Tae : tia ¢ U.S. Weather Berean Porseast Cold, snow flurries. ett Page a ee —<— YEAR fl 5 B Monkey Survives 55-Mile Space Shot WASHINGTON (#)—Sam the space monkey, alive and kicking after a violent rives today at Norfolk, Va. rocket ride-55 miles-up,;-ar- There he'll set his feet on terra firma again for the first time since 11:15 a.m. Friday, when a “Little Joe’) Promise Ideas ‘for Steel Peace Government Mediators to Act at Face-to-Face Session Today ) WASHINGTON (AP) — Govern- ment mediators promised to of- | fer some stee] settlement propos-| als today at the first face-to-face meeting of industry and union ne-| gotiators held since Tuesday, ‘* * * Director Joseph F. Firmegan of the Federal Mediation and Con- ciliation Service said in advance “We'll have some suggestions.’ He did, not spell them out, but! said. his team of mediators has been broaching peace plans to both sides right along anyway.* Finnegan explained that sep- arate talks he has presided over daily since last Tuesday wWith~ the industry and then the Steel- workers .Union have been ex- ‘ploratory and “routine media- tion.” He said he has been trying to reconcile conflicting cost esti- mates with “the slide rule boys” —or the technicians on-such mat- ters as insurance and pensions, LITTLE OPTIMISM There seemed to be little ground to be optimistie for a prompt. set- tlement as called for Thursday night -by--President Eisenhower. | The President sai@ the public simply won't stand much longer warfare in the steel industry. News Flash MIAMI BEACH, Fla. \P—The Detroit Tigers and the Philadel- phia Phillies “completed a five- player inter-league trade today. The Tigers obtained shortstop Chico Fernandez and pitcher Ray Semproch from the Phillies. - te o® * In exchange they gave up in- fielder Ted Lepcio, rookie out- fielder Ken Walters and a minor league tarcithand, Alex Cosmidas. Sk ee BEELER RE In Today’ s Press Kee Sine cia cct Oak Namrata: Once ere Church News '............ 14-15 Comics ...... becevec esses . 27 Editorials .... 6 Home Section ..°........, 19-23: Obituaries 2.0 6.....65...., 8 Sports receeesceees eee. Q4-26 Theaters .7..00025....... . i TV & Radio Programs .... 33 Wilson, Barl ...........08 17 Women's Pages bsadeeee, 12-13 *rocket shot him aloft from Wallops Island, Va. This was Sam's dizzying odys- sey from that point: His-—space— future space men will ride in their first attempts to orbit the earth, roared to g height of 19 miles. There an escape rocket ignited, bl loose from the. main booster rocket and carried the capsule on up to a height of 55 miles, Testing this escape mech- | anism, a key safety device for future astronauts, was the main purpose of Sani’s” journey. It worked perfectly. For a few seconds the seven-. ;pound monkey, in his form cush-. ‘ioned cradle! was. traveling 3,600. jmiles an hour. The pressure and istrain was enormous ‘compared to, sea level conditions. * * * Then Sam tumbled earthward in parachute biossomed and steadied the vehicle. At 10,000 feet the ‘main’ parachute mushroomed and lowered the capsule into the Atlan-: tic 200 miles east of Wallops Island. It had taken just 13 min-/ utes from takeoff, A radio beacon and a dye marker guided a Navy destroyer, the Borie, to the spot where the | capsule bobbed and tossed in ight foot waves. The capsule was hauled aboard in about twe hours. and the destroyer crew was reluc- tant to let him out for fear of} damaging. delicate ‘instruments. Sam had a 40-hour supply of oxy- gen. SEA TROUBLE For a: time the destroyer tried ‘a nearby Navy Dock, the Ft. Mandan, which had! a veterinarian dboard.. But the ‘seas were running too high. * * * ivice by radio and with further jinstructions from Wallops Island, the destroyer. officers removed the monkey from the capsule. This was six hours after the launching. “Alive and kicking,”’ came the word from the National Aero- nautics and Space Administra- tion, Which conducted the experi- ment. toward Norfolk. For supper he got “half an apple, half an orange and a cup of water. He ate and drank | eagerly. eo | From Norfolk, Sam _ will be flown to the School of Aviation Medicine at Brooks Air Force Base, Tex, His name comes from the school's initials, The monkey was born there 30 months ago. * * * “There scientists will study Sam space flight may have caused. the capsule. At 20,000 feet a small} But Sam still was imprisoned, Finally, with the vet giving ad-' | v. owing ‘boulevard-Adams road intersection. Sam spent the night in the de-| “® | stroyer’s sick bay, as it steamed) Goodfellows Sell Papers to Brighten Yule Needy Families and Children Will Benefit From Area Effort Goodfellows were on the streets throughout the city capsule,..the._kind'ang jn several surrounding communities sellin g The Pontiac Press in their an- nual Christmas season drive to raise money for needy families and their children. Besides Pontiac, sales were un- der way in Waterford, Highland and Addison townships and. Avon- dale, t *& * More than 50 members of the Metropolitan Club of ontiac, made up of city employes and mailmen, will be covering their “*routes’’ on Pontiac street cor- ners, Sale headquarters has been set up at the club’s hall on Yale ave- nue near Baldwin, - * * ’ + 5,000 Goodfellow _ Paper in Pontiac. | Another 2,500 editions are ex- editions of the The newsboys expect to sell over * WORK PROGRESS ON $34 5,000 PROJECT — A _ surveyor's tripod points towards the rising foundation of Pontiac Municipal Airport's $345,000 terminal-tower project. delayed construction a bit at athe start, Although poor weather footings have been ) laid pected to be sold in Waterford | | Township today. ' Some 100 businessmen, civic jserv ice club members and volun-: ‘teers will distribute the papers jurttil dark. MORE NEEDY FAMILIES Last year’s sale netted $2,000. | With more needy families listed | « ‘will try to top that mark, | * * * Township headquarters has been iset up at Wheeler's Grocery, 4260 Dixie Hwy.’ i Avondale Geodfetlows wil) hold did last night. They will be’ found along Auburn: ‘road at Rochester, Adams roads, as well as the South | William Richards is sale chair-| man in the Avondale area. * * Highland Goodfellows will take) up their posts on M39 at Duck Lake ‘road, Milford road, Green Ridge ‘road, at the stoplight in Highland and in Clyde. Chairman of. sales in Highland | Township is George Volkert. * * * The sale started in Addison Township last night and continues, through today, according to sale} ‘chairman Elmer Powel. LEONARD, LAKEVILLE the main intersections in Leonard and Lakeville, and at Campbell's Corners, * “gt Aside from aiding - -underprivi- lleged families, sale proceeds will be. used for toys for needy children, \the different communities, this year, Waterford Goodfellows Crooks and, Goodfellows will be stationed at) "Await Warrants a a "Riders Wont Feel the Pinch Until Monday City Lines Drivers and Mechanics to Walk Out After Final Run Today e The first bus strike in six Pontiac today. . Drivers and mechanics for Pontiac City Lines, Inc. were ordered to strike early this evening, after the last regularly scheduled run is completed at 6:45 p.m. If the strike continues over the weekend—and there are no signs tna i won't~approximately 4,000 daily riders will first feel the pinch Monday morning, when bus runs 1 normally would begin again. Similar strikes. were ordered Yesterday in Saginaw and Kala- mazoo, where there are bus lines operated by affiliates of National City Lines, Inc., parent of the Pontiac bus company. Pentiac Press Pheote and most of the foundation isin place well before ground freezing time. Located north of Highland read (M59) and centered along the main east-west rypay, ae building is sc heduled to open early next tia ae - a bes ‘Eyes Better Life for Grandchildren in Numbers Raid “Ae Talks Summit 1 in Italy: | Police Say 11 Nabbed | | in Two Rings: | Warrants against. 11 rested in a numbers ring raid at’ men 7 ‘General Motors Truck and Coach ‘(0 trangfer the one-ton capsule {© forth at four major Avon Town- |pivision Plant No. 2 were expected Landing Ship, ship intersections today as they ig be issued sometime today. Police claim the 11 arrested yes- ROME (AP) President Ei-, ‘senhower discussed Western sum- at GMC Plant Were mit prospects today with Italy's) The persistent downpour Premiér after pledging to strive! | |for “a better life” jchildren than he had himself. Eisenhower, despite Rome's continuing rain, met with Prime Segni:to review decisions expect- ed at the Paris Western summit talks Dec. 19. The conference with Seni Eisenhower's second since terday were members of two, numbers “rings operating in the _ plant, | They were arrested for inves- tigation of conspiracy to vielate state gambling laws. According to Lt. William Nesbitt. head of the vice squad, the rings were doing an. estimated $50,000 business yearly, CALLED RINGLEADERS | Ringleaders of the two groups, according to Nesbitt, were Claude «Day, 32, of 180 Quick St., and, Robert L. McNeary, 36, ‘of -431 Raeburn St. Police said, McNeary's, group | operated in the sheet metal di- vision of the plant, Day's in the | truck division, Other alleged members of Mc- Neary’s ring~ arrested Were: Side Dr.; ‘Luther St.: 90 Draper Ave.; ‘Millan, 50, 361 Ferry St; George Ford, 65, 491 Harold Mozingo, 39, Claude H, Me- John) for any effects his initiation into, and childrens’ Christmas parties in| A. Freeman, 49, 827 Alberta St.; (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) 000 Fete Top. Michigan Democrats, at- "fending a birthday testimonial din- ner for U.S. Senator Philip A. Hart, tion that birth control would be an issue in picking the 1960 presi- dential candidate. * * * The prediction came from Min- nesota’s freshman Democratic sen- ator,.Eugene J. McCarthy, fea- tured speaker at the diriner last night in Detroit's Sheraton-Cadil- lac Rotel. McCarthy told the Democratic crowd of 300 Wwho paid $35 a - plate to honor Hart that the jan- “Tf ine Like one ‘NOT CAMP, i CAN AIGN ISSUE. Mcciaany pic the Seth Eettsct controversy would come cons a lB tec a campaign issue, (D-Mich), heard a predic- Sen. Philip Hart at Dinner * “ins with peruay 4 C, e Philip A. Hart (left). is presented with birt Eugene J. Necarty (Sim) at» temo “day cae om of sr Bray y Sem, en Se a ee: Charles Milliman, 55, 736 River-) iiving in Rome Friday, tasted | nearly two hours at the Pre- mier’s office ending just before hinch time. : ' White -House press secretary James C. Hagerty told newsmen ithat Segni and Italian Foreign) Minister Giuseppe Pella outlined, their views on the forthcoming ¢ Paris meeting. He also reported ithat the Italians gave their views . of European problems gencrally.' Answering questions, Hagerty isaid the Italian government did _not request a role as an observ- ‘er at the Paris meeting which is) ito bring together Eisenhower and! for his grand- self on this 22,000-mile tour to | | three continents. which | attended his arrival Friday con- Leffect. on in a jovial mood spirit. Cold Will Arrive After Departure of Rain Tonight Minister Antonio tinued but it appeared to have no; cere the President's high{ of * He, waved smilingly from the! | rolled-down window of his closed! to admiring Romans as he’ car The order came from Walter P. iWall, international representative of the Amalgamated Assn. of Street, Electric Railway and Mo- ‘tor Coach Operators of America |(AFL-CIO), and affects approxi- ‘mately 110 of its members, includ- jing 35 drivers. and eight mec’ benies ‘in Pontiac, * * * John Sytsma, president of Pon- tiac Loeal 1097, said he would noti- fy Pontiae City Lines today of the Union's intent to strike, “ Details of the strike will be |; Beta to local members at a | 7:30 meeting tonight in the Roose- velt Hotel, Sytsma said, The strike order came afler col- | rede to and from the wreath-laying lapse of an 1ith- hour negotiating (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) Plan Courlesy Rides During Bus Strike A courtesy ride service was: mony and beamed. at shouts session in Saginaw yesterday to ‘Viva Ike.” The rain kept the prevent a strike there, SAGINAW TARGET Although contracts are signed separately in-each city, the Union had made Saginaw’ its prime target a general dfive for higher seeges. | The Saginaw fight had begun ' a month ago With the Union ask- ing a 48- cent-an-hour package in- The rain was expected to eMd "being contemplated today by Pon-| Crease: | tonight with temperatures Wrning tiae City Lines drivers whose | Sytsma, a member of the Un- colder, ported, A few snow flurries, continued | cold and partly ‘cloudy is the fore- cast for Sunday. The mercury will dip to near 30 tonight and rise to 36 tomorrow, ° ~ Monday will be mostly cloudy with scattered snow flurries and little éhange in temperatere, the | high 35, the low Monday- -nig ht oy wee Southwesterly winds at 5 m.p.h.| '4,000 regular passengers busless |Monday morning. * * & Drivers thinking are of using their own cars to pick up regular; regularly- | said John Syts- ma, president of bus drivers’ Local, passengers along scheduled routes, 1097. The courtesy cars would be marked by signs and the service | would be free. “But we would ithe leaders of Britain, France and will shift ‘to northwest at 10-15, be willing to accept donations,” |West Germany. Earlier, the President had made his pledge to seek a better life for his grandchildren in a short talk at the U ‘SS. Embassy. Several hutiaréd per sons, mostly Italian government icheered Eisenhower as_ he visit. The President reportedly determinedly with a policy communisnr. : done.” LAYS WREATH bassy directly, from known soldier. day -in this Eternal City, ~~~ Eisenhower seemed to exude confidence that he would achieve workers, | emérged and drove directly back to the Quirinal Palace, where he ‘is staying during the 48-hour Rome | as- sured the Italian leaders the Unit-/ ed-States intends to press ahead of building Europe's defenses against Standing before about 900 Italian _tand American tmployes of the U.S. Embassy here, Eisenhower made a solemn pledge to “‘try to inter- pret America to other people a lit- tle more emphatically, a little bit more accurately than has been The President went te the em- laying a wreath at the tomb of Italy's un- This was the first round of ac- tivities on his second rain-whipped the goal he has set for him- miles late foday, continuing north- ierly tonight, and tomorrow. | Thirty-eight was the lowest read- jing in downtown Pontiac preceding 8 a.m. The thermometer read 41 at 1 Sytsma added. * x * Sytsma on the courtesy service. said the urfion wotjd| check with the city’s Legal De-| partment before a final Gecision the Weather Bureau re- ischeduled strike would leave about ion’s negotiating team, said various lower offers were suggested yester- |day by the Union — package offers ranging from 26 to 30 cents an hour in increased wages and benefits. The top wage now is ro » Col. (Continued on n Page? 1 Children’s Serials - Starting Monday Don't forget! In: Monday's Pontiac Press, ‘Santa and the Ice. King’ will be a Christmas. thriller for the children: in the. family. ‘Little Gabe and the Golden Stars,’ an illustrated strip, also will entertain. them, . * Watch for them . . . starting Monday in The Pontiac Press. | PIRST. jc A Bio ONE~Pontiac ieee circulation manager Earl N. Treadwell (left) hands a $100 chéck to James R. Lafnear, presi- i dent of the Metropolitan Club. . Treadwell bought’. N: today" s Gest — Goodfellow ‘edition in am is Press Donates: $100 years was scheduled to hit ~ % ¥ fense Day Monday. ; —Robert-A. Stierer, assistant” tity! nent surphis acquisition. Priced a1, Defense The Weather _ : Cc sil Defense Observance - to Stress Shelters Here _The importance of fallout shelters used as a civil defense rescue “will be stressed during Pontiac's, vehicle, and the ¢ity's new alr, ohservance of National Civil De- port crash truck, This is the itv’s latest govern- manager, will urge shelters in Pon-| $40,000 when new seven years ago, | tiac homes during a 2}2- hour pres- | Pontiac purchased it for $100 from! entation at the southeast corner! the Air Force of Saginaw and Huron streets * On display frem 1@ a.m. to Handy on a year-round basis at 12:30 pom. will be @ GMc Truck the airport) the fruck’s life-saving & Coach Division panel truck, and fire-fighting cquipment allows, it to doubic a mobile, civil de- “fense weapon x. * ' HS Th hicle il! be displayed Bus Strike to Sever "itr" syns," from 2 te 4 pum. - City Service Tonight At 11 am. radiological de ves to detect radioactive fallout wall demonstrated by twe public halt workers, Roland Bourke and Ralph Ftorio. They are member's of the; city's radiologica] monitor team, * * During the orowratn, literature! will be distributed describing fall-; ‘out shelters recommended by the) ‘Office of Civil jization (OCDM). ‘FOCAL POINT The OCDM has selected Pontiac 1Gentinusd=Krom+Page Oné) $1.72 an hour for drivers in Pontiac and Kalamazoo; $1.71 for Saginaw drivers; and $1.86 for mec hanics im all gpree eities. Maurice R. Biddle, operations manager for National City Lines, said the bus lines are losing money and cannot meet the Ua- ion demands. Union negotiators said the com-| pay. offered’ only to renew provi- as 4 focal point in its drive to per: sions of existing contracts which | guade householders across the na- expired March 31 in Pontiac and tion to have shelters constructed Kalamazoo and Oct. 31 in Saginaw | in their basements. Ear! Dreasher, manager of Pon-| tiae City Lines, complained that) The OCDM has offered to build the union had not negotiated faith- | a $500 shelter for some Pontiac fully here in an attempt to avert| family if the family, in turn, will thé strike locally. | allow the general public in to in- The last bargaining session was spect It. almost two months ago, he said. | Stierer said the response to the . er, made two weeks ago, has the union wa ti At thet Gms, in- | been impressive. A dozen families’, asking a 458-cent package and Defense Mobil-| | Profit for GM; Alleges Bradley Cis (The Day in Birmingham have expressed interest so far, he ‘said, * * * In connection with National Civil} Day — which has as its heme “Peace. through Prepared-|— 'ness"* — the function of fallout shel-| ters was stressed by Lea Hoegh, OCDM - director. “In an atomic war, blast heat and initial radiation could kill mil-! ‘Figure Settled U. S. Steel Will Pay /: BIRMINGHAM — dice & eee 2 new. baseball donciel at year wait—delayed litigation; Eton awarded to : a _ Survivors $1,250,000 | yer vain 1956" <-the Drainage| Arrow Fence Co, with » low bid _ jn Lake Tragedy ~. Board of the Twelve-Town Drain| of $1,370. ta | henall seek right-ol-way approval! The Forestry and Parks De- Commission to Receive Twelve-Town Proposal » CLEVELAND ® — US, Steel| * Scooting: Corp. has agreed to pay $1,250,000 day » in already drafted in settlement of damage claims the Board, will be submitted from the freighter Cart D. Bradiey 2¥- He. §- t disaster fo last year. for: Comnaslasion adoption af © ps: 5 - Fhe right-of-way is on Coolidge kw: * Highway frem Maple road 19 to Charles. W. Gale, department project was $1,850. Upon comple- tion of the diamond, the Little League —will- reimburse. the—city for its portion of the fence work, which amounts to $555, according lions close to ground zero of the) /puc lear explosion . | “Many more millions every- body else, in fact—could be threat- ened by radioactive fallout. But) most of these could be saved it! they had adequate protection from fallout.’ Scholle Asks: Michigan Sick? Predicts 30 Per Cent Lt Anti-Williams Plot ROYAL OAK.#—August Scholle, president of the Michigan AFL-CIO, contends that General Motors Corp. 'will.show.a 30 per cent profit for 11959, based on the experience of its first 10 months, if it suffers “no sharp setback for steel-short No- vember and December. Scholle, a Royal Oak precinct delegate, was a substitute speaker in that city in one of six county- SAM BACK SAFELY—This 7-pound monkey was shot 55 miles into space yesterday to test satellite escape equipment to ac- company human astronauts on future flights into space. shown strapped to his couch before the t test. Fr Handle 795 Cases; Paid $29,000 Sam is crease, which Dreasher termed | ‘fantastic’ in light of the com- pany’s slim margin of profit. Faced with this demand, Dreash-. er said, management had to begin its bargaining by offering no wage, inerease at all. “There was no other position we! Jurors Leave Gifts Behind at Courthouse Jurors on the 195° fall panel left copid ‘xe at te ny was, behind them not only records ee ee negotiations lo-| iwhen they completed their service Friday. cally vat any fime the union re- For the popular Mrs. Ada Dod- quests.” gon, the blind lady who runs the) The company hiked adult fares) to.a quarter Nov. 1 At that time it‘ . reported that operating costs were |house, they chipped in and eating up more than 99 per cent of! her $10 in a red coin purse revenues. | For Larry A. Girard, court The company had. carried 129,-| clerk for presiding Circuit Judge | 00) passengers in October, but the| William J. Beer, a present of automotive shutdown (caused by! an engraved silver identification the steel strike) helped push the) bracelet was the juror’s token passenger load down to 97,000 last of their appreciation. month, Dreasher said. Not. long ago. jurors pre ‘The union's last pay raise was judge Beer with a thermos seven-cents an hour, Sytsma canter set for his bench said, obtained when a two-year * * ‘* eontract was signed in 1957. Mrs. Dodson “Our wages are low—much toO|with her present that she wen low and it's:time that we bore€jright out and purchased a set o dawn a bit to raise them." learrings and her birthstone of to- The State Labor Mediation Board | naz for a ring conducted a strike vote in the three) “Jurors respect cities this spring. In March, the your ambition. and cheerl il Pontiac local had voted on its OWN|jook ‘on jife You tor strike. The last strike h t our snacks and e last strike here was a tour- + these months, day walkout early in 1953 in a as card to Ada. pttte over working conditions, Bus — drivers struck for higher wages inj 1951. That strike also lasted four) days. concessions stand in the Court- de- Was so Cour Age, ‘out: vour have kept swee tS Frosty Mass Bears Down | on Midwest By The Associated Press Frosty winter air clamped on! the Great Plains and Mississippi Valley Saturday. Temperatures) tumbled as much as 25 degrees in Oklahoma and 11 degrees in North Dakota. ‘The cold front, stretching from) the Texas Gulf Coast up the Mis- sissippi Valley and into northern Michigan, triggered scattered! showers. At Gage, Okla., the mercury plunged 25 degrees — from 56 to i _ during the last 24 hours. In the same period, Minot, N.D., went from 30 to 19 — a dip of 11 de grees. Ahead of the cold front, Eastern “states had temperatures general- Iv in the 40s. “Fell BU. 8. Weather “peress Re eport PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Cloudy and becoming colder wi jonal rain today, Cienay 2: and colder with rain or snow ending tonight. Tumersow Bt ted : cleudy_ and cold with a few flur-| riés. High Ph 10-15. miles to northerly tenight and ; Today in prow 2" est’ temperat ding $ a.m. Wind eeteetty 5 m.p.h. Direction --Bouther rly. Sun sets Saturdey ss 5 cP wen un rises Sunday ‘ non sets oon Ag es 11:17 p.m. oon rises Sunday st 12:38 p.m. POR rg im Pontiac nina fempereture atepesnesind AO eee reer es es: ‘sented thrilled, “aawrs CHRISTMAS TREE — . crowd. of onlookers and six- jwide meetings of Democratic pre- | icinet and party workers: They were meeting to lay plans for next year‘s statewide survey rength | of political st : | Circuit Court jurors went home| This was the highest number Citing what he said may .be a yesterday, unaware they had es-| called’ as the circuit was for the GM profit of 30 per cent, Scholle | tablished several records in the an-| first time embraced with five _|Lakes shipping history. Circuit Jurors Set Records. Attorneys for U.S. Steel and! windemere road ‘plaintiffs agreed on the amount in| eme ° : jeuperfntendent. City. Manager L, R. Gare will i 'U. S» District- Court last night. recommend also at the meeting The agreement, one of the fast. | that the contract for the fencing est in’ maritime history fora zs Ford for VP ; the last majer- chapter in the +, Drive Launched ~ yes | The Bradley, a 600-foot freighter. isank with all but two of ber 35 crewmen in a furious Lake Mich- 800 Republicans Hear t Broomfield Speak of ‘Brilliant Leader’ * * TC. cha, superintendent of the Department of Public Works, -|will recommend that six. new vehicles for the city’s” equipment pool be from tow bidder Neth Chevrolet Co. ata. price of '$7,640 after trade-in. To be replaced are three police. cars, one suburban truck-for the eering field crew, ~ one pickup truck in the Sewer De- partment and a pickup truck for the Forestry Department. The city issued 26 building per- ‘mits for construction valued at , $608,880 during the month of No- “vember. songs ese ns igan storm on Nov, 18, 1958. It was one of the worst tragedies in Grzat © * * Despite extensive investigations, including a prolonged U.S. Coast Guard -hearing, ‘no final conclu- sions were reached on the cause ‘of. the Bradleys siriking. i A boom to boost Michi Con- Probably no further attempts m to ichigan gressman Gerald R. Ford as a vice will be made to clear up the presidential candidate was mystery. Attorneys have indi- jaunched by state Republicans;two churches, a business estab- | cated as much. last night, among them U.S, Rep, lishment, two new private garages The big ship, a limestone carricr William S. Broomfield (R- Oakland and the razing of one single family for the Bradley Transportation Co. |County). ) Tesidence. ‘of Rogers City, an affiliate of U.S.. More than 800 GOP member's The total number of permits ‘Steel, went down in many fathoms turned, out at the Latin Quarter) issued in November 1958 was 19. of water after-apparently breaking in Detroit to honor Ford and olfi-, /8°Y Were evaluated at $167,979. in two in-gale winds in the. vicin- ‘cially kick off the ‘‘Ford for VP" ity of Beaver Island in northern! campaign. Lake Michigan ! Red Cross Issues * \. Broomfield, in introduéing { Efforts ee refloat the hulk last’ Ford, described his colleague as ‘Urgent Appeal for Blood Donors 4. ” summer were in vain. When she a brilliant leader. The Oakland County Chapter of the Bradley was upbound, He said the 46-year-old legislator’ empty of cargo, heading for her from Grand Rapids is a man “‘that, many people. not only in Michigan, the American Red Cross today is- but in Washington, would like to!sued an appeal for bleod donors home_ port. The $1,250,000 settlement com- . . . -_ . ‘see as a Republican vice presi- to visit the Red Cross Bloodmobile dential candidate.”’ pares to the original total claims single family residences, three new single family homes, alteration of said: ‘‘And théy say there is a nals of the county’s highest court.| judges. of 6 million or. more dollars ‘unit from 2 to 5 and 6 to 8 p.m. climate unfavorable to industry 1m At the close of the fall term Fri-| Courthouse observers said this. made by survivers 0; !- “3 lost Broomfield’s introduction Dec. 14 at the Elks’ Temple. |Michigan.”’ day, jurors had disposed of a rec-/ was, one of the major reasons it} seamen. Thirty . dunage touched off a four-minute demon- “Due to the recent production ‘CONCOCTED’ CAMPAIGN The labor leader said a campaig to picture Michigan as a state with: a government unfriendly to busi- ,| proximately 436 civil cases and 359 cases riminal case cri cases. +42-DAY SESSION Actually, about |up serving the entire term, They were paid g record §29,- ‘was concocted over at Bir-| 900 In fees at $8 a day and naile- several age costs at 6 cents mile for their | duties as citizens, 7a jurors endec ness _mingham Country Club” years ago. He said GM executives ai- tended the meeting and the cam- | paign was designed expressly ‘‘to | get (Gov. G. Mennen) Williams” and to make citizens “get so tired of all this we would say ‘vote ‘in a 4 per cent sales tax and | protect GM.” duty. They put in one of the longest Counti > _ 2 ‘terms in the historv of th ounting the jury week ot Tues- ne court. day through Friday (Mondays ‘according to residin Circuit ' , ‘Judge William } Beer” who | are motion days in Circuit missed them amidst plenty of fan- fare yesterday afternoon, * * * “We never strive in this court to in all, Louis E. Fairbrother, acting as- jurors cleared the cused from: further duty’ Roman candles were stolen from his: store. He was immediately arrested on a charge of violat- ing the town’s antifireworks ordinance. ‘MERRY CHRISTMAS’ Jurors applauded. One male ju- ror wished Judge Beer “a Merry Christmas and jurors departed from his courtroom, During the parting remarks, Prosecutor George F. Taylor | praised the jurors for their work | during the “longest term we have | had in my 16 years experience in this court.” Awaiting Warrants (Continued From Page One) “Tm happy to say_you've helped. us dispose of every wt, ready for trial,” and Ernest Jackson Jr., case that was: re |M a Taylor said. fontana Ave. in the investigation were Patrol- man Karl | squad and Frank Durso, 39, for- mer police reservist. lke Talks if Summit With Italian Premier . (Continued From.Page One) _—_ficer for the investigation. crowd down to abeut 1,000 at the ALL ARE RELEASED ceremony.. _ Oakland County TOUR ROME _Maj. John Eisenhower and. his. wife, Barbara, behav tourists in Rome. They wanted to go sightséeing. | . Rain kept them from such out-) door monuments as the Colosseum, and the Roman Forum, but they went to the Vatican Museum and the Basilica of St. Peter, - ~*~ + * Italy’s Communist party today complained that the City of Rome had not given President Eisen- hower-a big enough. welcome. * * * Italian newspapers of ail politi-| -cal shades today were unanimous in hailing President Eisenhower's goodwill mission, Headlines reflected the new at- | titude adopted by Italian Com-+ munists, who once riocted when Eisenhower visited Rome as commander of NATO. : President Eisenhower had a tru. ly wonderful time, |-That's_the way the President |— himself put it in expressing thanks: - to his hosts, Italy’s President and ed today like! being involved, Nesbitt said. a.m. Monday. tody, Nesbitt said. ge ‘Pulses Poe Stoke de R j Mrs, Giovanni Gronchi, after din-) te | Yearold Susan Haun were aglow With the spirit-and warmth of ("er and a teception in his honor! $i 451 Christmas last night as Sustin Switched On the lights of Pontiac's. | Quirin _ othe eines > Christrfias tree at Saginaw, street and Oakland ayenue. She is | It was a eink flair which ‘99, shown here getting a boost from Santa Claus—who naturally was | brought out the high society of t zi on hand for the ceremony—looking up at the bright star atop the ‘ political world, as well as ‘tahoe 45, Stunhing 60-foot’ Norway spruce. ‘The tree, bought by the Down- and other members of the. hier-| 0 a § i _town Merchants Assn., has 5,000 multicolored lights and is the archy of the Roman Catholic: : - S 3. biggest in. Pontiag's ‘history. Susan set it aglow: at Tep.m ~ | Church 7 a ~ “|. ROBERT. L. McNEARY . ot . : = . . F ‘ & ord 795 cases. This included ap- was possible to settle so many taking 6:30 p.m. into account those excused from|almost the dis Court), the jurors served 42 days | signment clerk for the court, said hearings on individual claims and can assure you I will give 436 civil jury|apportion damages. on City Numbers Raid ol | their fiest day of duty Sept. 22. Spells, 39, 462 Orchard Lake’ Ave. : Working as undercover men Kilmer of the vice Durso was sworm into the de-_ ‘partment. as a special police of- Prosecutor George F. Taylor released all_11 | men after they made formal state=. ments: Ait but Harris —admitted— They were ordered to appear at the prosecutor's office at 9 The raid was conducted with the ceoperation of plant police. All the men had bet slips in their |possession when taken into cus- stration with participants parading shutdowns in local factories, sev- - .. a ‘about the room with signs and bar-. er al Red Cr ‘OSS Bloodmobile visits Survivors included 23 WidOWS ners. Balloons and confetti_ filled, were. cancelled,” said Mrs, Wil- and more than 350 children. the air. am H. Gorsline, blood’ donor re- j) The agreement Was finalized at, . ‘crultrient chairman, —a year and 16 days to| “Michigan Republicans hope to “But the needs and demands exact minute of the) obtain a Nixon-Ford ticket for “for whole blood continue. Our first radio report. of the Bradleys) the 1960 campaign. "hospitals must have an adequate peril. She was lost overnight 04 org indicated he was willing) supply.” Nov. 18 of last year and was never'to become a favorite-son candidate Acceptable are donors between again seen. for the second slot on the national] and 60 who have not given x e party ticket. blood the past two months Judge Charles J. McNamee now, ‘“‘If the Republicans of Michigan’ “A pint of blood may mean the is to name a commissioner, prob-,accord me the high honor as a difference between life and death,” ably next week, who will hold! candidate for this office if-1960. I said~Mrs. Gorsline. Appointments you my miay be made by calling the chap- ter, suits were filed. best,”’ he said. “Then,’’ Scholle claimed, ‘they edge said in his a ae! ‘ases from some 1,500 jury and | (GM) could make 45 per cent, oy ; i rene vases on the docket when’ rofit.”” e’re not as interested in e term began ® P * * * quantity as much as we are in The next jury won't be impan- Dope Addicts Better Watch Out Scholle declined to say who at- | quality,” he sald. “And as far as. |eled until _February e iA / aes I've. see | tended the Birmingham meeting | Lae heen yoo reece” quality S ant supplied he reported, saying that if he: . . Wrong Time to Speak d WINGS eqn e t named those attending it’ would “T ‘hank you for your services| : ; jurors said in their permit people to figure out who nat 4 Sedge Dey, Judge — PULASKI, Va. (UPI) — Claude © xiw yoRK (AP) — Santa stood on Harlem street corners) which case the suspect was told wes nS source of information Hughes “and myself. You ae restora “ae tea to police ' Claus has his eye on bad beys and/ the past two weeks clanging his the facts of life: ‘this was not the - _~ - - BES ys ou are ex- yesterday that - cCuses “! ay is ANS) | : 0’ s s & : : : at four cases of girls, -and he isn’t waiting for'bell and singing ‘‘Rudolph the real Santa Claus at all but just a 'Christmas Eve to leave sticks and Red-Nosed Reindeer." ‘stones in their stockings. In his pockets, he carried lolli-' squad detective Edward Egan. The ~*~ * * pops. In his hand, he rattled ajhelpers were detectives Richard Already Santa has helped. arrest container for coins. In his head.) | Pardo and Salvatore Grosso. 24 narcotics suspects. he carried a photo and data file’ Friday, |play-like Santa, namely narcotics A rather tired and trowsy Santa on drug traffickers. _closed in on Kathleen Johnson, 27, ~ —- - —' Always near- Santa were his|the woman dropped 10 envelopes, ‘helpers — two down-and-out loaf- each containing enough heroin for : ers. When Santa spotted a famil-;one injection. Pardo and Grosso Dial 2 — Hear Anthem iar face in the crowd, he would pretended to overlook the enve- SINGAPORE — (UPD = Singa- shift his bell from one hand to) lopes, but Santa Claus Egan shuf- pore residents today had a new ithe other. The loafers would saun-|fled over and absent-mindedly entertainment medium-=sthe- tele- ter over, discreetly separate the picked them up. = phone. They could hear the jface from the crowd, and search At a police station, the woman city-state’s new national anthem him. demanded: ‘‘What are you pulling “Majulah Singapore’ by dialing * me in for? -You haven't got any * * kt ok * i D x * + the number 2 on their tele, Sometimes they found that the evidence!” a . Some jurors watched Taylor's in| (7 Bay ‘Ss group, police said, phones. ' Suspect’s holiday cheer stemmed | “Wait ‘til Santy comes,” re- ° duction as prosecutor Tuesday jwere: Otis J. Harris, 57, 489 Har-, — from the dope i in 1 his pocket — in, ‘plied Pardo. vey St.; Cary R. Childs, 37, 281 cores ee “Some 90 jurors were called te Rockwell Ave.; -and Booker T. ; TTENTION FISHER BODY EMPLOYES | All employes of the Fisher Body , Assembly Plant laid off because of the steel strike are to report for work at their regular shift starting times on Wednesday, December 9, 1959. Deviations will be herndfed on an in- dividual basis. Unless otherwise notified, Fisher Body employes assigned to the Pontiac Motor Division Plant laid off because of the steel st strike, will report as fol- lows: . Wednesday, 129.59 Second Shift nly) | Trim ond Body employes report: at Thursday, 12-10-59-All Fisher Sey Ge FISHER -soby DIV, eed PONTIAC PLANT 4. 900 BALDWIN AVE, partment’s cost estiniate of the | They include 14 for alterations to _ as Pardo and Grosso “PONTIAC, MICH. a 4 -|.Bride-Elect. | Receives Linens - Jacqueline Dubay Honored at Home of Mrs. Hiller 10t . -f ting date for Christmas. The Perlect Christmas Gilt -A PORTRAIT “A Git Mere Precious as Time Gees By" 1—8 x 16 Master Oil 3—8 x 10 Luster Tones 2 Wallet Size Portraits by Varden $15.95 All outdated coupons honored thru Dec. 1989 ¢. 10th final sit- Varden Studio °3 .£. LAWRENCE ST. PONTIAC FE 4-1701 ens at the home of Mrs, Walter Hill- er, on Lakewood street, Dray- 7 ton Plains. Mrs. Francis Col- : Daughter of the Warren Du- queline will marry Richard Clair Wuerker of Detroit on son of Mrs, Estelle Wuerker of | Davison, Bridal attendants present -were Mrs. Murray—Palmer, Connie Hensel, Mary Imbler of Oxford, Coralee Shotka of Bir- mingham, and Mrs, Thomas . Spayde of Bloomingdale. x * * Wear Clean Clothes for Christmas! Take a tip from Santa! You'll enjoy the. holidays more in fresh cleaned clothes from- Father and Son Cleaners. So be set for the Holiday Fun... FATHER | & SON CLEANERS FE 2-6424 ~—- G41 Joslyn Rd. (Corner of Mansfield) 1 Block North of Engineering Bui Iding Guests from Pontiac were Mrs. Dubay, Cindy and Nancy - Hiller, Mrs. Gertrude Kenifeck, Mrs, Gene Shell, Mrs. Ken- neth Hoskins, Mrs. Joseph Mc- Carthy, Mrs. Fred Slavin, Mrs. Wesley Johnson, Mrs. D. O. Leonard, Mrs. William Dewitt and daughter Catherine. * * * The list continues with Mrs. Julia Kleist, Mrs. Norman Prentice, her daughter Betsy of Rochester and Mrs. Fred Kluesner of Clarkston. Miscellaneous showers have been given by Mrs, Nestor ‘Capogna of Auburn avenue, and Mrs. George Durr and lom was cohostess. —~ a4 ' bays of Stanley-avenue, Jac- _- Jan. 16. Mr, Wuerker is the- | By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN | . DEAR ABBY: Please don't print my name because every- one -in’ this town knows me. Now for my problem: I have been widowed many years. ’ I've -had numerous chances to remarry but I ie will not go out with just any- ‘body who rings me 4p. There is one very desirable “professional man (retired) who has been bwiting me 4 ly, I am “in. 3 terested in him ahd he seems to enjoy my company. But : he has one annoying habit that puzzles me: He keeps looking at his watch all evening! - * Do you think this means he is eager to get the evening over with? Should I remark on this annoying habit of his? I wish I could. figure him out, DEAR PUZZLED: Don't try to figure out what makes him tiek, or you'll have lots of time on your hands, * + * DEAR ABBY: My ther and father have been magried happily for 15 years, or at least I thought they were. My mother met a man recently. Every time I corne home from school his car is in our drive- PUZZLED brother and his: wife at five- | Time’ s A’ A MVE All Along 5 Maybe it Is only my imagina- tion and -maybe it isn't even any of my business, but do you think 1 should ask my mother what it is all about? WORRIED DEAR WORRIED; It is cer- tainly your business. Ask your mother, * ae _ DEAR ABBY: * My husband can't read very fast’ or very well. He was taught to read by sight, but when , dt comes to ive _ Grandma Please! By EMILY POST “Dear Mrs, Post: I am the mother of two young chil- dren. Last week my mother- in-law walked in with her thirty, just as I was. feeding the children their supper. She had given me no warning that they were coming and asa result I'm afraid we looked rather shabby. I had met my mother-in-law's brother and his wife only once before. This was their first visit to our house. * * a new word, he can't sound it out. I've tried to help him, but I’m no teacher, He won't go to church be- cause he's afraid he might be called upon to read aloud, His boss told him that if he took some schooling at work (théy have courses to teach the employes more about their work) his chanees for promo- tion would be exeellent. But | he ts ashamed to let anyone know how poorly he reads Any suggestions would be very much appreciated. the Dec, 15 annual Christmas party. ee # + sent to a needy family, + & & The January meeting will be at the West Maple road home of Mrs. Douglas Hallett. Breakfast After * ; HIS WIFE DEAR WIFE: There is no | * ‘‘shame"' in not knowing. Only an Tr a ver se City in refusing to learn. Find out if your Public School system | Wedding breakfast at “The offers adult education courses. |Willows’ followed the Nov. 28 Almost all communities have |nuptials of Marie Flood of Traverse evening classes for adults who {City and Clem 0, Sturm of Man- wish to learn elementary read- istee. ing, writing and ‘rithmetic. ~ * * x *« & CONFIDENTIAL TO “THE |@uincy College, Quincy, ML, of- ABBY, care of this paper. En- close a stamped, self-addressed envelop, Cadillac. * * * The couple will live in Manistee. Weasels hunt rodents and birds. ‘In winter their fur turns white There were nine bank failures in the United States in 1958, the - Final’ plans were siete for = A Christmas basket will be- Wedding Rites —--- The Rev, Owen Blum, OFM, of. PROFESSOR": 1 disagree. |ficiated in St. Francis Church, - Civilization IS making prog- Mr. and Nes. M. E, Fitzgerald ress. In every war, they kill : * you a new way. va aeety street are the bride's What's * a * » oe Attendants were Mrs, Mac G. at's your problem? For |tHallenbeck of Pontiac, sister of a personal reply, write tO |the bride, and Donald Bevans of {Smith and Mrs, William Bow- No fuss, no feathers, not a se-|trast, and ty vard of 42 inch ma:| quin .in sight, just the most use- . ful dress’ you ever owned, this’ ne | Herbert Sondheim. Perfect for) To order Pattern No. N+1106,. straight-from-the-office social life,state size, send $1. For Herbert; Mrs Arthur Walls, of North |it has a seoop neck, neither low Sondheim label, send 25 cents. Tilden{avenue was honored at |nor high, trimmed in contrast’ For Pattern Book No. 15, send _a_Stork x {shower Wednesday at either fabric or color) that $1. Address SPADEA, Box 535, ~ the home of Mrs. Earl Maid- ‘matches the piping along the skirt G. P. O., Dept. P-6, New York 1, en of Premont street. ‘panel. Four buttons decorate the N. Y. If paid by check, bank re- Guests from Pontiac includ-- [wide waist band. iguires 4 cents handling charge. Mrs. Alfred Tollefson, cohos- tesses_at the Durr home on Hill drive, Drayton Plains. kw 7® * lone size best for you. ~~ ‘geRich Benefited i er came from Drayton Plains, > | GIVE HIM A | STETSON | CHRISTMAS } GIFT | CERTIFICATE Here's a new, novel way to give a gift he really wants—a gay miniature hat box .. . hanging brightly on the Christmas tree! The certificate inside will be the tip-off that a & Stetson Hat awaits him. He chooses from our vast selection of styles and colors, ! from $10 Dickinson’s wealthy people had them made of silver, and royalty washed uP from gold sets and Mrs. George Hopper Jr. ape 0 from Oxbow Lake. Sizes Bust Walst Hos. Neck fo . Washstand sets, consisting of | Others were: Mrs. James 8 33 23 34 16%, a pitcher and basin for bath- : : 10 4 24 35 1645) ° : | Smith, Lake Orion; Mrs. 12 38 25 36 16%, ing. were usually made of | George Hopper and Mrs. Mich- | 1g 387 36% 3% {f,,' glazed ‘pottery — but some | { | ael Sheridan of Keego Harbor, ; and Mrs, Frank Robinson of Milford. Size 12 requires 1% yards of 54 inch material for dress and %| lyard of 50 inch material for con-| a Keep Limber Get Graceful With Exercise By JOSEPHINE LOWMAN You can have the prettiest fig- fe in the world but unless you lare limber and have good coordi- | nation you will not appear grace- ful and your figure may be vut jot line. straight ahead. Bend both knees|but they will develop’ poise and) all the way down and touch thejgrace if you will practice them7 floor with the fingertips, between|regularly. Soon you will be sur- the knees. Straighten the legs and prised by how well you can do raise the arms upward over the|them. jhead, reaching for the ceiling. x* * * Again bend the knees and touch tne If you would like to have nf floor between the knees with the leaflet ‘‘Grace and Charm” sen fingertips. Continue. a stamped, self-addressed enve- These exercises may be a bit lope with your request for tleaf-: difficult for you at first since they Jet No. 57 to Josephine Lowman in require coordination. and balance, | icare of this newspaper. Mothers’ Club Exchanges Gifts The Mothers’ Club Group of Today I would like to give you ia few ‘general exercises which will idevelop graee, coordination and [balance Exercise also is absolute- ily essential if you wish to remain ‘firm and keep your muscles elas- ‘tic. | 1. Stand erect. Raise your arms \sideward-upward to overhead po- sition as“you lift your heels from the floor and rise high on your toes. Inhale as you do this. Return the engagement of their-daugh- ter Sharon to Richard Lee Dex- bert M. Dexter of Eason road, Watkins Lake. telephone and he calls her when my father * fhana Alt | | All the girls applaud the crisp, : look of tucks topping a whirling ter, son of Mr. and Mrs. Del- iskirt. Round neck, buttons to |waist. Choose rustling taffeta for holidays. Plain or print cotton for and they are called ermine. largest number since 1942. ae on ep eee “While 1 was finishing feed- (_ ing the children, my mother- [ff in-law took them on a tour-of—jF- our house, a_ privilege I thought was surely reserved for me. Later, when I told my mother-in-law she should have given me some warning so that I could have been pre- pared for guests, her reply was: ‘‘Since when do | have She calls* him on the RESERVE . . Your Santa Claus Suit Early - ‘COSTUMES Van Beau DESIGNERS AND CREATORS isn't home. formality from my mother-in- law but as she had_ others ' with her I thought she should have called to.see if it was all right to bring them over. Am I wrong in expecting good manners from relatives?’’ ed Mrs. Jackson Johnson, Mrs. | Choose wool crepe, lightweight x we wk to call my children before Merle Barn. . Alberta Maid- wool, faille, silk, shantung, cotton, (Next week look for an Ameri- visiting them." OF ORIGINAL COSTUMES : | en, Mrs, Frank Robinson. or linen: for the contrast faille,\can Designer Pattern by MR. k ® & i ~~ : | Mrs. Garland Nicholas, Mrs. Satin or glazed cotton. MORT.) OS “I don’t expect. any such | * | Clinton Smith, Mrs. Jerry | \From this size chart select the| —— | YOUR CHOICE FROM QVER 2000 RENTAL COSTUMES | OR WE WILL MAKE 1 OR 100 FOR YOU __ | FOR SALE OR RENT | WIGS AND THEATRICAL MAKE UP * 2823 N. Woodward Ave. Royal Oak, Michigan Answer: I agree with you R. Shultz Liberty 9-5200 , that before bringing. anyone, | . | even her brother and sister- ——-—-— $e | in-law to see the children and your house, she should have | telephoned, On the other hand, she is the grandmother of your | children, so don’t be too hard _ on her and make her feel that she is not welcome. ' ” “t Will Your Home Be LOOKING ITS BEST] FOR THE HOLIDAYS?— “Dear Mrs. Post: My moth- er is giving a party to an- nounce my engagement. Nat- ‘urally my fiance's family will be invited. However, his married sister and I had a disagreement awhile ago and she has not spoken to me since, Under the cireum- stances, should she be exclud- ed from the guest list? I am very undecided as to the proper procedure and wish you would help me.” | NEW W AY Answer: You couldn't make RUG AND CARPET CLEANERS a greater mistake than doing anything to widen the breech Serving Pontiac for 31 Years between you and your sister- 42 Wisner Street in-law to be. Ask her by all : means, If she comes, be very” | When friends come to call during the Holidays you'll want your Rugs and Upholstered Furniture looking clean and new. Call us today and discover how we can restore all the original beauty to your carpets, rugs and up- holstered furniture at amazingly low cost. ; } FE 2-7132 ‘the arms sideward-downward to Pontiac Boys’ Club exchanged ; school. AAAAAAADAPIDAAANADRADDAADADDDDDHDRDD RADE isides as you lower heels to the floor and exhale. Continue slowly, reaching high and breathing deep- ly. 2, Stand tall. Raise the arms to sideward, shoulder height po- . sition. Lower the arms and swing them in front of the body, crossing them. As you do this raise the right leg sideward as high as you can. Lower leg to floor as you swing your arms back to shoulder height position. gifts following Tuesday's coopera- | tive dinner in the club building. Mrs, Cressy Larson was named Mother of the Month for November. | Chairman of the fish fry Friday, Dec, 11 at the club, wilk | — be Mrs, Almont: Austin. Mrs. Raymond Elisworth ex- 3 hibited holiday decorations and explained how they could be made. Hostesses were: Mrs. Walter A Dec. 24 wedding in Miami is planned. ~ {Pontiac Press, 137 Pattern Dept., perforations in fiber-textured tiles Tomorrow's pattern: cordial. If she doesn't, try not | Misses’ dress. _ to resent it. | Printed Pattern 4954: Girls’. 2, ‘Sizes 6, 8, 10, 12, 14. Size 10 takes Holes Swallow Sound | 2% yards 39-inch fabric. Printed directions on each pat. Ever wonder why perforated. tern part. Easier, accurate. ceiling and wall tiles are so ef-, Send thirty-five cents in coins fective in cutting down nojse vol-, ‘for this pattern — add 10 cents for ume? Home improvement special. ‘each pattern for Ist-class mailing. |ists explain that sound rebounds |Send to Anne Adams, care of The off hard, flat surfaces, but the New York 11, /“‘swallow” sound and reduce noise N. Y. Print plainly name, address vollime by as much as 30 to 40 ‘per cent. BROWN EYED 4 Continue. After a while do the Peters, Mrs. Arthur Longbrake, _ SAGINAW at LAWRENCE 272 w. MAPLE—Birmingham same thing but raise and lower Mrs. Donald Ernst, Mrs, Ralph. | 243 West 17th St., | { with zone, size and style a the left leg. DEAR 3 Stand with the feet pointing Weir, Mrs. Warren Byers, Mrs. Rosaline Hickman and Mrs. Elvin Sutherland. Mrs. Lloyd Boles was a guest. Presbyterian Group _ Superb Cold Wave Fetes Yule Season Leal Emes Group of First Pres- byterian. Church held its annual Christmas party Wedr eve- ning at the home of Alice Jack- son on Miami road, #Mrs. Stephen | Field was cohostess, JOANNE ©. DEAVER May nuptials are planned by Joanne. Carol Deaver whose on ts bos ny PHOTOGRAPH “te a YX of You or Your Child at Savings for Christmas Giving $745 Officers will be installed at the engagement to Robert Ray- mond Siggins is announced by ‘Jan. 6 meeting at the church. ,2-18M -—- SHARON PRICE her parents, the Frank Deav- ers of Cottage street. Robert 3-8x10 STUDIO PORTRAITS is the son of Mrs. Helen Rol- Shampoo and lison of North Telegraph road. Mr, and Mrs, Clark Clitford | “REGULAR $1.75 HAIRCUT WITH 1 THIS COUPON $1.00 — i“ Goop MON.—-TUES.—WED. a i >Shampoo and Set . we SHS mt Permanents. ee $650 wp, We Specialize in Tipping. Tinting and Bleaching Curl & Swirl | §t re t= = VARIETY STORES ~ Bessy Salon. nd Floor Creme. Permanent with Haircut tee 65° + options rrr bay ache ee a 42 N, Saginaw “.. FE 8-143 ss BEAUTY SHOP q A Heights Across: Bank UL 2-4460 " Sa siineteta Bowens Including 2 Wallet Prints 17 PHONE FE 4-3669 TODAY For An Appointment SET— - (Eerviece for Eight) Special at This most wanted china ag consists of 8 dinner plates, 8 bread 42 PC. $1 995 and butter plates, 8 @ saucers, 8 cereal bowls, a medium size platter and round vegetable bow - Wonderful to own or give” as a Christmas gift. + pa . OPEN EVENINGS Michigan's Lorgest : _ Dinnerware Specialty — ee tore a FE —<