- peared in his accustomed haunts. But cancer strikes swiftly as well as jnercilessly and the final days were 4 too few. — 7 so Not many: men have come to as quietly as Harold How- | Jett, lived as simply and easily i yet left as definite a mark ‘good and for betterment. for deep meditation, for ‘quiet self dedication. * * * We do not have the same high mis- sion to fulfill which Jesus had, but each one of us has a vocation. As we carry out this task, as we turn in prayer and acquiescence to God each day, as we allow our conduct to be altered and our lives to be determined by His Spirit,-fhen we will become the instruments of Almighty God through which His mission is accom- plished in our day. * * * We can be sure that it will have nothing to do. with personal and self-centered success in this world. But as we give ourselves over in quietness and humility to become channels for God’s purpose on earth, we shall gain steadfast happiness and peace that can be gained in no other way. We shall attain the sense of fulfillment in life for which all men hunger. We shall hold in our hearts not only in this holy season but throughout all the years of life which are given to us the warmth and love of Christmas. The Man About Town “Yuletide Finals Last Items About Approach of the Christmas Holiday Missile toe: What Sheriff Irons hopes holiday drivers will not make out of theirs. The fifteenth Christmas of Jeyce Isherman of Waterford is celebrated with a beauti- ful tree, the seedling of which was planted in the garden of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Isherman on the day that she was born. Quite in agreement is this column with a phone call from Blair Merrifield of Birmingham, who asserts that the weather bureau has been doing a bum job on its pre-Christmas predictions. The family cat of _ Mr, and Mrs. Ashton Broderick of Drayton Plains received a catnip ball for Christmas, and slept with it until it was stolen by a neighborhood cat who re- fuses to divulge its hiding place. Verbal Orchids to - Mr. and Mrs. John Williams of 1697 Ward Road; 65th wedding anni- _versary. Mr. and Mrs, A. L. Strong of 2885 Otsego Drive; 60th wedding anni- versary. Mr. and Mrs. John Webb of 31 Thorpe St.; 61st wedding anniver- sary. Mr. and Mrs. William Spangler __ of 319 Raeburn St.; 54th wedding anni- versary. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Dusenbery of 30 Washington St.; 56th wedding anni- versary. Mr..and Mrs, Fred G. Oliver of 54 South Jessie St.; 51st wedding anni- versary, Roland Kilgore of 64 West End Ave.; 80th. birthday, Fred T. Dowling of 398 Boyd St., 80th birthday. Mrs, G. S. Brodie of 2411 West Walton Blvd., 82nd birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Osmun Blanchard of Auburn Heights; 51st wedding anniver- sary. Morton Allison of Bloomfield Hills; 80th birthday. Mrs. Clara Busch of Keego Harbor; 83rd birthday. Jacob A, Dean of Birmingham; 82nd birthday. Mrs. Fidelia Kessell of Oxford; 93rd birthday, John Gaylord of Rochester; 89th birthday. Mr, and Mrs. James G. Baird of Oxford; 52nd wedding anniversary. Mr, and Mrs. Darwin East. of Holly; 63rd wedding Anniversary. _.__ Herbert. Hansford _ of Metamora; 85th birthday. ~‘ Light of the World © > & 5 eS e % PS & eae oS ee David Lawrence Says: Union Wants Political Settlement _ WASHINGTON—-Federal media- re agement representatives ard steel union leaders may be called into continuous ses- sions, but the fact is that neither side has the slight- est intention. of giving in at this time. union leaders do not say so, but actually they want a “political” settlement. LAWRENCE By this -is “meant a governmentally-imposed agree- ment. The union strategists: think that in the end the steel managers will be compelled to accept it. This is what has happencd many times before. The com- ‘panies will not, of course, accept responsibility for an in- flationary settlement. Hf how- ever, the government puts them in a situation where they cannot do anything but yield they will have to agree to such a settle- ment and then later raise prices. This has been the history in major strikes, and the unions feel that their influence is such that the administration in power, whether it is Republican or Demo- cratic, must conform to the pat- tern. * * * The argument is made that Con- gress will be urged to pass legis- lation providing for compulsory arbitration if there is no _settle- ment. This means, of course, the breakdown of the collective bar- gaining tradition and the introduc- tion of mofe and more jn labor- management disputes. This could prove advantageous to the labor unions because of the enormous political influence that they usually exert, Again and again, management has been virtually forced to yield to the demands of the unions through governmental interven- tion. In the current sitvation President Eisenhower has up to this time stood up well against the pressure for a ‘‘politieal’’ settlement. Inside his official family never- theless are those who have been urging him to change his attitude. It is an open question how long Eisenhower will be able to stand firm. WOULD SETTLE If the labor union leaders ‘vere convineed that management would. under no .circumstances yield, there would be a quick settlement. For the differences between the two sides are by no means irrecon- cilable. Actually, this year's contract isn't half as important as_ the precedent to be created by this “The Country Parson “A fellow ought fo have seme policies for getting along with » his family besides the ones that pings B them money when he dies,” ft ‘worth anything, . year’s negotiation.. The work rules are the real stumbling block. Con. ditions vary in different companies. The steel managers feel that they must, by this present con- troversy, disabuse the labor lead- ers of the idea that a work rule once adopted cannot be changed | thereafter, and that clauses once ~ agreed upon in the past are not subject to collective bargaining in subsequent years. The principle involved is im- portant to both sides. It could bring a frustrating condition to the steel industry unless solved. Machinery to bring about a settle- ment is available, but the unions have taken the position that they will not yield at all, and that man- agement cannot be granted the right to negotiate changes in the work rules. The next step, of course, is the vote te to be taken next month under the auspices of the National Labor Relations Board. The steel com- panies are very anxious to see ‘ votes. On the ballot will appear a summary of the companies’ latest offer and the men will be asked to vote ‘‘yes”’ or ‘‘no”’ on it. NOT BEGUN It is expected that the union position will be upheld by a sub- stantial margin. But the-important point will be the size of the opposi- tion, (Copyright 1959) Dr. William Brady Says: Arthritis (Oops) Rheumatiz Injections. Are Worthless “Although osteoarthritis is not a rheumatoid disease''’~ (whatever that may mean), ‘‘adrenal steroids, injected into the , affected--joint or joints, may be ef- fective in- to the joint space or into the tissues around the joint, of hydrocortisone (Cortef, Cor tril, H_ y drocortisone, H_ y. drocorticone) US. BRADY acetate, prednisolone butylacetate (Hydeltra-T.B.A.) or methylpred- nisolone (Medrol) often produces not inflammation of the affected joint or joints. . It is not a disease at al]. It is merely. degeneration of joint tis- sues, and so medicine, old or new, can do no more than aspirin does for the joint disability — relieve’ pain temporarily. The only means of prevention or treatment is correction or overcor- rection of the nutritional deficien- cies which have brought about de- generation Beads Disagrees With Book Critics To One Who Read It, I’m sorry it made him sick, but there ave many stomachs-of a tolerant and aesthetic nature. a 2 As for freedom of speech not meaning freedom te beceme “dow, vile and filthy in public,’ _ Rone of these things apply to the book an@ ne book is public— enly available to ‘the public. It, would seem the dirtiness alleged- ly contained in gthe book exists - only in the minds. of thee whe speak of it. ¢ x * * As for Very, Very Anonymo's, you knew what it was, yet you accepted it, read both halves, and passed it on. Your interest. was stronger than your convic- tions and your inconsistencies are all ‘too obvious. : Nerman E. Genes ‘Both Parties Have Submitted to Soapy’ Both .the Democrats and ‘so- called Republicans have at last submitted to Soapy’s orders to use the Vets’ Trust Fund, for him to spend. This, fund has been a ter- rible spot in his head. He’s doing what his master, Reuther, télls him to do. Come, you veterans, stand up for your rights. . . John Hillman ‘Increased P Prices Reduce Our Sales’. Pontiac workefs are. losing the manufacture of many automobiles right now because buyers are buy- ing foreign cars at a lesser pric>. Thére aren't as many people who “can afford the ones you make as there were when the prices were ower. How much longer do you in- tend te let McDonald keep cut- ting down your own working hours or the number of men em- ployed in our city? Every for- eign sale reduces U.S. employ- - ment. The higher the price of Pontiacs and GMC Trucks, the more foreign cars will be bought. * i * Think it over quietly * by 7 eeret : endell J. ‘Press Pictures - Are Best I See’ The pictures in The Pontiac Press are the most interesting of : any newspaper that I see and I-- hope you keep up the good work just like you are now. _in prayer... ‘ Dana P. Superintendent of Schools ‘Others Should Follow Example’ Pontiac working men must be awfully busy these days. Some of the chain stores must be on the verge of bankruptcy when they have Sunday specials to get ts to their stores on Sunday. They even give you extra trading stamps. One supermarket in Detroit ad- vertises “Closed Sunday,"" and a _ better idea would be “See You in Church.” Let's suggest al] the rest - follow that good example. W. B. Gilkey 1990 Lakeward Ln. 7 ‘Our Police Are Keystone Comedy’ If someone With a movie came-a went down to the police headquar- ters, why they could get a new film of the Keystone Comedy Cops, when. Straley -and | Eastman and Willman and the POA get into full action. ; Old Timer ‘Why Can’t We Be Kind to Both?» I-don’t think that the monkeys would be too happy in outer space, . either, but why. pick on sick hu- mans? Get going and be kind to monkeys and sick. Be Kind ‘It’s Time for Fraud ’ to Come to End’ The Columbia Broadcasting Sys- fem says when it uses fake ap- plause and laughter by the audi- ence it will say so with some tech- nical annofincement and*all others should do the same. We people have been fogled ‘and. kidded enough by these air wave bandits. Shut In Portraits By JAMES J. METCALFE Tonight is holy ‘Christmas Eve « « . Becoming Christmas Morn » +. The night in Christian history + , » When Jesus Christ was born .'. . That joyous night in Bethle- hem. . then shephards knelt While Mary kept her baby warm ,.. With sweet ‘and tender care .,., The Son of God, our Savior ; . . Who lived and preached and died . . And to redeem our countless -zins eee Was scourged and crucified .. « It is that holy time of year... When we should kneel and pray . And thank Him for His birth- day that. . . Is now our Christmas Day ... It is the time for all the world ... To realize that the past . The present and the future— all . ,.. Belong_to God at last. (Copyright. 1959) THOUGHTS FOR TODAY desus answered them, Do you now believe? — John 16:31. kk w* * All the scholastic scaffolding falls, aS a ruined edifice, before one single word — Faith. — Na- poleon Bonaparte. prompt as well as lasting improve- . ment . . . Taken by mouth these steroids ‘have little or no effect on osteoarthritis. (Quoted from a. paper by Dr. L. ‘Maxwell Lockie of Buffalo Medical School, published in JAMA, June 27, 1959) ; Dr. Lockie went on to say that generally the effect of these ster- oids is temporary, having little or no permanent benefit on disease structures in or around the al- fected joints, “However, the patient does feel so much better for a varying. pe- riod of time, . extending _ for. months, that continued use. is most pleasant for the patient. However, when the symptoms are not @on- trolled, despite increased dosage, and, at that point; the patient be- comes one of ‘the miost difficult problems in rheumatology.” * * * Among the difficulties which may develop with prolonged use of these steroids, Dr. Lockie mentions hy- _percortisonism, characterized hy moonface, buffalo hump, hirsutism, glycosuria and hypertension; pep- tic uleer, with complications such as bleeding and perforation; flush- ing of the face and purpuric ‘spots... In conclusion Dr. Lockie said it would appear from ten years saniie ea ak ee, ever they may be — that it is important to recognize the risks incurred with prolonged use of is, aS oretical advantages. The risks jn general appear to outweigh. - a advantages, Bee 1 can't say the man ail ue - werds of one paste hess I get . tor = the inipression. that Dr thinks: thése miracle chronic joint moat - are not Anyway _ that's what I think — bat remember, I maintain they're all, ‘out of step _by, Brady, in the .condi- __m tion they ca chronic sotat ‘tieabity. I say it 16 ! \ weighed against the- sete Burnfather Case Records of a Psychologist:. Christ Caused Religious Explosion The Atom: bombs are trivial compared to-the Bethlehem ex- ‘plosion over 19 centuries: ago. - It shattered mankind's univers- al view of God as.a cruel; aus- tere judge instead. of ¢ loving father. And it fooled the theo- logians. who expected Messiah to: be a war lord and pompous monarch, instead of a baby. of poor parents, preached Peace’ ‘and Goodwill. - By DR. GEORGE w. CRANE CASE D-4H: Tad B., aged 24, is a seminary, student. “Dr. Crane,’”” be began, “as a psy- chiatrist. and ac- tive teacher of a there comes a time ~ one God yet - the. i time. of Christ’s birth, “at the primitive eit of wordht mai me ping ny ny their. who . - Athena But the Hebrew leaders’ looked for a Messiah who would combine the military prowess of their King David, plus Hannibal and Alexan- der, with the-pomp and regal web: Pings: of Caesar. A re a as | Likeall other ancient religions, they expected their Méssiah to start out as a fully grown ‘adult. The-Greeks also exemplified. this idea in saying that their ‘goddess sprang fully grown from the forehead of Zeus. That's “why. the Bethlehem story fooled the Jewish priests and ‘other. rich loyalists First, they couldn't imagine a _Messiah as an infant, - Second, they couldn't visualize oo of God to be poor and. stable of ordinary hard Cod ctenned up the universal thinking of all peoples and all pre- vious religions by sacrificing to man! : * * * In one dramatic stroke, he tried to shatter the mistaken worldwide view that deity is austere, cruel and unfeeling. He sacrificed to man to open mankind's ¢y@s to an entirely new oe ee | that the _ larger thant its doctor bill. The government reported last year physicians collected just It was the first time in history nation’s medicine bill was that from : patients compared with $4,362,- appliances, as + | America’s health. budget, of i the Social Security plans. x* &* *& more than the year before, or $95.65 for every man, woman and child. x * Privately-financed hospital bills amounted to $5,100,000,000, of which almost $2,600,000,00 was covered > by insurance, Insurance paid for nearly $1,300,000,000-of the doctors’ bills. place five. million dollars a year. Almost -$5,100,000,000 of the pri- vate health bill went to hospital bills; nearly $1,700,000,00 for den- tists’ services; $769,00,000 to siona] medical personnel, hundred million dollars to nursing homes. Flemming Asks End of Loyalty Test WASHINGTON @UPI) — Arthur S. Flemming, secretary of health, Wednesday he hopes Congress will eliminate the student loyalty oath tt on loans under the requiremen ! National Defense Education The administration already f of a bill spon- the require- (D-Mass) to eliminate ment. 4 000,000-spent for medicines and Such items now represent the biggest . out-of-pocket expense in "since they are not covered by most types were compiled by for publication in its December bul- letiri as part of a series analyzing benefits under health insurance ccording to these statistics, the Act. is Christmas Eve before they nestled all snug in their beds, just as his great-great grandson will read it to his children tonight, Moore's descendant, . public relations man David E. Moore, 10, Kate, 7, David, 4, and Time- thy four months, in the fire-lit mas is summed up in that poem.” Clement Clarke Moore's imag- ination, sparked by Dutch Santa Claus legends he had heard in his youth, has colored the Christmas of/dreams of American children for six generations. Manhattan estate, Peter the driver} was transformed into a nocturnal visitation. The vision that sent Moore directly to his desk when he arrived ‘home has delighted _ children ever since. , bottles are kept in a bath-tub-like The familiar screw cap, the firm says. MOON PACK Division, Los Angeles. Sater Hot Water Bottle Among Latest Products NEW YORK W—A boon for those in hospitals, a hot water bot- tle which it’s claimed can’t burn ~ midity and ventilation conditions ,|to his liking. the bottles are part of a. system supplied by Nationa] Cylinder Gas Division of Chemetron Corp., Chicago; The premanently sealed water heating unit controlled to remain at q given temperature, which sometimes causes discomfort, is gone. Nurses and attendants save hours of time previouly spent re-|wherever he pleases. filling hot . . CAN'T HURT TOTS The use of deodorizing units for sick rooms, especially for cancer patients, is not-new but De Mart Associates, Inc., Lancaster, Ohio, announces a portable unit with certain features which it's claimed put this in a class by itself. It is! a lightweight unit that can be operated immediately by anyone, A portable “‘moon pack"’ to pro- vide breathable air for a man dis- embarking from a space ship on the moon or on a space platform has been designed by the Garreit Corp.'s Airesearch Manufacturing The firm says the pack weighs 50 pounds—on earth, that is—/will never tarnish, the company weightless in space—has a newly developed closed-cireuit oxygen system and allows the space traveler to set temperature, hu- * * * A 242-horsepower ‘‘snow-boy”’ that clears 15-inch swathe through the heaviest snows has been intro- duced for 1960 by Lawn-Boy of Lamar, Mo., a division of Outboard: Marine Corp, The discharge chute is remotely controlled from the handle, allowing the operator to aim the discharging snow The touching-up of lamps, clocks, toys and other things is a great! hobby with some folks so the Star Bronze Co. of Alliance, Ohio, has introduced a complete line of fast- drying, non-toxic enamel! finishes suitable for a wide variety of dec- orating purposes. Since the ‘‘Plea- suretone’ line is non-toxic, par- ents can feel safe if the small fry chew on painted objects, as they frequently .do. * * * A lot more light for backing up‘ your car is provided in a sealed beam lamp developed by Westing- house Electric. The lamps are sim- ilar in design to auto headlights but much smaller. They employ an internal alumimized reflector which gave it , spread around the world in scores ot pqevens. This year is Moore's 180th birth- day anniversary, Columbia, Uni- versity, of which he was trustee ng Moore .imemorabilia this se includ. ing copies of ‘A Visit From Saint; ” e & * * for 44 years, is. displ n, Nicholas’ in Moore’s own writing. of a gigantic was important enough, The Lights That Failed: That’s Their Yule Tale the 1,000-unit community... homes failures. In the exhibit 1s Moore’s care- were off, the big sleigh flashing |fully written diary. --It does not mention “A Visit From Saint. authorship dictionary titled “Compendious Lexicon of the Hebrew Language," did not think his little Christmas poem PHILADELPHIA (AP)—Christ- mas in the Pennypack Woods de- velopment was dimmed somewhat by the enthusiasm of residents in They strung so many Christmas lights within and outside their that. for. three straight nights there were electric power 68S, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1930 __~ Gate ae 4,200,000. of fluoridated water, he replied: ““T imagine the principal issue is question whether its use is tharmful.”’ Then he added: “The evidence definitely_points in the other di- rection." Flemming said ‘‘Virtually all scientific and professional health organizations" including the Amer- ican Dental Assn. and the Ameri- can Medieal: Assn., have urged flouridation of public water sup- plies. ’ Churches and synagogues in the United States had a record mem- bership of 109,557,741 persons in 1958. This was 63 per cent of the population. + says. HALLMARK cards, wraps and ribbons Here's your chance to plan a thrifty Christmas for next year. You can buy the very best now . . . and pay just half of what they’d cost you next yeor. Choose Christmas-y or modern motifs in all colors. es in crat - APPLIANCE ~ TV CLEARANCE Some demonstrators, so es! All guaranteed and delivered! No Money Down! *Automatic w me new “eGas ranges eRefrigerators , , *Electric ranges *Radios °TV Hi-Fi *Stereo Vacuums * Dishwashers eRCA Whirlpool eRCA Victor eNorge *Kelvinator “Tappan °Westinghouse *Hotpoint *Lewyt eOlympic *Webcor - ee ee a ee eee - The beauty of Christmas has come down to us through the birth of the Savior who taught the world that love is stronger than hate and good mightier than evil. May this prevailing spirit of good will em- brace ‘us all during this joyous holiday season. BILL SPENCE -Rambler 256 S. Saginaw FE 8-4544 + * Two of the six women died in jthe accident as they were re- _Catholic church in néarby Katon- ‘ah, Six children were orphaned. Derrick Worcester, 20, of Mount |Kiseo, hag been indicted on a charge of criminal negligence. Po- lige said he was driving a souped- /up car at high speed, families of all six mothers, A “Four Mothers Fund’’ already has |pital bills and family expenses. In addition, 15 registered nurses | and 15. aides have served without | bay in shifts around the clock to. ‘care- for the hospitalized women. | In another drive, St. Mary’s| | Parish has collected more than! |$10,000 for all families coneerned. | ‘The largest contributions were) /$1,000 each from Francis Cardinal ‘Spellman and the Teamsters Un- ‘ion, An anonymous Fort Benning, |Ga., soldier—who sent a_two-dol- Nar ‘contribution to the parish fund |—wrote: “My prayers are with the mothers this Christmas.” DiSalle Turns Down Parole for Licavoli | COLUMBUS, Ohio ww — Gov. Michael V. DiSalle has refused to To all those we: have known and happily served during the past year. It is with great pleasure we send these greet- ings. GARLAND FREL,& ram ; 436 ORCHARD LAKE AVE. voli's first-degree murder convic- tion to second-degree so that he could be paroled. x * * , The prohibition era mobster is serving a life sentence for ordering the slayings of four persons. Lica- was known as the Fecagal a a b To. ledo and Detroit gang: - Gov, DiSalle, said yesterday he was abiding by a 4-1 recom- mendation of the Parden and Parole Commission, which turned thy down in Licayoli’s re- lease. Lieavoli had a similar parole hearing in 1954, and by law he must be granted another in five years, * * * ; DiSalle noted that his decision has a good prison record. But the governor added that Licavoli has “continued his old habits of try- ing to buy special privileges’’ while ‘in prison. | Petoskey Weekly Folds PETOSKEY (® — The 85-year- jold Emmet County Graphic, a _jweekly newspaper, discontinued publication with its week. The Petoskey News-Review, was hard. to make because Licavoli| | ‘The nation has not forgotten the) ~ \raised $15,100 to help.defray how. issue this} @ 1959 Walt Disney Productions -° World Rights Reserved we NOR ARE HIS CLAWS ABLE TO PENETKATE HER THICK PROTECTIVE LAVERS OF BLUBBEF. -IN7 LE Ba erat HER. TUSKS KOUT Te RAVER. Pe .‘ WHO HES Eek, Ee- Yike! It’s Icky Ike By MERRIMAN SMITH WASHINGTON {UPI} — Back- stairs at the White House: In Greece, the kids along the street called President Eisenhower “Ee-yike.”” In Spain, the children ‘yelled “‘Eekay”’ when he drove voli, who was convicted in 1934°/past. In Morocco he was just plain “Eek."’ And in France he was “Icky” to many of the children,- Recreation Dept. Will Institute Dance Classes Three dance classes have been scheduled to begin next month by ithe Parks and Recreation Depart- iment. Advance square dancing begins Jan. 6 at the Crofoot School, novelty round dancing Jan. 12 at the Central School and social danc- ing Jan. 12 at the Herrington Hills School. The classes are scheduled be- tween 7:30 and 9:30 p.m. once a week for eight weeks. Square dancing is scheduled for Wednes- day nights, and novelty and social dancing for Tuesday nights, Registrations are. still open, said a daily newspaper, is taking over |John A. Streit, assistant director the subscription rolls. 20 We esteem it a privilege t to have served you in be #~*, the year just past. We hope your Christmas is a merry one, com- plete with all good things and that your New Year will be filled with peace and prosperity. JEWE LE AS / 16 W. Huron Pontiac ‘Cuban and Latin American dances. of the department. Fees are $1 for city residents and $2 for those who live outside the city limits, ‘Advanced sqnate dance instruc- tion, Streit said, is for persons who have alréady“gained a basic knowledge of the steps in _begin- ning classes. Among the novelty dances, he listed the polka, schottishche, varsouvienne and gavotte. _ Steps that will be emphasized in _|social dancing, Streit said, include the waltz, two-step, fox trot and A President by Any Other Name. commute Thomas (Yonnie) Lica-| Many people in Asia ant*Africa found it utterly impossible to pro- nounce his entire last name. On any normal Christmas, it is hard for friends to pick a gift for the President because he truly is the man who has most every- thing. With his returning from Asia, Africa apd Europe this -week, the gift problem for the Presi- dent became more and more dif- ficult. At the final stop on‘his tour, Casablanca, the King of Morocco gave him a double-barreled shot-| gun with a handsome stock inlaid in gold, rubies and emeralds. Eisenhower took a look at the jewels on the weapon and told ‘King~ Mohammed V, “I ought to}, make a necklace out of these.” The Navy doctor, Capt. George Burkley, who did such a fine job of keeping the 83: members of Eisehhower’s press entourage rela-| tively healthy and operating dur- “| ingt he long trip, is quite a real-| istic man. Along with bis pills, and salves, : | Jews’ Hanukkah, Yule Coincide— Rare ‘Happening NEW YORK (AP) ‘— The eight- day Jewish holiday Hanukkah, and Christmas coincide this year — the last time this century. * ‘The Jewish holiday is known as the festival of lights and as the days of dedication. It is a 2,000- year-old tradition commemorating) fr a | a Victory of Jews over the Syrian King Antiochus. * * * Only twice before this century] — in 192] -and 1910 — have the two holidays. coincided. _— kah’s beginning is based on My if Ny Zan STUNNING BLOW SHAT WOULD KILL MOST CREATURES HAS LITTLE EFFECT | ON MOTHER WALRUS |. A POLAR BEAR. ve 7 tr 1S VEFENDING | PUP AGAINST hn the good doctor brought along a small supply of death certi- ficates. Happily, he came home ‘our hea rt-felt greeting that “wish so warm and Tis the warmth of friendship in this makes the age old true: A Very Merry Christmas and A Ha DPY 44> Holiday Season To ° t : You and Yours! \ ee om hi ae oa wn es : » We Look Forward With You to Another Year of Pleasant Association in 1960 HI-WAY FURNITURE MART {$22 WOCOWARO AVE... BIRMINGHAM. MITCH. —_ ToT 4 MOCKS N.OF 14 MEAD... 04... Mdlaredt 44M0 without using one of them. 4 cy Attendants at the court of King) Mohammed V in Casablanca were. a trifle surprised to see Eisen- hower pick up the French lan-| guage version of the joint com-| munique and study it closely. “That's in French,’’ one of the court attendants said;“mindful of the fact that Eisenhower must} speak through an interpreter when, working ‘with the French language. a ne “TI know,” the President said.| “I vead French pretty well, but V cannot talk. it.” He also explained to some enidats in Spain that he figured he was! too far along in life to develop; any fluency in a foreign languag:.' 4 Season's Grestings “Merry Christmas” Says Jolly Old Santa, and So Say We, as We Take This Opportunity to’ Extend Season’s Greetings to You and Your Family. Russ Dawson Mrs. 232. South Seginew FE 2-9131 lunar. calendar. : be smart-look smart THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1959 . Accept our best wishes for a delightful and happy hol- iday season. Sam Lividetti Nerm Travis “Mike” Meyers — John Richardsen ~ * Gertrude Gabert 121. N, Saginaw FE 5-6189 four children not only got a Christ- Way (ele E cy. Anna, You’ ll Get Your Christmas Tree “IRVINGTON, NJ. (AP)—“Mis-| tree?” or, ae I have a Christmas ‘That's how a needy ‘act oll |Luna, 14, to her home, He met her sisters, Jerri, 9, and Debbie, 3; a brother, Frank, 9; and her | mother, Eisies Luna, 38. * * “Their tather has beer missing for two months,” Mrs, Luna ex- | plained, ‘‘and we have no money [for the tree. We have no money ‘at all,” . * * * She told Baldassare, “I must ig0 to the hospital for an operation before Christmas and the Catholic Charities will have to take care ‘of my children until I return.” “T spent 11 years in an orphan: age,” Baldassare said. fun at Christmas time.” * * * “It's no! a A TOAST TO SAFETY — Philip Sauer (left), president of the Oakland County Table Toppers Assn., and Sheriff Frank W. Irons enjoy a spot of tea in a toast to highway safety. The associ- ation is cooperating closely with law enforcers He insisted on taking the Luna children. * ke * children home to his wife and five|~ in warning drivers not to drink alcoholic bever- Pentiac Press Phote ages during the holiday season. Irens:!-warned that drunk drivers would be dealt with severely during the coming holidays when traffic fatali- ties traditionally rise. ‘‘We want party-goers to | have a good time, but let a non-drinker do the driving.” -——% Some Annoyed by Good Will . As the nine youngsters played Mrs, Baldassare explained: ‘We don’t have much money either, but we're rich in children.” Von Braun Hopes to Orbit Earth, Land on Moon HUNTSVILLE, Ala. (AP) — The director of the Army’s rocket. de- velopment program says he hopes |some day to orbit and maybe even go to the moon. Wernher von Braun says he hopes to be an ‘‘orbiting grand- pa. “IT am certain that if I don't MANECK’S ©0OW “WE RENT MOST EVERYTHING” Roll-A-Ways — Hand Tools Floor Polishers and Sanders Coffee Urns — Dishes Tables & Chairs Plumbing Tools—Wheel Chairs Merry Christmas! 1028 W. Huron die. prematurely. that I will orbit and maybe even go to the surface of the moon,” said the Gefman- born missie expert. Von Braun, 47, who was picked by editors of The Associated Press member newspapers as Man-of- the Year in science for the third year in a row, told an interviewer Wednesday that he was honored the first time, surprised the sec- FE 4-3505 ond time and is now embarrassed. “The way.-science works,"’ he said, “everybody builds where some. predecessor left off. So this makes it difficult to find the guy ROSENBERGER-JOHNSON PAINT & WALLPAPER CO. 34 8. Saginaw =| who really deserves the credit.” ‘Parke, Davis & Co.,. | Murray Reports Rosy DETROIT — Parke, Davis & Co. Wednesday declared a year- vend extra dividend of 40 cents a share payable Jan. 29 to stock- holders of record Jan. 6. It is in addition to the drug firm's regular, quarterly dividend of 25 cents. Murray Corp. of America re- ported earnings of $545,013 in the three months ended Nov. 30. . The earnings were equivalent to 52 cents per share of common stock FE 2-7901 | compared with 61 cents in the | Helen Ratcliffe, psychiatric social SAN FRANCISCO: (AP)—Christ- and madder. sion and infantile behavior and a Yule Brings Out Mental Quirks [ proached, the woman ate taster | hibitions by becoming exhibition- mas in the United States has be-|and faster, the man got madder istic. come a breeder of mental depres- Another patient” let down his in-! seasons there. {Tax Bite on Estate {Fifty Million Dollars |took more than 50 million dollars PITTSBURGH Pa, (AP) —| State and. federal governments. in taxes out of a woman's 73-mil- lion similar percentage among the school’s outpatient medical clinic had Christmas reactions, The report was published in the American Practitioner and Digestive Treat- ment, a medical journal. BECOMES NUDIST Two clinic patients were a St same period a year ago. ' mountainously fat woman and her skinny husband. As Dec. 2 ap- (Christmas The clean smell of evergreens... the crackle. — of popcorn... the glittering of tinsel... "Sm With Our Wish for Peace and Prosperity in 1960 = #3 Gey bk ee at, Pontiac’s Oldest Jewelry Store | mete a Sel as eater f & Pe, ae: mt 7 “3 Fred N. Pauli Co. s.. 28 W. HURON ST. The Store Where - Quality Counts 2 i i i i i i] - Sra — a ~~ 2 te j Tee $e we, cee | aoe 4 Sew © ee | ps? <78 - a dee aT =18 * toed | fi E EetS ed case saa i rn mate Custom Draperies | The YARDSTICK MIRACLE MILE some ‘people, says a _ Psychiatric Sian hin te <€ erry Chris to all... from all of us tmas "Twas THE DAY AFTER CHRISTMAS AND ALL THROUGH THE STORE, PENNEY HELPERS WERE WAITING TO SERVE YOU ONCE MORE. IF YOUR GIFT ISN'T RIGHT OR A TRIFLE TOO SMALL, YOU CAN CHANGE IT AT PENNEY’S, NO PROBLEM AT ALL! 4 So Santa goofed! He forgot you wore a size 36 instead of a 34... well Santa Penney’s is always happy to ‘adjust or exchange any purchase. As a matter of fact, Penney’s is your Santa all around the calendar. . . whether it’s sleet time or sun time... whether you’re school-bound or gift-bound, Penney’s skilled staff is at your service to make shopping pleasant, efficient. downright fun!. ALL OF US AT PENNEY’S WISH YOU A VERY HAPPY HOLIDAY SEASON! DOWNTOWN PENNEY’S 17-19 South Saginaw St. MIRACLE MILE PENNEY’S 2185 S. Telegraph Rd. COME PENNEY’S SUPER VALUE DAYS! AT DRAMATIC SAVINGS! SPECIAL PURCHASES! STARTS SAT., DEC. 26, 1959 “ Penney’s = Penney’s Miracle Mile Downtown — goal re pre Ty te 9100 P, M. 9:30.A. M, wo 5330 Pe y,enuneecre re § fo Check State Office Bias LANSING (UPI)—Gov. G. Men- Williams tent ‘asked agency heads to tell him how They have put to use his 1957 order for making sure there wis no discrimination in hiring “ state employes# " In Angust 1957, “urged” department heads to ithe hiring policy, how many em- “institute a program geverning (pjoyes of minority groups were in ‘executive positions ‘and any recom- Williams | employment policies and prac- tices. The program required execu- ACSC a et IME € imac eee eS NOW OPEN! New Bloomfield Branch AMERICAN Folks in this community are now able to advantages of AMERICAN SAVINGS where they'll receive highest earnings with safety. You invited to visit itives to “give all qualified work(Plangs No Vengeance ers and applicants. an opportunity to perform at their highest levels ified’ minority group workers were, inot seeking state employment on. belief ‘they would be rejected be- ancestry. [ment officials to report to him by Jan. 8 the steps taken in line with ing man of 33. whose only brush iwith the law occurred years ago '—when he got a traffic citation. * * * Williams today asked depart- imendations for improving the enjoy the. saving at guaranteed are cordially the beautiful new Bloomfield bramsch.. A warm welcome awaits you {1] Savings Insured to $10,000 by An TELEGRAPH ROAD at Maple in Bloomfield Shopping Plaza Open 9:30 to 4:30—Fridays to 8:30 P.M. of the United States Gort. Mm AMERICAN s > | ‘i é x SAVINGS LOS ANGELES son of Roger (The. Terri- ble) Touhy, flew into town Tues- day for a television interview, Tom turned out to be a slightly built, cause of race, color, religion or! Touhy, The-younger Touhy~—whose policy. ‘torious father was ambushed and ./and my brother fRoge i|kidnap story,"’ he said. “We didn't even know dad was in prison. SAVINGS ithe papers about him and the oth- ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. DECEMBER 24 1959 agreed to speak out in public as Touhy’s son was hig concern ever a newspaper report that he was “out to avenge his father’s death.” straighten that out,” he said. ‘‘T : * * * “Mother carefully guarded ne Mother told us he had. some trou- ble about income taxes and was staying in the Canary Islands.. “T remember when I just start- ed in grammar school. The other kids used to tease me and say my father was a jailbird. I used to ask my mother and she'd say \‘Don't believe them.’ Naturally, I ‘went by what my mother. said.” Eventually, Tom said, his. moth- er changed their name and they left Chicago, moving to a. small Florida community, He would not disclose. the assumed name — which he still uses. , * * * Young Touhy said he was 16 when he found out his father was a convict. “In 1942,” he said, “I read in lers shooting their way out as | prison. that he went to see his father. iber that. T° isecemed like forever. I just -re-| Phone MA 6-2546 Papa Ernie Cosma greets and Abe smiles, as he watches Harry call for a stock boy that will carry groceries for a customer so gracious and tall. ‘Sophia and Sammy take hold of things as the day ends and happiness rings. The asm family jon in the Christmas fon as they say... ‘Twas the day before Christmas and all through the store there’s laughter and good wishes wrapped in fine foods galore. “MERRY CHRISTMAS EVERYONE? , A year after the prison Breaks! which brought Touhy only brief! freedom—Tom joined the Seabees. ' It. wasn’t until four years later: ® * * | “T was 21," he said. ‘‘That long, corridor in the prison—I remem-) walked dowgy it—it! member that he'd excuse himself now and then and say he had sométhing to do out of the room.| I knew he was going out to cry and then coming back." Tom was living in Chicago again and the visits were frequent after that. ; * * * “But I never really got to know! “him until he finally was | Teleased) “T certainly wish you could) John (Jake the Barber) Factor. | % iter nen ROGET Touhy’s Son Not Terribl 3 Report Si killed in Pete last ‘week—has| last month," a said. “I saw him just about every day. The day before he was killed we sat «ver /2own and talked for hours about the future, He wanted to go to Florida and go into the fishing equipment business. I’m in con- struction now. | make $152 a week. I was willing to make thel, _|Move. He just wanted to live out] olj A boast see leas life ~peacefully—~|— ag * ae eee b way was his father murdered? “There's still a mob in Chicago. I just bave the feeling it was somebody small in the mob who} was trying to impress somebody. big.” Of his father's prohibition-era reputation. Tom said: “He: was a very fine man, but. when (Al) Capone tried to move in on him he acted tougher than he really Was.” Atlantic Commander Announced by NATO PARIS (UPI) — U. S. Adm. Robert Lee Dennison will succeed U.S. Adm. Jerauld Wright as su- preme allied commander in the Atlantic, NATO headquarters an- nounced ‘Wednesday. Wright’s retirement, effective March 15, was announced last week. The NATO permanent coun- cil asked President Eisenhower to designate a ‘successor. ‘cause this only reflects increased undergraduate enrollments for, ‘them to associate with. THIS: 1S YOUR INVITATION TO ATTEND. 7 CHRISTMAS EVE. SERVICES = ‘BETHANY BAPTIST CHURCH West Huron and Mark scihugal ce Two. SERVICES © 7:15 P. M. and Wi00 P.M. CHRISTMAS MUSIC BY THE CHOIRS Meditation: “THE YEAR THERE WAS NO CHRISTMAS” Dr. Joseph Irvine Chapman, Pastor a roa ey Oe ow ae Trained engineers are in big sot mand now because of technological ' advances in industry and oes fields. Full-time and part-time ander- ‘graduates in engineering totaled | 243,000 this year, peg to | 257,000 in ee fall of 1958, Derth- | ick said. = The number of graduate students in engineering schools was just over 35,000, this year, compared to less than 33,000 in 1958. But Derth-, ick said the: fact that this year's figure is an all-time high ‘‘is not as reassuring as it should be, be-| several years prior to 1958."’ ' Grim . safety slogan: Just be-' eause-you weren't killed in the last, holiday weekend traffic, don't get! cocky — there are miles and miles’ of opportunities ahead of you . . .| Most of the trouble with same peo-. ple is that they don’t trust other | people, and there's nobody else for So a SS The Buiiiest I nstitute 7 West Lawrence Street, Pontiac i- FE 2-3551 yma P.M. FOR VERY LA MINUTE SHOPPING FOR . SUCH GIFTS AS REMINGTON PROLL-A-MATIC SHAVERS customers all * at YANKEE’S | PRICES The only shaver that adjusts to the face and beard. For lasting shaving comfort . . . lasting value, give him a Remington Roll-A-Matic. First and only electric shaver with the exclusive feller combs thot ote to any beard and skin. Aa MD ten Ua wees 4 . NEXT 1 - : ‘WRIGLEYS — TP ea seal ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS | PONT AC, MICH IGAN. act opener mt eens ete SANDRA soy MORRIS A June wedding. is planned by Sandra Joy Morris and Robert W. Grusnich. The bride-elect is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bruce E, Morris of 1154 Grace St., Rochester. Her fiance is the son of Mr. and Mrs. William Grusnich of 3871 Brimfield St., Auburn Heights, MELDRED RUTH BALLAGH The Rev. and Mrs. Walter Bal- lagh of 336 N. Broadway St., Lake Orion, announce the en- gagement of their daughter Mil- dred Ruth to Bruce O. Benson, son of Mr, and Mrs. Edgar F. Benson of Lansing. An August - __ wedding is planned. LILA WILT Mr. and Mrs, Charles J. Wilt of Solana Beach, Calif. formerly of Clarkston, announce the en- gagement of their daughter Lila to Cpl. Kenneth E. Vermillion, M.C. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert L, Vermillion of Mendota, Tl. se a Walled Lake Firm . ‘THURSDAY, DECEMBER 24,1059 HETTYE AUSTIN The engagement of their daugh- ter Hettie to Louis, Grinnell, son of Mr. and Mrs, Wilfred Grinnell, 375 Coats Rd., Lake Orion, is announced by Mr, and Mrs. John Austin of Morley, Tenn. Date ‘of © the wedding hasn't been decided yet. . “for McGregor: ‘|the State Highway Department to To Name School| Late. industrialist Gave Site to Rochester; Vote on Funds This Spring ROCHESTER — The. Rochester Board of Education jast night de- cided to name the new elementary school, now in the preliminary stage of planning, after the late Howard L. McGregor, Rochester area’ industrialist ‘and philanthro- pist, ‘- He and his son, “Heward L. McGregor dr., gave the site for the new school. For this reason and because McGregor had made many other contributions to edu- ‘cation, the Board voted to name the school after him. School officials said a tax issue to cover the cost of building the new building will be presented to the voters next spring. Associates, architects. State Approves | Oxford Village _ OXFORD — The Oxford Village | Council has received approval from have a flasher unit installed on the CAROLYN TUBBS A Jan. 30 altar date has been set by Carolyn Tubbs and Thom- as Williams. The bride-elect is the daughter of Mr,’ and Mrs. Milton E. Tubbs of 8 Crawford St., Oxford. Her-fiance’s parents are Mr, -and Mrs, Roy Williams of 7654 West St., Washington. traffic signal at of M24 and Burdick street. The change will be made when a new unit is installed, The flash- They hope construction will be) ‘|started in early summer. “T O'Dell, Hewlett and Luckenbach Birmingham, are the’. Tratfic Flasher i ‘MERRY CHRISTMAS!’ — ings come from Brian Noel Beach who will be the intersection oe year old. this Christmas day. Season's greet- of Mr. and Mrs. Rd., He is the son ~ Coroner Rules Death Accidental er will be in-eperation from 11:30 p.m. to 5 a.m, daily. The Council also has heard the second reading of an amendment to the electrical code. JOAN PAULA KENYON A March. 2% altar date has been set by Joan Paula Kenyon and John W. Craig, The engagement is announced by the prospective bride’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Bartley P, Kenyon. of 840 Maple- hurst. St.,- Ferndale. Parents of the bridegroom-to-be are Mr. and Mrs: W. C. Craig of St. Clair Shores, ‘formerly of West Bloom- | field Township. Plans for Exhibit - WALLED: LAKE — Pioneers in the development of unbreakable tlh products, the Plastray Corp. - here is. preparing to show. its full line of houseware products ‘at_an exhibition in Chicago. * * * More than 80 products developed by the company at 1225 W. Maple Rd., will be displayed at the Na- tional Houseware Manufacturers Exhibition at Navy Pier Jan. 10-15. They will include — ice cube trays, decanters, measuring cups, drinking cups and bowls, Several new. products will also -be introduced at the exhibition, ac- cording to Robert Potter, merchan- dise Manager. x * * ’ ‘The plastic moulding company is) - a division of the Bohn Aluminum and Brass Co. of Detroit. The rigid;-high density polyethy- lene from which the products are pany since m was intro- = dah tak ts ok pene. ; material trom Germany because, of the superior quality.” Ee is ancien aie effector taped in this ¢ x4: % 80: persons, of an expansion program, "SHARON FAY STOCKER cal companies B 2 Stapleton St R Resgo. ar- Loge rag the rota Fy bor, engagement -amnounce the of their daughter Sharon Fay to Seaman ‘Apprentice ie oe m\ Edwin opp Es = of Mr. and . vantage. the high. de ieee that it be pap: 2 hy ie a a Mrs. William Fre nk Coleman of a Leke, washer because it can resist tem- peratures far above boiling water.” The company, employing nearly moved to Walled Lake from Detroit in May 1956. as part It raises the license fee for jour- ineymen and reciprocal contractors from $1 to $5, effective 30 _days ‘after publication. The village has increased. its), icharges to the township for fire runs from $125 to $165 because of increased cost. of..operation and’ depreciation of equipment. Parking meter proceeds for Jan. 28 will be turned over to the Meth. ers’ March for Polio, according to FERNDALE — An autopsy com- pleted yesterday shows that. a Ferndale mother of four drowned accidentally when she blacked out over her washtub Tuesday, accord- Hing to Oakland County Deputy Porgner Dr. Soh. Lewis. sein Saar Mrs. Aven: H. Lowers, 43, of 925 |LeRoy Rd., was found by her hus- band slumped over the tub with her head immersed in the water F gl aden an agreement with sponsors of the idrive. In Avon Township AVON TOWNSHIP — North Cen-| tral. Christian College announces the appointment of a director of public: relations effective Jan. 1. He is Lester Allen, 36, treasurer | of the college’s Board of Trustees since 1955. . x * In addition to his new duties at the college, Allen will occupy the pulpit at the Waterford Church of ‘Christ. He will resign his present | ‘Atlantic and Pacific Lowers told Ferndale police he | left the house for a few hours Allen to Head College PR position as minister of the Ann {Arbor Church of Christ’ to accept the new posts. A native of Truman, Ark., Allen and his family moved to Detroit when he was 12 years | The- father is an unemployed| old, He attended Wayne State University and the University of Michigan. He served 34 months-in the U.S. Navy seeing action in beth the theaters “dur- | ‘ing World War II ~ Stanley Will Head Schools in Armada ARMADA — Kenneth Stanley, head counselor at Utica High {ss has been named siperin- tendent' of the Armada Area School District. He will take office Feb. les 2.00 °°! He. succeeds Leslie Blossom, Armada High School principal, whe has: been acting superin- tendent since September. Stanley, whois 44, joined the, counseling staff at Utiea High School in September 1958. married: and has two daughters, Karen, 9, and Adele, 4. They live. at 74610 Burke St., pomete. Drank Crade Oil: Now He's 96; Gives It Credit BOLIVAR, N.Y. (UPI)-— You might say that Merrett E. slipped through the years to his present age of 96. He credits drinking crude oil for his longevity. : x * ® is a retired oil-field work- ay | f ‘9; Rhonda, 6; and Timmy, He is/| reach Sia, who outlived his: wife ot ; 7 years as well as their seven * The Allens Donna, 15; Karen, 12; * * have five children, Lester Jr., 4. They will move soon to 220 Winry Dr., ‘Rochester. Oxford Lecture Sunday OXFORD — ‘‘How Spiritual Un- derstanding of God-Restores Health and Harmony” is the topic of a lecture to be given by Gertrude E. Velguth of Flint at the First Church of Christ Scientist here Sunday at 4 ptr m. rs * * a ie J Christmas shopping while his wife was doing the family’s washing and ironing. With her was their nine-year-old son, Eber who has both legs in casts as the result of recent surgery. | When he returned from shopping, | ‘LéwerfS said he fretting for his mother called down to her in the bagement | repeatedly and had gotten no an- swer. The boy was unable to negotiate the stairs because of the! casts. * * * The husband rushed down, but) ii was too late. * * * \under a doctor’s care for several | ‘months due to the frequent black- louts she was experiencing. The eldest son, Frederick, 21, was away at work when the ac- cident occurred. Eber’s twin | brother, Paul and the fourth boy, | Timothy, 6, were at school. spray pai inter. Orion Twp. Voters Continue Franchise ORION, TOWNSHIP — Voters | here yesterday favored the re- newal of Consumers Power Co.’s 30-year franchise in_ the town- ship by a vote of 61 ton, This parallels the vote 30 years ago when 86 voters cast thelr ballots, 85 for and 1 against the proposition, The franchise ordinance, adopt- ed by the Township Board, gives the power company authority to lay, maintain and service gas mains, pipes and services in the township until April 1908. ‘pare’ HOME DISPLAY — Winner of first plate trophy in the: Rochester Area Chamber of Commerce home decorations contest - was, this. Christmas scene at the. Andrew Hughes. home, 31 W. Childress St, Avon — The prancing. reindeer take. to the ,/ West Commerce. will be four years old next St. iwere ~ moon trip. | i ~ alt Pontiac Press Photo James Beach of 620 Commerce Their other son, Darwin, Patrick's Day. Ferndale Mother Drowns in Tub Funeral service was to be held. at 2 pgm. today with burial in « ‘White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Tommie Roses ion wes Honey mooning After Ceremony DAVISBURG up north are newlyweds Mr. Mrs, Tommie D. Rose, Honeymooning and burg Methodist Church. * * * The bride is the former Marilyn) ‘Mrs. Charles M, Swift of 12645) |Rattalee Lake Rd. The bridegroom s the son of Mrs. Jocelyn Denman of 409 North St., Holly, For her candlelight wedding in | a Christmas setting, the bride chose a white satin gown with a fitted bodice and basque waist- | line, Her sabrina neckline was trimmed in Alencon lace which was repeated on her bouffant, chapel-length skirt. A crown of pearls and sequins secured her veil of silk illusion, She carried a bouquet of orchids! ‘and roses on a Bible. * * * Marion Barrigar of Davisburg was maid of honor. Bridesmaids Javee ' Leece and Karen Swift of Davisburg, . Duties as best man were per- |.formed. by Arthur Burgess of Ypsilanti. Kenneth Leece and the bride’s brother, Ronald, were “ushers. : Following the ceremony a recep- | tion was eld in the charch par- lors. q © “> _* ‘The newlyweds will.reside at Moorehead, N. C., after the-honey- 4e of Ortonville | ———— ‘Candidates File in Romeo, Lake Orion, Oxford, Holly -The deadline for filing nominating petitions for vil- lage offices is 4 p.m. Monday in four Oakland County area communities. In Lake Orion the terms of the village president, three trustees, clerk, assessor and treasurer are expiring. William Shoup will complete his first term. 1 as village three trustees with two-| year terms nearly finished ‘are Hugh Galloway, Wil-| liam O’Brien and Gordon ‘Hazelton. Clerk Mary ‘urer Geraldine J. Campbell and Assessor Geraldine Storey are ‘completing one-year terms. president this spring. Thes—— ne items, | fire for several months, will be Troy Council In for Heavy Parkinson, Treas- | Sessi on TROY — A. full agenda of 25 including matters hanging ’ Nominating petitions may be \presented to the Troy City Com- | obtained at the office of the vil- lage clerk. petitions. being circu: The only lated now in Oxford -are for the) ‘three trustees up for re-election! this spring. They dre Allen KE. Valentine, now serving as village president, Lionel Kamm and ap- /pointee Kenneth Hough. * * * The candidate with the. leas inumber of votes will be elected to) la one-year term, the other two for) itwo years | If there is no competition for | the three posts, there will be no | primary election, according to Village Clerk Ralph Precious. ' mission Monday night. Included are reports on the 12- | Tewn drain easement, on the sanitary sewer program, ex- pressway negotiations with the State Highway Department and the major thoroughfare - plan. The resignation of Commissioner Louis Yanich, * + & Action also is expected on the y city audit recently presented to the .Commission by William ‘Woodman of the Detroit firm of Touché, Niven, Bailey and Smart. ~ e * * * Another item which has been the The deadline for filing nominat- | subject of considerable controversy ‘ing petitions for village offices in| 'Romeo is also 4 p.m. Monday. * * * Incumbents whose pining are Joseph C, age president; bone, Rymill, terms are ex-| vil-|to govern landing strips and air- and David Petti- ports in the Donald Payne and Fred C,|brought up for discussion and pos- is overassessment of personal prop- erty tax. * x * A rezzoning amendment designed he city also will | Het bert, completing two-year ter rms| sible action, by the. commissioners. as trustees. * * * ‘Others are Elgin Anger Sr., Mrs. Elaine M. Hosner, ‘treasurer; Sidney J. White, clerk; and Mrs. C. L. thur Maxson Smith, imembers. POSTS IN HOLLY Davidson and Ar library board Six posts will be opened to can. | didates in Holly's Feb. 15 primary. * * * As yet "to one has filed candi-| dacy petitions for president, clerk, | The president, clerk and as- sessor posts are one-year terms. following, assessor or the three trustee posts| \their wedding Saturday in Davis- (to be ‘filled « Remind Area Aliens ‘It’s Time fo Register All aliens living in Oakland }County are reminded that begin- ning: dan: 2 address registration lcards which must be. filled out ;each year will be available at area \Post Offices. * * * Aliens—in the United States by virtue of an alien permit and who ihave not as yet taken out their \citizenship papers—will have the imonth of January to fill out. the The three trustee posts are two- |papers, They must be turned in no ‘Lowers said his wile had been) Roberta Swift, daughter of Mr. and) year terms, Paul Cohee is president; Patterson, clerk; gomery, assessor * * * Holding the three turstee posi- itions to be filled are Court Hall, Lloyd R. Oakes and John Van Deusen ; a + The vice-president of a Phila- celphia advertising agency reeently so integral living that we don't realize its true importance until some act deprives ‘us of it. The oldest means of mass communication has yet to be con-| fronted with a substitute. No other | medium has served so well for so. many vears.”’ George: and J. Lee Mont-| said;-‘‘The newspaper has become|’ a part of everyday) later than Jan.. 31. NOBODY candrin ‘Registration Times Listed Registration is slated again. for expectant parent classes being of- fered in Oakland County to future fathers and others. * * * Pontiac bien Phote ‘sky ag Sanita waves a “Merry Christmas to All” from his sleigh.” Shepherds watch.the spectacle, and a giant Christmas card com: / tt ! ‘ “ pletes the gen: he re ‘ * \ | i A f Classes are limited to 26 people | Set Class for Moms-to-Be - and will be held 7:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. on days to be announced. * * * They are conducted by the Oak- land County Department of Health, Registration will be held 6:30 p.m: te 7:30 p.m. dan, 12 at the Pontiac Offiee, 1070 N. Telegraph Ra: ; 6:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m, dan. 5 sat the Royal Oak Office, 2401 . Fourth St.; “Rnd 6:30 p.m, to a p-m. Jan, 4 at the Birming- ham Office, 151 W. Martin St. Films and other audio-visual aids will highlight such topics as the mental health of the family unit, growth and development of the baby before and immediately after birth, labor and delivery, and care and feeding of the infant. : ot * * ranged during each series. ° Wheat Export Estimate> Up 15 Million Bushels _ WASHINGTON (UPD) — The Ag- riculture Department has revised its estimate of wheat exports for shove Lonee forecasts. tabled at the last . /meeting, will be up for considera- ¢ tion. A conducted hospital tour is ar: £ the 1959-69 marketing year to 425- million bushels, some 15 million. EG ON IRIE EIR 4 in _ 3 . Holiday Best Wishes We extend to fae our thanks for your loyai patronage the past year. H. H. SMITH OIL CO. FE 2-8343 590 S. Paddock St. Romney, Von Braun Tops. in Fields’ (EDITOR'S NOTE: The Newsmaker of the year selections are made in strict accordance with returned by the 3600 radio and newspaper members of The Associ- ated Press. Newa editors are asked annually to vote on the “top news | personalities’ of the year. Votes do not. necessarily mean support or | approval of winners’ actions or -poli- cies, The balloting does identify the men who made the news of 1959 in their respective fields.) By DAVID L. BOWEN AP News Writer Nikita Khrushchev, the traveling salesman for Russian communism, has been voted Newsmaker of the ‘Year for 1959. It’s the second time the unpre- dictable Soviet Premier has placed ‘first in the annual poll of the na- tion's news editors conducted by i'The Associated Press. He finished on top in 1957, the year he con- solidated his power in the Kremlin at the end of the struggle follow- ling Stalin’s death. The vote does not mean news ~ editors believe Khrushchev is | the mest popular er commend- able figure on the worid scene. It is solely an acknowledgement that he generated the most news, good or bad. Khrushchev hit the peak of his LEE’S SALES & SERVICE _—— 921 Mt. Clemens ‘headline grabbing during his 12- Aiday tour of the United States in Fe, * NIKITA KHRUSHOHEV THE PONTIAC PRESS, “THURSDAY, Decuare 24, 1950, ent Beg |Vote Khrashchev Top Newsmaker of 1959 : ‘prominent in 1959. but pouty in the Soviet Union — Tngefaar Jobdneson’s « knockout of Floyd Patterson made him the runaway winner. of the title as}. newsmaker in sports, succeeding Casey Stengel of the collapsed New York Yankees. INGEMAR JOHANSSON September. | Greeted by President Eisenhow- ‘er and a 21-gun salute in Wash- lington, he traveled across the na- tion and-back—sometimes behav- jing like a fypical tourist, some- ‘times trading wisecracks with his ‘United Nations, spoke of himself land his visit as a harbinger of |peace, but pointedly warned of jthe consequences of war. He announeed his willingness to negotiate the crisis over the future of West Berlin (a crisis he precipitated by threatening to sign a unilateral peace treaty | with East Germany) but yielded | not an inch. And he boldly lectured a nation- 1954 Mendes-France Dulles 1953 Eisenhower Dulles” 1952 Eisenhower 1951 MacArthur Dulles a 1950 MacArthur Acheson hosts, other times bitterly attack- 1959 Khrushchev _ Khrushet ing those who pressed questions on Soviet actions in Hungary and 1958 DeGaulle DeGaulle elsewhere. 1957 Khrushchev Khrushchev He presented a grandiose world 1956 Eisenhower Nasser disarmament plan before the 1955 Eisenhower Dulles Mossadegh Von Braun ,Romney~ , McDonald Pope John XXII Johansson Van Doren Pasternak Von Braun Romney None Pope John XXIII Stengel Cliburn Pasternak Von Braun ‘Ford Meany Graham Burdette Todd =~ Cozzens Salk Ford ‘Meany: Graham Larsen Presley Churchill Salk Ford Reuther Graham “Podres Kelly Wouk Salk Robt. Young Reuther Graham — Bannister Gobel Hemingway Salk & _Ford .. ‘Durkin — Sheen Stengel Godfrey Churchill Alfred Kinsey Waksman _—_ C. E. Wilson Murray Sheen Marciano Marilyn ~ Hemingway Monroe Max Theiler C. E. Wilson Murray None Durocher. Lanza Thor Hyerdahl Philip Hendi C. E. Wilson Reuther None Jolson Faulkner INDUSTRY . LABOR RELIGION AP Newsmaker Poll Winners of the Decade NEWSMAKER FOREIGN OF THE YEAR AFFAIRS SCIENCE None SPORTS TAINMENT LITERATURE ENTER- wide American TV audience on the goals of communism. DOUBLE TAKE | The AP editors also pegged Khrushchev the top newsmaker lin foreign affairs, again duplicat- ing their selection in 1957. Last year Charles de Gaulle’s return to prominence in France |gave him the titles in the same | categories. Color Film Processed by KODAK 1 and 2 Day Service on Block end White and | Continuing supremacy in his field, German-born Wernher Von Braun walked off with the news- maker laurels in science for the third year in a row. His nearest competitors were the anonymous Russian scientists who succeeded in designing the Soviet moon rockets. Pope John XXIII was selected for the second year as major of the powerful AFL-CIO United newsmaker in religion. The Steelworkers and strategy-maker spiritual ruler of the world's in the 116-day steel strike, longest ‘Roman Catholics has steadily, Walkout in American steel indus- made headlines since his corona-|'y history. tion in 1957, often the result of} The strike ended only after the his fresh approach to the prob-|Supreme Court upheld a Taft-Hart- RELIGION & POPE JOHN XXII SS Se OA “TOYTOW Santa's Due and it's of you 0 cory Merny Christmas 23 N, Saginaw. lems of his office. ley injunction ordering strikers at ae ae back to work. The basic issues Open Daily FEderal | In the labor category, the AP remain unresolved. 10 am. to 9p m. 4-5992 ‘editors’ gave the nod to David x* * * . ‘McDonald, Pipe- “smoking president American. Motors’ dynamic —asalieanner rena amos a nemnanemenenmes president, George Romney, re- peated as top newsmaker in busi- ness on the basis of the continued spectacular success of his com- pany. After enjoying the envy of his competitors last year as Ameri- ‘can Motors rolled up large prof- its while other car makers had to scramble to maintain prof- it margins, Romney this year Sadan | DAVID McDONALD watched the Big Three follow him into production of compact cars. iB ENTERTAINMENT ° CHARLES VAN DOREN = LITERATURE [Krupp fo Pay Js for Fea seal the Krupp firm _« spokesman said that if this SEASON’S fo increnso tee tl we #2300; | GREETINGS Alfried Krupp von Bohlen und Halbach is sole owner of the vast; John J. Smith } Dodge,Inc. =; 211 S. Saginaw Street FE 3-7055 Mery Christmas to Al aft ts 2 ee ES eagle. ik ese Re oe sincere wishes that. Santa Claus will bring you everything your heart desires... plus prosperity and good health for the bright New Year! - HARDWARE and LUMBER Co. Mi | ainacis CENTER 151 OAKLAND. AVE. merce le CHRISTMAS, FRIENDS... and thank you for your kind patronage this past year. ee. tom INC, 107 &. SRRREL RD. AUBURN HEIGHTS BORIS PASTERNAK Charles Van Doren, the re-| tant wonderboy of television quiz shows, was singled out as major newsmaker in entertain- ment. While the impact he made as a spectacularly successful quiz show contestant was considerable, it was far overshadowed by the headlines generated when he con- fessed before a Congressional in- vestigating committee that he re- ceived questions in advance. x ek In literature, the editors once more elected Boris Pasternak, the 1958 winner of the Nobel prize in Hterature. While the. great tu- mult over Pasternak’s “Dr. Zhivago”—published in the west! Gives Europeans |tertaining 75,000 Germans, Italians American Army Continental Party HEIDELBERG, Germany (AP) —The U,S. Army in Europe is en-| and French at Christmas parties Friday. “Operation Good Cheer’’ goes into effect for the needy, ranging from baby age to old folks, Thousands of dollars of volun- tary contributions from Army. per- on German, Italian and French soil is taking part. SCIENCE 7A BRAUN WERNHER von Bid. AD RABID DDDARD IHD NID D/AITD ~ cus to with each prom .. oll of ut. DISCOUNT. - WONDERLAND Across from Pontiac State Bank ‘ Calbi- Musie Co. "119 N, Saginaw, Pontiac 4895 Ol pars Hwy. Drayt . NK oi snort uns nmnemm e t e P A on Plains Is “pe. e “Nay he riions the of Cts is sie eee Fad * 48 * vide facts it contained. “Asks Governmerit to taken for granted back home be-|here. first, bec age and flown in; ak xcia i 2 * = ee oe : : : i . ANE : +h teas : 3 2 OR jaa nce . Give Rartiatons Eoes|icn eects Ge | Pistoia MIN eo ce reg : WEE i : te : arr : ae “Yiemeritus of the iversity wr Defending , Needy So writes one of Michigan's 39ers ee Pe ane Senet: ot our Savior’s bir} = Michigan, died Tuesday night of a 2 a moniee 0 ten. Crees se a . * Our homemade . GRAND RAPIDS (UPI) — Cir-|K@, Where they are homesteading} “Gee, I wonder how the store boughs and pine cones hang|72 _guit Judge Dale Souter calied ‘orn @ wilderness after a widely pub| on ou ean Boor. We will hang legislation. to give attorneys “rea-|! are court appointed to represent |9¥indled to a settlement of 15. ment as the time grows short to pemniless defendants in Federal] In a note sent along with a | UY Presents? Court Christmas # = saeco ourt, : ecard, Mrs. Bertha “We will miss most of all the . Souter told Rep, Gerald Ford| Donaldson wrote: “As we pre- | privilege of attending the church (R-Mich) in a letter he was “‘plead-| pare for Christmas, there is a | of our choice and hearing the por Sertich agra scape o bit of homesickness among us.” | carols sung by the choirs . . . parecer 4 eae uk Gan But she added this consolation:|\ “There will not be many gifts presumed innocent. __ : “a5 , : ge - Pm alse pleading fer mem- |c. : So : dine : ‘ 1 bers of my profession, namely Sues Mt. Clemens, Officer a pg Reag gg re lawyers, who should not. be |in Shooting Accident —_ {all we can afford this year. called upon to representa pen- so a ae a niless respondent withoyt rea- MOUNT CLEMENS @® — The of - = A ‘sonable compensation for their |City of Mount Clemens and patrol- We.will have spruce Christmas services,” Souter continued. | ™4n Kenneth Betcher, 32, were — wad a good chnice — ord The veteran Grand Rapids jur- sued yesterday for $50,000 dam- Eee wil i . ist, who is retiring Dec. 31, said|"®®* = = Head “prought| his plea for such a law could be| The suit was filed in Macomb oa tae ond dant got Geren! called his “swan song’ aS a County Circuit Court on behalf of the: tri i judge: : ."|Frank H, Defer, 17, who was\™ "eu. - Souter said the wounded in the groin last July 28} “The Sik family have a goose | is a at ple Lace ng when the patrolman’s gun acci- they are fattening up and we will | farm subsidy program, and should dentally discharged, ye ee be able to “properly and ade-| Defer and six other youths were! wie ea quately”, compensate lawyers being questioned at the police. sta- High Official of MEA ealled upon to counsel a defendant tion about racing in cars, Defer) ,— R ° N M th in a Federal Court action. = passenger in one of the cars. to Retire Next Mon In too many cases now, Souter|. wound prevented the youth) ,. : 38 +i said, “attorneys appointed to rep-|0™ Playing football “at L’Anse/niomas, assistant executive secre resent such a respondent are not Creuse High School: last seasen. ae ue “y Prensa mes - E the cream ‘of the crop of lawyers He ts one of 13 children of Mr. pra *MEA) will ed Jan, 1. so to speak, but are young attor-|2% Mrs. Russel Defer of Harri-|) "MEA moed Wed sd ay. |) neys who are appointed with the |*°" Township. i wins “ * — _ they may get some trial ex- Renamed to Boord _ | Thomas has been with the MEA /; ~ Michigan statutes. provide for : ane satlecielatioe activities, ell court-appointed attorneys in state LANSING (UPI)—Nyle Katz” of held the n ber two lobb: fist |) é¢ases to be paid by the nty in-|rural Marshall was reappointed : —_ edad | paid by the county in- registraton at the state capitol. volved upon ‘certfication Wednesday as a member of the) “°- presiding judge. . ot te State Board of Veterinary Exam- ~ * * iners. The term will expire Dec.| Thomas taught at Lansir ae Give Our Staff | and Employees a Big _ Christmas Holiday 31, 1964, and ‘confirmation. by the|schools and Michigan State Un Rail Freight Rises _ _ |Senate is required.’ versity ‘before joining the MEA. in Great Lakes Area : DETROIT (®—The Greéat-Lakes Regional Rail Shippers Advisory . Board predicted yesterday an over- all increase of 17.6 per cent inj - railroad freight originating in the eastern Great Lakes area im the first quarter of 1960 compared with the first quarter of 1959, The forecast Was based on un- perenne iron and steel produc- ti 2% The area’ covered by the fore- Starts Saturday 10 AM. End of ’59 cast includes railroad shipments) for lower Michigan, northern Ohio and portions of western New York) and. Pennsylyania, — Shipments of ore and. concen- trates were expected to increase 198‘-per cent; automobiles and : acumen trucks 25.5; vehicle parts 10.7; | wd hs coal. and coke 17.5; gravel, sand) and stone 14.7, and iron and steel — 32.9. 4 Williams Will Spend _Christmas With Family LANSING (UPD—Gov. G. Men- -~ pen Williams will spend Christmas Day with his wife and children at his mother’s house at Grosse Pointe Farms. | The governor willspend Christ- mas Eve Lere with his family and] attend night services at St. Paul's Episcopal Chureh in Lansing. > His brother, Richard, and or | ily will also be at their mother’s house, Williams said. ~ Boys’ Jackets and Suburbans Men's Jackets and Suburbans | Shoes for the Entire Family Convenient bion \narge — mR: ESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBE] - \down Manstfield’s request for tic full report but said he would pro- ene Ex-U, of M. Professor have fowl purchased in Anchor- Clarence Thorpe Dies’ “wreaths fromjheart attack at his home, He was eo on our eabin Goors, We will hang| Thorpe retired from. the Mich- licized pioneering trek. More than|in the parks are decorated and is/},5) : Chris fi in 1 i sonable compensation” whenaihey | sent out, Now the band hagithere still that feeling of exeite- ee Pas by ve cinta bin ites petal CLOSED SAT., DEC. 26 j Sy ay enter re we a ee a a he e SY While visionsof sugar-plums Le, danced in their-heads, ; : AMM 3 little old driver, so lively and quick, Fy) | + S**And [laughed when [saw him, in spite of myself, ip When all through the house IN DG) Tot a creature was stirring. it even a mouse Meer SSH) In hopes that St.[licholas soon would be theres childten, were nestled all snug tn their beds foe bie per in her’kerchiefand —S* lin my cap, ad just settled our brains for a long winter's nap, - Mp hen out on the lista there arose such a clatter Ser" T sprang. from the bed to see what was the matter. Away tothe window Zoe Iflew lhe aflash, ee Tore open the shutters and threw up the sash. \GZhe wioon on the breast of the mwew-fallen snow, Gave the lustre of mid-day to gg objects below, When, what to my wondering eyes should appear, - But a mimature sleigh,and eight tiny teitdeer, ~ L knew in a moment it must be St.Mlick . ° | More rapid than eagles his coursers they came, ~ And he whistled, and shouted, and called them by name _ EMivow, Dasher! now, Dancer! now; Prancer and Vixen! | OniComet, on! . Cupid, ontunder and Blitzen! To the top of the porch! @ to the top of the walll Tlow dash away} dash away! dash away. alll” i: dry leaves that before the wild hurricane fly, | When they meet with an obstacle, mount to the sky, So up to the house-top the coursers they flew, + With the sleigh full of toys, and St.Tlicholas too.” $ j nd then, in a twinkling, [ heard on the roof , The prancing and pawing of each little hoof. % AsI drew in my head, and was turning around, * Down the chimney St.Micholas came with a bound, sme was dressed all in fur, from his head to his foot, And his.4% clothes were all tarnished with ashes and soot, A bundle of “Sp toys he had flung on his back, And he looked = like a peddler just opening his pack, one lis cheeks were like roses, his nose like a cherry! His droll little mouth was’ drawn up ¢& like a bow, And the beard of his chin was as white as the snow, a: eyes how they twinkled! his dimples how merry! he stump of 2~774 pipe he held tight in his teeth, ®L&”And the smoke it XB encircled his head like a wreaths He-had a broad face and a little round belly, That: shook when he laughed. like a bowlful of jelly. ewas chubby and plump, a right jolly old elf, A wink of his eye and a twist of his head, Do : Soon gave me to know [had nothing to dread, : We spoke not a word, but went straight to his work And filled all-the stockings; then turned with a jerk, xD: ———— . And laying his finger aside of his nose, And giving a nod, up the chimney he tose, U7 als sprang to his sleigh. to his team gavea whistle, And. away they all flew like the down of a thistle But I heard him exdaim.ere he drove out of sight, -\ MERRY CHRISTMAS to all and to all a good night%s:. GLEMENT CLARKE MOORE __ MERRY CHRISTMAS F rom the Employes and Staff of x § Pialeniaianintitcsiitien. ri ie ah des aba a ae Se a a atin ee al f The sweetest story ever told is read from the Gospel of Luke - by George Putnam of West Iroquois road. Gathered in rapt attention around the creche, the young family pursues a Christmas Eve custom Dr,- and Mrs. William™* H. Marbach of Neome drive are ‘entertaining at-Christmas: din ner, Here from Elmhurst, Il., are their son and daughter-in- law, Mr, and Mrs. William A. Marbach .and children Billy, Elizabeth and Margaret, Other guests will be Ella Preitz, a sister of Mrs. Mar- bach and Mr. and Mrs. Don F. Dickerson and son,.Charles of Ogemaw road. The Dickersons are also grandparents of the Marbach children * * * Mr. and Mrs. John .W. Fitz- gerald and daughters, Julie and Susan of Cranbrook court, Bloomfield Hills, are in Phoenix, Ariz., where they are spending the holidays with Mrs. Fitzgerald's mother, Mrs. W. L. Efmery * * * The Rev. and Mrs. Daniel J Wallace and son David of Highland road will be with his parents, Mr, and Mrs, Rick Wallace of Sandusky on Christ- mas Day. * * * Coming from Port Huron to be present at a family dinner at the home of Mr, and Mrs. Arthur W, Selden of Cooley Lake road are the Robert L. Seldens with children, Martha, Janet and Barbara. Another son and daughter-in- _Jaw, Mr. and Mrs, Charlés P. “Selden, and son Ronald, will be here from Port Clinton, Ohio. : Other guests will include Kate and Fay Taylor of Alli- son street, Ralph Palmer of Union Lake road and the John E. Windiates of Union Lake, * * * Mrs, E. W. Flourdus of Flint will spend the holidays with her sister; Mrs. Irene Heddle, and Elisabeth S$. Lounsbury of Exchange street, * * * Capt. and Mrs. Sixten 0. B. Netzler and son Sixten Jr. of Tienken road are in Miami, Fla. spending the Christmas holidays with relatives, * * * Mr. and Mrs. J. Alfred Hub- bard and son David of Wood- ward. avenue are, entertaining at a Christmas family dinner. Coming frem Birmingham will be Mr. and Mrs; Howard H, Fitzgerald II, with children Ann, Harold, Craig and Kathy; and Mr, and James’ Hubbard Jr., with son John, Other guests will” include Mrs. Dexter H. Craig and Jean- nette Hubbard of Barbour lane, Bloomfield Hills, the Phil- ip M. Hubbards and children Charles and Jane of Berkshire road, and Mrs. Hubbard's mother, Mrs. John Osler and son John of Bloomfield . Vil- lage. * * * ‘Norma Strickland of Miami road and Mr. and. Mrs, Merritt D, Hill of Birmingham will be with Mr. and Mrs, Charles C. Hill of Ann Arbor. * * * The Rev. and Mrs. Tommy Guest and children, : Timothy - and Paula of West Rutgers ave- nue, will be Christmas dinner guests of relatives in Goodison. Here from Nanton, Alberta, Can. to spend Several days . with the Guests are Mr, and Mrs. Carl Thrush and Mrs. Sue, Mr. “Lake; *% be hosts Christmas Day to her parents Mr, and Mrs, Charles W. Spence of North Cass ave- and Mrs. William Johnson of Raeburn street, and the Norman Hillmans and chil- “dren Douglas and Randy of Saginaw. * * * Traditidnal Swedish: Christ- mas ¢tistoms will prevail again this year at the home of Mrs. Gunnar Karlstrom of Colonial court, Birmingham. With her youngest son, Car] Gunnar, she is looking forward to the arrival of Mr. and ‘Mrs. Lars T. Karistrom with twin sons, Kurt ang Karl, and year- old Erik, from Cincinnati, Ohio. Coming from Norway, Mich. will be Mr, and Mrs. S. Olaf Karlstrom and their son, Sten Erik. Family dinner will be served on Christmas Eve. * * * Dr. and Mrs. L. G. Rowley of Williams Lake road will have with them on Christmas Day, their son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Thom- as Gallant of Huren, The three little Gallants, Steve, Kathy and Ricky will accom- pany their parents. ~ * * * Gathering for Christmas Eve dinner at the home of the Rob- ert E. Fields on South Avery road, are Mr. and Mrs. Har- old Sibley with their children, Debbie and Danny of James K boulevard; Mr. and Mrs, Les- ter McClellan Jr., with Karen, Kenny and Janet of Pontiac and Mrs. Sue A, Long of West Huron street, “From Dearborn will be the Calvin F. Longs and their youngsters, Diany, David and Dale. Joining in the fun with the “‘small'.fry” will be the Field daughters, Suzanne, Barbara and Joanne, * * * Hillsdale College sophomore student, Clayton F. Roth will spend the holidays with his father, Clayton H. Roth of Monroe street, Drayton Plains. Clayton, a physical education major, is vice, president of his class. _ wo we oF The Thomas Nickols of East Pike street are expecting their son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Gus Froumis (nee Becky Nickols) to arrive by plane this Christmas Eve. Mr.’ and Mrs..Siros Govenis of East Pike street, with Mr. and Mrs. George Nickolopoulos of Chan- dier avenue, Becky’s aunts and uncles, will have Christmas dinner with the Nickols, x* * * Frances Maginn will come from Pittsburgh to spend the Christmas weekend with her niece, Mrs. George Heenan of Seminole avenue, Other guests will be Mrs. Heenan's mother- in-law, Mrs, Leo J. Heenan of Pontiac; and two aunts, Mrs.. Arthur Murtha of Pontiac, and Mrs, John Howe of Chatham, Ont. x *& * The Russell ‘H. Galbraiths of Cherokee road. will motor to St. Clair, Mich, to spend. Christmas Day with Mr. Gal- braith's mother,’ Mrs, Robert H, Galbraith, ¥* * * Highlight of this Christmas: for the Charles P. Kleinsmiths of Hillwood drive, ‘Bloomfield Hills, will be the arrival. of their new grandson, Kévin, _ with his parents, the Richard -- G, Kleinsmiths of Los Angeles. \ a) 1 , Ohio. | “Chr 7 ristmas: . De a r This will be their first glimpse of Kevin. U.S, ‘Air Force Captain and Mrs. Charles P. Kleinsmith Jr. will come from Eglin Air Force Base near Fort Walton Beach, Fla. Mrs. Kleinsmith’s par- ents, the Joseph Bergomosers, also her brother and sister-in- law, the Paul Bergoniosers, and a brother-in-law and sis- ter, the Elmer Webers—and their family, will come from Detroit for Christmas Day. * * * Christmas Eve- guests of the Duncan MeVeans at their home on the Pontiac State Hos- pital grounds will include their son, Durican E., who is work- ing on his master’s degree in research pharmacy at Uni- versity of Michigan; and Vir- ginia Cibor of Detroit. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bruce McVean will come from Wyandotte with their children, Kay Lynn and James Robert. ~ x * * Arriving this week for Christ- thas holidays with their par- ents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank J. Moreau of East Iroquois road, are M. Catherine Moreau of Ridgewood, N. J. and her brother, Frank William Moreau of Tampa, Fila. - * * wie Richard Reynolds, freshman a tonight. | Reynolds, "stone, of Elizabeth Lake road. The Reddings are Nalin le St. y ick’ eT | Golfside drive residents Tommy,.9; and 7 at Western Michigan Univer- sity, will spend the holidays with -his ‘parents, the Gordon Reynolds of Illinois . avenue, Small family dinner on Christ- mas will include his grandpar- ents, Mr,.,and Mrs, Elmer H, and Amy ‘Brack- > * *« * Sp.4.C. and Mrs. Robert Col- lins of Fort Devens Army Base, Still River, Mass, arrived in Pontiag last weekend for holi- day visits with their parents, ‘Mr, and Mrs, Floyd Collins of Giddings road, and the Lloyd Mandleys of Utica. Specialist Collins will leave on assign- ment in Africa after the New Year. Mrs, Collins will remain in Pontiac on an extended visit. * * * Coming from Cincinnati, Ohio, and Bloomington, Ind. to visit Mrs. H,-T. Baker and family of Navajo drive, are Russell Seestedt and sons Dick, Ted, Kit. They will be joined ‘by Mr. and Mrs. B. J. Anibal of Linden and Mrs. San- ford Smith of Flint. * * * Mrs, Albert Barnett of Pine Lake avenue, Keego Harbor, will spend Christmas Day with her 90-year-old stepmother, Mrs. Alien Kenaga, of Holly. 4 Billy 3, sons of the' Edward — check up on Pontine Press Photes ' that is traditional in ‘countless homes. From left are Susan, 15; Tommy, 7; Brooks, 9; Mr. Putnam, and Rodger, 12. Mr, and Mrs. A. J. Roy Jr., will host their Christmas Eve dinner at their on Kemp street. The Roy children, Robyne and Kim, will -greet their maternal grand- mother, Mrs. Ruth W, Reridie- man, and great-grandmother, Mrs, Nancy Vancel, both of De- troit; Mrs.. Roy’s sister and brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Gid Cooper of Stanley avenue; and Mr. Roy’s parents, the A. J, Roys of Kimball street. On Christmas Day, the senior “Roys will have dinner with their son-inJaw and daughter, the B. E, Wyatts and their children, Jan, Debbie and Scott of Cimarron drive, Bloomfield Hills, * * * Mr. and Mrs. Mark Cheney of Dwight avenue are expect- ing-the junior Mark Cheneys and daughters, Naomi and Eli- nor, of Saginaw, for Christmas Day. The Harry Smiths (nee Grace Cheney) with Harry Jr. and Russell, will come from Ann Arbor, and -the George Cheneys, with Debra; Anna and Larry, from Clarkston. « * The Gerald Bowers of Dal- las, Tex. and their youngsters, Terry and Sue, will spend the Christmas holidays with his parents, the Frank Bowers of Marlborough road. traditional Timmy Marra, 4, has hatched a devilish plot to snip the toe out of his - Christmas stocking and assure himself an avalanche of gifts. Partner in mis- On Christmas, the family will gather at the home of Dr. and Mrs, Charles Bowers of Barrington road, Also enjoying the day will be the senior Bow- ers, the Glenn R. Heathmans and their six children, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Wittkopf and their two children. The Heathmans and the Wittkopfs are sisters and brothers-in-law of Dr. Bow- ers and Mr. Bowers. * * * Former Pontiac residents, Mr. and Mrs, Joe Kreklow of ‘ Eldorado, Tex. will spend the holidays with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. William Kreklow of O'Riley street. 2 ae: Mr. and Mrs. William J. - Freyermuth of Mohawk road, with their children Mark and Jane will be in Waukegan, Til. for Christmas, They will visit Mrs. «Freyermuth’s mother, 2 , ‘< Mrs. B. E. Brattland,.and re- turn home Monday. * * * Mr, and Mrs, Lee Lewis of Port Deposit, Md. arrived last — weekend for holiday visits with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. F. iLewis of Bloomfield Hills, * * * Mr, and Mrs. Earle Van Dyke ‘dr., of East Iroquois road, and Mr. Van Dyke’s fa- ther from Detroit, will join the James N. Baileys for Christ: mas dinner in Highland Park. Barbara Ann, Susan and Jay Bailey are looking forward to visits with their cousins, Earle, Arthur, and Donald Van Dyke. x * * ; _ Mr. and Mrs. James S. Hud- “son Jr, and dadghter, Heidi, of Beverly avenue, Mrs. C. San- born Hutchins of West . Long Lake road, and Dr. and Mrs. Harold A, Furlong of Navajo drive will be Christmas guests of Mrs. Hutchins’ son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Charles §. Hutchins and daugh- ter, Linda, of Ann Arbor. - Invited from Royal Oak°are Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Nichol- . son and children, Timmy, Amy and Meg, * * * Mr. and Mrs. Paul M. Snov- er of West: Huron street are having a large family gather- ing at their home. Included will be his mother; Mrs, John A. Snover, the Donald 0, New- mans and sons Robert, Rich- ard and Ronald; home - on vacation from Michigan State University, of Lakewood drive, Watkins Lake, Mr, and. Mrs. The Austin D. Eslers of Shore View drive will open their home to a family gathering Christmas. Guests will. be Mr. and Mrs, Louis M, Kimm of Elizabeth Lake, the John L. Cosgroves and children, Mich- have just re- a | Yule Message at pe fee chief is his brother Paul, 5, who lends a hand at the receiving end. They are the sons of Dr. and Mrs. John ]..Marra of Nakomis drive. Oscar Eastman of Marysville. Grandson Bud Eastman will be home for Christmas from U. S. Air Force service in Africa. Other guests will be the pastor’s son and fam- ily, the Rev. and Mrs. Addi- son. Eastman, missionaries to Burma; the Rev. and Mrs. Murl Eastman and children, from Grass Lake, and Mr, and Mrs. James Baldwin and fam- ily of Brown City. * * * Former Pontiac residents the Elmer R. F are com- ing from their home in New Jersey to have Christmas with their son, D.1., and daughter and son-in-law Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Longair and children, Christy, Karen and Jon in Clarkston, : Other members of the fam- ily -will be'the Robert B. Oli- vers and son, Robert, of West Troquois road, Mrs, BD Gould and daughter, Kathie of North Johnson avenue arid Mr. and Mrs. ~_ Spees. of ad dianapolis, Ind * * * Pfe.and Mrs. Willis J. Sev- enson willbe here from Fort Bragg, N.C, to-spend the holi- days with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Julius Vatik of Rus- tie -Lane, Forest. Lake Elects Hunt President Ralph E. Hunt ae the slate as president of Forest Lake Country Club, Bloomfield Hills, for the coming year Serving as vice president is Fred. DeRango, __ secretary, Richard: R, Norris; treasurer, Donald P. Green, Others elected. were Claude ; DECEMBER 24, 1959 aa Corse - Michigan Chapter A.M. of the . PEO Sisterhood met. Monday eve-| ning at the home-of Mrs. John H. Little on Franklin road, Bloom- _ field Hills, Mrs. John J; Little was _eohostess. Twenty-one members were pres- ent, with two guests, Mrs. Helen Sinn of McKeesport, Pa., and Mrs, Philip-Caldwell of Birmingham. Christmas to All!” from Eva Wethington and Staff e of Waterford, who, with Mrs. Smith, has been on the planning committee since the: beginning of -Girls’ Ranch. Zonta Club gave $2,000 for Girls’ Ranch $700 presented Monday to William B. Matus, director and the $700 for a bedroom. was contributed as a Merle Norman of Camp'Oakland.. At right, is Mrs. L. Harvey Lodge Memorial Fi und, ° a Cosmetic Studio One of the first woman jour-|scooped her colleagues inter+|dent Johm Quincy Adams die newipapers~cnd readers—benefit 12 West Huron _qoalists was heirs Ro: who vane Potomac-swimming Presj-| sitting on his clpthes. Today, both from the work Zonta Club of Pontiac service chairman, Mrs. Homer C. Tinney, left, of Elizabeth Lake road; and Mrs. Lloyd B. Smith of Milford look at a check for planned “program Everett Peterson led in singing carols. The group will meet Jan. 4 with Mrs. William. F. Kalwitz. Mrs. Norman Allan will assist. 106 N. SAGINAW STREET . steeper a eRe conn ate oA - —_ " a EVEN IF MONEY WERE NO OBJECT: You'd buy these Arthur Coats. And have the largest selection IF YOU’RE LOOKING FOR PERFECTION: You'd buy these Arthur Coats. Because we insist on highest stand- IF YOU’RE LOOKING FOR VALUE: You'd buy these Arthur Coats. Each and every coat-is drastically reduced. Brand new special purchases are. included. UNTRIMMED Cc ards of quality workmanship. A the area for style and fabric. FUR TRIMMED Regular 49.98” 59.98 and 69.98 Zibelines, Worumbos, “'Travere”’ and “Ebonique,’’ Hockanum‘s magnificent “Windsor” plush. Imported _ tweed and zip-lined tweecs. Regular 69.98 79.98 and 89.98 100% cashmere, Forst- mann's Worumbo, Warren _ Staffords, imported tweeds and. ‘Oscar “Cahn ¥ Regular 79. 98° Regular 89.98 99.98 and $110 Outstanding coats from our finest makers. Trimmed in ‘Dyed Fitch, Mink in all the Hew shades. Natural Gray Persian, and Natural Beaver. _ Regular $110 $119-and $125 ‘Beautiful woolens, all ex- pensively tailored, Natural Ranch, *Curealean, or Silver Biue Mink. Newest fashion colors. Regular $129 $139.and $149 Layishly.furred Couturier coats with Natural Ranch Mink, *Curealean, *Dia- dem or Black Mink or’ Natural Beaver. . Siren awa py We Hope You Have a Happy Holiday! REDMOND’S - lewelers - Optometrists 81 NORTH SAGINAW STREET ae Ew eS — TT ee ae se ere ee we wh ee “ree et ee es ae » # | _f i ‘| i; : mre ed Beauty Shop Organist Ivan F. Rouse. Jr. and Mrs. John B. Walker, soloist, both of Clarkston, admire the burnished anetal of the exposed pipes of the memorial “At St. Andrew Church { +. Sigilins Teun Tad “organ at St. Andie Episcopal Church, Waterford. The organ dedication is - tonight. The new memorial pipe organ " 311 National Bldg. FE 5-6911 will be dedicated during the Fes- ‘ tival Christmas Eve service -at + 100 tonight in St. Andrew Epis- ; ‘s > };copal Church, Waterford Town- * : : --- <[ship, with Ivan Rouse Jr. church ants , CHRISTMAS — [owns payne , . i The instrument fulfills the dream i , REETINGS ‘of a true pipe organ of the rec- - ‘tor, the Rev. Waldo R. Hunt, and 4 ‘the congregation. . This season | “The organ is of modest size : . | but still adequate for-a small Pe. i let us give thanks | church,” said the Rev, Mr. : > to God, who _ | Hunt. 7 , . | The organ builder. provided for guides our destiny, for the addition of several ranks of his many blessings. of Waterford — -ELLIOTT’S Furniture Co. Bl pipes when the instrument is /moved to the larger building now being planned. The 280 pipes are divided into _six ranks and range in size from ‘largest bass, which is nine feet - MERRY CHRISTMAS from Thelma Crow and Her Staff at METHOD SHOPPE 88 W ayne St. * » | A BRIGHT CHRISTMAS! ~ The Holiday Season is a special time of gratitude, compassion, hope and faith. Gratitude for the many : | blessings on this land and : for trials withstood. Compassion for the less eee better world of peace and > one LAER EW ET in which we may rear.our It is in this spirit that we ee : Privilege it is to serve so and Oakland County, warm greetings and ae Christmas Season. RANDALL’S HARPER _FE 2-1424 i gE | WE WISH ae = fortundte. Hope for a ___ justice. Faith in our ability to grow and to build. For our way of life is-a good . Strong and free and full of promise .. . and one children with confidence. of Arthur’s, whose -many people of Pontiac extend to alk, our good wishes this itall, to the smallest treble, the |size of a pencil. It stands in a wooden case de- | signed to blend with the con- | temporary architecture of the . St. Andrew Church. The main pipes of burnished metal are ex- | posed on the front. ' _ The blower, swell and icommittee were Mrs. Martha Rob- ithe studetits with six Christmas ‘shutter! Organ Dedication Tonight The organ was built by the’ Fouser Pipe Organ Co. of ~ mechanism $ 2 ® ¢ @e 3 @@e #8 4 ALL SALES FINAL! a0 TG Se Charge Your Purchases! Take Up to Six Months to Pay! Stunning new fall and holiday dresses, Juniors, Misses and half- sizes, wools, jerseys, crepes, afternoon and date dresses, one and two-piece styles, all taken from our regular stock, every dress a tremendous value ond every dress a new fall. fashion. 270 Orchard Lake Pontiac FE 4.0558 | > Our Fine- Quality Our Fine Quality -— a SKIRTS — } |» ‘BLOUSES —-| J 490 6.90 9.90 bie 2.99 ae buon o eyed Sevobie Pontiac Over 28 Years! were 7.95 to 17.95 were. 2.98 to 5.98 ° Hundreds to Choose From } i May you find the peace and calm ofa clear winter night. tenaled | NATURAL _,HEALTH ” FOODS 8 Mt. Clemens St. (Formerly 58 Wayne) FE 4-4601 CIN corn) is in the eating, it Proof of the pudding ( and the pop- Members of Intermediate Girl Scout Troop 579, Elkhart School, taste test the popcorn Christmas trees they will distribute 1 wi vith other gifts to the Lapeer -_—= Pentiac Press Photo would seem. Training Home. From left are Terry Price, 12, of Baldwin avenue; Joyce Hartley, 12, of Merrimac. street, and Sandra Davidson;-12, of Cornell ave- nue, News From Bloomfield Hills We hope you will pause the “true meaning- of this Holy to remember Christmas Season By RUTH SAUNDERS BLOOMFIELD HILLS — Mrs. Edythe McCulloch Beauty Shoppe 608 Pontiac State Bank |New York Sunday evening law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. — | Louis Molella, just returned from | Europe, Merry ! iS? | Christmas The Knitting Needle 452 W. Huron FE §-1330 carried out in shades; of pink and ‘the white tree stahding in the ‘curve of the lovely spiral staircase ‘was decorated in American Beauty) ornaments and bows on ‘branch. John G. Wood was hostess at din- ‘ner Saturday - before leaving for to ispend a few days with her son-in-| Decorations for the. party were) Dinners, Parties Are in Holiday Style tains in Canada near the town of Agatha. They will be staying with Mrs. .Restrick’s brother and sister-| in-law, the John W. Roses at the Laurentide Inn which Mr. Rose, who formerly lived. in Bay Village, Mr. and Mrs..Thomas T. Re- istrick left Wednesday to: «spend Christmas in the Laurentian Moun- Yule Program lr. and Mrs. 4 ‘| Fox of Stirling engagement of “|Mr. and Mrs. Hills. ‘| Michigan. A June wedding William C. avenue their daughter Carol Ann. to Stuart S. Bower, son of R. G. Bower of Bloomfield Carol attends the Pontiat Business © Institute. Her. fiance attended the University of is planned. 7 CAROL ANN FOX _ The United Lutheran Church Women of Ascension Lutheran Church packed 200 individual _ bags of cookies at the Christ- mas meeting Monday evening. Donated by the women, the cookies’ wil be given to pa- tients at the Oakland County, Infirmary. The-Christmas story, as tak- en from ‘‘The Martin Luther Christmas Book’’ was told by Mrs. Milton Freet. Mrs. Har-— old Wood led the singing of carols, Mrs. Lawrence Colbeth gave devotions. Hostesses were Mrs. Lisle Echtinaw, Mrs. Wayne Gabert, Mrs. Hans Hoffman and Mrs. _ Herbert Rohn. The lowest point in mountainous Wyoming is 3,100 feet above sea; level, f | | Peace On Earth | Goodwill To Men | SOS MEET for LUNCH | RIKER FOUNTAIN Sealtest Ice Cream Popular Prices “Riker Building Lobby PONTIAC | BEAUTY COLLEGE | 1612 East Huron | Behind Kresge’s . . . 2nd Floor Ohio, recently bought. Accompanying their parents at Will Rogers A three-act musical program was were Cindy; ‘Ginny, Tommie and presented by students, mothers and Doug every day. —— We're agiow with that intangible thing called Christmas spirit:— and wish all our friends A VERY MERRY CHRISTMAS PONTIAC GLASS CO: ELMER H. REYNOLDS- GORDON E. REYNOLDS 23 West ‘Lawrence Street _ Spence, teachers at the Will:Rogers School ‘annual Christmas program Mon- x * * | and Mrs. William B. Bach- man Jr. left Wednesday to fly to’ Florida for Christmas with the {senior Bachmans for a holiday in’ | Nassau. Mr. * * * Carols of the past and present | _ were sung by groups from_each | ' class, under the diréctien of Mrs. ek *’ | dean James. Directed by Eldon Rosegart, the! Hosts at the Cotillion Club Tues-! school band provided the overture|day evening at Bloomfield . Hills) ‘to the musical, Country Club included Mr. and | Principal Dr. Ann Galbraith ex.|Mrs. Ernst F. Kern, Mr. and Mrs. ‘tended Christmas wishes to the as-|Wright Tisdale, Mr. and Mrs. | sembly. Theo F. Yntema, Mr. and Mrs. | The vocal selection, “O Holy/Ernest Jones, Mr. and Mrs. John) 'Night,"” by Gerry Merrel concluded|S. Kerr, - Mr. and Mrs, Carl F., ‘the program. | Fisher and the Clyde P. Carines' Jr. : * * * Homebuilders Mr. and Mrs. William B. Saun-| Celebrate Yule ders (nee Joan Franklin) announce | the birth of a daugfffer, Dec. Stacy.! The Eugene Sheltons of Monti- 15. cello street were hosts to the} Homebuilders’ Class of First | Church of the Brethren.on North | Roselawn for the annual Christ- ;mas party, Saturday. * * * | Mr: and Mrs. Frederick Sanders | will be hosts at a supper Sunday | evening for their house guest, Jane | Runyon of Northampton, Mass. — es hae ad Sin Our best the very happiest of Holiday TELEGRAPH at HURON. wishes for Seasons. tvs. | Buffet supper followed a social hour and gift exchange. Proceeds ‘from a traveling basket will pro- vide food for a needy family, | Present were the Rev. L. W. Shafer, pastor, Mr. and Mrs, Earl Cox of Adrian, Mr. and Mrs, Dan the Ray Flemings, Mr. and “Mrs. Aver Ebey and the George Thrashers. | Others were Mrs, Ruth Durn- baugh, Mrs. Al Warner, Mr. and Mrs. Galen. Joseph, the William /Tuckers, Mr. and Mrs. William | Lucas and Mr. and Mrs, Herman Thrke. Leet 4 rd he arte gps lap pee dtd Mi CELA LMRLALOOLE LEP LE LP ELE i ee ee ee a ee a ee a F ’Tis the Night Before Christmas ' And we in our shop Have hurried and scurried And now we must stop; To wish all our wee friends their dads and moms too... A Very MERRY CHRISTMAS To each one of you. The oo “MARGARET ANN RIKER BLDG. SHOP ~ PPP LLL AL LLP le AN PL NL GL Rt L Nl lL Ea tl APP acti | . Plus Savings . Blouses, Ail Ww ~ Year-End Sale Be Here Saturdey 10 A. ‘Winter Coats UNTRIMMED Regular $59- 95 to $110 ‘48 58 +68 FUR TRIMMED Regular $110 to $150 $33" To $123 _ Regular $165 to $245 — cont eather _ Kad fabulous savings on 4 oe «coats — « Suits” « dresses cocktail- dresses * formals Kn reduced —for those of you who received money for Christmas (lucky you) . here is the opportunity of choosing your own gift and getting terrific values at a fabulous saving. Come one... come all, you may find that dress or suit that you couldn't squeeze into your budget before!!! Sorry, all sales final. Ne C.0.D.'s No Mail or .phone O BOTH STORES - Pontiac wad Birmingham of Be gens a THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DE ECEMBER 24, 1959 f IE COLO | Wtes — Three Neary Later : : pA ened pve er ‘is is ry on the origin of our great Christmas carols.) , i By HUGH A. MULLIGAN AP News Writer Christmas Eve in the Holy Land, * 1865. horseback into ‘the hal- lowéd hills, the tall American min- ister came to the same field where centuries before the shepherds had| - watched their flocks by night. A chill winter wind sweeping off the mountains urged him to ride on, but the solemnity of the scene held him fascinated. The night was hushed and clear, the woods :dia- mond dipped in “frost. Below him, the dark streets of Bethlehem: stretched out under the timeless stars, “© little. town of Bethi¢hem How still we see thee lie Above thy deep and dreamless sleep The silent stars go by. . .” The beauty of Bethlehem on. that night, so profoundly affected the Rev. Phillips Brooks that three years later he was able to trans- late it into an exquisite poem for his Sunday School ‘classes at Phil- adelphia’s Church of the Holy Trin- ity. , The words were set to music by Lewis Rédner, his church organist and Sunday School superintendent, who always maintained that the melody came to him in a dream after weeks of fruitless struggle. * * 3* almost. to the hour after “Silent; Night” first echoed through the|lowed to make the day merry with Austrian Alps, a choir of six teach-: ers and 36 Sunday School children’ ° lifted “Phillips Brooks’ ‘‘O Little Town ‘of Bethlehem” into the ranks of the world's great Christmas carols, CAROLS ON MAYFLOWER Like “Silent Night,”’ it became a Christmas classic. No other American hymn is held in ‘such! high esteem throughout the world, although America has produced many of the finest Christmas car- ols — an output. far out of pro- portion to the size and age of the country, — The first singing of carols in | the New World may have taken | place on board the Mayflower, anchored off Provincetown on Dec. 25, 1620. sous Ahatonnia’’ The Pilgrims did not celebrate’ og - a church members on board were al- per and feasting in the main cabin, * * * The first American carol, “Jel sy (Jesus is Born), was written in the Huron language by John de .Brebeuf, a Jesuit mis- sionary who labored among the Huron tribe from 1626 until his martydom by Iroquois torturers in 1649. INDIANS MARK CHRISTMAS In the “Jesuit Relations," mis- sionary reports sent back to the superiors in Paris, another Jesuit, Father Bartholemew Vimont, tells how ‘the Hurons celebrated Christ- mas in 1645. “They built a small chapel of; cedar and fir branches in honor of the manger of the Infant Jesus. “They wished to perform some penance for better receiving Him Christmas, scorning the feast as into their hearts on that holy On Christmas Eve, 1868, 50 years'* ‘Popish nonsense, ’* but the non-| day, and even those who were at can be built into. walls— or floor, ceiling or baseboards! . anal fo meena > “Buying, ‘electric heat. It’s so comfortable, parser & : ‘building or remodeling, you'll want to learn more about built-in so fast and so clean it makes other heating | methods downright old fdshioned. Electric heat makes it practical—for the first time—to control the temperature in each room separately. such comfort it’s a brand-new experience. ; Electric heat completely eliminates the ‘need for a furnace; for boiler or radiators; for chimney or fuel facilities. It gives you this space as a bonus! Like more information? Pick up your free copy of a new booklet on electric heat wt Ses ea Eoin oO. = peeren ie Comfort? Here's _—") Westward lending, stil. pre- ceeding, : Sec nisiee ge Reached for the Stars — 3 and Plumbed Fear’s Deni Harvard man, wrofe the words to “It Came Upon a Midnight Clear’) while watching the snow fall out- side his etudy windows af Way- ‘a landmark it ‘ own Miia it)Korean war, which settled noth ruled at last that segregation of ing. It was a time of increasing human beings because of the color prosperity, some recessions; when By JAMES MARLOW Associated Press News Analyst | WASHINGTON (AP)--What will land, Mass, in 1849. A Yale man, Richard 5S. Willis of Detroit, sup- plied the music after seeing the poem in @ morrRpe pee. The two history remember best of this dec- of their skin was wrong and ne: Europe got back on ity feet: and never met. lade of the 1930s? ‘jonger endurable: iheads of state began exchanging - < bed * * This, no doubt: it was the time *’ * * visits like country cousins, e.. a hag mn Neen nalions wren earth . bound man first; j, was in this 10-year span tia + & sant Gloria chords oat Ae carats! fteached out toward the stars. The people around the world in China,| Joseph Stalin's death in 1968 sing at Bethichem- continues to! ‘satellites and space probes, fan- [ndia, the Middle East and Africa, brought a whole era of savagery ingpire poets and composers to tastic as. they seem, were only shaking off the misdirection, ex- and terror to an end in the Soviet ‘timid . preliminaries the sum’ ploitation, suppression or lethargy! Union, or so it seemed, His more’ to 9 J +} ] , . tutte a sting melody in in total of wonders set in motion injof generations or centuries, were. subtle and imaginative successor®. . the: 1950s iwaor king out their new indepen a. switched Sow let policy from sullen For each of us these past 10 ence. ‘grunts to jolly goodfellowship tall, iyears have had private meanings. | ~*~ *« * But it was in the field of world ‘polities that mankind once again Soviet progress in the 19508)faijed most miserably;. it failed shocked America into realizing, ifto find a real peace, * Lonly-dimly so far, its days as No. 1 = Typhoons Cut Food « auunce ot twe dayy’ pareey SUPDlY on Ryukus iFor all of us, depending on who iwe were and where, they had mo- ments of greatness, bitterness, re-| as wen ulate. a/eing | Wie pre ien turbulence, tor | among nations may he numbered. 'WEAP ONS OF HORROR — tyme s Bie ate sat bers NAHA, Okinawa (AP) — Three, oar \But the Soviet Union, bragging) Whole groups of people;~ still, jautumn typhoons have caused. ap * __labout leaving America behind,|Clinging to the primitive tribal chia. Ser aused. & The most memorable achieve ooyid not escape misgivings, eith-isystem which is called national pra food eee. rou gh ments were in science, social jus- three aregs of the “AdMINIS- tice. and,the stampede of new na-°) tered Ryukyu Islands and put 140,- jong toward self-realization. 000 persons “on short rations until ism nowadays, built, up weapons of horror, glared at each other: over their missile pads, and merk ‘tioned good intentions while talke “Neither the inconvenience of the snow nor the severity of -the cold could stifle their ardor.” . AN it had to do was look over The its shoulder toward Asia where a igreatest failure was in world pol-' pinjon people, in China and In- * * * ‘Williamsport, Pa. is the -bigth-| spring. e+ *% Meee —in the inability of nations to gia were going through convul-|ing annthilation. . carol “We Three Kings) -« ing real peace. sions in their efforts to indust: ~ wh place of the caro Three Kings) J+ j¢ serious.” a spokesman fOF|° In this dex ‘ade, besides devising ise. When they de uc indus ‘al For this reason the period of ot Orient Are,” written in 1857 the U.S. Civil Administration, gaid.| instruments . 1950s, when man produced his by the Rev. John Henry Hopkins 554 there is ho for journeying into jon and America may trail both starvafifn or space men devéloped the hydro- of them. seen sect tie lis Episce| famine. People are on short ra-jgen bomb and missiles. Either worst weapons, may seem to hise palian rector. “Bf Williamsport’s tions, This is expected to continue! now makes war unthinkable. . | * * * toriane a thousand years from Christ be gig: wrote porn the! through next May.’ | te ke t “| avery decade has had some/"0W the stupidest decade on earth. words a music, a rarity for| } ° . ia x carol com my y * we * It was the period of vaccine wretched moments, and some Just an the per od newres an end, ’*« * { He said nearly 14 million pounds! lagainst polio and of the nuclear- soul-searching ones, The 1950s the big baatchioh decid rc to talk Singers regard this etately dra- of rele food has been ordered powered submarine | which were no exception. This. country Only the bias taataren sas can’ agers . ° from the United States. | ski lor . it by McCarthyis “4 matic ‘carol as one of the best, | om the uu . vies iskimmed under the North Pol was split by McCarthyism which, ‘show whether this new together> a began in 1950. Hungary tasted) freedom for an instant before the| T. LANDMARK IN LAW Soviet heel came down. _It was also in this. decade that PROSPERITY RESESSION U.S, ‘Supreme Court created This the decade Don’t disappoint Santa! lice. Either would have. been from a musical standpoint, and) landmark in any decade, are particularly enamored with its were part ef Japan's rapturous chorus: ‘until the end @f World War “q star of wonder, star of night They have been under American, Star with royal beauty bright | administration since 194). ’ ithe south of Japan, iness means anything! home islands" The Ryukyus, en) ‘est member of the, deer family. Was the It grows antlers six feet across, of . eerement © 290, ee avenoms comrnn “enesanee: one “CON on SRM RS Rene BE REALLY REFRESH ED! The old ld gentleman’s had a long trip, and from the North Pole to the South Seas, nothing is so refreshing as the cold crisp taste of Coca-Cola. It’ gas bright and bracing — as a sleigh-ride in the stars. Keep a big supply in your refrigerator all through the holidays... - please your Santa and all his helpers who will be calling at: * -Yyour hous@: 2°": eee. Bottied under autaity of The Cochcola Compenyby THE COCA-COLA BOTTLING COMPANY OF PE ' ( ‘ s ; Pe : 5 — > ecegey : \ \ The. Alaska moose is the larg -' clas = SG TI, ee * Lat . ; Rend # * * - DEAR SANTA: Dick Ayling, Charley Guinnip, Al Gratsch, Tom Raeside, Norm’ Since your last viwit a year ago, there have been many Krawczak. and every last one of them. happy moments for our friends in the ‘‘World of Sports.” There have also been many disappointments. * * * We know that in your big traveling bag tonight there are gifts which will please many and’ there are some which may not be liked by some. It_will be difficult to make everyone happy, but Santa, please do your best for all our friends in sports—-coaches, play- ers, reporters, officials and the fans. To them we would like to dedicate a paragraph from one of Grantland Rice’s great poems “The Winners”: There ts no life for soul or heart That breaks or falters at defeat; Fhe weak are beaten at the start, And ohly those who play their part May face the rough and rocky beat; —fhe read is long—the dream is gone— But the fighting heart still carries: on. When you visit all the fine gentlemen in the high school ranks, leave Jesse MacLeay at PCH a gift certificate for the SVC football title next year, and to Art Van Ryzin a chance to meet Hamtramck in the state basketball finals. Dean Wilson wants the same gift he had four years prior te last season—the state track title, and Ed Graybiel would. like a championship trephy for all Chief teams. Gene Norris wants a new swimming pool; leave Steve Szabo a few mats and matmen and for the other PCH coaches—all winning smiles. Ed Heikkinen at Northern wants a few transfer linemen, ' Dick Hall needs a “6-2 giant," Elden Johnson another pair of hands, and Ed Dauw, Bill Willson, Dick Marsh a molding ma- chine for swimmers, wrestlers and trackmen. , © © * Leave some real fast times in the pools at Birmingham for Jay Meyers: at Southfield for Milt Hurd: at Fitzgerald for John Wieck; at Dondero for Ron Gora and the other area H20 coaches. Another 100 basketball wins for Gene Konley at Rochester would be generous; 6-6 Casanova cager for Brotebeck at Romeo; | and stretching machines that make 5-8 players 6-8 tall for Dick Bye at Avondale, Art Paddy at Keego, Lew Parry at Birming-| ham, Dom Mauti at Clarkgten, Jee Duby at PNB, Hal Trott at) Bloomfield Hills, Jim Horeffi, at Walled Lake; Jerry Wallace at! Waterford, Gene Wright at St. Freds, Ted Gawry at Oxford, Bob Pence, at Holly, Hal Carlin at Lake Orion, Peyton Goodwin at Troy, Bert McMahon at Cranbrook, and to all the other court coaches leave a couple “dunkers.” . Please leave uniforms filled with 225 pound linemen for Carl Lemle at Birmingham, Dave Freeman at Water- ford, Frank Crowell at Avondale; Dick Pigg at Oxford and Ray Figg at Holly; Ted Meister at Ferndale, Tom Taylor at Clarkston and Dave Smith at Walled Lake. Some speedy 10 second backs for Jim Niebauer, St. Mikes: Father Rakoczy, OL St. Mary; Joe Borovick, Lamphere; Tom Kennedy, St. Fred; Monte Charles, Southfield; Jerry Ganzel, Milford; Don Hoff, Bloomfield; Pin Ryan, Kimball; Ivy Loftin, Dondero; Prank Kownacki, Lake Orion and Jack Hayes, Farm- ington. . * * * On behalf of Ben Snyder at Cranbrook, leave all aréa schools a book on organizing a soccer team; leave Paul Smarks) a couple votes in the MHSAA; Waldo Ashley a swimming pool and Wisner Stadium some lights. Extend our best wishes to all the high school coaches: Ker- mit Ambrose, Fred Campbell, Bob Acton, Jack Cotton, Dick Snyder, Gene Heppinstall, George Glinke, Ben Conrad, Ron Schipper, Ted Gawry, Barney Swinehart, Tom Evans, Niles Free- land, Don Beedle, Al Cuthrell, Don Bradford, Ed Battani, Bob’ Finley, Lyle Powers, Will Steinke, Bill Doolittle, Joe Dewdy, El- mer Engel, Herb Korf, Larry Hartsig, Ron Horwath, Chuck Skinner, Larry Laeding, Jack Marlette, Wally Schloerke, Andy Over Lansing drop a bundle of joy for Duffy ‘Daugherty, a Rose Bowl Trip; Forddy Anderson another John Green; and Biggie Munn, 5 games at 75,000 each; and. Fred Stabley, a 9 col. headline on MSU at Pasadena. At Ann Arbor, ‘promise Bump Elliot a better break in '60 ‘national tournaments for Oakland County and fat tourney | and a win over brother Pete; Bill Perigo needs some wins and, ‘Gus Stager another NCAA swim crown; Fritz Crisler a lifetime “ athletic director's job at “M”. * * * = — ceuter; the Lions need all top flight draft choices; the Tig- ers a new bullpen, fully stocked. Leave Nick Kerbawy.a pro basketball exposure meter: Red | |Rocha players he can look up at; George Wilson, rebuilt claws |for the Lions; and Jimmy Dykes, a Tiger who growls. We do get golf weather in Michigan. How about a few good | ipurses for Wally Burkemo,.Bob Gajda and Max Evans? * * * ~ ‘Put Frank Syron, Tommy Shannen, Leo Conroy, Al Wat- | ‘rous, Ray Maguire, and Brownie Meyer on the “Dean’s list” of Publinx repeat for Mike Andoniar:*with city title for Paul Bada, and nothing above 70 for Dick DeWitt, Glenn Hard- ing, Dick Robertson, Lynn Spees, Joe Burgdorf, Wally Smith, Charley Barker, Butler Cooper, Jack Reynolds, Tim Baldwin, Chuck Kocsis, Sam Koesis, Roy Iceberg, Ron Rothbarth, Don Nelson, Ben Smith, Stan Sabat, €d Wasik, Jack Geiss, Jim Pembroke, Tom Draper, Sammy | Laine and all the other fine amateurs, including the gals, | Sally Sharp, Mrs. Gawne, Ann Wilson, Zadah DeBolt, Edith Wright and Mrs. Smead, among many fine golfers. Plenty of bowlers and good scores for Sam Perna, Joe Bon- In, Detroit, visit Jim Miller with some beef and speed; ar- our fine golf pros and let all the putts drop for Ralph Yankee, |figlio, the Kuklinski’s, Stan Mayes, Hal Hintz, the Millers, Roy Tange @ post-season basketball trip for Bob Calihan and give Joe Thackér, Elmer Prieskorn, Bill Uzelac, Warren Orlick, Ken | Stroup, the Howes, the Moores, the Koprinces, Ben Bondo and ‘Frank Metzger an “SRO” sign for everything in '60. Don’t forget the pro teams. How about bringing back that once-proud banner, “The City of Champions.” The Wings would like you to return a certain cup; the Pistons want Russell and Baylor at forwards and Chamberlain at | ‘How about_ another state crown for Lloyd Syron; a |Wilson, Red Wilson, Bill Kennedy, Art Berry, Gene Bone, | George Ferguson, Don D’Onfrio, Bill Catto, Fred Chadrick, | Preston Meisel, Bill Martin, George Spencer, Fred Challen and 'Paul Van Loozen. SPORES all 700’s for the “700” club. . i * * * | , Don’t pass up Peg Bender, Gen Bradley and the fine gals | of the Pontiac WIBC, 4nd gather up 1,000 men for a big 1960 _|Bowlerama., - fe | Bring some of that snow down from North Pole for Mort 'Graddis, Joe Kosik, Jerry Monod, Walt Haefeli, Bob Hard, Peter Weber, Michelle Turcotte, Bob Jackson, the Ostrander’s and she rest of the ski people. A good budget to operate a big recreation program would be appreciated by Dave Ewalt, Johy Streit, Len Buzz, Don Martin and Tom Belton and leave Belton an- Colts May Use Ha og Ewbank Installs *" @ Them to Defeat Noise of Crowd Baltimore Is 3'2-Point Choice Over Giants in NFL Title Game bs ' By United Press International _ The Baltimore Colts, who may “use hand signals to beat the crowd ‘noise in Sunday’s National Football) League game with the New York | Giants, remained 3.44 point favor- | ites Wednesday for the professional | classic. Bookmakers TOP PRO — Johmy Unitas. Baltimore's passifig great, was named the top pro-player of the year yesterday. He will be firing his aerials at ragged Giant de- fense in Sunday's NFL title duel at the Colt stadium. Houston to Get Confused Star Tackle Floyd Signed With Both Texans and Baltimore over the giants when the game be) gins in Beitimore’ s Mémorial Sta: dium | The Colts needed a sudden- | death overtime to’ score a 23-17 victory over the Giants in the 1958 championship, -Bookmakers figured the teams would score about as many points as they did | in that thriller, estimating a total of 42 for the two clubs. the biggest individual betting event SAN FRANCISCO — Don of 1959, Baltimore fans were in a. yd, All-America tackle as Christian University, said Giants tried to dig out of a seven- MacDonald, Chuck Fowler, Jim- Blenkhorn, Fred Shadrick, | Wednesday he had ‘signed con-|inch‘snow in New York: Ss : -Star Pin Points portant segment of the bowling! delivery This purely physical phase which means exactly what it says—push- ing the ball away from the body— can make or break a bowler. You're in a balanced stance ready for the approach. The ball is close te the body. New vou must get it in) motion. Most bowlers pust out with the first step. The degree of pushawav _ affect your entire approach - ultimate delivery. If you out too far or don't’ extend the arms enough, you will be off bal- ance. This causes a jerky ap- proach, the ‘‘pull’ across the alley that haunts bowlers. The pushaway should become an. automatic part of your bow!l- can and with your approach and your, physical makeup it egg a: S part of -the pendulum. - Welu Swing which starts the Shstant you take your first step. Push away. naturally, ¢omfort-: ably. Push 6ut with both hands, the non-bowling hand _ support- ing the ball. + Tf you’ re making | rad ‘you'll | it immedi ‘The weight of the ‘ball will pull! you ” oecvag PUSHING AWAY Ry BILLY WELL reach} tracts with both the Baltimore} -Colts of- the National Football;fans will produce a tornado of; League and the Houston club of/sound Sunday, has installed a set! the new American Football of hand signals to help quarterback League, but he intends to play for' John Unitas communicate with. Hou ‘énds Raymond Berry and Jim! The contusion came to light when|Mutseheller and flanker back Len- | both K. S. (Bud) Adams, owner'ny Moore. of the Houston fr: anchise, and Don. Ewhank said Unitas would use Kellett, general manager of the! hand signals te e pla te ‘Colts, announted they had signed’ his ends and ak ste Levee he ‘the 225-pound lineman. changes a play at the line of | “T made a mistake,”’ the 21-yéar-, old Floyd said in an interview often to meet changes in the op. | W ania vork | position’s defense. “The New Yor itans of the. new league drafted me. I didnt Phe Colts raced through a brisk; want to play in New York. After workout Tuesday in Memorial Sta-| the Bluebonnet game in Houston V™. concentrating on_ offense. last Saturday, Mr. Adams told me lon say hacia a see this record | he had a verbal agreement « ith, idid ue of thoowiny us year, the Titans that he could sign me ree plenty 0 rowing In near- for Houston. | signed the Houston | ae on eh er tel contract | ut an. inch of snow fell on “That was about 6 o'clock. At|the tarpaulin covering the ae field and work crews shoveled it off. Coach Jim Lee Howell’s Giants were unable to practice at Yankee Stadium Tuesday be- cause Of a heavy snow and worked an hour and 49 minutes indoors at a New York armory. They hoped to drili. outside | Wednesday. | Howell was pleased with the zip idisplayed by.his men, He said they. ishowed the same spirit 10 o’clock [ talked with Mr. Kel- lett. I was worried whether Mr. Adams’could get my release from New. York, so I signed with Balti. ‘more also. ‘and sent my bonus back. | signed ‘with Houston first and want to play with Houston.’ Honor Moon, Sherry LOS ANGELES . {AP)—Outtfield- er Wally Moon and pitcher Larry Sherry of the Los Angeles Dodg- jers have been named co-winners of the “Southern California Ath- before they clobbered the Cleve- land. Browns, 48-7... “Qur boys were.dwice. as spirited as last week. The game with the estimated coach | Weeb Ewbank's defending cham-' pions would be four-point choices | With the game already tabbed as from|fever of anticipation while the Ewbank, aware that Baltimore's. scrimmage, as the pros do so | that ford against Cambridge at “Wick: marked their workouts the week/enham Field and received the fa-' nd Signals Sunday ‘ Pontiac Press Photo } ADMIRING THE BLUE — - Fady Wright casts admiring glances at the blue blazer and blue scarf awarded to Pete Dawkins for his rugby attainments at Oxford where he is a Rhodes Scholar. . Dawkins is home in Royal Oak for the holidays and the ex-Army All-America halfback will return to England to resume his studies on New Year's Day. Miss: Wright, Pete's pretty girl friend, hails from Washington, D.C., and is a guest of the Dawkins family hin the Shrine game Saturday night! again other doubles partner for the city tennis tourney next season. More table tennis honors for Perc Secord, Carol Ryan and ithe PTTA; another state water ski jumping title for Tony |Mitchell; more insurance customers for Chuck Davey; bigger gates for Julius Piazza; red hot publicity releases for Fred Huber and Fred DeLano; new track records at the windows ‘for Jim Eathorne at DRC and ditto for Hazel Park; extensive ‘athletic program for Hollie Lepley and MSUO: sharp skafers ifor Bert Anselmy; lots of boys and members for the YMCA land Boys’ Clubs; a jet job for Joy Fair: and a new book of | rules for Charley Forsythe and the MHSAA. i Be kind to the people of the outdoors in this great Oakland County: Harry Barnes, OCSC: president; Bob Gubbins, Jack Beebe, Weldon Payne, Bob Waggoner, Bob Theifels, Cash Bond, | Homer Cross, Kyle Wharff, Harold Stoll, Warren Kendall, How- ard Johnson, Harold Hughes, Ed Kuder, and the others. To all whom we have missed in this column, please ex- tend our apologies. To.every single person extend the wishes of the sports de- partment for a wonderful, healthy and safe Christmas. 2-Point Edge for South | MIAMI, Fla. (AP)—The odds-|Speer can cover 100 yards in 9.46 | makers. have installed the South seconds. lall-star college football team a| Both squads went throtigh work- | two-point favorite over the North|outs yesterday in which ‘passing was ‘emphasized. _ Walker jae the Orange Bowl. But to casual | was pleasantly surprised with the | observers the reason is. a mys; throwing of Joe Tranchini of Na- tery. Ivy. He now has three able pass- ers. * * * | The North has a big weight edge | in the line, and Coach Dale Nall’ has four of his Army players. ih- cluding passer Joe Caldwell, ly énd Bill Carpenter, halfback! Bob Anderson, a running and pass-receiving star, and center Bob Oswandel as a nucleus of his offensive unit. The reputations of little Fran Curci of Miami and Jack Cun- inings of North Carolina-may have = Treais Paces Huron Tourney Title Win FLINT. @®—Ron Gulyas sank two free throws in the last 23 seconds \and gave Eastern Michigan a 75-74 victory over Flint in the .cham- pionship game‘ of the Flint Junior something to do with the choice jot the South. Both are outstand- ‘ing passers, and Curci, who | throws . left-handed, can run the | option play about as well as amy- - one, The South also has an outstand- ing punter and place-kicker in Gordon Speer of Rice, who also . ee oe College Sixth Annual Holiday Bas- ketball ‘Tournament last night - Marzzellug Wilson ‘was high scorer for Fiint with 24 points. Rod Treais (Pontiac) led Eastern with 21 points. In “the consolation game, “Hills- dale College beat-Aquinas of Grand Rapids 67-56. Aquinas led 33-25 at the half. during the vacation. ‘Football, Rugby-or Hockey—They’ re All the Same to Pete. i Daw Peter Dawkins, alias Mr. Blue, replied in his typic ally sincere lis a diplomat of the highest order way: iwhen it comes to promoting inter- * * * national good will. “T think that's an unfair ques- x * * tion. The two sports cannot e The former All-America halfback compared because of the different at West Point who took his prep meanings they hold in. their re- Schooling at Cranbrook will never spective countries. They're really {be one to take sides on the com-/quite different. iparative skills and virtues of Eng-) «4 have been asked that ques- lish rugby and American footbali.) gon before by several _ others Dawkins, home with his family | and I've always made the same at 1829 Greenleaf Drive in Royal y- Pve also been asked to Oak for the holidays, refuses to //make a comparison among foot- say which sport he likes better | ball, rugby and hockey and once —football or rugby. | again I think it’s very difficalt As -you'lt recall, Dawkins has| 4 = fellable way. gained international ‘recognition) ‘‘As you know, I played football this year for his rugby attainments,and hockey at West Point before at Oxford University in England|trying my hand at rugby and I where he is a- —_— Scholar. lean honestly say- that I enjoyed * * 5 [all three of them very much. Only. recently nt played. for’ Ox-, ~ & * itween America’s attitude toward mous blue scarf and blue blazer/football and England’s to- awarded to all: young men who rugby. voane 2 a high take part in this cratittonel. rughy| pressure sport. here while over rivalry. i Lecetce ilete of, the Year" award by , the Helms ‘Athletic Foundation, it ‘was lannounced today’ Colts was too far away then. Now it’s fast around thé corner, * How- ell said. a When asked which sport was the!played and enjoyed roughest ‘physically and. whieh vasdins 7 ‘ “There's a great difference be-| rugby season is much longer than the football season and many games are played by a a huge num- ber: of teams. “They start playing ruse around the Ist of September and continue until March. They're right at the high spot in their rugby schedule now.” Pete's blue scarf bears the ict. Recreation Cage Scores RECREA SKETBA PRookam vondalé Merchants ag Booth Hom Clarkston ty, Griff’ss Grill 99 sass Town & Coun 7 a Set t Polite 39 ae ane - Field's Landscape 3 9, Biedses ” Jefferson Jets 43, kins Is Real Diplomat ters OURFC (Oxford University Rugby Football Club). _ 2s *® * Dawkins won the Heisman and Maxwell trophies during his days at West Point as America’s No, 1 college gridder. He entered Oxford in September on a Rhodes Scholai- ship and just completed his ist term of study. Dawkins has mighty. attractive company as a guest at his home during the vacation. Her name is Judy Wright; .a University of Maryland aealer who lives in Washington, D..C PAD ove not deinen, how- ”’ Dawkins said, “I have no ‘wanied plans for at least two years because you cannot be “married and rarcne “Rhodes Scholarship." Pete and Miss Wright will dive ‘game he liked the best, Dawkins} Dawkins said that the Englist,| es RT i Welden’s 80, ‘'to New York after New Year's ~ hbase to EAoUE. Day from where he will return to Lyle & Colegrove $8, Aeport Speedway |e neland by plane to resume nis Rai pal work at Oxford 9m Jim's Ades BLS mae a Ee he ee 2 a heronfp concentrate ' |mueh ‘harder’ on his studies now nage a ee since he has deckied 10 sive, we ~ sa guerdhapene acy j of Home ‘Sougpen a = Mebacne é.schobl year, | i ae : ee oe : eS i 4 i ma ‘ : i | ey ‘ ¢ 4 \ \ Sa cM sla 9 MR SSO MONT Goalie Bharie I ca aN ' ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1950 Special Rates to. Ski Clubs. BROWER’S Department Store 2 North Washington 8t., Oxford OA 8.2933 Make Plans for Full Operation for Holiday Action. Grampian expects to “have its new Poma-lift ready for use Satur- day. Skiing will be available on z if Be BREE jsnow and any | snow will put all facilities in oper- jation Saturday. “he tee Mt. Summit opened the begin- “ner’s slope Wednesday and the of- ‘ficial opening is set for Saturday with nine slopes and six tows in ED WILLIAMS TIRE COMPANY -~“General Tire Headquarters” 451 S. SAGINAW: ST. operation. The weekly Saturday uled to start. Dryden ski area has a base on the intermediate slope and will ; Will be ready for operation start. | | ing Chrsstmas Day at noon and | continuing until full operation is | reashed by Sunday. Mt, Christie is now making snow and expected all areas to be cov-, ered by Saturday with five tows 'working. Skiers can obtain snow ‘conditions at Christie by calling’ 0a 8-3957 or LI 1-5200, Michelle: ‘Turcotte and staff of Gene Hill, \Neal Jacobs and Jim Olsen will be. | available this weekend. | ~*~ * * | Winter activities in the city will !be limited over the holiday, No| ' skating is planned until after, ‘Christmas because the ground as _yet has not frozen enough to hold ' water. | A snowfall will put the toboggan } run at Murphy Park in operation prey and . Sunday. Dallas Gets Bernet | DALLAS (AP)—Ed Bernet, former Southern Methodist and! Pittsburgh Steelers end, Wednes-' day signed a contract with the} |Dallas Texans of the oe Football League. Weather Forecast Gives Skiers Good Promise night ski movies are also sched-| family leave for Los Angeles this Fling at and with that thought in mijd, Pontiac’s Gene Bone is going to take another fling at professional golf's winter tour after a one-year, layoff, * * * Through the assistance of sev- eral Warwick Hills Country Club members, who were seized with) the Christmas spirit, Gene and his family will leave by car this week- | The financial backing from the | Warwick membership was an unexpected and. very pleasant | surprise for Bone, who had planned to spend a’ leisurely win- ter at his Drayton Plains home and help Warren Orlick of Tam O’Shanter and Monroe’s Ben Lala | operate a golf school in Detroit. four years as Orlick’s assistant at Tam, plans to compete in eight or inine tournaments during a two- imonth stretch before returning, ‘home the first week of March. * * * Warwick Hills, Bone’s first course as a head pro, is scheduled to open for the 1960 season on April 1. Bone wilt-qualify for the $37,- | 500 LA Open on Jan. oot | lowing: his LA appearance, he | will enter the Yorba Linda Open, | Bing Crosby Clambake, San Di- sic, all in California. Then he will head for Arizona | to play in the Phoenix and Tucson* events and follow these with an’ entry in the San Antonio (Texas) | tourriey. Bone is undecided about, entering the Baton Rouge (La.)! Open, slated the first week of i March. * * * | The Bing Crosby and Palms| Springs tourneys both offer a total! of $50,009 in prize money. Yorba. Linda is a new event on the tour. | This will be Bone’s 4th crack | | at the. winter circuit, | Wink OPEN BOWLING ALL DAY BEGINNING AT NOON ee CHRIST MAS end for Los Angeles where the| winter circuit begins Jan. 8-11 with! | the LA Open. Bone, w Warwick’ be closed tonight. eg spes ES aR a Sa | ego Open and Palm Springs Clas- | i TRIES ANOTHER WHIRL — Pontiac's Gete Bone, head golf. | pro at Warwick Hills Country Club, will try another whirl on the winter golf circuit for the next two months. The winter tour of- ficially starts with the Los Angeles Open Jan. 8-11. Bone and his weekend. . Bone to Take Another ‘inter Tour Poreotronii pape att uy: 5, peted against the best ‘in the | business for three straight years | (1956-1958), then took last year | off. * * Gene never fared foo well as a igolfing nomad. The best showing I by the genial 27-year-old swinger eame in 1957:at Houston (Texas) |where ‘he tied for 5th place after * |leading the field by two strokes at. the end of 54 holes. , ~*~ * * Home-sickness shouldn’t bother \Gene this time. His wife Willy land two-year-old son Gene Jr. are |making the trip with him: | Bone again will be host pro for ithe 3rd annual Buick Open, sched- { | uled July 1-4 at Warwick near 'Grand Blane. | et es YMCA SCORES Curtasian 32, sake Mae bk PisiBns 0 - NFL Crowds Hit Peak — Here Is State Skiing Report | This Weekend | DETROIT (UPI)—Skiing condi- Council and the West Michigan’ . |tional Football League and two of | lits clubs had record attendances ~ {this year, an Associated Press sur- - [vey shows. in 1958. PHILADELPHIA W—The ‘Na- For the NFL it was the eighth consecutive year ih which it had topped its previous records. The The new faba of 3, std 515 fans Nine clubs had increases and three’ lost ground. The biggest single boost was by the Eastern Division champion New. York Giants. They had a club; record 389,603 fans sitting in their! six home games, 97,167 more than x * & ¥ of he stee! exceeded the 1958 total by 156,617. Nes : x. oemes at idinneapslla. Ex-Coach Baker Dies PITTSBURGH (AP) — ward. Baker, who split his time | practicing dentistry and coaching | (football at Carnegie Institute of) The next biggest increase was) | eohnalogy: died Tuesday night at the 224,518 attendance at Philadel-'| South Side Hospital. He was 50. iphia Eagles’ home games, a club) ~ strike” in Detroit, Cleveland and Pittsburgh. Of the. three, Pittsburgh still had a 19,234 increase. Cleveland had a 32,401 drop and Detroit, with a natal dropped 13,583. accomplishment was achieved de-|} : spite unfavorable economic condi- ‘ tions in ~— a a. | | { SOUTHEASTERN MICHIGAN ai fe Christmas skiing " fair to i onde good. Open 5 ake aries shton {ficial ial al Kage sree { Sitver Vi x om 10 * ashes’ ‘ioe en. ‘nen base, 3-inch new ki snow base. an. ch | Lake “guew goer wd Bxkiing @ inches fair to Had Sable Ranch and Skt Resert—d-inch 1 18 Miles North d— of Pontise on US-10, Easy to See from Hi-Way Always good ski conditions, Orig- inal snow makers in Mich For accurate, up- -to-the-minute ski conditians an Phone Li 5-0711 or ME 4.9381 lrecord and an increase of 49,986: fans over 1958 when the Eagles, (were 2-91, This year they were | 17-5. Acting commissioner Austin! {Gunsel said the figures would have ibeen higher except for the effect/ i i MERRY CHRISTMAS May your holiday be bright with blessings, aglow with good cheer. PONTIAC ELECTRIC SUPPLY CO. 3432 W. ‘Huron St. JEROME OLDSMOBILE- CADILLAC 280 S. Saginaw FE 4-3566 Make Your Christmas Merrier With a Merry Oldsmobile utili Ohe Seasons Best i Jishes NIGHT. ‘ / * / hee eed peers May, the Highways and byways of life lead to d Happy Holiday for you and yours! /May we at this time express our gratitude to all of our many friends for ‘their loyal a ven Te All A Very | MERRY CHRISTMAS. LIVER MOTOR SAL FE 29101 | , Beautiful sift, ‘inside and out,’3%. SMOOTH AS SILK | This one’s a beauty of a gift—bright, dis- tinctive Holiday wraps—bow—removable label—all ready to give. And inside, smooth-as-silk Kessler Whiskey. with its taste of excitement. A handsome bit of giving—inside and out. $2.39 a pint. * * * Luxury taste... Honest value * & * wren f 4 oe ‘the West, have completed their) 16 points for the Hoosiers, who |" ‘preliminary push-ups and now are|20w move on to the Blue Grass) 0 con hee . _.|Festival starting next Monday at ready to flex their muscles against Lexington, Ky. Louisville, another Blue Grass maining. The ball twice rolled around the rim before drepping [down Nebraska, through the net, ee edged Drake, 58-54. NFL's Best; Huff Tops Linemen _ “next Monday. Other teams in the | it sero Unitas Player of Year | Cross, Dayton, North Carolina | | BALTIMORE (AP) — | State, Minnesota and North Caro- (tremendous thing to be chosen for Colts’ end Ray Berry and San Hina, jprofessional football's “Player of Francisco’s halfback J. D. Smith. California and West Virginia are/the Year,"’ says Johnny Unitas, the co-favorites in the Low Angeles | but he thinks some others were youn atten he won a berth dh te George Campus Basketball Classic, which also gets|more deserving of the honor. Colts following his outright re- a rolling next Monday with the Bears) .Asked his reaction today to be-\lease by the Pittsburgh Steelers. Motor Exchange Company A opposing Illinois and second-ranked |ing named the top man in the AS-iGiven his chance when George Pontiac West Virginia meeting Stanford. | sociated Press poll of National! chaw was injured, he took over ‘Michigan, Northwestern, U.C.L.A.| Football League writers, the Bal-| with such authority the regular jand Southern California also are timore Colt quarterback replied: ' cot quarterback was out of a job. rf F entere '“T wa overwhelmed, it’s such a. prea ——— x & terrific honor. But a lot of other | thio pear said eget non ge hari 2 Michigan State staged a game’ guys in the league deserve it more) wot’ Coast teams, Sen Francisco battle against California and held than I do.” | and Los Angeles, in their home |a 41-40 lead shortly after the start Such as, iof the second half. But the Bears, Conerly of the New York Giants, | 7 led by Darrall Imhoff and Bill linebacker Sam Hutf of the Giants |°t {he Rams there ones se anal |McClintock, then went on an eight- and guard Bill George of the ' have never turned back the 49ers. ‘point tear to gain command Chicago Bears, he added. ete he Imhoff wound Huff, the rock in the Giants’ high soeten wtin' 1s pone, ane great defensive wall, was named Ten stalwart linemen were more than high-jumping Horace tmenan of the ard tone Balti-(fensive end, Ray Berry, and an- Walker of an State. Cal e passing wizal e . | shot 44.4 more attack nailed down 20 of other Colt, 270-pound tackle, Jim per cent from the field he Parker, received five votes. Still to 38.9 for thg Spartans. the 37 votes cast. In leading t e i ‘Colts to their second straight West-|two more Baltimore luminaries Indiana, the nation’s 10th-ranked ern Conference title, he connected end Gino Marchetti and 288-pound ‘team, won the Hoosier Classic at for 193 passes in 267 attempts and/Gene (Big Daddy) Lipscomb, of Indianapolis by downing Notre, gain of 2,899 yards. the defensive line, attracted two ‘Dame, 71-60, with a strong second; The 190-pound signal-caller also! votes,—as did | pare Forest Gregg ‘half rally. Butler turned back Pur-| stretched to 37 his record of con-|of Green Bay! Four others got one due, 73-69, _ the consolation game. | secutive games in which he tossed vate. They wéf® end Doug Atkins x * ‘touchdown passes. His 32 TD toss- of the Chicago Bears, guard Jim A 25-foot ‘jump shot by Herbie es bettered the old season’s mark/Ray Smith of Cleveland, guard \Lee put Indiana ahead to stay ‘of 28 set by Sid Luckman of the Art Spinney of the Colts and guard ‘early in the second half after the|Bears in 1943. ‘Rosey Brown of the Giants. score was tied 10 times and the! Runnerup to Unitas in the bal- touring Michigan State, 71-60, helped Montana State University! Wednesday night while — sixth- ranked Utah outclassed College of ‘the Pacific, 72-58, for its eighth | io" triumph, The Utes now head cross-coun- | try for the Dixie Classic at Ra- leigh, N.C., where they will op- | pose Duke in the opening round It's a game, 5 votes; Huff, 3; and lseach May the joys of ow follow 7 you throughout the coming year... |rebounded from their poor start lin the. National. Hockey League ithis season into the position of contention. _ Chicago won its opening gam and then went through the next | 14 games without a victory. Chicago blanked theNew York Rangers 3-0 last night in the only league game played, The triumph i boosted the Hawks in a fourth- place tie with the idle Boston Bruins. It also left them three ipoints in front of cellar-dwelling! New York, In their last. 12 starts, the Hawks ave won six, tied four and lost to Big Ten conference rivals this: 64-58, and . lowa quarterback “Chuck stadiums. The Colts had only beat-| named. Baltimore's brilliant of- Boatie Glenn’ Hall handled 25 League will benefit from the Jan. pees ee ete Pree eee eee! eee to ao 4 Birmingham G toves Emmanuel Christian Farmington OLS Crambrook «1... cece cceese ert panes 9 a * a 1 ges tare thes me oe cael ene eee ener att 4 i 3 ii 4 2 : Northville 43 23 Milford... sess ceen eas a 43 ; OAKLAND B =| re OHS Thin aig Te at | . | rt | Vaponaste 22 I 3 3 | wson ... 413 23 | WALTON TV & RADIO / SF ol " | Hl acon HOLIDAY ; ~ & and STAFF a: | pce nf aia SEASON a BIG TEN TRIO — Duffy Daugherty of Mich- all-star game Jan. 2. Elliott had just been ap- Lye 8 4 3 et ROM , | igan State is flanked by Pete Elliott (left) and pointed head football coach at Illinois, succeeding [Lapeer —......-.......0 6° @4 < mn & Ray Eliot at Press and Union ‘League Club dinner Eliot. All three coaches are involved in the SOUTH CENTRAL U 515° Walton Corner of Joslyn I in San Francisco, scene of the East-West Shrine East-West classic. League All Games, Yo Ry . : _. pad — ras a rr ae i Bacon ° i 1 ss TIAA AIRDID Se BTR T IDE I 2: srenee sirens aye ; eee SPE MIDAS SOUTHERN THUMB MUFFLER wt AN rt SHOPS Anchor Bay seecserc eed O 3 0 Arm: 2 1 21 Dryden ae 34! | United Press International lead changed hands 10 times. Lee; Ron Jobynson led the Minnesotalmemphis |... 1 2 22 ; t i jecenees with 17 points. The Sooners|New Haven .........- 13 elf California and Utah, the best injand Frank Radovich each totaled; Capac ...... .1 8 i 3 ow have lost four straight games Brown City +... 1 2 i172 | me Be é |Hariwonod ‘other strong national contenders in Festival entry, rolled to a 59-46 tri- Who Are These CUSTOM TAILORS next week's holiday basketball| Minnesota warmed up for its jumph over Wittenberg; St. Bona- & CLOTHIERS - Qwioas we . tournaments appearance in L.A, by edging {venture trampled Texas Southern, | a ; . . 4 | The fourth-ranked Bears, Oklahoma, 57-56, on a spectacu- (88-70, in its final tuneup for New| | $08. Wr Bewen rE 3-4908 435 S. Saginaw ‘stretched their unbeaten string to| ‘@f Beek shot by reserve guard |York’s Holiday Festival Tourna-| Oxi 100 ~ nnn 22 straight games by turning back; Bob Griggas with 23 seconds re- jment; Dan Balko’s 15 points | That's Question Eastern _ Ring Body Asks Pender | to Answer | BOSTON (AP) — The Massa-| ichusetts Boxing Commission and' ithe state legislature want to look ‘into charges by middleweight challenger Pau! Pender that) “gangsters and thieves’ infest! professional boxing. “T want him to put up or shut up,” Commission Chairman . Her-} man Greenberg said last night. “Who are these crooks in boxing? ' As chairman of the commission | want to know. I want to get rid of them.” * * * « Pender was ordered to appear’ before the commission Tuesday. | State Rep, James F. Condon) filed a resolve for the appoint-| ment of a committee to investi-! gate boxing within the state. “If Rep. Condon is successful in. getting an investigation started,” Pender -said, “I hope it does more than scratch the surface the way most of these committees do.” * * * Both the commission and Con- don were spurred to action by a newspaper interview in which Pender was quoted as saying box- { ing is in such poor shape the x “On behalf of everyone here at Homer Hight Motors I'd like to say Merry Christmas and a Prosperous New Year to All of Our Friends” HOMER HIGHT MOTORS, Inc. 160 S. Washington (M-24) Oxford OA 8-2528 ¢ sport should be abolished for, nen ne eee, ne be canna five years to rid.it of undesirable} elements. Baltimore Fans — Get Court's Aid for Title Ducats BALTIMORE (APy — It took! e loting was Conerly, awarded sev-' * en votes for quarterbacking the; court action for four Baltimore MICH, STATE - catrrornta Giants to the Eastern title. The| aw ove 0 ‘Colt fans to get tickets to the Na- . ‘walker & 19 1) Mecinve? ofp 1, 2o-year-old veteran threw 14 touch-| ‘tional Football League champion- We wish aff our good friends Olson 4 8-10 16 Gillies $ 0-0 ‘¢idown passes and had a 8.79 yard ship game here Sunday. happiness the holi ! Fane 1 6-0 2 Mano: 2 49 "ei average, the best in the NFL. x * * eee m Bote) Ep EBay 1 HE "Gi “tho aot the weiter ace 10 crout"r sge seteriy . Richey. 023° 2 Shulte” 3 36 7 votes in the “Player of the Yea ordered a tavernkeeper who had| BORB’S Totals 1824-31 60 + ee pea re were: ony igs cer bought season tickets for the four| - ote liland’s powe' ck who av- By_ The Associated Press fans to sell them tickets for the; ‘ - ; [Michigan State ............ Dh | = mate, Meee %- 3% eraged more than-.110 yards a) The Chicago Black Hawks have title game between Baltimore and| BUILDING SERVICE | New York. Each-. season ticket. holder is: entitled to a ticket to the cham-| and STAFF 207 W. MONTCALM ST. | pionship mae. | a ™ . ad i i ap a i oa ap rt cer ° * * Judge fielay Foster ruled that the men were entitled to the title! game tickets. because they had al definite understanding about buy- ing season tickets through tavern-_ keeper John-Shipley. All NFL Players Get 1 ‘Slice of Bowl Cash | ‘LOS ANGELES (AP)—All play-| ers of the National Football| i OUR VERY BEST WISHES FOR A MERRY CHRISTMAS “AND A’ PROSPEROUS AND shots flawlessly for his ‘second|17 pro bow! game. shutout, Tod Sloan scored the-first) The first $15,000 after game ex. goal in the opening period—hig/Penses are paid will go into the) 200th in the NHL—and Bobby Hul}| NFL payer =_— fund. tied Bronco Horvath of the Bruins i” for the league. scoring lead. The 33 ‘slides of the. winning| Hull collected an assist on rook- Squad will receive $800 apiece. | ie Red Hay's third-period goal, |plus trin exnerises. The losers will} | This Gave Hull 39 points. cane hat arte nti SUCCESSFUL NEW YEAR « Santa pauses with his pack to join us in wishing Se you the merriest of holidays! May it be filled to overflowing with love, hope, ond every happi- = x May your Christmas he merry and joyful | +s + and your New Year filled with pros- ; perity and real happiness, : vt BURKE LUMBER 60. ae - 4495 DIXIE AWY,, DRAYTON PLAINS _ = ou Wi te: ‘Closed st, Dee. 26th -Season’s be | : From — ‘ |. Joe and AL - Jacobson Joe's en (i S28 stg mot St. FE 2.0022 If it takes local interest to promote a basketball : egg peee then the 8th annual Motor City Classic Dec. 28-29 at the University of Detroit Memorial Build-. oto ‘fen Recreation ing should be the best in the history of the event. if ed 5-6032 Never before have there been as many state and area HUBBARD BUILDING players involved in the féur- team tournament as there = are this year. From that standpoint alone, it should be < 7 G AMBLE! a natural draw at the box office. - Leaky M Mufflers. Perhaps the competition for the host U. of D., which ans won its own tourney three times, is not as ee as some previous occasions;> “Closed ‘Windows jbut the rosters of three of | | two of their four straight Inter : the four entries are clut- Lakes titles during his prep days. TROUBLE! ___ Ii tered with Michigan cagers.| Vinceat is a ¢2 forward. NOT Becca Prsieng- 29 Dien rye Another Ferndale boy, Neil Kel- f a i Calih MEME players trom this state, 16 trom|°? SuTne® Conch Bob Calihan the Detroit-Pontiac’area. Only New, “it good bench strength at De- #Mexico fails to have a Michigan’ troit. jeager on its roster. | From Oakland’s neighboring ter- jo: * * t= (ritory comes rangy Ron Emerick, The U.-of D. has 11 state repre-|Who helped East Detroit High /sentatives on its roster and West-/School reach the state semifinals ‘ern boasts-a dozen while Valparai-|three years ago. Emerick is a I'so accounts for the other two. Four Starting forward for Western and Mi Oakland County boys are among he stands 6-4. the list of names, two each at the! Other Michigan players, their U. of D. and Western... prep school and respective college Leading the Oakland ‘County include: = parade is Walled Lake’s Larry | U. of D.—Tom Villemure, New- ALUMINIZED—Resists Rusi Bes installed $@88 | FREE : Unconditional 3-53 G ton Ford ~ Chev. WHEEL ALIGNING Garree = $GB50 en Seasons ago. Chickowski, Detroit St. Andrew; | Hughes, a talented 6-foot-4_per-| Ctarile North, Detroit Northwest. | former, is a key figure on the ern; . Buse Schoenherr, Detrolt powerful Titan squad which has Austin; Tom Stumb, Detroit |won six games in seven starts and| Austin; John Parker, Ham- lis a heavy favorite to win the Mo-| tramek. iter City crown. Western — Tom Dreier, Plain- Meme | scum rdhats te See Bae ate So Une nal Guarantee New comes Ferndale ‘ Fant Me- Lakeview; Bob James,’ Down RD Inc. Li eal, a sophomore guard at West-\Creek Central; Sam Key, Dowa gNev. $9 B95 i; ae Liniet ern who crashed The Press All-|giac; Jack Grimes, Jackson; Er- # County quintet two seasons agojnest Scott, Kalamazoo Central; | jand is now a standout backcourt|Marty Waalkes, Muskegon; Ron artist for the inexperienced but! Robinson, Muskegon Heights; Tom M: DONALD TIRE C0 |dangerous, high-scoring Broncos. | Woodruff, Grosse Pte. Pitt A | Another Oakland cager mak. |_Valparaiso — Terry Callaway, 10 S. SAGINAW ST _ ing a noise at Kalamazoo for the | \Dearborn Fordson; Tommy’ Orton, Zaire § Broncos is Berkley’s Jack Vin- Detroit Lutheran. | cent, _who helped the Bears win MERRY CHRISTMAS TO ALL } 4 quality’ brak Unies re: of all types of ying EASY BUDGET TERMS YEAR-END CLOSE-OUT TIRE SALE ALL POPULAR — 14” and 15” SIZES’ * WHITEWALL and BLACKWALL_ %& NYLON and TYREX Offered at the LOWEST PRICES in our History NATIONALLY KNOWN FIRST GRADE TIRES WITH Full Road Hazard Guarantee No Mileage or Time Limit Open Daily ‘til 9 P.M. Your Choice 6:70x15 or 7:50x14 99 Plus Taxes, Exch. BLACKWALL TUBELESS ALL OTHER SIZES SAME LOW PRICES - ADD. ONLY $3.00 FOR WHITEWALLS BRAND NEW| WHEEL Money Savers | BALANCING a ($4. Li SPINNING, STATIC AND ~ DYNAMIC WEIGHTS . - FREE | MOU NTING YOUR CHOICE BONDED | “ - BRAKES 6.70-15 2 7.50-14 s49"" coots | ,YORD-CHEV.- PLY. | | 7 a INSTALLED COMPLETE 2" 7.10-15 2 12” ‘ i lot Retreads or “Secon set ie ust Charge It [WHEEL ALIGNMENT | lies woe — : mer. "CHARLES OERTEL pO Ce HE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1959 NEIL WARD Truck Menager * BUD ENGELHART ° Asst. New Car Manager LEO KAMPSEN New Car Sales CURT CRAWFORD New Car Sales JACK SEEBOLD New Car Sales HENRY GEORGIA New Car Sales AL FIRESTONE New Car Sales New Car Sales A.J. BAUER _—E. CURTIS MATTHEWS. A.M. SERRA _ JOHN NOREEN’ General Sales Manager Owner Sales Manager Business Manager The MANAGEMENT | and Entire Sales Staff med BUD MISFELDT Asst. Used Car Manager ~ ROBERT McBRIDE’ Uged Car Sales HARGRE AVE Ss ne a "Chevrolet ee. NICK MACKSON Used Cer Sales BYRON DAVIDSON Used Car Sales NORMAN HOVIS Used Cer Sales GERALD DARK Used Car Sales ROSS MOODY New Cer Sales ; - : ree nf es 3 a eaten 3 t 2§ hy McCandless 1 N. Perry May the true spirit of Christmas fill the air. . . may the benefits linger on throughout the holiday season and the year to come The Sales Staff CY PERLMAN sim GHEE BILL ROLLISON SP anaes SIGHT NEAL BLACKMER and from the bess. BOB LYNADY _EDDIE STEELE EDDIE STEELE. FORD 2705 Orchard Lake Rd. Keego Harbor FE 5-9204 1 Mile W. of Telegraph Pontiac's Direct Factory Dealer € Wishing You the Peace That Christ Can Provide at Christmas and All the Year “For God so loved the World that. he gave his only begotten Son, that whoso- ever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting liie.” Kenneth G. HEMPSTEAD INSURANCE 102 E. Huron St. Ph. FE 4-8284 a ee an SEWING MACHINE aiz,, CLEARANCE ‘INCLUDES OUR ENTIRE STOCK NECCHI-ELNA PFAFF BROTHERS and Others DEMONSTRATORS and FLOOR SAMPLES LARGE SELECTION of CABINET MODELS and PORTABLES 24 MONTHS LOW DOWN # TO PAY PAYMENT Mich. “wine 9 Sen 143 Ocklend FE 2-3337 a + Home on furlough until Thurs- iday is S.A. Gary A. May, son of 'Mr. and Mrs. Ellwood A, May of |2188 Middle Belt Rd, He was grad- ‘uated from Pontiac Central High 'School last summer and underwent ‘basic training at.the U.S. Naval Training Center, San Diego, Calif. ‘Currently he is attending Fleet Sonar School at San Diego. Marine privates Charles D. iBornrian, son of Mrs. Geraline E. ‘Bornman of 5256 Ormond Rd., iDavisburg, and Jon J. Nagelvoort, json of the Frank G. Nagelvoorts of 1937 Lone Pipe Rd., Bloomfield Hills, recently completed indi- vidual combat training at the Huge Dwelling. { 000 Years Old New Mexico Pueblo| Housed Indians in 80 3-Room Suites ~ WASHINGTON — Long before ‘Columbus discovered America, some Indians of the Southwest lived. in elaborate apartment - * * * One apartment dwelling with at least 80 three-room suites stood in New Mexico about 1,000 years ago, the National Geographic Society | Says. Each suite housed a family of | about five persons, The ruins of this fabulous dwelling, known as Pueblo del | Arroyo, were discovered in 1849 | by a military engineer recon- © NAGELVOORT - |\with the 2nd Armored Division at pleted by Army Pvt. Proctor, son of Mrs. June E. Dud- ley of 655 Rosewood Place. A for- mer Pontiac Central High School student, Proctor entered the Army last June and completed basic training at Fort .Hood, LANDMESSER PROCTOR * * * A recent graduate of the 10ist Airborne Division Jump School at Fort Campbell, Ky., is Army Pfc. Fredrick H. Landmesser, son of iMr. and Mrs, Harold L, Land- messer of 3605 Lake Front St. He received his paratrooper wings/| after‘ completing three weeks of! intensive ground and aerial train-| ing which included five parachute | jumps. A 1958 Waterford Town-. ship High School graduate, he en- BORNMAN ieee * * * ; i Advanced. individual trafning|o sighted en route to this country. Automation in the Air Prevents Tired Feet DENVILLE, N.J, @—It used to take a twoman crew 10 days of trudging across hills, fields and swamps to check out 132 miles of high voltage transmission lines for the New Jersey Power & Light Co. Now one man does the job in| less than five hours, without get- ting aching muscles and tired ‘feet. The company: bought a helicopter and a tape recorder. Wants His Mousetrap ham is a city comptroller who watches his pennies. When Graham seta trap for a mouse, the trap did the trick and a cleaning woman rempved both He Watches Pennies, BALTIMORE ®—R. Walter Gra-| a car in which he was riding struck a utility pole in Detroit during a police chase. * * * Richard B, Andres, 27, of New! ;Lothrup, was killed Wednesday: about 15 miles west of Saginaw: was killed Wednesday night -when his’ car ranout of control and struck a building in Detroit. * * * Rapids, was struck and killed by a car in Grand Rapids Wednesday night. night when his car struck a tree! ‘Nicholas Babson, 60, of Detroit, | Martha A. Holmes, 74, of Grand| Christmas Merry to all! INFORMA FITTING 103 N. SAGINAW | i | i | Army Pvt, tered the Army in September 1958 trap’ and mouse from Grahafii’s| Badhabits are like soft beds— and \completed basic training at office the next morning. easy to get into, hard to get out Fort Leonard Wood, Me, The comptroller said he was glad|of . . . Behind every man there’s « he had bagged: his quarry but!a woman—and she usually catches The \omunications center added: ihm ... A bikini is a bathing operation \ course at the South-| ‘More important, that trap cost suit a girl sometimes gets more eastern Signal School, Fort Gor-| me five cents and I want it back. "lout of than into. —Earl Wilson. doen, Ga., has been completed by| Jahn E, Noonan, son! Oakland Packing ‘Co. customers, a very “Merry Christmas’” from all ~ “the gang ot 716 Glenwood - Specializing in fresh frozen meat for your . food freezer To all our friends and of Mh and Mrs. John V, Noonan) of 3595 Lawrence St. During the) not eight-week course), he was ey ¢ to receive, \_ process messages by various a eane “ot 4 communications. ‘He \ \entered the) | service last June’ \and\. completed! ivi dl f are basic training at Fort, Leonard Wood, Mo. | noltering Navaho country shortly after the Mexican n War. | ‘scientists began excavations. x * * In the ruins of the massive struc-, jture, which lies northwest of | | Albuquerque, archeologists have’ |found bowls, mortars, tablets, bone iawls, and figurines. Timbers were used in building | | the Pueblo, and from the tree | | rings the scientists could de- | 1 termine its approximate age, as | well as the periods of various (banks, i remodeling. ; The medieval inhabitants of the, ‘apartment “house were farmers. ton, Calif. | They grew corn, melon, and squash ‘outside the walls of the Pueblo. * * * | They hunted with dogs, and lraised turkeys—not so much for \ food as for feathers to use in re- ligious ceremonies. - * * * | Pueblo del Arroyo covered more) ‘than an acre. It survives as an enduring monument to the crafts-| | manship ofthe Indian stonemasons ‘and carpenters, who had to make do with stone axes. i Distance Walker Sideswiped as BIGGLESWADE, . England (AP) | —A car sideswiped. Dr. Berbara | ‘Moore today but she igrimly along on her 373-mile ‘march from Edinburgh to London. * ~« * The car prazed the 56-year-old. ‘marathon. walker’s right arm,’ ‘knocking off-a golden snake brace-| 5 Se ¥ ¥ ¥ and all the folks at 37 North | ; Saginaw Street ... Extend Sincere Gas — let she regards as her lucky piece. | |She searched the roadside grass! \20 minutes before she found it. The driver didn't stop. * «* * The slim, Russian-born dietitian was still 37 miles from London. on the Kodiak Island in Alaska. End of Trip Nears , | trudged) 3 FRANKLIN, Tex., (AP)—The'of 10 other Southern states were frail body of Walter Williams, the| among those attending the Hous- a | last veteran of the Civil’ War, ton service, \\ Wednesday was committed to the | *« *« * Red clay soil of the Franklin cem- president Eisenhower was Lep-, /etbry, ‘resented by Maj. Gen. C. Stanton/ “Death is swallowed up in vic-| Babcock, 8th Corps commander, . | tory, *\ said Chaplain Frederick | at the Houston service, and by Lt: -. |Richard8en of Ft. Hood, Tex ;|Gen. Edward T. Williams at the| reading the burial service at the graveside rites here. | graveside rites for the 117-year-old| Prominent among the floral of. _ | Confederate soldier. | ferings that banked the copper. | There was a brief prayer aS/casket was a large dark green: 12,000 stood with - bowed heads un-! wreath tied with a red, white and’ ider a heavily clouded sky. Three} blue bow, It bore a card saying | EUBANKS * * * NOONAN Marine Pfc. Dave Spindler Osmun’s Town and Country Shoe Department Kenneth W. Eu-; ‘volleys by an honor guard echoed | “The shai ceseasat husband of the former | |across._the © small, barbed-wire| Donna J. Reed of 785 Jessie St., | fenced cemetery. . pear ark are re recently returned to Camp Pendle: * we: * . | after taking part in} ‘Then the notes of silver taps: = Exercise ‘‘Totem Pole’ conducted | poge and fell—the last taps for a the four million men who fought\# The large scale operation was con- | jn the. Civil War nearly a century | ducted with simultaneous raids on: ago. “ea Kalsin, Isthums and the Pasag-' The simple graveside service # shak Bays at Kodiak. near Williams’ farm home in the ek ke oak and pie covered hills of cen-'§ Four weeks of training at the'tral East Texas followed funeral) § Marine Corps Base, Camp Pendile-! services..and ‘a military procession) ton, Calif. have been completed | through dowritown Houston as a by Marine Pvt. James A. Larsen, | united nation, paid final tribute to son of Mr. and Mrs. James C.| | the former forage master in| & Larsen of 132 Gladstone Place. | Hood’s Brigade and - Quantrill’s'¢ raiders, who died —— “& * * “Those who streguied from North and South now lie in dust,” ithe Rev. S. Stephen McKenney | & isaid at the funeral services in’. the South Main Baptist church of 3 Houston, More than 25,000 persons, many with hats held in their hands, lined the three-mile rotite as the § |funeral procession moved from) & *'the Civil Courts Building, where} TOM ~ hy, 5) “ LARSEN PATTERSON the body had lain in state 48 x * * hours, to the church. * T. Sgt. Kenneth R. Patterson Gov. Price Daniel of Texas and recently was named Rreeiccmacree representatives of the governors ' Calows GREETINGS” From-Mr. and Mrs. Irving Diem and all the folks at Diem’s WZ OPEN 6:30 P. M. Pa! } >RROW 4 y WOMEN RAVISHED AND ae prizes of a pleasure- -mad war lord ren oes ee Er ee ere Te ee owe woe wr ) fe fects is ie - escape-of another oS ee > around.” . processing and new questioning— ~Young, Hé had gone to Havana tember. And historically imports , | Detroit Sure They'll Lose Ground — - * Ny : : pe ; By BEN PHLEGAR 6 jabout 115,000 passenger cars here} grabbed third place in import sales, AP Automotive Writer ithis year. wee in October and Buick officials, who! | DETROIT w—Detroit automak- * ihandle American distribution, ex-| 5 ors admit they aren't’ sure yet Volvo — A modest jump from! pect to continue to move about. fiend ee Oe taier ie 17,500 to 20,000 plus. / 3,800 cars «monthly. i ~ . outw mafider | Fiat — Some 36,000 sold this’ pontiac has been importing 1,900 TAMIL vardl fident t W : | k ng i, M Fla. (AP) — Reporter main ney .qaaticent te ae |yeer; as good or “better in 1960,'VYauxhalls monthly and indicates) Jai o ‘entries have stemmed the tide of Vaux | ames. C. Buchanan, 43, of the! imports. | This would appear to leave the it will contiane to do -so as long] Miami Herald ,goes back to work! ‘key in the hands of the so-called,|as sales hold up, i . As the new year approaches for- “** |. . : : ea eepilengn . pena | today to write —from experience | eign car manufacturers appear just |CaPtive makes, the imports whose | Sime ‘a tays it Ww ul hold steady | -~ .about Cuban justice under! a. confident about the future, Gen- U.S, sales are controlled entirely at about 3,000 units per month. Fidel Castro: losniiy they-predict inerended sales|PY the American makers. | If thé captive makes perform in The newsman was liberated/for their products in the United) These are Vauxhall and Opel this fashion and the independents Wednesday by Cuban authorities! States in 1960. ‘ot General Motors, English and| boom as they predict the coming. who locked him up Dec. 10° in. ; _ German Ford, Simca by Chryster, jyea could be our of increased connection with, the _guardhouse| In year-end statements both Metropolitan by. American Motors imports rather than the year of ‘ Mid | L. L. (Tex) Colbert, -president [og Merce: -Benz by Studebaker-|ecline Detroit hopes for. Miamtan, Frank t i Frederic G. Don. ercedes-Benz by Studebaker Austin Young, 38. - | of Caryater, and rede ‘ i" ” |Packard, Together they accounted; To Buchanan, the wheels of! at about 500,000 units, a drop of HERE'S HOW Cuban justice first appeared to! 190,000 or more from this year. | crawl, then spin madly. : “They told me 100 times during ela my detention they were about to leading foreign makers, estimate move me from my cell in Havana \°Ver-all import sales in the U, S. to neighboring Pinar del Rio for," 1960 at upwards of 750,000. trial,’ Buchanan said. ‘Suddenly, | ef we Tuesday night, they rushed me to, Only time will tell who's right, Pinar del Rio. The trial in |but Detroit's past record of pre- | theater by a military tribunal {dictions about foreign cars {sn’t; happen. J. 8. Kemp, import car | took three hours, Twenty minutes|the best. The American mami-| marketing manager for Ford, | later — including the court's de-| factiters chose to regard import- predicts sales of 45,000 new Eng- | liberation and the typing of its|€d cars as a fad, a passing fancy,) lish Angtias and 5,000 other Eng. — verdict — I was given a ‘choice 48 just another postwar craze that) lish Fords here next year against | of 14 years imprisonment or leay-/ would fade away if properly ig-| an over-all total of 44,009 this ing Cuba at once for keeps. inored. year. QUICK DECISION ‘Either ceevie or because of | James W Wate, she banihes ‘as this attitude the traze grew inte |Metropolitans for erican Mo-| _ “I made the choice before My! y sotig market. Detroit makers |tors, says he hopes to get a mini interpreter could turn his head mum of 24,000 mets compared with 15,000 this year. The Mercedes- Benz distributing branch of Stude- baker-Packard is counting on at .jleast a 3,000 unit, increase from the 12,000 sales of 1959. , if Opel and Vauxhall have appeared Gets ‘Happy Greeting,. Describes Ordeal Prisoner_ of Castro . Americans spent $75,000,000,000 ifor food in 1958. Food and grocery a ‘advertisers invested $148, _ By cutting off these makes fromm daily newspapers last year to tell Renault and Volkswagen, the twofthe United States market, the do- | consumers about their products. imestic manufactures could realize | - rimes Wau ‘their goal of shaving import totals next year, regardless of all-out : TIMES TONITE Bei? sa3: pushes by Volkswagen, Renault or! others. mos There is no evidence this will | reluctantly added. their own im. . oy | ports and finally, this fall, He said it took 13%2 hours of brought out three smaller cars of their own — Corvair,. Faleon without allowing him to clean Up) 44 Valiant. | # — before hie was put ‘on a Miami- . bound airliner. Ne _ Now, said Detroit, imports sure- At this end Buchanan got kisses ly Were doomed. Official figures so) 2 : ~ from his pretty brunette Wife, Pat, far don’t bear this out. The com- me vulnerable since they he and a Herald city room receptign ‘pacts hit the market in October, . Americ a nets me O, mt under a banner proclaiming “Wel-| along with all of the 1960 model | Migan compacts. put VP oe : : Starts TOMORROW Friday come home — jailbird.” ‘standard size domestic cars. Reg-) — FEATURE STARTING TIMES 7:00—8 :50—10:50 * * * \istration figures show’ 51,923‘ im-| The Miami newsman was tried/Ports were sold that month, a for concealing information about |4PeP of only 1,864 cars from Sep-) to interview Young, who was in “4ve shown a temporary decline hiding. He had sent his story home |!» the month new American models shortly before Cuban army intel-|®re introduced. ligence seized -Young and then gig JUMP Buchanan himself at Young's Ha-| During the record car year ot vana hotel. '1955 imports accounted for only ._ * * '58,465 sales. This compares with Buchanan said the prosecution 57,211 in Jute this vear. made much of the fact he returned| Here are some of. the things to the hotel to bring Young a band-| Europeans are saying about next age for a leg the Miami soldier|year in the U.S. auto market: flee” Wis Sheoeor wae trying tor British Automobile Manufac- sear ; turers Assn. — An increase of counter-revolutionary fighting. at least 10 per cent from the | ' Out of that song— afuryof gam a moviel ! Tie LEGEND Tom DOOLEY, Foreign Cars In for Test __ THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1959 PE k (Se FROM THE MANAGEMENT ge =©6=—S AND STAFF OF YOUR ‘ BUTTERFIELD THEATERS! a . Holiday Entertainment for the Entire Family! STRAND x x x t DOO ind] ae ae Features Today At: 1:39-4:14-6:49-9:24 & NOTE: DOORS OPEN CHRISTMAS DAY AT 3:00 P.M. FEATURES AT: | on the most 3:49 - 6:34- 9:19 | YOU-ARE THERE amazing Jules Verne adventure of all! -EXCLUSIVE Ist RUN! ¢7 PAT BOONE: JAMES MASON CINEmaScoPE COLOR by DE LUXE’ STEREOPHONIC.- SOUND STARRING ARLENE DAHI-DIANE BAKER __ ADDED ENTERTAINMENT-—-COLOR CARTOON—NEWS REGULAR - PRICES MATINEE - 65¢ EVES G HOLIDAY 90¢ CHILDREN ALWAYS 25c “AMPLE COMMERCIAL PARKING JN REAR OF THEATER BIG NEW YEAR’S EVE SHOW! MAKE UP A CELEBRATION PARTY TO SEE THIS ALL NEW Every place you go you'll be bearing about phe tee tog Bement memes or Toe theme thew Sean SPECIAL PRE-RELEASE 1960 FEATURE... 3-NEW YEAR'S EVE. PERFORMANCES AT 7:00 P. M.—9:30 P.M. G MIDNIGHT! Lai paramownr’s BIG, LIVE...“LI L ABNER” 200,000 cars sold here this year. . ; Renault — At least 150,000 sales,’ operates a spétial conservation car’ . . . traveling more than 12,000 miles|\CO™Pared with 100,000, in 1999. _ over Canadian National Railways! . Volkswagen — Continued to teach conservation of wild life, | The Canadian Forestry Assn. first. place in sales, which means beat- forests and water resources. ling Renault’s 150,000. VW sold DOORS OPEN 12:45 THEATER a aera How can an officer in his right mind 12:45 “qisplace”s fully-equipped destroyer escort? the motion picture“blue denim’ || — talks heart to heart with young America-—and their parents! Officer and gentleman emg, by Act of ee Wedding night or not... Jerry's gotta find his “mislaid” ship | _2ND THRILLER! THE HANGMAN IS COMING TO BOSTON! tas the /Man Hunter! — OMY. ce EAT STARTING —60e ADULTS — — — CHILDREN 25¢— JAN. Ist! FRI. & SAT. ONLY Buse |— stots TOMORROW Doors Open 2:45 at 3 P.M. TODAY LAST TIMES! “The 4-D Man” ...1n coLor Plus! “FOUR FAST GUNS’ A JOYOUS CHRISTMAS HOLIDAY SHOW THE WHOLE FAMILY WILL ENJOY! FIRST RUN! ALL NEW! : COLORFUL SS 4a CAVALCADE OF MOUNTING THRILLS! SPECTACLES OF FUN AND DARING CARTOON PARADISE AND AREAL-LIFE "9g + ; ’ ti FLYING TRAPEZE —FouR = XCITING NEW STARS! COL UME Pi Deeper te TURES cf sid BACXUS rete Rode Arr Wave® baTiMeyie GRANT wo Prvces MOM, POP and ALL the K Hip rn went Y-SIX_ ies i i 4 A Carat Diamond “NEW ‘YORK 4(AP)—Much- mar-)> * ried Tommy Manville gave his fo ture wife—No, 11—this choice of Christmas gifts: A whopping eight karat diamond or a hefty block of American Telephone & Telegr aph stock. Ss His fiarftee, Christina Erdien. a 4 Statuesque brunette, chose the 28 stock, The number of shares was = not disclosed : Manville, 65, and Christina, 29, E plan to marry Jan. 11, She is an : immigrant waitress from Ger-). .- many, It will be her seeend mar- riage. It’s All in the Family 4 MEREDIEN, Conn. UP—It was : al] in the family when Republican, John. D. Ivers was elected mayor of this city. He defeated his own! : brother-in-law. Democrat Willian! 3 J. (Cahill ore F.O. E. No. | 230 : 389 Montcalm NEW YEAR'S EVE PARTY Dancing — Faiors Breakfast—Floor Show Adm. $1.50 per Person Admission by Tickets Only SQUARE and ROUND DANCING _ GARDEN CENTER BALLROOM 995) Weodward, Detroit Dancing Every Thars.- Sat BABE’S IN ARMS — Rep. Area Kiwanis Distribute 25 Baskets of Groceries | The Waterford-Drayton Kiwanis Club distributed 25 baskets of groceries to needy families in the! six-month-old baby they adopted e Sun has the same middle name as the congressman's father, President Franklin Delano Roosevelt. a private adoption agency when three. days old. Court has. just approved the adoption. | AP Wirephoto James Roosevelt (D-Calif), 50, and his third wife Irene, 40, are shown in Los Angeles with the The child, Hall Delano, the late He was acquired through The Superior Monday. area today after their regular |" ~ noon-day luncheon meeting at the! Serves His Porpoise Drayton Inn on Dixie Highway. The Dutch, Australia in 1613, New Holland. PUENTE) ty ~—ALSO— CAMPUS BALLROOM Fenkell and Livernots Gala New Year Celebration at Both Ballrooms Don't Miss Our Christmas Day and New Year Day Dance 2 ADMISSION $1.25 —UUME STAG OR COUPLE— who ‘first explored, called the land , Psychologist isn't niuch of a demand for whale psychologists these days, but they're a niust at the world's larg- est oceanarium, where psychology is carefully applied in teaching the huge mammals to do tricks. In fact. Marineland of the Pa- ciftt-as the oceanarium is called, has its own “marine psychologist.” His name is Kent Burgess and his | job is to rehearse the whales for their five or six shows a day peascasoaa3 : NEW YEARS PARI | DANCING To THe MUSIC of DICK DENGATE ; and the ESQUIRES — ~*e Burgess said he employs the basic principles of psychology on ~Kwely similar to these of ha- \ paleusy; anger and fear, for ex- ample, although not guilt feel- LOS ANGELES (UPI) — There! the whales, whose emotions are n beings. He said they show | Marineland of Pacific Has tor Whales extremely slow process that re- ‘quires a lot of patience in encour- aging the animal.” Returning to the psychological aspects of training a por voice, Bur: gess said he has found the animals work better after they're allowed ‘to take the equivalent of a coffee i break. ‘However, the animal must not be either too hungry or too well fed,” he said, “If it is overly hun » gry, it will be too anxious to get its food. If it is full, it will not care about the reward for work- ing.” . Incidently, Burgess pointed out ithat a porpoise will eat from 12 to '15 pounds of squid per day and al whale will eat up to 100 pounds dur- | years of police work. jtective and Juvenile bureaus on/ pick ups and checking prebation hak eke ? Pistol ‘Packing: ‘WoUsen Is Detective in Denver . DENVER ip —_ Denver's first because on studied abnormal - woma’n detective is a college grad-|havior in college. ; uate in psychology who packs a Mrs. ‘Shelley often works incog- pistol but has never used it —- ex- nito checking on gambling at local! cept for target practic — in six race tracks, breaking up fortune iteHing operations and investigat- Mrs. Doris Shelley, an attrac- ing liquor violations. tive divorcee, went to work for) «ppere's always danger, but the department because, “I had, pye never had any trouble in just graduated from college and, : arresting er holding persons,” needed a job.” | she says. She has advanced steadily and | Sa — Make: "Your keene Early _ for Our Big New. Year's Eve. Party peuauesneeseueeucusuesssceaees, SUNDAY SPECIAL $ 1 5 0; Potatoes, Vegetables, Chef's Salad, Hot Roll and Butter. ROAST TURKEY ae LL lehetashates roocararcecunenerey H NE ated et % and DRESSING . faauseue & ie ® Ld ‘ae ‘a a ’ While she has never used. her recently was appointed a -detee- ‘revolver on a case, she practices tive. ‘target sheoting each month. Our dining room seat- VISIT OUR. Mrs. Shelley's past assignments) Her detective assignments will | Parties, ing Si peda persons COCKTAIL have been mostly investigations be almost exclusively with delin-. nquets Resi ; NGE for the department's Morals, De-|quent girls, making investigations, Ba vate Bet. LOUNG Open Daily 9 a.m. to 2 a.m——Sunday 2 p.m, to 2 a.m, cases involving fortune tellers, ‘violations. gamblers, sex offenders, child) Mrs. Shelley, a native of Indiana, PLENTY OF FREE PARKING molesters and juvenile delin- \was graduated frorn the Univer- ® 1650 N. Perry at Pontiac Rd. FE 3-9732 quents. sity of Denver in 1953 with a degree adanthar is “T've thet a lot of People, Vd in psychology... During undergrad- never meet otherwise,” she says. uate days she had no intention of i * * # going into police work. Her most interesting work, she | “It’s very interesting, and I like | says, has been on the problem of million acre-feet of water. This sex offenders and child molesters | working with people,’ she says. Noisemakers | Hats, Horns Fun for All BOB BAILEY Mayor of the Hillbillies F eaturing Featuring the Top in Western and Hillbilly Style Music with Larry Heath and johnny Swan Thursday 9 P.M, ‘til ? New Year's Eve " Es Nite et oo id Years ne ee fe Comé First Served % Co’ 4 Spadafore Bar 6 N. Cass at Huron SSSSSSSTHSSSHOSECSSOHSSCOHSHSHCHSESEOCOS ©0609600869088000805008096088006006660060 See Bob Lawson Trio and Mad Man Miltie on the Drums and Comedy M. C. Make Plans now to join in our Big New Years Party Now Serving Barbecued Chitken and Ribs Also Complete Meals of Steaks, Chops, etc. . New Drayton Inn RESTAURANT & COCKTAIL LOUNGE 4195 Dixie Highway R 3-7161 ‘Make Reservations Now for Choice Tables for Our Large New Year's Eve Party Jam Session Monday with CHARLES VICTOR. MOORE . DANCE SATURDAY NIGHT. To the Music of ‘ALVIN WALL and TRIO paneer 79 iam FOR THE HOLIDAYS... Lidey ] Line Northwood's 2 oe xy ¢ PASTIES } Freshly Baked to Perfection BUY 3 and GET 1 FREE! -WITH THIS COUPON— NO COVER NO MINIMUM PI é. | ings ever the thal -of food. ‘ing the training sessions, And with | Burgess insisted that each Whale |squid ‘selling at 30 cents a pound, | even has an individual personality: ithat’s quite a food bill. Limit 1 Coupen Per Customer—4 Days Only— Satu rday Thra Tuesday - We Also Have Delicioms Pizzas that stamps him or her as an intro- vert or an extrovert. “For example,”’ he said 2592 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-452] A & cles reigns as queen of the whale PRBIIIAAIIITIT TILIA tank and neither of the other two whales presume to dethrone her * * * Bubbles is the 1,700 pound. 14- foot long star of the whale ®how She can sing. dance, shake hands ee la ale Relea tattle We wish to thank all of our frie 2 an se \ ur friends and custom~ f \ave goodby. lift a plastic barbell. ers for their patronage in hit a punching bag, wear a_ hat, nod her head and jump completely. the aat . " the past and extend our out of the water over a tightrope. Actually, Burgess — who holds a master’s degree in psychology, — works more with the oceanar ium’s porpoises than he does with| the whales. He has taught five of them to play basketball, football and baseball as well as exti oer best wishes for the holi- davs. CLOVER LEAF INN Fine Food — Liquor — Carty Outs a fire, rescue a “drowning” acc ¢ ; ; son, sing. too, horns and lav 1967 Cass Lake Rd. Keego Harbor drums. leap through’ a flaming jump high out of the water race across the tank tossing life rings with their noses and haul a small boat with a real dog at the CELEBRATE NEW YEAR'S EVE smal AT OXBOW LAKE PAVILION @ HATS @ FAVORS FUN FOR EVERYONE Come Early Stay Late hoop, ‘4A porpoise sometimes sulk for no other apparent reason than jealousy,” Burgess said to illustrate his theory of emotions experienced by marine animals. He said the porpoise was really more emotional than the whale, and thus harder to work with. “One might learn. faster than another because he is less afraid.” he said. “Sometimes f think they're just being They just like to tease the trainer at times.” Burgess is well qualified to work, Modern and Square Dancing music by Bill Lawson and his band Glen Eastman calling ornery No Reservation Needed The io learn Welcome to the his ren ard.’ “Bub- | will | Besides the whale show, housed iin a 640,000-gallon tank three, stories high, and the porpoise | games, which are.staged in a sepa- rate open-air ‘‘Sea Arena,’ Marine- land of the Pacific offers a hilarious sea lion show and a huge exhibit of some 9,000 underwater creatures of more than 200 varieties in a 340,000-gallon tank equipped with three viewing levels The four-million-dollar marine recreation center, opened in 1954, ‘has attracted more :than a million visitors a year. It is by far the largest and most modern of the _'three oceanariums in the -~ world and the only one outside Florida. Kern's Closes Doors for the Last Time DETROIT («®—Kern's department store folded midnight afrer bargain hunters cleared out most of the merchandise It marked the end of 77 yeurs lof merchandising* for the downtown store which is being liquidated by ' last a Cireuit Court receivership. The remaining stock will be sold either privatels or at auction Many of the 206... emploves planned to spend the day before ; Christmas looking for jobs, At dts peak, the store had 500 em- ploves. Mes. Margaret Fegen, floor manager in women's dresses who had been a Kern's employe for : with the animals, and he loves) : years, said, “Some of the girls Call EM 3-9124 every minute of it, He said he has have been placed but a lot of us t ained ¢ every type of animal from 'g . on't know what we are going to 9451 Elizabeth Lake Rd. a cockroach to a whale — and go" . ye | \ \ : ‘g Choice Liquors I bebe es an animal can be * * * | : taug » pertorm The store occupied a 10-story' * * * ‘building at Woodward and Gratiot. | animal actually is anxious'A big clock at the corner was a 1a new trick in order to get| [landmark and rendezvous for De-! "he said. “Bat i it is an) | trot shoppers. ,, 15 TOMAHAWK RESTAURANT CLOSED SUNDAYS AND CHRISTMAS j= Aubum at Opdyke Phone FE 2-7014 people of Frejus pause in the| |worker in the relief center placed|aftermath of tragedy to give the| in ay abd 2 ebed lag, of candy|2 oo: eaten hemi bees, ee inte the outstretched hands of a mas. iwondering child. — x * * : “It's for you, for Christmas,”| It will not be the sort.of Christ-) ‘the: worker explained. mas they had looked forward to.; : Re. litde ‘girl smilingly hugged! The grim work of searching for, the package and hurried away. the last ms of the Malpasset “This scene will be repeated'dam disaster goes on, The official ‘many times. today and Fridey’' vas; toll stands at 319 dead and. 103 i missing. ~ (| ‘The town beside the Riviera Jovous |Waste Poisons Erasers NOEL ranean when the dam burst. on ort [Water Supplies = sz: ; NO DECORATIONS May All the Pleasures No Christmas trees -blink gaily of. - | Seeping From Adrian iar eee proce of houses. No Creme ete | Plant, It Oozes Through) But the people of France — and ill:vour home at 4 , eas many others over the world — are CHRINEWASTIDE | Several Communities tevin to ake he Asan iemery m for the children. Closed Saturday | LANSING # — A stretch off The Frejus postoffice is | December 26 chromium - contaminated water swamped with 500 to 600’ relief — growing longer but weaker by packages a day. Workers. say GENEY the hour — coursed slowly down, most aré gifts for children. ‘the Raisin River in southeast * *« * i . . ‘Michigan today. Wednesday night a heavily laden’ Dr y Cleaner ) | It was due to move completely|truck arrived from the German | past the Lenawee County commu- | toymaking center of Nuerniberg? 12 West Pike St. inity of Deerfield by noon. Baron Pfeten, from the West Ger-, | The State Water Resources Com-|man’ consulate in Marseille, de-. | mission said there was no health/livered the contents to the mayor. | ihazard facing Deerfield. The com- x w® | ‘munity laid up a two-day supply} Several tons of candy will eome lof clean water and has shut off|today from towns and_ cities all its river water intakes until thejover France. The candy and toys poisonous concentration clears the/are being distributed at seven re-, area. The Reveo. Co. — a heavy /lief centers. water user — agreed not to operate oday to upplies. i. . Mighty tore chromium wasiea (CATE Drivers Up seeped into the river accidental- Mileage 5% Pct, ly Monday. from a plant at series. LANSING ® — Michigan’ mo- The wastes took nine hours to torists drove nearly 32% billion flow past Blissfield yesterday. In-| miles this year — an increase of takes were shut off, but the com- 51g per cent over 1958, the State munity had stored an adequate|Highway Department reported. | reserve of clean water and there; The average motorist drove! wag n6 interruption of service. | about 10,000 miles compared to 9,-/ x *&* * '700 miles last year, said Commis- ' The commission estimated the!sioner John C. Mackie. | wastes would take 15 hours to} ‘ | clear Deerfield and then move | me eee cee ts wd |downstream toward Dundee. They) corded if the steel pe. | not | | prere due to reach Dundee Friday ou gown travel, jafternoon and take 24 hours to! lclear that community which also| Traffic was up in all counties) has adequate water in storage. (south of M20 and, in the western ihalf of the Upper Peninsula. It , The action of tetha a prover idipped slightly in northern aad ing the concentration fo ©® \Michigan and the eastern portion out and become weaker as it | ‘of the UP. moves along. | The traffic boost does not neces- | el | Thus, it takes a longer time to sarily mean an increase in gaso-| H. R. Nicholie ‘pass a given point as it flows’ line taxes collected to build roads, i | t \downstream, | Mackie said. Insurance & Realtor | Eventually, the wastes will flow | ~*~ * & & Staff ‘into Lake Erie where the Health He explained that the advent of} 49° T. CLEMENS by} miles drivensoetf:the-sarte-dmount j et een May your heart be filled with the joy of Christmas « ~~». tree-trimming with the whole femily . eopening gifts Christmas moming 208 , thankful prayer before the family dinner . «= may all these dreams come true when we say, “Merry Christmas.” Department: expects them to ejthe small car will result in more(f_ ij i |. Hf Arnold Denison Bob Giroux Larry Whitfield sack Mason Jack Chappel Clarence (Cavy) Cavalier the first Christmas be We sincerely wish our many customers -B. J. (Buck) Hull fh May the magical wonder of renewed in all our hearts! and friends all the blessings of this happy season and extend our thanks for their patronage through the year! ee Bill Pollitte Jack Parmalee Tom: Stachler Joe Wells Henry Gotham Henry | Kline She Won't Be Able to Fulfill College Promise By PHYLLIS BATTELIZ NEW YORK — The happiest marriages in America appear to, be those in which the husband is dent of modern history, who said: - elder than, and mentally superior, to, his wife, ~ The above may sound like the mutterings of a henpecked, old-hat antifeminist male, But it is the finding of Duke University psy- chiatrists after testing thousands of couples who have reason to know what marriage is all about — 60 to 90 years of age. The doctors’ analysis of their findings: . “1 a wite is smarter than her mate, the position of the mele as head of the family is threatened. When the wife realizes this preb-_ ~~ lem, she submerges her brain- ness for the sake of his ego. The result is an unhappy wife and, consequently, an uphaeppy marriage.” / In. a new publication called ‘‘The Insider’s Newsletter," the work of Duke's doctors Ewald “Busse and Carl Ejisendorfer “have been predicted years ago are de, ‘Educated Woman Can The outcome of these tests could by Pearl Buck, author and stu- “What is wreng with Ameri- ean families bas to do with the way Ameriesn women are edu- cated , , , that is, as long as life is still controfied by of@ tradi — tions, en in the old, simple, traditional ways. The root of the discontent in’ American women is that they are too well edticated. They do not need college education. What they ought to have is sim- “Men in America think of wom-| Ruin ing’ homemaking and how to deal lwith very young kids at home. has led American woman into hav- ing ideas which she can never realize when she comes to ma- iturity, “Fathers strain themselves | and work their guts out to fur- contented women. ple courses in reading, writing and arithmetic, and advance courses in cosmetics, bridge, sports, cook- x § B - “Incidentally,"" Miss Buck went on, “overedugation is probably. the happy great curse » in America, It To educate women as we do for over. Fortunately I am too stupid our present state of traditions is toto graspe these things , . . cae put new wine into old bottles, No! . jone knows the effect upon chil- ‘dren of so many discontented mothers, and when a mother is un- or discontented, the atmos- phere around her is grey. 7 x * & “Children then are deprived of .that essential gaiety in which they thrive,,as they do in sunshine.” * © & ; | So what should. be done, to as- I have turned the matter over to my brilliant husband to stew BOARDING HOUSE i onl 7 lp ff ify Vs iy Yi YW YUU AND 50 WILL THE SOLICITOR oe : “Sr FROM THE AUCTION GALLERY EGAD, WHEN LT THOUGHT OF THOSE}, AGE, THEIR FRAIL VOICES RAISED ue IN ABOUT 20 DAYS! ported, He said research has not ‘experienced couples. But, accord-) ", For the third year. scribed. Couples were asked to’ rate their marriages according to a five-degree scale — very un-, happy, somewhat unhappy, happy, rather happy and very-happy. | ‘ » = * ‘When the wife considered her husbandswiser than she, it tallied! with her concept. that theirs was happy marriage. In ‘almost every | case of a happy couple,” said the! report, mister excelled missus, | Age difference also figured-:~' [ importantly in domestic happt- By _ness. More happy marriages | involved a husband considerably | adder than his wife. “The age difference in the happy: group was 5.9 years; in the less happy, the husband was only a mooth or_so older,”’ Dr. Busse re- yet determined why this is so. CONFUSES BOYS Tests of. this type have not yet. been conducted on younger, less ing to “The Insider's Newsletter,’’ studies have been made of the effect on children of mothers who are brighter than fathers. These) showed that scientifically inclined) boys fend to be troubled and con-' fused if the mother is the scien-| tifically oriented parent. Radio Hams | to Bring Yule Joy toChildren | TUCSON, Ariz. fAP)—Amateur radio operators in Tucson will, team up with ham operators throughout the United States and! Canada Friday to make Christmas. a bit happier for 59 children. | The kids are undergoing treat-, ment at the National Foundation | for Asthmatic Children in Tucson. | They are not permitted to see’ their families. amateurs will work” throughout! Christmas Day to line up radio! contacts with families of the) children through amateur opera-| tors in their hometowns. | j Claims East Germany Has More Yule Spirit BERLIN’ (AP) ~— Communist East Germany claims it is out- doing West Germany in sending Christmas gifts across the border. | The official Communist news agency ADN says one East Ger-, \. man in five had sent a gift to the’ \West and that the ratio coming eastward was only one-in-nine. - 4 \DONALD DUCK BER FROM OFFERING THEM THIS > Rwy ORGAN / THE TRUCK A. WILL BE HERE i cnet me —— AED TEL Se a = 7 ¢i ee ace ava nn e a S IN SONG WITH LITTLE MORE THAN HELPLESS WAIES AT THE ORPHAN) AND WHAT WILLYOU GINE 4 VA , BED HIM,MR.SANTA CLALIS 2. Y\ YOU'D BETTER SEE IF Z:\ THEY HANE AN EXTRA ORPHANAGE/ NER AT THE oo oe eT Te AE AL ona tard — RN AN \. \ owe Y) he WATERY NY Not i OR,OH! JUST TWO BUCKS IN THE BANK AND OUR KENT'S QUE! ~ ee, THINK FAST! | THE LANOLORD > WiLL BE HERE INLITE / =" Tah] THE GIRLS , You'll Find PROFITABLE OPPORTUNITIES Press Want Ad Section Every Day in the Pontiac Take advantage of this easy way to solve your buying and selling problems. To Place Your WANT AD 4 & DIAL FE 2-8181 Cae as “ BaP ad aa stmas! The sales slips are inside. “The epartment is on ‘the {ith floor.” Sh oa : é : ee a DIXIE DUGAN Peet hee PODS #4," ’ NSS Ai % r ae NANCY ia a. Y F *, “a oy © 1069 by NEA Bervies, oo. TM. Rog. US, Pat. OF. he er By Carl Grubert abs 4 t By Leslie Turner YOU'VE HAD RARE TELL ME MORE THRILLS ‘SPYING BIRDS, CEDRIC! THE ) STAND TO SUBJECT CAPTWATES wel / LISTEN! BUT TAAL /.NANCY---I'M GOING WER TO THE SMITHS --- WANT _ ALONG ? TO COME NO-=-T'LL STAY HOME AND WATCH TELEVISION ON I CAN'T 1 GUESS WE OUGHTA HEP CHARM His ELS CEORICD CRY OO nr vB BIRDS. HELL BE PLEASED "LL BE GLAD cheng | Apa FULLA 4 TO HERD ‘EM owes! BACK 10 TH I'vE DECIDED TO GO WITH *- dee. te By Dick Cavalli a : b ; 3 “generally -i ; 4) 27 |Apples Jonathon, ou. .......... 388) block of 2,000 shares and then re- doough iy ghee eet at pet reed Rortbers: eer, ee too edvered to cut its net-loss to abput yesterday failed to materialize. yueuract. Es . [Balt o doses polntx. Forecasters predicted “a b ou t) Beets topped. bu... -ooas: $273 General Time, which soared one inch” of new snow for. the Cabbage: Cutly, bu -- 300. 1034 points yesterday, fell 154 te _State today and said this would Cabbage, Red. bu. 3-80 108 on 1,000 shares before trim. SUGGESTION WORTH $5,000 — His idea change to freezing rain in the Celery, , - Ss ming the loss to around a*point. to fabricate certain Plating Plant equipment southern portions. {teks doa. vchs. eeraes is Gains and losses of fractions to) rather than purchase it from outside has netted for Christmas’ in the lower pen Parsiev tt do. "0 we ise about a point prevailed among Harold’ R.- Sage (center) 109 N. Adelaide St., insula st Par ley. arty jos, debs «+--+ 988i most of the pivotal issues. Some | Fenton, a maximum . suggestion award of Petatee: Py wt Fo likseeeeaeoee Hs of the blue chips were up smartly: $5,000 — and just in time for Christmas. Pre- Police said South Haven roads |Radishes, black, ‘@ bu 1.55\0n investment buying. ° senting the award are S. E. Knudsen (left) — since were slippery this morning be- |Recishes. hothouse. dos. bens. -: 148' General Eelectric and Eastman’ Pontiac Motor Division general manager, and cause of sleet and freezing. rain. | Squas Acorn, bu a * 18 Kodak both advanced about .2 ——-- a : - Reed City, Grand Haven and Ne- oeam Delicious, "bu. "0.000000. - 1.09) apiece. wes — waygo reported snow-covered roads!Turnips, topped, bus 21.0.0... 250 Eicawhere in the list most Lt’S Bringing Joy to the World were fearful that lower Michigan . torists, finding some clear spots, them hit slippery sections and > Roads.Are Bad, So Take Care - ‘home Tuesday, she reported to city | Besides Ice and Snow, Monster ° Traffic Jams MARKETS The following are top covering sales of locally produce ‘Are in Store By United Press International | State police reported today’ that roads throughout the state were Wednesday. Detroit Produce fRUrrs Apples, Delicious, bu. .. and drifting snow at 7 a.m. * * * The entire Upper Peninsula was snow-covered and police said there was one-lane traffic on M94 and) I isti ETROIT. Dec. ope Cattie— US. 2 in the Manistique and). yee: eae >. Gladstone arcee. sendy: cows ective, fal, geney:, st, . $ wi ¥ and & a! steers an With the holiday trade baile heifers 16. 20- 00: Toad ont y choice - -and ton a ers aroun ’ uns today hight; police Utility cows 15.00-16.00, few to highways would be more hazardous to drive than snow-covered roads of the north. A trooper explained that mo- tend to be a little careless and jose control of thelr cars. The Auto Club of Michigan pre- dicted two million cars would be on state, roads, with the worst traffic jams coming today and|5 again Sunday Huskies Get All-Out Pre-Yule Scrimmage “PASADENA, Calif. (AP) -— Yuletime spirit sets in today in Rose Bowl land, bet_not until after the visiting football players take a fade Nnaeas on the Pract®\GMC Offering * * * Coach Jim Owens of the Wash- ington Huskies scheduled a double workout—a light drill this morn- ing in the Long Beach Memorial Stadium, and an all-out scrim- mage in the afternoon. What, asked inquirers, did he call a scrimmage the Huskies put on two days ago? of * * This one was no tea party, and several of the players proved it) when. they showed up- for break- fast—tendered by the Long Beach Chamber of Commerce—the next morning. They bore bruises, ban- dages and tape, some of it. around | the face, * * * Coach Milt Bruhn of Wisconsin had a busy day set for his Big Ten champions but indicated it would not be as severe as _ the Huskies faced. . News in Brief A break-in at the H. E. Ball Motor Freight Co., 124 Franklin Rd., was reported to Pontiac police yesterday. It has not been deter- mined what is missing. r Eugene Johnson, 226 Prospect St., reported to Pontiac police yesterday that his home was bur- glarized. A watch valued at $35 was stolen. Mrs. Ann Giles, of 231 High St.,, told Pontiae police Tuesday that someone broke into her home and stole two piggy banks containing about .$50 plus 10 silver dollars. Mary Kelaire, of 1698 Taylor St., reported to Pontiac police that someone. took $20 from her wallet; while she was shopping yesterday. Violet Snyder, of 608 .N: Perry St., -had-a $12 coat stolen from her SALAD GREENS Celery Cabbage, dow. ..... Livestock ETROIT Liyeet ; canners Hoge—Galable , 150; 1 about steady at 11.75-12.25; mymber 1, 2 & 3 around 307 Ib. 12.50; anne done etnans lable 30: unchanged; no engueh ofseres to set up quotations. eep—Salab 60; unchanged; enough offered to set up quotations. Poultry and Eggs few lots. numbe DETROIT POULTRY DETROIT, Dec. .23 (AP)—Prices per, ‘ly. prices: grown brought to the Farmer's Market by growers and gold by. them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets. as of $3.50. ‘opening, was down 10 at 113 on a * = ad ~ sil and cutters 12,00-15.00.! ~ tb. barrows and gilts load mixed not) Profit Taking Hits Electronics NEW YORK ® — Profit taking hit-a couple of the electronics stars as the stock market pursued an ir- | regular course early today. Trad- ‘ing was fairly active. | Ampex, a terrific gainer this ‘year, dropped about 2 points at the changes were smal], reflecting lit-| tle drive one way or the other. Many Wall Streeters had left for a long Christmas weekend and there | was ne particular news to push | * * | | i eifers about prices up or down. Oils, motors, utilities and electri-! cal equipments were pretty steady. | Steels, airlines and drugs displayed Tt Investment-type' issues | gains were made by Union Carbide, | Dupont, Westinghouse Electric and! American Smelting. und f.0.b. Detroit for No. 1 quality routine rate. ve poultry: Heavy type hens 22-24; heavy type roasters over 5 Ibs. 27-28; heavy type) broilers and fryers 3-4 Ibs. whites 21- red Rocks 22-24; swan geese 21; 23; Bar: se 25-27; turkeys, heavy type young Opening blocks included- South’ American Gold & Platinum un- sichanged at 6%s on 4,500 shares; ens 40; heavy type young toms 31-33. |General Motors off % at 53%. on DETROIT EGGS _ police, a rnucKs ae ps AND PANELS 4-% AND 1-TON Prompt Servi Picked up and Delivered | OC. Se cee | |4,000; and Shell Transport & Trad- an easier tone. i Curtain fared Christmas Eve to. the possibility about the best. International Paper’ that. advanced about a point. Moderate World War II. By J. R. Triplet Associated Press Staff Writer People on both sides of the Iron” looked forward first time since’ the ‘again know rea] peace. x * for the President Eisenhower and Pre-| Visit The market was active at the|mier Nikita Khrushchev are key Eisénhower's agreement to return Stores were. crowded with French and werk, |start with the ticker tape late brief. | figures in the hopes of millions, the visit; the arrangements for a people buying holiday gifts Then turnover settled down to a just as the United States and the Big tions in the cold war. Shooting persists in troops in a yuletide border spat., ‘Red China, no convert to Khrush- chev's renunciation of force to In-|a focal point ‘in religious obser- ANY uritversat peaca But the past year has seen sig- world may, nificant steps toward greater ‘ternational understanding, been the Khrushchev, French States and normal ithese have to Four this Of the distant future * * the United summit Les 0. Tangen, works as a pipe fitter. @ is a Matter livetinoat~ * conference; outside the city, ‘Soviet Union have been key na- Elise nhower's 11-nation tour on be-| were ‘reinforced to 2169 Oflette St., man in the maintenance department where Sage a general fore- | Now completing his 19th year with the Division, Sage has received several ‘other suggestion Pentiac employe to receive the maximum award it was boosted to $5,000 awards, and is the--second last June. We ve Truly Peaceful Christmas at Last an armed truce, never by a peace tants of, Holy Land areas who de- (pact. “pend on tourist trade for their,‘ “RRB = Teraeti“tensidn* somewhat * * * Algiers, had eased Ever celebrating — its in- sixth Christmas since the start of Among the natipnalist’ rebellion against) rule, presented a more appearance than usual security patrols bar ! lChiet Sachem of the Narragansett Gov. William Bradf of arrows-—6ays he doesn't think | grenade WAKEFIELD, R. 1 (UPI ~The | Indians—whose lea i once sent a fattle-| snake. skin loaded with a bundle there ever will be peace in the world.” Cagsius Champlin, who leads the more than 500 Narragansett In-, all over the earch because there. are too many different nations with foo many different ideas.”’ The @5-year-old Chief Sachem — urged all the countries of the | world to “revert to the Bible , . . there is your only hope.” | Chief Champlin who works as | ‘a gardener and greenhouse man, ‘bears no ill feelings toward the | iwhite. man—with whom the Nar- ragansetts waged incessant war- fare during the ‘early days of New! England treatment the Indiarrs received at) the hands of the whites.’ The chief said that as far as the bow and arrow are con- cerned, “that is something that is dead, and will never return ... even if a-tetal nuclear war _ wipes out all nations.” He said that his people have ‘come to realize that all men must thake a livelihood and -must—try-STace. to live together under the smoke. of the pipe of peace.’ Chief Champlin said that his people are “holding their.own and are coming. back strong’’ in Rhode Island. He said that their prized is the land they own ‘tc wena ot Charlestown, but attendance was one of the lowest in the 85-year history of the event, “I look forward to a greater pow-wow in October,” said -the “a peaceful Chiet Sachem, “at which time we iwill pray and renew all the tribal customs.” But, if the results of the most dians in Rhode Island and Parts recent pow-wow are any indica- of, New England and New York, ‘tion his words are wishful think- 1id he believes “there always will ing ' The teepee, and the buckskin be disruption and a sort of anxiety, ‘and the birch-bark canoe are gone, Rodriguez May Get Title Shot MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) ‘Luis Rodriguez’s Christmas pres- -ent appears to be a shot &t the world welterweight championship, and he gave it to himself. ~ * *& The Cuban buzzsaw, ranked No. “What has gone over the dam o jn ¢he division. won @ unani- is best forgotten,” he suid. “al-) mous decision over Garnet (Sugar) ‘though there are several among fart in the 10-round main event us who will never forget what’ a¢ the Miami- Beach. Auditorium last night. His perpetual-motion at- tack kept Sugar, ranked No. 3 be- fuddled much of the time * * * Promoter Chris Dundee said he ‘had been notified by NBA Presi- \dent Anthony Maceronj that unless champion Don Jordan defended ‘his title by Jan. 15, the expiration time of his six-month period of that the winner of last ° ‘night’s fight would meet the best’ other available contender here Feb. 10 for the championship. * * r There were no knockdowns and although each man suffered a slight cut over his left eye there Possession “and that land is our Was no other serious damage. But heritage and will never be given Rodriguez weighed 14612, Hart up to any man.’ * * The Chief said that. he- feels ‘half of friendship Algeria. | freedom: Iran and Iraq have moved- up.Geneva nuclear talks: the coming 10-nation parley on disarmament. Bethlehem, today was as usual of toys, candy, and relief supplies them " went to flood-stricken French fam Is and peace progress ‘in| Raids moderate- " RELIEF FOR FREIJU 8 Across the Mediterranean, gilts! younger Indians ‘‘don’t care about He said he-and the elders: ‘have the task of educating these sinietes made the Dean's honor jtribal customs are here to stay, ‘26 Athletes Named idespite the fact that many of the, to MSU Honor Roll EAST LANSING (UPI)—Some 26 DETROIT, Dec. 23 (AP)—Eggs {.0.b. 3 3. Detroit in case lots. tederal-stay . & graded: ‘ing up % at 20% on 3,700. dian frontier lands. vances ilies at Frejus. The official toll young | ones in our history—our roll at Michigan State University tas Whitee--Grede 8s rm jumbo extra) from bursting of the Malpasset most cherished memory, fall term, it w ed toda BStrse fie’ no brown epee aay j ‘PILGRIMS GALORE ‘NO ROOM AT THE INNS Dam Three weeks ago stood at ‘fe , as announced today. Checks 20. ° New York Stocks ae i ; 2 7 . ; ‘ The tribue recently held a two. Billy Reynolds, the Spartans’ "Commercially graded: Pilgrims thronging by the thou- Hotels. and boarding houses of 319 dead, 103 ‘missing ‘ — 1960 . hites—-Grade. A jumbo 39-40; extra, {Late Morning Quotations) ands to Bethlehe Jordan-held| that Judean town were turning ‘atic : cross country captain, Stan @|large 32-37; large 30-35; medium 26-28; | ; Figures after ‘decimal points are eights Sands to Bethlehem, Jordan-he vat sucea A ; ns Nations of West Europe were 'Tarshis, Big Ten and NCAA hor- © [small 22-24; grade B large 26-32: browns) 4 mira) 23.6 Kello birthplace of Jesus Christ, were away customers with*words equiv- riding high. Except for Poland lizontal bar champ in gymnastics sont s. srtre nee: 3 rade’ B ee Allied Ch 116.2 Kelsey Hay 45.6 reminded by the presence of. Arab alent to the ages-old ‘No room at’and possibly East Germany—both Promotion Group Options land freshman hockey player ai. | Aited al. SBD. Rreeee BS 3. s{and Israeli military guard posts the inn.’ Chartered planes swelled troubled by food shortages«this 5 June Dates for Fight ‘Wayne Pecknold had straight A Alum Ltd 34.4 Kroger wees. 32.6) | along the nearby border that the a flow of tourists that spelled should be the best Christmas sea- | averages. Alowe can’. saa toe ee 4) 1948 Palestine war was ended by prosperity for the many inhabi- son economically since the war NEW YORK (UPI) — Attorney: 2! ‘Am Can 411 Ligg & My $2 ——— — - for Communist-ruled Eastern Eu- Roy M. Cohn announced today his NBA AT A GLANCE Am Cy 582 Lockh Airc .. 312 or , toy M. C : as a Wider Range Am M&Pdy 49.1 Loews Inc» 22.6 ‘rope. Though prices were high, new 10-man promoting group had "EASTERN DIVISION” g [Am Motors 81a fone 8 Gas 381 Disappearance Still a My stery consumer and luxury goods were taken options on five June dates posion Won Lost Pet. Behing of Accessories Am N Gas 57 Lorillard i an reported stocked heavily by state-,at Yankee Stadium for the return Phladeipiia 18 10 63 7 or ‘ac 7 An fee Tai fey Mace aah iC : ] L t Ei ht Y Tun stares: Ingemar Johansson -Floyd Patter- New Yor, io 303338 Broadening its 1960 GMC truck Am Tee wid Mert ‘er Oup e OS 1g ears | * * * son heavyweight title fight. WESTERN Division Senien accessory coverage GMC Truck |AB8 W&C oarer Merce As 8 The Christian-style celebration He said the optioned dates are) |s. gute ” 10 ee ’ + Mae Armco Stl .. 75.6 Mipis Hon ee D t N F d still defies conversion attempts by June 1 and 2, and June 13, 14 and minneapolis H 200 o3I $ ae - 2 o 8 and Coach Divs offers such Arment & Ce 036, Minn M&M IM ‘on e€ser ever oun the Communists in Hungary,.15. Feature Sports, Inc., Cohn'’s C@cinatt | ays ee new ems a ru b r Loae A Corp 18. Mont Ward 3 Czechoslovakia, East Germany organizatioh, hopes to stage the No games scheduled sliding rear windows. mee Borg Warn | ie ot wheel i5@s| LOS ANGELES (UPI) — The Newman has no hope the couple he an Thowsands ‘crowded fight on June 1. 8 Wednesday, oF no games scheduled, SCHEDULE , eee we Borg Warn Nat Bis¢ 55.2, ¢, ° oe ; their churches June 13, a M mday. The other FRIDAY'S SCHEDULE Other added accessories include Brun Balke . oy Nat Cash R 67.3 final chapter may soon be written ever will besfound alive Gates are sain oney 0 Boston iit, New at Lou a Bat-O-Meter that permits a con-| Burroughs 35.6 Nat Lead 19% $4in the mysterious case of Klaus ‘They couldn't stay there long . _ _ __ Detroit. at Cinetnna stant check on battery voltage out- yas Dry - 137 NY Central uM artens and a pretty nurse without water, and there isn’t any Write H W d ROCKET AT A GLANCE Syracuse at Philadelphia put and a twin-motor air flow heat-|carrier Cp 371 No Am Av i i named Marajune Walker who trere,") he said. “If they tried to is onor ; a e ot EDNESDAY'S. RE Pate Wednesday's College Basketball er for heavy-duty D860 diesel high- rel Jeane 34 Owens 1 Q} 192.4 vanished togethér on Arizona's walk out 35-49 mileko hey might coicagy NATIONAL LEAGUE 7 TOURNAMEN oe Fees way tractors. chee 2 om bo pan AW Air 221 sun-seared desert more than not have made i for Help to Sports ORO ON ATIONAL LEAGUE mdane 71. ROOSER CLASSIC 7 . 7.2 2p TS , * ¥ nsboro 7, ’ ser 7 The new springs augment reg- eer eee ulp py! param Pict 4.3 eight years ago. “Nobody knows why they .land- z New Hexen & Washington 3 Saver 7 Fiat Holiday ular rear coil suspensions on half |C85" cola” ..150) Ps RR” 13.6 tk ed. Nobody knows a lot of things pay pre a oe petetcd INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE ionship lg -Palm 41.3 Pepsi Cola %4 His former father-in-law is ; ; RALEIGH, N.C (AP) — “It's. Louisvilte 6, St. Paul 4 Eastern Mich. 35. Plint JC 74 and three-quarter ton pickups. Cols ae 07 Snel 0 43 HS orme! a yer -i aw about this case. It's All a BUESS.'been a most interesting and re- Milwaukee 5. Omahs 4 . ird Place Mounted between the axle and (Con Edis S35 Ehelpe D 85 . taking legal action to have Mar- }je probably had enough gas to warding career,” said. Wallace Indianapolis mapay's SCHEDULE Hillsdale 67, Aquinas 56 frame rails, they. consist of rub- |Eohsimer Pw 543 i 833 tens — who was 28 years old at fly to safety. but the location is.in wade today in looking back on No Gane RIDAYS SCHEDULE California nn OTRER ames 69 ber cylinders that soak up heavy Cons S. es prect BS 361 the time of his disappearance —-a valley. and if he wasn't up high four decades of work in college ; NATIONAL (HEDULE bral ni Couege igan State 60, oe - 7 © . i ‘ ow t ‘] 3 vont jolts and prevent “bottom corn. id $84 Republic Stl. me ae declared legally cead enough, he couldn't have seen over athletics Chicago at « WBoxtnn AN LEAGUE srnewga Oelhonne 38 | * os . ; \ , P ? n P % low t . 5 | "m6: Curtis Pub oe Rex “Drug : tes Martens, a German-born sales- ne mountains “ “un pat thet rt Ot * Springfield at Providence ‘Louisville 59. Wittenberg 46 beet Sg eee x oa Ws Be ‘ 3 (iain : - _ uf t cheste & ° Transistors eliminate the need!Det Edis + Rey Tob. gas. man, and Miss Walker. then 3, ed.” oesn ft explain why he tan’. The former Alabama and Duke “INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE | Bonaventure "3, “Texas ‘Southern 7 for a vibrator-type power supply Dis. < An® ° 32.1 Rove at Owe £5) and a native of Malverne, N. Y., |©¢. . football coach retires next week Louisville at st. Paul | arene pele: a Cato Marys, Tex. 8 in the new radio, extending the) pow 2 Bt Reg Pap .. 55.4| left Pasadena, Calif., July 15, Attorney Roscoe R. Hess is the as Southern Conference Commis- Indianapolis at Miwaukee CCNY 60, queens ° set’s life and reducing battery rent ao 33 pore Se mi. 2 1951, on a Sunday morning flight |man interested in having Martens. sioner. | nn ——— drain. Beet, nt 107 | ginclair voces 0 in a rented plane for Blythe, declared legally dead.~Hess’ He has been named recipient: ; * as A f . 5 r ‘ The sliding rear windows, avail-|g) a Mus na jou Pac 294 Callf. jdaughter had been married to, of the 1959 service to sports award Kaline, y ost Honored able for many light, medium and) Emer Red id Seo Ra” 26 Their small aircraft:~some: gas- ‘and divorced from, the young. given by the Atlantic Coast Sports: heavy-duty GMC models, can be) Ex-Cello-o 38 d Brand .... salesman. mo, writers Assn. ad ft xt lati Firestone 138.2 Std Di cai” 13 Oline still in its tank and its engine: t+ eit . opened for extra ‘ventilation. OF poog Mach '.. 49.4 Std Ot! Ind #24in working order, was found 16° . * * * ] e Ox 1Op 1e fers shut tightly for year-round use. pore Mot... oe oa On $1.8 days later in the desert 50 miles . The lawyer is handling the miss-' The 67-year-old Wade, who op-| The accessory line also has im-iproeh Tra |... 30 kevens IP 346 from Yuma. Ariz. ling man’s small estate, which he erates a 120-acre livestock farm) proved vacuum power brake units|Gen Dynam .. 95.8 Bind ek Baa. Th ‘said amounted to $500. ‘outside nearby Durham, said he| BOSTON (® — The popular! American League fielding figures and step-type rear bumpers, and Gen Motors 38.3 oar Oe ake . Ne uple was ee feand An insurance policy on Martens’ received particular satisfaction theory that a stalwart defense) for 1959. provides fuller coverage in side) G.n° Time 110.2 Tenn Gas. us again. No trace was ever found jife for $3,000 has been paid to his'‘‘from the association I’ve had carried the Chicago White Sox to! The White Sox won the team mirrors, clearance lamps and self-| Gen Tire 79-5 “Texaco wi feof their bodies. mother, Mrs. Ferdinand Martens, with athletes and the many won-|their first pennant in 40 years was fielding title with a .979 average. ; ; Gerber Prod . 53.2 -f*. an a: * : ' P spraying paints. Gillette a= ait a3 « * who’ now lives in Frankfurt, Ger-'derful people connected with ath- given further impetus Wednesday This was one point higher than Sontmear eur’ Transamer~. 29.2 ““A case like this one is never many. ° ‘letics.”’ ‘with the release of the final New-York, Boston, Cleveland and Pro Gridder, Ski A iGrah Paige 2.6 pwgnt Cen. 32, really closed under these circum- nt cnt eee RR RR ‘Detroit. FO. origs , Kt AACS: St oer Ba oe eres 464 stances,” said Yuma County, »| Chicago also had two individual Top Canadian Athletes Gall 08 ey Unit Air iin 35.4,Sheriff T. H. (Pete) Newman. | ‘leaders — second baseman Nellie > Holland F 13.1 Soh Pant | 38-4'«For One thing, there were too Fox, the circuit's most valuable TORONTO (AP)—Russ Jackson, Thdust Ras ag Cn Pes ce #3 many unexplained things.. And) player, and his sparkling double- star quatterback of the pro foot-itng Rand. .. 43.2 Rub... 623 for another thing, we “just had_ play sidekick, shortstop Luis ‘ball Ottawa Rough Riders, and! Tat "Buse Mich 34 Be tcs. 3s what might have been a new de- Aparicio." Fox, in leading at his ‘Anne Heggtveit, a willowy, eet Bere... 4 Upjohn 5.1 if velopment recently. . | position for the fourth time, made ‘i nt Ni . 108. . t . . # : “er year-old ski ace from Ottawa, ih: paper i332 Weste A Bk -. 322) «gome bones and a skull were | only 10 errors in 827 total chances Wednesday were named Canada’s|int Shoe .. 33.6 este Mi. Mes for a .988 average. Aparicio field- outstanding athletes. of 1959. |int TeleTel 382 Young 8 §¢¢, found in the general area where | ed 970 to finish well ahead of They were chosen for the male Jones & 1 863 Jounh’ ai 1322) they disappeared. But it turned | the .962 mark posted by Woody _ - out they had been on the desert | Held of Cleveland and female honors in the Cana-' | toe eng more than the eight eld of Cleveland. dian Press’ annual yeat-end poll. STOCK AVERAGES ~ ‘ . | * *« * Jackson, a 23-year-old native of pCOmyiet bY The” Associated Press: trond these Rarwd have been | Vic Power of Cleveland, at first ‘Hamilton, Ont., beat out Stan tn dee aati vi sises sing —_ base, and Eddie Yost of Detroit, | Leonard, of Vancouver, the best prev. day ......47.0 327, Newman is bothered by many at third, rounded out the top field- lgolfer in Canada’s history, and /ysct.°h, a3 i281 u8 ios 328-8 unexplained aspects of the case. | ing infielders. Power showed a Dickie Moore, the Montreal ‘Cana- — ee mae rs ues id especially why the two young .995 slate to set the pace for the diens’ National Hockey League 1959 low... 306.1 1938 93.4 211.5 /pe~ple landed, and then aban- second time. Yost was No. 1. at ges ish et ‘fos ie ise doned, a still functioning plane. third for the second straight year st . i . ' with .962. W-JONES 11°A.M, AVERAGES i Newman said it was ‘10 minutes . —— 30 Inds 671.07 up 0.89 flying time to safety at the small Mickey Mantle of the New York 20 Rails 154.00 off vg ; 1 =O) Yankees was the leader among 15 Utils 86.97 off 0.0 | Arizona town of Welfon just 65 Stocks 217.47 up 0.168 | imiles away from where the plane the outfielders with .995 on only Volume to 11 a.m. 520,000 | two miscues in 375 chances. He : - | wag Sone, “} was followed by Jim Landis of th | * NGS Nephier Co.) And he said tracks from the White Sox, 999 and. Al Kaline, Dew Pinwre after decimal points ite a hare! plane indicated the couple walked troit, .989.. : ’ ‘Bale win ane , + Berr: edged Rose Gar Oo. as a8. Bp used road Jel R to Wetton. Chicago's Sherman Loar for catch c o ities “ jing honors, Yogi made only two [Beans Se a: cot NS ‘ag “It they. could have made it to} ‘ pi fae and suena wie F 97 © Lite Mirote i BY He iWelton, | they: would ‘have’ been) _|average. Lollar erred five times Toledo i Gib ocak 164 184 15.4 safe,” Newtnan said. “But they land finished at a: os Wg gps Cer vom didn’t turn north on the road.” ‘Twenty - five for among * » a | ir i Grain Prices said the couple had walked west. fy i : _ It Kad“their names and was timed : ee ee ona tag 1° hours Sunday.” © Rk ee . a8 \. A postecript to the note also in | precast say ‘ i ’ handwriting but much , Weeees % tek . ohh dded Re +s Me — wk aa vane con wo [. "NATIVITY SCENE — Familiar feats 5 ry them, ‘the golden bell glitters as it swings in ‘s Lis ie ina) | planation in thé note of the des- | the ‘Holy Family, shepherds and wise men-are ‘night: ‘The-scene is at the home of “if = ae Fah) ere landing. = in a gleaming white rege Above _ Mrs. Thomas Bartell, asl N. Ardmore “ewe ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS, ' EE eae THURSDAY, DECEMBER 24. 1959 - ae FRANKFURT. Germany (UPD ~ “Black and white poodles. Only |. 5 est ; roots. Phone West Berlin Hiciilen as it’ sounds, this -re- cent advertisement in a West Ber- lin newspener had a sinister back- al a 2 7 It ‘was another attempt by the Soviet and East Gernran state security organizations to hamper operations of the anti-Communist ' revolutionary orgatization NTS, The phone number given in the i + ad was that of the head of NTS) in Berlin. He was placed in ‘he, embarrassing position of having to! explain to up to 30 people a day’ that he was not & poodle breeder In their recently-strengthened campaign to destroy the Nation. al Alliance of Russian Solidarists — NTS — the Communists are - taking mere drastic steps than | mere advertisements. Bombs, poisoned coffee, kidnap- ings are among them. NTS has its headquarters Frankfurt. It has secret cells in- side the Soviet Union itself which) distribute revolutionary literature that has been smuggled into Russia ___by NTS members. ! NTS spokesmen said their organ- ization has been labeled revelution- | ary enemy number one by the Soviet regime. For the Communists to step up their campaign against NTS, the movement must be spreading, the spokesmen said. GINA SHOPS WITH SON — on her son Mirko, two. The bc winter clothes and a few gifts ver WASHINGTON - (UPI) — They*ret about to build the world's long- est bridge’ in New York and ‘he! controversy over what to call it threatens to last as long as the P* * * * construction job itself. One recent Communist move Nor is the matter of interest to was to send out cards inviting New Yorkers alone. Italy, Pana- leading city officials of Frankfurt,:ma and to a lesser extent France, including the mayor, to an NTS Mexico and Brazil are ‘indirectly | banquet. The invitations said_ it'concerned too. | would be held on “Wednesday the The authorities who ‘are build- , 18th.’ The 18th fell on a Tuesday ing the span—which will be 60 that month; the Reds were merely! geet longer than the 4,200-foot a trying-to create animosity toward, Goeiden Gate Bridge in San Fran- | the NTS. cisco on its completion in 1965 | ; —are calling it the ‘‘Narrows- Verrazano Bridge,"’ for the time * -&. * A few weeks before that, lead- ing members of the NTS In Frank-| being, anyway. furt received letters, typewritten, i They get the first part of the b ut unsigned, eet they they name from the fact that the bridge tinued their work : About the same time, neigh- bors of NTS members and bu- reaus received letters branding Annie Oakley (12 Years Old) would be ‘eliminated’ | | the NTS as a “Russian spy group.” Q : These letters were sent out by uite a Hunter organizations calling themselves ANCHORAGE, Alaska (UPI) — the ‘Federation for the National pyelve-year-old Marilynn Hazen Purification of Germany" and the bagged the largest caribou of the “German Homeland Committee.” season with one shot while on her a ~ * * second hunting trip NTS officials say both these titles k oe are ficticious names for what is ; really the East German secret The eighth-grade student made the kill in the Oshentna River area while hunting with her father, M Sgt Lynn Hazen of Elmendarf. Air Force Base, Anchorage. On the Jepeen Island of Hiro The huge caribou is being en- shima is a pine tree known as tered in the North American Big’ “the Dragon's Beard.’ It is only'Game Trophy competition. Sgt. | two feet high, but stretches 85 Hazen didn't get a shot during the feet along the ground. ~ ‘trip. “ service, acting on orders of Soviet security organs. Argentine Phone Service Out of Date and Whack BUENOS AIRES (UPI)—‘‘Sorry. phone and Telegraph Corp., which wrong number’ is a familiar re- ran the system until 1946. expand- *frain in Argentina. jing the number of lines from 195,- No wonder. The “current er, Buenos Aires telephone book, which lists half of all the tele- phones in the country, is three years old. \Then again, for a lot of people, jtine Mixed Telephone Enterprise was formed, an ill-fated adventure that saw experienced hands re- placed by amateurs and which was, ‘climaxed two years later by the |jailing of the company president : even a wrong number would be ‘(5 financial irregularities. ee a luxury. They can’t even get a | ek . telephone. | . ' Telephones of the State was According to the State Tele-) formed in 1948 in the era of exdic- communications Enterprise, there tator Juan D. Peron when national- __» _ are 454,000 applications pending for ism was in the saddle. telephones in Argentina. Which is to say 454,000 people. have. both- ; Seciadeda ero don't aven ere “the government of the tyrant ac- The telephorie ‘book situation is, THTEd tt 1546 an enterprise tech-. being remedied. \ The telephone. "/ally and commercially well or-| le are now in‘the process — ganized and equipped in large) i fully slow f gettin |measure with a modern plant, and | pain: one—of getting nat is more, with plans and fi-, " . onew ae none jairectory. heq Tancial resources to satisfy future the hands of some suburb ns b- needs . . . (but) the lack of the or-| an su 'ganizing ability of the personnel! scribers, although they still are i ent d own. centerpr ae the undoing of the ° x *« * Not that it makes a great deal of Now the enterprise is trying to difference. Because of the night-- make a comeback, but plans | mare involved in getting a new! still run well ahead of accom- / telephone, many people keep tele-| plishments.. Waits of 16 years for ; phons listed in their names long| @ telephone are nof uncommon after they have moved out of a’ house or apartment and rented it to someone else. q In the words of La Razon, the. city's biggest. afterrioon newspaper, ‘ on a shopping trip in Rome Monday, ” Great-;000 to 519.000. That year an Argen- ;, “Job of filling the orders for ‘Between 1955,and 1958, the tele: oie ot 00 ew in planned to ‘add 217, new lines Kt actually ‘/put in 59,000, Now pn is under way on 57 » including | aty AP Wirephoto Italian actress Gina Lollobrigida, tries a warm winter hat - | up the tour with new xy wound - Lengthy. Debate Develops eof N.Y. Bridoe will span the Narrows. in New, York harbor as it connects Brook lyn with Staten Island The ‘Verrazano’ part comes from an Italian navigator who is believed to have been the first European to enter the harbor. * * * The controversy has made mary New Yorkers aware of Giovanni da Verrazano for the first time ‘(even though many of them have traveled on a ferryboat named 7 his honor). But it has also added to the — renown of John F. Stevens, chief engineer of the Panama Canal in 1905-07. Stevens’ name was advanced by members of the Panama Canal, Society of Washington and of the American Society of Civil En gineers. The name ‘Verrazano Bridge"’ is advocated by a powerful group to honer. the. celebrated Floren- tine explorer who is believed to have distovered Manhattan _Is- land in 1524, 8 years before the arrival of Henry Hudson. This campaign ‘stirs enthusiasm among the’ millions of Italian- Americans in the United States, and they've been writing their congressmen to tell them so Verrazano explored the North American coast from North Caro- lina to Newfoundland in the serv- ice of King Francis I of France, a act which adds fo the interna- tional aspect of the current de- bate. . - A Mexican angle is the. fact | that early in his career, Verra- zano, serving the French, cap- tured two of Cortez’ treasury ships bound for Spain frem Mexico. . Then on his last voyage in 1428 Vérrazano was captured and killed by Indians in Brazil One of the arguments for the name ‘Stevens Bridge” is that a sister bridge connecting Staten Island with New Jersey was named for another great figure, the Panama Canal project —' Gen. George W. Goethals. t * ® Rep. Daniel J. Flood of Penn-| sylvania described Stevens as “the basic architect of the Pan- ama Canal.” He said that it was largely due “te--Stavens’ influence that Presi- dent Theodoré Roosevelt and Con- gress decided to build the type of: canal—a_ high-level-lake with locks —that proved to be successful. And so the debate continues, | although many New, Yorkers con-. tend it's academic. They say they've been thinking - ‘and talking about it for yéars as, the ‘‘Narrows Bridge” and that's: what they'll call it no matter ‘what the histosians and/or the {politicians decid decide. Good Neighbor Policya Flop — Due to Feud BUFFALO,- (UPI) — John Sciera recently put up a sign in| front of his home announcing: “Woman next door wil] not let us ‘paint side of house.”’ It was the latest development th a feud that began in, the early '1940s when Alevander Chilinski and A N | A L) S are z & »_Death Notices _ i “tm person to Andy , 172 Baldwin Ave. + " ‘oO a@gaut $115 week to one who Ww: preign cars, 1 & a tot” genera! re week _meerentees te start; as given yea i Also, cash for Four ‘auity. tors, Gals any hou sane a ee PE 43644 © ein TY j , SBSOLUTEL ¥ THE FASTEST AC- i ; } ‘STA PART-TI LEADERS, DIE, | ws Shape NTED Makers, toen r 7 erred ith car ta} ; = work i dey, Sty days | be an “| Bunce wy rienced only. Bervice, next : and Square | LLER WITH | in 2 in. well. | g Call Renter Fart- Cali 1066 W, Buren. pes t © 90, dbo 4, dette tm, o Work Wanted Female 12 | | _Moving | & Trucking 22 hands, Visner ing, 210 Campbell, Tool _in Rochester. “ ENCED WOOL resser. 6 Middlebelt. PE 8-9571 YOUNG MAN TO LEARN THE .AU- tomobjfe business and adopt i missed by Gary & Dennis: daughters. sons Joyee & Pamela ; IN LOVING MEMORY OF BOBBY as a career, An opportunity to Hampton, whe Passed away De- Jearn and earn with one of the 4 4 . nicest dealerships in one of the The world may change froth year . Best localities selitng ene of , 1 ‘, America’s most popular cars a Yr a * ane opened tae oe to gay. Drop in for interview Crissman From memory pass away. Chevrolet Co., Rochester . Sadly missed by father. mother, YOUNG SINGL E MAN, 300D> brothers and sisters character to aie to become fen: VING MEI eral manager of mv entire busi | IN to ING i cor OF RALPH | ness. Will pay expenses while killed 8 ears ago today, Dec.“ learning, A rare opportunity for | | 24, 1982 y 8 the right man. References re- ) They hed a nature you could not quired. Reply Pontiac Press i help ving, _ Box 77. | And hearts that were purer than Help Wanted Female “9 PPRPLPP LPL ISS PERELLL IL BABYSITTER Jor 1 days, 9 to pm. $12 FE 5-6535 go ' And to those who knew them and loved them, Their memory will never grow cold _ Sadly missed by their family. CHILD, 4 Cali 3 CAR HOP, EXPERIENCED AP- Funeral Directors 4 ly in person, Frost Top Drive In, BBR LPL LOE POD N NLOLOL OA tie Ww Huron GRILL GIRL, EXPERIENCED. Donelson-Johns “ssa, Avelyn, person. Fre Top Drive In, 3118 W Huron, EXPERIENCED "BARMAID MUST bave ref. Between 21-35 Steady job, very good pay for the right FUNERAL BOME _“Designes ior Funersis SPARKS GRIFFIN CHAPEL , Ww rights Apply betwee fhoughttul Service FE 2-584) rhe vor ae Spatatore’ % Bar. ' € N Cdas COATS . EXPERIENCED DISH WASHER, | FUNERAL HOME also part time weekend night Drayton Plains OR 31781 kitchen help. 577 Auburn Ave HOUSEKEEPER AGE 30-50. LIVE in, care of 5-year old boy. Cail Voorhees-Siple after 5 p.m OR_3-2328 ; : : HEN HELP FOR PULL TIME FUNERAL HOME _ EITCHEN HELP Fo! ; vening work $171 ®Otixie Hwy ambulance Service Plane or Motor Closed Mon a | FE 2-8378 __— MATURE, RESPORSEBLE WOMAN met / to help care dor children visitin ____ cemetery Lots ee Pose te during ant. nm € gs aati PERRY it, PARK cemetery 28,0" Y get Gt Tee ee 6 grave lot. Will divide. | DESpoNSIBLE WOMAN. SCHOOL- etn... a aged children, 6 hours day. Vicin- ee = ity of Orescent Lake. Call after, 6 pm /FE 4-2485 . > ’ WHITE LADY TO LIVE IN CARE BOX REIITIES \ of hose and children $18 a wk At 10 a.m. Today there | woman FOR GENERAL OFFICE | FE 2776 Must Itke detailed. clerical , wo were replies at tang wort Typing required. Write offi follow pntiac Press Box 101, giving eo im the "6 age, education, job experience & boxes: family status Woman” TO LIVE IN. DO LIGHT housework and care for 2 school- aged children, Must need home Reply Box 95, Pontiac Press. WHITE OR COLORED WITH Own | * 3, 17, 34, 35, 70, 75, 82, is &3, 101, 116, 117, 119. ; transportation for housework and- i} or sewing by the day EM 3-4465 asp WOMAN FOR LIGHT HOUSE- aa ate work ard babysitting. more for ‘ home than wages. references. i Days ca.l Jack Hodge. FE 5-4101 The Pontiac Press Evenings REpublie 2-8557. ESTABLISHED WATKINS | ROUTE | available Full or pert time Av erage $250 per br 80 N Perry 830 to 11:% am | ' DIAL FE 2-8181 From 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. All errors should be re- -ported immediately. The without children. Husband do ress assumes 80 respon- anitor work in exchar for nice sibility for errers other artment. Can keep bis regular than to cancel the charges job Wife to assist doctor in for that portion /of the first medical clinic-- References /te- insertion of the advertise quired. For interview call MEl- ment which has been ren- rose 17-7281, Holly dered valueless through the error When, cancellations are mace be sure to get . your ‘‘kill+/ number.” No ] adjustments be given without 1t f Employment. Agencies 9 wil EVELYN EDWARDS VOCATIONAL COUNSELING SERVICE 2412 EAST HURON SUITE 4 FE 40584—FE 4-1429 ' Closing fime for advertise- ments containing type sizes larger than regular agate type is 42 o'clock noon the day previous to publication. we ~ RECEPTIONIST Aged 22-35 with good typing and NOTICE TO ‘ Lapel light shorthand for downtown Th ahs tor cancelle- office, Some public contact. Mid- to of (ransient. Want, Ads §! est Employment, | 406 Pontiac | ts now 9 am. the day of | State Bank Bidg. PE 5-9227. publication after the first ¥ Work Wanted Male 11! ns . | —a~ PRLPLLPP LLLP LLLP ¢e usey WANTS WORK OF ANY ind, have car & tools for most CASH WANT AD RATES. | | jobs ine $1.50-hour. Call UL 2-3584. os 1 - Da er Paes sige’ tt *S 2 | A-l CARPENTER WORK NEW 3 1.50 297 4.50 / and repair, PE 4-4210 4 2 06 3.84 5.76 A-l] PAINTING AND WALL PA- i “§ 2.50 4 $2 | ring. FE 2-4721 6 300 5 | BOOKKEBPING ALL TAKE ’ 7 350 6.30 1888 . | BOOKRESFING, Att LL TAXES — $0 ase) io) i242) | CABINET MAKER AND CARPER. 10 5.00 9.00 13.80 | ter. Kitchen a specialty, FE, | 4-6000. An additional’ charge of | CARPENTER WORK OF ANY $0c will be made for use of , Kind Reasonable. Call after Pontiac Press box numbers. i | om, © | Man WEEDS wo! DESPERA eecenr en encancencemcen cen tf any kind SPE 401i? __! Help Wanted Male 6 “Work Wanted Female 12) AUTO SALESMAN, NEW OR USED | 2 WOMEN WANT WALL WASH- for one of the hottest, cars who | _fog & house cleaningFE) 3-7581. could queify for sales manager. BOOKKEEPER AND OF FICE! State age, qualifications whether manager desires permanent -posi- | | able to work on commission or! tion with local firm. Best ref- ' salary. Full information first jet- erences Write Box 114 Pontiac ter. Apply Pontiac Press Box 67. Press EXPERIENCED GROCERY STOCK GIRL. 17 WOULD 1 LiKE : CASHIER | | man, Apply Pontiac Press Box #2 _Work, days. FE 5~1620 By Dick Turner. CARNIVAL alll ave made up- my mind to accept Edgar as ‘a. ‘a steddy if ‘it ever =e to the = where ‘t Ihave ‘no other por F ‘ \ } : (iar) r | * EXPERI Apply Mitchell paners. Orchard Lake Read, leorner . _Hel Wanted “8 FOR WANT ADS jp wee LOOKING FOR A JOB IF sO write Pontiac _Press_ Box 7 1 MIDDLEAGED. MARRIED COUPLE | i ENE To sell a ,- , NGS & LOAN A iN. +75 W. Huron 8t. AN ARGN The _Wanted Real Estate 36 nae OPO Dt | WANTED LAND CONTRACTS ~ Farms and Lake property. Don't lose your e. We.can‘ sell it oo oe | RONTNOS.. SUPERIOR - QUALITY A-l Pa tga SERVICE | } | | | R FE 5-3458 | HAULING & RUBS Tas. NAME | __your price.. Any tim FE | HAULING AND ——— $2 joad. Anytime PE 40266. AND HEAVY TRUCKING. i | MiMBOGRAPHING. av SEC. tetartal service EM | WASHINGS. AND OME PICK. up and deliver, FE 4-6429. WASHINGS AND FRONINOS. PICK | up and deliver. FE 5-9124 WALL WASHING. HOUSECLEAN- ‘Fubbish, fill dirt, grading. sand. | ing, ironing. \by the day $1 br.) gravel and front end joadlag. PE for you. ‘and transportation, Experienced... 2-2 > Paul M. Jones, Real | Est. | _ FE 5-8321 _ UNWANTED ARTICLES PICKED | 832_W. Huron | __up free of charge. FE 5-4638 Al Building Service 13” Q'DELL CARTAGE | “L, CASH unlding rvic 439) O'DELL CARTAGE | te ONT 1g at nO tn “| on ne m y guic » ca A-l. FLOOR SANDING. witt — | Local Onn oe ance, moving. us, Immediate action. , the floor sander. } 5-3722. | WICKERSHAM Peer | 1195 WEST MAPLE MAY fui 6.6250 | | Painting | & Decorating 23 Ae i CARPENT ER AND CABINET | <= ork, Winter rates. Work guar- ‘CASH anteed OR 3-8748. 1ST CLASS PAINTING AND DEC | — Al CARPENTRY —- orating. Cash or terms. L! 48 HOURS Additions — Basements | Soreness — KOU 4 Attics — Garage | ]ST CLASS DECORATING, PA | HOME — EQUITY — OBT MY BID 1 FIRST - F ‘ing and wall papering. FE 4 WRIGHT-VALUET | A LADY i ea DECORATOR. | FE 54-0692 PE 5-0441 | rey cei ; “COMMERCIAL | « Papering PE 8-034 i Gl iD F { & industrial iso and geD. A-] PAINTING & 0 oR A TING i Gl AN HA contracting Also store fromt re-' Paper removed. PE~$-6018. ! ASH FOR YOUR HO moteitag. John W. Caples, MY ectemccorentte | WE TRAD ; Ast PAINTING INTERIOR, EX. 1128, riot 10. r cont disc. for cash. | DORRIS & SON R i a-1 BRICK BLOCK AND. CEMENT | Gueran FE 49205.) W. Suro PE. 4-1557 work, Also fireplace, OR 3- ATTICS, OUR SPECIALTY, LOW- | 4p PAINTING. & & DECORATING rs’ experience. Betsina» WILL PAY CASH 26 yea: © $5,000 for small home. 1 Free cotimates. Phone U est prices. free plans and spec | 1 P38, t __ELWOOD REALTY. FB 4-5203 { EM 3-0333. ; | a en | PAINTING, PAPERING. WALL “ AL, TYPEs oF MASONRY | } j din ETES OOF ga ito | Sea, BE ammeree = * | Rent Apts. Furnished. 37 mere mercias, * | PATerTWe ~FienS, REMOV- . 7 ALUMINUM SIDING. gmnine re. al. Wasting. FE 22312. {* Paar wares} Oe hen re RIvATs vist | PAINTING. INT. & EXT. PAPER |] RM. & KITCHENETTE. TV. PVT. AS A GROUP OP BUILDERS WE! qian? ***° Pson. _bath & entr. N. end. PE 2-43%6. offer low prices through volume | 1 BoA. PRIV. ENT. SHOWER. | purchases on custom ‘‘Quality | _ Television” Service 24 ist fir. 3 apts. We specialise in Built" homes — 800 plans We'll | AAPL bachelors. t eT aie c, secure mortgage. No obligation | CREST TV & RADIO, i HOUR | _ Tose. ester, Birmingham. Pe ; __service. FE 5-6 Builders Exchange | DAY OR aa SERVICE. | “se 1 a nom Ae est GaLrrims. TE AULLDGEING 6 TRUCE. ee Soltek | OOM, SND SCRE ZING & a | 1 eat, hot and c water furn- SLL 5-2853 | JENSEN'S TV SERVICE. APTER-| ished, 290 N. Paddock. Adults | BRICK. BLOCE . eee ‘STONE | noon & evening. Call FE. 2-0495.— one. work. Commercial and residential. | WALEER & GARY BAttO & TV.}i BEDRM. *;LAKE FRONT We are insured. Bill Hibler, OR | FE 8- M_ Jeroen | apes? Partly furnished. OR 3-9105. 3-71 i8T PL, NEAR MIRACLE MILE. BASEMENTS WATERPROOFED | Upholstering 25 | “clean 3 rooms & b $55 & up. Work guaranteed. vree estimates. | PLA IAIAE AEE“ | BED 4-3369 or FEL 31370. _ > PE ¢0071 | EAKLE’S CUSTOM UPHOLSTER- | 2 LARGE ROOMS CLEAN. GOM- CEMENT Ig OUR SPECIALTY., ‘ing. 6174 Cooley Lake Rd. EM | pletely furh. $11 weekly. 342 O:- Floors, basements. EM 3-4879. 3-2641. __ . + chard Lake Ave TOM HOMEs BY LICENSED | AL'S UPHOLSTERING 2 RMS. & BATH, UTIL. PAID. cDuilder. Free es EUGENE PE 4-8797 #2. 50 Bs. wk. Eastside, in city DRY WALL TAPING AND FINISH- THOMAS UPHOLSTERING OR 3 ing. Free estimates. OR 3-0888 297 NORTH PERRY ST. NE GROUND || FLOOR. PVT RY WALL TAPING AND FINISH- F -88R88 ent ults Pine. Pree estimates. FE_8-6781. E 5 2 LARGE ROOM BASEMENT ELECTRICAL SERV. FREE EST Lost and Found 26 ' pyartmons. Frivete pit Ons oe. 5438 | ree APRA S TNEY Electric, FE 5-943 Gingellville. FE 5-1927. —ENEARL® CONSTRUCTION Pale. eth AND WHITE >~ ROOMS AND BATH” NICELY ~ furnish West side. Adjacent Garages. addittons, cabinets & ete. _ _EM_ 3-360 _| LOST: NEAR PONTIAC LAKE 21! to high sehool. 102 Washington ELECR PC AL CONTRACTOR. year old Walker foxhounds, fe- | ® OR 2 CLRAN RP Construction and maintenance. | male, 22 in. tall, 1 lemon 3 or duis FE 5318. CLOSE Ed Connup Electric, UL 2-3902 white; other black and white Avith tan head. Very shy nature, Ad- ‘dress and phone noon ollar. | 12 FAMILY APARTMENT, DOWN: stai furnish 3 rs and bath each. Gas Heat 3 Hill FREE ESTIMATES ON WIRING, | heaters. and iryens FE So RB. Munro Reward. PE 5-635. FE 41478. | Street. Electric Co.. 1080 W. Huron. | LOST OR STRAYED IN SYLVAN | - = | GEAUATING— TRENGHING | Manor vicinity, 3. mo/ German 2 ROOMS. UTILITIES PAID. NEW: ee AOAING - EM 3-088) | _Shepberd, FE 2.2326 oy FE 50524 !y decorated. ground floor. pri. HOME GARAGE, CABINS, ADDY. | ORT a ott Ae AMS, BEAGLE | line. F "42004. oe | tions. Licensed builder FHA — : I COZY RMS. CLEAN. NORTON. _Terms, PE 4¢-6908_ per, Park, W. W. Hall. FE ort en HOUSE MOVING i PULLY wir paRTY WHO HAS LITTLE ? .& 3.RMS. PVT BATH. APPLY __equipped 450. L.A. YOUNS. “white dog please let Kim out so | 7 Clark. __ KEITH CG STE GWART he'll hn Cnmens 8 Mel- | 2 Cy AJ 7 OR 2 MEN. $10 WK ro: y, ie s ONTRACTOR, ,Li-| mn - BUILDING sidentinl Commercial, | _Mon Eve. /FE_5-7 3” LARGE RMS. 387 OSMUN, Industrial, Winter Remodeling ; _ Notice & Pe-senals 27 _ __FE 44750. Crew Available Ph. FE $-0782. ROOMS. NEAR TEL-HURON. ; FIN ANCING — AVAILABLE a PaIvarTe DETECTIVES Overlooking rk Redecotated | MONEY FOR REMODELING NEW Don't worry. Know the facts. Ex- | Adults only 2-0574. | eonstrietion, repairs. See SEA- perte shadow'ng. FE 5-5201 \3 ROOMS. PARTLY “PURN. $30 BOARD FINANCE co. 1185 Ne | ANY “GIRL OR “WOMAN. NEED- _Mo, In Lake Orion. FE 3-7212 Perry St. FE a THPNG DOWN js cmealy advisor Frone Fe B+ 3 ROOMS, PVT. BATH, GAS- HEAT. « NOTH G = V er p.m. or no an _FE “4-0808. Remodeitng , Wayne B: Hall | er, PE 28134. Confidential 3° RMS. PVT. ENT. & BATH. OR 3-8813 K AEROTREDS ¢ | Baby welcome. FE 5-5668. 3 ROOMS ED. OUTS NAPP SHOE | floor. Utilities entrance Pirst PLASTERING, NEW & - Rerain/ 74 furnished, FE 4-6548. Rd. Vern—Keller. UL 2-1746. Fred Herman OR 3-1593 3740 Joslyn , ALL MAKES OF FOUNTAIN Fans | repaired by factory trained man at our office. Ceperes Prititing a: | Office Sy iy hone re 7s giss. { tence St. APPLIANCE PARTS 96 wit Ae AVE. FE _.2-4021 | LOSE R. G SNYDER FLOOR LAvIWG, DAINTY MAID SUPPLIES — 139) | Sasa. “And finishing. Phone’ FE) Menominee. Mrs. Wallace, FE} ROOM APT. 323 N. SAGINAW. - | sees Call FE 41039. ~ ROOF REPA Te HAYRIDES FOR ALL OCCASIONS ‘3 RMS. ERB APTS. 119 STATE ‘ST | EAVESTRODORINS | rae Ser 9 ROCHETING. ee is OFFER GFE FO FU ERING & REPAIR — {3 LG RN. | PLARTERING a REPAIR RAS. | and. sowing OR’ 3.9900 16 RMS. UPPER. | | TO BUILD OR REMODEL. NEL- iF YOU NEED S000 FOR ANY 7. RMS. PVT. BATH “& ENTR. son Building to FE 40681. __ | ABOARD FINANCE . vou | 21988 TRERCHING EXCAVATING FOR _N. Perry 8-966 | 3-LGE. nae * GODERN- CLEAN, ic tanks, Pield tile, footie - - PE! —— } Wiln acto. heat. Convenient to { ditches and ‘boat well. uL IN" DEBT? | reo or bus, Couple only. ee 1 Sapotes “ . ‘3 oy! ge © BATH. 31 STOWELL, eae a IP SO) 5 kaos, ENED rau € - ; ; men riva’ a arage.< ee FINANCE, * 188 N. Perry LET US / | Adults only 104 TAY ae Busin “Service 15 |? vate. 2nd floor tat Pon. 1! | va floor, ic “on ry Business service’ Give You 1 Place to ‘Pay | Sees etpeerts. Building = 1,000 EMBOSSED Business| Ease Y Mi 4 OF. | "cards, $3.99, postage paid. Write | aa Gur nd i ‘ROOMS AND BATH, PRIVATE ne {ree sample pe aie chart. | WE ARE NOT A COREA. ae Cae flirnished, 74 i t ’ __Wal . . Houcay Enterprises, 8's Union! TOQAN COMPANY 5 Rows 4 BATH OPILTTIES | AA PRIVATE DETECTIVES | | MICIUGAN CREDIT ne os Le not &u burn ; Domestic q Criminal. FE 55201) 8: ne Ohitdren FE COUNSELLORS oak RM,. 716 BLDG, Ps bbe rs BANK | | 4 ROOMS, PVT. ENT. & BATH i oan See after 4:30 p.m. Adulte “| american pe ne "Greait Counsellors = only. 16 Pine Grove. — | Michigan ‘Assot. Credit Counsellors | «Rug AVAILABLE TO. COUPLE WEIGH! SAFELY AND until: June lst. $58 per mo. FE onémicaliy with newly released | 4-7215. ‘} BLOOMFIELD WALL CLEANERS. | ie Wall, and windews. Reasonable. | Dex. io tablets: 98 cents at figs vogaton | 2 ila. west { 2. j ; FE COMPLETE HOME SER CE, | WORRIED GVER FE 5-784). glass door walls, siuminum sid: | « . ? * | $12 WEEKLY 3 ROOMS. PRIVATE D BT / bath and entrance, heat and util- ing and storms. pa will | : . ‘ttles. $16 Weekly. Apply. at 806 aieernic noree ae ERVICE R care consolidate all your bills & St. Clair. Child welcome, ] fring and rewihding. 218 Er p. have 2 SEI BACHELOR'S Ey poole TH, Bike Phone FE 08h UDGE E c ERVICE In modern rtment “building: | PULLMER CO & bO- ae 2-000 1 Huron 8t. ished. Uhior Pine ag Beatie refrigeration servis. OR ns be SUPPLIES tt but alee m+ i pte i Gesning’ vore<- a0. FURNACES CLEANED AND 743 Over Coaavetly 's Jewelers ig. BACHELOR i | | serviced. C. els 5-1788..; . mre haga ore od atione ett East Biva & PE $4 +8612,” Fea ae ce Ol PAINTS BACHELOR APT. 7 RMB. LINENS cawa MACHINE FILED ings pvibaaeareiaie fun, Wu. Close ti. FE 3-5236, Manley Leach io Bagley St-| 19 Kast Lawrence -PE_2-1414 FOR COLORED. 2 ROOM APART. Dressmak’g & & Tailor’g 7) Ww td. Children to Board 2B ment fase ag es Wid, Children to Board 28 child ALTERATION FE ote. A-l LICENSED . eine e Powtae, ar eure, PE 4 sfeenebnens al H . iF ish : Me tioin bes, Bode, Pm &-005. | ‘Wtd. Household Goods 29 ea fF ul ni ed cae FOR PLL LPL LPL LDP LL Tooms plus kitchen & bath as men & women. Dressmak’g & fur | CASH POR Ra AND AES) a eon tedb saemste te . FE 5-2598. Edna Warner. y Maer vies. i PAMILY LAQNDR . service - a rvice, he od A vite 500 8 eeraph. FE 5 eae peepee amt 2 top. dollar el ea oral TREE e oben * " Moving pot a ds 22]. : LA ee, Rates : 1 tea ow, eet a Tractor io wa paige Open Cale — sonday 4 E. . 4 or Fé a after : p.m. CLOSE IN. WARM ROOMS & bath. Also garage. te 8-1414. thru: aria T in Paul M. FE 4-8550 ome ll REAL ESTATE, INC: 2 te 4 No mone OFF AUBURN 2f ba full basement, oil furine the, furnace, ‘newly 832 W. Huron wn. ones, Real Est. PE 8-1275 NEW West su a UALITY HOME 3 bedroom brick. Pa walk out asemant. 2 baths, a Gar Call for *: 50st. Nelson 4 furnished. . = 1. Ideal for 4. couple. ber_ mo. : COLORED 4 ferent for rent. Stove, re- rator and heat furn. Call after 4, PE 5-6597, JAMES K BLVD se bedroom terrace Nearly apartment. Biv e and refrigerator furnished, Bus ‘at door. Near ‘St. Benedicts School. A. Johnson, Realtor, FE us or Caretaker, FE 43008. —— 2 BEDROOM DUPLEX — Brick with full basemen, gas heat — Tile bath. Hardwood floors. decorate for re- sponsible tenant, $75 per Nicholie & Harger Co. 83% WEST HURON — FE 5-8163 FINE BRICK, LOWER APART- MENT. West side. 6 large rooms, tile heat. fu to month or lease dvatiable. rn per moth. Call Realtor Part- €& 43581. LARGE ? ROOM DUPLEX. of Union and Cooley Lake ‘Ra. EM 3-4881. NO MONEY DOWN Will pulld a starter home on your lot. it. Any size. 15%. TRE LEVEL STARTER NO. MONEY DOW Butid a home to be proud of, Your lot or oe 3003 Save model. G Piattley. -ANNETT 3 ‘Suburban ; * Peuee yard al i fa! — ein reom, | handy tenn basement | Chrysicr FA. Heat wae e “Wi accept jow payment. | Parklike Neighborhood ILLIS. i wen ard, Mes PE ea0is or PE Bobb Move into a new home by Christmas. n down. 3 bedrooms. Full ‘basement. Wilson Real Estate. FE 2-3953, EM 3-6556, ee ANTS LAKE bedroom, large li TOO: electric water gs $3,080. sige a, pares drive, | 000. Terms. Look “Acfoss the Lake Blocanfield Highlands ~ Well landscaped acre HO, beautiful shade trees and > roads, 3 bedrm. bun- | > Ww glen. pe home. Large liv- . room oane fireplace. | penncare | BUDGET T YOUR DEBTS % maine visors, Inc. LAW EB, 3.7083 BIG reece. TAs Reg, US. Pot OF /2-42¢ mene on onan bet bbmes. Mod- Voss & Buckner, Inc. | 200 etene Bidg, Fe 447% FOR USED TV's. Cask record and , | Oo ouebecemeneaars - - tia: A LE OF a wood bed, h an ee couch samt in 6 oe BE 2. USED. 35g fs Sales, MA Sei341. REFRIGERATORS, ALL 8I1ZES Largest » rebuilt “and Uar- seer ret salon in Oakland _County, Sun Sales. MA'S-1341. RUGS »#'xX10°6"; apes oy ‘ green. Blue, 9 xi?’ _ Biond dinette, mise. FE §-T332 TRADE: TRAILER » ie very need, SPECIAL 6X12 RUGS. 95. modern 3 bedrm. ranch psi 2685 8. S. ‘Woodward. vee 3 _— 4.) Neneeteatior ‘or ' SPECIAL | Eailyweed neadboora + aid 5 aaa, Inc., Realtor | chest becutitul new sofa actualy, Mother,it was a pretty dull evening—until tee the dinner check!" ba recre room, fireplace, H.W. heat, 2 car at- garage wah 00 Terms, . ROY ANNETT, -INC., REALTORS | Open Evenings & Sunday 1-4 FE 8-0466 MODEL —will ate.’ Sve model, 1455 Gienwood. 8) Sylvan. A M. Catell Your future home is the 3 & 4 bedrooms. 1% baths OR 3-8071 . JIM WRIGHT NOTHING DOWN NEWLY DECOR STED EXCEL- LENT BU NLY $100 CLOS- ING ‘uoves § You TIONED “HOME. MONTHLY PAYMENTS Liki RENT LY Jim WRIGHT, Realtor 706 Onkland 4: Ave. tt) 8:30 FE 5-9441 entr, 355 Baldwin Ave, FB 4-1038. and Rooms with Board — 43 M WITH BOARD _gentiemen. PE 23-3429. Convalescent Homes 44 $475 DOWN . $55 Fond sponth, ae modern ungalow 8 rove bie a bor. roof, HAVE ROOM FOR UP PATIENTS | _only. OA_8-2833. Call between 8-3. | No end,: desired. Total price $4,950 FE ONLY $60 PER MONTH —2 BEDROOM— —FULL BASEMENT— “BRICK” FULL PRICE $7,900 —S8ALES OFFICE— 544 EAST BLVD. SELDEN SK Tires” 92 oarding reeding, training trimming Brittany anc poodle 4 TRUCK TIRES. 750x208 PLY. | — service Pick up and deliver | Brand new MU 9-189! 1640 ‘E rare Lake Road, close to John R USED TIRES. $3.40 UP WE. buy Lat Also wate STATE TIRE SALES 503 Sasinaw Bt, 40687 81 LOOK! 150x14 BLACK TIRES. ALL ALL L r-6Ng¢ Call after 4 p.m_ aE REGISTERED MALE BRIT- _tany pups. UL 2-3838. Hunting | Dogs 120 bass accordion $50.00 120 bass accordion $69.60 ~~ name brands. Off new cars. $15 12 bass accordion $29.95 3 AKC wn Gorse GooD RABBIT plus tax and exchange. State Tire an joeners greatly reduced for! dogs, or PE ern Saginaw. PE 4-4567 ristmas laren) rT Sn Easy verms—simall down payment he 6009 RABBIT “HOUNDS, REG: | STANDARD BRAND NEW TIRES. will _ banc le any of the above : | trade in on General Safety Tires. | Gite * certificates available BEAGLES, ‘AK.C. REG. RUNNING oO ~ 5808. PLatea ~3746. Lateau 2 ; Up to re en" cent off. Black or! Whitewa. GALLAGHER’S Seats swear in & ED WILLIAMS 18 EB Huron re soe, ay, Grain Feed (82451 S_ Saginaw at Raeburn _ KING SILVER BELL TRUMPET “SNOW TIRES—$10.40 for sale. Used only 1 yr. Phone 1.000 BALES HAY. STRAW MA GOOD USED TIRES EF 5-8690 for further information.| pure Lumber, Wood. MA_5-0666 KUHN AUTO SERVICE weniou SMALL—UPRIGHT PI (ALL TY PEs OP ST & 2ND cur. 149 W. Huron ___FE 21215 tin, traw and cor Will ano with new tvories. Thoroughly | aetiver OA “ea 7 D Auto Service 93 reconditioned $175. . GALLAGHER'’S 18 BE. Huron - PE 0566, PIANO-TONING—OSCAR SCHMIDT | PE 23-5217 ies 2a Cviinders rebored. Zuck Ma- RENT + SPINET PIANO Wits | For Sale Livestock 83 chine “Shop. Hood. Phone FE Option to purchase All. OPP 9.25 ' Chase oeoe ot ela the pur ‘FOR SALE: 5 HEAD OF Sale Motor Scooters 94 oTTE oak oh C2 F RRARAARAR ALAA AA GALLAGHER'’S | GRADE GUERNSEY BIG DISCOUNT. 1959. CUSHMAN 18 & Huror FE 40566) COWS AND HEIFERS Eagles & used scooters ae Sr 99.8 98 ORGANS. B+ + 6 year old, fresh Sept. Ist. 4 year midact cars & racers. From $159 $135.98: si99 | gid, fresh Noy 1th. 2 year old. ANDERSON SALES & SERVICE ‘ due March 15th. Priced low a8 & | 996 % PE 4-4246 ALL AGHERS group for quick sale. Great Oaks 6 EP | 18_E Huron PE 4-0666 Stock Farm. 1106 Walton Blvd For Sale Mctorcycles 95 95 WANTED ; WAAARRARAS USED PIANOS WELCH PONY. GENTLE With SIMPLEX MOTOR BIKE, Prom | Wiegand Music Center EXTRA hay. $22. Delivered NA 7-3699 iHAY AND STRAW FE Has “OR (eerie eae ieee ererene. D HORSE AND COW CRANKSHAFT GRINDING IN THE | car E 23-1501. CRANKSHAFT GRINDING IN THE | ear. OR F01G FbHcoth LE Rd _children, OR 3-4805 Full itne of Simplex Gokarts ‘WANTED HORSES TO BOARD. trom 189 Cliff Dreyer's Gun & Bazaal AREA MIRACLE MILE 6242 Coolidge, Troy. UL 2-5474 Sport.Center, 15210 Holly Rd.. Piano T Organ Repair - ~ _Hoily, MElrose 46771 PHONE FE 2.4924 “Wanted Livestock 84 oa rrr SMALL URED CONSOLE PIANO 0 ~~ SFr Sale Motor cycles 95. in b. Beautiful mahogan fin- 3 ish. oh first $295 takes mi GALLAGHER’ S 18 E. Huron FE 4-0566 _ Sale e Sporting | Goods 74 auns BUY. SELL "TRADE | Manley Leach, 10 Bagley. LAYAWAY NOW FOR CHRISTMAS | Sale Farm Produce 86 Boats & ‘Accessories 97 HONEY, SALE. N SPY APPLES, AN AAO PPL LOO HIGH QUALITY GRADE SHET- iand stud coils. ®@ months old. BOY'S, SCHWIN PHANTOM, 26" “Make Offer, 1 or all, MA 5-1215. $40, Girl's: 28°", N 00. FE 5-1965. WHOLESALE. 80 LBS. $9 196 Baldwin Rd., Lake Orion. ‘5° JOHNSON MOTORS. 16 FT INBOARD CHRIS - CRAFT | _and tratier se ar. ore D Po tatoes. , Coats Re., Oxford. 8-204 _ s Everything fer the sportsmen. Complete gun sho repair of all kinds. Head-,~ Live. bait fishing Dreyer s & 8 i pe A Holly “Rd. Holly. MElrose | TOPS IN wear at. unbelievable low prices. Insulated Pl a sporting "ees fer Chris ig SPORTING GOoOoDs ARD LAKE RD. A ARBOR MICH, Latest information on bes: | BOLENS AND WHEEL insULATED UNDER- ——~ NS MARINE SUPPLIES owe . scopes mount-' Sale Fa Farm Equipment 87 6 Orcnara Take Ave. Je 12-8020 POLL LL LI tL a ~ ~GHRISTMAS SPE HORSE NEW — 1959 EVINRUDE. MOTORS | (Also | tractors with snow blades - _.4 types of snow blowers ats before fal close out price) Evans Equip. ; 3 H.P Reg. $161.50, now $119.50 6507 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-724, MA | 2 wi? (Manual) Reg. $529 50. 5-7878. $389.50 30 “AP elec. starting now $550 00 Execetient selection of new i and used beats and motors. { All available with low down payment and up to i months to pay. Take M-$9 to W ightand. Right on CHA AIN. SAWS WE HAVE A NICE EW AND ED 8 CTION OF | NEW AN”) USED CHA SAWS. | PRICES START AT 865 AND “UP. | Easy time payments Open Nights “Till Christmas PE 4-0734 FE 4-1n2 Hicko ghts - . try Ridge Rd. to De- WANTED RAW FURS, DEER KING BROS mode Rd, Left and follow skins, highest ces paid Vree- : ~~ signs to DAWSON'S SALES Pur Pontiac Trail, YOUR MeCULLOCH DEALER ‘at. TIPSICO LAKE. Phone Walled Lake. “MA 44531. PONTIAC RD_AT OPDYKE _ Main 9-2179. Open every WE os MONEY FOR SPORT. PIONEER CHAIN SAWS AND) } etc. | 1185) goods, boats, motors, See SEABOARD FINANCE N, Perry. FE 8-9961. a night a GIFTS "PAMILIES BOATING Wright power blade saws. We eect Terms. Keliy’s Hardware. 3994 Auburn at Adams. PE 2-8811. Sand, Gravel & Dirt 76 ‘FARM MACHINERY — NEW AND Evinrede motors3 to 75 hors power Larson and Cutter boats. Comptete line of Ma e Pittin ngs. clean used used Proulx Oliver Sales on M24 just north of Oxford. aS | SOIL, CRUSHED STONE Travel, fill. Lyle Conklin | _FE $1113 or FE 2-85 ' Machinery Co. Ortonville, NA BOAT WORKS BLACK AND WHITE sa KIT- ~7-3292. John Deer New Idea a _YOUR EVINRUDE DEALER 34 International {$1195 |" Pree to good ‘home. .OR Homelite Dealer. 1899 §. TELEGRAPH ogi van - extra sh _Xobon __._____ WH) NEED USED CHAIN saws” OBEN, EVES ! ror, Courier .. “3 495 CR STONE. SAND, GRAV. Will buy or trade. Michigan Chain E_2-8033 cylinder _@l, Earl Howard. EM _ 3.0531. Saws Distributor. Lombard Sales INSURE vous BOAT AND MO. i 35.G MCS ton $1295 (OVED TO OR PROM - & Service, MY 35821 wor for only =e per $100 vi! 4 GM Pie eee #e, Travel and broken | valine atisen ins, gency. Bt oe Fe * __ Auction Sales _ 88) _3-7083_or_ FE 8-6278. \'55 Dodge 4 ten og 495" IL. SAND AND GRAVEL. vase WANTED: USED 12 FT ALUM é \ | en nang OTT NO ey SPECIAL PRE - INVENTORY Mhum rowboat Reas, OL Mil. 1s Fed Plo 5 _semoval PE 5.4188) stock reduction auction. Sat, Dec .'55 Ford . F-i00 S$ 595 Saab ROE —<< 6. Sun. Dec M at 7:30 pm “Transportat'n Offered 100° Pickup — cylinder | § 005 OAD GRAVEL, 5 .°S. gelling new. salvage. surplus & 33 Ford F “6 H.__Debvered._2E_tOe used merchandise Also & J8TB®’ CARS DAILY TO PENNBYLVARIA, te ecatk s@lection of new clothin or men, I s' ¢~ Wood, Coal & Fuel 77 women & children will be in = Ale Pe pie, Bonnie's Drive-a-way 86 Ford F600. “ 195 RIESE SIS SESS cluded. Highest bidder buys Free | CHANNEL CGAL PIREPLACK.| coffee. Free door prizes. 2 auc. DC6 PRESSURIZED 4 - ENGINE stake + sharp furnace ond kindling wood. Speed. tioneers for y@ur bidding pleasure Sir line. California, $80; Hawalt, 56 Chev, 1% ton . $1195. -_ way fuel oil, FE 5-6159. Col. Irwin Wilkinson from Owosno Prt lr aks as eh York, van PIREPL. ACE ANI 0 arvey Parker un e, ' Cc Truting wood. “Oood ‘price ArD Sales 8505 Dixie. MA 5-1341.. 31254. 37 "Ford F-600 . 731195" cord 716 are Lake Rd, _AcToss from St Jude Motel LEAVING THE 26th POR CENTRAL 154" cab & chassis : | FE FE 4-4228 or OR 3-0165 SPECIAI i City, through Louisville, Ken- | 58 Thames Pan $1208 FIREPLACE, FU RN ACE AND SPECIAL jeg, Returning the iad. Rider | es Panel .. | kindling Wood. OL 2 2-DA Hee Gee ROT START 5 9 Ford F-600 600 $2505 oP DRY woop 4 SALE. CLEARANCE aod, Either way. FE: or 9 “for 4% deliver vers. Also as ‘eplace ame Tabs. CG WOOD. oR OOD, , white Wren, | piss "cedar ad ling. Call eve- .| REBUILT TRACTOR SPREADERS | TOYS ~ ~ port Mar 1969 MODEL CARS * APPLIANCES Glenn’s Motor Sales DOOR PRIZES EVERY AUCTION 952 WEST HURON * | NEW MERCHANDISE CAN BE 48 MUCH AS PURCHASED WITH NO DOWN | cheap care, re 23608 Gaye oF PAYMENT. 12 & 294 MONTHS / %O PAY. CARS, ta Fm “AND SUNK OPEN 7 DAYS # TO 8 | se nl 7 = IR ETE QAPDERBURO MOTOR BES, LUNCH ROOM ALWAYs OPEN ob ae metre OF, ander. §-8449, Also good 8. HARRINGTON. New & used chain saws, Davis - AUCTION SALE ._—sCAVERILL'S 2020 Dixte Hwy. STARTING PE 2-0878 FE 4-686 SATURDAY 7 P. M. “ACTION” SUNDAY 2 P.M. _ TOP DOLLAR ~ B&B _ AUCTION Rent nt Trailer Space 90 90 | oe 473 Now longer priced than ever. _ St Chev, 34 ‘fon n..$ 595 t { | NC Wanted Used Cars 101 | . win TRUCE & EQUI... MODEST MAIDENS. — Sav Pee 8 < eaten 1224 “I didn't get what a wanted!”" , ‘NINE CANARIES WITH ae at | SHORT’ SAP MOBILE. HOME cage, i4 i 20 x 30, all fer $12 oe St & SERVICE t a Oo . 153 i Featuring i] eet. Sportsmer arr eemer om J he oa | "ore a) HAR Sie ee tle gas Hitches installed a as gifts After 6 p.m. 123 Seri care w ed we sell vour used» nels ni W! Buroh” __—PE 40183 Wanted Used Cars 101 lack males ready for Christmas. SPECI AL JUNK CARS FE 5-6079 See M&M Motor Sales F dollar om ‘ater mode) cars. 327 Dixie Hwy OR 31603 TOP CASH $$$$ FOR CLEAN CARS or trade up or down. ECONOMY CARS 22 AUBURN TOP F este CA mS PONTIAC WAST TOP DOLLAR For All Model Cars Glenn’s Motor Sales 95a W RON FE 41701 it TOP §$$—-CSED & JUNK CARS Smith Motor Sales PE 8-2441 TOP $$$ PAID FOR GOOD USED CARS | Russ Dawson | 232 S. Saginaw FE 2-9131 . WE NT LIKE TO re tn BUT WE THINK YOU'LL G THE MOST FOR YOUR CAR wt JEROME | “BRIGHT SPOT” Orchard Lake at Cass | FE 8-488 Open Eves. | WANTED JUNK CARS, TAYLOR hit lsed_parte. FE 6000. | WRECKED, JUNEED, oP R CHEAP a wanied. FE 8- | WANTED ‘as cake i OR 3-2938 ! WE NEED | ' your car For 20 years we have | paid the top dollar. Trade down | or UP VAN WELT UR 3135* 4540 Dixie Hwy. | Sale Used T Trucks 103 Pontiac's Truck Center Factory Branch OAKLAND AT CASS ‘a CHEV. We TON, 3.000 MILES | on nex moto repashed. Pet ieavy aie y trailer $350 NEW ‘60 Dodge Pickup $1,606 Tits price tncludes all standard Factory equipment & federal tax oxeichigen Sales Tax and license extra imited time offer). RAM MLER-DALLAS. | Pal oo, brakes,“ 1001 N. MAIN pOCcEEST _OL 391 . { FORD, 1 1954 % — N Good tires, ve ery, a °S "583 mechant- | eal condition after | § pm, CHEVROLET PICKUP 1960 ‘INCLUDES: Foam seat, Torsida Suspension Deluxe cab. an Ped-— eri la $1688 / Matthews-Hargzeaves CASS AT QAKLAND—PONTIAC FE 68-4161 | . ¢ Turner's Truck Center BIRMINGHAM 3 Chev. 1 Ys ton ..$ 595 FT. STA ‘33 Chev. 4 ton ...$ 495 153 ‘Dodge 2 ton woe a 695 12 PT. STAKE ‘54 Ford F- 100... "s. $05 Pickup: - 6 Pickup — 6 cylinder 9 eo ~ BE SURE TO CALL _ BOB BUTLER ong sharp HAROLD TURNER 464 5 women MI 4-7500 JEEP -+W be Ger. rH ig i ig roa cabta, SCHRAM. i ae, GMC, TON Pic PICK-UP, A rood ti Exceptional cond 24 31 "034 Irwindale Auto Insurance 104 PL, PD. & MED FOR MOST CARS @ MO. PY A OF $4.99 EA 3536 "Eves. PE 2-4353 0200 Foreign & Spts. Cars 105 RPL lt -_ te al oo ‘58 RENAULT DALPHINE 4 door, radio s heater, solid pleck. Extre may, economical. k this over . CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH DEALER Main 8t., Clarkston MA §-5141 .CANDY APPLE CONVERTIBLE. | $4 Pontiac, ‘59 tripower. MI +6724, Sale Used Cars 106 | MAple | {981 AUSTIN. R&H, VERY CLEAN. er wer lide, ¥ i alle, w L mallets erg hite walls Wg “85 V¥ BEL-AIR. 2 DR. : cond. EM 3-0081, ERE Sale Used Trucks 103. Clarkston Motor Sales steering. y Belge finish with interior trim in bl be: cop- per. A’ signal seeker Wonderbar radio with desirable rear seat hes never ground. This in mint omnditios speaker, been “JEWEL” ts with only 11,600 actual miles most attractive price of $2150 Crissman OPEN EVES. “TIL 9 OL 2-9721 SEE “Cost LESS COLE” FOR cars. ze. or Used, You'll get s a Chry e 0 Ws. a ae TRAN 4 RA- HEA LUTEL 47500. Harold Turner Ford. Operation Economy This is it! A 1958 CHEVROLET % TON PICKUP with an pret eats eal 6 cylinder engine with efter, less automatic drive. dio heater too. Solid grey finish ana not a. seratch on ft. snow tires and very low mileage. as @ commercial vehicle. HAUPT PONTIAC. 1998 Pontiac superchief. 4 dr. Hard-— Hydramatic. Radio. Hecker: | Whitewalls Power steering & power brakes. A gem! ank | | erry ‘Pontiac 2 door hardtop. Gray , and coral, Hydramatic. Radio | Héater & whitewalls. You must see ne one! Drive it and bu 1956 P tine starchief 2 dr. ue & white. Hydramatic. ey Heater. Power steering. Ob Power brakes. | Whitewalls. Year's Special! 1984 Plymouth station. wagon. In| fine cond. Just the kind for a) second car. $5 down....- i 57. Olds. . Hardtop. A black | beauty! Radio. Heater. Hydra- matic. Power brakes A l-owner car. 4 New Many More to Choose From M15 Mile North U. Monday ans Friday i §-8566 MAble Ss. Onen Evening © or $-114) No money down. Ascume ay- ments of $4.65 m onth. ite Auto, 118 8. Suginaw. FE 1 BUICK SPECIAL, EXC. CORD. ina “BUICK SEDAN, 4 DR, “Tae, clean. No money di ance due $183, Assume yinente oH nes Mr. White. Auto. dginaw | i863 BUICK HT, _VER RY Good _ Shape. $300 EM Fan 6. 53 BUICK, $325. 59° FORD, $95. j Dick's Used Cars. PE 5-9056. | $5 BUICK SPHCTAL 4 DR. R&H. Dynefiow. fwner, no rust, needs | iT work $560. FE 4-9837. | as BUICK CENTURY, 2 DR. HT Dynafiow R&H WW tires. Power | Al oi $1850, 6151) ONLY $1350 _ Crissman ROCHESTER TIL @ OL 2-9721 LET US LOWER YOUR PAYMENTS and OES you CAR LOT AR LOT 2255 Pontiac _ at Opdyke FE 3-7931 ROCHESTER ae me) Auto., HS 8 4 DOOR a very clean. ‘No ‘money Ao ance due, $148.35. nts of $7.82 month. * fiaginaw. on Pi00g altes SEE, ‘OUR SELECTION | ™ Beteehrmout-curyaier es COLE, INC. | ied “taken” POMS 1959 Plymouth 3 ae asl ; "$2467 80 = R&R Mtrs. 724 OAKLAND | FE 4-3528 CAR PAYMENTs TOO er i . dio and Custom 300, 6 a cylinder e heater, standa: mission. Factory official car. =| Larry Jerome some? Come in. and us and let us “help you adj to ‘. less BT, V: nen PB, expensive ear. new white walls. ae 9 down. ar 8 by a one Po 1206. Maw, ‘Milford. MU 4175 | ° ie ai | "32 & '50 FORD. V-8, GOOD COND. ‘56 6 BLY DEL., 2 DR Maw abe __PE 2-862; UL _2-1i20. Pe 31642. Be (58 TBIRD ....,.$8150 1959 Plymouth ° rdtop, ~smatic .trans- alae oe ee poets BRAND NEW _ brakes, ctrie windows, isdio 4 door hardtop Belvedere. Ra- waite. : ; es Sno Bester. tone. W. Covers. *$9,FORD ...... . $1995 co 1954 FORD, cu STOMLENE, | clean, Ree No money Coun $1 ments | te, King Auto, 115 8. 86-0402. . FE 5-4680 “4 JEFF 4 WHEEL DRIVE, FOR Excellent This pickup has never been used: HYDRAMATIC | ER, ABSOLU | ry Assume _ Turner ine LINCOLN gius COUPE, ADIO & HEA OTEL LY NO MONEY Ranch Wagon. heater, rea sharp. On: 1954 FORD 2 door V-8. Radio, ly $495. BEATTIE | $806 DIXIE 31 At the Stoplight in Weietors “Your FORD Dealer once een . HWY. "64 OLDS 88 $495. ear CARL" s Motor Sales. 62 Oakland WN os DAR ERTAL CONVERTI- dite full power, ex- telient condi tion, private. Best offer, PE 5-887 1985 atts WAGON This ts an 8 cylinder, 2 door. R&H. Stick shift. Nearly new tires. Winterized, ready to go, stirs PEOPLE'S. AUTO 68 Oakland 2-2351 ‘52 FORD MAINLINER, a oe inside. New snow tires on back ae transportation. $175. USED CARS | ''§6 Super 88 4 door standard | / transmission . “58 Super 88, 4 door, all power. real sharp ee ‘59 Super 88 Convertible, 5,000 miles. New Car guarantee ‘87 Ford Victoria ‘96 Pord Victoria. H ougfiten & Son Your Friendly Olds Dealer FOREIGN CAR SALES _ AND SERVICE 528 N. Main, Rochester OL 1-976] 1966 reno VICTORIA, RADIO. =a ER, D-O-MATIC AB- J, CARPENTER ALES & SERVICE 415 COMMERCE RD, _EM 3-4101) CHEV. 1956 BEL-AIR. 6, 2 DOOR. | PE 2-1048. \ » 1957 7 CHEVROLET 4 DR. HARD- Automatic transmission and | | on ac miles. pmmee- | ~ tale ‘conditio om must be reciated. RINK - we W. Huron (Next to the Rolladium) OR 4 4 54 CHEVY, DELRAY automatic transmission, “radios io and heater. ch Trade and MAZU. STUDEBAKER SALES South Bivd, at Saginaw. FR 4-9567 1954 CHEVROLET, RADIO & HE ATER ABSOLUTELY No NEY DOWN. terms. North Chev. New and Used Car Depts. ~OPEN SATURDAY, DEC. 26 Big End-of=Vear Clearance ~ SAVE $83 New:.’60 Chevy Biscayne - 2-Door, 6-Pass. $1897 1 Year Service Warranty on “These: Stock Sedan cnet FoR ae cana Haat orth Chev. ft Piva. at 8. a - Overlodk Dr. Clarkston, | Mo. Call Credit Mgr. Mr. Parks ‘84 CADILLAC, POWER SHARP are Mi Harold Turner $1295. FE 5-2473. Ford. iosg’ CADILLAC COUPE DEVILLE, 1956 FORD WAGON, RADIO & cream and_ white, continental HEATE RY ABSOLUTELY NO é ‘wheel, premium tires, ' co MONEY WN. Assume pay- full power. hat consider smaller ments’ of $29.96 per Mo. Call car for equity & take over pay- Credit Mgr. Mr. Parks at MIT ments. UL . 2065 Dales- 4-1500 Harold Turner Ford. ford, Birmingh 1957. FORD CONVERTIBLE, SOME OF THE FINEST OF CYLINDER, RADIO & HE Used Cars are Found at ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY a Assume paymen ia Mo. Call} cr FACTORY BRANCH ‘56 PONTIAC Radio ho Reuter $1095 Pontiac ~ Retail Store FE 3-7117 —BEMIND © THE POST FICE Johnson OFFERS ‘88 PONTIAC WON. NEW 9 PASSENGER . $1905 "$7 FomTie HARDTOP. SHARP LOW MILEAGE PR, 305 "56 + SONTAS sTancuiey. ¢ FULL POWER |... $1095 ‘86 PONTIAC HARDTOP . DOOR. PINK Rat. #995 ‘59 PONTIAC CATALINA, 68- “DAN. POWER B . & STEERING 1.20.50 ..-... $2695 "86 PO PONT? HARDTOP MOOLD & BLAC & BLACK .. $ 905 ‘85 FORD WAGON: RED & HITE, AUTOMATIC . vee oh 198 "86 PONTIAC WAGON, INSIDE & OUT, ... POR "55 WA ; WHITE. ‘AUTOMATIC. eee se Sales. LAKE ORION |. MY 22801 or MY 2.2381 FE | ~~ $705 No. Year Make Price [65 PORD V. " 1010) 1087 Buick Bre 206 7 AUTOMATIC, “CLEAN” .....8 608 | PUB 1947 J a ee | 86 Yi gh BE: a m 1987 Rambler tar cigy STR: Ses $ 495 8. | Or 1956 Olds ers 4 DOOR. | = | ois 1988 Blok RP os we OR REN - a seen $ 495 | | 4987 Chev. adr. |. ptoee | ‘54 1077 1986 Chev. He = Was. $1081 ee Bo B18 1004 «=: 1958 Chey. Qir. V8 1035 1958 ; < 039 3 - 1042 1048 RS ea ey e i rep eS ee ewe es eS 2 fone u 1953 OLDS, 4 DR. No money down. Avto. 115 § SEDA AN, R&H, very clean. Balance due $131.42. Assume payments of $6.87.. month. White, Kin. King | . Saginaw. FE 3- Power brakes. Radio. Hydramatic, a & white ~ ones FE 3-7 & paint. $1695. Pontiac Retail - Store 117 FACTORY BRANCH 57, PONTIAC STARCHIEF CONVERTIBLE steering & Power Heater W-Walls Cor- i { "| | | 4 } t 1 MT. CLEMENS 8T POST OFFICE 65 | BEHIND THE | 1954 _ $375. FE 5-2768. rom Minnesota. Sales, EM 55. MERCURY. GOOD xe | ond running cond. Real clean. | SPECIAL, 1963 RED AND WHITE. Cidemobiie. Sharp. Teacher's car Motor | ' 1955 PLYMOUTH STATION A . BELIEVE IT ‘OR NOT! Fs Plymouth HT | 1952 Buick "$2429.65. R&R Mtrs. | 724 OAKLAND FE 4-3528 — oa, Feed oon condition. $650 cash 63146 ~*55 PONTIAC 2 door, blue ene. white, Hydra., R&H, W/W Sharp. Look this over. Clarkston Motor Sales. CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH * - Main 8f., Clarkston MA &-5141 "59 PONTIAC CATALINA SPORTS Sedan, 4,900 mifes, clean $1995. $510 ° Motorway. $675, 1958 PON'TIAC SORRELL 2 door hardtop, 17,000 miles. $1, 850. MI 46021 alter 6 “$4 PONTIAC CHIEFTAIN, $395. oe 2-5554. 602 Third Ave. SALE ‘34 STARCHIEF PON- | POR. very clean. FE 4-773. # Henry ‘J. Good & Clean . || $197 Chrysler Ny. PS. oe PB. $491 Hi we e- =e] “Bta. Wen. 2 Cadillac. Overhasied— ee Pord .....+--+ “ARRANGED Economy Cars 22 Auburn Sa won| "59 DEMONSTRATORS PAREWOOD ¢DOOR WAGON IMPALA 2DOOR HARDTOP “OLDS “se” HOLIDAY COUPE Haskins Chev. 6871 Dixie Hi; wey ot Mis | MAple 665071 - ‘a 8 $6 PONTIAC 860. & Ayers. yer bro aoe" on A 200 before 3:15. a $ NTIAC CONVERTIBL: Sire FONT $245, Carl's Motor Sales. 62 a + $l. of ae WILL ACCEPT or inten, ste, On our . our nies or. 6 good BILL “SPENCE __ RAMBLER. ‘wee 8 SAGINAW FE 4s 8-0402 NTIAC, ST ARCHIET ! ars. . Power CCoabie FE €2007 or 2628 N. _ Perry, = 196 3 2 Dooe & ewer Ee end steoring. | For quick sale call EM NTIAC, 2 DOOR, EW * LA Det, rash. Hive Nice family car. Tade & ZUR: STUDEBAKER SAL: wa Bivd at Saginaw FE 4-058 | 1953 RAMBLER Eats) FEN- de shout but the engine |; condi- tion. See pore ee . ) —— FOR FINE USED C AT HUGE BAvINOS watlani ~ Inc. MI_ 6-5303 Schutz Motors, 912 S. Woodward CHEAPIES th, A-l running .. $51 , A-l running 1 $50 1950 Plymouth ‘Club Coupe $50 1950 Oldsmobfle 88, A-1 running $75 ‘hevrolet er Air HT 15 1951 Studebaker 1951 Shevrolet hardtop 1952 Ford, 2 doo | 1952 Chevrolet _:1952 Pontiac CHOICE OF 50 CARS NO REAS. OFFER REFUSED NO MONEY REQUIRED DOWN 75 75 6 E 7S* $75. ‘51 MERCURY 4 Doo $195 | FOR. _ ~ YOULL LIKE OUR WAY —’ OF DOING BUSINESS — VOLSW'N, 9,000 miles $1695 DODG. tion Wagon *, $1405 $1385 ’ B-Top $1295 ‘$8 RAMBLER 2 Door 1188 D % Ton Pickup $195 Quality Motor Sales SUPERIOR _ AUTO SALE 923 W. HURON FE 4-7500 R &C Rambler Sales 649 ORCHARD LAKE FE 3-704! BELIEVE IT OR NOT! ! | 66 Chev “54 ntiac Hyd. R&A rf "62 ‘Pontiac 97 sis] '83 Beary J. J, Good & ‘Clean ‘63 PH Chrysler NX. Es a PB ier mouth HT We're overstocked with real holi- | a1 Pivee day special deals. Ambassadors, mericans, Rambler 6's, Metropo- | 5806 D transport trom 1930 to BEATTIE | oe r FORD Dealer Since 1930" 1 XIE OR 3-1 At_ the Stoplight in Waterford | 1955 OLDS. GooD ION. , s Me Gnee i oes | iifans, Beat" Bow and sa@ve-on a 46448 after §:30 p.m EM. 3-4155 BM 34186 1954 P?NTIAC CATALINA, 2 DR., SEE THE i ™. a very dae, tial” Atsume ee ce due ssume WONDERFUL | pagment of $11.86 month. Mr. New world of Fords, Palcons, T- | ie Ring Auto. 115 ‘B. Baginaw, Birds and trucks. Now in stock. See what you get and get what | ‘53 POWTTAC. 4 DR., R&H, VERY cha pry, for (no fooling). Mer- | good con? HM 3-446. i , | "8 FORD Victoria ae ‘8 _| 8 PONTIAC 2Door . es epee a ‘86 FORD Vietoria 2 Door . ‘W DesOTO 2 Door Hop. fie Weems 6 FE 4 GLENN'S HOLIDAY SPECIALS DON'T MISS © -Your Chance | "NOW" -TO GET A Like-New Car LOWEST PRICES EVER 88 BUICK Special mn ‘68 OLDS Fiesta Wagon “300 "68 BUICK Special 4 Door... ‘8? PONTIAC Chieftain H-T . PONTIAC 2 Door HT . GLENN’ S MOTOR 952. WEST. HURON ie A Very SINCERE. _ MERRY CHRISTMAS “FROM THE © STAFF AT Matthews- Hargreaves | = JERRY DARK — — BYRON DAVIDSON — "2 NORM HOVIS ~ » = NICK MACKSON - BOB McBRIDE - ~ BUD MISFELDT ~ Al Bauer’ GENERAL MANAGER - "WATCH" "3 ' FOR THE . "BIGGEST" w« Money Palen es Spectacular "EVER" - HELD AT, Matthews-. Hargreaves| Coming: ae | OAKLAND ive, | *'§1-°40 Pac kards | FE 44547 ‘$2 Rambler Sta Wgn. | Cadillac. Qeechatiog . io ED Economy Cars t MAZUREK STUDEBA South Bivd at Sogmew 44-0587 LOOK! BUY! SAVE! PON’ bh tea eet ee dene $2795 Convertible with powe ering. power bre brakes. \ ~ 19 E Lawrence PE 2-414 “MERRY CHRISTMAS To greet you and Wish you the cherriést of Yuletides Rk. B. Munro } 1060 W Huron MERRY CHRISTMAS We want to share our Christmas| joy with frienda from far and near and wish them lowds of happiness This day, end all next , year BEE LINE INC slectric SEASON'S GREETINGS _ Merry Christmas * HOUGHTEN’S TO ALL OUR | Friends and Customers $28 N Main Rochester. OL 1-9761 - MERRY CHRISTMAS | HAPPY NEW YEAR OAKLAND CAB CO. | 2160 M15, Ortonville, NA 17-2815 MY DADDY SEZ: Merry Christmas. AND A Happy New Year FROM Eddie Steele and Staft | DON ROUSSEAU Greetings! With sincere appreciation of your _ friendship and good will, we wish | you all t joys of a very Merry goristmes Day and a Happy New ear Mr. Sills from | ~ WESTOWN REALTY | | PE 8-2763 bet. Pantha “Merry ~ - Christmas and A Happy New Year | > YELLOW CAB. FE 56161 or FE 4-158) a | Eddie Sis .— FORD — 3275 W. Huron 7. Orchard Lake Road FE 5- “Bud | Shelton and SOL “All the Staif eo l _ Gerry Eckalbar Jim Williams 7 Jess DECEMBER si 1956 SINCERE. | Hearty | HOLIDAY | GREETINGS - one ~Te all our FRIENDS —To all our “CUSTOMERS - “WILSON | PONTIAC-CADILLAC 1350 UN. Woodward Birmingham, Mich. Lola Fick ‘ Betty Heller LaRue Keller — John McNeely Walter Nelson John Robinson R. K. Simpson Herb Smith 1.0. “Ike”? Wideman STA¥¥ OF Smith- — Wideman | r GLENN wow OW GLENN'S” YULETIDE GREETINGS. MOTOR SALES Trg MIOHTY, MIGHTY .PLIBAg wise YoU A VERY MERRY _ CHRISTMAS © AND A Happy New Year DOUGLAS HOUSTON SHEPPARD JAMES DOUGLAS LLOYD ossune | 952 WEST HURON we oe '7O GREET YOU ALL THIs way (AND sEND WISHES FOR A JOLLY CHRISTMAS DAY. |] Davis Machinery Ortonville NAltional 17-3292 Merry Christmas We want to share our Christmas joy with friendg from far and - pear and wish happiness this day, and all next them loads of year. SEASON'S - REALTY From All’ ~ ee ‘ “EM WILLIAMS of Us. Sincerely ss As Wishing _ Heartfelt NN SEASON'S GREETINGS. May we take this nity to “wish all of our friends the most Happy ido Beasqn ever, and to { we are you aiwaye at your service, Wm. Miller, Realty 670 West Huron St. GR EETINGS TO ALL OUR CUSTOMERS ‘Bob Hutchinson MORI E HOME SAL ES | aoe Dixie Hwy. Drayton " Plains OR 3-1203 : MERRY CHRISTMAS You Wish A | | VERY | . | - Season Ever Best Holiday SUN SALES 8505 DIXIE MA 5-1341 Wishing You AND A _ VERY HAPPY NEW YEAR To Our Many Friends FLOYD KENT And His Statt 1916 — 1960 | MERRY | That your Christmas be | ( HRISTM AS | joyful and your New AS | | Year one of good AND ca | fortune. | A HAPPY NEW WARREN | YEAR! ~-STOUT | { ,t | John wiltems, 77 N. Saginaw St. Oley Pointer Goldie Grane ‘ te Garcia Ann Garcia FE §-8165 Otis Crane Matthew Scott A B Greene Genevieve Stevenson Hannah Hoskinson tt cK VERY MERRY SINCERE WISHES | | | | CHRISTMAS Ton | Very Merry Christmas To One and All from AND A Happy New Year WM. A. KENNEDY WIEGAND MUSIC CENTER REALTOR CLIFFORD WIEGAND ROBERT WIEGAND . ANB JEROME WIEGAND TED ROBERT LILLYMAN STAFF John H. Stewart (Sales Manager) Emil Dorcak Rudv Lo Patin Melvin Revoir Miracle Mile Bazaar Area “ Fiano Tuning 7 organ repair PHONE FRE 2-4924 SEASON'S. | GREETINGS ~ AND MANY WISHES © | KOR A YEAR OF Mary Frye 3101 W. HURON ST. CONTINUED FE 4-3569 HAPPINESS! DOROTHY HARRELL . JOHN TERSIGNI \ 1157 W. Huron MAY YOU HAVE A | MERRY CHRISTMAS FOR ALL THE FULLEST, | RICHEST, DEEPEST MBANING OF THOSE HAPPY WORDS. ———+————' A] HANOUTE Chevrolet-Buick “Merry “Christmas” “AND A “Happy New Year” "4000 HOUSEKEEPING SHOP | : ot Pontiac | WE W ISH YOU A VERY MERRY CHRISTMAS | LL. H. BROWN, Realt 1362 W. Huron ALL OF US r DIXIE OK USED CARS | LIBERTINE ar Ph. FE 2-4810 YOU HEARTIEST — | CAPITO!. APPLIANCE FE 5-9407 io 7200 Dizte Mighway < FH 2-0123 hope to serve — Merry Christmas! ‘camp omtow, cm. MY “eM, R. HANSON: Plastering Contractor | 20 Seward YOU WHOSH PATRONAGE WH cherish and you, whom we still FE 24991 | MERRY CHRISTMAS May th slory Fill your hea: | And roonlaaly _- - pare. | You'll be traveling | 1OF'S CAR LOT that is Christmas with glee & cheer, ee the many f next year! 2258 Pontiac Road at Opdyke FE 3-Te31 Q M LERR y CHRISTMAS Happy New Year Hardenburg MOTOR SALES CORNER. CASS & PIKE HOLIDAY Hohdav “Greetings to ends All Our Fra Stefanski Radio & TV reve Christmas — FROM © REALTOR seem png nt sansa simran _ PARTRIDGE ~~ AND © - ASSOCIATES Mery (TO OUR MANY FRIENDS ‘A SINCERE WISHES FOR YOUR . GOOD HEALTH . AND : HAPPINESS : FOR THE Coming New Year Teague. |. Finca | “CUSTOMERS, AND MAY. | NEW YEAR BRING HAP: AND PROSPERITY TO ALL. JAKE VERLED ERWIN O. POTTER MARY M. KIRKE ave we been prouder . “ween eee 211 S. Sagiriaw FE 3-7055 SHELTON | » N Season's Greetings GLENN CHATTERTON — ASSOCIATE — DON G BROKERS INVESTMENT CO. > ' To all our friends and customers, t am | 443 ORCHARD LAKE AVE. Ww Ww ~ | Sere will Be Chased ‘Datil Mondsy Best Wishes for | A Move enone YOU" ; MERRY : ~ OF 3-1931| ore Prospero NN . . | boa 8° New Year - CHRISTMAS SO Christmas _ Than Ever Before. | as we wism You A very . US. [| Merry and the. CAMERON H. CLARK | MERRY CHRISTMAS ‘Anda — ane VY A EREALTOR AND a AT Christmas New Year cm NEW YEAR Singer Sewing Machine Co, 102 N. SAGINAW | | SALES AUTHORIZED RAMBLER DEALER | AUTHORIZED PONTIAC DEALER { N. Broadway Lake MY 2-2871 Orion | | | | ALL OF Us AT R. J. (Dick)-— | VALUET REALTY | | TO ALL OF YOU DEAR aoe AND CUSTOMERS HEARTFELT WISH FOR A MERRY CHRISTMAS | HAPPY NEW YEAR | } Cc. ie . Backalukas R. | A P. N H. L. Warden { / RJ. (Dick) Vs ALUET Eo Opkiend Ave. Open 8 to 8 FE 4-3531 Closed ‘til Dec. 28th ly iF | — XXX_ EACH DAY . | XXXXX . | XXXXXXX ; . | XXXXXXXXX | Us FOR YOUR PATRON. | .XXXXXXXXXXX_ | ean’ ir"Gs "oUn' be | XXXXXXXXXXXXX | Wet Ag COURTEOURLY, XX AND JUST AS DEPEND- XX | ABLY IN THE FUTURE. XXXX | | ; FROM THE . From each of us EMPLOYES To all of you OF THE Merry Christmas FROM Crissman CHEVROLET CO. ROCHESTER - WE COULD Ramble’ ON AND ON . _ But Here Is OUR HAVE A MERRY ‘CHRISTMAS HABPY * NEW YEAR BIRMINGHAM - AMBLER ‘ ' b } ee : ete ‘i leave a dicbs acelin y i ees | “flamen Wish *.-4 _| AVON CALLING. . Aa or greatest eat juck ore * ” wr MERRY bacgerie theo a Val- U- Way | at | "GOODWILL". by 8 TASK OF LIVING, DAY TO ay, Sure keeps us on the go; 4 But now that Christmas time is here, . We wanted-you-te-know; That we're thinking of you and w you every blessed hap- piness Merry _ Christmas! Gallagher's is E. Huron FE 40566 Re Merry Christmas’ TO ALL OUR CUSTOMERS Williams Lake Rd. oOo’ WE _ ‘WISH YOU> : A ' MERRY CHRISTMAS |'AND MAY THE YEAR 1960 at M-58 wessoess Proce edit 4 Leonie: | YOUR joYs PONTIAC RETAIL STORE | MM | | THE, LOT 65 MT. CLEMENS ST. FE 3-7117 a _| Those We Hope to Serve | you and yours. MERRY CHRISTMAS To Those We Have . Served — and ~ We wish Christmas could be forty-eight hours long to hold double measure of happiness we wish for | | i | | i | | Maple 5-5566 or MAple 5-114] | F.C. Wood Co. | Christmas Greetings And Best Wishen, To each & every friend. For 2 '60 that's extra fing — ‘| From year’s tn to Your's end. — CHRISTMAS | . a parr ays | Jackson’s Rental Equip, Ww, Monten Pe 50 as HAUPT Pontiac Sales | CLARKSTON ‘Tu 8 N. MAIN ‘sT., Open Nites we ok wok All — of You Al of Us - EVA ANDERSON — — DELL BORGINE — — TED CRIQUE — | AQ Sincerely and “cordially ) success. | TOMORROW — ~ — FRED HAMILTON — - _ FRED ROSVEAR — — PAUL SINGLES — — A, J, SMITH — — ELSIE sTRAGEA — — JERRY VERNO — _ — HERB WETTLAUFER — Tom Bateman ‘Augie Kampsen L. H. Grimes THE: Merriest Christmas AND THE Happiest New Year de dete | ‘Bateman ‘Kampsen REALTY COMPANY 377 8. TELEGRAPH RD. ae ote ~ -E CHRISTMAS RR . Y Steele Real teele RD. bv «9 = 1246 RS | Sincere _ Holiday. Greetings. _ TO OUR a ‘CUSTOMERS Filghis - ; Our Warmest Wish. for : Contin | Happiness! ‘* % Woe: r * — EV@ LANE — j Ry Ry : ’ N\ +» a ~-YULET NDE wishing you Christmas cheer and New Year's TALBOT LUMBER CO. 1025 Oakland Ave. Pontiac FE 44505 2 Ww MAY YOUR STOCKINGS Be Filled ‘With Every Joy TO EVERYONE I SEND-. FOR' I'M THE SORT.OF FELLOW - WHO WANTS EVERYONE HIS FRIEND BL REALTOR ; 4536 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-1251 DRAYTON PLAINS Eves, OR 3-1708 - Ww CHRISTMAS CAN BRING AND YOUR TREE Light Up The Meaning oF THIS Glorious Occasion MERRY CHRISTMAS / ‘CY i OWENS Your FORD Dealer USED > CAR DIVISION 147 S. SAGINAW ST. * Merry Christmas! TO OUR FRIEND; TOMERS AND MA YEAR B AND CUS- THE NEW FRANK SHEPARD Realtor OL 1-611 —ON LAND . —AT SEA IN THE AIR.. No. Maia | Where You Are PONTIAC TRAVEL seca enw. monON : Pag. bi & Son | | meter} RING HAPPINESS AND r ‘TO ALL. . Rochester | w KW MERRY © CHRISTMAS | took x We wish you and yours a joyous holiday season. - | And-while at it, we wanf-~~ ‘to thank You sincerely for your faith and ,confi- dence in our business methods. well is our aim. woe os | HOMER HIGHT MTRS. “15 Minutes from Ponttac"’ | Oxford, Michigan OA 8-2528 wow xX | x XXX XXXXX - XXXXXXX MERI CHRISTMA rene? HORSE OUR MOST VALUED 1g THE FRIENDSHIP AND GOODWILL OF THOSE WE SERVE ; PRIVILEGE DURING THIS FESTIVE SEASON ‘ OUR APPRECIATION TO THOSE... PATRONAGE TaND REN DSEE FAS Wea SINCERE _ GOOD WISHES TO YOU AND A - Most Enjoyable CHRISTMAS. "SEASON se a “"Buss’ 3 Dawson “ MOTOR SALES ~ To serve you | 8 AC iN Sy THIs SIMPLE LITTLE GREETING = MERCURY ~ ase le ~ Chemnet aheiaetehall _ Caannes Caw “Chansel waver ‘y on ® oer AP Wirephote Santa Claus, in the person of train conductor Ken. Trembley, delivers a tricycle and a bag He made his | NEW YORK (AP) — Television present its annual “mahi. and | Pp. the Night Visitors," Gian Carlo. Menotti’s opera, by the NBC Op. era company tonight — 89 p.m. At 1] p.m. ABC will telecast an Episcopal service from New York's Church‘ of the Ascension and at 11:30 CBS will televise the service from the National Cathedral—also/ Episcopal—in Washington. * * Ww a cast the pontifical midnight Mass from St. Patrick’s (Roman Catho- Ne) Cathedral in New York, and) at 12:30 a.m,,.CBS will show Cath. olic services from St. Church, St. Louis, broadcast Christmas services. from National Cathedral} in Washington from 10 to 11 a.m.) Friday. Friday evening ABC will rerun; Walt Disney’s cartoon “Alice in’ Wonderland” (7:30-8:30) and CBS) will show the ‘‘Desilu Revue,’ fea-' turing 16 members of Lucille) Ball's Worship Theater plus e raft of guest stars, including Lucy, Desi and Lassie. an 4 * * Saturday features sports pro: | grams of NBC and CBS during} call Tuesday as the big engine made an unscheduled stop beside Wayne, who always waves to the train crew as is partially blind The gifts were given the boy’s mother, Mrs. Jo Thomas, by Union 4 ‘Men Into Space’ Never _ | Despite its exciting concept — to title of the fourth CBS Reports Signed to serve up to five million] portray as realistically as possible |hour-long special, on Wednesday, Students. nching Pad |join the NBC-TV programming de partment . | memoirs . . , ‘Can Democracy Compete?" is the, Jan. 6, Space-missile experts will, ,air their views ‘Revion have changes schedule Starting sometime in agreed Dn in the Thursday January, | ‘Revion will present a_ one-hour of 150 to 206 miles of mon weekly variety show from 10 to Imd. The university is in 11 p.m. EST. Markham, shifting fayette, Ind. from Saturday night, will come in, at 9:30 p.m. EST. Playhouse 90 campus are expected to send pro- will continue on alternate weeks, | but not necessarily on Thursd night. Man ' Losing Beach ‘Loan’ Nature Reclaims the Sandy Havens With. Steady Erosion WASHINGTON — The nation’s from nature, and engineers are’ acura t+ tain jaa) Prose 0 Dogan at[t4 >) Sare fr Tomorrow ate ilies ee 6:00, Ch Monte (began at 5 p.m.) (a) Bet Your Life, (D Love That Bob. _ 0 () M-Squad. “The | j {T) Untouchables cont.) * (9) Myrt League Bank Robbers,” Lee ] Poe | (9) West Point: 18:45 2) Guiding | | 6:95 (2) Weather. J” 11:30 @) Playhouse 90 (Ségan ative:se (9) News. se igen aes caer tos my 6:30 (2) (4) News, Weather, Te aes Slade. 1:00 (2) Our Mins Brooks, | You Need.” Steve Cochran, : (7) Curtain ‘cont.) b Men of Annapolis. Bo Peneaghl ‘\. @) Sports Highlights of 1969. = oe ee 1:00 (2) (4) (9) News, Weathe ia) hove x “WD Detectives. | ~ 6:40 (2) News Analyst. ~ — Sports. J —_— ao = Tepper. ; ” Robert Taylor,’ Law- 2... 2). Sports. u < ée S : ; | 45 2) A -_News, Sports () Christmas Eve Serves @) As World Turhs. (8) Capt. David ret, “Cam : Church of the Ascension|t:5§ (4) Faye Elizabeth. * 1@ Se tee ae (Episcopal), N. ¥. 200 (7) Day in Sourt, 2 - €4) (color) . Mich. Outdoors. 2 ; (2 Medic. > ve 10:30 hy ‘Manhunt. j f) Bures end Allen: | [t/9*') Bervign of Carele. United iy Qoeen tet a Day ( Mormon Tehernicte (9) Huckleberry Hound. capella '9:30 (4) Thin Man “Christmas Night on Temple 7:30 (2) Lockup. (11:30 (2) Christmas Vigil. Na-|* (2). House Party Square.” (4) Plainsman. | tional Cathedrals, Reshing- (7) Gale Storm. (7) Black Saddle.” “Client: (1) Gale Storm. J ton, D.C. 3:00 (2) Millionaire. - Neal Adams.”’ (9) Million , Dollar Movie. (4) Jack Paar. ~ (4) Young Dr. Malone. (9) Person to Person, 1 Drama: ' Reginald Owen, (9) Starlight Theater: (7) Beat the Clock. Charles Collingwood - visits | Gene Lockhart, Kathleen’ Drama: _ Fredric Maren, ~* (9) oop show Jean Pierre Aumont and his ; Lockhart,” “A Christmas Martha Scott. ‘One Foot in) 3:80 (2) Verdict Is Yours - wife, Marisa Pavan. : Carol,” (°36). | Heaven.” (‘41). (4) From These Roots 11:00 (2) (4) News, Weather. 8:00 '(2) Betty Hutton Show. (7) Whe-Do You Trust. (7) lee Hockey. (4) Star Parade: ‘‘Amahl ‘FRIDAY MORNING ¢§ © (9) Movie. (9) News, Weather. % and the Night Visitors’ will , 4:00 (2) Brightcr Day. 11:16 (2) Sports. a be a tape showing of the|6:5@ (2/ Meditations. (4) House on High Street. 11:20 (2) Movie. “Little Miss i ‘ performance given by the|6:85 (2) On the Farm Front. | . (7) American Bandstand. Marker,” Shirley Temple; d NBC Opera Company last|>:99 (2) TV College. (4:18 (2) Seeret Storm. “The Creeping Unknown,” j year. This showing .marks (4) Today. 4:30 (2) Edge of Night. Brian Donlevy. : Bin ion presentation of the (7) Big Show. | (4) Split Personality. (4) Sports. ; 7:30 (7) Breakfast Time. (9) Robin Hood. (9) Telescope UAW. aq a "Donna Reed. : ' (3) Cartoon Classroom. 5:00 (2) Movie. 11:30 (4) Jack Paar. ~ (9) Movie (began at 7:30 g:9@ (2) Captain Kangaroo. (4) (eolor) George Pierrot (7) News, Sports, Weather. i ~ p.m.) 8:30 (7) Johnny Ginger. Presents. , (9) Movie. “I Dood It,” Red 8:38. (2) Johnny Ringo. 9:00 (4) Bold Journey. | (9) Looney Toons, Skelton, Eleanor Powell. “ SANTA ARRIVES ON ENGINE — ) Star Parade (cont.) | (2) For Better or Worse. (5:30 (7) Rin Tin Tin. ~ (7)Real McCoys. 9:30 (4) Life of Riley. | SATURDAY MORNING of tovs . Lely Movie (began at 7:50 m Stage 3. FRIDAY EVENING HIGHLIGHTS ,. 55 (0)° steditations oe ys to 4-year-old Wayne Thomas of Los Angeles. 9:00 (2) Zane Grey Theater. (9) Prelude to the Queen. 6:00 (4) Californians. 7:40 (2) On the Farm Front. * the boy's home. ; (4) Bachelor Father. 10:00 (4) Church Service, — (7) Curtain Time. 7:45 (2: Michigan Conservation. the engine passes his window (background). : (D Pat Boone. Musical va- (9) Queen Elizabeth. (9) Popeye. , |8:00 (2) Capt. Kangaroo. riety: Choir from Churct of 10:05 (9) Love Came at Christ-'6:25 (2) Weather. 8:36 (7) Genius. Pacific employes. the Transfiguration. Spanish mas. 6:30 (2) (4):News. 8:55 (4) News. ae singer Augie Reos, = He: 30 (9) Ding Dong School. (9) Ciseo Kid. 9:00 (2) Sagebrush Shorty. 7 (9) Wrestling. /10734 (7) News. 6:40 (2) News Analysis. _ (4) (color) Bozo the Clown. TV News and Reviews 9:30 (2) Playhouse 90. Comedy: i: ee ) Price Is Right. (4) Weather. —«D Crusade for Christ. “The Silver Whistle.’ (2) Love Lucy. (7) Sports Deadline. '9:30 (2) Jeff's Collie. adapted from the Broadway (7) Lady of Charm, 6:45 (2) (4) (7) News. (4) Kit Carson. play, concerns a glib-tongued_ (9) Abbott.& Costello. 7:00 (2) Telephone Time. “A Pic- (7) High Road to Danger —hobo who sheds light into the 11:30 (4) Concentration... ture of the Magi."’ 14:00 (4) (color) Howdy Doody. G Off L lives of others. Eddie Al-| (2) December Bride. __(4) (color) Clutch Cargo. (7) Fun House. ets au bert stars. Cast's children, (9) Six Gun Judge. (7) Death Valley Days. so:00 FH Mighty ‘ Jake. 4 uests. (11:45 (7) Detroit Today. — (9) Brave Eagle. . 3 a . mh; (color) Ernie Ford. | Mu- 7:30 (2) Rawhide. “Incident. a 00 ” (calor) ana Reddy. NEW ce FRED DANTG sical variet “Dennis the’ , wc : a the Calico Gun.”’ : 2 re . _ en you| Menace,” (Jay North), visits! FRIDAY AFTERNOON : (4) People Are Funny. (4) Fury. | get right down to it, the Wednes- Ernie and discovers the sig-/12-0 (2) Love of ife. ND Walt Disney. “ Alice in| /11:30 (2) Lone Ranger. day night series, ‘Men nificance of Christmas. * (4) Truth or Consequences. Wonderland.”’ (4) Circus Boy. | Space," ‘doesn’t really go any-| (7) Untouchables. (7) Restless Gun. (9) Wayne and = Shuster. (7) Restless Gun. where, except maybe ‘‘Dullsville.” (9) Wrestling (cont.) (9) Tidewater. Tramp. — “Mother \ Goose,"” musical /11:55 (9) Billboards. schoes a fantasy, 1 Spantsh 7 2 (8:00 (4) Troubleshooters. ‘Swing SATURDAY AFTERNOON ‘the technologic al, emotional and! a r, Shift,” man decities to dig ; , physical problems besetting otr | Pranciaco de | well for orphans in Greece,” 12:00 (2) Sky King. ‘space men — this CBS-TV show 2. Lucientes Keenan Wynn. (4) True Story. ‘fails to provide fresh, different- “ $ Dated painter, i , 8:30 (2) Hotel De Paree. “gun, (7) Soupy Sales. ‘looking TV viewing. . Pa (gypsy) dance and the Bare-Knuckled e. (9) Country Calendar. The failure is in scripts that too | u Below Fighters.” + cert a2: + oe qrametons. often are earthbound, fueled by | j hae} - (4)(coler) Night o st. | Liberty . liche : | 14 Norse goddess mas. . (9) Movie. slanea’ te tere ve inal seem ae. | 15 Labe to Czechs (7) Man from Blackhawk.) OD Mea "into its audience. Last week's 1S araor oa. “The Legacy. i ® Mr. Wiard, episode dealt with the behavior 18 Silver-white 9:00 (2) Desilu Playhouse. Stu- of the first woman on the moon. metal dents of Desilu Workshop 1:3@ (7) Realm of the Wild. (Bored. by 1 Fanc : y it all, she began nag: 22 Individual . Theater present review. | (4) Blue-Grey Preview. ging her husband.) re water (7) TT. Sunset Strip. “The (9) Movie. ~~ (eomb, form) Juke Box Caper,” Roger1:45 (4) (color) Blue-Grey Game. And last night's more cumber- 36 Mang ‘be Smith, Edd Byrnes. \2:00 (2) Orange Bow! Regatta. ‘some episode involved a number of 28 Tre “ ’ a . | “e 2 Wine cup” Ses Map, Tonemy. tant |800. CD) Movie lentist who abandoned his: atheism y i ' $ : . 5S i. aliens. . Gordie Tapp, - Tommy Huntt '$:3@ (7) Wrestling. ‘after his wife gave birth to a son 3 Seoneps (2) Wrestling. ‘an Christmas. Day back on earth. fcoll.) 4:25 (4) Football Wrap Up. _As if this wasn’t.enough of a story, iI peenty =a heel 2J 4:30 (9) Six Gun Judge. the half-hour also dealt with a med- Research , we (2) College Basketball:~ ical rescue mission “that had to (ab.) 36 Grafted (her. 1P , 36 Natives of (7) Amateurs on Parade. brave a meteorite bonihardment’ 2 Ameripen ese ab Auniale & Tagiaa Weter 31 Breamship 44) Milky’s Party Time. on the moon to perform an appen- $6 Chines §°* own r winged tionat 39 Peecetul 5:00 (7) All Star Golf. icitis operation. . - “ philosophy 1 Ei = 19 Pasquinades 40 30 (Fr) (9) Comedy Time. In faet, there was enough ma- $0 Wpochal sree Te ncustry 5:45 (9)-Learn to Draw. terial here for at least three sep- 51 Qualified — 4 Religion strength (ab.) 43 Natural fat ‘arate episodes. None of the sub-, 3 Feminine ° once FH Gnusual Pa Islet ‘ret. sp.) | plots could be expected to be ef. suffix awelien 31 Informal 49 Génus of birds | 85 | Golf mound pepper \ 35 Lacedaemon .§2 Vegetable Hold Up P| ane | sho { - Today's Radio Programs _ WIR 760) CELW (300) Wi 1950) WAR (1130) WXRTZ (190) WPON (1460) WIBE, (1506) TONIGHT | :00-WJIR, News, Guest ' §:00—AWIR, News, Mune CKLW. Tody Davié | WWJ, News. Roberts WWJ. News, Holida | $:00—WJR, News WXYZ. Newe Wolf bP-4 Z, Muste 10:00— WIR. Music WWI, News CKLW News. David See. WCAR. New CELW. News WIBK News. George WIBK, WIBK. News. George WJBK, News WCAR, News WCAR. ; oad trnte WPON Ne rk WEOR News’ Spoits phapnekoat ead | $:30— WIR, Musie Hal $:80—WJIR, Muste fell ews Spe ‘eons Muste a | “CKLW. Bad | WIBK, News. George 6:80 Dinner Ma ews, ¥ ' Trae oe | RK SE Stor i as News, Patrick 9:00—-WIR, News, Mrs. Pose FRIDAY NIGHT | warty, ‘Mu Wror Candielight wwe, Paye Elizabeth Must David. | WEY2. Brea Breakfast Club j ache er WBE. News. Reid * Pi aoe Guest ee | Some cove. ee wea, fe news WCAR. News. Woodling CKLW P WCAR. News. Martyn | AR, News, Page ° | 0:30-WJR. Jack Barris ’ WIBK, Mute WPOY. News. Lark | News. te WIR, n . Can : 100 Kiplinger wo Woodling 0:30—WJR, Jack Harris “wy is pine Date | WWJ, News, Haggard J, 3-Star Extra 10:00—WJR, Must | Wx¥Z J ‘W, Joe Van ch ight Train WWJ, News, Holiday | WPRON Candlelieht & stiver| Wd News, C. Reid fier WXYZ, News, Winter i | Ww Bob Lark Bd F CKEW Joe Van ~ | 7:00-—WIR, Guest Houss~* | WJBK, eee ‘Reid i wwe Holi | eee Sour 4:00— WIR, Compnatte | WCAR, WhYZ, EP Morgan WCAR. News. Woodling be News, olices 10:30—CKLW, doe van SEK. Mute mal Pn WIR, Yor" the J . Knowles S > 1 te u “wxyz. cde Sherm WCAR. Woodline Ws, Neve, "a ad $:30—WCAR, Woodling { e - w t1:00—WJIR, Choral 780 WWd. 3 war satee WwW. Joe wow. raw Shoe MWS, Nes, Holiday WEEE. iebt WIRE: ie ews, Were 9:09 WY, ristmas ‘ ut wis Ww Menino CEL w. Joe Van | PON Tom J CELW, Bing Sing | WJBK, News, Reid 11:36 WIR, Time; Muste WPUON Rite Sounds WCAR, News $:00—-WIR, Composite WCAR, News. Woodling WPON. Chuck Lewts / WW, Newa, enna’ 9:36—-WJR, Chorus CEL R wies nine 10:00 cert. Sathedral lelibor _ army ‘th:80—WIR, Time for Mustc ww Maxwell 9:30-—-WJR, Harmon i ‘ '12:00—WJR, Wm, Shethan OKLW. &. Rnowles ty ‘Sherman WW, News, Holiday - WJBK. News. Reid W. Joe Van 10:00-—WJR, Concert WPON uck WYz, gher WWJ, News, Holiday . WAR, News, Purse WIR, Wows, Bports ‘aera Time ‘for Muste , News, Lewis mi) al ae WIR, Showcase 12: WIR. Time for Muse | EON Meter Mivete "WWa. News Maxwen) ; FRIDAY AFTERNOON 9:06—WJIR, News, 11:30—WIR, Music acaammel | 8:30-WCAR, Woodling SATURDAY MORNING SATURDAY AFTERNOON Carols [100 WIR News. Parm _1:30—WW, Blue-Gray Game au Mirwen wee. Bi Playhouse Weg, Mea » Monitor WOAR:, News, Bennett 3:30—WIR, Defense stare 1:00-WIR, Muste 3 | | i 4 i } + i | i ( | t i | i i ~ Set for Future Supersonic Type Too Costly Now but Certain to Come Eventually DENVER (UPI)—Jet passenger ltravel is an accomplished . fact over much of the globe today, but the nation’s airline executives have .jno intention of leaving it at that. Robert Six, president of Conti- nental Airlines since 1938, when he | was only 31, is a case in pont. Six is the 52-year-old dynamo who hag. guided his small moun- tain. states line into a place as one of the nation’s largest. He ts also the husband of Breadway star Ethel Merman afd has as much showmanship in hig business as she does in hers, Six recently installed jet passen- ‘ger planes on Continental’s major ‘poutes—from Chicago to the West ‘Coast through Kansas City and Denver, But before they were in opera- tion a month he petitioned the Civil Aeronautics Board for route ex- tensions to Hawaii. And not only that—he wants to cit fares to the islands by a third. _*& * * In the same petition to the CAB, Six let it be known that reduced fares on longér routes aren’t all he has in mind. The burly execu tive, who practices fast draws with a six-gun ag a hobby, also ‘outlined a plan for soermnte pas- planes. |senger 8% Six assured the CAB that Conti- will have planes of * * * Each week, it seems, the series’ ‘pest from sweeping them back into) ‘both the standard and narrow -band | gives us moon craters and astro-| ‘nauts who become seriously ill, or i sustain equipment failure or acci-' dents, but are always rescued at. | the last minute. CAN BE DONE ‘This puts me in mind of a hall- ‘hour film seen last summer. in, which James Stewart starred. as| an Air Force man on a routine long-range practice mission, He' was concerned about getting home| The sea is gobbling up gold, in everything upward these days —!| in time for his daughter’s piano effect, at resorts where ocean-front. including cemeteries. recital, hd] ft had immense amounts of | suspense and domestic drama | footage, proving that a simple, | straight-line, slice-of-life — a p - proach to these rather exotic “hot hardware” subjects can make for exceptional viewing. Unfortunately the ‘Men Into -Landigan as Col. Edward McCau- iley, hasn’t been able to come up with the right story combinations. I think the solution may, be found by digging into the lives of our real-life astronauts a little more deeply. And then this series might blast off. THE CHANNEL SWIM: Ingrid Bergman and ABC-TV are close to Swedish-born actress woiild appear in at least two hour-long dramatic specials next season. ¥ ¥ * Jack Paar’s producer, Bill An- derson, is leaving the show, He'll Former Page Named to Head Stock Exchange. NEW YORK (UPI)—Joseph °F. Reilly, a former page.boy on the old New York Curb | _ has|e, been fominated as chairman of|* its wuccessor, ithe: American Stock ~ Nomination © is. tantamount to election. Reilly, present vice chair- Space” series, which stars William) agreement on a deal whereby the ‘hard pressed to keep tide and tem-| the sea. * * * The waves that poufid United: States shores for 24 hours a day carry enormous destructive power. | Erosion experts estimate that the beaches are receding at an average rate of about one foot a year, Society says, . property is worth millions of dol’ lars a mije ACUTE MENACE along with engrossing technical The menace to the seashore ine 17. 684 bodies. Rates run from 6.-) ‘dustry is particularly acute on the coasts of New Jersey, Long Island, Massachusetts and Florida, cording to the Béach Erosion. Board of the Army Corps of Engi- neers. Cape May, the populaf resort at New Jersey's southern tip, has lost hundreds of feet of sea- front fn places, wwim where houses stood and gardens bloomed. , Some dwellings have been moved, inland three times. Unless the ero- sion is stopped, town officials say, the present site of Cape May will lie under water years. * * * ocean Peninsula, Point Barrow, Alaska, the nation’s northernmost soil, is shrinking southward. Studies are being made of the | disappearance of ‘beaches, farm , acres. and marshlands on the | Great Lakes, From man's point of view; the discouragifig med. Ero- normal, © obmeeast CHANGE ; Since..the formation of:.oceahs and lakes in early geological eras, shore lines have Stages con- Judy Garland, hos- Federal Communications Commis-| pitalized in New York City with a Sion has approved Purdue Uni-| Into’ liver ailment, is at work on her versity’ 8 application for a seven-| “The Space Lag: million-dollar éxperimental educa-| CBS-TV and ducted during the school year ‘oe beginning next September, would night the National Geographic ac) in another 2% Loss of beaches is not peculiar; to the East Coast. The sea has! struggle to save the beaches has much of the day—football, I, pasket-|

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