{i ey ge or, _ Teesday: Rain or Saow é ¥ ¢ * J - THE PONTIAC PR at SS 112th YEAR keke ASSOCIATED #RESS UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE ~ Tc 379 Traffic Fatalities Nine More Than Predicted ey ej ; = > SIGN LANGUAGE HELPS—Three of the four children in the Jim Schneider family of Louisville, Ky. are deaf mutes, but they refuse to let the into a new Dolores, 8, (center) made |to the ears, but friends by teaching her playmates the Handicap No Bar riendliness AP Wirephete sign language. Eddie, 13, left, and Joe, 15, spend their time building | .odel cars, trucks and ships. Physicians say the handicap worry them. When the family moved | children’s deafness is due to defective nerves leading have no remedy for it, State News for 1954 | Political Stories Awarded Top Billing in Past Year DETROIT (#—Michigan’s November election, a smash- ing: victory for the Democrats, was a landslide choice as the state’s biggest news story of 1954. The political surprise which swept Republicans out of virtually every high state offtce drew the No. 1 vote of all but five of the newspaper editors and radio-television - newsmen who took part in an Associated Press poll to! pick the year’s 10 top Michigan stories. The biggest upset of the election was the defeat of Sen. Homer Ferguson, a high-ranking national Republican Chou Promises Fall of Formosa ‘ease and carried his entire Chinese Premier Vows “cabinet” slate into office to Capture Nationalist with him. isle in Bri stlin 9g T alk Only two other stories during the . year challenged the election for TOKYO w—Red China's Premier | first place votes. One was the V. McNamara, a political addition, bristling statements to date, says discussed straits of Mackinac “the Chinese people will never | Bridge, which three poll partici- halt” until the Red flag flys over | pants picked as No. 1. The other Formosa, island holdout of Chiang | ¥@5 the sensational triangle slay- Kai-shek’s Chinese Nationalists. |im& of New York playboy Jules | Chou voiced this latest Commu- | L@ck by Dr. Kenneth Small at a nist threat to capture Formosa | Wank Lake Michigan summer before a government-sanctioned home. That got two first place consultative conference in Peiping | Votes. last Tuesday. Peiping radio did not | Both stories ran strong for run- broadcast Chou's remarks until; "rap honors and the Straits yesterday. . Bridge story was given second Peiping quoted him as saying: Lee by enh margin. “Talwan Fermesa is China's top 10 stories are chosen on figure, by Democrat Patrick | Chou En-lai, in one -of his most! start on construction of the long- | Ike Keeps Eye on Paris Crisis | | President Ready to End | Georgia Holiday Unless | Rearmament Is Ok’d | AUGUSTA, Ga (INS) — Presi- ‘dent Eisenhower, ready to fly back to Washington unless the French | National Assembly approves West | German re: [watch on the news from Paris today. The chief executive may cut short his work-and-play | issue. it also was considered possible that Eisenhower might seek a meeting with British Prime Min- | ister Sir Winston Churchill if the | French do not approve rearma- | ment for West Germany. White House News Secretary |James C. Hagerty declined to | speculate on such a possibility, |however, pending the outcome of ‘the crucial voting. | White House aides privately were | optimistic that the final vote, ex- | pected today, would place a reluc- | tant French stamp of approval on | plans to bring a rearmed West |Germany into the European de- |fense alliance. | Should the French- stick by | their refusal te approve rearma- j . Attempted it, kept a close curred, + * * Bobbie Dunn, 13, Condition Good Witnesses Say Victim to Catch Ride on Freight Thirteen-year-old Bobbie Dunn lost both legs when he fell under the wheels of a freight train here Christ- “}mas Day. Bobbie, of 60 W. . Pike St., was walking along the Grand Trunk Western Rail- road tracks about a, half- block from his home with two companions who said he attempted to “catch a ride’ on one of the slow- moving cars. The boys, Donald, 12, and Wil- liam Hunter, 9, also of 60 W. Pike, said Bobbie lost his hold on the car ladder and slipped under the wheels. | The left leg was severed just | below the hip and the right was amputated below the knee later at | Poster General Hospital. According to Hunter youths, | Bobble remained conscious and asked them to summon aid. An unidentified city bus driver saw the youths running for help, in- vestigated and called police. The train did not stop, police — because crewmen apparently | didn't realize the accident had oc- Ambulance drivers said the vic- | tim remained conscious t the ride to the hospital. Although nurses at the hospital Christmas | reported yough in unknown outside of Detroit. | holiday in Augusta and return to| condition as they void ‘Oy Democratic | the capital for emergency confer. | afe mot sure he fealizes both |Gov. G. Mennen Williams | ences if the French fail to reverse | ‘6 ®re gone. | won a fourth term’ with | last week's surprise vote on the | Yesterday, he told his parents, Ben and Myrtle Dunn, ‘I know how bad it is,"’ they said. Assistant Oakland County Prose- cutor Arthur W. Kollin said state- ments from the Hunter boys would be taken today. — Hospital officials said the train wheels sealed the arteries in the bey’s legs saving him from bleed- ing to death. Bobbie's family from Romeo last September when the father secured employment at | Fisher Body Division. They came |to Michigan 22 months ago from Harrisburg, II. The youngster has two sisters, Martha Anna, 15, a sophomore at Pontiac High School and Phyllis June, 10, a Central School fifth grader. : * Hospital Reports PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1954 —34 PAGES * * * Boy Loses Legs Under * * Train Train Victim - BOBBIE DUNN moved here | ys > Fishermen Save Two From Lake Ice Breaks at» Orion With Coaster; Brother Attempts Rescue Fast rescue work on the part of | four Lake Orion fishermen Sunday averted a post-Christmas tragedy here when two boys steered their sleds onto thin ice and plunged into the frigid waters of the lake. Billy Herrington, 9, and his brother Glen, 7, sons of Mr. and Mrs. James Herrington of 415 Lake St., Lake Orion, were coast- ing off a point at Bellevue Island. Sloping ice carried Billy farther than he planned, about 200 yards | off shore. The ice gave way and boy and sled fell through. Mendes Regime fo Stand or Fall on Today's Vote French Assembly Will Decide German Arms on Confidence Issue PARIS (# — The French National Assembly con- vened shortly after 3 p. m. today for a decision fateful for the government of Pre- mier Mendes-France and the defense of the Western world. The Premier is asking for the Assembly's vote of con- fidence on west Germany’s entrance into the North Atlantic Treaty Organiza- tion and, by implication, the whole network of Lon- don-Paris accords for West German rearmament as a partner in a seven-nation Western European Union. The public and press galleries of the chamber were packed long be- fore the Assembly was called to order by its presiding officer, An- dre Letroquer. Outside, many others, including knots of Communist demenstra- tors hostile te West German re- armament, thronged against bar- ricades waiting a turn te get in- side. Hundredg~ of police stood on guard at strategic points around the ‘Assembly building, the Bour- bon Palace, to maintain order, | owt to help him and he, too, plunged inte the 15-foot depth. The boys’ cries were heard by — ‘a fisherman, Arthur Schrah of 146 | S. Bellevue, who ran out, jumped | into the lake at the risk of his own | Pope Reported Resting Better, Still Improving VATICAN CITY (INS) — Ailing Pope Pius XII was reported today to have passed a “satisfactory” night marked by a continuation of the gradual improvement in his condition. Reports from the Pontiff's bed- chamber said his hiccoughing had disappeared, totally since Christ- mas Eve added that he now was able to eat some meat and spend several hours each day work- ing on church affairs. The Pontiff was said to have received another tnfusion of plas- ma this morning as a part of his doctors’ campaign to build up Vatican sources said the Pope spent some time yesterday work- ing on the Christmas message which he hopes to publish in a few days. The Pontiff delivered his tradi- tional Christmas address last week, but ft was a brief, recorded mes- sage instead of the lenghy speech which is customary, However, he told his listeners that he hoped to publish a much longer message. 15-Mile Chase Nets Fugitives 3 Wyandotte Youths Nabbed in Stolen Car After Evading Blocks Three 16-year-old Wyandotte boys, who were seized by State Police of Pontiac Post early today after breaking through three po- scout cars in @ 25-mile chase, will lice roadblocks and eluding 22) 10 Deaths Rank Michigan With Nation's Worst Christmas Weekend Toll Mounts to 499 for All Types of Aecidents From Our Wire Services The number of dead in Christmas weekend traffic accidents hit 379 today, just nine over the pre-holiday estimate of safety experts. With reports of deaths still coming in, a United Press tabulation showed that 379 persons died in highway crashes during the period from 6 p. m. Friday to midnight Sunday. Sixty-two others died in fires, two in airplane mishaps and 56 in miscellaneous types of accidents of 449 accidental deaths. California reported 33 fatalities in traffic, Texas 31, Illinois and Pennsylvania 22 apiece, Ohio and Michigan 20, New York 19, and Florida and North Carolina 15. “This is a bloody way to cele- brate a holiday dedicted to peace on earth, good will toward men,” he said. and merry. It ended with an un- usually heavy death toll and dreary undergo questioning in connection to favor the Premier by a slim margin. The executive committee of the | Independent Republicans, most of were hostile to the govern- | ment last week, advised party | when the youths’ auto crashed | | with store breakins, police report- The wild chase at speeds up to 100 miles an hour finally ended |life and caught the younger boy |members today to vote for the | into a tree on Orchard Lake Road, | just as he was sinking. Schrah managed to keep both boys afloat | until three other fishermen pushed | a toboggan up to the edge of the hole. \ Elroy Durocher, of 152 Bellevue | St., Dailey Sisler of 712 Buena | Vista and Eddie Triest of 452 Sum- | | mit, with the aid of Schrah, brought the frightened, halt-frozen | youngsters to safety and _ took | them to the Durocher home. There, the pair, along with | Schrah, were wrapped in blank- ets and given hot drinks, and the boys’ parents were notified. The boys had been in the water about Premier. This, it said, should be dore t@ support the At antic Al- liance and not as a gesture for Mendes-France personally. Various party spokesmen planned to take the floor before Mendes-France himself presented a supreme last-minute appeal for the Assembly’s backing o1 his pro-Western foreign policy. De- (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) More Rain, Snow Seen for Pontiac | north of Pontiac Trail. The boys fled on foot through a wooded area after the crash and eluded police who organized a search. They were captured trying to hitchhike a ride at Northwestern Hwy. and Telegraph Rd. this morning after a citizen tipped eff police that the trio had. gained a ride in a green car traveling south. Troopers Lyle Tucker and John Benaglio arrested the trio mo- ments after they had been let out of the auto. They are being held by State Police of the Redford Glenn Wejmer, 51, of Midland County was killed Sunday three miles south of Midland when struck by a car. David Fairvhild, 17, of Dearborn was killed Friday night when a car in which he was riding went out of control and hit a utility pole in the Detroit suburb. Frank McCaren, 64, of Carson- ville died Friday night in a fire | that swept his brick home in Sani- = County, Melvin McCombs, 23, a Detroit |airman, and Johnnie Fortson, 28, |of Chicago, with whom McCombs } (Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) Noted Botanist | to give the nation an overall total . After a rather uneventful, | Post. ithe basis of 10 votes for first ment of their ancient foe, Eisen- five minutes. | California Whipped aaonsk . te amr = — 'choice, nine for second, eight for| hower will summon his top for- “My mommy and my new little | Weatherwise, holiday — weekend, bork ert began bie prin = ead ape sts | third and so forth. | eign policy advisers into confer- 'bD 10 M p H Winds baby sister were all I could think 'the forecast for Pontiac and vicin- | scalar Arey eeeted aisles speed. uccum A) at ibera eee The inese peo | | | | ” : : Po A : . a resolutely demand that the Unit.” The fina] tabulation showed the | ence. y BLE OULD | about.”” Billy said. The brothers | ity is for more rain or snow to- |ing through a stop light and gave | ed States withdraw all its armed | election received 217 points. The | If the President does not return) LOS ANGELES u—Winds up to |h@ve & 3week old sister and two | night and temorrow. | chase, but they were outdistanced. | of | He made expeditions totaling ‘more than 250,000 miles, including \trips to China, New Zealand and | Various parts of the Americas. He | Spent his 90th birthday alone on an | island in the Caribbean Sea hunt- jing palm specimens. ora | : jtoday without even a cold to re- ne that China no longer is a weak | Another story of political signit}- | Deferte Secretary Charles E. Wil- | soot and billboards and Sewing | ind them of the near-tragedy. {of an inch up to 8 a. m. toda _ | Toadblock. but the fugitive car ichi nation and would not beg for peac¢ | cance—the untimely death of Blair | 8°" would fly to Augusta. traffic. a P BS Se Michigan State College f t yay | r 1ACA, N. Y. ! - torial claims. |died virtually on the eve of the ie Western European alliance, at mere and the mo ase hare boys have promised to stay away | from above freezing, 33, to 40 de- | ITI (—Funeral serv He called the recently-signed | Aug. 3 primary election, leaving | !¢#st temporarily, appeared certain | Department descri fire haz-| said. false iralatively wares at Gi to| University Chapel tomorrow for | : in | Dr. Liberty Hyde Bailey, 9%, a the United States promises to de-| ation to McNamara uncontested. | "ejects the rearmament plan. A $2,500,000 blaze burned | joe fecersied Friday) and 28 00:28) Oswald B. Wallace re : tend by Pes- U, | — ee Moral Rearmers Slate Christmas Day. | . fend ‘Formosa and the nearby Pes- | Up to then, Moody, who had been a | . . | through the Fullerton Citrus + |. Tonight's low is expected to be| 1081 E. Tienken Rd., was | Pioneer in the field of agricultural (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) |U. Ss. Senator by appointment of Asian Premiers Meet | Wasehouse District. Meeting in Washington «|""epuea’ facccntie: eta. sai governor Williams, was favored | A : ; | F ; ' Sarr y id Bailey, dean emeritus of the . 4 Ale | DJAKARTA, Indonesia (UP) — The 70-mile-an-hour blasts were WASHINGTON w—Believers in, row of 34 to 38 degrees. Tomorrow . bf ; Gilt Exchange ini igs Gcaminatton 540 (oppose ‘The’ premiere of Indonesia Pakis-| recorded at Ontario. The wind Moral Rearmament, an interna-| night will be mostly cloudy with morning when he plunged State College of ‘Agriculture at Cor- . guson. - | whistling west from the desert vir- | tional movement hoping to improve the rain ending and becoming! to his death from scaffold- {nel!. died at his home here on Deadline Is Set ; ; | tually stalled traffic on highways mankind, assemble here tomorrow | cooler. ing in the Rochester Paper Christmas Eve. | the dramatic escape and recap- Vetted on the Indonesian hill.town|in the Beaumont-Banning area.|to explore ‘an Idea to win the snow or snow flurries by after. for January 4 | subject of plant and animal life, Wallace, who was doing | Bailey had written or edited tual deadline’ ix’ Ga return | desperate flight, with two women clude discussion of the plight of | San Gabriel] mountains. | from other nations to jain partici-| registered 37 degrees and re- \Ncareeniny) (woekforthe set as ea or re as was one of the |11 U.S. airmen jailed as ‘‘spies”| Wind velocity was expected to| pants from this country for the| mained almost steady and hitting) C4™PeM!r) of those ill-fitting, strangely-colored | eeaeueats The Jan. 4 retum deadline is Kiplinger Reports on Population Trend in Nation set to help both merchants and . forces from Taiwan.” Straits Bridge got 162 and the to Washington, Secretary of State | 70 miles an hour whipped Southern | der sisters at home. Starting late yesterday, the | Redford Township police, in an- | Dr. Liberty Hyde Bailey 5 . 7 | “It was a lucky escape, and the | , at the price of surrendeing terri- | Moody—was placed fourth. Moody | A decision to cut France out of | As the winds rose, humidity | ‘ a piseighra Lad poten reaigetedie arin | from the lake,” Mrs. Herrington grees. Friday and Saturday were Bulletin Crs will be held at the Cornell mutual defense treaty under which | the Democratic senatorial nomin.| if the French National Assembly | ard as “really dangerous.” | noted botanist, horticulturist and |near 30 to 34 with a high tomor- | education | oe Rounding out the first five was 2". Ceylon, India and Burma con- | Wednesday will bring | : Considered an expert on the ture of 13 long-term convicts from | of Bogor today for a two-day con-| Gales lashed Cajon Pass and upper | world.”’ ;noon or night. Co. Next Tuesday—Jan. 4—has been more than 100 beoks, among hostages, | (Continued on 2, Col. 5) Si i . ; . m. | firm, landed in machinery. or “what-is-it” type Christmas gifts Page ) lin Communist China. increase, 10-day meeting that mark at 1 p. m y customers, according to John W. / . 5) ane Hirlinger. assistant manager of | the Chamber of Commerce. ; ; as A A The bo ; ‘ nd about : Chou, at the sare time, boasted | D¥- Small. case 183. John Foster Dulles and probably | California today toppling power Se eee eda as aa | vals) comtinaed today to make .27| wer to a radio alert, set up aj Was Early Graduate of Southern Michigan Prison. Their (ference which probably will in-| canyons of the San Bernardino and | Sponsors expect 1,000 persons! Today at 8 o'clock the mercury them the ‘Cyclopedia of Horti- you may have received. Speaking for the C. of C.’s Re- plained: “Most businesses close their fiscal year Jan. 31 and must have their inventories completed by that time. It’s difficult to take an inventory with exchanges still being made. that more babies were born in the United States in 1954 than in any other year? That one third of all women work? That Florida's popu- fornia's? That the average bride is is rising. New babies this past year, 4.1 million . . . largest num- ber ever in one year. The rate, 25.2 per 1,000 women, compared with a prewar rate of around 19. lation is growing faster than Cali-| Peak rate was 26.6 in 47, when men were just coming back from The bigger the city, the lower the birth rate, But things are chang- ing, the gap is narrowing. In Today's Press marrying people of today were bern back in the 30’s, and there weren't so many babies being born those days. Consequently there aren’t so many of marry- ing age today, Marriages now are about 1.5 million per year, in 1960, plus 9 million. That's 28 per cent more than now. Some 117,000 classrooms should be added each year, for grade and high schools only, and to maintain existing standards only. Number tad Merchams - amen <* WASHINGTON — Did you know | since war years, Now the plateau| babies; city mothers the fewest. As for marriages, the young | 12). Next year, near 8 million and|only one: Higher taxes to get | schools and teachers. College enrollment, now 243 mil- lion, reflects the low birth rate of the 30’s, when current college stu- dents were born. By 1960, the out- look is 3 million. By 1965, 4 mil- lion. This is 60 per cent more than In East Lansing, Dr. John A. |Hannah, president of Michigan State College, today paid tribute to the famed botanist. “Everyone at Michigan State College feels a sense of loss in the death of one of our most distinguished alumni,” Dr. Han- se i yant | 20 years old, and that the average | being built thi 50,000 now. It me hysical facili-| mah said. “Bailey was a pioneer People with goods they want | the war. Birmingham ceees 2 ; ng s year, 50,000. . It means more physical facili said. y was a pi \ near 24? That our | Canter, Eddie 8s | as compared with 2.3 million os Wr dane by: the 4th and so don't |Population will reach the 220 mil a ee Coals Cg | beet ral Ow as G an ace Ciecgeg Neely Ge) prerine | eee ond ooo aslo cre keep putting the exchange off., tion mark in 1975? veae mee Gerenah te img | Crane, Bee GeORee 8 rr 8 The birth rate boom indicates; © °™ rlachaa var wee P ; shown by marriages, plus incomes,| mendous asefulness.” They have a better selection of | These and many other facts . so vsseceesenerseess +4 future probems in education. | wase moore. caavadiabis: By | Plus money costs and other eco-| 4 ttative of South Haven, Mich:, ; * about our people have been as-| Young women are havin seater §Editer Elementary grade school -enroll- |nomic factors. By all of th eee te eS ee ‘sembled in a special report on| babies than their mothers had. and| {autisie. "beta: '® ment is now almost 28 million, | 1%%¢. 5 years off, we shall seed | measures the outlook is tavorable, | Bailey was reared on a farm and Hirlinger announced that_mem- population by the Kiplinger Wash. | ¥ ; secosdeedsoosun SE . . “| approximately 1,700,000, which is oe § favorable. | was graduated in 1882 trom Mich there are now more second, third,, Jiathets ---- - % | Next year, plus 29 million, By 1960, except for a couple of short-range Priday, New Year's Eve. | ington Agency. Excerpts from the fourth children—tamily size is wp, Sper 00-0) #38 only 5 years off, 33% million, | 70% more than now. cautions, (1) Number of new mar. | San Agiee\tural College (now Mie : report follow: | The birth rate is about the same at, [y's Radic Programs... a8 | That's 20 per cent more than now.| It’s largely a matter of pay, and|riages will be relatively low ‘in . Osman’s Tel-Raron Store | The nations birth rate is up aj all income levels. ene, Best... oan | High schools enrollment is now| pay is largely a matter of Jocal | next 4 or 5 years, due to birth rate | ons 2 fine stores: Downtown @ Open every night ‘til # ‘ bit. It has been on a high plateau | Women's Pages... {2, 13, 1435, 16, 11 | about 7 million (grades 9 through| taxes. There’s one answer and} (Continued on Page 29, Col. 3) nitely "ttl ® ‘ ¢" The farm mothers have the most . ‘Tel-Hyron, jawe | | : ‘The’ Day in Se _. THE PONTIAC PRESS, MON DAY, DECEMBER 27, 1954 36, was visiting friends Two Youths Caught Commissioners to Learn ~~ of Options on Parking Land ¢ From Our Birmingham Bureau | school vacation program at the | BIRMINGHAM — City commis- | sioners will be chiefly concerned with municipal parking lot No. 1 various city-wide tournaments this) week. Scheduled for tomorrow are, Egbert | a swim meet at Northern Y and a table eastern Y at tonight's, meeting. City Manager Donald C will report on options acquired for the 220 car lot, on Pierce between, Merrill and Brown streets Along with that, he will discuss appraisals made on property of the Wabeek Corporation and Jud- sen Bradway, for which options. have not been secured. Figbert will recommend ¢\pedi ency in the acquisition of certain properties, for builtling-demolition purposes. A petition to Vacate the alley at the southeast corner of Cranbrook and Maple will be pre- sented by attorneys for Harry Kirsh, who has plans for a com- mercial development there. * * « Mr. Wright had owned sey A birthday party at 2 pm. lo (perator’s Service Laboratories, morrow will highlight an active netroit, until his retirement Flint Father Admits Strangling Own Baby - FLINT (INS) — A 40-year-old | Flint father who thought he “was too old to have a baby’ pleaded guilty in justice court today to the murder of his 2'3-month-old | daughter on Christmas Eve. Cyril Labarre, who also. waived * examination, was bound over for | arraignment in circuit court next Appearing wild-eyed and dazed in hig court appearance, Labarre | admitted strangling the infant with | a handkerchief when his wife, Inez. in the same apartment building. | Labarre also struck his wife — the head with a hammer as she leaned over the crib to dis- cover that the baby had been mur- dered dufing her absence. She is in serious condition in Flint’s Hurley Hospital. = Stolen Car Stalls. BIRMINGHAM — Two Detroit boys, ages 15 and 16, who police | said had stolen a car in Pontiac. were caught on Christmas night here as they were syphoning gas for the stalled auto at Pinter's Service, 1595 N. Woodward Ave Police making their rounds no- ; ticed a broken rear window and upon investigation found the boys hiding under a car in the garage They had pocketed $2.91 trom a soft drink machine and cut the hose on what police said was an ex- pensive acetylene pump for siphon- ing purposes. ' The two. who told police they had been arrested twice in Detroit | on breaking and entering charges are being held at the Oakland County Juvenile Home. pending court action Poison Kills Dog BIRMINGHAM—A candidate for the “meanest man of the year’ title is the person who caused the death of Forrest S. Cornell's dog on Christmas. Cornell. of 1649 Vil- la Rd.. told police a veterinarian attributed the dog's death to strvch- nine poisoning. The pet became il) after Cornel] had taken him for a walk Thief Is Choosy BIRMINGHAM - and cleanliness apparently” were: the uppermost Chrstmas Day thoughts of whoever entered the Food — drink Arthur Jo Wilkie Jr home at 1776 Derby Rd. Wilkie, who told police he left.a side door unlocked winle aways for a few hours. returned to find half a bottle of Iquor. two boxes of candy and a box of bar soap “the only items taken from his house PONTIAC ANP VICINITY — Clouds and colder with rain Or snew tonight and tomerrew lew tenight % te at High temeorrew %4 to 3A Northeasteriy winds &-1* miles an hour tenmight Ta meorrew night mestiy cleud+ with rain of snow ending and turning cecler Tedavy in Pontiac Lewes! temperature preceding ® at At #@ e@ Wird ve , &8o Directior Neorthea Sun ee’: Moray a? 5 06 7 > Sun rises Tuesday at 8 0 a Moon sets Monday at 7 40 ; Moon rises Tuesday at 10 00 a Deentoan Temperatures wr cone. 38 tte om 37 ign +7 it ste eees OG ee. wee IF 2per is erpreee = Sunday in Pentiac recorded downtown Highest temperature 47 Lowest temperature 5 fama cos 32 Mesr temperature ..... Weather—Clotudy. 4As One Tear Age in Pontiae Highest temperature . 4 Lowest temperature ............ 28 Mean temperature een 23 Weather—Snow Highest and Lowest Temperatures te im 8 Years 6 in 1904 -4 in 1825 Sunday's Temperature Chart Battle Creek 47 Los Angeles 38 «. Bismarck 24°16 Marquette 4% Chicago . #6 21 Minneapolis 29 It Cincinnati , $7. 43) New Orleans 66 37 Cleveland 62 45 New York 45 35 Denver 32.18) Pittsburgh $2. 43 Duluth 2 8620 «St Louwts 7 50 Fort Worth 71 63 8 & Marie 28 24 Gd Rapits 4 jt Seattle 37 (32 Houghton 340610 Tampa ; 76 nif facksonrille 1 60 Traverse City 38 Kansas City 63 41 Weshington 44 2% > ! ( 4 . * | movies, prizes and refreshments. competition lasts. re 6 Village, will be held at 8 tonight at | the Manley Bailey Funeral Home, | with graveside service at 1:30 p.m. |; Tuesday at i Tecumseh. He died Saturday after | YMCA. There will.be songs, games, | The Y is also participating in tennis meet at North. | Both will begin in the morning and continue -as long as * s * Children's Christmas parties are taking places Uus sseck at Fipst Methodist Church, The annual ju- mor department party will be held from 7 to 9 tonight, with both pr- mary departments meeting from 2 to 4 pm. tomorrow * * * Bvan Hadley Wright Service for Evan Hadley Wright, | of 17360 Avilla Rd., Lathrup | Brookside Cemetery, | a long illness, fied 31 years. _He is survived by his widow, | Bessie C., three daughtets, Mrs Frank Buchanan of Lathrup Vil- tage. Mrs. John Farland of De- troit, and Mrs. Everett Verstoor of Sacramento, Calif., and two sis- ters, Mrs. Fred Buskirk and | Jeanette. * e Samuel F. Morris Samuel F. Morris, 71. former ‘owner of Morris’. | Store at Walnut Lake, died Friday at his residence, 5660 Inkster Rd. He is survived by two sons, Rob- ert S. of Birmingham, and Ed- mund H. of LaMesa, Calif.. and five grandchildren Funeral service will be held at the Bell Chapel of the William R. ‘Hamilton Co., at 11 am. Tues- day, with burial in Pine Lake Cemetery. = bd * Mrs. George W, Nichols Service for Mrs George W (Florence Cook) Nichols, 67, of 1045 Forest Ave., will be held at 1 p.m. / Tuesday at the Bell Chapel of the | William R. Hamilton Co., with cre- mation at White Chapel Memorial Cemetery. She died yesterday alte r | a long illness. Survivors include one daughter. | Mrs. Calvin A. Dennison of Bir- mingham. al So mrandeons Kaci os Kiysor Kart’ Dy Kysor, 6 of 20 Puritan Rd., a mechanical engineer with Westinghouse Corp., died suddenly yesterday, Mr. Kysor had been active ino radar development in World War II. and had been with the Palmer-Bee Co. of Detroit un tal 1946 Surviving are his widow, Evelyn two brothers James D and Asa ,B. both of Chicago. and three sis ters. Dania. Mabel and Mrs Lola Cross, all of New York L Service will be held at 11 am Wednesday at the Bell Chapet of the Wilham Ro Hamilton Co. under the auspices of Lincoln Lodge F & AM of Detroit. of which he was a member. Burial will be Rural Hills Cemetery, Northville Five Persons Hurt in Southfield Crash Five persons were three-car collision at | Southfield and Mt. Vernon Rds. Southfield Towbship Saturday, according to Southfield) Township Police Chief Philhp Lavigne In*good condition today Joseph Mercy Hospital ts Kempainen. 20. of 18279 Ilene. troit. witheRide and head injuries Also infured were) Danny Dan els, 15. of 42536 Cumings. Berkley severe head cuts: Walter Clinton Jr 17, of 247 Ford Ave High- land Park head and knee mpiries injured in a at St Paul Mrs Ceetha Conklin. S1. ef S24 hipling, Oak Park. severe nase in mire: and Ronald Hints #0 of De trot forehead bumps All were injured when cars driver bs Clinton. Mis Conklin > husband) Edward. and Alvin Fen der 19 ef 3629 Phillips Berkley oblided Fugitives Captured After 25-Mile Chase Continued From Page One? evaded it by swinging off the road hrough a shallow ditch. A few seconds later, in a sini- lar maneaver, it evaded a block- ade set up by Detroit police. They were halted when West Bloomfield Township police set up a double block on Orchard Lake at Pontiac Trail. The driver managed to miss the po- lice cars but failed to regain - control of the car, which struck the tree. NX Police said t found a large quantity of cigarets. beer wine and jewelry in the wreeked auto They said the loot was probably taken in a burglars Other police departments who look part in the chase were Pon- tiae Sylvan Lake, Orchard Lake. Wasne County Road Patrol and Oakland County Sheriff's Dept. ‘ in if ' 1953, and had,,been a designing ,engineer with the Ford Motor Co. confectionery | Deaths in Pontiac Area De- | } y { | AP Wirepheote WINS FIRST ROUND—Tony Trabert makes a backhand return in his match against Lewis Hoad during first round of Davis Cup | Matches held at Sydney, Australia, today. The Americans seized 1 firm, almost unbreakable grip on the Davis Cup when Trabert and Vie Seixas fought thea way to almost identical four-set victories over Australian foes in the opening singles matches of the challenge round. Trabert cut down Lewis Hoad 6-4, page 24) Mrs. Thomas Criss Word has been received of the death of Mrs. Thomas (Bessie) Criss Dee. 25 in Pasadena, Calif A former Pontiac resident for 20 years, she was 78 years old. The daughter of Mr and Mrs. James Thompson, she was born in Greece Surviving are three daughters, Mrs. Alex Kokins of Pontiac, Mrs Ernest Kantar of Detroit, Mrs. Leon Agyros of Pasadena, and three sons, Philip of Pontiac, and | Paul and Michael of Pasadena. Funeral service will be held | Tuesday at 2 p.m. in Pasadena ‘Buriai will follow in’ Mountain View Cemetery. Mrs. Artemas Hall Mrs. Artemas (Sarah) Hall. 78 40 Judson, died at her home this morning Born Capac was the daughter of George and Mary Ann Calcut’ King, and was mar- ned mn Port Huren May 31, 1893 from Mar- in she She came to Pontiac lette 41 years ago Surviving vesides her husband are two sons. Lysle of ¢Flonda and Leon of Auburn Heights, and a daughter, Mrs. Zadah Bass of Auburn Heights. Also) surviving are a) brother George of Marlette, a sister, Mrs Rhoda Rubey of Pontiac, four, grandchildren and eight great grandchildren. Funeral arrangements wil —¢ announced later by Huntoon Fu- neral Home Edward Lemaster Service for Edward Lemaste: infant son of Samuel E. and Bar bara Wilson Lemaster, 5769 Wins low, was held this morning at the Drayton Plains Cemetery. The Rev Tom Malone of Emmanuel Baptist Church officiated He died shortly after birth Sun day at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital Surviving besides his parents is a brother, Jerry Wilham, at home Funeral arrangements were by Huntoon Funeral Home Mrs. Henny love Mrs Henry Mennet Love, 89. 34 School Sto died Saturday an ON ford E Born in Bath she was the daugh- ter of George and Helen Cook and was rnarried Oct 1] 1881 Mis lave as survived by two daughters Mes. Ethel MacClem f Pontias Mis Hazel Smart. of Flirt and three sons, Rov G of Mt Havel Township, Arthur. of Santord -and Claude of Flint Also surviving is a brother, Will Ponhac, six. grandchil- wna TO great grandchildren Free Methodist 1! nad wall be { koh Nerrviees fem (0 das at 2 ym Midland ¢ eae tery Thomas A. ieclesky Thomas A. MeClusky, 67 Union St.. died in St. Joseph Mer- cy Hospttal Saturday after a siv- month illness Born in Shawnee Town, Ill.. he was the son of George and Jenny Clark McClusky and married Ad- ana Mae Stone in Harrisburg, IIl., in 1906 Church in Harrisburg. he had lived in Pontiac for 28 years. A_ retired watchman for GMC Truck and Coach Division. he was formerly a ¢oal miner Surviving besides his widow are John. of Pontiac, and Thomas. of Bowling Green. Ky and a daughter. Mrs. Lenora Beav- er. of Pontiac Also surviving are foug sisters inch Tues ial will fallow an fwo sons 14 | A member of the Baptist 2-6, 12-10, 63. (See story, Mrs. Net! Hancock, Mrs Hazel Alexander, Mrs. Myrtle Reynolds, of Harmsburg, and Mrs. Laura Chauncy of Florida, and four brothers, Ezra, Otto, Horace and Harold, all of Hagrisburg. Service was held at 11 a.m. to- day from Pursley Funeral Home, | \ of the Rev. James M. Johnson Social Brethren Church officiating The body will be taken to the Tur- ner Funeral Home in Harrisburg this afternoon for interment in Sun- ‘set Hills Cemetery. Leon Morales Leon Morales, 58, of 395 Third Ave., died at Pontiac General Hos- |pital Saturday after a three-month liness A Pontiac resident for one year, he came here from Texas where he was brn in 1896, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Nemensio Morales He married Josefa Villarreal there in 1924 A member of the Method- ist Church, he was last employed by the Pontiac Nursery in Romeo. Surviving besides his mother and widow are two daughters, Mrs Beatrice Villarreal and Virginia. both of Pontiac. and seven sons Alex, Holly; Alfred and John. U 8 Army Henry, Croswell: Augus- tine. Thomas and Albert. all of Pontiac Also surviving are Mrs Man Corpus and Mrs. Petra Castillo, both in Texas ~ Service from Huntoon Funeral Home will be Tuesday at 10 a m with Rev. ing. Burial will follow in Drayton Plains Cemetery two sisters James M. Morgan Service for James M. seven month-old son of Morgan, karl and Beverly Gravelle Morgan> 91° N Fast Blvd. will be held Tuesday at 10 a.m. from Donelson Johns Funeral Home He died suddenly at his home Friday Born in Pontiac, he was a member of St Surviving besides his parents is a sister, Sheryl, at home. George R. Murray George Ross Murray. 74. JL Ja- cokes St died Friday after a two-vear aiiness Rorn in Kokomo Ind he was the son oof Horace Dunn Murray garet: Barry in 1904 A resident of city. for 10 years. he came here from Romeo and, was last employed as a painter and decorator Surviving are four daughters Mrs. Mae Randall of Kingsford Heights Ind Mrs. Helen Cox of Pontiac Mrs Mildred Hoff- man of South Bend, Ind. and Mrs Betts Gant of Indianapolis. Ind Also survining are three sons Harrs of Pontiac. Emanuel - of Chicago, Ul-. Charles of Pontiac. and 18 grandchildren Service from Kirkby Fu and Margaret and married Mar in’ Logansport. dnd tie neral industry jto battle stiff | the "big three.’ _ son's famous F. M. Santiago officiat- | Michael church. | Politics Tops News - Stories in Past Year (Continued From Page One) most spectacular in prison his- a Kew ii Oa 09 10 were: 6. A significant state ore | court decision making state equal- | t4zation the basis os pact pemperty | taxes. . UL The “solution” of the at- assassination six years ago of labor leader Walter Reu- | ther and the eventual evaporation | of leads stemming from the stories | of one Donald Ritchie. 8. Mergers involving every auto “independent” in a bid competition from 9. The jong and bitter contro. Versy over bingo, climaxed by a state-wide vete Nov. 2? against a move to legal lotteries for charity. , 10. Defense Secretary C EO Wil- “bird dog’ remark, which touched .pff a nationwide |controversy over the Republican , toward administration's attitude unemployment Other stories which figures con- siderably in the balloting included: The conviction of six Michigan Communist leaders under the | Smith Act. The slaying of Kalamazoo State Hospital nurse Marilyn Kraai by a “mental patient. Tragic holiday weekend traffic deaths tolls and efforts to curb them, The Detroit’ Lions’ winning of their third straight National Foot- ‘ball League divisional champion- ship before their defeat in’ the league playoff game Genera) Motors’ production of its 30 millionth car Red Premier Vows to Capture Formosa (Continued From Page One) |cadores as “a great menace to ‘peace in the Far East and Asia.” The Chinese Communist leader charged that the United States attempted “to cover up the ag- gressive substance of the .. . treaty’’ by creating ‘‘a great clamor about the . . , U.S. spies that had been justly convicted in China.” That was Chou's only reference to the 11 U.S. airmen imprisoned by the Reds on spy charges. He made no mention of U.N. Secretary | General Dag Hammarskjold’s pro- | | jected trip to Peiping to seek the | airmen’s release, Home was held today at 2 p.m. with the Rev. Edmond Watkins of Joslyn Avenue Presbyterian | Chen officiating. Burial followed | : Perry Mt. Park Cemetery Otto A. Schields Otto A. Schields, %, of & Park P|. died at tis home Christmas Day after a short illness. s e The son of August and Fred r i) ericka Keehn Schields. he was born in Tonawanda, N. Y. and came to Pontiac 62 years ago. He married the former Fredericka Quandt in Pontiac 62 vears ago : e A retired auto worker, he = is survived by his widow: a= son ere 1a 1s@ Walter Rochester a daughter. | Mrs. S. S. Daniell Pontiac, and three grandchildren. wa)! In the selection of merchandise intended for gifts Service from Farmer -Snover , where size and color are important factors, the Funeral Home will be Tuesday he a . at 2 p.m. with Rev. Maynard G. exchange privilege has always been graciously granted | Oesterle of Bethel Evangelical and > HF . | Reformed Church officiating. Buri- by Pontiac met chants. ; : ‘al will follow in White Chapel Me- . . . . z | mors Cemeleny. “ This year there will be no exception to this custom, a R D. Sh however, it is necessary. that all exchanges of gift % oger VU. erman : _- 8 wilt > Pacetiay: an 4 merchandise be made on or before January 4th, 1955. Ms unera Wi uesday a . : . - Es =e pm. for Roger Dewayne Sherman, This will be to your advantage as well as the merchant 3 ho was dead at birth Friday . . . . a . 3 at Pontiac General Hospital. | from whom the purchases were made. In the interest } . The son of Clarence C. and June of all concerned... . = J. Miller Sherman of 110 S. Hos- ' * e pital Rd., he is survived by his 7 parents. and a brother. Daniel Sid- ney Sherman, at home. Service will be held from Voor- 'hees Siple Chapel with burial in Perry: Mt Park Cemetery Mrs. Rose Stileski Mrs. Rose Stileski, 68, of 24 Put ‘nam St died this. morning after a twoemonth illness A member of St) Vincent de Paul Church, she was bern in Canada the daughter of Alexandre and Agnes Emery DuCedar She came to Pontiac ago from De- trout Surviving Mrs. Pearl 20 vears are three daughters Benn and Mrs. Ger- trude Bresler. both of Rirmingham, | and Mrs. Leona Boomer of Pontiac , and of) Clawson Pontiac Also) osurviving isa dephire Duc Funeral arrangements -announced later by Pursley neral Home. two Sons, and George LaCharite Fred brother. eda will be Fu- of an H. Call 49 Mt. Clemens St. Opposite Each of us wish each NEW YEAR . H.R. Nicholie—H. Delos Bud’ Nicholie you a very HAPPY d PROSPEROUS R. Nicholie “BUD” AGENCY Ph. FE 2-2326 Post Office 4 Stileski of, ‘Crash Victim Reported in Poor Condition Today | Jack Baker, 44, of 159 Michigan | ve., is reported in poor condition — today with a neck injury he re- Michigan Ranks High| *’ [Friday night tm a’ twocar cat sion on US. Ithica; ‘With 20 Road Deaths was isco ttiy nes (Continued From Page One) ceived Friday when the car in had hitchhiked a ride en route which he was riding hit a tree at, home trom his Georgia base. were ‘Mt. Clemens and Opdyke Rdg, Baker was a passenger in a car lision on U.S. 12 near Asin Arbor. i driven by Victor L. Smothers, 3, | of 2 Collingwood Ave, Smothers, who was not injured, told Oakiand | County Sheriff's Deputy Melvin Glover that his brakes failed. | Mendes Now Facing Decision on Future (Continued From Page One) feat would mean the resignation of his six-month-ol¢ gevernment. | killed Saturday in a two-car col- Hareld Weston, 43, of Ciark- ston was killed Friday night in a | cartreck ecllisien on US10 te ‘Oakland County. | Frederick R. Smith, 51, of High- | Four land Park was injured fatally Fri- | ‘day night when his car smashed | into a rail overpass on the Willow Run Expressway in Dear- born. Warren Sanders, 33, of Ypsilanti, | died Saturday after being injured Friday night when-he lost control | of ‘his car and crashed into a tree He is asking a vote of confidence | in Wayne County. many’s entrance into NATO, and endorsement of the government's position on three amendments to ' the ratification bill. If successful on those ballots, hé | wag slated to demand that the As- | sembly reverse its refusal last Fri- | day: to ratify the treaty permit- ting West Germany to rearm as a member of the seven-nation Western European Union (WEU). That, too, would be a question of | confidence which under Assembly rules could not. be voted on for ‘24 hours, probably tomorrow.: Defeat on any of the three votes would force the government to re- sign, plunging France into anoth- er of its numerous postwar Cabi- net crises. Commerce Man Injured -today on two points—West Ger-; | | Russell Kost, 26, of Detroit and a companion, Patricia Joyce Black. 18, of suburban Detroit, were killed into.the rear of a cattle truck on U.S. 16 in Ingham County. when his car hit a guard rail on a bridge near Monroe and toppled’ ‘over into four feet of water in Plum Creek. Elmer George Otto, 49, Leona Farris, about 50, Detroit. were killed Friday pight by a car while crossing a street eee fore * arthur S. Humphrey, in Two-Car Collision Edward J. Kolke Jr. 31, of 3146 Brooknell, Commerce Township, is listed in satisfactory condition to day at Pontiac Genera! Haspital with a possible skull fracture suf- | in a two-car crash’ fered Friday on South Commerce road. William Ford, 69, of 2219 Austin. Walled Lake, driver of the other car, Was treated for minor cuts and brutses of the face and his wife, Annie, 67. is reported in good condition with knee injuries. | Ford told Oakland County sher- iff's deputies thaf Kolke's auto skidded sideways across the cen- | | lerline and into the path of his southbound car near Penny Lake road in Commerce Township. Gratiot County was injured fatally Saturday when their car rammed Hospi 73, of | his car missed a curve on M20 northeast of _ Muskegon, crashed ‘into a tree and burst into flames. Airman Glenn E. Swearingen, 19, of Jefferson, Tex., was injured ‘fatally Sunday when he lost con- | trol of his car and crashed into a tree on U.S, 23 near Ann Arbor. Pvt. Russell D. Brown, 19, of Reading, a paratrooper home on | turiough, was ed Sunday in a two-car colli near Hillsdale. other teenagers were injured | seriously in the .smashup. Robert L, Spencer, 39, and his wife, Delores, 34, died Sunday in Muskegon an ei] space beoter apparently A fall down a flight of stairs at” some adjacent territory. — Our organist is one of Pontiac’s best. Conse- quently, music during the services at the funeral home, is a greatly oppre- cioted feature. Sparks-Griffin Glenn H. Griffin Funeral Home “Thoughtful Service” 46 Williams St. yt ae om TRE hab ET Ware se tea | ae | by Exchanges of Gift Merchandise May Not Be Made After | Tuesday, January ~ SPECTAL NOTICE! 7 | Governing the Exchange of Ph. FE 2-5841 } i Pe {th Please note also that this regular credit rule AND CL | Pontiac Chamber of Commerce =~ applies: —- MERCHANDISE SHOWING DEFINITE z! EAR EVIDENCE OF USED OR WORN ‘fe CREDIT OR EXCHA PONTIAC RETAIL MERCHANTS CAN NGE. ASSOCIATION of the secre ee ease e HAVING BEEN NOT BE ACCEPTED FOR ‘ 2 SQ et worn tee iy . ’ ‘ 4 Britain Ousts ’ : . Teaches Friends . Sign Language ‘Somalia’ ‘Comes of A , THE ge U.S. Divorcee America Denies Use of ‘Pressure’ in Securing | Somalia Expulsion Order COPENHAGEN, Denmark ww — An American divorcee ordered out of Britain sought temporary haven here today and blamed American “pressure” for her plight. U.S WASHINGTON—Italy’s elongat- \ed, — East African colony, Saur f cee cee | tas 6 igs Gas a as ‘solid blue field, nothing more. New Somalian postage stamps show the flag to the world against a background of ftaly’s traditional colors—green, white and, red, the officials depied an part in “a National Cougregiee Society re-| case, 7 $ ports. : The woman, 32- year-old Mrs.| Somalia is a U nited Nations | Trust Territory under Italian ad- with her British fiance, Clve ministration. It has been prom- Jenkins, a British , trade union ised self-government after ten official. She plans to marry him! years of tutelage ending in 1960. here when her divorce becomes, Leng end narrew, Somalis final in F then return wit him to a a ‘ae = provides comparhen—end charp zen. contrast—with California. Al- most as wide and 306 miles long- er, it is one-fifth greater in area. Its coast faces east in- ‘ stead of west, stretching 1,100 virtually unindented miles on the | Indian Ocean from northeast to southwest, the reverse of Cali- fornia’s slant. Hotter and drier than the Gold- en State, Somalia reaches 100 ‘miles south across the Equator to | Dicks Head on the border a Kenya. With few high gree holds close to sea .Jevel in southern half. Northward it rises ‘to a 3.000-foot plateau. Two pane bordering its short Gulf of Aden | coast rise 7,218 and 4,593 feet. Jean Butler, flew here yesterday | * 8 @ Mra, Butler has been in Britain | for the past five years, employed | recently as a curator at a London, museum. The British Home. Ottice | had refused to extend her residence | permit and warned that she must leave the country by Dec. 28 or ke deported. | The Home Office declined to dis- cuss the case but said “such action is made when it is conducive to the public good.” * LJ * Mrs. Butler was divorced Dec. 22 from J. Jordan Butler, an Ameri- can archaeologist living in Britain. She said previously “there is cer- ions pie ppnageend girded | Fully halt the territory is barren been any question about extending |W@steland. A million semi-no- | my permit to stay in Britain.” madic Somalians herd several eat | Mrs. Butler has said she did not |!ion sheep, goats, camels and cat want to return to the United States|tle in areas that offer forage.” because of former trade union|Crop farming is possible on only | affiliations. She said that 10 years| one-tenth of the land—that which ago she had been an organizer lies near the few, large water with the CIO (Congress of Indus-| holes. or along the Giuba and trial Organizations) “and had Ne- | Scebeli Rivers. Crossing the groes and whites in the same union southern plain, the rivers are fed in the South." | by tributaries flowing from Ethio- “=e pia on the narthwest. “Also at my state university | A fow Secsainas 0 ths coll (Missouri) I ran a campaign to) ; = allow Negroes to be admitted to| growing maize, rice, sesame and the university,” she added. pranuts. Since 1936. skilled Ital- — : jan farmers have developed . plantations beside the rivers, Deatf-Mute Child | srowing bananas, cotton and sugar. These and livestock pro- ducts account for most of the export trade volume. Some 170,000 Somalians live in towns, 70,000 of them in Mogadis- cio, the capital, chief port. and communications center. Its broad, palm-lined streets and white build- ings lead to waterfront warehouses that store cargoes carried by British and Italian ships visiting on regular runs. Coastal ships from Aden ply among lesser So- malian ports—Merca, Brava and Chisimaio. Rural Somalians are illiterate. The territory has never had a LOUISVILLE, Ky. W—When her | family moved into a new neigh- borhood two years ago, Delores Schnider had a problem. How does an 8-year-old deaf- mute go about making friends and playing with the other children? With a child's directness, De- lores found the answer by teach- ing all the youngsters sign lan- guage. Now there's hardly a child of her age in the neighborhood who can't hold his own in two-handed Italian. Protectorate Picks Single. Starred Blue Flag | morality are among the strong. | est which remain in-our arsenal,” | service officer between 1941 and | written language of its own. ‘Only | ia few urban residents have learned to write Italian or English in the score of lower schools so far opened, Illiteracy and . the |Himitations of agriculture and program of preparing the people to run a sovereign nation. British forces early in World | War Hf eatered§ Mogadiscie, euding Htaly's 50-year coloniza- tien of Italian Semaliland. Nine | years later, in April, 1950, the British transferred the admin- istration to Italians as provided by the United Nations Trustee- ship Council. The arrangement left unsettled the sharply dis- puted problem of a boundary between Somalia and Ethiopia. Of Italy's other former colonies in east Africa, Libya became an independent kingdom on Christ- mas Eve in 195). Eritrea became’ an autonomous unit federated with Ethiopia on July 9, 1952. Ethiopia. which Fascist Italy held from 1935 to 1941, again has sovereign status under Emperor Haile Selassie. " Bentley Wants U. S. | fo Sever RedTies NEW YORK @®~Rep. Alvin M. | | Bentley (R-Mich) wants the United ask the court to declare the ordi- | States to sever its diplomatic rela-| nance invalid. tions with Soviet Russia and the Iron Curtain eountries. Bentley told a meeting of the | Hungarian Catholic League of America last night the move “Would be one of the best steps | which this government could take | to reassert its pesition of moral leadership of the free world.” “The weapons of international Bentiey said. The congressman questioned the value of using American embassies in Communist countries as ‘ listen- ing posts."' He said that on the basis of his | personal knowledge as a foreign 199), he found their value ‘‘of ex- 'tremely limited content.” Stainless steel contains from 6: to 26 per cent nic ickel. ly yy, pice: 1 Bonne Bell's No Need to Pay More Than— Per Print For Your Holiday SNAPSHOTS conversation. Delores’ two brothers, Joe, 15, and Eddie, 13, also have been deaf-mutes from birth but the eld- est child, Mary Lou. 17, has nor- mal hearing. So do Mr. and Mrs. Jim Schneider. Sleeping Driver Kills Another Asleep in Car LEVELLAND, Tex. w& — High- way Patrolman Henry Crump gave | this account of a car wreck yester- day: Army Pfc. Carl Preston Peek, | 20, of Midland, Tex., pulled off the road near here, evidently to ges ’ A car driven by Lonzie Cole, 26. of O'Donnell, Tex., hit Peek's car headon. The patrolman quoted Cole as saying he went to sleep at the! wheel. Peek was killed. Cole and five passengers injured. Dean of Dental College to Be Honored in Detroit DETROIT w—Dr. Myron § .Ai- senberg, dean of the Baltimore School of Dentistry at the Univer- sity of Maryland, is scheduled to receive the Alpha Omega annual © All SUPER-SIZE Prints ® New Faster Service * Lifetime FADEPROOF * Deckied Edges Plus 30 Hormone Cream mes ob watyens : Regular $5.00 size $ aus tan An exciting chance to bol- ster your beauty and budget. Now, at half-price, 1 60 day supply of this scientifically tested cream. The test, as L reported in a medical jour- nal proved results can be seen quickly. The skin looks firmer, smoother more radi- ant and younger. Buy your supply now—while this | “once-a-year” bargain lasts. SIMAS. achievement medal at the dental fraternity’s 47th annual convention in Detroit this week. More than 1.000 delegates are ex- pected to attend the five-day con- ference. Electric photo-cell, automatic equipment assures best possi- ble prints’ Why pay more? SIMAS& BROTHERS Camera Dept. —Main Floer Ceocescoccosccosesoe The quality of cigars is said to, be influenced by climatic condi-. | tions. ScadaGdcoasdcscosoovceavecsdedds bemivceelbecaiccn nites Docccccccccccccccccccccceeeecceeeneescecces eee eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeseeccooceee Knock Pop Winter Off His Feet! Use Our MARAFUEL Oil for Heat! To keep your oil burner running trouble-free, use our High-Heat MARAFUEL. Prompt delivery serv- ice . “Keep Full” service, too! Just shore FE 2-918). BROTMERS 98 N. Saginaw Main Floor , Injunction Hearing Se banning house trailers. | liam D. Swinney and Joel K: Pipkin iwho have trailers locate1 on lots ' be completed in 9 year, during an now have their second set of | twin boys. ‘MONDAY, DEC EMBER + Tobacco, Alcohok Hold No Fears in Trailer for 93-Year-Old LOS ANGELES uf—At the age & of 98 Thomas N. Camfield offers cnet Lake Area the opinion that ‘‘all this stuff you t read about the dangers of tobacco , and alcohol is a lot of bot air.’ Camfield, a retired Los ‘Angeles real estate man, took some time PONTIAC PRESS, January 17 will appear in Circuit~Court Jan. — and women — to a reporter in |1T and attempt to show why an in-_ his room at the Jonathan Club, | Junction should not-be issued stop-| where he has lived for 30 years. ping enforcement of an ordinance | «1; start my day with my corn- cob,” said Camfield. “As soon as I) wake up I go back to bed and ‘smoke my head off. And I have a cigar after breakfast and dinne The injunction ~is sought by Wil- in Springlake Heights Subdivision. The ordinance, the first passed by the village, requires trailer owners to get building permits | and start constructing homes within 30 days. The hemes must | port before breakfast and a dr ink | ‘of avhisky before dinner. ried. I never wanted to have any: which time the builders may live in their trailers. Swinney and Pipkin claim they located the mobile homes on the lots before Wolverine Lake was incorporated and the ordinance passed. They cite a state law | which says, “the lawful use of | land or a structure exactly as such | existed at the time of the enact- ment of the ordinance affecting | them may be continued.’ They assert the law places re. strictions on their constitutional rights and ‘ ‘confiscates thousands (of dollars of property.’’ The two. At Simms the ONLY | Difference Is Our LOWER PRICES. Savings of 10% to 40% . ®Freshest. Pure Drugs: ®Experienced Pharmacists *Certainty of Satistaction | Santa Matches Stork ‘in Twin Yule Present LOS ANGELES «—Old Santa being no piker perhaps figured he could do on. Christmas what the i stork had done on Thankegiving 13 years ago. 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McCatt | ithy (R-Wis) said yesterday the | ‘flow of goods from the free world to Eommunist China is steadily increasing and that he plans to. | SEOUL w — Francis Cardinal intensify his ‘campaign against it.-| | Spellman celebrated two masses, eC arthy said in an interview | shook hands with 2.300 serviee- he plans te do ‘a lot of public “Adillions of them." ~ re Cardinal Spellman Busy transportation hamper the trustee| Wolverine Lake village officials yesterday to give his views on life ™en, Made three speeches and laid speaking after the first of the the cornerstone of a new church, year’ to emphasize his contention Sunday on his fourth annual tour that Red China should be block- ‘of Korea. aded—"‘not a naval blockade by The cardinal's maks servers at U. S. warships,’ he added, “but a/ (Sth Air Force headquarters <in- bloc kade brought about by cutting | ‘cluded Sgt. Earl Wentworth, Rose- off aid to nations which do trade | bush, Mich. iwith the Reds.” = Simms Special for Tonight and Tuesday BARGAIN BASEMENT Big 20x40-Inch—Heavy First Quality ‘Cannon’ Bath Towels In Rich Solid Colors JT _—In ‘Matching Colors— 12x12 Matching ' WASH ‘CLOTHS..... 10° $ for 1 14x24 Matching HAND TOWELS . Famous ‘“*Cannon' wae heavy bath towels in rich, vibrant colors, of: Blue, pink, green, or yellow. First Quality towels. SCCCSCOHSCCSOSSESESCHCSHSCOCESOOSECOREESOEEEES 36x36 Inches When Opened Flour Sacks Ain" Opens to big 36 x 36 inch size. Has many uses in the home, dusting, pol- : . ishing, drying, etc. Regular 34c. each. SOHEHSHHHSSHHSOHOHHSHOSHOHHSHOHSEHHHSOHOEOCOOOE First Quality —81x99 Inch Muslin Sheets ‘7 44 First quality muslin sheets in white only. Big 81 x 99 inch size, has wide hem. Tonite and Tuesday . - only! PYTTTTIITITITITI TTT TTT Reversible SATIN QUILT Comforters In Double Bed Size rT 5 ~~ : 2 = be Regular $1.89 Value — & - ; : ~ ‘am SQ99 | Quality Satin quilted comforters in warm 69° woo and 40% cotton filled Choice of es with side in contrasting colors. Warmth at lowest cost. PRICES SLASHED— Regular $3.95 to $6.95 Playtex Girdles Nationally famous ‘PLAYTEX’ girdies in choice of 3 styles: brief, garter, and panty with gar- ters. In white or pink colors. S-M-L and BABY NEEDS BIRDSEYE or FLANNELETTE Baby Diapers Regular $2.49 2 77 PER DOZEN Price Choice of either famous BIRDSEYE or FLANNEL- ETTB diapers at this low price! Guaranteed First Quality—Regular $3.95 ‘CURITY’ Baby Diapers 2% 'O2 Bees FULL yn DOZEN | Scaler soft 'Curity” diapers Ps to wash . . . faster to dry . dozen, guaranteed -tirst Quality at this price - = Basement —Main Floor {(® BROTHER LY: : THRER. Shop Simms TONIGHT Ice Fisting 1955 Fishing | License « a FREE ; Fishermen Calenders Never Feil—Non-F reeze .- Tip-Ups 8 Regular 9 Oil treated hardwood, al) metal parts cadmium plated to resist rust. Large reel, double stabilizer, 17” long. Fiag stands 2" above ice on strike. Exactly aa pictured. IC— RODS c Various lengths = makes te $3. 49. : Ice $sPUD 36 inches lo. $298 WONDER BAITS — Fameus Could's 5% Werms, Grubs, ete. . LEADER aera 39« Sine -. 18 ¢ te SNELLED HOOKS Package of 6 * (29« Snelieg Meeks .... ce ‘SKIMMERS All metal c , 39 eee eee eee Fits All Size Shoes Ice Creepers As pictured, safe, caae = 19¢ slip creepers straps, will [4 any = shoe Other Creepers as low as ... COLEMAN LANTERNS. $] 195 Single Burner .,,. CE PLIES— Many kinds priced G6 1OW 00. «cc ctsans HAND WARMER HOLDER Helds firmly tae PERCH SPEAR PIKE SPEAR, All Steel 5-Tine style eeoeee eveuers events Famous Endicott-Johnson THERMO-PAC Insulated Boots Why a $ , ] 0° SIMMS PRICE Famous Thermo-Pac tnsulated boots ideal for cold weather sports or work. Scuff-preef rubber with non- slip cleat soles. 12 inch high tn all , $7169 UNDERDRAWERS $129 Famous Manes $149 “49 25¢ 796 te match drawers... . _ 8 SWEAT SHIRT | White with Fleece Lining .. eee JERSEY CLOVES For men of women, brown color only. BOOT SOx 100°, weel for extra warmth _.. PLAID SHIRTS Flannel Shirts in Plaid Style . seeeees $8 N, Segincw —Main ‘7 / After Christmas OF ASHION is on a Girls’ Coats—Sets Were .29.98 Were to 29.98 Dress Clearance! - Were to 8.98 Were to 8.98 PENS Sweater Clearance! ¢ Were to 7.98 Were to 10.98 Coat Clearance Were 69.98 Were 59.98 14" 18 pas = 88 Qs £3 Bgzoo DH Warm winter coats and cost sets .. . ‘ some with interlining. plaids, ribelines, ‘C]; : . / . 100°, wools m sizes 3 to 14. Subteens, Mpscr, GOGiVEsS |e nylon, wool, Were to 16.98 Were to 16.98 Fitted, box, clutch, and boy coats in a tremendous assortment of fabrics, colors, styles. Even some cashmere, camel hair! Sizes 7-15, 8-20. Hurry fool uses 814, dacron, orlon. Full fashioned in a host of styles and colors. Sizes 34-40. 7.98 100% wool jersey blouses, 32-38, 6 colors, 3.88 > 8s ae Crepes, taffetas, rayons, failles, prints, solids, dressy Boys’ Leather Jackets All leather 19.98 horsehide jackets 14% : r 1 vw . o/ eo % | S16 Te bomber cx ayaa pe Ski rt Clea ra nce Bette r Dresses : 2 . , Were 8.98 Were 11.98 Topper Clearance Were 39.98 Were 24.98 , Pa , , = y P Boys’ and Girls’ Sno-Suits ges 88 = as Were 49.98 Were 35.00 Were 5.98 Were 10.98 | ° 24 12 2 d°° 18°° ; 100°. wool flannels, tweeds, kharafleece in Ass Be* many styles and colors. Sizes 10 to20... most Were 19.98 Were 16.98 have pockets, too! A( 3) in for the coat buys of the year! \ ee and casual styles in sizes 9-15, 12-20, 14'2-24'2. A : Nd | terrific group of dresses . . . hurry in! Short and 34 lengths in many, many fabrics ond T (si eee colors. Sizes 8 to 16 lined with milium, wool, and quiltings! } One, two, and three piece styles in water repellent . ° | gab, estron with wool interlining, handy zipper clos- ings. Sizes 2 to 6x. A Famous make dresses, many one of a kind in every Knit Dress Clea rance imaginable fabric and style. Sizes 10-20, 14'2-2412 in over a dozen colors! Were 39.98 - Were 29.98 13** | Junior Dresses Were 24.98 Were 17.98 Were 14.98 Here 8.98 16** 19% BS fe Were 10.98 One and two piece knit dresses oo in wool, orlon .. . some with an- gora trim, flared and straight c oe ; . i . ' lever . <-plece Jumior styles in jumpers and cos- skirts. Sizes 10-18 in six colors! fine Oiaiies, ‘Wide selection of silnoucites, labocs: colors in sizes 7-15. Fur Tierra Coats Values to $119 including Cashmeres' Nine types 1% fur, six styles, six colors ue sizes 8-18, 14%a2- Hurry! Girls’ Dress Clea rance Reg. 5.98 tatfetas, velvets. cottons, epee nylons with short, 34 sleeves, in sizes 2-14, 8-14 for subteens. Better Suits Values to 69.98! A doz- en luxurious fabrics, handsome winter styling, lush colors for misses, juniors, half sizes. Girls’ Skirts—Sweaters | Reg. 398 skirts (a tremendous assortment of styles, fabrics) and Sweaters (slip-ons, cardigans) in orion, nylon, wool. Seven colors in sizes 7 to 14. Waite's Third Floor Waite's Third Floor Waite's Children's Apparel—Swecond Floor Waite's Third Floor + | Priced to Clear! Save as Much as $311! “save as much as 8.15 in our famous name Persian Lamb Coats ||Shoe Clearance Originally $399 to $599! | — _ Dressy and Casual Shoes Taken Right From Stock! BO Values Values "to to . ; ; 10.95 14:95 Choose Either Natural Grey ji he ad » > . ’ or Blach Dye d Persian: Imagine .. . 675 pairs of nationally advertised shoes taken right from stock for our Annual Clearance Sale! These savings insist that you come in to buy the top shoes in America at lowest prices in Pontiac! Just about every size and color imaginable, too! ) Here's an After-Christmas Fur Special you can't pass up . . . dyed inky black or clear natural grey Persian Lamb styled according to fashion’s latest trends. Light- weight, small or open flat broadtail curl! Complete sizes, too! And we have full length to jacket length waiting for you Jen A ~~ Te, ama » «hurry in and save! aa °* Air Step * Demoiselle * Glamour * Fortunettes * DeRoose ° Teenagers * Joyce A Very Small Down Payment and the coat is yours ... with many months to pay! *All Fur Products Labeled to Sh igi ‘ : “i me ot Tapered pe a ot Orisia Waite’s Shoes Street Floor | - Choose Chalk White, Nile Green, t---% oa ; Fi \» = a | . fs THE PONTIAC PRESS, _MONDAY, DECE MBER 27, 1954 — FIVE. - : : Pe A ae fe @ & © © ‘@ ¢ : — “Seve te 2.99! quilted, _ Seve Vet washable, if Seve 50c! | pocga = re ° Seve 6c! soft absorbent! Seve 50a! heavy 8 os. sippered Save 80c! sturdy, durable! a p : s @ 5 e ° Ed Mattress Pad | Pillow Protector | Dish Towels Dish Cloths Pillow Ticks Mattress Covers , ‘ e c : : x wn 4.99 AZ - 39 . X 99° 2.99 inn Reg. 7.98 contour fitted pad Regularly 79c! Zippered clos- | Regularly 89c! Irish linen for . - R to 4.79! Covers : pod — with SS ees ing for pect in sanitary... the best in aakane in clean e Regularly 15c! 12x12 gaily col- Regularly 1.49! Ready made ema foam rubber or og b ing, = esr 41 S” wide + Sanforized percale! ~ Fits all dishwashing. Washable and . cred dish cloths of quality with corded edges in solid and spring mattresses . . . also box te re ine. Reg 8.98 Full 6.99 standard site pillows. Bleached colortast. 18x26. Stripes and ry mesh. Famous Morgan’ jones attractive prints! Rose, Green, spring! Regularly 4.79... ” dedi taale 6. white. Hurry in today! cheeks. e Brand. Save today! Blue or Rosebud Print! Full. . . 3.99. 4: ~~ Wa, Bann) & Giant Savings on nationally advertised, towels, sheets, spreads, linens... . everything you need! --- Hurry in! Call FE 4-2511 Tonight and Tuesday Night ‘Til 9 P.M... .. Operator on Duty for Early Bird Shopping! > to 50¢! First Quality, Famous Martex Dacron-Edge Regularly 1.39 22x44 Bath Towel Washcloth 13x13 pay No famous ‘‘Martex’’ gives you a real — 99° ‘Regularly 79c 16x28 Guest Towel added feature for longer wear... “miracle margin’’—Dacron reinforced selvages—down both edges where most towels wear out first! Wonderfully fluffy and ebsorbent deep- looped terry towels with 88 sq. inches more terry cloth than ordinary towels. Sunflower, Carnation, Rich Brown, Pink and Azelea. Towels tailed colonial beauty! EXD $10.21: Reversible . . . beauty! Heirloom-Type Spread Hurry in for this terrific savings . . Super thick loopile overlay in an authentic colonial seas on either side. Lush, heavy spread that drapes gracefu . no iron in natural white. save to 82¢! Exclusive... first quality! Dan River Muslin Sheets Regularly. 2.59 77 (72x108° (Twin) be 81x99. (Full) p98 Regularly 22.98! 862x110 = =98x 1101 Twia Full Regularly 2.89, 81x108 (full) 1.87 Regularly 65c, 42x36 Pillow Cases. .. 2 for 85c . fuxurious ... de- @ Check the prices . . . They're. Pontiac's and ee best Values! — @ Exclusiv? with Waite's Famous Dan River Top Quality! ** @ lly to the floor. Pre- shrunk Twin 399 filling from shifting Regularly 4.79 . save YO 80c! First Quolity! Mattress Pad Regularly 3.79! Size zag stitching to prevent cotton . Full Size... ee @ Extra smoothness, sturdiness, and they're fresh and new in sanitary cellophane wrapping! @ Wear and wash beautifully, and priced way down to save you money ! to $1! Lab. Tested . . . First Quality! Famous Dan River Percales! * Regularly Heavily quilted pad with sanitary Fe J Regularly 59 Regularly 2 bleached cotton linters inside. All IC € 3.59! 3.29! 9 first quality in both twin or full, 422x381,” eee . : all thoroughly washable! Lab C bre 81x108 72x108! tested for more durability! Zig- ases. Dan River top quality . . cellophane wrapping. . sparkling white Percoales . , . every one fresh and new in Hurry in today and save! GD to 21c! First Quality! Martex Kensington Towels C3: Regularly 98c! Guest 16x28 Regularly 1.69! Bath Towel 24x44. —«-«1.49 Face Cloth 12x12 .39¢ Vibrantly colored, thick and thirsty towels . . . every one deep and fluffy, absorbent and soft to the touch! Lab tested, colorfast, in a wide range of decorator colors. First Quality! Chenille Spread 99 Regularly 8.98 Full or Twin Size! Beautiful first quality chenille spreads in intricate rope pattern on corduroy background All thickly piled. . completely washable with colortast vivid shiades in Yellow, White, Red, Rose, Aqua, Hunter Green and Cocoa Brown. to 3.99! First Quality! Duck Down Pillow 99 Cut Size 20x26 EEX) to 6.99! First Quality! Satin Comforter 99 @ 100% Imported Down! @ Reg. 9.98 8 ox. @ Regularly Ticking! 12.98! Re- versible! Luxurious cloud soft... Plump . . super soft fluffy down... sealed comforter filled to in down proof blue its gleaming edges stripe ticking with corded with 190°5 wool. All edges! Really a first Quality . . extra lightweight .. . yet extra cozy . . . comfortable warm. Lab tested and ap- proved! Choose 6 color com- binations! pillow for deep down sleeping pleasure with a firm support. Hurry in today and save! ex to 99c! Non-skid, famous Scatter Rug “p29 @ Adds a definite luxury touch to any room! © Startling beauty to ‘bathroom, bed room, nursery & living room. @Choose from 10 vivid decorator colors! » 24M. 3.99 , 2448.2... 4.99 , 32248.....5.99 | 40x56... .8.99 Reg. 3.98! Size 24x36 fsave § to 4.99! First Quality! Trish Linen Damask @ Regulorly 11.98! 64x84! @ Fully Bleached! Washable! Rich first Quality imported 109° Irish linen tablecloth in sparkling white. Ideal for your ' best silver and china. Regularly 12.98... 64102 . . 8.99 Napkins. . 20220 . . 49. Hurry in today! to 3.99! First Quality! op 100% Wool Blanket Ex) "1.99! First Quality! 100% Solid Color Linen 99 ) i @ Regularly 3.98! ! 52x52 @ Luxurious Belgian Linen! Regularly 12.98 Imagine . . . magnificently col ored cloths that are guaranteed to wash without losing their lustrous coldring! Hurry in to- day and save! 8 vivid colors. Rich wool blanket containing only the finest fleecy wools for extra soft yet springy nap. Light downy feather- weight with wide satin binding.. Moth protected for five years. .Weighs only 3 pounds in Green, Claret, 4.98 .. $2x68., 2.99 a ae . 60x80... ..4.99 Blue, Wood, Rose! Hurry in today! Reg. 7.9 60x90..... -99 Reg. se W7ul7...... 4% Waite’s Linen's and Domestics—Fourth Floor SIX. Sent yes ee * THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 27,1956 i: raiea ne ——— a HE. PONTIAC PRESS ton as'to whether amendments alont ~ | y si? mS David Lawrence Says: X,-e= : | 4 Reliance on France Risky Daily Exceot Sunday land County’s experience in the last After German Arms Vote . election, there is evidence that the prob- WASHINGTON — If any further pilots of today. Also since naval lem won't be solved entirely without many more voting machines than now MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS So * reel were Seoied te prvele Te planes are equipped ‘to carry , lian the int ti atomic weapons, a large number emcee ooo beter! ween Gales isenaber a. the U. S Air parce of sorties could be flown per hour Paper as wel as all AP news dispatcea =e past election, for example, and on jhe aircraft carrier of the to hey cles in Ruslan territory Raa amy aS cartes for 40 cent Michigan voters weren't sure of U. S. Navy, it has been furnished without dependence on any land ee Genesee. Li Ny eer‘ all results the morning after the nthe lg ew dvs by the - ‘This does not mean that Ameri- Washtenaw Counties Serie Se 30.00 voting. In other states with larger For the slender thread by which can military men believe in giving Byzeer? populations and closer races, most - & small group of French deputies On the contrary thay see the need MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS of the results were known by mid- = ee SE ger ed Sor mare sibituntion bacua % night of election day. Our own staff was able to tabulate some machine precincts two hours after MONDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1954 particular set. Thus reliance e mergency on whe) 28 * : bases in Spain, Italy, Turkey and Parliament, Road Survey Needed the polls closed. It was 14 hours before arises, can suddenly declare its bases in, § a Gal A proposal by Greorce N. SKRUBB, the count was finished in some of the raises wy aes oaleaea ip strong. director of the County Plan Commis- paper ballot precincts. French territory. "But the unsolved problem ts sion, that a survey of Oakland's high- ke Uk Soviet Mussia, on the — pel epessheagtrg eagles decom way needs be completed as soon as © The Press is heartily in favor of ~ ee hedermee a pees: operat. in Europe suddenly decide to go i lection laws to brin “neutral.” It would make quite a possible, makes sense. amending the é Ws g ing effectively through the Soviet ~e ' handling of unofficial embassy in Paris, controls im- §Ve*ing probim for the - His suggestion grew out of the bout speedier ing portant newspapers and has the als Who cannot redeploy their fact that the plan commission = Teturns. But we are convinced that support of influential groups, Fees overnight. and the Oakland County High- x there can’t be much speedup locally which collaborate with ax ae Ever’ with the — habe way Commission are collabora- unt mere of pares 2gee and ie bos the test war, — pledge of last — to ratify Pn ting in the task of determining Pontiac’s paper ballot precincts are groups pull strings inside pending treaties rearm Gin mechanized. At present there are 54 French Parliament. —_ a a The whole French situation is Fi just what work must be done. one that is perilous for the West- ~ *« « such precincts, 44 of them in the city. the . , cards for future strategy. This brought realization that because pe fn eee ne te, gress will ask a number ot pat of limited personnel a complete survey “! HERE are about 25, vii “gressive leadership ot Mendes- ent questions bout all th pag of Oakland's State, Federal and county highway needs could not be ready in less than five years. Oakland County can’t wait that long. As SKRusB told the Press, the need is so urgent now that few motorists in this area know what it is to drive on an un- congested road. Moreover, as he pointed out, such long delay isn’t necessary. _ By hiring some engineering firm to complete the survey, it could be ready in two and a half years. * * * In our opinion the plan commission's director has advanced a suggestion that should receive the early and sympa- thetic consideration of our supervisors. Certainly, as he says, to build roads in the wrong places can be worse than not building them at all. KSEE Old Art in New Industry Part of the success and romance in American industry stems from its abil- ity to use old as well as new methods. A case in point is the rapid growth of the investment casting industry. As the Wall Street Journal points out, this process dates as far back as China's Shang Dynasty, 1766-1122 B. C. and was used by the Egyptians, Romans and Greeks. * * * Investment casting got a new start in this country during World War II when it was adopted for the manufac- ture of parts for plane superchargers. By 1944 this had become a $25,000,000 business. Production this year totaled $200,000,000. Seventy of the 100 invest- ment casting firms now operating didn’t exist before 1945. * * * The system itself is easiliy described. Hot wax or plastic is_ pourde into a mold and allowed to harden, or mercury is poured in and frozen. This smoothed pattern is buried or “invested” in sand then melted out leaving a perfect matrix. Molten metal poured into the cavity and hardened comes out smoothly fin- ished. Most intricate designs can be made and little machine tooling is re- quired on the finished pieces. Savings on production costs are said to be as high as 90 per cent. * * * Among products now being turned out for a mass market by this method are military and machine parts and in- tricate pieces for everything from foun- tain pens to electric shavers. Thus we owe a debt of gratitude to the ancients for our industries’ ability to produce more and better things for more people at less cost. Faster Vote Counting The good news from Lansing is that an effort is to be made by the next Legislature to insure speedier vote counting after State elections. Present plans are to accomplish this by revising the election law. As the law now stands it is pos- sible, if not probable, that un- official election returns could be delayed as much as two weeks. et we we While there isn’t any doubt about the need for a speedup, there is some ques- { 4 ways to make a living in this country.” —Newspaper filler. Unfortunately, how- ever, most of them entail work, and work is highly distasteful to a very large percentage of people. “Laziness is a natural state,” says a psychologist. Well, thank goodness, at - least in one respect nearly all people are normal. ——————— “BALD-HEADED I men are happiest, ” says a psychologist, who may be mistaking their shining pates for shining coun- tenances. % Overneann, 7-year-old- philosopher speaking: “Some people are more like people than other people are.” The Man About Town Christmas Echoes Some Items Connected With Observance of the Holiday Pocket: Where some men today find Christmas cards they were given to mail a week ago. A box of cigars is among the Christmas + presents for City Manager Walter K. (Bill) Willman, who hasn't smoked since 1937. An annual Christaes present in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Warren Addison at Keego Harbor is getting monotonous. The family cat gave birth to six kittens Thurs- day. Last year her Christmas presentation was only four. With an automobile 51 years old, but look- ing like new, at its center, one of the best Christmas displays we've seen is on the Dixie Highway at Waterford. The car is the 1903 Ford with which Robert C. Beattie won the gold cup in the 1954 Glidden tour. Taking exception to' tas away is the blue- bird” in the Christmas carol is Mrs. Frances Zollerman of Elizabeth Lake Estates, who says a pair of them are regular patrons at her feeding board every winter. As usual, there was an over sup- ply of Christmas trees, At some Dixie Highway lots they were selling for 10 cents on the final day. Others were giving them away. The poinsettia is not exclusively a tropical flower, phones Mrs. Embury Smith of Auburn Heights, who says the published United Press suggestion is nothing new to her. For many years she has kept her poin- settias in the house during the winter and sets them out in her garden in the spring, and they keep right on producing indefi- nitely. A Pontiac man-with a keen eye to . vital statistics points out that this weekend was the longest drought since prohibition. “But,” he adds, “the advance irrigation was plenti- ful.” Those collectors of antiques, Mr. and: Mrs. S. J. Davis of 27 Palmer St, wonder who knows some- thing about X. F. Mueller, formerly of Forestville, whose name appears on a solid cherry chest with no nails, which they recently picked up. Last week receiving a Christmas card post- marked in Syracuse, N. Y., on Dec. 15, 1953, Wilbur Andrews of Drayton Plains tells me somebody had made a notation on ft: “The mail must go through, but it sometimes drags a little.” Verbal Orchids to— The Keego Harbor. Inter-Lake News; entering its twentieth year of pubilcation. 4 5 New Boy at the Old Grind © . Voice of the People Ross Wade Advises Using Surplus Food to Feed Hungry People Here and Abroad Letters will be condensed when neces- ry because of lack of space. Pull name, eddress and telephone number of the writer must accom y letters but these will not be publis! a if the writer so Fequests uniess the letter is critical in its nature. About a year ago, I wrote an article on the surplus farm prod- ucts, 2.5 billion dollars worth owned by the United States tax- payers, which was costing them 14 million each month just to store in government warehouses. That surplus now is’ about seven billions, I suggested feeding the hungry people all over the world, A man will turn to anythin, ff It's going to give him something to eat, even to the Communists, I suggest this Christmas and in 1955 that the taxpayers, through their government, give every fam- ily that is on welfare, 10 pounds of wheat. if you brown wheat in the oven it makes a good coffee substitute, if you grind it coarse it makes a good breakfast food. Also sag 3 or 4 pounds of butter, three dozen eggs Aus — ot dried eggs and or dried miik, a5 ils Give to the Salvation Army what they can distribute to any they know need food, Let us feed the hungry and save the taxpayers some money. Ress Wade Milford Advertising by Mail Not Fair, Says Reader Shall we call it progressive economy when the merchants foist their advertising matter onto the taxpayers through the postal service? Merchants formerly employed boys and unemployed men_ for this work and thus helped some families. Our postal service is overburdened now and crying for more money from the taxpayers. Is it fair? Wondering Choral Club Wonderful, Says ‘A Music Lover’ Recently a Christmas play was presented at St. Vincent's Hall, which featured the St, Fredérick's Choral Club, Case Records of a Psychologist Girl’s Life With Brothers Not All Roses: I had the satisfaction of being present and enjoyed the singing very much. I have never heard a high school choral club sound so fine. Mr. Dominic J. Kline, director of the choral group, should be congratulated for the wonderful performance. I have also heard the ‘Men's Choir" of St, Vincent's, which was directed by Mr. Kline, and his direction of the chora] group meets up to all expectations. Our group would like to hear more of Mr. Klines Choral Club, and also the Men's Choir of St. Vincents. A Music Lover Lookina Back 15 Years Ago REDS FORCED back 53 miles in three days. JAPANESE PREMIER asked to resign. 20 Years Ago END OF INFANTILE paralysis seen in two new vaccines. LEON TROTZKY LINKED plot to slay dictator of Russia. in but Educational Experience Valuable It’s a lot of fun to have brothers and sisters, but Judy can tell you it ts often embar- otal oo. However, children educate children so married couples should try to have at least three youngsters. For the “middle” child is different from the oldest and the young- est in his personality. By DR, GEORGE W. CRANE Case N-307: When Judy, our only daughter, came home from col- lege during the Christmas holidays in her freshmen year, she had several dates with a boy named Boh I'm telling you other girts about this case so you will realize that a life with four brothers is not all roses. “Oh, Dr. Crane, I wish IT had several brothers,"’ many girls oft- en tell me, And brothers are a great educational experience, as Judy can tell you. For Judy invited Bob to our house for dinner one night, It se happened that Mrs, Crane and I were out of town that day but Judy's two younger brothers were at home, At the dinner table that night, as soon as Bob had his mouth full of food, Daniel would imme- diately ask him a question, just to tease Judy. For Bob would politely try to answer but since his mouth was full, he would be forced to swallow hard a couple of times before he could reply, Aunt Het Charge accounts make Jane ex- travagant. When you can charge things, it don’t bother your con- science like passin’ out the money. When David passed the butter to Bob, Bob reached for the butter plate and David then gave it a little shove, which Bob didn't antici- pate. So Bob’, thumb rammed itself half an inch into the stick of butter, while David, in mock chagrin, exclaimed: “Ooops, I'm sorry, I guess it slipped."’ Well, Judy knew it slipped on purpose! And she realized that her two younger brothers were delib- erately trying to embarrass her. but her hands were pretty well tied. so to speak Another stunt the beys used was to focus their eyes just above Bob's right shoulder and then stare fix- edly at, that point while they asked him questions. Bob would turn his head to see who was standing behind him, for he thought the boys were looking at somebody else as they takked to him. Danny even tried this stunt on his teachers at school, too. In fact, he had used it on Mrs. Crane and me on previous occasions. The next night Judy had another boy friend, who was calling at the house for the first time. Danny and David had never met him before, so they purposely re- mained out of sight in the adjoin- ing room as Judy was preparing to leave the house. Then Danny tried to imitate my voice and in stern, heavy tones, exclaimed: - “Be sure to bring my daughter home before midnight!" j Of course, Judy and the strange boy friend heard this admonition. “Oh, that’s one of my kid brothers,” she tried to pass off the situation as gracefully as aed sible, And as Judy end her boy friend fa started to open the front door to leave, David exclaimed in a loud stage whisper so they could easily hear him: “Dan, is it O. K. to unlock the closet door now and let grandma out?" Again, Judy tried to laugh off the situation by ascribing David's whisper to .some more of the “horse play’’ of her kid brothers. Fortunately, Judy was suffi- ciently accustomed to the give- and-take of four brothers that she “just considered the source.” ‘She could also hold her own very well in debate with them. And now that the two younger boys are both in college, they don't em- barrass her as much. In fact, they value her advice and often ask for her opinions on social questions, which shows the reciprocal educational value of bro- thers and sisters. Cc opyright bowetne Syndicate Inc.) France, are apparently unable to counteract the Soviet propaganda and the infiltration process which goes on in secret. Exposures of the Communist influence are rare indeed and then only when a fla- grant case of espionage happens. Some idea of the dangerous sit- uation that exists in Paris can be derived from the fact that 100 deputies in the French Parliament are members of the Communist party and regularly contribute about $5,000 a year from their salaries, or about $500,000 annually for the support of Communist par- ty propaganda and activities, The leaders of this party go. pe- riodically to Moscow for confer- ences, and this is reported in the press as a commonplace occur- rence. While the Communists are ex- eluded from the cabinet, the y manage somehow to get hold of secret documents, It has been revealed in the press that during the Indochina war the Commu- nist agents in France instantly obtained the details of French military plans through cabinet sources anid relayed them to Mos- cow and then to the Communist forces in Indochina. How can the United States be sure of France as an ally when there are such goings on? This question has been frequently asked by military men here as they ar- gue for a different concept of defense than is usually heard. Thus, for example, important air bases are being constructed for the U. S. Air Force in French terri- tories in Africa. But.a change in control of the French cabinet can overnight mean a decision not to let any military operations be prosecuted from such bases. These are some of the reasons why military strategists here feel that since the best- defense for the United States is in part at least an effective offense, then intercon- tinental bombers which can be re- fueled in the air and can cross the Atlantic and Pacific from bases in Canada or this country are essential along with a large fleet of aircraft carriers which can roam the seas. The floating bases, of course, are not within the control of any foreign partiament. This means that a sizable number of fighter planes and bombers can take off from the flat tops, and it would require a fleet of similar size or quite a lot of land-based planes for Soviet Russia to attack such carriers, especially since the lat- ter can move around constantly at a speed of 30 to 40 miles an hour. In any future war the oceans will be as important as the land mass. The accessibility of the Russian heartland from the approaches to the Baltic and the Arctic and also from the Mediterranean, Persian Gulf, Indian Ocean and the Pa- cific is well known to the bomber Baering Down . By ARTHUR “BUGS” BAER (International News Service) . When you have a boy around the house these Christmas days he sure will toy with you. There was a time when Christ- mas toys lasted just long enough to follow the instructions on the wrapper, You put it together and it fell apart. gave a whirl, a mechanical wheeze, shivered and was no more. Today the Christmas toy is as practical as long underwear. Somebody gave the kid next door a do-it-yourself set.And he did. He not only did-it-hisself but he did - it-to-everything-and-every- body. He sawed the legs off the piano and now it's a musical sand box. He pegged an arrow through the encyclopedia the thick way. He wanged the aquarium for the full derby route, his atomic airplane - chased the cat over the transom and through a fan ventilator and all the chairs and tables in -the house are now his size. He has a hoss that gallops, a General Custer carbine that shoots and a Sitting Bull outfit that spares nobody. His electric train system has grade-crossing accidents, His tool chest takes up vhere the ter- mites left off. Portraits By JAMES J. METCALFE How much am I in need of you . That life be not in vain? . As much as crops and flowers need , . . The sunshine and the rain. . . As every heart must have its beat . . . And every lung its air . . . And babies cannot do without .. . A mother’s loving care . Iam in need of you as much . As friendship cannot live . . , Unless there is that willingness... To sacrifice and give... AS much as sails depend upon... The wind that sweeps the sea... In all these ways and more, my love... You mean so much to me... Without encouragement from you ... I could not ever thrive... Without your promise to be true . I could not stay alive. (Copyright. 1954) THOUGHTS FOR TODAY Fear, and the pit, and the snare, are upon thee, 0 inhabi- tant of the earth.—Isaiah 24:17. * * * There is this paradox in fear; he is most likely to inspire it in others who has none himself! — Colton. Doctors Find Fewer Cases of Croup; Children Getting Less Coddling Now By WILLIAM BRADY, ._D. Friends told me you used to have a pamphlet on croup. I have never seen any mention of it in your column... (Mrs. B.A.) The last 3 pages in Little Lesson No. 5, “Call it CRI’ deal with croup. You really should slip one of the Little Lessons in your pocket or handbag, Ma‘am, and read it at odd moments instead of —well, wasting time. If by any chance the chapter on croup is not in your copy of Cal! it CRI, return jit and I'll send you with my compliments a new $5 set of Little Lessons in the Ways of Health, being Ol’ Doc Brady's pocket en- cyclopedia of the science and art of keeping well. A few years ago I commented here upon the rarity of croup . nowadays. Guided by the fre- quency of croup in my own prac- tice—it was a common cause of emergency calls, ularly at night when the spasm of throat muscles causes crowing breath- * f _ Fe ee see es eee -ing—I had prepared for distribu- tion a pamphlet on Croup. The first decade or two readers asked for information and advice about croup. But after that months and years passed without any in- quiries about croup. I inferred that children just didn't have croup any more. Moreover, I had not come across anything about it in medi- cal literature in recent years. Even medica] textbooks of the present era are as vague about croup as they are about rheumatiz, infan- tile colic and the gout. So I opined in this column that croup was no longer a hazard of childhood and (you know me, folks) I endeavored to explain why —children nowdays get more fresh air, less coddling. That brought prompt and vig- orous refutation from mothers whose children were subject te croup. But I realized it was useless to argue with them about it, because in most instances their children were attended not by an ordinary doctor like my- self but by a pediatrician, if you please. One mother not only re- b buked me for trying to impose my quaint views on intelligent people. Her young son, she in- formed me, got the croup if something went wrong with the thermostat and the temperature in his bedroom below 65 in the night. That stopped me. - Aside from the last chapter in the booklet ‘Call it CRI’ Dhave nothing more to say about croup. CRI. by the way, att t ical and surgical. khucks, everyday use of of the prevention of is a kind of health insurance is easy on the pocketbook, Ane So paged New Yeart 272 F922 be answered Dr. aires a —— self pore nals (Coppright. 1986) Or you wound it up and it © t “ ethene rrr—nteereeeererggresngaresin Once-Proud Army Is Gone State to Close GAR Offi in Capitol Building Wing LANSING .&) — The last Michi- gan outpost of a once-proud army —the Grand Army of the Republic can flag that hangs above the of- —is soon to be abandoned. Soon after the first of the year, state officials will move the GAR headquarters from its wing in the capitol building, where it has held the records of Michigan Civil ‘War Veterans for as long as anyone can remember. Whether the office will be con- tinued in another: building is still open to speculation, but even if it is—it will never be the same. The office, and its furnishings, are a piece of the past—dust- covered, cracked, and covered a 4 with the memoralia of 4 war ebscured by four later ones. Workers will remove the Ameri- fice door, and the venerable sign that identifies the room as GAR headquarters. many of the furnishings would be moved td new quarters is anyone's guess. Inside, there's an ancient couch, a shredded American flag, a dusty blue uni- form hanging in one corner, pic- tures of the old guard and some 600 battered tin boxes containing records of the state’s GAR posts. Johan Gafner, state property Manager, says he will start clearing out the room soon after FEDERA dept. stores REC. ilators and REG. built no-sa, ee ee a OPEN MON. NIGHT TO 9 CLOSED FRIDAY AT 6 } and BOXSPRINGS « 180 to 209 coils with pre-built borders, vent- 252 to 576 coils. Some with nylon covers, all ? 8 88 with pre-built borders. REG. 49.95 VALUES! 837 coils! Woven ravy- on damask covers, pre- dan 1. Demands from the gov. @rnor’s office and. legisiaters for miore space make it inevitable, he said. * .Actually, the office has been living on borrowed time. A state law provided that gl! the files and documents should be transferred to the Michigan Historical Com- mission ‘“‘when the Department of Michigan Grand Army of the Re- public becomes disbanded.” No one around the capitol seems Michigan's last veteran of the Union Army died in 1952. Only one is left in the nation, and he is 107 years old. < Valuable records will apparent- ly be turned over to the Michi- gan Historical Commission. And the office, which one echoed with the talk of men who wore the blue of the Union, will be cleared j to make room for the business of {their grandsons. San a eee ee 34.95 VALUES! 21°° 39.95 VALUES! handles! 34* borders! tg : q ‘ ‘ ei ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1954 to know what, “disbanded” means. | aeneiiblihieitmmen nite in 72x108 SHEETS manent size tabs! Type 128. Seal of Quality muslin and 81x108-in. T 67 | | KF ™ Never before such quality at this ~~~ low price! Snow-white, extra —~ smooth muslin with wide hems, per- aa — 42x36 pillowcase ........... eee 44c or Thick tn! thirsty double loop | TOWELS 38: Superb values at this low price! Pastel colors in moisture-blotting terryeloth! Slightly irregular. 20x Wein. Size! Hurry in and save! Guest towels, 3 for $1 Wash cloths, 6 fer $1 Sldiss OPEN MON. TO 9: Closed Fri. aaemeenated a 4 * ee ee ee ee «SEVEN Pe Bae On ee * Stag : : .e 3 ba ee eS sc GF om ee ee . ie = — ' FEDERAL'S INVENTORY _; | CLEARANCE OF TV AND APPLIANCES! @ Kelvinator AKE ADVANTAGE OF FEDERAL'S SPECIAL LOW BLANKETS 177 Softly napped! Wash- able! 70x90-inch. ~ 72x90-in. Chatham BLANKETS 277 Wool, rayon blend! Pastels, 7 2x90-inch. 72x84-in. quilted COMFORTS 6.33 Wool, rayon filled! Pastels. 72x84” size. Non-allergic foam rubber PILLOWS 399 Lowest price in years for such quality! Allergy-free foam rubber that retains its shape always! Will not mat or bunch! Buy now for refreshing sleep!, Percale zippered protector included! YARD GOODS SALE! 25°. @36" unbi. muslin @ Bleached cotton @17" teweling @27” flennei Big 22x44” TOWELS Extra-plump PILLOWS 2» $5 75% chicken, 25% turkey feathers! Stand- ard size. ACA tick! Extra plump! 20 x 26! Man-sized 22x44-inch towels at savings! Pas- tela. Thirsty double loops dry so quickly! Make your own sheets, nightgowns, dish tow- els, dust cloths, dra and save at Federal’s! SACINAW AT WARREN PONTIAC ., \ “RIGHT. ee ___THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 27,1956 fs _ ' + — ee —_— $$ : : SS | = - [ee = za a April 15 Deadline _ cowed cee et ae myers POH, r a e didn't do so? Will the Tren get| Show Business Tax Office Set to Mail ste sear’ ton New Blanks This Week _iti imation‘ WASHINGTON —Right on the, Likewise, if you're one of those | thing i¢ you paid your first three heels of Santa Claus this year will | people required to file advance installments for 1954 but come @ less welcome visitor to estimates of your income, and to | weeks-of grace in making the pay- —o : | rterly install. ™ent normally due Jan. 15. % millions of American homes — a pay the tax in quarterly insta Farmers get a bit more time.| | They can wait until Feb. 15, in- mailman with your 1954 income ments, the deadline for your first tax form. jestimate and payment is moved 1604 of the previous J The Internal Revenue Service |trom March 15 to April 15. The ‘ie their final return on 1954 in- is ready to mail out some 63 mil-' dates for the remaining install- 4 lion forms between’ Christmas and ments are unchanged, however— an. 31, to, New Year’s Day. Many will be June 15, Sept. 15 and Jan. 15. Duck Owner Can’t Even delivered in time to give the recip-} You now fall into this category fent a headache even before the jf: : morning of Jan. 1. *- 8 6 * * cause they had to be revamped 2. Your income includes more Bulldozer was too messy around, © = wet ke ._ j ; . completely as a result of the 1954 than $100 which is not subject to the house and Brooks just couldn't; _ G00-GOO EYES—It has finally happened, someone had the idée | tax law changes. This took extra withholding. In that case you're bear to eat the pet as a duck {of dressing up a helicopter to look like its nickname—"'Grasshopper.”” time. Supposed to file estimates if you dinner bay : : ems Ot This gigantic grasshopper rides in a parade at Pensacola, Fia., One possible bright spot: An eX expect your total income to be = Sure enough, Brooks won Bull- ie : sel : tra month to pay. Under the new more than $400, plus $600 for each -dozer back in the shoot, is April 18. | What about those who should Give His Pet Away bd 1. Your total income is $5,000 or, MADISON, Ind. w — Ansel The form 1040 and 1040-A re- more if you are single, or $10,000 Brookg donated his tame. duck turns are being mailed a month or more for married couples or, Bulldozer to the local gun club for later than last year, mainly be heads of tamilies. '@ prize ina turkey shoot, length. Stork May Have Bra but Bronx Is Bird’s Headquarters By EDDIE CANTOR anniversary I repeat this, but now after The othes night, sitting in our living room a ae J love you I've added, “New help with George Burns and Gracie Allen, Jack Benny and Mary Livingston, we started to rem- inisce. Jack and Mary, George and Gracie were all married in 1927. Ida and I go back a little | bit further. Ours was a 1914 wedding. When I told Ida’s father that I wanted to. marry his daughter, he wanted to know, “Can you support a family?” I told him I thought I could. He said, “Remember, there are seven of us.” Jearned later there were eleven of them. When I proposed to Ida I was really romantic. I actually got down on my knees and said, “Ida, I love you.” On every | nches All Over “We started housekeeping in s three-room — flat in the Bronx. Our daughters, Marjorie, — Natalie, Edna and Marilyn, were all born there. Yes, the stork may have branches all over, but the Bronx—that’s tge old bird’s headquarters, Our marriage has lasted through all these years, and they have been happy ones, only because of Ida's proposal in our early days. — She suggested, “Eddie, we'll get along fine if — Of course he was only fooling—I ‘you just let me take care of the little things (Copyright 1954) and you take care of the big things.” Imagine - —in forty years no big things have ever come up! . es eae honoring the U. 8S. Navy Helicopter Training Unit No. 1 from North boundary of the U. S., ex- law, the deadline for final returns ' exemption. | Brooks redonated Bulldozer. And | Ellyson vite Undressed, the aircraft is just another ‘copter used aoe of Alaska, is 3,987 miles in he won't compete in the next shoot. | to train pilots at the base. 1950 than in any other year since! back in 1888. Fewer employs jost their lives | the Interstate Commerce commis- as a result o frailway accidents in 'sion began computing its report ee —— a STEWART-GLENN COMPAN Yee et tt QBUALITY. — a FURNISHINGS S INCE 1917 ~ Regular $24.50 mM 519% ety unit, Regular $59.50 $3 7% @ 300 Interlocking Coils @ Seat Edge Construction @ Insule Cushion @ Twin or Full Size Mattress end Box Springs PRICED LOW TO CLEAR ; TWIN SIZE MATTRESS ONLY 4 =o AN fine quelity set at « low price with best quelity cotton and spring Regular $29.50 TWIN SIZE MATTRESS or OUR GREATEST END-OF-THE-YEAR | BEDDING C Regular $39.50 TWIN and FULL SIZE ARANCE Closeout! Mattresses and Box Springs SEE THEM IN OUR DISPLAY WINDOW! FAMOUS STEARNS & FOSTER QUALITY! BOX SPRINGS ONLY MATTRESS or BOX SPRINGS $2 388 @ Pre-Built Border @ French @ Excellent Coil Unit @ Heavy Quelity Ticking Hurry down to Stewart-Glenn Co. and take advantage of these important savings in these well known mat- tresses and box springs! Most are one of a kind in full or twin sizes. Many of them are matching sets so you can buy mattresses with matching box springs or matching sets for twin beds. All’ are excellent bedding values. You'll find such famous quality feo- tures as seat edge construction pre- built borders, insulo - cushioned springs, inner-roll construction and hand-tied box springs. +28* @insulo Cushion @ Pre-Built Borders @ 231 Coil Unit @ Weight Balanced Unit Regular $69.50 : 547% @ 837 Pocketed Coils @ Orthopedic Types @ Pre-Built’ Borders | @ Insulo Cushions @ Twin or Full Size Mattresses end Box Springs SPECIAL SAVINGS ON TWIN SETS! rubber cushions, beautifully styled. . .$339.50 299.50 Valentine-Seaver Sofa— Contemporary Style ...... eee ee, 249.50 369.50 2-Pe. Sectional — Valentine-Seaver — Low arm, modern styling ............/...... 339.50 299.50 2-Pe. Sectional—By Kroehler............ 249.50 359.50 2-Pe. Seetional—Custom-bilt construction ......................... 279.50 279.50 2-Pe. Suite—By Kroehler—Large Size— Excellent cover ....................... 249.50 199.50 Custom-bilt Sofa—Nylon cover .......... 169.50 124.50 Large Size Chair and Ottoman — Mohair - frieze—Chair size ottoman ..__. oo... . 99.50 139.50 Modern Lounge Chair — Foam rubbe cushion — Tweed cover................ 99.50 79.50 Lounge Chair — Kroehler built ........... 69.50 69.50 Platform Rocker—Modern style ....... ... 59.50 99.50 Swivel Rocker — Kroehler built, nylon cover 84.50 79.50 Modern Style Occasional Chair sss. . 64.50 74.50 Occasional Chair—Excellent Styling....... 59.50 299.50 Double Dresser, Chest, Bed—Modern walnut, Kroehler built. .................,.... 249.50 459.00 Double Dresser, Chest & Bed—In sculptured maple—Newest modern styling, excellent quality ................. ... 389.50 359.50 Double Dresser, Chest, Bed and Night Stand 299.50 $249.50 Double Dresser, Chest, Bookcase Bed— By Mengel—Modern style... .......... $219.50 79.50 5-Pe. Black Modern Dinette—30x48 table and 4 matching chairs, charcoal checked , pattern, Lloyd .......... ee ee 64.50 129.50 5-Pe. Dinette—Black wrought iron, table 30x48, extends to 60’, knotty pine formica top, 4 yellow chairs with wine back........ 109.50 94.50 5-Pe. Black Modern Dinette—Yellow 30x40x48 table, matching yellow chairs.... 84.50 109.00 Mahogany Buffet—48" ......... ieee a5 69.50 19.95 Mahogany Dining Room Chairs .......... 13.95 23.95 Beds—Mahogany or Walnut, Twin or Full .. 17.95 30x40 Plate Glass Mirror ............... 18.95 19.95 4-Drawer Walnut Chest ................ 16.95 11.95 4-Drawer Walnut Chest ................ 16.95 11.95 Maple Nite Stand ..................... 9.95 8.95 Brass Smoker .....................5 ... §=©655,.95 Many Other 7 Buy on Our Easy Payment Plan! Items ym Reduced | _ Not Listed 86 to 96 South Saginaw Street. 19.95 Mahogany TeaCart.... sss i ii‘(‘(‘(i;ttt! 18.95 99.50 5-Pe. Chrome Dinette—Red top table, 30x40x48, with Duncan Phyfe base, 4 matching chairs ..................... 79.50 99.50 Sofa Beds—Lawson style, guaranteed— Choice red, toast, green ........°......, 69.50 198.00 3-Pe. Sectional—Pine—Separate cushions.. 139.50 79.50 Chair — Pine ....................., >. 59.50 79.50 Maple—Love Seat—Provincial print cover.. 69.50 249.50 Apt. Size Hide-a-bed .................. 219.50 139.50 Maple Secretary ..................... 119.50 49.50 Poker Tables... sssiswiéa‘i#ys¥¥¥)¥d¥ aw dd ddd 39.50 299.50 Limed Oak Buffet, Table, 4 Chairs... 239.50 22.95 Cricket Chair—Choice of pine or maple.... 16.95 19.95 Mahogany Dining Room Chairs........... 13.95 24.95 Limed Oak Tea Cart .................. . 16.95 90 Day Accounts Pay Ne Carrying Charges A New York, N. Y. (Special)—For the first time science found a new a substance with the aston- Sry A g ability to shrink hemor- and to relieve pain—without surgery. In case after case, while gently relieving pain, actual reduction Gurlakees} took place. Most amaszi "f all—resul were 80 promaen | that suffe made astonishing statements like “Piles have ceased to be a problem!” Sone The secret is a new healing sub- Now this new healing substance | Michigan is an all-year vacation- is offered in ointment form under the name of Preparation H.* Ask for it at all drug stores—money back guarantee. “Beg. U. 8. Pat. Ort. | [LOOK! ' PRICES ‘SLASHED On All Merchandise Except Fair Trode items Hndson sou Houscheld Co. FE S-Goe8 3Centennials |i Scheduled in at | MSC, Soo Locks, Flint LANSING (UP)—Centennial cel- | ities, council secretary Robert J.| stance (Bio-Diyua*) < Gameeees of Furlong siad in noting the 195 @ a world-famous research featitotal | | calender gives “further indication | a STARTS 1 to Mark 100th Birthdays | & land.’ jumping tournaments, -- 15-21. tion's history." 1 progressed to such an extent that it is no longer logical to believe that boom times in general will result tourist business, ing appropriations of other states and territories, there is little rea- dustry will continue to expand at "| the same rate it did prior to last | year,"’ Furlong said. council seeks a $437,388 budget for the 1955-56 fiscal year to ‘“‘put -] (to that of its competition.” Your Watch © Cleaned © Adjusted $ 4” © Regulated Expansion Watch Bands Ladies’—Men‘s Special 1 95 Georges-Newports lewelry Dept. Wesley A. Nunemaker, director, ee commenting on the plan, observed | > |in Buffalo They Can Buy | Art on Installment Plan BUFFALO, N. Y. (UP)—Credit | 9% jis as good as cash at the Art bo | Institute of Buffalo. poe For the first time in the insti-| 7 tution’s history, paintings and | § : sculptures placed on exhibit: may | = | now be purchased on the install-| ment “plan through an arrange | Hy ment with a Buffalo bank. that a growing trend is evident throughout the country to” enlarge the base of interest in the arts. “Tt ig fortunate this is happening because, if our cultural institutions are to survive, they must be humanized,’ he said. ‘‘The or- dinary citizen must feel he has as muck apart in the cultural life of the community as in its political or economic life." It’s - Dry Cleaning at It’s Finest ! You'll be thrilled with the new beauty in every garment. Clothes look new . Not-so-new clothes LOOK NEW AGAIN! TRY STA-NU TODAY! Costs You Nothing Extra! HURON DRY CLEANERS and SHIRT LAUNDRY Is Proud of It’s 11 Branches In Pontiae and Suburbs J There Is a Neighborhood Store NEAR YOU Individual pwwvwvuvvvvev’. Sacked and Boxed Your Shirts Beautifully Laundered 4-HOUR SERVICE AT OUR MAIN PLANT Speed skating contests, ski- | . winter | earnivals, trout festivals, sail. | > beat and cance races are among | © | the variety of events scheduled. | ~~ will ,begin its observance Oct. 1.| 7 Michigan week will be held May | © Furlong said the council is look- | * ing forward to 1955 with “re-| &" strained optimism despite predic-| «| tions that it will be one of the| @ most prosperous years in the na-| 7” in a boom year for Michigan’s | |~ “Unless Michigan begins to a} © least keep pace with the advertis-| j son to believe that its tourist in- | ¢3. Earlier, Furlong reported the 7 LADIES’ || WINTER COATS Values to 365% 28 ~38 Includes all wool twoods alpacas, plushes, fleeces and chinchillas. G27) | Michigan back in the parade with | 7 Me] a dollar fighting force fully equal | gy LADIES’ FUR TRIM COATS: Regular $88 +49” LADIES’ Winter SHORTIES Values to $34.95 45-95 Ci LADIES’ SUITS Values to $49.95 Closing out ENTIRE STOCK including ““Whitleyettes’’ — Regular and brief sizes. 19°25 muary Ceaane Sale! SCOOP UP BIG SAVINGS ou The Shoes You love To Live le This great sale happens only twice @ year—so now's your chance to pick up several pairs of beovtifully- fitting ond flattering new ENNA JETTICKS ot these emazing low prices! We hove o wide selection—but nol every size in every style, s0 COME IN EARLY FOR THESE GREAT VALUES! WOMEN’S SHOES Values to $7.95 0.99 Life-Guerd end Modern Priscilles. LADIES’ CASUAL and SPORT SHOES Values to $8.95 2.99 Gole, Huskies, Williem, Robinette. EVERYTHING GOES! GIRLS’ WINTER COATS Girls’ COATS 47-"24 re 7 to 14 Sub-Teens. Values 4.95. Déebwood Girls’ COATS 14-19 Values to $29.95 Toddler 1-Piece—Values to $21.95 6-13 GIRLS’ SNOW SUITS | 2-Piece—Values to $21.95 12 ~*16 MEN’S SHOES Values to $12.95 *6.85 Portage, De Sentini. CHILDREN’S SHOES Values to $7.45 3.99 Poll Perret, Leconian, Skipeaze. a weve VrVvVvUVY > ™ 51.09 HAT CLEANED and BLOCKED (FACTORY METHODS) FREE PARKING Will Pay Parking Meter in Lake Orion and Milford STA-NU IS EXCLUSIVE IN PONTIAC and SUBURBS at HURON DRY CLEANERS and SHIRT LAUNDRY Main Office and Plant 944 West Huren FE 2-0231 , 1536 Unien Lake Ré. Oppesite Gireur 4313 W. Walten Bivd. at Sashabaw 10 Main &t. i Milford 61¢ Pentiac Trafl Next te Ceffee Cup at Jesiyn Walled Lake ; aes rcharé Lake 731 Nerth Perry &t. 16 Main St. Us }MEN’S JACKETS Values to a | 1?” $19.95 BOYS’ WARM SNOW SUITS Sizes 3 to 8. Volues to $22.98. ‘14 ‘Il BOYS’ COAT LEGGING SETS Regular $24.98. 17 188 Nerth ~— neen at State St. BOYS’ ~TOPCOATS Sizes 4 to 8. Reg. $19.98 to $24.98 19 15 BOYS’ | JACKETS Regular to $16.98 Il '| LADIES’ BETTER - DRESSES From Our Regular Stock . . . Values to $16.98 A $77 | 10 7 Jc RES OOS ee ¥ egue tees. tears Reg. $39.95 MEN’S SUITS °3 7 “= 43 4 8 ‘52. .c 8 MEN’S TOPCOATS Reg. $45 Reg. $49.95 Reg. $55 34 38 43 ‘48 PARK FREE REAR OF STORE WHILE SHOPPING oe “ac Te eee! 2s eee mi. hc: SOR EES a ear ae eee a Joe oe, ; . = : ~ ee ~ ae = ae SS at TEN, 8 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 27,1956 _ * Ousted Navy Clerk -UM Research Points Way HintNew Policy oe ert in eee se pret ait tom OaTLARC, Brando —arrwon."™ SO Ritter were voted the best sup- Latest hot potato in the staff | MUSKEGON w — A man and| oars cad“ at he ’ \ KEGON um — A man and] situation is the hiring of Rew van Named Top ‘54 Stars his wife died yesterday in @ fire | Pogson ‘Nov. 24 as an $8,200-alyear | | year. “On the Watertront” picked that swept their small home iN | investigator. Committee sources | NEW YORK (INS) — Judy Gar-.' 1p ‘additional awards when Elia |Nesson trailer park in Muskegon | say Van Fosson was an Air Force | land and Marlon Brando have been Ka,an took honors as the year’s intelligence agent wha gave the chosen by the nation’s film critics tstanding director and Budd committee secret FBI data and/ as the top stars of the year. Shulberg received an award for then was forced to resign from, The_selection~of Miss Garland 50 «0% screenplay.” and Brando by newspaper, maga-| _ zine and broadcasting film review- ve ° b |ers was announced yesterday in Italian Painter Succumbs | the results of the “Film Daily's NAPLES, Italy Vincenzo 1a/ annual Slmdom's famous fives - |" Miss Garland was selected for works were. shown in Europe and) her work in “A Star Is Born” America, died today. while Brando won the critic's a ——— fo Answer Charges in 1954 Medical Progress DETROIT (UP) Famous | ANN ARBOR # — The progress, Infantile Paralysis granted the Lockett, 31, was scheduled to ap- of medicine “in 194 is mirrored in | walversity and Dr. Francis near- appear before a three-man naval the march of science at the Uni- | ly one million dollars to do the board today to answer charges that versity of Michigan. job : he is a security risk. ~ , The major scientific speculation But 1954 saw other advances at | Lockett..a civilian clerk for the of 1954 remains the hope of science the university. The medical school Navy here, was suspended last in 1955 — the test of the Salk vac- {became the largest institution in month after the Navy received an cine, the possible answer to polio. | enrollment to teach medicine anonymous letter charging at Ee Research men, under Dr. Thom-| Meanwhile — university was a@ member of a Communist- }as Francis Jr., are working on the @nnounced a new test that will de- front <eien while attending nationwide test of the Salk polio termine in advance who is sus- Wayne University in 1946. vaccine,/ tabulating results. They , ceptible to diabetes. He has denied ever being a [expect to know about April 1| Another series of tests will dis- member of the American Youth (whether it is a success, a partial cover which person is more sus- for Democracy group, 88 (success, or a failure. 'ceptible to noise, and how much charged, or any other Commu | re work was begun this year Noise a person can take before his nist tront organization and asked (oy i. university when Dr. Jonas hearing mechanisms are damaged. ie ue to be reinstated. . Salk,” discoverer of the vaccine.| University doctors used atomic | ouster of Wolf Ladejinsky as U.S Capt. es sone “suggested that hiss teacher, Dr energy to sterilize human heart agricultural attache in Tokyo er of the Navy Materials Office 7 "* | 7 ean . , af it can tate se ; : aay Francis, conduct the evaluation tissue so thafit can later be used raises a question “whether or not here, pledged to support: Lockett , ,or replace damaged heart tissue | and testify for him in other persons in Latest Firi - Township, Ouster of Land Reform ice etna the victifhs as . Robert L. Spencer, 39, and his ciel ae a wife. Delwes. Ud They sai the o Major Chan couple was trapped in the home . when an oil space heater apparent- doctors’ WASHINGTON uw — Sen, Hum- jy exploded. _|phrey (D-Minn) says Congress; The house was destroyed by the | should determine whether the fir- | time firemen arrived at the scene. | ” <2 | Bella, 82, Neapolitan painter whose ing of a U. S. land reform expert oats < pa cane suede Shakeup Looms | , : | in Probe Group | YEAR - END WASHER SALE Trade - In That Old Washer the Air Force. ae John N. Garner was the first vieé president to leave the U. S. when thé President was away. When Garner left in 1936 Cordell Hull acted as president until Roos- evelt returned. ’ ‘Humphrey said last night the Un-American Activities more. js behind this than just a . . Committee Faces Jolt The National Foundation for . personne] action " A type of rheumatism was * * « discovered which causes swelling He urged a congressional inves- When Dems Take Over ON A NEW of the fibrous outer layer of the tigation, suggesting the action WasiNNGTON up -The ~House = Bray ean Tee maces aoa d Un-American Activiies Committee The university hospital was made \aeeennel © ; | seems headed for one of the big- | the medical headquarters of the | state in event of an atomic bomb- ing. University medical men have The firing of Ladejinsky, a na- | &8t shakeups on Capital Hill when tive of Russia closely identified | the Democrats get control of Con. | drawn up a series of emergency | With Gen, Douglas MacArthur's | gress next week. plans to transform the hospital in- |!and reform ile oe Changes are shaping up in the | to an atomic médical center. poe npr pet Fe we ¥ O€C” committee's 41-man staff. its ap A shipment of cobalt 60 is being "8'Y Of “sriculture Henson. ; oni ae fe * propriations and, perhaps, in_ its | * * received by the university for the Ladejinsky was removed on se-' controversial procedures in® hunt- @ Auto. Wringer @ 20 Gallon Size itreatment of cancer patients. It fle t en ; - will be placed in a thousand pes and technical crowns after ing for subversives and in putting @ Bow! Shaped | a . | Was mY De Wwe whe con- . > 7 ~, ss ‘ doliar machine thei rotate aboul|., n- its findings before the public Double Tub Shop around — THEN more for your money at Our 18th Year of G 144 Oakland Ave. Miller’s, 144 Oakland Ave. You always get MILLER FURNITURE Where You Honestly Save ithe patient, its radioactive rays , focused on the diseased portion. | | This machine will be one of two, | | using radioactive cobalt and ceri- jum, to combat cancer in the new | Alice Lloyd Cancer Research Cen- ter of the hospital. It is part of the progress of sci- ence and medicine at Michigan -and in the world | | We'll Vote for This as Oddest Yule Gift | WATERLOO, Iowa 8 — Howd 'you like a mastodon molar for Christmas? ° Young Jerry Mead of Waterloo | got one this year and it was vs) _what he wanted. He's been studying mastodons in school. So he told his grandfather recently he'd like part of one of the prehistoric animals. It wasn't too hard for grandpa | to meet the request. He's Dr. Warren Mead of Belmont, Mass., | former head of the geology depart- | ment of Massachusetts Institute of — compare values at Miller’s, 144 Oakland. | reater Value Giving Careful Free Delivery Now—more than ever— you need one sure medication . that does more With infectious colds raging in your ne is no ti chances. Don’t gamble use the home-proved medi does so much more than just chest to bring relief — Vicks ids VapoRub! cr VapoRub also brings relief ., in the cold-irritated breath- ing passages—because it acts two ways at once: =— \ wer 1. VapoRub relieves muscu- aan | ~~ lar soreness and tightness, stimulates chest surfaces. 2. At the same time, VapoRub’s special medicated vapors also bring relief with every breath. You can't see these vapors, but you can Jeel them as they travel deep into the nose, throat and large bronchial tubes. In ho time at all, congestion starts breaking Best-Known Home Remedy for Suffering of Colds ROAST... with unknown, un- tried treatments. For your family’s sake, ' Technology. than work on chest!~ ~~ » didi aa up. The coughing spells lessen and you breathe easier. Soon you enjoy wonderful, me to take — warming relief that lasts for hours. So when an infectious cold strikes in your family, insist on the medication that does more than just work on the chest. At the first cough or sniffle—rub on relief... breathe in relief with Vicks VapoRub! cation that work on the $ GREAT IN STEAM, TOO e For most effective relief from A croupy coughs, that choked-up feeling ... use Vicks VapoRub in vapor- izer as directed in folder. Youll get such fast, direct relief! Vicks ApoRusB 35: e 78 North Sagi Grade A . Medium EGGS..... | Mrs. Walter Frankowskis have a. | badminton Ralley, and pioneer im agricultural education Born in South Haven, Mich trol of his post was shifted from the State to the Agriculture De- partment. Humphrey, in a statement, cited past United States support for some land reform programs in the Far East and added: “There has been an apparent | reluctance on the part of our gov- ernment to maintain its leager- ship in this field and to do any- thing to implement our announced policies." * * * Kadejinsky, he said. ‘‘has been a symbol in Asia of America’s concern for the. people ... and it certainly seems unwise to de- stroy a symbol of hope to peo- ple we are trying to win to the. side of democracy." See $100,000 Loss in Cheboygan Blaze CHEBOYGAN (—A fire swept the Knights of Columbus building in downtown Cheboygan last night, causing an estimated $100,000 dam- age. No one was injured in the blaze Fire departments from Macki- naw City and Indian River and the | crew of the U. S. Coast Guard cutter Mackinaw were summomed to help the Cheboygan firemen | bring the flames under control. | Dale Douglas, Cheboygan insur- | ance adjustor, estimated the dam- age. j Firemen said the flames burned through the roof of the three-story building and totally destroyed the K. of C. hall on the third floor. | Two business establishments on the ground floor, the J. D. Vaau clothing store and the Cheboygan Candy Kitchen, sustained extensive -smoke and water damage. Healthy Ivy Plant Poses Problem for Movers EVANSTON, Til. u — Mr. and) | unique problem when they move to their new home next week. Mrs. Frankowskis bought a 10-inch ivy plant seven years ago, has become attached to it. and wants to take it with her—undamaged. No problem, you snort? This plant has grown to the ceil- ing and hag completely encircled the walls of Mrs. Frankowskis’ 19 by 22 foot living room. Deaths Last Night | WASHINGTON (AP)—Amos Ball 77 | former vice president of the Sianderd) On Co Ind Born at Newton Abbott Devonshire England PRESTWICK, SCOTLAND —Kenneth RF | Davidson, 40. former world's amateur | badminton champion and former coach- | manager of the American Thomas Cup |- team | SAN ANTONIO, Tex —Jack O'Brien. | retired newspaperman and founder | of the Texas Open, firat of big money golf tournaments > TULSA Okla = Mrs Marie Foster heiress | Kane Smith. 44, of] NEW YORK —Joseph A. Mullaney, 83, | veteran AFL labor leader * @ANTA MONICA, Calif Mra Tlilian| Florence Hedrick 86, mother of film star Kathryn Grayson SOUTH BEND Ind William rR Dociey 2 placemen! director at the University of Notre Dame and former hewspapermpn ITHACA NY Dr 96. noted botanist Liberty Hyde | horticulturtst | | naw Street Shankless Half SMOKED HAM eeee0e 35: 45 Lean Blade Cut PORK | CHOPS... t Wafer Thin Sliced D RIED % Pound Lean Slab Dry SALT PORK.... BEEF .. °" * This Valuable Coupon Entitles the Bearer { ' to a 2-Ib. Package e ' ib |PURE | ad | ola ane ' Fh tan 29° Only one switch is due on the , committee membership roster it’ | self: The 54 ratio in favor of Re- publicans during the 83rd Congress changes to a similar edge for the Democrats in January * * | But Rep. Walter (D-Pa), who! takes over the chairmanship from Rep. Velde (R-Ill), says the com- mittee’s activities will be handled | differently. | As things now stand the Un-/ American Activities group, .with fewer members than any other regular House committee, has just about the biggest bank account of the 19 committees. Its 1953-54 ap- propriations totaled $575.000, topped only by the $585,000 for the House Government Operations Committee which handies a wide variety of probes dealing with the | government * 130. 24 Months to Pay 90 DAYS WA SAME AS CASH! * But Walter says the Un-Ameri- can Activities group can do just! as well on less money next year. | Besides, the Democrats are re-' FOR YOUR OLD WASHER. TRADE-IN ALLOWANCE 95 With Trade - ¥ YEAR Exactly as GUARANTEE Pictured and Service YNE GABERT Your Electrical Appliance Spectalist 121 N. Saginaw St. Phone FE 5-6189 OR \DYona nein: Edison It's as simple as 1-2-3 to drift into the most refreshing winter night's sleep you've ever had! 1. Just set your automatic bed covering’s temperature control to the warmth you want. Zip into bed. Dream away relaxed, unhamp- ered by umpteen heavy blan- kets over you. An automatic bed covering gives you light-as-a-feather, warm-as-toast comfort regardless of room tempera- ture changes. And for only a tiny fraction more than 2c.worth of elec- tricity a night. ny we og < * « ¥ * oo of ever before; the B? He might have to do labor 5100 TRADE Beautiful 21” Console with Doors Walnut — — Blond — Cherry Nothing Down — Free Home Trial — Terms IN ALLOWANCE | Z qt it HF if ta E 9 RNa i e / THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1954 in Rifle Fight Seven-Man Gun Battle » ae ge his truck, Mixon said. ” * * * The bachelor rancher brothers, Sparked by Shooting of Sterling Garlington, $3, and Dal Hunting Dog vt Starting was, kompitalineg af JASPER, Tex. —Two ranchers and five hunters who accused there are millions of married folks | yj; like us.”’ (Copyright 1954, King Features) | Dist Atty. J. L. Smith said the| Morris and Clarence Willingham. |e grand jury will take up the case | All are of the Jasper or Beaumont | F i Beaumont, in critical condition, shotgun blasts in his “neck, chest and back. Dalphin was in a "| Jasper hospital in serious condi- tion with face wounds. Dalphin Garlington was among those charged with assault to mur der and released under $2,000 bond. The others, all among the hunters, Travis Ellis, who was shot in the face; Gerald Sanford; Richard Roy Muench, 51, Beaumont, Tex., | 77 killed by a rifle blast through his | & jright shoulder, had left his gun in | & with a rifle shot ‘in his stqamach and HAMPTON "Sem'precious "miners, carlo “Sheritl_ 76 _— o TV precious minerals, curios | New York has the oldest un-| Sheriff Tom Mixon said five 625 W. Heres ° Gees. FE 4-2525 and rare books. He builds gadg- | broken state forest administration hunters fought it out with two; India has more than two million - . | cto tn ble Wertisheg,. chavo wane in the U. S. It was founded in 1885. | ranchers they accused of killing a| cases of tuberculosis. ; “4 eet 4 Many items below wholesale - nd today! 9 ps When Is a Bargain 2 Barge” 4 a oe ‘ = Ss 6 Months! _ ? Special Groups of Men’s Ladies, Boys’ and Girls’ Clothing And What Bargai ; Follow the Crowds to Our End.- of - Year ns! Come, Save! 50%: ‘ Bay Now on Easy Credit Terms...No Money Down! Take 6 Months to Pay! Mary's coats . UP to 50% OFF CASUAL COATS NOW SPECIAL GROUP of 59.99 LADIES’ COATS 4) Yes! Save 50% on 100% all wool poodle cloth .. . St. . . Blanket fleeces . . Wool zebalines, etc. Sizes for junior, misses’, large sizes. . Wool tweeds... UP TO 50% OFF FUR TRIM COATS NOW 69.99 Fur Trims ... $39 79.99 Fur Trims... $49 89.99 Fur Trims ... $59 99.00 Fur Trims ... $69 139.00 Fur Trims .. $89 ma ACCOUNT, OR BUY ON OUR EASY BUDGET TERMS ‘79 Big January Savi and grey, while 25 last. No Money Down—6 Months to Pay! $149 RABBIT 29.99 Winter Coats. $15 35.00 Winter Coats. $19 59.99 Winter Coats. $29 69.99 Winter Coats. $39 89.99 Winter Coats. $49 : Group of Ledies’ DRESSES 5.99 Dresses..now 2.00 8.99 Dresses..now 5.00 | 16.99 Dresses. .now 7.00 Group of 149 Befter FUR COATS . . . Choose from brown .. 9149 .. $199 oe $249 MARMOT COAT. . $299 MUSKRAT COAT. COAT... UP TO 0 % To 39.99 Tots’, Girls’ ST. MARYS $2.5°° New low price of Coat Sets 3 to . 10 and Coats 7 to 1A with mil- ium and fiberglas lined. $25 Girls’ Coats.... $15 $29 Girls’ Coats... . .$19 $35 Teens’ Coats... $17 $11 Snow Suits... .. $8 = - Boys’, Girls’ 10.99 Warm CAMPUS COATS 46°? Extra heavy quilting for warmth, Sizes 6 to 18. $15 Boys’ Wool Jockets ........ $10 $15 Boys’ Snow Suits ............. . $10 Boys’ Flannel Shirts . 1.29 SeeeeeesecesoossoososososeoaoeeeeossooeoeseeeeS Group of 59.99 Suits-Coats $°3 330° Men, big savings on finest quality. While quantity lasts. 27.50 Hunting Coats $16 White Stag Jackets. $14. 11.99 Campus Coats. $8 29.95 Leather Jackets $18 ] | hunting dog. He said the réthchers | \siy ee " ess Hunter Slain wisrenns Meats y were Charley Fllis, his father | Eo Sensational value! low price. Pillow Cases 49c 42 2 36 Cases... ‘ Bee » #3 = Regular 19c Dish Towels Stock Up Now _ january Super Special! 2.99 Full Size | Spring Knight's SHEETS | * Ist quality. Stock up your linen closet at this I : Bd } ee Le : Feather Pillows Regular 2.99 Loop Rugs ELEVEN eS ca Cannon Percale Sheets 72 = 108 Percales........2.79 81 x 108 Percales........ 2.99 42 = 36 Cases.......005- 69e. . Me™ 5.99 Playtex Foam Pillows $499 3.99 Full Size Mattress Pads Regular 49c 39c Cannon 6.99 Chenille rint Percale Guest Towels Bed Spreads 19¢ 4 For $] $499 ~ Special 89c Bath ‘Cannon While 2000!tast! Thick ‘man size’ towels. Highly ab- | sorbent, colors and white. CANNON : ENSEMBLE | 1.29 Bath Towel.79¢ 8%e Hand Towel. 490 49c Wash Cloth. 25¢ cg! TWELVE " ee “f Pe a rare PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 27: 1954 + ANDRE First for Hair Styles day | Mrs. Princeton avenue, gery at Henry Ford Detroit. : with his parents, Home for Holidays Robbie Lenz is spending the holi- and i Robert J. Lenz of West, following sur- Hospital, Mr. Maccabees Sewing Circle Tuesday at 1 pm dinner Blue Star meet Tuesday at 730 in the oa at China Coming Events | Deughters of Pontiac 166 will “meet | | Tuesday in Grotto Hall at § pm will Mothers Chapter four will | YMCA meet City for Engagements. Take Top “Spot In, “Holiday 1 ab - ‘= ila nO The Secret of Our Permanents Is the “Know How” of Our Operators MAGNIFICENT PERMANENTS $5.00 LET US CREATE YOUR PERMANENT and Up Manicures—Hair Setting No Appointment Necessary i 4 by Cali ve 2- S226 Including Hair Cut and Styling 7° . *10 . ‘12° Open Wednesday All Day — Friday ‘til 9 P. M. Tit, M Raginawe &t. OPEN WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON JHEALOIL Beauty Shop FE t-9226 Leep Bullding—Next te Yardstick NADINE LEACH and Mrs. Daniel Leach of Mr. |Nelson street announce PATRICIA ANN WATTS Mr, and Mrs. Johnie Watts of gagement of their daughter, Na- the en- BEVERLY JEAN MARION Oakland avenue announce the en-| dine, to John E. _gagement of their daughter, | Patricia Ann, to Gerald Turner nue, John is a student at the Uni- | Hargraves, son of Mr. and Mrs. | versity of Michigan where, he is | James Hargraves of Arcadia drive, a member of Phi Eta Signi Yra- He attends Wayne University. ar ternity. No date has been set for. jw Spe ak their vows on June 4. the wedding. Baxter, son of| The engagement of their daugh- ter Beverly Jean to William Far- ner is announced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Russel] Marion of Kenilworth avenue. He is the son of William Farner of Elm street. | A fall wedding is planned. JOYCE NELSON The engagement of their daugh- SHARON FRENCH ter, Joyce, and Robert Sowter, is; jr and Mrs. Edward S. French announced by Mr. and Mrs. Gustaf | of Glenwood boulevard are an- nouncing the engagement of their Nelson of Opdyke road. His par-| Gaughter, Sharon, to William Rob- ents are the Richard Sowters of | ert LaRose. He is the son of Mr. j;and Mrs. Raymond LaRose of ; Osmun street. A spring wedding is | ee | South Anderson street. An April | wedding is planned. at Look Hits Snags Personal News of Interest, FI Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Shotwell en- | Friday from Ramsey, N. J. to tertained 50 guests Sunday after- "spend Christmas with her parents, noon at u Cocktail party in their! the Paul B. Taylors of West Iro-| James K boulevard home, | quois road. The Taylor's daughter, NO APPOINTMENT NEEDED * * «& ' Kathy, is also home from the Uni- IMMEDIATE SERVICE Andre Beauty CSalon 2nd Floor Ponte State Phone FE 5-4490 ‘Castom Upholstering WILLIAMK. COWIE 21 Years of Practical Experience 378 Orchard Lk. Ave. FE 4-2857 at Curtain! | Soviet Style Show Mr. and Mrs. David Locklin ar- versity of Mic higan. rived Christmas day from New | * * * ene Conn for . a viet Mr. ~ Mrs. John B. Nicolls! Held in Budapest us parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. Jr., ar ckie, Pamela | ° L. Locklin of Oneida road. David Penny, of Sylvan Shores drive Sticks to Curves is a student in the drama school | traveled to Ann Arbor Sunday to| VIENNA (INS)—Christian Dior’s Bidg. Sa a Fla., where they will vacation | Quinter, Kan., where she will be until May. | stick to curvy feminine lines. January Clearance Sale Begins Tomorrow at 10 A.M. LADIES! COATS /8 58 A8 $ Reg. $89.95 to $150.00. . wr Reg. $79.95 to $84.95 ... wh Reg. $59.95 to $74.95 ‘38 Leather Jackets & Coats $ Reg. $49.95 to $55.00 Reg. $34.95 ...... 6c. cece eee. 28 Reg. $39.95 to $49.95 ....... $ Reg. $69.95 to $99.95 ....... AS CASHMERE SWEATERS $8 & ODDS ‘n ENDS Dresses, blouses, sweaters, skirts and suits Y3&V2 OFF All Sales Final—No Exchanges! Broken lots, formerly to $25 “s 8 «© « YY Telegraph at Huron—Open Every Night 'til 9—Sunday 2 to Park Free Rear | the guest of Marguerite Long for the remainder of the holiday. | Not @ single one of hundreds of | A New Years Eve party t | sire we party wal be model sshown by the Soviet Union. given in their honor by Mr. and, M8fxuerite and Jeanne are Mrs. Tate Fleming and Jack Hislop! Pledges of Sigma Alpha lota at of St. Petersburg. the University of Michigan. * * * i * * Dr. and Mrs. Henry Peinecke and daughter, Laurel Ann, arrived * _introduce Dior's H-line to women Anna Baldwin, daughter of Mrs. in the Soviet orbit. James Baldwin of Augusta avenue | i; wae the third tnlernational | tm | 2d Helen Rigdon of Ward road, | Commmnniat taskine ok aad the . + y | are local residents whose names) ©. ; i fir PE R MANENTS | were recently placed on the dean's , ae — did in ee | The basis for every hair | St *! Bd od | Prague, where the 1952 and 1953 | | style ... hold it in shape, Mrs. Arthur Oberndorter of Wau- me Were . | easier, longer. | watosa, Wis., arrived today for a As far as the word ‘‘internation- . week's visit with her son-in-law | 4!" was concerned at the Budapest | Short Curl and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Carmi | how. it Dp, belies i Soviet J. Odell of Oxbow Lake road. | Union a es toples: Vemocrs- Permanents * *¢ »® cies’ '—Russia's satellites. bans |_ Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Heckman of According to an official Commu- | ee | Utica are announcing the birth of nist Hungarian report, ‘“‘simple 23. lines, a tasteful application of folk , ‘designs and the skillful use of new | textiles’ were typical of the Soviet | orbit 1954 fashion show. a son, DeWayne Lavern, Dec. Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. George F. Tate of Martell avenue and Mr. and Mrs. Arthur F. Hack- man of Rochester | i 6° No Appointment Necessary IMPERIAL Beauty Salon 20 E. Pike St. “curves” were the most popular, | the report asserted. Dry Floor First If you use an electric floor pol-! Second place of the international | isher, be sure that the wax is fashion show went to Communist | thoroughly dry before you start, Hungary, the third was awarded | to polish. to Red Czechoslovakia. jane Lee 41 N. Seginaw COLD WAVE & OIL TREATMENT with ALL FOR | “4.95 FE 4-2878 ‘dustry was mentioned for its use of | new plastic materials, Nylon and Perlon. Models shown at. the tapes | fashion parade ranged, from over- alls for women to deluxe evening BownNs, Swing-back coats have replaced swagger and straight line coats and coolie jackets are not in vogue any more behind the Iron | Curtain, the official Hungarian | report said. Soviet Russia topped her satel- lites with what Hungarians de- scribed as a dark evening gown with white lace collar, designed in HOLIDAY SPECIALS! Lustre Rinse Style Hairdress The oi! treatment condi- tions your hair. The cold wave gives you soft, carefree curls that last and last century. Most dress-up frocks of the Com- munist world have very full skirts, | snugly fitted bodices and lots of tulle. Luxurious LANOLIN OIL COLD WAVE Reg. 10.00 The pretty-as-a-picture look stars with a good figure. Fashion a finer shape with the right foundation garments. If you are a junior size, | bandeau and _ lightweight | will do the trick, For the average woman, a cor- selet is the perfect way to ac hieve | a smooth silhouette. The full fig- ure needs a long line bra and a girdle that really holds down the i hips. Phone FE 2-0531 Appointment Not Always Necessary LANOLIN ENRICHED Pounanent Machine and Cold Wave ‘4 S60 - 10 No Appointment Necestary Hair Cutting and Styling by Oscar PARISIAN BEAUTY SHOP’ 7 West Lawrence St. Se + i BDO ain Over Old Prof's Book Store FE 2-4959 at Yale University. Visit with his parents, Mr. and. * * »® | Mrs. John B. Nicolls. new “flat look” got stuck in 2 Mr. and Mrs. Russel] 8S. March + * «# Iron Curtain. and Mrs, Lillian Archambeau, Jeanne Leland, daughter of | The latest Soviet-world tation | Gr een Wal Is Good all of South Anderson street, will | the E. H. Lelands of Middle- show, held in Budapest, indicated | > = leave Tuesday for St. Petersburg, | belt road, left Sunday for ‘that the Communist countries will | i popular decorating color. | be many and Hungary was trying ‘oly ' | Softer, feminine lines stressing | ~ | | Eastern Germany's fashion in| ° a style similar to that of the 19th | : Figure Influences lj ‘Just Right’ Look 1. Don’ t Jerk Cord ‘However inaccessible it is, don't jerk on the cord to pull a plug Food Prices Double Since War Days Expenditures for food have .ris- out. Get down on your knees, if en from $31,000,000,000 in 1944 to/ you have to, and pull the plug an anticipated $63,000,000.000 this itself. year, according to Paul S. Willis, | - oe president of the Grocery Manu-| —_ facturers of America. Luncheons— Willis told a meeting of food | RIKER FOUNTAIN editors in New York recently that | js combination of good reporting by | editors and increased food product advertising caused food sales te, double in the past 10 years. | - in” Riker te _ | ters Your Hair Personalized For New Year's COLD WAVES A Specialty erate If a home seems pleasing and in- vigorating to you, chances are the walls are green. Because we as- | sociate this color with nature, it’ s| 48 N. Saginew St. ‘CLEARANCE. § - MILLINERY.. = @ ENTIRE WINTER STOCK n % Reg. $ 8.95 Hats....... $ Reg. $ 7.95 Hats....... &: Reg. $ 6.95 Hats......- ae # - Reg. $12.95 Hats Reg. $10.95 Hats - Reg. $ 8.95 Hats ee ee ee “2 eo oe ee ALL BETTER WINTER HATS 8 Patterned Hats rs Up to $45....... § 4 Rs Millinery—Second Floor ; a J bp none SHOES ‘ i 867 Pairs Nationally Advertised 6 ‘7 212 Sports Oxfords ‘$qso and Loafers Shoe Sclon—Mazzanine Sinema GROUP NO. 1 JACQUELINE Reg. to$10.95°... 80 » GROUP NO. 2 NATURALIZER and RISQUE ~ Reg. to$12.95.... GROUP NO. 3 MARQUISE Reg. to $14.95... Bi SES Reg. to $6.95 - FORMERLY SOLD TO $35.00... FORMERLY , ) sap 1° 97) $B 70 $55.00... FORMERLY SOLD TO $69.95... FORMERLY SOLD TO $89.95... Nationally famous brands” including Lilli Ann, Moordale, and our own Brant- wood exclusive. Two, three and four =. piece styles. Imported tweeds, imported boucle, flannel, mohair, sharkskin, broadcloth, angora, worsted crepes, menswear, cashmere blends, rayon and acetates. Black and colors. Junior, misses’, women's sizes. c) Suit Salon—Second Floor , y FORMERLY SOLD TO + $798... 4 bal bid FORMERLY $ re SOLD TO ee $10.98... vi *FORMERLY $ Rr $1298. .... «2. F x “i Flannel, tweed, slim and flared. All ‘ colors. Sizes 10 to 18. Skirts—Main Floor ge. Fy ee ved ee Sie Fe BETTER FURS EXAMPLES of SAVINGS: Dyed Mouton Processed $ 39 * “Lomb Bolero ...... NOW amb cope Now SO Cot Now = STO ga! -.......NOW $] 69 MMfocket now S199 Jacket one es Pe eee oe ee ee ee ee eee ee ee Se) Dyed Persian Lamb Silver Blue Mink Trim ....NOW Fur Salon—Second, Floor "48 NORTH SAGINAW STREET. STARTING TUESDAY. AT 9:30. ALL SALES FINAL $3875 THE PONTIAC PRESS, AIONDAY. DECEMBER 27,1954 ‘MontE “ah ~~ “s \ JLEARANCE AND SPECIAL PURCHASE SALE Arthur's originated this sale event in Pontiac. For twenty-seven of the thirty-eight years we have been in business wehave * held the 13th Month Clearance in the week between Christmas and New Year’ s._It’s an annual event and one that all -UNTRIM COATS FORMERLY ee Me FORMERLY SOLD TO $39.95... wo SH 7* Included in the above groups are coats suitable to wear the year-round. Top- pers, shorty, three-quarter to full length. Boxy or fitted styles. Fabrics include imports, tweed, suede, fleece, broadcloth and others. Black, natural and colors. Junior, misses’ and women's sizes. Also formals. Coat Selon—econd Floor GIRLS’ SKIRTS FORMERLY BETTER DRESSES ety) LIP $49.95 . = $17.95... , a ever § 37° BR ronmeny $Q%0 By 899 i $19.95... , . SOLD. TO. 74 | 7 . FORMERLY - 3” 90 $79.95... OM % SOLD TO All taken from our regular stock of fall and winter styles. One and two piece dressy and tailored rayon crepes, failles, wools, knits, gabardines. Junior, misses’ and women's sizes. Black and colors. Better Dresses—Second Floor 523% women look forward to for genuine savings on quality merchandise in the heart r of the season. FUR "a | C O ATS" 5 gu h 69" is FORMERLY | SOLD TO = = $89.95... FORMERLY SOLD TO - $99.00... ln eh ™ ‘FORMERLY = SOLD TO » ~ $11900.. FORMERLY ff A 7 $139.00. . nuine Brantwood or amous brands. All fine Every coat is a other nationally fa =) 100% wool fabrics trimmed-with dyed =) mink, persian lamb, white fox, beaver, muskrat, marmot, fitch, squirrel and others. Black and colors. Junior, misses’ and women's sizes. ee ah seal my OE i te tare he. ee eee om SSeS et <P ¥ <2 Paes eae A g° pee EVLA, 7 . +" 35 ris 4 r : 2 FORMERLY ‘20 i FORMERLY. $ 4 | FORMERLY FORMERLY SOLD TO © SOLD TO ” | SOLD TO $29.95 ..... © $7.95 .... 0... P $5.98 2... g... SOLD TO ie | FORMERLY $ | FORMERLY $ FORMERLY $m & Me 99.95........ aa 4 SOLD TO | SOLD TO | » $39.95 ..... © $895 ........ $8.98 ....... © Wool fleeces, tweeds, chinchilla, Boucle, | Flannel, plaids, felts, velveteens, taffetes, 100% weol, nylon, orion. Short sleeve, Se ete tre f # sizes 3 to 6, 7 to 14 and 8 to 14. ' long sleeve cardigan. Sizes 34 to 40. t : a 8 4 Sweaters—Main Floor ) Young Folks Shep—tower Level =|) teen eas aii | oe qe | ici a Ee oe camaro Fas _ “=== — BOYS’ and GIRLS’ BOYS’ WEAR ' BUDGET | S | a COATS TODDLERS’ SLACKS & JACKETS BOYS’ PANTS Were 7.95 = = (8 $7.98........ Were to 3.95 ° Were to 4.95 FORMERLY to 29.98 $5 ; 9 id $ 3 49 Man tailored corduroy. Sizes 3 to 7. BOYS’ LINED JACKETS Were to 5.95 A $ 3 $ 4 100°% wool jackets, mouton collars, . alpaca lined. Grey or tan. Sizes 19 to 16. © i 18 22 | é : iccondineimene Floor a CLS DE SEMEL AAI SAS — £ ee ORDA | -| Misses’ Jumpers Poplin, plaid lined, corduroy quilt lined. Sizes 3 ie), ! : a ‘7 5 LD TO 12.98 e BOYS’ FLANNEL SHIRTS 3 A; Were 1.95 FORMERLY ‘9 i s] 39 ql SOLD TO 16.98 ; : Flanne!, velvet, tweed, corduroy. Dark , Long sleeves, solid or prints. Sizes 3 to 7. E and pastel colors, Sizes, 10 0 18. : T 4 Sportswear—Main Floor \ Se OME DES LE Young Folks Shop—Lower Level TODDLERS’ -- GIRLS’ J-3 — 36 FORMERLY GIRLS’ DRESSES 7-14 FORMERLY FORMERLY Corduroy with warm printed flannel lining. JACKETS Were to 16.95 ‘912 Poplin, fleece, warmly lined. Sizes 7-14, 8-1 4. SNOW SUITS Were to 19.95 913 Nylon, gabardine, mouton collars, or estron. Limited sizes. Tots, boys, girls, SNOW PANTS Were to 4.95 $289 $389 will, warmly flannel lined. Adjustable shoulder straps. Young Folks Shop—Lower Level a OBE DE IED SBE ERR ODE SD SG Sill I ae ssa ae A CHILDRENS DRESSES PRE-TEEN DRESSES ae | 6 | oe ee eee Se. Se ws es oeove woe 7 | —— Folks Sicp—icwes Cotton, nylon, wool jersey, dacron, short, three-quarter, and long sleeves. White pastel and dark colors. Sizes 32 to 38. Blouses—Main Floor FORMERLY , ra E SOLD TO SOLD TO > 8 © © 8 » @ Spun, crepe, faille, wool, dressy and _ tailored, ‘black and holiday colors. Junior and misses’ sizes. Budget Dresses—Second Floor 79") BUDGET DRESSES THIRTEEN 4 ee ¢ ca ye * c 4 _- _* . i FOURTEEN | oe ' B oig Z \ F 7 Open every —A FINER night ‘til 9 We Will Close This —- Friday, Dec. 31st at 5:30 q & * i YEAR ~ loomfield “ )[ASHION SHOP___ T END=SALE! “.. THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1954" : “Tv wg © Park at our front door! starts tonight and continues thru Friday. tremendous reductions on ¥ Better Dresses 16 24 32 | FINE COATS Forstmanns! Stroocks! Alpacas! Camel-hairs! Einiger fabrics! Anglo woolens! Wool and Cashmeres! Values to $95 44 ‘38 The choicest coats of the season! Most elegant styles of the season! The smartest colors of the season! Yours at tremendous savings! tremendous reductions on VALUES to 49.95 Sheer Wools! Jerseys' —-Flannels! Tweeds! Crepes! Taffetas' | Worsteds! JUNIORS’! HALF-SIZES! MISSES’! A Special Group of Designer Dresses, Sizes 10 to 16, were $85, reduced to $55 4 Ay t Smart formals | Cocktail dresses Party dresses continue to arrive expressly for NEW YEAR'S EVE Priscilla Ann Priscilla Ann ‘Smith and John Russell Neuman ‘spoke their mar- 4 riage vows in a ceremony per- - \formed in St. Vincent de Paul <a ! Church : | She is the daughter of the An- | drew J. Smiths of Whittemore : | street, and his parents are the Rus- ; sell P. Neuman’s of Pleasant * | Ridge. PA For the morning ceremony on ; Dec. 18 the bride wore a ficor length gown of nylon tulle and A lace. A fingertip veil _ | of silk ilusion was caught to her "| headpiece, and she carried a cascade bouquet ef stephanotis and white orchids. Mrs Charles Riharb. the bride's sister, was matron of honor and @ the ofty attendant. She woresa 77 j ees ballerina-length gown of blue ve!- iy ee vet and carried a cascade bouquet -of red carnations and holly = Donald Jacobs of Iron Mountain ; was best man. Seating the guests | were William- Olsen of Frankfurt | and Donald Wallace of Ypsilanti. The bride's mother wore a pow- der blue lace ‘dress with black . accessories and a corsage of ru- | -\brum lilies. - The bridegroom's | in Church 7 Residite in. Ann Arbor ate the John R. Neumans who “ were married in ‘St. Vincent de Paul Church. She is the daughter of the A. J. Smiths of Whittemore street, and the R. P. Neumans of Pleasant Ridge are ‘ill ~~ his parents. - | mother chose a street length dress | /@ | of rayon brocade with black acces- | “*|sories and a corsage of rubrum: -. | lilies. ; . " A breakfast was held in Hotel Waldron after the ceremony and MRS. JOHN RUSSELL NEUMAN a graduate of Alma College where ‘he was a member of Phi Phi Alpha | Parents Reveal ‘fraternity, Me is attending medi- _ 7% | bouquet. Hotel Waldron was the setting | for the afternoon reception. Be For her traveling costume the residing in Ann Arbor. - | bride wore an avacodo green wool » | dress with matching accessories Prevent Tool Rust a4 and the orchid from her bridal graduate of Mercy Schoel of Nurs- from rusting. ing in Detroit. Fhe bridegroom is cal school at University of mich. Engagement gan where he affiliated with Phi, Rho Sigma fraternity. They are John F. Daneke of Moh BIRMINGHAM—Mr. and Mrs, egan road, announce the engagement of their daughter. Carolyn Frances, to John ' Patrick Donovan Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. John. P. Donovan of Tools can be hand-dipped in! Dayton, Ohio The new Mrs. Neuman is a_ thinned, fresh shellac to keep them Carolyn graduated from The Lit- tle Flower High School and Col- |lege of Saint Mary of the Springs, & 4 —— a ~| Permanents *5 Haircutting and Styling ANNALIESE Beauty Shop : Next to Besley Market (Over Tasty Bakery) 4 |] 801; N. Saginaw open Evenings by Appointment FE 2-5600 ‘ . Columbus. Ohio. Her fiance was graduated from Cahminade School, , University of Dayton, and will ‘complete graduate work at. Ohio State University in the spring. | They are planning a summer | wedding. 'Winter Handbags Features Plastic - Winter-time finds in handbags are the new plastic reptile and leather grains They look llke liz- ard, alligator, ostrich, or calf. Yet they're inexpensive, quickly ‘and easily washable with soap and ‘water, English-style frames and important shapes put them up front —— ‘in the fashion picture. Maling Shoes Not a leftover in sight! Nosiree! No picked over odds and ends like you usually find at sales! Not at Maling's big, big Winter Clearance! Here you'll find your size in the color : and the material you're looking for! And in fresh, clean j shoes that look like we bought ‘em yesterday ! So get in on this buying picnic now— ct Maling’s! formerly 2.99 to 6.99 i 97 297 Every Color! Every Material! Every Heel Height! Not Every Size in Every Style! Maling Shoes 50 NORTH SAGINAW STREET Open Friday Evenings Bee ah tate eng . i : | a i. 2 | me / \ 3 , | be : | S os a ) i | i : | | | | : y . : i . y , , | ae THE PONTIAC PRESS; MON DAY, DECEMBER 27,1954 ,ae : "FIFTEEN Civitan Club | Arvounees STARTING TOMORROW MORNING 9:30!... & | age ria Vek cing! Slated January 15° 4 Tremendous at High School D Members of Pontiac Civitan Club | Sale : ays ooo feel that the ying the “| the better type of entertainment” WEDNESD AY in our community with the coming. stage Presentation of “The Vaga- THURSD AY “a bond King.” The production will be presented J FRIDAY Jan. 15 at 8:30 p.m. in the Pontiac || High School auditorium, : Civitan spokesmen say that the SORRY NO EXCHANGES NO APPROVALS | NO REFUNDS "ALL SALES FINAL The production will duplicate the ortginal Broadway show which ran. for three solid years in New York City and which has been seen in| major cities ali over the globe. There are two more weeks re- maining to purchase tickets. All| seats are reserved and tickets are . available at many Pontiac stores’ |or from Civitan members, accord-_ ing to William Lane, ticket Chair- JANICE STAYTONS . man. Janice Stayton" s engagement to Louis W. Gnam is an;| wv bringing “The Vagabond coed yh prs. Svs niin, Secs | THE MOST TREMEN DOUS COAT VALU ES EVER OFFERED oa re concerts have started Pontiac Is Hostess | served by Hrs. W. G. Ferguson | ken another step in this direction, | Now, they- continue, we can en- eee eee ee ‘ir vas een aa es Fari J0Y Broadway productions on a par | | id} . ' ess at a luncheon in her Bloomfield | Tt will preside at the with the larger cities of the nation. v den Association ‘Use Cake Breaker | Hints on curtain laundering: “ ; . will be held on Jan. 10 in the | are cake-breakers that look like rehang them to keep them match- | . Confidential’ lowa. After their April 2 wedding they will reside in Boul-| They are considering for tuture | Bloomfield Hills. Mrs. Smith was ‘W8rd an appreciation of the bet- Hills home attended by the board | Mrs. Paro M. Thomas, program Wash them basted into an old Orchard Lake home of Mrs. hyper-thyroid forks for the task. ing, rehang now and then upside- COATS Sold to os. COATS Sold to $65 COATS Sold | to $89.95. COATS Sold to $99 A new series of der, Colo. where he is attending Colorado University. He is| *°%imes”euch popaiar musicals | é | as “Finian’s Rainbow”, “Gentie- y.. a member of Phi Kappa Psi fraternity and the bride-elect | men Prefer Blonds” and “Guys | is affiliated with Alpha Chi Omega sorority at Colorado | and Dells”, | . Mrs. H.P. Shaw pens ter things in life and the amateur COATS Sold to $75 COATS Sold to $89.95 COATS Sold to $99 COATS Sold to , $109 af the Bloomfield Hills Branch of. tea tables. chairman for today’s event, an-| Don't cut an angel cake with " George Baldwin. Colored slides of ' Lacking that, poke away with a down to vary the part of the fabric : | Hawaiian foliage and flowers were : fork and pull, rather than mash, that gets the stronger sun at the . F shown by William Smith of, the cake into slices. : | bottom of the window. . U /niversity. They point dut that Gammmuanity | Following the program a tea was “eater groups in Pontiac have ) Women’s National Farm and Gar- Pillowcase Useful nounced that the annual meeting a conventional cake knife, There Pillowcase, rotate them when you 2: a Sn you If you are “not quite” a pertect A or B cup Values to 3995 . . . Reduced to Values to 2995 . . . Reduced to . lf you need a little more filling here and there... here are the bras for you! 1 3% 1 G2 40 1 0” 1 3% 1 §” Because they fill you out so naturally—so beautifully $296 — Embroidered cotton . ; —here are the very bras for you who are “not quite” an Sie eel ee 7 . morqvisette back. Gentle , ..é A or B cup. Artfully padded with light foam rubber— wire wppert under the bust, Every dress in this sale taken from our regular stock- of Wool sports, menswear, jersey, orlons and crepes you will concealed so carefully even you can’t see it—these bras EN pan smart fashions. Original price tags remain on every one. recognize as fashions seen in your favorite magazine. bring you up te your fullcup messurenteats withacom Dressy crepes, toffetas, failles, rich colors and blacks. Wear them for afternoon bridge, for business wear and pletely natural look. They mold, hold and subtly endow Dresses that ore festive for Holiday wear. Juniors and for “dates.” The savings are wonderful. Juniors and a = . Misses and Half Sizes. Misses. you with young, alluring curves. No need for you to | miss out a moment longeron the glamour of firm, rounded contours. Come in, be fitted in these wonderful Life Bras today! q 4386 —tronctere of om broidered and plow cotton 900 Pairs Quality Shoes REDUCED FOR QUICK CLEARANCE! Deliso Debs... Rhythm Steps... Carmalettes... Joyce... . Sandler... Deb Formerly Priced $10.95 to $19.95 5 . 8 #5502—Strapless Foundation em. Black, Brown, Blue, Maple, Red, Combinations! Suede, Calf, Patent, Combinations! cups only. $1050, ee All Sizes but Not in Every Style! cized morquisette. Gentle wire support under the bust. Weat-cinching feoture. 32d to 388. $6.50 il |) care GLENHAVEN SUITS SALE of FALL and WINTER Values to $10.95 HATS BOBETTE Hosiery and Corset Shop | Regular $22.95 Values T 6 | Fates, ste Alt colors. Special $ 3 _§ 5 14 North Saginaw St. St. Reenter Bide. ; FE 2-6921 | a = Coe ee _ ‘4 ; : £ 4 _SIRTEEN. a PS Failure of Single Talent Incidental By MURIEL LAWRENCE husband. In grade School, Jinny’s Jinny’s father” was the son of a teachers were always having to- wastre] who inflicted an anxious reassure her parents that her brain’ childhood on him. A successful was a superior one that would’ lawyer himself, he credited the, not let them down, material advantages he lavished | on his own family to his brain. And he thought of a fast-think- ing brain as the one indispensable safeguard against hurt and disas- | ter. In her last year tof high sc school, He 2, was therefore concerned with Jinny’s brain. Throughout | her childhood, he would provoke arguments with her, not because he was interested in what she — had-to say, but because he want- ed to be sure that her brain was working competently, ° dJinny’s mother checked it con- stantly, too, lest it disappoint her Early Week Special! MACHINE or | MACHINELESS PERMANENT WAVE s 4°° Open Evenings - by Appointment SIZES tals y—24/, 2 Look smart in this chill-chasing jumper! Wear it with or without a blouse! Use wool or heavy- weight cotton remnants! Propor- tioned for shorter, fuller figure! | Permanent Wave 12 School St. FE 2-6039 Shop Start the NEW YEAR Right | Pattern 519: Sizes 1442, 16's. © ¢ Private 18%, 20, 22's, 24"2. Tissue pat- | ote $100 | tern; transfers. State size “Send 25 cents in coins for this pattern—add 5 cents for each pat- ‘tern for first-class mailing. Send jto 124 Pontiac Press Needlecraft 'Dept., P.O. Box 164, Old Chelsea Station, New York 11, N.Y. Print plainly your name, address with - ' pone, pattern number, size. e Bane tr Practice @ Graduate Wees Instructors ——~— ~ Et Ne Ny a earieecchie ACCORDION STUDIOS Call FB 2-501 LOOP AiNG, Tite N, Saginaw WINTER TERM MONDAY, JANUARY 3 | DAY, HALF-DAY and EVENING “The demand for well-trained office workers has exceeded the |. pon a dl the past. This shortage will still exist during the months to come. Training Is Offered in... GREGG SHORTHAND | STENOGRAPH (Machine Shorthand) TYPEWRITING COMPTOMETER and CALCULATOR - HIGHER ACCOUNTING and Other Courses. VETERAN APPROVED Phoné, Call or Return This Ad for Information Address. cs ie CREAMY— I SmootH | DELICIOUS ! HERES ALL YOU DO! 1. Just toss Minute Pota- toes into sa)ted boing wa- ter. Do not cook. 2. Merely press potato shreds into water with a spoon and stir umtil water is absorbed. 3. Add butter and beat about 1 minute. A small amount of milk may be added, if desired Quick asa wink . you've got the creamiest, best-tasting mashed pota- toes ever’! So fluffy, eo smooth! Serves 4. Try ‘em for dinner tonight. ee Y, eee ‘ 2 A new product from the mokers | MINUTE RICE Products of General Foods | praise. For by it, ‘other's applause of his one gift. So when school or work tests face Tt * THE PONTIAC: PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1954. Qualities We Praise ina Child Shape His Later Demands Upon Himself ie nner enna eae cahaeenee =mmecmemmmenmenaant — m Jinny’s marks suddenly began to. deteriorate. Her alarmed parents said, “Remember college is | ahead. Get your diploma — and! we'll take you to Europe this um- mer." But as final examinations neared, dinny could not pre- pare for them, She could not | study. For the test that faced | her brain contained the possibil- ity of its failure. Without a successful brain, she was nothing, and fina] exams threatened her with annihilation of her entire self. So, the. night be- fore her first exam, she fainted. Writes England's John MacMur- ray: ‘The intellect. is rooted in the emotional life, draws its nour: | ishment from it and is the ‘sub-_ ordinate partner in the human economy.” This statement holds true for any talent possessed by a child wheth- er it be for fast thinking, music or football. We make a bad mistake when | we single out any young talent for | we sugge it that the child's total value rests upon him with the possibility of fail- ure, hé has no reserves of self- appreciation to back him up. He has to make Jinny’s choice — and évade the tests. He may just not work at all — or content himself with third-rate jobs that offer him no possibility of annihil- ating failure. What we praise in a child shapes the demands he will later make up- on himself. For this season, I praise chil- dren only for sincerity. For this | quality includes acceptance of their | total selves — their feelings as well | as their thoughts. Thus, such praise | supports whole selftrust, making, __ the triumph or failure of a single, talent incidental. IF heavy junior figure— style so inherent that it bec | (The * ‘dressmaker”’ sui isa < saibtinidads pane. . ‘ ma Qecasionall y a fashion develops weith interpreted keved ina crisp linen-weave blend of wool and rayon and it's wearable all | deeply. ! ‘and remains fashion-right Jor years to come. ‘comes timeless, 5) ear ‘round, case in pownt, | “oe Margaret McBride Says: By MARY MARGARET McBRIDE The novelist Ellen Glasgow re- ; | cords as the earliest incident she /remembers a frightened black dog pursued by shouting men carry- ing - sticks and stones. The little |Ellen thought the animal threw |her a tortured, as it raced by but she could not help. It was the child's first con- tact with cruelty, her first) inte mation that human be rings could be brutal | For the rest of her life she was firmly convinced that the only great sin is the deliberate inflic- | a You con drop weistline it hips ore really slim, otherwise rounded bod- tion on another of pain, ico end eosed shirt comoutlege In her remarkable autobi- heovy spots | ography, “The Woman Within.” Miss J. F.—Classic princess lines | the author predicts that war will or straight, vertical lines are most never be banished, and gives as flattering but there's a good ex-| a reason that some people like appealing glance | ception for the plump young girl who can wear the rounded bodice | instead of a straight one, because youth can afford to emphasize roundness it. They are the ones, she be- lieves, whe enjoy being cruel. At first “enjoy’’ seems the wrong word here, but perhaps it is the only one a fits. bd | ) , | 7 W. Lawrence St. Phone FE 2-3551 | | 17 Depend —1~ b I ACROSS and t mouse — end ruin and tide and all Century plant Russian river Country hotel Food processing plants \ Accountant « books Hindu poctal Class Hearing organ Profanity Repeat Place i) 8 Hard. heroine Location Dante liens Mountain rider Strew Turning back ey tm the 3 is ( 4. Bow and ofa wine legs slang Arrow poison and Nability Lawyers patrons High notee Yesses and hates a! and the Divine Comens tn a tine Nevada cits For a day Price Poker stane Abstract) be! DOWN 1 Wind up a snake Prince Charles and Princess ne ‘ and ae 7A 20 right ro te da 1) Mherwise 17 Copy “ Welrder Group of eight Wound hragh 48 Rodents 80 Health resort W Most) seGuitive 38 Coll for Coreful Dan the Pontiac claundry Man Fluff Dry Just Send Your Entire Family Wash The flat pieces will be returned all ironed. The wearing apparel ond bath towels will be fluff dried and folded. Very little left for you to do. Your Best Buy Is Fluff Dry PONTIAC LAUNDRY |& CAREFUL DRY CLEANERS FE28/0/ @ cat = FE 28/01 | I, for one, would never be able to tie a tin can to the tail of a cat, | miserable when occa- read stores of sub- human men and women who starve, beat and maim their chil- dren for reasons ranging from simple dislike to strange ideas of discipline. In spite of all the rationalized explanations, I am _ revolted by bull fights and hunting undertaken only for sport. 1 can't for the life and | am sionally I of me understand how a landlord | /can bring himself to evict a penni- less woman and young children. Yet there is a streak of cruelty in) me—as 1 imagine there is in most. All it takes te bring mine to the surtace is anger. Let somebody sting me in a sensitive spot, and instantly my irresistible inclination is to return blow for blow. Maybe I enjoy the outburst but it is use- so Sipe. he ee 2% * eee eee Fi ~», Outbursts Only Intensify the Hirt + i | | : | | _4#me for a date. We went out to) nights later he called and said he i wanted to see me, and I tald him _ play around and have some fun | asking for dates, so his affection | | for you is of long standing. | have as much fun as possible—so how should I have acted? _ though I were 30?" /you! Equally obviously it’s your * Apologies Are Better | Than Pride Treat Relationship With Real Respect, - Don’t Hurt Him By ELIZABETH WOODWARD “Dear Miss Woodward: For two | years he liked me before he asked gether and were getting serious. 'He was very nice to me and I tt the world of him. “But one night we had a misun- decanting, and afterward he went back to his base. Several I'd be at a dance if he wanted to look me up there. “When I go dancing I like to -with my friends—and he didn't like that and left-without a word. Now he tells my friends I acted like a two-year-old! He said he wants a girl of 17 to act 17. What kets me is that he used to say I was the life of the party! “Now I'd like to know how to tell, & him off! Should I phone, write or tell him face to face? I like to As | Usually one in a couple loves | more deeply than the other, is It’s so thrifty, sew-easy to make ‘more sensitive to moods and mis- ‘this new, side-button, wrap weskit! understandings, can be more easily , Just look at the diagram! Weskits hurt., Obviously that one is not are so smart this year—you'll want boy friend. | several of the classic, button-front You say he liked you for two. type, too! Choose wool tweeds, years before he got around to’ corduroy, cotton! He | Pattern 4529: Misses’ sizes 12, | regards it with dignity and respect., 14, 16, 18, 20. Size 16 upper ver- —it’s important.to him. Your mis- sion, % yard, 54-inch; lower, 1% understanding with him cut him yards 39-inch fabric. This pattern easy to use, simple And when he called you to get to sew, is tested for fit. Has com- things patched up, you gaily sug- - plete illustrated instructions. gested that he look for you at the Sid 3S comle in cles foc this dance. For all the world as though | you had something better to do— and it didn't really matter to you pattern—add 5 cents for each pat- tern for first-class mailing. Send less as therapy, for it does not assuage but, my hurt. fqows it. If the blow another is different mannered ordinary thing through =the partment store per, *. though, rather, since shame inevitably She do was vestibule as another annoyed by the crying of her intensifies is being struck for perhaps the case Once I saw a mild- woman an extra- passing of ai de- shop- child, first screamed at and then slapped the | anger, my defenseless Without a word. baby face white with friend walked over, hauled off and slapped the other woman hard across the face I don't know what would have Jike a child. the avenging angel | store. |" happe ned if had stayed in the ‘didn't—she went away fast, scared | and rather appalled at what she | (a done ' the right idea. She | stead_of telling him off. to Anne Adams, care of 137 Pon- tiac Press Paftern Dept.. 243 West | 17th St.. New York, N.Y. Print plainly name, address with zone, size and a style | number. | whether you made up with him or not. He found you at the dance, but you didn't give him much time. He wanted to talk seriously with you—and after all, you'd told him te meet you there, But you preferred te play around | with your friends. You were hav- | ing too mach fun te be pried | loose. -He saw he was getting nowhere, so he left) without taiking with you. He probably felt that you werent treating him, his affec- tion for you, and your relationship | with him with the proper dignity ' and respect. You made no sign that he and your quarrel with him If you ask a guest to play the were important to you. That's | iano for you—be courteous enough when he decided you were acting to listen quietly. It’s rude to say, “I'd love to hear you play’ and * ‘then chatter to someone else all You hurt through the selection. If you want |him more than he annoyed you. to talk—talk. [f you want to listen You'd better apologize to him i You added insult to injury of the But maybe she had original misunderstanding. So seek him out—by phone or by letter. want to see him. And say it in Tell him thig time that you | to music—listen. You can't do both at the same time. | | Modern Woman’s Role Requires All Her Talents | By ANNE HEYWOOD A woman's life is no longer the predictable thing, running the pre dictable course, that it used to be. | In the times of our great-grand- mothers, a girl got married in her | late teens—or else' She than had |}babV¥ after baby after baby. stayed in the home est was grown and_ then, haired and black-shawled, on the porch until she cdhed, | The modern weman, on the ' ether hand, is apt to live three er four different lives in’ the course of her one. She goes to school, she has ai job, she leaves the job and gets married. like rocked She has children and then, as not. gets a part-time joh when they're ino school and a full-time ob when they have flown the nest. | She lives a Jot longer than her great-grandmother did and if she's prudent, she plans for it, Mrs. Helen Clarke. of Kingston, N.Y. 1s wise. She is a registered | nurse. happily married and with an eight-,ear-old daughter, Anne. During the war, Helen worked in the hospital full time, Then | she stayed home, had Mary Anne, and engaged in homemak.- ing as a full time thing. Recently Mrs. Clarke has worked out a new and very satisfactory arrangement. She decided that, first of all. was so bad that she arin something in her community | » help relieve it. Second, she decided that it would a good idea to keep her hand lust in case she might one dav be In until the young: | gray. | Mary | the nursygg shortage | ought to be) want to resume a full-time nursing | career So she talked it over with her husband, and with the Hospital) The result-is that Mrs. Clarke works at the hospital, week from seven till eleven. Fhix gives her eight hours a week of work at her old field, enough to keep her from getting out of date. At the same time, it disrupts the Clarke household net at all, She gets alt her home- making done during the day and on her two working evenings Mr. Clarke baby sits. And q nice little nest egg is growing. Kingston | on | general floor duty two evenings a- If you had a job or a profession before you were married, you don't have to sit ifs loss around and bemoan If you will really search, vou can find some way of working at it for at least a few | week, With Life the way an up-to-date business ski!! it hours a is today is a handy thing for any wife to have! i. With sports cars Shortening ssipenpeicd Americans dress-for both city and suburban living. 4 + your most humble voice. Make things straight with hith—if you care about him at all. And I'm sure you do! Watch Long Handle Those enameled frying pans with ' the long handles are wonderful for style in the kitchen, but be care- ful in using them. It’s very easy ! to turn such a pan, full of hot food, onto yourself. Keep handle away y Som une Vobed edge. There must be fortunes jn oil, the because so many people have put = and got aor back, — 7 * turquoise cotton blouse. W hite embroidery stitches the gentry collar. Three-quarter Adaptable lo any setting, is this | length sleeves are tailored with barrel cujfs, i * ie if , : > * % s8 7 : 3 ¢ ae “esi fe : a fe “2 . a . : * % v i @ } is i* f : ‘ ¥ - fy ‘ * - : 2 Ue Lay J i ) | i = 1 “ts : “ ar : ee ' i i 7 . *t ae « a f : ae Pa ¥ - THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1054 | _ a SRVENTEEN Put a Gleam in Their Eyes! Go to Play. wer co Mase ree | 2-Hour Free Parking as Plann laergere= Mel aa ae HAVE YOUR TICKET VALIDATED , oo : ed, . |ime bam tor suring, Gis, Was 7 AT JACOBSON’S WHEN YOU MAKE A PURCHASE = y, - Says Post Ease sever apogee tor Pah , gu Dignified Evening | scorns on her glove to shake wor P Shoutdn’t Arouse| spologize tor not taking off her hat Any Criticism things to do. A man, payin sit- . . By EMILY Post uation, —e apologized for , 7 " 2 Today's first letter tells me:| . e : 2 “My mother-in-law A ; Nosllaptanpaieay prosper Pep Up Your ’ / 7 whom I play bridge every week an i / mene = oe enue Post-Holiday a, 7 bes. vo te particul - ay i “| 7 = aria “et the tickets me | Eating “ i V4 s a ahead of time, so they are bought | Clarkston Cook Has and paid for. I would like to know | : if you think it would be proper | Number of Good, / , / J ; A : ". for me to go to the theater as’ . planned. Please advise me as [| Hearty Casseroles 4 oa = to bring criticism | By JANET ODELL / A / | 7 7 Pontiac Press Food Editer . , T see no season why you should In the course of a pleasant / /- / FR Ven | not to go the theater as planned— | cussion on food, Mrs. Francis \. / : / 7 OU \ Family Nighis. you Saas tg aaeeeae ps — = os ave = / 7 / | ’ \ Monday end Tuesder A) If it were a theater party in the teresting suggestions. We are / ‘a / 8 \ Bring the Whol Family Sioa ee] | tf 6/ YEAR-END \ \ FINE FOODS Woodward et Squere Leke Rd. ‘FREE PARKING ef a neighbor. of ours was mar- |any food left over from i | i sug- Dear Mrs. Post: The daughter is most timely as it uses your the ' / | So — / 4 7 Pocpan te Sng iw one la tc H fof. CLEARANCE \ v | rete Te | They’ lke gardening end. working pf i 4 \ . ‘we : f l ! ! l | | | TOMORROW! *‘ for New Year's Festivities! | ¥° 4 nt take it to the reception.| By Mrs. Francis A. Mickle re Now Open—Our New I met the mother of a friend. I/Cover with a layer vf sliced DRY CLEANING or al deme roe Goaey r ng. PETUNIAI! gravy over the casserole. Bake 30 DRIVE-IN PLANT minutes in a moderate oven and 605 Ocklend Ave, Through the cluttered | |W im squares to serve. If you Just North ef Wisner Stadium House I zip -— have no gravy, use cream of | : Its my Trash- — Drop Off Your poeta Collecting trip! ° / | , , | SUITS - COATS ! DRESSES | SPORTSWEAR it \ Have the COATS and Stecees| | 1 |) BLOUSES ji / Cleaned. While wee fe UU TE MILLINERY -SHOES !, / seneet, se Cur! other scalloped potato dish. Place | + \ ) | TOYS 7 re pork chops on top of the sliced : Good idéa, Petunia! Make poe on .—_— ' 1 | | | / ° GRESHAM CLEANERS aa So ee a — : \ ' ) | | CHILDRENS’ -f / / ! _ 97 Oakland Ave. FE 4.2879 || endch—chn replacethem || aunoush te eutoine came | yA pi fee - We Give Holden Red Stamps ' a =P =) 0 mo Cgplpas pleads Rote \ \ : ! | COATS / / A } : ee : iy \\ SNOWSUITS & /// , PRE-INVENTORY [B|_ | FURNITURE Sale (FLOOR SAMPLES) Sofas—Chairs—Sectionals | SUBSTANTIAL SAVINGS! Annual CARPET Sale NOW IN PROGRESS | “TERMS 15% DOWN! UP to 24 MONTHS to PAY! CARPET & FURNITURE CO. 932 W.HURON ST. 1/2 BLOCK FROM TELEGRAPH PHONE FE.5 9211 PONTIAC MICHIGAN . | | of MAPLE’ ot BATES _— SIRMINGHAM USE YOUR CHARGA-PLATE® - | ; | | i oo A x oy * fh te ge eee ae ‘ * PEGE pee ea Oe See ged Vo gun gym eee si " oo pe ig pts : ‘ “ a= ‘ S ; —— ae se ee Fe ES ee ee we ss : a. ¢ . 4% . *% “ ~*~ . j : aa | ; £ ale . ; = eer ~ oe : ¥ : : . « ‘. Ra pre » i . y Ij * +. EIGHTEEN ‘ sg | * THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 27, T9054 ~ ee: eeenonaa xs — — Alc 6 uc mas 7 i a : a ee . thet a : “He cracked head log ) |p TQDAY'S ASSIGNMENT FOR: . 11, Stylianos, 10, and Stavrolla.8.} Angel falls in Venezuéla is the| It has been computed Some Men. Just Don't ; die mat out | U 5 Sends Mendes | As soon as he could, Mike got|worid’s highest falls. It is 3,342|welder’s flame could be geen on : . the stove just because I went out| Us. Js : ; st - oe oe ; tte Sete, Se Sao way from BSiaes | LSUNIOR EDITORS | se sveund oer ee _ te & ; 1] ; : Fs D. McCracken, 25, was arrested) - + | ae ul f — se! Today Mike: starts a week vaca- < — over the weekend on complaint of| The largést office building in| CHICAGO n 18-year-o i» tion and hes bis nine children to Cc. BRACB his wife, Therrance, 29. the world is the Pentagon. Minnesota farw girl, good will em- ~\\ 2 . aie Kk wich bien: & + oer . 7 issary of America’s dairy indus- o 4 __ ; a try, made ready to fly to New . . . York today and thence to Paris eorcelteenl ries | Brace-Smith ana ome " Tuesday with 48 quarters of milk |. =< | 138 West Lowrence Street IMPORTANT NOTICE [i =" crc a tie cae * 4 6 John A. MacDonald, 1 mother ot Pontiac, Michigan The milk, one quart from each Glenn MacDonald, editor lente Semice ‘ Phone FE 5-0738 : ern ns 4 state, and a milk dispensing me- re City Times, Mrs, MacDonald, Ambu! . chine for the Premier's office, is Friday after illness. : a gift from the American Dairy ene — Assn. In appreciation for Mendes- ; France's efforts to promote milk drinking. Ht will be delivered by | Eleanor Maley, who won a state- , wide contest for the honor. * We % The .French Premier, however, | faced a political crisis today which might cause his Cabinet. to fall on the issue of German rearmament. Just who would get the milk if Mendes-France loses his premier- | ship is an unanswered question. RENCES, wrise fully and imserview with division manager. WRITE—BOX 34, PONTIAC PRESS 1955. Sign a Geo Fuel Oil Contract TODAY Gee FORTIFIED Fuel Oil. ‘with its AMAZING NEW ADDITIVE. burns HOTTER, CLEANER. * LONGER! Yet this better quality fuel oil, which is thé finest obtainable anywhere, COSTS NO MORE than ordinary fuel oil. A LITTLE BOY GOES SKIING This is the time of year ofr winter sports in many parts of the country. A popular one is skiing. Here's a little boy who will stand up on skis: 1. You can color boy’s face pink with water colors or crayons if you like. Make his suit green, scarf and mittens yellow, and hat red and yellow striped. His shoes are brown, and the skis, ski straps and round disks are yellow, ' 2. Paste entire picture on strong white paper or light cardboard with library paste. 3. When dry, carefully cut out the boy's figure, the separate leg, and the two disks. , 4. Place the separate leg behind boy's figure until the dotted | line on leg is at edge of boy’s coat. Paste leg in this position. 5. Figure stands upright on skis by folding along bottom of both feet on dotted line. Make sure to cut on heavy line of shoe as shown in small diagram. Also bend legs outward for better balance. For finishing touch, poke holes in hands (white dots) and in center of discs with a toothpick. Place discs on toothpicks as shown in (A) and push top end of toothpick through hole in hand from behind figure. . Spread out some cotton in a shallow box, sprinkle it with snowlike ‘| soap flakes, and set the littie boy on the snow. | ) | || SERVING PONTIAC FOR OVER 29 YEARS . Father, Children Reunited Atter Seven Years Apart SALT LAKE CITY u '— Mike: gather all six children into his| Katsanevas, 66, took his children’ arms at once, Then he and the | shopping today—but he wasn't just other three—James, a U. S. air-. looking for after-Christmas bar- ; : ain | man first class now home on) & : ‘leave; a daughter, Kaliope, 18, and He wanted practical coats and Manuel, 16—posed for pictures | trousers and dresses and shoes, all with them. And between shots | right. But at the same time, he 4. : : y turned and hugged Leonidas, was showing six of his children 47 “jr 14. Nicholas. 13. A a new wiy to live, the way he has | zl aisome lasted ak males : learned to live in America. | AFTER-CHRISTMAS eae a IDAME YOU'LL BE HAPPY, TOO, BECAUSE WE GIVE RED STAMPS On the “keep-fill plan.” your Gee Fuel Oil Con- tract assures you of automatic delivery .. . year ‘round . . ..of this finer fuel oil. Don’t delay. call FEderal 5-818f today ... and enjoy greater comfort, enjoy a cleaner home, enjoy greater economy simply by using Gee Fortified Fuel Oil. The gorments they need for warmth and comfort on wintery days! Styled for easy putting on and taking off heavy . fabrics and quilted dinings to keep them dry and warm. : While School Is Out Get Them (66 Cleaned! Heavy materials with new fabric linings require special attention and care in cleaning to preserve the warmth, color, and size of the garment. Here at Ogg’s we take special pride in cleaning each 3 snow suit, ski suit or heavy jacket or coat. We preserve the linings, blanket or quilted, and keep the fabrics and colors as they .were intended by the manufacturer. And this FINER OGG CLEAN- ING costs no more than any cleaning If You Don’t Know Your Coal-— Know Your Coal ~ Dealer LAK | COAL and o1Lc?: Clearfield Naval Supply Depot, where he js a janitor. This was the first time he had seen them in seven years, since he left Crete. | | Three children came with Mike | then, but he had to leave his wife. ° and seven other sons and daugh- Five Cash and Carry Stores ters behind, He got a job as a . | janitor at the naval supply depot to serve you better too! /north of here. He prayed and he saved—but he never could get to-| gether enough money to bring the | rest of the family over Then Mike's fellow workers de- cided on his Christmas present. | They raised $2.500, and that was) | enough. . Se 3 DAY SERVICE on truck routes and most normal orders. 1 DAY SERVICE when desired or needed Please phone plant, FE 4.9553. 4481 Highland Road (M-59) 2617 Dixie Highway 376 Auburn Ave. present from his coworkers at the ° i] Gas or Electric The family started, but in Ath- 1 HOUR SERVICE 430 Orcherd Leke Ave. ens Mrs. Katsanevas -was detained he RANGE or. in emergencies at our for about a month because of a ‘from Greece — Mike's Christmas} Any TV Set | CHOOSE FROM: y $ 00. Admiral ®@ Philco ©G-E © Emerson : © Zenith © RCA ¢ Norge © Tappan plant... . 379 E. Pike St 379 E. Pike Street i The six child ; cate on oy plane. Kiatisce son, WASHER ees e e Maytag e Easy George, 21, will join the family F Your Choice © Speed Qu een when he finishes a hitch in the Greek army. Mike couldn't say much when) the airliner landed and his chil- dren ran out—he just laughed and cried, His friends standing behind the runway fence didn't say much either—they” just grinned. The thin little father tried to CLEANER Main Office and Plant 379 E. Pike St. S Phone FE 4-9593 MEDICAL JOURNAL REPORTS PROOF YOU CAN SPARE YOUR FAMILY DAYS OF SUFFERING FROM COUGHS OF COLDS Here’s Relief So Different It Will Change All Your Ideas About Cough Syrups Choose from Maytag. Speed Queen. Norge. Easy, GE .. . Fully Guaranteed used models—Every one a real bear- gain. Philco, Emerson. Zenith or RCA... All Fully Guaranteed used models — Just like Cheose from Admiral, GE, Choose from Phileo, Magic Chei. GE. Admiral, Norge, Tappan... All Fully Guaranteed used models — Just like new. NO DOWN PAYMENT —2 YEARS TO PAY! Six Leading Cough Syrups Tested in Medical Center. Results Vital to You. Never before could any leading cough syrup promise you so much. Think of it! A new kind of cough syrup specially made, not only to re- lieve coughing faster and more com- Cetamium is the Answer One reason why Vicks Medi-trating Cough Syrup is so effective, the re- port concluded, is that it contains Cetamium. This remarkable new penetrating ingredient carries: re- lief-bringing medicine to the cough- irritated crevices of the throat. So spare your child days of suffer- ing from coughs of colds. Use new, more effective Vicks Medi-trating Cough Syrup. MEDICAL JOURNAL REPORTS :* Matched, point for point, against five other leading cough prepa- . There, it medicates as it penetrates. rations, Vicks Cough Syrup: ; : ee nae tania nn In addition, Vicks Medi-trating : anne E $20 Innerepring on of the cough! ’ . 1. Helped red th i Cough Syrup also works through the the cough by Viai Pa eration: of Mattresses and { { ; 8-Pc. Bunk Bed Set * system to speed breakin f tr Here are Facts: cough. pe é up of the 7 eared to bring relief 39° faster Box Springs than the av i : Bunk Beds After testing six leading cough syr- . sense $ Bibs Guard ups on patients of all ages for two Proved Safe for Children fem coaghe eee Pele SAVE 61 00 ON seencouie : — years in a prominent clinic, doctors etn aad aR ee : Oe ae vain 0% 5 99 published their findings in a Medi- rs also learned that Vicks 4. Was the only preparation tested ° | 9.3 cal Journal article. They reported Medi-trating Cough Syrup was the Modern 6-Pc, Sofa Bed Groups .- me that new Vicks Medi-trating Cough Syrup was not only the “best of the preparations tested,” but also cut the duration of coughs of colds by ~ at least two full days. t now... with colds threat- ening, these findings are especially important to you. only cough syrup tested that did not upset the stomach of any patient, ° - regardless of age. This feature, plus its pleasant flavor, makes it ideal for children VICKS meo!-TrraATING COUGH SYRUP Medicates as it Penetrates that did not upset the stomach of a | single patient. ; “Copy ef Boston Clinic Report available to physi- cions on request ee ne ee a ee Not just a beautifully furnished liv- ing room BUT an extra bedroom when you need it... First you see it with a handsome Medern sofa. buoyantly spring-filled for seating comfort ... flanked by TWO ma- hegany finished step end tables with striking Modern table lamps. Matching cocktail table, too. Sofa — smoothly to form a big double ry Reg. $149.95. “89 a NO MONEY DOWN 108 LA Phone FE deral 3-7114 NORTH SAGINAW ¥ cd ot ad te “I ONTIAC PRESS | ef MONDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1954 wr ” PONTIAC, MI CHIGAN | NINETEEN 1955 Seenas Year of Con tinued Prosp ’ ——_ ae te te Pa Christmas Shoppers Spend $17 Million to Set New Mark fore many families’ out of the w: for the bills which the merchants men today are after another rec- ord: Post-Christmas sales. Bargain sales are starting early in many of the nation’s stores. The big Chicago mail order houses have their midwinter sales catalogues in the mails this week. They are liberally studded with price cuts from the listings in the fall general catalogues. s = * Department stores are launch- ing their bargain sales early this year. Merchants are taking note of the increasing custom of: using gift certificates or putting cash in family stockings. Many a retailer is eager to tap this flow of cash before it goes to a com- petitor. And Christmas sales volume s i F met refeetaed : d z. °F i & oa to Iron Curtain Escapees “WASHINGTON (INS)—Twe two ranking Democrats on the House Judiciary Committee today dis- agreed bitterly over the administra- tion of the 1953 Refugee Relief Act with Chairman Emanuel Celler (D- NY), calling it ‘“‘savage and un- realistic.” Celler called the law itself ‘‘im- and Iron Curtain and only. very few refugees have been allowed to come to the U.S. ‘the judiciary immigration, that red tape is being cleared away to allow the refugees to enter in increasing numbers. e * * Celler promised to call enforce- ROYAL LADIES—Queen Elizabeth II is the picture {Princess Anne, in this portrait by photographer of an adoring mother as she poses with her daughter, | Marcus Adams. WASHINGTON ® — Two Dermo- cratic senators said today they be- lieve the next Congress. will au- thorize more new low-rent public housing than they expect President Eisenhower to recommend, ~ The similar statements were made in separate interviews by mittee which handies housing leg- islation, and Sen. Humphrey (D- Minn). Each said the present law is too restrictive and that he will pro- pose changes in it. = * * * Albert M. Cole, federal housing low-rent public housing units in the next two years. Eisenhower this year asked a four-year program of 140,000 units, but Congress author- ized 35,000 units for each of two years. Such housing projects are de- signed for persons in low income brackets, The federal government pays to local housing authorities the difference between the amount of rents collected from the tenants and the cost of maintaining the properties, Sparkman said the 35,000-unit _!limit is so hedged in by restric- tions that it is doubtful whether - more than 10,000 units a year could be built Ls) * * ee WASHINGTON (INS) — Air ‘Force experts conceded today that intercontinental guided missiles in the next few years may rise more than 1.000 miles to plunge at me- teoric speeds through outer space on targets 5,000 or 6,000 miles Questions concerning the long- range missile projects were stimu- lated by the statement of Socialist least 10,000 miles an hour. the Air Force and Con- vair, builder of the “Atlas” mis- silé mentioned by Moch, refused to comment on the statement. The questioning, however, brought out these facts: E “These restrictions must be re-: New Low-Rent Housing Eyed by Solons moved," he said, and added he ex- pects they will be when Congress acts on proposed extension of the act. Sparkman said he would prefer |“a flexible law’’ which would leave it up to the President and the | Budget Bureau to recommend each Sen. Sparkman (D-Ala), a mem- year how many units should be | housing unit, and relocate the fem- ber of the Senate Banking subcom- built, the final decision to rest with ily living in the old unit.’ He said | Congress. | Humphrey said that if the law does limit the number of units to be built, “it should be not less than 75,000 a year.” He said he will introduce pro- | posed amendments soon afier Con- gress convenes Jan. 5, seeking to | eliminate what he termed ‘‘far too much red tape." | He anid the present law requires aor “for. every housing unit built, you must tear down an old erity by Cabinet ‘Planning Unit Less Optimistic Further Cuts in Taxes, More Public Spending Urged by Group i aH t S25 Hy ge | sé H rr ig H Somewhat more cautiously, Sec- retary of Commerce Weeks said “further economic growth in 1955 is probable, if an environment that is favorable to business progress is maintained.’ that involves such planning operations that many mu- | nicipalities in need of new projects ; and slim clearance have found it |impossible to qualify within the \time allowed.” ‘Fingerprint’ | BERKELEY, Calif. (INS)—The | “fingerprinting’’ of living cells as |er into the mysteries of cancer was described by a scientist today | at the 121st meeting of the Amer- ican Assn, for the Advancement of Science, The report was delivered as the huge AAAS convention, attended by some 6,000 delegates, swung into high gear on the University of rang- ing from snakebite deaths to radio- activity in oil refining. Dr, Engene Reberts, chief re- , Hope Medical Center in Southern | California, told a symposium on See Missiles Zipping Thro | speedg of more than 3,000 miles, 3 have been produced by the | four-stage rocket might easily be = a two-stage rocket with a | range close to 2,000 miles, and the a dramatic mvans of probing deep- | the physiology of growth that | team of eight associates. Cancer Cells | cancer is “a chemical law unto | iteelf."* Where malignant growths occur in the body, he explained, certain i. similarities can be found in their biochemical makeup in sharp con- trast to normal tissues, all of which have highly individual patterns of chemical activity. ‘ One of the similarities in tu- mors, Roberts reported, is in their patterns of free amino acids, . sub- stances which act- as ‘‘building blocks’! of protein materials and also perform other important func- tions in living cells. Roberts launched the research | search biochemist of the City of | project at Washington Universfty | in St. Louis and now is continuing it at the City of Hope with a Planning Assn., urging such public spending, said the national output should be The organization's trustees, head- ed by New York banker H. Chris- tian Sonne, said in a statement made public last night that the growth of the economy has failed ito keep pace with the labor force and increased output per worker, and it continued: , “The actual level of economic activity is at present about 15 to 20 billion dollars below the amount of reasonable full employment.” The group said no general de- pression seems to be in sight, but it urged tax cuts to stimulate con- | sumer buying, and an improve- | ment of social security legislation. Among nongovernment measures, ‘the group said it considered ‘‘the most important to be a rise in wage rates and a _ reduction in prices in accord with increases | in productivity." | an how ugh Space been given, the fina] speed of a | U.S. may have a three or four-| Army, Navy and Air Force. Since 45 of 4. 12.000 miles an hour. stage rocket in experimental de- velopment. 3. Single-stage rockets reaching Health Men C f BERKELEY, Calif. «®—Radio- active cockroaches have demon- strated how the species can invade. homes, even passing through water traps in the plumbing, two U. 5. Public Health experts reported to- day. Sewer cockroaches in Phoenix, Ariz., were used in the experiment. The results showed that the in- sects, which are potential disease carriers, migrate as much as 200 | feet when they become overcrowd- 'ed or when forced out of their colonies by backed-up sewage. g s & Advancement of Science by Wil- liam B. Jackson and Paul _P. Maier of the Public Health Service Atlanta, Ga. SS a a ee er a eee ee in Disease Spread Check the speed of each succeeding ' “stage” in a multi-stage rocket is | added to the speed it has already | heck Roaches made them traceable with a geiger counter. Then they were put back into their hole and then another colony of 1,500 roaches was trapped from a nearby manhole | and dumped into the radioactive colony. The second group of | roaches was not — radioactive. x a | The idea was to produce over- crowding and see how many of the radioactive insects would leave their own home under such condi- tions: In cold weather the migrating i 4. The burn-up time for each stage would be only about two minutes, so q four-stage rocket would still have only about eight minutes of powered flight, In order to span 6,000 miles, it would have to achieve an altitude of more than 1,000 miles. The at- mosphere extends to an altitude of about 300 miles. . The Army demonstrated the po- tentialities of the ‘stage’ rocket at White Sands, N. M., in 1949. A comparatively smal] rocket was placed in the nose of a captured German V-2, which was capable of altitudes of about 100 miles. When the V-2 was near its maximum speed and altitude, the small “Wac Corporal” ae didn't go far, but when it warmed up they went off in) The experiment was reported to’ al) directions. They were caught | achieved by a man-crea@ted ob» the American Association for the jpn spots both upstream and down-| ject, A tight lid of secrecy has | stream in the sewer. | This is about what could be ex- pected when clogged mains pro- Communicable Disease Center in, duce backed-up sewage, the health experts said. The insects are cap- The roaches in one sewer man-| able of carrying a variety of dis- hole were collected and sprayed|ease organisms, the experiment- with radioactive phosphorus whicli| ers said. > As far as official records 80, . this is the greatest altitude ever been kept on this type of experi- ment ever since. Most of the original weight of @ 'focket is burned up as fuel. Ig’ ” rockets, the casementa, ; «ts ia iaumiiaamaa ae Sn Ww ee \ q _TWENTY _ erica THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1956 oi 7 ne le | discuss and take decisions on mst: Texans Jolted -by Blast , Suspect’ — Cha pter 8 —by Hugh Lawrence Nelson Near-Free Sudan ‘Sew ie ar “r\From Stored Dynamite le water. ODESSA, Tex. W—One hundred Desired by Premier ince “sss mrusnteyien| ODESSA Tex, One hundred = “rich Suan KHARTOUM, Sudan W—In an | under the cotton-ric , a — pose I miight as Well adopt your effort to placate nationalist ele- is to choose within two years/in a tiny metal shac oe — say who she sus- | ments, Premier Ismail El Azhari ee ee prairie three miles south of here ¥ woman sheriff, j " | pee Fre SS - aan rt, It’s just possible Sheriff Agnes is; ished, He decided to put it | ing the death of Mrs. Angelica | buttering you up for her own rea-| the test. “Dig Agnes—and:l ap. | Jomes, one of the wealthy Carl- | sons.” ‘ 152 N. Be caininea “erste te Calerede'gm | “It tan't like that,” Nancy said s Colorado. Jim ir informality letely” independent ew up last night, jolting a section | naw Dunn, 0 private detective 0d indignantly. “And anyway you pected of the killing?” | has — voll @ nominally inde- | COmPICN’Y * West ~=aitags - Ht - iw San ous wanted es jveee Fees show one thing. Agus “An accident, Jim, It hag to be. a E = — Sk ter B ba 0 Scott | The only casualty reported was “pet something on Mrs Hilton | 4lready knew about the California It better be!”’ Nancy closed her her | ™' <P ater barbara OW | a woman knocked down when her El Azhari, who recently fired | Next Door to Sears . Carlson, her mother-in-law. An- | business. And maybe I shouldn't . door was blown open. She was Sa ettort io “prewect hie cient, | tell you this, but T think she knew| moun firmly around further we. Cabinet ministers for rebel- | Recovers) From! Views treated for bruises. Jim mekes @ search and finds what | beforehand that Mrs, Kit and Mrs./|",..” : : ; | against his nationalist Union| CHICAGO w — Barbara Ann | Or our client might be a prime 1 ae * ; 5 blast was a it is empty, in atrecess ‘behing the | Gelstrap were cowjing here.” party's pro-Egyptian policy, told’ scott, queen of the Hollywood Ice| What caused the St ee ns sero: Jim was more interested in the “I wouldn't say that. Jim, hon- newsmen over the weekend the Revue, is expected to return to the mystery. * “Gueovery. Mrs Gelstrap, Mrs. Kits | first part of that statement than in|. aly I hate thi Hold out pa Sudan should become “an inde- | chow today after a two-day strug- —- sduene on ‘Deter: hgeerl the news itself. “Why shouldn't you.’ 4 . ding, pendent republic with its own B0V- | gie with a virus infection. tacked by Miss Wister, Jim's secre. | you tell-me?”’ Jim D felt as if he ernment and parliament. Miss Scott, former Olympic fig- Mery. Sheriff Arezie restores order | Nancy looked away from her bus- standing on.a sinking hummock of = * 8 ure skating star, missed the open- Pain cleared Miss Wister's eyes, | band. “After all it was more OF | crass in the middle of a quick-| Buyt he added: “The link with | ing night performance Christmas and the mask of rage left her face: | tess in ; , sand. One wrong step or in this} Egypt should take the form of a | and failed to appear in last night's z= “All right.” Sheriff Agnes mie “I see.” A horrid suspicion one wrong word might lead | supreme council of the Sudanese | show which was televised on the Cc “What's this little ruckus about?’ took reot in Jim’s mind and flour- / to disaster. and Egyptian Cabinets which would Comedy Hour (NBC). “She—she tried to scald Jim,” | — ; ea La = TORES, 6 MONDAY |} NEISNER’S Shoe Repair Department Miss : Wister painted, “I did not! How was I to know | he was down there?” Mrs, Gel-. strap whined and hiccuped. “I | heard noises in the basement and | scratchings inside the woodbox. | I thought maybe someone was try- | | TOMORROW AT 9:30 P) NN ALWAY BEST BUYS! |} | .ing to get in that way. Trying to) get in and hurt Mrs. Kit. That's | what I thought.” Miss Wister laughed insultingly.- Mrs. Gelstrap contented herself with a glare. dim Dunn said, “I was looking | | BOYS’ 100% | WOOL | around, standing en the plat i : ferm of the elevator, The door | COATS r of the woodbex opened and a lot ; of boiling water came down over i me."" Jim stopped talking long , ; enough te realize he was not 4 burned. Hig face tingled « little, i but that was all. “Well, a tot of hot water,” he amended, “T didn't know what she was go- ing to do,” Miss Wister went on. $994 | “All at once, she ran out into the . © Quilted lined j —— -kitehen, -eame—back —earrying a - © Finger-tip : pail of water from the stove, She length pulled up the trap door there and 5 dumped it down. I heard Mr. Dunn yell. When Mrs. Gelstrap started _ for another bucket of water, I stopped her." Agnes Argyle walked over to the woodbox and lifted the lid. She | spoke at last, and her voice was husky. ‘I see you found a hiding | place, Mr. Dunn.” “Foupd it empty,” Jim said. “But it might explain why An gelica Jones came here, why she was around the elevator.” “It could. And you found it emp- ® Assorted colors Special § Selling Boys’ Hooded “WINTER Coats Now Only Cotton Smocks, Dresses ............1.00 | Gloves Reduced ............... .50¢ - $1 4 Petticoats Reduced ..................$2. MEN‘S COTTON 133 wt VARSITY eveniyen cee ‘J 7 } Handbags Reduced ........ 1.50 plus tax FLANNEL SHIRTS dust on the bottom where someone Hs has ouegt & cal Aenea 4" \ Cotton Gowns Reduced ....... bee. 1.33 BASEMENT J ACKET “No,” Sheriff Agnes said, “I p be Ge tt | $ , Maternity Dresses Reduced ...... $4& ? owen eat | Mrs. Gelstrap, maybe you'd bet- : lining Gan ae. hak Seek eal eax 4 Coton Plisse Robes ................. © Hood converts to | i pose was in pouring that water.” 5 : e — eslors | > “I told you,” the cook said sulk- | SECOND FLOOR © Sizes 4 to 10 iy. | Now Only “I heard what you said. Try | $94 again. Your water throwing did a/ thorough job of sluicing out the ca hidey-hole."’ . a BOYS’ COTTON 7 mnmotiomnene| 5) LADIES? FLANNEL SHIRTS everything second-hand,. Jim.” P| Sanforized. Sizes 4 to 18 BASEMENT He told her of the water, of the fight between Miss Wister and Mrs. Gelstrap, “I'm ban. | ished for the time being,” he went on, “Ostensibly to change clethes. Meanwhile I think the ‘4 Junior Boys’ Shirt 'n Longie Sets ...... 1.88 > Boys’ Dress Shirts sss iwtié‘(‘(a ’ sheriff is on the phone again, ce Boys $3.95 reporting to headquarters, to (J | _ $ CORDUROY Mrs. Oswald. And they're trying | to get ~~ ee awake. Seems | PANTS to be an a we should all | ; ; 4 , All winter fabrics gather happily under the Cartson | ‘ root in the place across the lake.” reduced | Sub-Teen Coats Reduced MEN’S ALL 32.94 Nancy nodded. saad heal SECOND FLOOR 5 Girls’ Robes Reduced ... 9? “ 28 © Ver coseat move was No news to her. | . For handier for Agnes,” she said | Girls’ Coats Reduced ................$10 | WOOL TOPCOATS othe “I noticed you two hit it off. i eale Md opens brews What did you tell her, Nancy?” malt Girls’ Blouses Reduced ..:............50¢ MAIN FLOOR Boys’ W pyle | “Everything .I knew.” | F ys arm @ Sizes 6 to 16 “Think that was wise?” Jim ® ' Fleece Line d . Ba asked mildly, | 4 “Of course, Jim. Really she is. 3 ODDS & ENDS: ~ < remarkable. She's also under- | : ‘ : standing and shrewd.” | ; SWEAT “Shrewd, I'll grant you.”” Durin UNIFORMS "Rayon Marquisette Curtains ......... 50c sald. “She have anything to say | | as to why Mrs. Hilton hasn't been Reduced Organdy Tier Curtains | poe Sooke $1 SHIRTS over here?” ” nw” : “No. Why should she? Mrs. Hi Bath Towels Reduced—22 x44 cle! sels ae 50c MEN’S PLAID $ ton IT mean ” 99 , . “Her daughter dead.” Jim out Men's Winter Caps Sets $1 WOOL SHIRTS After all—' 3 Boys’ Slacks Reduced. ............... $2 Bsa |, 15° nylon, Washable, Sonforlan “IT guess the Carisons are a ’ 70 woo!, 0 : ' wel acecse° Nancy seid. | : 34 only. White , Boys’ Caps Reduced ................ 25¢ finish. MAIN FLOOR “And I suppose Agnes told Mrs. |] | ¥ ’ : f wiltes Gh ib ccs ANG Ga BASEMENT Men's Hunting Pants ............... $6 what could she do?” : “Nothing, I suppose.’ he said SEs x “Here's a little word of caution Drapery Fabrics, 36" and 48" Wide yd. 69c Re 2.99 WOMEN’S Wrinkled Cottons .............. yd. 50c oe: | | Plaid Ginghams sssssististit 4.50e fm BOYS’ WARM FLANNEL ! KNIT F Rayon jaan Challis ........... vd. 50¢ STORM COATS Sizes 10 to 12. BASEMENT PAJAMAS DUNGAREES ‘Percale ......... 0. eee yd. 29¢ rd ; @ Heavy weight 988 § TINT ct $F A ‘7 94 218 only Reduced. MAIN FLOOR & Bi Al eR a Raa as oc . : 5 aie! a A Rl COMING NEXT WEEK... : JANUARY WHITE Goons WATCH FOR IT! WAIT FOR IT! Drapery and Upholstery Fabrics— SPECIAL SELLING 100 COCOA MATS Tables Full of Home Sewing Remnants Priced Low! “SCULPTURED” NYLON -DUSTERS REDUCED SECOND FLOOR FRESH AS NEW . » « again... after our artinizing service! GENEY CLEANERS Pickup and Delivery Phone FE 5-6107 12 West Pike Street © Durable ‘© Well constructed ® Large size ® Keeps out —_ & soil s ON Re ee RE aie eT ee é < 7 zi : Po s P) __THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1934 bi Séth Congress Leaders- Sen. Carl Haveli Wrisone ! | i fiat fie i Havden in 9 tare interview said he did not believe that “there has ever been a year that Con- Raises Would Help Military Technicians WASHINGTON @® — Asst. Secre- tary of Defense Fred Seaton says administration proposals for mili- ticularly in the Air Force—require considerable housing for dependents, and a rotation sys- tem for returning men from over- seas, as more important than pay Will Steer Appropriations L LEWIS -- Fine Furniture eye 15 times. magazines, will Fuoss, who will become executive editor. Last Thing They'll Do EL PASO, Tex. (#—There’s a sign in a bowling alley here: “Bowlers, please patronize your sponsor. Five members of a cemetery- sponsored team say ‘‘perish the thought.” ; GREATEST GEORGES-NEWPORTS YEAR-END SALE « SHOES Save 30% -50% On Nationally ee Brands A tremendous selection of - your favorite shoes for smart holiday wear. Popular colors, fabrics, patterns. Dress, play, sports. “” bal q” The Greatest Year-End Sale! Save 30% -50% RUBBER FOOTWEAR 6.99 Ladies’ Velvet Stadium Boots......2.97 6.99. Ladies’ Nylon Stadium Boots. .... .3.97 Ladies’ Shoes Formerly 4.99 to 16.95 wee ee 97 psi a " = Kit ww 3 re ’ rae “ine Furniture : | SECTIONALS...SOFAS... CHAIRS Reg. Price fale Price” Reg. Price Sate Price « Citaen built modern arm- fess chair, foam rubber and Spring construction, 4 2-piece Kroehler Sectional, ~ modern, covered with rubber back, tweed Johnson-Carper large dou- ble dresser and matching Ed = s He ee ee ee Be tig oes SS eg ee "MISCELLANEOUS PIECES | ie eh ae Se a 5 ae Ed ‘Wey st ere . nA Reg. Price Sale Price © _ Arvin Ironing Board. All meta! Reg. Price Sale Price § construction ............... $ 9.95 $ 7.88 Five-Pc. Dinette in natural oak, extension table Steel Storage Cebinet. White . with extra leaf, 4 uph. seat chairs 59.50 47.88 " enameled ............. -... 1750 9.88 § | Limed Ock Plestic-Top Table, extension » All Steel Linen end Hamper Cabinet. Suitable with extra leaf, 4 match. chairs 99.50 78.88 | = for kitchen or bathroom... . ... 1895 12.88 © One Only aoe ; : Five-Drawer Unfinished Chest. 22-inches 4 Buffet . Dee e ee ene. tee 74.50 57.88 & = wide by 36-inches high. . 1475 7.88 . ‘ 4 F Unfinished Bookcese Heedboord for full- TT | reece! Semel vere lecteur ge Cot b sizebed 0.0.0.0... 1695 10.88, | _amand three side chairs... . . 274.50 137.50 § ished Boot . ” 4 Modern Dinette in green locquer with white ‘ _— bed cose Hoodbeard for 13.95 10.88 | ‘ plastic top on butter and extension table, : Thirty-Twe ‘eck Twe-Section Unfio -* &§ i four matching chairs ......... 190.00 169.00 = Bookcase. 24-inches high .... 11.95 4.95 . mr pen Convery Drone’ = Se Table, Plestic-Top Utility Tables with silver drawer ea: Gla ee, | and two shelves ............. 17.95 12.88 4 P Seecck: beck - 5 . est . le a4 csi £ > Fifteen- ) = French Province rop able a re ; Fitteen-Piece Aluminum Woterless 5 16,95, _____ in fruitwood. G. Rapids qual... .197.00 169.00' | © Cooker Sets ................ 95 © ; P34. Com H Pe | Maple Ledder-Back Cheirs, d o Woruher mi, 49.95 39.95 : 5 colonial style... 0.2... 17.50 12.88. | ? 42-Piece Cannon Towel and 4 4 Meohogeny Finish Cheirs, upholstered seats, ' Sheet Ensemble ............. 32.50 28.88 - x _ _ ladder-back Styl@ se hse nx::.. 6.95 3. 49 ; EMSC CE lait neat [ARMS i EN iW Ao iO f GEER LORE SANE OE OR bt eg — Sine adage we FR "i ial” i DS EC : /RANGES- APPLIANCES | CHROME DINETTES | | ; Reg. Price Sale Price Reg. Price Sale Price ‘ Leonard Electric Renge ...... $258.00 $219.50 . + Five-Pc. Dougles Dinette Set, extension table j e with old range with extra leaf and four matching @ t rd Electric Ronge ...... 309.95 269.95 | _ chairs. Choice of colors... ... 89.00 69.00 _ with eld range _ 2 | Large-Size sieusion Table with extra leof Universel Gas Range ........ 179.95 129.95 : | ond six matching choirs with foom Universe! Ges Renge ........ 329.95 199.95 — rubber seats ............. 119.00 99.00 | | Bendix Ironer' tit .. 274.50 179.50 - sme Fine Be, Kee. © St : » Kuehne Five-Pc. , Duncan Phyfe styled 4 ce er isa 229.50 99.50. extension table with extra leaf and four : | Pe tte °” : padded seat G back chairs. 11900 99.00 | ' Leonard 13’ Deep Freeze ..... 383.35 249.00 HL © Five-Reom Oil Burner, Kuehne Large Size Five-Pc. Set, 36x48 table * complete with blower ...... 169.50. 99.50 + with 12” leaf and 4 chairs. 139.50 119.00 | sscenmeeatuammmaseestuammenieaaaaaae am — ee ee Pe ee ith ~ HEYWOOD-WAKEFIELD ASHCRAFT Reg. Price Gale Price 5 REPRE T Coe ORR ee | 4 =e Blankets | IN: PLASTIC BAGS Nylon and Rayoh Blankets blended ‘for beauty and ‘ warmth. Trimmed with — ‘ satin binding. FINE FURNITURE . Regular $18. 88 ‘ 4 FOR ALL y 588 FOUR ; "STARTING TOMORROW . - 4 DAYS ONLY! | END of YEAR-END of MONTH Reg. Price Sale Price + SOS Sere ke oo aaa, BE es sa lpi ORR le CMAPS a ~ MATTRESSES . . . a SOFAS | A "Our lowest prices of the entire year BEDROOM SUITES...ODD PIECES! eg. Price Sele Price © 3 Only. Hellyweed head- beards .in blond birch, “ 4 F texture 2.2.2... ee ee $269:50 $239.50 tweed textured cover... 6995 39.50 | Panel bed in limed oak $164.50 $139.50 twin sige”... 2.62.56 39.95 & 2- custom built - . 2 : . ; z — with yoo il Custom - built modern arm € ) Mengel large double dress- ’ ven ome Values to ase | S plasti , wedge table chair, tweed cover with : 5 cass Gee cae: a. 2. 2 Ee ae eee . 5 covered ‘with black and spring and rubber con- a. ° . Vanity Benches. Values to | white heavy tweed, foam struction 6... eee eee 50 sesog fm MONEY cc foets 22950 WON5O $2250 wee cents 7.88 S rubber ...--+..++ --. : : A ef modern chairs, 2 | Kreehler climatized con- jp lstemetiens Sevonpert end = styles, jj sernsted bed. chest_and 2 Ga. WR quel eee chair covered with lime with tweed covers, choice a dresser in limed , on : 99.50 79.50 neorwtindae foam rubber iso 30058 of colors ........-5.. 4995 39.98 i. tk ww. eee eee «.. 275.50 249.50 Oe seee rst toe 2: : 94-inch Grand Rapids Sota ee Kae-Settoy bod. chow wd 3 only. Odd pos | with fom rubber cush- matching shoman nar a, a. oe a anos 14.95 3.88 ‘ m e n e cone *eeeeereee r ° ions, covered in extra boltaflex. One only 49.95 struction f high-pile frieze... 349.50 319.50 — ee ee See tid ac Maple finished bak bode. | Grand built Jemestown ma @, modern lakes into two twin beds — — ae ees oer velte in two-tone cherry with guard rail G ladder 39.95 28.88 Club Sofa, covered wit chair, covered with lip * : top quality irene in olive stick, red naugahyde ... 99.59 Bookcase bed and double : . green . .i 279.50 249.50 7 Gresser sc eweess ceree 269.50 239.00 3/3 adjustable spr o8 - cas Gc - . Med lenah chair bn < a Wis P = Makes into @ hospital bed 49.50 __ 29.50 sofa “and matching chair grey and black textured fa hegany with serpentine Sre-e-wey ect ond met- ‘ covered with forest green, tabric with black legs. « front double dresser, bed tress. Fits under bed or Fe finest Quality frieze.... 495.00 449.00 Smartly styled ........ 84.50 59.50 | & and chest ........-.. 379.50 329.50 39.95 29.95 | in closet cocscenseece — sae eae ’ CARPETING... “RUGS ! | 16x28" Ovel Broided Rugs.....$ 1.29$ 88 | o4 12” Width High-Pile Cotton Ca choice ‘ of grey or green....... sq. yd. 95 5.88: | 12’ Width, Twist and Cut Pile, self-tone in : ~ green only ............ sq. yd. 995 7.88 | ee 12’ Width, Heeviest Weight Axminster, green . } tone-on-tone pattern... .sq. yd. 11.95 8.88 ‘ 79x12’ y'x12" Beige Self-T. waa ae wmame en veee ...115.00 57.50 vars sige Twist Remnent.....154.75 177.38 6'x6’3" Wine Axminster ' (unbound) 20... 0. cee eee 34.00 17.00 | § 8°9'x15’ Lees Chendelle Loop in ' | green VORWIONE gcc csc cccn cs 147.00 89.50 ; All Wool 9x12 Chenille Rugs ® Reg. $54.95 Reversible for long wear on each | page ates of grey, green, rose ial i SOOO SEE EET BABES Be: NES gig ce eer Rh ts SES BASES, BW eS GE BGEIOEGEE CD BOE EP AB. ' Occasional Living Room Pieces , Reg. Price | Sale Price _ One Only. “Welnut Lemp Table, & with drawer ............... $ 12.50 $ 6.88 — Mahogeny Sewing Cabinet . : ~ _ ‘with accessories) .......... 29.00 14.50 | » Mehogeny Gossip Bench, 5 '- upholstered seot ............ 1895 14.88 © | Medern Blond Birch ond A \ Wrought fron Desk... «isi a“ ~.10950 79.50 © - Fine-Quelity Jamestown Mahogeny Desk. (floor sample) ............. 99.50 69.50 _ Fine-Quality Mahogany Desk, with five regular and two deep file drawe/’s 5750 44.50 Odd Mahogany Corner Bookcase 2995 9.98 Odd Mahogany End Bookcase 2395 9.98 nna Iron ne Bench | 1495 11.88 ii REL APES ti ste eR as ts alas s ee Fd Reg. Price Sale Price One lot of innerspring mattresses, twin or full size.....-..206- ooeed 49.50 $ 38.88 Son auiay Aches rg two-piece io-elees “souttons!, ctiensl, spiing ‘seat and back cushions. 199.00 159.50 One only. Studie bed in green tweed with bedding compartment...... 77.00 $9.95 Heavy modern Asheraft davenport and chair, spring back G seat cushions. 259. a 219.50 Modern sofa bed. Sleeps two. Blond lees. modern cover. ees Asheraft occasional chair ..... 0... cece cere resence jesse cers 34.5 29.50 compartment .... : ceoee 89.95 79.00 rn Oe 18.95 Ula Arartment sine lp sata with onespring mattress. veeve eases 179-00 ohio ae a ee AN an EB ae ELDAR CGE OEE ROLE LEE: ELE GOO, EE ERED LS ne — = and Electric Grill Roasts, bakes and grills de- liciously different! " Roaster, Regular-Price. $44.95 Grill, Regular Price. . YOU GET sort 8.95 | a s Reg. Price Sale Prive © wy og se 5 4 rege Seng wes seta %, ~ ° ” i . — ” . as . , - = . ee Me Ne a ke ee ee ee a =| 3 © i i ‘ :* : rl dita 7, = , to 4 2 | , : | ~! .4 ‘ . ; . 4 \ & it ’ Cats *: “TWENTY-TWO, | Soe! INTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECE} ren ae: cial ie Adventure Close at Hand in This Enchanted Week By LAURA Z. HOBSON | | drink we Pc’ in-between (INS)--Lots of us| ¢rinks. you strike up | Ping tober unreal about the great new friendships that later week between Christmas and New | ‘become a bit of a problem. Year's—something like the way we, So what? Travel is broadening, feel on @ sea voyage. ‘they say, and perhaps one reason You've left one port behind you, taothet many humans get their | = another lies a few days ahead first experience of being them— of you, but in between you get 4) solves, of relaxing, of behaving in. funny feeling of unreality, of being more friendly and uninhibited suspended in time and space. ‘way, during those strange hours As anybody knows who's ever 'of feeling out of touch with either taken a. long trip on an ocean | liner, there can be mighty odd re- | Perhaps, teo, this suspended sults from that time-and-space sen-| week between Christmas and New sation, odd and unusual and re- Year's can do a bit the same treshing to the whole personality. thing for many of us landlubbers, _ Maybe yeu spill your secrets to | locked to our jobs, to our kitchens, pertect strangers. Maybe you eat |to our cash registers and sales in-between snacks and | territories. te ee ees Sree We have to settle down for these in-between days, of course, We can’t just take off for parts un- known, no matter how much our , ,' /unconscious minds tell us this . =. : La LOOK WHAT ‘OLE’ SANTA CLAUS LEFT BEHIND! : | week. x . ] Just the same, it might be a ; A | perfectly swell idea for lots and | = a ees it this —— Well, what do you know! After clearing the ribbons and tinsel . . . the gay . week when they their . . | hearts and spirits pretend to be Christmas benners and streamers . . . the crates and boxes . . . we found a dis- e | ‘men dene asp cme Lally tressing situction. For here and there are forlorn left-behinds . . . one and a 4 . f -a-kind; ; s. t ot sen- e Ring Out the Old | ic parlectty peasibia, sou kaow ‘ew-of d; some slightly soiled; end other orphans. So out they go ; All you have to do is make be- sational bergain prices. . ‘om lieve you're in an environment . Ring In the New | where you're expected to be friend- r ly and smiling to every stranger t fn Your Ol Forma UP to 50% and MORE OFF Feral | ee 0 9U” and MUR | ; Cleaned to Like New! | strike up a bit of chit chat about ; ~ : TWO-for-ONE BUY 5 the weather and the journey that | 2 ‘ . : both of you are making. .4 S Cal ene ; YOU'LL BE TEARING YOUR HAIR, TOO, $3995 ; a. cize you, unless you got too pushy, .4 r Re ree . ; 4 I ; 1 unless rie raperig — oper eis 3 IF You DON T GRAB ONTO ONE OF rote AND ‘cedar that? more - 536 | same ng is true, re , rig in ? , | down, ‘otection. Only 34 a FE your own home town, $ THESE OUTSTANDING SUITE VALUES e os a ship you, get oy ofin- $ a . - || forma] manner instea your ty ’ - || sober-as-a-judge personality, a kind , / of willingness to let down many of Lucky you if you’re in the market for living room, aX ~ ved Nh el Lah oe bedroom and dining room suites! Goodly represen- You're less stand-offish, once tation of all wanted styles, really priced low! * you're off shore. Why not try it for the rest of 719 W. Huron FE 4-1536 this week, this final floating week of the long tough year behind | VAI you? :I say “long, aap eat REDRO because most years, most Employers Attention adults, are scarcely in the same : LET US SOLVE YOUR class with beds of roses). ZB . fa E CHAIR PERSONNEL PROBLEMS I've it in the past—tried ‘ Kroehler curved sola in beige nylon matelasse Double dresser with large mirror ALL- PURPOS 0 Contidentic! talking to folks in stores, to bus|f Extra long with zipper T- 95 and full sized panel bed in hand- . piastie covered, tubular frame, Applicants Pre-Tested wing to cmretiorigheal ~ aor SANTA FEELS LIKE cushions Tulted bac a $ i see White finish. For- ‘ No-886 springs. Regular § | girls, I've “pic up” old ladies merly = slightly -sot mer 50 _ value. Reterences Checked | oad cheatin : . g young brats: I've ed FEderal 4-4469 |confided in the waitress in a tea- KING HIMSELF FOR Sa’ Double dresser with large plate glass mirror, Only rs room about how tired I was and |. KIC ’ —4. = \\ Mo tern 2-p sectional in nubby wool cover. dust proot guided arowers $ 50 \ , BOND tired the holiday rush had lett her | P| Cote alr ot charvouse Finished in Motocte San 1 19® jollday rush had leit her Ha 18 reversibia’ spring “fi led land mahocany Feta: J and her colleagues. with the trays. | PASSING UP THESE y) cushions. Coil | ee ing be wy § ooo aan Formerly EMPLOYMENT AGENCY There's something really good construction. Formerly J 189 53% W. HURON ST. ee tenet ie a) al 188.s0 Good suai saa y e dres ayes chest and 2 twin , too—t yond the size beds in blond pear usual barriers of regulation be- Valentine Seaver design by Kroehler. Davenport mahogany. This suite has - havior between strangers, and chair in cocoa tlat mo- 95 plate glass mirror and dust $ 95 It’s a voyage anybody of good hair cover. Highest quality $ proof, guided drawers will ¢an take at any time, of ’ construction throughout throughout Formerly course, and I’m not putting any * aoe now Formerly $34950 . $209.50 ‘ time limit or stop watch to my Modern walnut bedroom suite includes double suggestion. Host and Mestoss Chairs. choice of Lawson davenport and chair with tulted a cee : . But this week before the New of severe: te ence ee ooo ' merece le $ 50 ace Sctonriceende $ 50 (AY Year is a great time to start it—/|J| Barrel Back Wing Chair. green floral... 3495 19.95 CO" Mons. Mo, + $259.80 ar tion throughout. Formerly Fl FI Oi and if you do set fort, bon voyage! | Better TV Chair, fiat mohair cover -.- 4950 29.95 $219.50. Simmons HIDE A BED ; of Limed oak double dresser. chest and bookcase ve Escaped Lifer on Way wane a Chair with moss 6950 44.75 Mc dern design love seat in gold $ 95 Bed This suite hae bowed S 50 Stunning tweed cover.’ 1 Back to Jackson Cell i on eae ln a oe Fe 'e fronts and built-in handles Style. Includes cot} meltresn || Modern Lounge Chairs, choice of = pee Of Formerly $239 50 ST. LOUIS u—Southern Michi- covers, '/ off ., 1950 S489 9 erly $129.50 . gan Prison officers were due Lawuea Lounge Cheb aad Ou Sage green nylon soeenpet and chair 9) High quality solid cherry b 5 | y Kling in 99% here today to pick up escaped lifer Beige Nylon 7 M950 12995 {"1nged base pg quel ity $ design. Double dresser and Edgar Baldwin. Porat ge a styling panel bed. Formerly $279 50 The 43-year-old convicted ‘Black Simmons Beautyrest Reclining Chair .... 14950 119.85 ormerly §279 4 2 een Legion’ triggerman fled the Mich- || Grand Rapids built ladies’ chair igan prison Sept. 4. 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CP * Twist Carpet, so! you SAVE thot will have the final ‘say eoere Aries Arm Eridge Lamp: %z/ oft i model with autuaeds coon. beige color. sq. yd. —....... 895 6.85 : 25 To get "VES" for an answer to your most Torchier Lamp. bronse finish 7 § te _ electric clock and stove light. oe % Twist all wool carpet in cherished dreams, Start now to save Sampson Card Table. sturdy construction nd NE as Hy No _ wer os ve sar oS __ toward your goal... . and keep everlast- ingly at it. Regular deposits in your Ll iyi ITED savings account are the surest way to make money talk . . . in your favor! BANKING Plenty of FREE | | : | _ FREE | Dec. 30, Open 'til 5:00 P. M. | DELIVERY Dec. 31, Open 'til 3:00 P. M. | PARKING PONTIAC FEDERAL . | EASY BA SAVINGS FURNITURE CO. RGAINS | | 16 © Lewrence St. | CREDIT 361 South Saginew Street GALORE = . | . ) | = £ ? win » at 22-34 Mill St. to Matthews-Har- - his gloomy predictions of world * for the examinations. Pe a Py ig yr or yeni aims The stop order was secured Nov. 26 by Jack Habel, former auto dealer, who leased his building fe greaves last April. His move followed an annuence- ment by City Treasurer M. M. Ashbaugh of intention to collect $2,939.80 trom Matthews-Har- greaves in city and school tax Habel's attorney, William J. Beer, today said his client was| fighting the tax in his capacity as landlord to assure ‘‘tranquility’’ of | the new firm’s lease. He cited evidence in support of Habel’s contention that the taxes did not become payable until after much of the property was destroyed | * in a fire and, therefore, the taxes should be reassessed. City Attorney William A Ewart argued the taxes were assessed before the fire and the full amount is due. Judge Holland is}; —~ expected to rule on the city’s dis- missal- motion Jan. 3. — i Judge Orders Test | “ of Laughead’s Sanity § LANSING (UP)—Probate Judge John McClellan ordered an ‘“‘im- mediate’’ examination of Dr. Charles Laughead today to deter- mine whether the ousted Michigan State College doctor should be com- mitted to a mental institution for disaster. - Laughead said he was ‘‘all ‘set’’| Laughead was threatened with commitment last Wednesday when his sister, Margaret Laughead of | Des Moines, Iowa, filed a petition asking that he be committed as a “religious fanatic’’' who “believes that he is to create a new age.” She also sought appointment of a guardian for Laughead's three children. Laughead returned from Chicago early today. He refused to com- ment on his predicted trips to out- er space. Pontiae Press Phetes CHANUKO WINNER—The Feast of Lights Home | scenes. William, nine year old son of the Gamburds, Decoration Contest produced two winners, the Carl | did the drawing of the Temple on the mirror over Berg family, 2960 Middlebelt Road (upper) and the | the fireplace. The contest was sponsored by | Jaek Gamburd family, 964 Berwick Blvd. (lower). | Congregation B'nai Israel with 30 families partict- The Berg children, Leah and Mark thought up the | pating. More than 75 per cent of the work was | motif and cut on Joe victeres for the religious | done by the children. She’s Allergic to Money la rash when any of the long green OMAHA —Mrs. John Schrank | rubs against her skin. Doctors |New Jersey are an unbroken per- calls herself “‘ a silver dollar gal.’ say she is allergic to the ink used | pendicular cliff of colored balsat | She shuns folding money because {to print money. Her husband that rise 300 to 500 feet above the she’s allergic to it, breaks out in'runs a loan agency. | Hudson River. Halloween stems from festivals of the ancient Druids. ee a as PONTIAC’ PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 27; 1954 ine TWENTY Y-THREE ; . In ancient times, criminals who |The human ody 6 eos a sys “ Aithough the United States Trust| the entire United States, its Judge to Study im had been killed by other means |tem of 206 bones“which are held] Territory,.of Pacific Islapds—trom | 2,000 coral and lave atolls and | —— 2s ae were hanged as 0 mark af te jtagethar and moved:by €6 mus the wosters Carclines to the/ oibcrops contain enly enuph salid | a, f c “a — dignity. . cles. eastern Marshalls—is as wide as| land to make half a Rhode Island. Holland Takes City,| FF _ Auto Agency Litigation, § En 0 -{ e- ear Under Advisement Circuit Judge H. Russel Holland today took under advisement a motion to dismiss a temporary in- junction stopping Pontiac from : seizing personal property of -Mat- |" | thews-Hargreaves Chevrolet agen- 2 = here for. sale to cover 1954) es. _ ENTIRE STOCK: * Ladies’ Dresses ° Ladies’ Suits _ ©Ladies’ Fur Trimmed— Untrimmed Coats ~ ®Men’s Suits °Men’s Coats ~ '@Men’s Sport Shirts. © Buckskein Joe Jackets - Shirts -* Children’s Coats & Winter Wear ALL REDUCED | The Palisades of the Hudson in | ‘CHARGE YOUR PURCHASE AT NO EXTRA COST! NATIONAL RA P P Yy’s ta Spring Merchandise Just Arriving! SOUTH SAGINAW STREET a ne ’ 4 + * Full - Shank Half SWIFT'S PREMIUM or CORN CITY Fancy Young TOM FURKEYS | oui sald | Swift's: —e WRIGLEY’ 23 7 Vi SWIFT Premium or ARMOUR STAR iy fee ROS Sugar Cured = HICKORY Smoked HAMS _, Cut from 12 to 16-LB. Hams 49: WHOLE OR BUTT PORTION .. . 59 OVEN READY 20-LBS. & UP % Gowt tnsge RADE A HAM STICKS If You Like ‘ er. ae Browns _ TWENTY-FOUR i CLEVELAND. ®—The Cleveland Browns Monday owned a rare second National Football League title after an astounding 56-10 de- throning of the Detroit Lions which = 1. Cleveland's “‘retiring” quar- terback, Otte Graham, showed 3. That the same two teams playing in the same city on suc- -| cessive Sundays won't kill your crowd, (43,827 apeared — 20,000 buying at the = . * 4. That statistics are little white lies (the Browns had only a slight edge over the two-time league champion Lions). There was much of the fantas- tic about Paul Brown's tremend- ous crushing of a Detroit jinx in Sunday’s game, played under per- fect (for Dec. 26) weather condi- tions. It ended a Lion quest for an unprecedented third straight NFL title. The Browns won their first tri- umph in nine starts against a Buddy Parker-coached Lion team, but the run-away didn't develop until after the first - quarter tide- changer which puzzled TV view- ye peabee — Gextateck O10) Graham of the Cleveland Browns is pictured after he led his team- mates to a 56-10 victory over the Detroit Lions for the National Football League title in Cleveland | ers. Sunday. This came, with Detroit ahead 30 on Doak Walker's field goal. Cleveland's punter was roughed on the same play in which De- troit’s receiver apparently signal- led for a fair catch then was clob- bered deep in Lion territory. The Brown punter, Horace Gil- lom, was racked up by Lion guard WMariey Sewell, jyst after lofting a fourth-down punt to Detroit's Jug Girard. After signalling a fair catch,’Giarard moved three strides to his right and did not have con- trol of the ball” when he was smacked down. * * * What the TV audience never learned was that officials ruled Girard, “‘muffing the ball,” never had enough control to warrant in- fraction of the fair-catch ruling. That left the roughing-the-punter violation standing alone, instead of being wiped out in a double pen- alty. * « 6 So Cleveland got a first down on Detroit's 35 and two plays lat- er, Graham hurled a 37 - yard touchdown pass to speedy Ray Renfro. That was the game's turn- ing point. The Browns took a 17-3 lead and steadily enlarged it. Statistically, the Browns out- rushed Detroit by a scant 140 to 136 yards, and in passing the Lions were ahead, 195 to 163. But what the figures didn't tell was how Graham outwitted and outmaneu- vered the Lions while Detroit's Bobby Lane was hopelessly toss- ing 44 passes. * * * The Browns, a divisional cham- pion since 1950 after dominating the late All-America Conference, took the NFL crown only once be- fore with a 1950 nipping of Los- Angeles, 30-28. we Passing twice to Renfro and Ameri- Day's Passing Could Decide Sugar Bowl Tilt Navy Rules 3-Point Pick, but Ole Miss. Has Aerial Star NEW ORLEANS — Navy and Mississipi set Monday to open fir] practice sessions for their New Years’ Day football battle in he Seger Bet. Coach Eddie Erdelatz Gulf Coast. Navy rues a 3-pont favorite, But the Rebels have their own ideas about the game's outcome well hinge on the passing arm of a 178-pound quarterback with the appropriate nickname Eagle. * * * .S. Holds | singles matches of the challenge round. * s s Trabert, tight - lipped and de- termined, cut down powerful Lew- is Hoad in the first match, 6-4, 2-6, 12-10, 6-3, Seixas, scrapping 31- year-old United States champion, evened a long and embarrassing jinx by trouncing little Ken Rose- | wall, 86, 6-8, 6-4, 6-3. “Two down and three to go,” exultantly said Bill Talbert, non- playing captain of the Americans | as he congratulated his victorious athletes in the dressing room. “We'll clinch the cup tomorrow in the doubles. And then Wednes- day's final singles matches will be | just a formality.” Only one other time in the his- tory of this storied international tennis competition dating back to et Lea 1900 has a team lost the opening two singles and come back to vic- tory. * * * That was in 1939 at Philadelphia where Australia’s John Bromwich and Adrian Quist fell on the first day but rallied to win over Amer- ica's Bobby Riggs and Frankie Parker. In Tuesday's doubles, with the United States leading 2-0, Ameri- ca will send out Trabert and Seix- as again against Australia's Hoad and Rosewall. The Americans, who have established themselves as the best in the world, will be overwhelmingly favored. Harry Hopman, a disappointed Aussie captain, has the choice be- tween Rosewall and Hoas or Rex _THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1954 Smash Lions 56-0, Take 2nd NFL Tie from ‘the ,5-yard line and 2 and 1- foot lines Graham set three play- off marks. Graham's three touchdowns set title-game scoring marks with 18 once to end Pete Brewster for} points, most 6-pointers and most | land and in smashing over |touchdowns by running. He bested | ords timgt Be ad, = "7 “4 : a _ [ 4 | Bows Out on Top! as they grab for a 2nd period Brewster (88) of the Cleveland Browns and back WITH THEIR EYES CLOSED—Both end tack | Carl Karlivacz of the Detroit Lions close their eyes Graham intended for Brewster. The ball was finally Buckle Down to Final Drills Only 5 Days Remain ‘Mental Pressure’ Is Too : | Much Says Otto Graham Hartwig and Mervyn Rose, who have a brilliant doubles record. Duke, Nebra ska Coaches Plan Saturday Surprises MIAMI, Fla. #—Bill Murray of Duke and Bill Glassford of Ne- braska, coaching rivals for the Orange Bowl football game, are hatching up some new mischief toss the opposition New Year's s e ¢ e “We plan to use the same line- we were season,”” Murray said. ‘“Those the boys who came through us. We'll use some of our plays but we've been on two or three things new.” Glasstord, who substitutes by Browns’ Graham Sets Six Grid team units, said he has been jug- gling his players around a bit. One major change was boosting sophomore Don Comstock to the starting left halfback post. Com- stock has a lot of power in his 6- foot frame and is fast. “We're trying to adjust our backfield units to provide better starting at the end of balance and to come up with the best combination possible for this particular opponent,” Glass- ford said * * * | Duke, the Atlantic Coast Confer- /ence champion with a record of seven victories, two defeats and one tie, is favored by two touch- downs over the Cornhuskers, who got the bow! nod with a 6-4 record because Big Seven champ Okla- homa was not eligible for the trip this year. e * Big Begins Cage Tourney | Phog Allen's Kansas | Quint Enters Test With Unbeaten Mark KANSAS CITY W—The Big Sev- en Conference's ninth basketball tournament opens Monday night, but it'll be after the first round before a championship favorite is established. ® s * Opening the four-day meet in Municipal Auditorium at 8 p.m | (CST) will be the Colorado Buffa- | loes and Oklahoma's Sooners. Mis- 'guri and Nebraska follow at 9:30 Completing the first round Tues- _day night, and on the same time | schedule will be Kansas and Iowa State, and Kansas State and the guest University of California Bears. * ¢ Record-wise, Coach Phog Allen's defending champion Kansas Jay- hawks (4-0) boast the only perfect ‘Playoff Marks Herman (Eagle) Day, a Missis-, sippt native who completed 40 of © CLEVELAND. uw — Quarterback % pass attempts during the Reb Otto Graham says Cleveland's 56 els 10-game season, may be the 10 National Footbal! League play- The underdog -role suits Glass-, record in early play. But the Jay- ford but Murray is unhappy that hawks have a rookie team with his team is rated a big favorite only one regular from last season, The squads flew to Miami by guard Dallas Dobbs margin on which the Rebels are Off victory Monday over the De-| chartered plane Sunday. Both banking. The 22 - year - old junior, part Cherokee Indian, accounted for 879 yards and four touchdowns with his accurate aerials. Navy quarterback George Welsh is better known than Day because of his starring role in the nation- ally televised upset of Army which earned Navy its Sugar Bew! bid. * * s The teams shape up about even statistically, both offensively and defensively, But Day has the up- per hand over Welsh in the pass- ing department as far as produc- tiveness is concerned. Welsh, a junior from Coaldale. Pa., troit duiongs is the last football game in his 9-year career with the Browns. Cd * * Graham passed to Ray Renfro for 37-yard and 31-yard touch- downs and to Pete Brewster for a | 10-yard score. That ran the totals for his 9-year pro career to 1,375 completed passes out of 2,417 at- tempts for 21,874 yards and 162 touchdowns. Only Sammy Baugh. who played 16 years for Washing- ton. has a better record : e © The three touchdowns Graham ran over from inside Detroit's 5- yard line were the most ever for completed 39 of 81 pass at- one man in a pro championship tempts, but his completions ac- game. Otto also retires with these counted for 527 yards. 350 yards playoff records from his five title less than Day. The passing due] between Welsh and Day may prove to be the game's highlight although both teams have capable running at- tacks. : * * * Frank Reagan, youthful coach at Villanova, is convinced Navy will have to be at its best to down the Rebels. Reagan's team lost’ championship games: Most passes attempted, 134. Most passes completed, 72. Most vards gained passing. 952. Most touchdown passes, 8 Most points scored. one game, 18 P Siamese Trout Survive CONCORD, N. H. w — Survival 52-0 to Mississippi early in the sea- of Siamese twins is about as rare son and dropped a pre-season in the wildlife world as anywhere scrimmage to Navy. Navy wound up fifth in the final | Associated Press poll while Mis- sissipi took the No. 6 spot. Navy carries a 7-2 record into. Saturday's game while Mississip- pi’s lone defeat on a 10-game schedule was by 6-0 to Arkansas, host team in the Cotton Bow!. PRN RCH THAT SENDAY'S RFESTLTS 82 eres tne tart *2 (OT two-horsepower motor at the rear | Port Waene 109. 2. aed of each ski, with controls on the New ¥ Syracuse 101 -pole handles. Inventor Stanley Van | RSS ” _Voorheis makes 10 miles an hour,’ Rochester | else. But this state’s Laconia-hatchery ‘has such a pair approaching ma- ,turity. They are brook trout. The fish are now two years old and able to get around successfully _Cclimbs a 35-degree slope. with one swimming upside down Mechanized Skiing LOS ANGELES — Powered by a ‘severe injury to his knee later _teams planned two workouts Mon- day and Tuesday with one each day thereafter. Asked if he thought his boys would go out and mop up the field with Duke, Glassford replied with a grin: “Well, I wouldn't want to say that, Let's just say we're gonna go after ‘em.” * ° * said he had watched films of the Nebraska team and figured the coach took a similar view | “Nebraska has a good running attack,” Murray commented. “It takes a lot of running to pile up the season." Bengals Make Field Safe for Al Kaline DETROIT uw — Workmen at ing out 75 box seats from the right field pavilion to make the corner safer for Tiger outfielder Al Ka- line. Walter O. (Spike) Briggs, presi- dent of the Tigers, ordered the move last summer after Kaline | crashed into the stands trying for | a running catch. Though he finished. the game a developed because of the accident. C . i New Job for Devine ST. LOUIS wW—Vaughn T. (Bing) Devine will be an administrative liason man in the St. Louis Card- hemorrhage. He now is taking wot Arnelle, who holds all scoring Michigan State College early this net), inals’ scouting and minor league department, moving up after six | in the | League. | Duke quarterback Jerry Barger. Cornhuskers could be tough. His 2.700 yards on the ground during. California has the most impres- isive overall record. The Bears | have seven victories against a single loss, a double overtime to College of Pacific. Injury Puts Ed Furgol on Golf Sidelines Nationa) Open Champ Out of Tourney Play Indefinitely DALLAS uP—It's tough to have a withered left arm and lose the services of your right if playing , golf is your business. * * cd] That's the predicament Ed Fur- | gol. the National Open champion, ‘is in. He hopes it's only tempor- ary Furgol played championship golf last year: winning several tourna- | Briggs Stadium have started tak- ments and the big one, although he has a rigid, withered left arm I! depends on. his right arm for power using the left merely to guide the club. The National Open king, stop- ping off here briefly Monday en route to Los Angeles for a news- | paper dinner of champions, said | because of a ruptured muscle in his right arm. * s * He had an examination at Mi- ami Saturday and said the special- ist told him he had had another heat treatments. to Prepare for Big. Rose Bowl Test | PASADENA, Calif. @—The hol- | iday is over and back to work) for the final five days drills went the Ohio State and Southern Cal- ifornia Rose Bowl football teams 4, * wet ever flipped against : Official ‘54 NL Records INDIV. MISC. RECORDS (Qualifiers Slugging Championship) Monday. @ AB Pct, * * 8 j Mays, NLY........00.- 181 STI .667 Actually, there won't be 100 free stt cia. ccctae Ss 38 sea much hard labor “on the schedule | Susie: St. Louis...... 153 $01 359 .607 prior to the start of this 41st an- | aac seaeeses 4% ts = nual post-season attraction. saver. co. 303 es Latest word from the rival Adcock. Mil. ofl 4 coaches, Woody Hayes of the ceecneree Cin 3 _ = champion Ohio Staters, and Jess | 7.on; 76 402 Hill of USC, was that their squads | Hamner. Phil 318 46 have whipped into battle condi- | Bel. Cin 353 455 et i aah ae All that is needed is a general | 38ctso". ch 306 44 oo nleos 5 eet ie ae ots ees team shows signs of tapering (00 | Partie, pre 23 444 at all re d Say NY 180 mH le at i On top of tis, both coaches ad: i Ca ne mit they do not want to take a Banks, Chi. 383 fos chance of injuring a performer at Peiko. Mil 230 po this late stage of affairs. ‘Crandall, Mi 197 425 During the final scrimmages a Jablonski. | &* oe cae ir ‘ AP Wirephete! star for each team was banged mae Phil.......... 190 418 recovered by Cleveland's Ray Renfro. Browns won, | up. Ohio State’s halfback Howard a ore = ped Soke to capture the National Football League (Hopalong) Cassady, sustained @ Ashburn. Phil... ae ~~ pass from Otto | championship. hairline crack of the ninth rib but toma N.Y... 2-500. — team physicians don’t figure it | To : 183 371 ________________| will cause him trouble. aa, - =? ¢ me Mal 207 365 Ru ed Pre L S! t Southern California halfback Jon | 2'Connell, Mil 193 381 lgg * e€agque a e Arnett limped off the field Friday | Grammas, st.l..):.... 137.343 ° - after suffering a twisted ankle. | otitis, cin...c.....1 ie 313 Faces St Louis Quintet Medics said he incurred .only a. Talbot, Chi..........- 123, 305 . minor injury that won't keep him Roverts, Pitt.......--- os oan ST. LOUIS w — After you've | And he’s been nothing but suc-| out of the game. (Non-Qualifiers—10 or More Games) played Indiana, Kentucky and La-| cesstul, with five champions and| Each team has another problem Slug. Salle within seven days, you should | seven runners-up. case—fullback Hubert Bobo of the ices wy o Ap re be ready for anything in the Mis- Wichita and Detroit are the Buckeyes and right halfback Lin- Lopate, Pnil......... 86 250 141 544 souri Valley. home teams in two holiday tour- den Crow of the Trojans. Both CovUm oho tt SS Se su 4 ‘naments this week as the valley’ came up with late season knee in- | Burgess, Phil.........108 345 176 510 Maybe that’s what Athletic Di- winds up pre-conference intersec- | juries. | econ tars a = oo oes rector and Basketball Coach Ed-'tional play with eight outside) They appear to be back in shape : 2 «1 600 die aren fering aaa ne games. |now but no one is taking undue ¥ 1 és iss pees arranged is week’ u lr ; his Billikens. - = The murderous three-game St. risks with them. _ — aor cae Many fake. Vicley bax been < Louis set heads the list. lnc Shay aed ole Crow hrc 128 a1 456 as s . Loui: “rea able” to go . . believer in tough schedules since | ten champion the neue te venue | day afternoon. Of Bobo, the 190- | °° ue he started at Creighton in 1936. here Monday night. Thursday the Pounder from the quaintly named 300 et 438 Billikens travel to face Kentucky, hamlet of Chauncey-Dover, Ohio, a72 118 434 | (5-0) unbeated in 30 straight games the team physician, Dr. Walter gr ss ay or U um and ranked No. 1 in the nation, Duffee. observed: 24 92 420 LaSalle, defending national cham- | : 42 ’ pion. is here Sanday, om, |g He'll be able to play maybe oD Ge ® ® ee i (58 minutes " Rush, Chi 83 35422 Detroit is favored to defend its| Crow, 187, the fastest of all the | Jnr" san. is ue | in if § Motor City Tourney crown against Trojans, is a dangerous runner Ch 303 1298 416 powerful Penn State (5-1) in the) and an exceptional defensive back. | Goreeiele. a sen hes eae eal finals Tuesday at Detroit. In open-| He was hurt in the UCLA game | Heak, Brk............ 68 361 104 398 Coaches Saver, Jordan ing games Monday night, the| and sat out the Notre Dame game | Suspere.. Pitt.......:- $2. 227 98 0s : Titans meet Toledo (1-5) and Penn | which USC dropped 23-17. Beminick. B.c....., 88 24T 86 380 Bow Seeking Ist Win | state plays Wayne (25) Rae, Coca dee 1s eT in Bowl Game The Wichita meet isn't strictly ° . ’ Law. Pitt cscs 82 938s ‘a tournament, with the Wheat- F § fi 55: h.cceee teens : pUACKSONVILLE, Fla, um — The shockers already scheduled GIN SIGNS TOF I); oe BR or Bears were scheduled to! against Colorado A & M (3-2). . ttmer, orinsrens 380 arrive here Monday and Auburn's Thursday. But the results are ex- Terms Not Disclosed olatger (| oementan seus pa elie a4 football team will move in Tues- pected to make it look like one— ee a ES eS fe day to take final workouts for the Wichita is favored over Arizona DETROIT ®\—The Detroit Tigers Aiston. st...) 66 246) BO He Gator Row! vame Friday (34) and Colorado A & M over said today the club has received a re Pos = " % oH Coach George Sauer® plans to Mississippi Southern (2-4) Wednes- 1955 contract agreement from Fer- setkorich. Mil. |... 68 1230 4 358 hold drills for the Baylor players day ris Fain. newly acquired first base- resting Cin........ Bs = * oe Tuesday and Wednesday, then a! In other games, Tulsa meets ™@" from the Chicago White Sox. Cierk, Phil | ......: 233 82 «352 short workout Thursday. ‘Arizona Monday night at Tulsa, N° terms were disclosed. | Seen Ps ed ret Coach Ralph Jordan's Auburn then plays at Arkansas Saturday,| Detroit got Fain, pitcher Leo Newcombe. Bri......:. 47 16 340 Tigers reassembled on the cam- Oklahoma A & M and Houston| Cristante and infielder jack Phil-| Welter. Brk...- -— 3 on pus in Alabama and will workout are idle. lips from Chicago Dec. 6 for out-|Shube, Bre... -: 65 21 323 here three tues before the fielder Bob Neiman, ist baseman feet cw OB} game. NATIONAL HOCKEY LEAGUE | Walt Dropo and pitcher Ted Gray. | Cox. Brk 238 2 319 ae en Jordan both will be Montreal wgasneie n * ta he ce 3 22 i a8 \ looking for their first bow! victory Detroit ......./.-20 11 4 4 88 © Good 3.Year Record —| Pale 32 ‘as a coach. Sauer's teams twice Baton east oe oe ie ey ° rd eee. ae 8 310 lest to Georgia Tech in the Orange oe 07 8 1s 10 * ¥ 104 Wayne University’s basketball 13 i 308 ' Bow!—<c when be cobched at SUNDAE S Eneraen squads have lost no more than six 246 «73 305 Kansas and once at Baylor. Jor- Cuseaas i perros yo eC games in any of the three past — ame 7 36 | dan's first bow] team lost to Tex- |as Tech in the Gator Bow! last Jan. 1, Sparrow, Arnelle Top Men SATURPAY'S RESULTS j Montreal 4. New York 1 ' Detroit 3, Toronto 2 | Chicago 3. Boston 3 itie) seasons. Coach Joel Mason's rec- ord from 1951-52 stands at 49 wins and 18 losses. DETROIT (INS) — Annual Mo- tor City basketball tournament opens tonight at the University of Detroit Memorial Building and the powerful Nittany Lions of Penn State have been installed as fa- vorites over Detroit, Wayne Uni- versity, and Toledo. The Penn State crew has | ‘he may have to quit the tourna. armed twe NCAA tournament | | ment trail for an indefinite period ids in three years and has vir- | tually the same team which has | played together for the last three years, Lions have in Jesse Ar- nelle a six-foot-five-inch center | who is being mentioned for All- America honors this year. records at Penn State should en- | is 1,407 points and should he con- 21 points a game for the Titans. this vear as Detroit has racked up seven wins against one loss. | Penn State Is Rated Favorite as Motor City Tourney Opens at UD Fieldhouse scored 1,008 points before the cur- rent campaign, is now ranked among the top 10 rebounders in the country * ™ # ntry Arnelle broke his own single . In opening games tonight Penn game scoring record last week) will take on Wayne and Detroit against Rutgers when he netted 41 points. His three year scoring total tinue at his present pace he would approach the 2.000 mark. Ld * * On the other hand, Detroit's meets Toledo. Facts, Figures | sa"c on TitleGame. has twice this season ted 30 points to pace the Titans ures of the Lions-Browns pro cham- to victory. The 6-5 former Pontiac | Pionship game yesterday: high school forward scored 3 oss receipts, 289,128.43 (radio and points in Detroit's upset win over ' TY, $101.80). net recetasy, sth. eee Oot season, Last Wednésday, Guy Furgol only last week won the gage in a scoring duel with De-| dumped in another 30 points to, nament. year, Sparrow is averaging over, years as general manager. of Havana Open but he said the arm troit's Guy Sparrow, who is also lead the Detroiters to a win over International pained him during the entire tour- being groomed for All-America this' a troublesome Oregon five. >= Incidentally, Sparrow, who had | 915,453.42. $184,524.25. Winning players’ pool (40 shares), | $00,643.10, Losing players’ pool, 41% shares), $66,- 428.73 Each winn yer’s share, $2,478.57, Each footing player's share, $1,583.63. | sectional second piace clubs, runs, 1 on dou- Most Total Bases Game—i8, Ad- B, 4 home runs, 3 ’ Most ive te Piret Game (since 1000)—6 Kar! . lyn, seventh and eighth innings, September 22 vs. New York. Most Players Making Two or More — in One Game in One Sea- son—7l1. Most Pinch Hit Home Runs tn One Inning by One Club—2, New York, Bobby Hofman and Jim Rhodes, sixth inning, June 20 vs. St. Louis. ' ost Beasons Left-hand‘ Pitcher Win- ning 20 or More Games (since 1900)—6, , Werren © Milwaukee. Most fener, =r Balls in One Innin . Ray Katt, New York, Ry ith tnnin, - tember 10 vs. Cincinna' aan Most Players Used Foe oom MY '. . iiadel- geting pre . Used in One Game i e oy pgs oo Bt. Loule 8, Philadeiphia "Most Home Runs § Consecutive Games 18, ed ihe duly 7 through first Most Home Runs @ Consecutive Games York July 6 through first game, July 11. Most Home Runs 7 Consecutive Games New York July § seeond game through first = : M Home Runs ¢ Consecutive Games —36, New York Jul } t game, July 11. _ bern = Home Runs ¢ Consecutive Games game, July 11. ¢ Home Runs Gemes—28, New York first game, ny il. —Si, New York Ju iret ly 4 : game 10 ©Consecutive July 4 through cbapiggeia mit eesti perigee dicen ss eee yo sii _THE ‘PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 2%, 1954 « ay eae pe ly gta eh tte ng: beget | oy < 4 f North - Southerners on Top at Miami; by 20-17 Count Victors Pack All of Scoring in 4th Frame in Shrine Tilt MIAMI, Fla, W—The South used | So -| Kentucky, the winner of its own a Christmas. No Rest for Weary. The Associated Press New York. the Big Seven event at Kan- ty. ; * * * Among the other undefeateds’ ¥ i; anh : ic <4 ’ ; z z*e R 2° zg B With seven minutes left in the game, Miami's Cari Garrigus inter- cepted a pass from Helinski and the South drove 34 yards in 10 plays, Carrigus scoring the winning touchdown from the two. It was the South's 5th victory in seven college all star games. Heavies Meet in TV Feature more than two good showings to get back in the rankings. It only took two wins by Charley Norkus to get back in the money, and Buc- ceroni and Brion hope to do the same. ‘ Wildcat Billy McNeece, a crowd pleasing 22-year old middleweight from Islip, N. Y., takes on veteran Bobby Dykes of Miami at Brook- lyn’s Eastern Parkway in the other TV show tonight (ABC-TV, 10 p.m., Bowling Results K OF C LEAGUE Pts. Goebel's 38 «P-Carrier 2 Aubura 38 Letter-Shop 7 Benard's 3 Credit-U b Porster M Leonards "2 Stanfield's 33 Ned's 23 Shrine 33 Simmon's 22 B-Line pes — z Drewry's Pabs' Ww 3% Stone 21 Preitters 28 Contact 14 ello ergy 248. series —T. & R. Jackslow 638; team game, series—PForster 682, 2781. MOTOR INN BOUSE r 33 36 @am Benson 18 Poole’s Green Leake 23 18 Piga Mkt. 22 20 rewrys = is ie stroke, 12.30 s "2 Indiv. game—D. Carmichea! 220, series —L. Tipolt 602. : : CLASS “B” LEAGUE Pts 6 8. Pittenger’s 44 pk i's 2 Gridiron Ba: 43 Oliver Supply 25 Taylor Elec. 39 Braid Motor ™“ Davis 38 Pont. 23 D "s % Univ. Of! 22 Oak. hine 35 Gene's TV 71 Neilson Co. 34 GMAC 21 Wrigley's Sandy Beach 18 jemar Inn 31 Ballard Elec. # xehenge Club 29 Cut-A-Way 4 Team series—V. E. Taylor Electric 2961. s eaminmeeanl AFTERNOON Pts. c-V 33 Nizon 23 Pont, Pottery 32 Manning's Mkt. 21 - »C-Pak bY ‘8 ie Watérford Lor. 26 Silverbell iT Tom's Mkt 4 Col 17, Indiv. —- lay yr Leos series—Dorothy Beetle 4 game, series—Waterford Lumber 686, 1658. “| are three members of the team Georgia Tech in Bow! Games Arkansas’ Foe Will Be in Major Tilt for 4th Straight Year DALLAS wW—If experience is the payoff, Georgia Tech should win the Cotton Bow! football game in ‘a breeze next Saturday. The Yellow Jackets, who clash with Arkansas in the Dallas fea- ture, have been in so many bowl games they're as common as reg- ular season contests. This is the fourth straight year for Tech to play in a major bow! and there who have made all of them. | The three are Larry Morris, the | great center; Buddy Jones, énd, | and Ben Daugherty, tackle. Bill | Brigman, quarterback, was on the | | squad in 1952 when Morris, Jones | ‘and Daughterty, then freshmen, played against Baylor in the | Orange Bowl, winning 17-14. Brig- to 442 for Tech's top runner, Jimmy Thompson. Argentine Boxer Gets Award for ‘Progress’ NEW YORK (UP)—Little Pas- g performers of 1954, heavyweight champion Rocky |Marciano “fighter of the year’ and lightweight Frankie Ryff of New York “rookie of the year,” who were announced last night. new king of the 112- Perez, th Split Wel-Schooled fs Fourteen College Cage Tournaments Claim Eight Undefeated Big-Time 5s invitation. tournament last week and the No.-1 team in the country in the latest Associated Press poll, try to run its skein to seven against St.Louis and Temple . Holiday Festival, New York—LaBalle- : Niagare-UCLA: Duquesne- :; Dayton-St. Joha's Bouthwest ference, Dalias—Baylor- Alabama; Texas-Texas A&M; Rice-Ark- ven, Kansas Ci . first round. pai are: Kansas Eastern entucky; | Loutavilie-Murray 4 & pet Southern Methodist-Texes Christ ” Motor Ce y. Detroit — Wayne-Pean TRAFFIC JAM—Two Cleveland. in front of Lew Carpenter of the Lions while linebacker Walt Michaels (34) is about to apply a tackle after Carpenter moved through the center of the line for 5 yards in the Lions, 56-10, to win the NFL title. AP Wirephete Browns’ players throw a roadblock 3rd period. Cleveland routed the Township Archery League Slated to Open on Jan. 4 Third annual indoor adult rec- | reation archery league opens Jan. 4, with a handicap shoot to provide basis for scoring during the ensuing 13 weeks of shooting. Twelve teams composed of adult men and women archery enthu- siasts are expected to register. All shooting events will be held at the Community Activities Center on Williams Lake Road from 8 to ll p. m. Tuesdays. Instruction in fundamentals of Bowling Clinic By BILLY SIXTY CASE—Down at the Line. A let of young bowlers fail to. reach stardom because they try | to put too much stuff on the ball. | They throw the ball, instead of | sending it away smoothly. As Basil (Burz) Fazio of De- troit puts it: “A rolling ball gath- ers the pins.” The action sketch | i perfect “v" third and little fingers to apply what little spin Fazio gives Easy Victories Posted in Union Basketball Play over Milford CIO 898. Smith's 14 points ‘ sparked “596” to a 43-23 |is $100,000, You 'diately puts you a way up in the target shooting for all interested Features ese: at Montgomery Ga beginners is now being held — every Tuesday from 7-8 p. m. at | | the center, John Smith, local archery ex- , pert and recipient of last year's | individual scoring title in this league, will instruct the beginners | class and also act as league di- rector. Major Clubs Won't Accept Cash for Star Seller Loses Money on Taxes, Might Lose Fans as Well NEW YORK (INS)—You read! from time to time of a major league club making a fabulous of- | fer for a certain ball player, and you probably think the offer was just so much free advertising. Not at all, As a matter of fact, it is almost impossible these days to | °° buy an established star for cash. Some years ago Bob Carpenter of the Phillies (who wilt outbid anybedy) made an actual offer of $1,400,000 for a parcel of players and was turned down cold, Not too long-ago, Gabe Paul of the Cincinnati Redlegs, offered a certified check of $350,000 for a certain player. He also got a cold 5 shoulder * The answer, according to base- ball people is simple. : Here’s how Fresco Thompson, shrewd vice president of the Dodgers, explains it: “Suppose your profit for the year are offered $300,000 for a single star. Suppose | you sel] him. Your profit for the year is then $400,000, which imme- income tax brackets. “So if you accept the offer, you | have very little cash to show for your sale after taxes, and you are | mints a great ball player. And where do you suppose that leaves you with. your fans?” - UM's Baer Gets. Winning Tally Grabs Aerial in Last Period to” Give Blues 14-7 Victory | i a touchdown kicked the extra poin A crowd of 18,000 nationally televised game. Big 10 Quints in Final Tests Conference Play to Start Saturday With Illini- Wisconsin CHICAGO ® — Three Big Ten teams swing into action tonight in the final week of erence games before Illinois and Wiscon- sin*open the Western Conference title chase Saturday, g z z a Wardrop Upsets Jones in Holiday Swimming Meet Jack Wardrop of the University of | Michigan defeated Wolverine team- mate Burell (Bumpy) Jones irr the | 165-yard individual medley yester- day to turn in one of the top upsets of the annual East-West swimming | meet. Western swimmers splashed.to a | 219-174 victory over their eastern rivd@ls in the meet. Jones; holder of the NCAA and AAU led War- drop through the Ist two laps but faded in the final rush and -Wardrop beat him to the final marker by five yards, Wardrop, a Glasgow-born swim- mer, holds the English champion- | Ship in the event. lang-|, MONTGOMERY, Ala. & — The Other Michigan entries helped the East in other events. Pete Dow stroke relay team and finished 4th in the 110-yard breaststroke; Har- Segregation ‘\Comes to End in Sugar Bow! NEW ORLEANS A 20-year- Day when a non-segregated crowd game. Navy, whose tedm plays Mis- sissippi in the game, started the tradition crumbling when it an- nounced its 13,000 tickets to the game would be distributed with- out regard to race. Negro fans have been assigned to a specific section in the 83,000- Bow] games. -The sponsoring Mid - Winter Sports Assn. gave no indication it would enforce the clause printed on each ticket that it would not be honored unless used by white persons. Smith, Andrews Ease Training for Fight MIAMI, Fila. @® — Only light workouts remain on the training schedules of * light hea contenders Boardwalk Billy Smith and Paul Andrews who meet Wednesday night in a scheduled 10-round boxing match at Dinner Key Auditorium. The fighters were in ‘tip-top condition’ said their trainers, for Need televised fight ( . . finished 5th in the 55-yard free- style. Jim Thurlow anchored the | West's winning 220-yard, breast- old tradition will eid New Year's. will attend the Sugar Bow! football | ‘goalie Harry Lumley. seat stadium at previous Sugar | rison Wehner placed 4th in the|f Tom Prunk took 6th‘in the 440- | s yard free-style. Bert Wardrop was , eg 2nd on the 10-yard breaststroke. || Pontiac Motorists’ Mike Delaney. was 5th in the 110- " ‘ ‘ yard butterfly. . t H rs! Jones and Bert Wardrop swam | on the winning 22)-yard backstroke J] DAYTON’S BIG 3 relay team, | . ! o_o Hl, VARA TEe! 8 ® « Lifetime Factory | | Guarantee! ‘ I] 2 25.000-Mite Guarantes! Goal by Howe Keeps Wings Up Tie Leaves Detroit Just: 3. Points From Leading Canucks DETROIT i — Gordie Howe scored suddenly and unexpectedly in the final period last night to give the Detroit Red Wings a 1-1 tie with the Toronto Maple Leafs in a National ‘Hockey League game at Olympia. snagged a loose puck in the To- rento zene and flashed a 154oot _backhander high and true past It was Howe's llth goal of the season and kept the Wings 3 points ahead of the Leafs in the NHL race, The tie pulled | Leafs had nursed a 1-0 lead on a freak lst period tally by Rudy Mi- | gay. Migay lofted a 90-footer which landed in front of Terry Sawchuk, took a crazy bounce and slid be- tween Sawchuck's legs into the net. Referee Frank Udvari called 13 penalties in the 1st two periods, His strict whistle eliminated a lot of ing but tamed the game considerably, since both | sides were continually short- handed ; This didn't go over too well with the 13,105 fans, who started stamp- ing their feet for excitement. They got it in the last 10 minutes as the Wings drove in earnest to push the tie into a victory. Canada's first curling club was formed in Montreal in 1807, It is still in existence under fhe name “Royal Montreal Curling Club." | Midway through the period Howe _TWENTY-FIVE 3. 2-Year Written Read Has- tee DAYTON | THOROBRED | ist Ouality-!st Line @ All Rayon Cord @ Cold Rubber Tread fo Long Mileage — GUARANTEED IN WRITING AGAINST ROAD HAZARDS sale Reg. Prive = PRICE 6.00x16 $21.50 $12.95 6.50x15 $26.95 $18.75 6.70xn15 $23.20 $14.95 7.10x15 $26.95 $16.95 7.60x15 $28.95 $18.75 " Buy on Budget! No Money Down! One Full Year to Pay! BEG New B. F. 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Pike St. FE 2-9101 See Robert Rector, Mgr. for Free Estimates on All Makes of Cers Ne Distance Teo Great (within reasen) | 121-123 E. Montcalm Motor Mart Auto Parts cheno si ana 110x185 ..... $12.99 1.60x15 ..... $13.90 One year reed hazard guaran- entee — Exchange recapable casing. Brand New | BATTERIES Off Ce i 2 to § Year Guarantee FREE FRONT END INSPECTION! Front End Special! Complete Front End Alignment Caster, Camber and Toe-in °770 Wheel "sys Statice and Dynamic FREE WEICHTS SEAT COVERS 50% off ke. “12” Fully Guaranteed All First Quality INSTALLED FREE! wine OPEN 9 to 9 FE 8-0424 77 W. Huron St. Cor. Cass Ave. . ® : TWENTY- SIX Prosperi ty Stages Return tor Entertainment World and others. mean, the techniques offered ex- citement to the movie goer. Among the shows that drew big money were: “Caine Mutiny,’’ “On the Waterfront,” ‘‘Magnificent Ob- session,” “‘A Star is Born," ‘““The Glenn Miller Story,” ‘The High and the Mighty,” ‘Seven Brides for Seven Brothers,” ‘Rear Win- dow," “Executive Suite,” “Drag + Meanwhile a number Peter Pan,” “Dear Charies | 5 " -and “The Pajama G several ame.’ —ALSO— “BOUNTY HUNTER” i «—« With Randolph Scott be stot ie a ae ed DOOIIIT MA New Lake Theater N 420 Pontiac Trail WALLED LAKE \ “REAR WINDOW” \ ey \ “THe OUTCAST” \ In Color with John Derek \ and Joan Evans ViLLe Led b. musicals like “Fanny,” “Can| i = Baie CBS Planning Grants ‘to 14 Private Schools. NEW YORK w—The Columbia | Broadcasting System has an- nounced a new formula for its gifts to private colleges and universities. It is based on repaying the ex- penses of educating men who are now CBS executives. The network said yesterday it will give $32,000 this year to 14 eglieages and universities in the first of a number of annual grants. These contributions represent $2,000 given for each of 16 gradu- a top posts in the net- Dr. Frank Stanton, CBS presi- dent,. explained that publicly-sup- ported schools are excluded from the plan because CBS already con- tributes to them “through taxes at . | its various locations thfoughout the country.” Funeral Service Today | for Veteran Musician BATTLE CREEK (UP)—Funeral services were held today for Col. Joe Antonio Martin, 52, director of the Athens High School band, who died en route to a hospital. Martin suffered a heart attack two months ago. A clarinetist, he played with the Brown Sextet and in Irving Berlin's Music-Box Revue. Martin was an infantry officer in the Normandy beachhead invasion during World War native of Rome and came here at the age of four. Japanese Population Hits 88 Million Mark TOKYO w—Japan’s population | hit an estimated total of 88,290,000 last Oct. 1, the government's sta- tistics bureau announced today. This was an increase of 1,260,000 over the 1953 estimate. Men out- numbered women in the new esti- mate—44,910,000 males and 43,380,- 000 females, the government said. TUES., WED., THURS. LAST TIMES TONIGHT! ‘PHANTOM OF THE RUE MORGUE” “DUFFY OF SAN QUENTIN” *3-D MATINEES 1:00 P. M. CARTOON Walt DISNEY CARNIVAL Plus REGULA R PROGRAM ‘oir CALHOUN DAD BR-ATHEEY MOSES 2nd MAJOR HIT! TUES. - WED. - THURS. Il. He was a| J Judy, Brando | Tops in Filmland Press and Reviewers Call Eva. Marie Saint ‘Fihd’ of 1954 By CHESTER B. BAHN NEW YORK — Marlon Brando, starred in Columbia's ‘On the Wa- terfront,"" and Judy Garland, starred in Transcona Enterprises’ “A Star Is Born,” distributed by Warners, emerge today as easy ‘top winners in The Film Daily’s| ” annual Filmdom's Famous Fives natonal critics’ poll to determine the outstanding scfeen perform- ances of 1954. Voting in the poll by invitation were the country's press and mag- azine critics and reviewers and broadcasting’s commentators upon motion pictures, Brando and Miss Gariand, who returned to the screen in “A Star Ig Born” after an absence of some time, far outstrip all oth- ers in their respective categories, best performances by male and female stars. Brando's Terry Malloy ,in the tensely dramatic and action-packed waterfront drama was a cameo-cut char- acterization; Mrs. Garland’s Vicki Lester in the Hollywood saga was finely etched, warmly human, Both ‘“‘On the Waterfront’ and A Star Is Born,” also win for several concerned with their mak- ing other. prized FFF accolades, James Mason's Norman Maine places him third in the best male star performance classification, a | Jack Carson's delineation of Libby |. in-the same picture--secures for him the fifth place in the best performance by supporting actor category, George Cukor, who di- rected the picture, takes the same numerical directional niche. “On the Waterfront’’ does even better for those identified with its production. Elia Kazan is the choice for the year's best director, although pressed closely in the bal- loting by Alfred Hitchcock, whose “Rear Window” obviously also made a tremendous critical im- pression. Two of the “On the Waterfront” cast are numbered among the five suporting actors chosen for FFF | among many players. The vic- PPER LAURE. | NEXNCOL | | tributed by United Artists, and Thelma Ritter, era work of Boris Kaufman is runner up to that of Milton Kras- ner, A. S. C., for Twentith-Fox’s “Three Coins in a Fountain.” While Miss ‘Gatune had some- thing of a walkaway, there was ' something of a battle waged be- tween Jane Wyman and Audrey Hepburn for the runner up spot. Miss Wyman's unforgettable Helen |Phillips in Universal's ‘Magnifi- cent Obsession"’ finally made her the winner, Miss Hepburn taking third place. Her Sabrina Fairchild | in Paramount's ‘Sabrina’ is one of 1954's delights. The voters have two ballot bou- quets for Grace Kelly. Her in- terpretation of Lisa Fremond in! Paramount's ‘‘Rear Window" won _her enough votes to follow Miss Hepburn in the performance rat-| ings, and she was voted second | only to Miss Saint as the year's top “find.” In the instances of best per- formances by supporting : actors and actresses, there was a re- markable scattering of votes tors in the two categories are Edmond O’Brien, seen as Oscar Muldoon in Joseph L. Mankie- wicz's “Barefoot Contessa,’ dis- the Stella of Warner's “Rear Window.” Jose Ferrers Lt. Barney Green- wald in ‘Caine Muntiny’’ wins him third place among the supporting, actors, the critics thus making their own arbitrary category dis- tinction. Two actresses. seen in Warner's | 'idea frequently prevails in shorter ‘actress performance honors, Jan MOST BEAUTIFUL LEGS?—As and Jand tar as Adelle August, Lucy Marlow are concerned, they have the solution to producer Jonie. Tops’ search for the world’ demonstrate they are ready to match legs with any contenders. as they, walk down a Hollywood movie set. s most beautiful legs. The trio Music Assists Screen Story A Few Bars Can Do More Than Words to Create Impression | HOLLYWOOD (UP) — A screen | writer has made the startling statement that there’s at least one guy, who can tell a story faster and better than he can. The author of this inter-depart- | mental admiration group is How- ard Estabrook, and his tribute. went to the music score composer, a man who never turns out a word | of script. Estabrook, who ts not a musi- clan, never ceases to be amazed at what “background music” can do to a film — what it can con- vey to the audience about a sit- uation er a character. ‘And in so little time, too,"' Esta- of words in many instances to) express what a minute or so of good music can get across. “To realize how music has so) much to do with telling a story. you should see a movie before and after the music is added. If the music doesn't go with the dialogue, you'll notice it and probably listen to the music. ‘Take an instance in which we have a gentle, old man who dis- plays by word and manner a kind, loving attitude toward a grandchild. No matter what this ‘Mother Stabs Baby Boy 136 Times, Tries Suicide ATLANTA (INS)—A_ housewife, | who stabbed her 18-month-old son | 136 times and then tried to kill | herself, was in “‘fair’’ condition today at an Atlanta hospital. — Police, answering a call by Mrs. |Dolores Degalleford yesterday, found the body of the child, Ste- |phen Russell punctured with 136 | wounds. The mother was cut about the neck and wrist. Mrs. Degalleford’'s husband, Fred, told officers that he and ‘his wife had a family argument _before he left for work. A murder warrant has be¢h is- sued against Mrs. Degalleford. Racoon Joins Lost Dogs DETROIT (INS) — Detroit po- lice, investigating a report last night by persons who claimed they saw a_ strange crouched beneath a parked car, opened the hood and discovered a racoon, The animal, believed to be a pet, was taken to the city pound. brook noted. “It would take plenty Detroit Jails 31 Drivers te animal | M arlon aoe. Marilyn Monroe Figures of Year By BOB THOMAS HOLLYWOOD # — Curvaceous Marilyn Monroe and muscular Marlon Brando are the figures of the year in Hollywood. As another hetic Hollywood year comes to a close. it’s time ecelge nig lena) ai Ui rid Peal Jean Simmons, “Desiree.” ~ ‘ » Marriage of the year: Marilyn to Mitchum, LJ e*-: Nicest welding: Pier Angeli-Vic Damone. Best pictures: ‘‘On the Water- front,”’ “A Star Is Born,” “Exec- utive Sunit,"’ ‘‘The Country Girl," **20,000 Leagues Under the Sea.’ Best Musical: ‘Seven Brides for Seven Brothers." Best new TV show: Disneyland. Surprise movie hit: ‘‘Dragnet.” Best TV find: George Gobel. Most heartwarming story: Suzan Ball's pluck after losing her leg | to cancer. Best Movie song: in the Fountain." Come back of the year: “Three Coins Frank | Sinatra. Worst epic: ‘King of the Khyber DETROIT (INS)—A total of 31 Rifles.” _motorists were jailed by Detroit ‘police over the Christmas weekend for drunken or reckless _ driving. The arrests were part of a crack- down on taffic violators over the holidays. | e * * Messiest divorce: Susan Hay- ward-Jess Barker. Most overworked name in gags: Liberace. Silliest mistake: The use of rec- man says later, he can be | changed just about instantly if a | few bars of sinister-sounding | music are injected every time the old man appears on the | screen. “No matter how good he seems, the audience will suspect him.” Television leans mare heavily on | music in this manner because a story must be told more quickly, Estabrook said, and the same westerns. Music can tell an audi- ence that the Indians have been routed, the fort has been saved. and all's well, he pointed out, along with only a few feet of film. | Estabrook, who worked on ‘‘Pas- sion’ and “Cattle Queen of Mon- tana,"’ said he writes with an idea | of what the music score is going to be saving. “The Chinese proverb about a picture saying 10,000 words could be amended,”’ he concluded, ‘‘since music can do the same thing.” Yoursep CALL FE 2-9143 379 S. Saginew Ce Vac & Sewing Machine Supply BROTHER FREE HOME DEMONSTRATION RECONDITIONED & PARTS BY VAC & SEWING MACHINE SUPPLY Pontiac, Michigen “High and the Mighty” are among | 2 those picked for best. supporting Sterling, the pictures Sally McKee, is runner yp to Miss Ritter; Claire Trevor, who played May Holst, places fifth. Others chosen are. Nina Foch, the Erica Martin in. Metro's ‘‘Executive Suite,"’ who finishes third, and Agnes Moore- head, the Nancy Ashford in Uni- | Versal's ‘Magnificent Obsession," | with only a few votes less. Gerald Harvey, Manager « 6 (_Providest Loon ) : 2nd Floor © Lawrence Bldg., 7 WEST LAWRENCE ST. ¢ PONTIAC « FEderal 2-9249 loans made te residents of off surrounding towns FINANCE CO. ga ° N ONE PRICE TO ALL... at SAVINGS SAFETY GLASSES ona nT REPAIRS ee $2.00 Mere as stand | ing Prairie.” Best comedy: “Genevieve.” Most unfortunate scene: Danny Kaye and Bing Crosby fe- male impersonations in ‘White | Christmas.” Most “The Borough of Queens Spends Quiet Yule NEW YORK (UP — The heavily Wer the ficet Ge p Ge emery of court officials not one of the borough's 1,629,000 citizens was ar- rested on a felony charge and “Magistrate Albert Shanzer had the day off just like everybody else— for lack of business. Fire Destroys Hospital; TOKYO &—Wind-driven flames destroyed most. of a small Japa- nese hospital today but all 100 pa- im -|Nighttime Waiter Earns Three College Degrees CHICAGO Leo Reese is prob- ably Chicago's best educated waiter. While working nights, ‘he has progressed through Wright ‘Junior College, John Marshall Law School, University of Mtinols and Rossevelt University. He is now studying at DePaul University toward a master’s de- gree in elementary school educa- ioe ies eight hdres. Both For $1: 295 Ma’ wi Band tching Wedding os ee in MK lewelzy Department 11:00 - 1:03 - 3:11. 5:19 7:34 - 9:51 — ——PLUSs—— Cartoon and News NOW Thru FRI. CELEBRATE WARNERCOLOR ano STEREOPHONIC SOUND costaannc AUDREY DALTON - MARISA PAVAN Features 1:00, 3:09, 5:03, 7:12, 9:24 NEW YEAR'S EVE the help of Americans from near- by U,'S. Air Force Giiy' ispaal benaek ice Gena ae | te baze was doused by Jepenete TUL e ie ing teams OUR Batti field Theat | Yobay VE -SEEEEE sian ene Have the MERRY CHRISTMAS SHOWS! -HEFLIN THE WORLD NEWS CARTOON Dec. 31st Peers Open st 11:20 Pa POP eee ee ee ee ee a de U.S. Launches Big Research A. on Secrets Locked Within x WASHINGTON — The 0 nited preparing the Pole ions expected from offshore to continue the work through sev- Pireea ‘samt of eral seasons, culminating in United| High mountain ranges, States participation in the Inter-|. las, islands and pero ey anhegter Year of 1957-| ed for the first ‘ t time worldwide scien-| surprise, the explorers came on tifie findings will be correlated by “eases” cooperating countries. and brown hills. — The American explorers ‘will | The Ronne e& ee eee As ere wee aA ; uf a THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1954 3 CAPTAIN EASY , Dt a aes ogee te See EE gin ae nae ag 1 WAVE "DO RUN UP ‘To THE AND PICK UPA STRING fe O58 You. cH iy THERE OUGHT TO BE ENOUGH LAND HERE TO BORROW A DIME ON _47/ fy by Charles Kuhn SAW GOT’ | | GOLLY, AS OFTEN twa’ HOUSE ON 1STOPPED AT MY HOM HW’ BLOCK FOR HANDOUTS. YOU CAME. HERE vt Q ie beara ¢ >. T 2§ 5) ee HERE FIRST AFTER THIS, OR DON'T COME AT ALL.//’ — WN AIS pak aa, at : Pisce — Pr o Wes “That pipe the boys got you for Christmas—would you like to take it back and get one that smells better?’’ DONALD DUCK DIXIE DUGAN — FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS “FS A A be - (Ag vt 1 s . ‘ ‘ 4 . ‘ ~ OS * e bg s «’ * . *, ~ a oe ~. q —? Ose] ix bd * - * Pe WAG = ~~ . > ¥ . hee * . teen BY pas? AY Vom / pees, ie. 7 Bee. 2S Pet Or by Carl Grubert by Merrill Blosser No Matter What Your Problem WANT AD Can help you solve it. DIAL FE 2-818! Ask for the Want Ad Dept. WRIGLEY S SPEARMINT CHEWING GUM | _ Lida G i Mtv ap. - » “SSSI Eg Vom sil x Recent denrlten one ‘ sini OEE Scena em al ee ' renee teeter meena: 26" - re a wey & “TWENTY-EIGHT ~ Drought Break Wheat expected break in the dry weather which has prevailed over much of | rae oe the Southwest for many weeks cre- ated selling in wheat futures on the Board of Trade today At the start wheat had losses ! averaging around two cents, ald crop months selling off with the | new crop futures. The bread g-ain showed no ability to rally in sub- sequent trading. Soybeans eased but feed grains held steady. | 85- 100 doz Parsnips. No 1 106-150) Wheat near the end of the first fae (ad poms oem ape rey pera hour was 1% to 2% lower. March pag x.atoes No 1. 250 100 109-10 L bs eae Tomatoes hothouse No 2 $2.31'2; com unchanged 8 2 high 50 10-lb basket Turnip. No 3, | 00 er, March $1.56 ; oats unchanged ia don beh turnip, topped, No 1 a 1 06-1 & ul to M% lower, March 80; ae 4 Lettuce and salad greens Celery 4, March $1.1534. sov-. cabbage. No 1 150-200 bu et eee a _ } | Greens, Collard No 1 1060-156 .bu beans 4 to 4 lower, January Kale No | 160-T50 bu Swiss chard $2.81: lard 15 cents lower to 5 Neo 1. 100-125 bu cents a hundred pounds higher. January $13.02. DETROIT Dec 27 'AP)- Eggs fob id Detroit cases inciuded federal-state CHICAGO GRAPY | grades site esi bi 7 ' i " “Whites Grade A large weig! : CHICAGO, Dee. 21 AP —Opening secceue Sa peticns De-Sd Gtk at May 11e', small 28: grade B large 15 July 120 Browns «Grade A large 33-37 wtd av Soybeans 36 «medium 32. small 28 arses B Jan 280', 34 grade C large 27. Mar 2 78 —— May ....... 2 78's CHICAGO BUTTER AND EGGS July 232 CHICAGO Dec 27 1 AP) Butter firm os gue 2s receipts 1592237. wholeasie buying a 13.15 | prices 1 to 1° higher, 05 score AA 80 78 JON... sss eee 5 $169 aw S675 B SO. C 86S cars 00 Mat 22 uc 128s Sues ee 8 | May 2.0 6.5+: 1290 | . ERE* steady to firm: receipts 23 000 duly oll | wholesale buying prices unchanged to 1 | Salata 1196, Digher, US large whites 30, mixed 10 Mey . 11 66 mediums 28 standards 28. current re Supplies Held Grains Down Farm Price Supports Prevented Debacle in 54; Soy Is Exception: CHICAGO « — Big supplies. acted to prevent any run away up-. surge in grain prices in 14 while the government support pro- gram prevented any price debacle. | One result of this situation was_ that the government was saddied with huge supplies of grain and confronted with the problem of how to-get rid of them. Only exception to this patiern| was soybeans, where a wild time was enjoyed by all as a result of a poor 1953 crop. A national] wheat acreage al- lotment of 62 million acres was set for the 1954 crop. As a result, production was cut to 959,258,000 bushels from 1,168,836,000 in 1953. Prices were supported at 90 per cent of parity. For next year, acreage allot- ments will be down to 55 million acres. The government support | price also will be down—to 82'4. per cent of parity, This lower sup- port results from passage of thé 1954 flexible price support law. — The Agriculture Department ex- | pects the reduced acreage at least to slow down the pace at which wheat stocks have been building up. Even so, it thinks the carry- over on July 1, 1955, will total about one billion bushels, up 100 carryover July 1, 194. “Because of the very barge aupplies of wheat, prices will continue to be maintained by the support program,” the depart. ment predicts. Wheat futures prices on the Chi- | eago Board of Trade reached | their low in June, climbing slowly | thereafter as more wheat was tied up in the government loan. Decem- ber wheat set a low of $1.95%4 on June 17. By the end of November it was up to $2.30. Acreage allotments on corn. calling for a reduction of 17.4 per cent in planted acreage in the commercial producing area, were ‘proclaimed, Total production, both = inside and outside the commercial: area, was 2.939.000.0008 bushels down 7.5 per cent from a jsear ago. This total is net as much corn as ig normally consumed in one year, but there's an enormous earryover from previous creps. High price for corn in the Chi- cago cash market was $17) a bushel on Sept. 9 and 10. jusf be- fore the new crop started to come to market. By the end of Septem- ber the price had fallen to $1.52 The December corn future set a low. of $1.39%— on June 1, but was back to $1 60 in December Production of both oats and rve were higher than in the pre- vious year. An important factor in maintaining price levels, however. was imposition of quotas limiting the amount of imports. This ap- plied particularly to Canada Cash oats sold at a low of 69'4 cents a bushel on July 1). By Oct 29 the same grade was at a high of 88'2. The amount of rye sold in the cash market at Chicago was insignificant. Prices ranged from $1.16 in July fo $1.60 in October. Michigan Savings Firm Names Two Directors DETROIT (UP)—Winston Scheer Sr., of the Peoples Federal Savings and Loan Association of Monroe, and Laurence H. Cook, of the Mu- tual Savings and Loan Association of Bay City, have been named di- rectors of the Federal Home Banks in Michigan. They will serve two-year terms. USED TV SET 75 $10 te $15 Down $5 a Week HAMPTON TV : 825 West Huren St. FE 4-2525 . i. . . iy ; |: Produce DETROIT PRODUCE | | DETROIT, Dec. 27 (UP) Wholesale | prices a ae farmers’ market re- .| ported by the Bureau of Markets | Fruits: Apples, Delicious, fancy. . 6.50 bu; No 1, 4060-450 bu, al A | Jonathon, fancy, ‘eo bu No. 1, 3.00 1, 3.26-3.15 bu 2.50-3 00 buy apples. vfs pods eider, No. 1 225 ¢ gal. case. Pears, Bosc, No. 1, oe 406 bu Vegetabies’ Beets. topped; No 1 I ‘abbage, No 1... 45-160 bu curly, No 1. 100-160 bu. cab- | |bage. red No. 1, 960-1.25 bu corres? topped. No 1, 100-160 bu Celery, 32.00-1.50 crate, celery. No 1 dos Celery root, No 1, 1 00-1 | Fennel. No- 1. 1.00-1.26- bu Mdbagredisn 1, §.00-606 pk Leeks No 125 doz bens Ontons, dry, No 1 1658 50-lb bag Parsley, curly. No | 85-100 doz behs, parsley root, No 1 DETROIT EGGS | cetpts 26 dirties 23: checks 23, Poultry | DETROIT POULTRY ! ETROIT Dec 27 (AP) Prices paid per pound fob Detroit ~ tg) 1 qual- | ity live poultry up ta 10 Heavy hens 19-20 Censuses (6-6 Ibs: re | 27-20 | ares steady Overall trading rather qu Receipts were mostly caponeties | ee] ‘dcanad fair taken im at 22 cents | Carryovers nated undergrades . Turkeys vallable as no receipts were taken in| today Moderate’ carryovers noted on both hens and toma . Light weekend | consisting mainiy of | Livestock DETROIT LIVESTOCK DETROIT. Dec 27 (AP)—Hogs Bal- | able 800 Not enough hogs early to make | A ;® market. undertone unevenly lower Catlle: Salable 1400 Broad and active demand on limited supply average eg and better fed steers and yearlings. strong: jower grades generally ste ¥: cows relatively scarce early, sround $100 higher than last week's close; no sales bulls or replacement cattie. under- | tone steady, bulk good and choice fed steers and yearlings 23.00-2750. mostly 26 00-27 00 for high geod to low choice offerings twe head prime steers 20.00 early sales utility to low good, mostiy commercial steers and heifers 15.60 1825. bulk utility and low commercial cows 10001200; canners and cutters mostly 8 50-10 80; some light canners $00 down Galves vealers strong to unevenly higher, but market not fully established account small receipts individual head prime vealers up te 33.00 Sheep Salable 800 Market openin fully steady with last week's close: & head choice and prime jb wooled jambs 2) 50° sheep scarce "CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO, Dee 23 (AP)—falable hoes 9.000. fairly active, strong to mostly 95 | higher, most advances on weights over tb; instances up more en these weights: sows mostly rteady, sround ene deck choice No 1!« 200 Ib at 1935 several decks chotee No | and 28 199 220 I> at 19.00 most 190 220 Ib at 1778 1875 bulk 230-250 Ib 1700-1775 ao few choice No 1 and 2s 230-250 lb at 17 25 1825 most 260-280 Ib 16860-1760, with bulk 200-125 Ib 1575-16560 sows under 400 Ib scarce at 15.00-15 75. most sows 425-600 Ib 13 50-15 00 Balable cattie 2,000, salable calves 00 prime cattle absent. steers and heifers choice and below slow steady to lower; cows steady to 25 higher: bulls and vealers about steady; a load of choice prime 1074 Ib steers Ao a = -27.00 good 1073 ib mixed steers and heifers 29 00, good and choice betfers 1900-2600, « load utility and commercial 00 Ib : utility and commercial 35; canners and cutters | 800-975 utility and commercial bulls | 13.80-18 50: to prime vealers 20 00 | 24.00; a load of good to choice 440 Ib | Montana stock steer calves 7125 me @ium and good replacement steers and sheep 3.000. slaughter lambs moderately active: about steady; other classes stea to prime wooled lambs 110 lighter 1850-21 00 latter price for weights up to 105 Ib; & deck 07 Ib 21.28, a few mostly choice Lecxificad LL) skins 1756. cull to low good lambs 7.00-18 _ cull to choice slaughter ewes § 00-6 dy. «@ Ib and Foreign Exchange NEW YORK, Dee 27 (AP) ee rates follow do! jars, others in cents: Canadian dollar jn New York open market 3% per cent premium or 103 17), US cents unchanged Gurope Creat Britain «pound. $2 78s up | 1@ of a cent. Cireat Britain 30 day futures 278 2132 up 1 16 of a cent tjreat Britain 60 day futures 278 21 42 up 1-16 of a cent Great Britain 80 day futures 278 2132 up 116 of a cent Belgium ‘franc: 200 up 00', of a cent France ifranc) 28%, of a cent. un changed. Germany (Western ‘Deutsche mark) 2385 unchanged Holland ‘gull der) 2445 up 0S of a cent; Italy ilira) i6te of a cent, unchanged; Portugal ‘escudo) 3 50 unchanged, Sweden ‘krone; 1934, unchang Switeeriand ifranc: (free) 23.34%, unchanged; Den- mark «krone! 1450, unchanged Latin America Argentina (free) 724 unchanged, Brasil (free! 1.38 usc eneed Mexico 862. unchanged, Venesucla iboli var; 3903 a Union Orders Srl) to Chrysler Walkout DETROIT (INS) The CIO- United Auto Workers today or- dered an immediate end to a wild- cat strike of 42) grinders which tied up the Mack plant of Chrys- ler ss Automotive Body Division this morning, halted Plymouth as sembly and idled 8.000 workers. Instructions to end the unauthor ived walkout were issued by Ken oe president of UAW Local J12, less than three hours after the company was forced to send “000 home, from the Mack plant 1 06- | large little or no disposition in Few fancy heavy hens | Market unsettled Prices not | Salabie 300 Few early sales | Forrign ex ‘Great Britain in _. | MAR KETS | French Crisis Affects Stocks NEW YORK uw, — The Stock | Market declined moderately today | | certainties of the French political | situation. Prices were down around 2) points at the worst. Plus signs were. | scattered and seldom large, al- 1 ' though some went to around 2? 1953's record of 285 billjon. | points. Trading was in the neighbor. hood of Thursday when the total was 3,310,000 shares in a rising | market. | This is the fina) day that stocks can be sold for regular four-day delivery and have profits counted on the 1954 tax bill. Selling for | 1954 tax losses can continue .regu- , larly to the end of the year Premier Mendes-France staked the life of his Cabinet on a vote Lof confidence over West Germany's || entrance into the North Atlantic ‘Treaty Organization. Theredtwas Wall street to regard the French action as a threat to market stability, but some brokers felt a word of caution Was necessary. The market opened higher and then swung lower all around, Mo- FOR SERVICE 2 y INSURANCE Maynard Johnson 807 Community National Bank tors were down from the start. | oe 8 new eee at as en 1,015 k TAIPEH, Formosa #—Chinese es other major divisions soon ington, Southfield Township, by the 015,000 trucks. Communist artillery on Amoy just joined them. owner, Arthur Aldrighetti of 12915 Steel production dropped by 25 off the Red mainland pounded Rutland, Detroit, according to million tons to 86 million, but was Nationalist island outposts today New York Stocks Oakland County sheriff's deputies.: headed upward as the year closed. for the second straight day, the a) } 2 * 3 ° . | Coal-production was down 17 per | National Defense Ministry an- ‘Late Merning Qeetations) james K. Procter, 23, of 74 Hart. emt f 1953 385 i ‘ aa moor Blvd. pleaded gully torecks | ee eed | Air Reaue n. se com . a lees ives Stipa hari Sante! Cotton goods output dipped to. The Reds fired more than 20 Aes Ott fanes Mew 8 | seaeicigal Sigel Coc McCallum, (9? elem er irom mere than’ shells St Toten | tiny Nationalist, led Sire ... 84 may Hay. 30 lana ope fined 6S. = s 10 billion the year before, Rayon island three miles south of Amoy, | = ona oe u ? ——— 1 oe 8 _ and woolen production was mark- | but caused no casualties nor dam.- | | Alum hm ae wa Kroger = aa “The home of Grover Schatz of Cdty tower than in 1953: yage, the ministry said: Am Cap. 447 Log NenaL. 132/143 Center St. was ransacked Sat- The jobless total averaged * Last night, Red artillery on Amoy ca . e 2: bee © MP $21 urday night when thieves took two about 3'2 million most of the bombarded the nearby Nationalist | oC re : ; | Am Loco 205 Loew's ie2/| wrist watches valued at $50, ac Year, nearly two million more island of Quemoy with 13 Shells but | io cen. ne terilara . an cording to Pontiac Police. than in the year before. ‘caused no damage, the ministry pion ma ‘ merch Fieid , 33 Tues., Dec. 28, at 1 p. m. to re- Farm prices declined three per S14 = | [Am Smelt 441 Martin Gl... 30 |place the two Sat. holidays auc °°Mt and farmers’ net income about — h Am 8t) Fd w : ’ me Ce lam Tela Tel Ite era ce’: 3S '| tions we will miss. We are open at | *** Logs cent. . Two Farmington Youths | Am Tob 45 Mid Con Pet. (00¢/ any time for consignments for the 7 e federal debt showed no signs Sentenced for Breakin lam zit” 324 Mensas, Ch...1838/a¢th. Joyful holiday season from * shrinking, however. it climbed =~ ot : 486 Motor Pd... 221, all of us: Arnold, Hickmott, and 27'2 billion dollars from 275 — }{arold Lange, 19, of 29945 Grand mae $8 Motorola .... $05/| Hillman, auctioneers; the Myers, ie the eran teens before. Armeo 8t! 703 aes BT | : ; River, Farmington, was released | ato nk Murray Cp... 302) cash aoe ee oe oe in custody of the Army yesterday | aed Dt 277 Nat Bisc .. 432/ Sousa, and Mrs. Parry, assistants: AUC ; 4 AC s. Do Ar Got Line 187 | Nat Cash R’. 1818 Gilleties, in the lunch counter, and 6 From Pontia Pontiac Sot py crcit sade bree Aveo Mig 66 Nat Gyps.... 4¢5|from the Proulx family, Prop. of _. | after pleading gui ty o breaking | Belt Onin | sae Nat leed.... 61 | the Oxford Community Auction on and entering Dec. 20. Beech Nut a M-24 just north of Oxford. —Adv His accomplice, Gerald Clouse, meas A ~ Nat Thea... 06 Pp : ocd yal NY Air Br. 25 20. of 30804 Lamar, Farmington. Benguet 18 NY Cent 311 The Chief Pontiac American mae at ee 318 | Legion Post 377 will hold its annual 4! least) six Pontiac Junior ‘was placed on three years proba- | @ Air Nort @& Weat 611 Achieveme : ‘ : ti d assessed $150 court costs Bohn Alum 208 No Am Av cl New Year's Eve party at the Post, Achievement members are expect. ion and assesse t Bend Stra . 187 Nor Pac 2 | 4819 Edgewood Dr., Oakland Lake. ¢d to be among the 450 delegates Lange had been in previous trou- | « Borden 66 n : ; os Borg Warn 146 asst ae ed te | Danc ing and refreshments Mem- attending the Junior Achievement ble with the Army before the pair | Sued a4 ise Sie ce tse | bers and guests. $3 per couple | Mid-Western Conference in Detroit broke into a paint store at Ten Burroughs |. 28 Owens Il Gt lol | —Adv. tomorrow. Mile and Orchard Lake roads Dec. | Semel ed Ls pel ae ae Te buy or sell in Waterford. The Fort Shelby Hotel will be 7, according to Chief Assistant Can Dry ... 138 Parke Da 362 the scene of the three-day gather- Prosecutor George F. Taylor. can P . : ote a Drayton Plains or Clarkston area ys gg ‘dn Pac 11 Penney see White Bros. al Estate ing at which the delegates will | - Capital Airl .. 236 Pa R 206 Re STATE OF MICHIGAN—In the Probate | (urn rH =e ons 73 OR 3-7118. —Adv.| discuss the business activities of | court. for the County of Oakiand, ease I harder | ‘the 2.100 JA grot d th Juvenile Division Cotenens ay ee ou : eed . water ah i eke In the matter of the petition concern- ie ca ~ ; pal ea a 7 a eg aragbal Oa Miner “and operations of the JA program ine’ Wiley Funderburk, minor Cause No Sert. a e i 2 Ches 4 Oh 446 Pillsby Mills 31 “A | Aside from the regular confer 175) gon punderburk and Lydia Parry pea tated 2° ae ee | ence business, ive dances will be) parents of said child tna > i on F J ¢ 1 | Sees, of: amt £* Consumers Power wiiinisiees= sit tent) Eh i ca a Clark Equip) = 872 Pure Oj}! nm? ruta plants abouts of the parents of the said minor Clin M $82 Radio Cp ‘ p own th id child Cluett Pea” 423 Rem Rand ‘ A surprise award for outstanding aepuccccen ke public ia a ca ecce a Ripee u Announces xpansion « jactivities at the cogference will | one het ee ae Fecha " t { o | Peel ar as RKO PA 7 presented to a boy or girl Tle the! etic of the: people of the State | See “a 7 Rock Hig ae JACKSON, Mich \U'P) — Con. | ac sckitver at the closing luncheon | ag atoms BAgeedy aris ain bs an | Comes P= qi ives? = . sumers Power Co. announced to- | set for noon Thursday at the hotel. at the Court House in the City of Pon. Cent k 2 . t nm the ¢t ay oO Cont Can 752 St Reg Pap «0¢)/ day it ptanned to spend about $73. saueary AD tees ot ane <clech | Cont Mot 129 Scovill Mf ... 32. | 000,000 next year on new construc- Woman Is Injured the forenoon, and you are hereby com- | on he shell one Tea tion and expansion projects. | ne to appear personally at said Copper Rog .. 40.2 . * heart: ° | core Pa... OO melons ee $17) Justin R. Whiting, board chair- Wher Car Strikes Tree It being tmpractical to make personal ruc s summ™m Curtiss Wr 195 Bou Pac 53 | man, gaid it was the biggest one- Mid Schill Siesll be cated by publication of a copy Det Edis 336 Sou Ry 18 year program in the company | Mrs. Midred Pearson Schilling. | one week previous to said hearing in Dis C Beag 336 Sparks W $7 32, of 5000 Elizabeth Lake Rd_, | tne Pontiac Press. a newspaper printed Doug Aire 21 Sperry «5 history. He said it was designed to . ; vas and circulated in said County. Dow Chem. 472 Std Brand 384 | beep pace with the rapid See reported in good condition to- | ™Witnes< the honorable Arthur F Pia anit Me BE St Sta elim oF ‘county. out-state Michigan Sty Af Pontiac General Hospital Mog its cadtefueis nie ah an ri) ’ . -§ ty 5 : y ry vi East Kod O96 Oe Ol HS..18T] Oi. eas and service srean’’ | with injuries she received Satur- Praia rv Fi Auto L 325 Std Ol Oh 424 . Bas | day w Seal ARTHUR E MOORE.’ Ba Mus im Cy Men JP EL) Whiting said all 12 operating Etizabetn Lake Road. HP occ tet Steere | End John 282 Sun Ol! 852 | divisions in Michigan would ‘‘share According to Waterford Tow Deputy Probate Register. Erie RR . 21.7 Suther Pap 4n4 extensively” in the 1955 program. | : g a . n- Juventie Division | Fx-Cel-O |... TT Se@ift & Co 481 | ship police, Mrs. Schilling's auto , Paird Mor 258 Sylv EB) Pd 462 Division headquarters are at Jack- Firestone 109 «Texas Co... 842 | son, Flint, Grand, Rapids, Pontiac, spun out of control on a curve |” state OP MICHIGAN —In the Probate Preept Sul 726 Tex G Bul 125 | Pp rear Christy road. She suffered Court for the County of Oakland, Prueh Tra 363° Thomp Pd 482 Saginaw, Lansing, Kalamazoo, | Juvenile Division. Gen k 10 Timk R Bear 464) Muskegon, Battle Creek, Bay Cit | shoulder and back injuries. | Im the matter of the petition concern- Gen Pos pos} cated as a3 T 2 Cc d Al : ing Mritha sect alias Cannon, minor Cen Pads fransamer |. oo raverse City an ma. ! Cause No. 19 Gen Motors A) went C Fox ali To Jesse Arbuckle, father of said child Gen Ry Sig poh Underwd ; 5 2 ——— -_ Sees Auto Demolished i Petition having — filed Ape raeng Gen Refre 29 Un Carbide . aoe . Court alleging that t present where- | Gen Tel 3 Ue Pee S 181 ‘ Gounty | Ex. Gls Learn SIDNEY, Neb. (INS) — George | aboste of tne father “* elena miner on re Lf r Lin ’ : » child ts unknown an je $a c Atitette W646 Unit Aire 14 of Former Chief’s Death “!cDonald. 32. of Sidney, has a vioiated « law of the State and that said | orbel Fr i United Cp 6! bone to pick with his auto me- child should be pIwced under the jurts: Food teh 76 Unit Fruit $22 : =| . : : ; th t ey ae’ te acim GA John FE. Fisher, 72, commander | chanic. Right after he had his car Oot ental of tue (peamie of thee Otate : * crise 2 . vs i are i of oan artillery hattery during | overhauled. it stalled on a railroad ct Michigan vou are bedi. navies at Wee 8 218 UR amet say World War Poin) which) several’/ track. He got) out and watched eee eee on nen ae ihe City of Oot Gree bet es ete pt ae Oakland County men served. died | helplesslv as a freight train de- Sages a <0 oe ct te aN mutts ON ‘ "1 PB - of January 5 8 wo o¢ Haves Mf 1@ US Tod a ys; yesterday in Saginaw Veterans | molished the auto the afternoon, and you are hereby com- j Hersh Choe 476 Van Raa! ' Hospit al _ ° = = Soe earn | ' Holland Fr 161 Walgreen o 4 . Homstk 4a2) Warm = Pie 19 News of the death came from | Hook Ei 23 Ww V ! Wa pn = . ' * Houd. Her let West Un Tet. 78), County Auditor John © Austin, | a Ss (mM Cent eoa West A Bt 271, one of 15 county men in Fisher's Indust Ray 402 Weste £E) 762 . T | | Inland 81! ada ~— n if group. The former Army Sealy Inspir Cop MM Wilson Co . - ih ited aad ol ey wie wi ee : ad been living at 1111 LuCharles Int Harv 353 Woolworth io so Mount Morris. He will be buried A Int laledd S77 Young 8 & W 264 Sr : Int Paper 74 Ynest gn & T an2 At Grand Rapids Int a & Tel 245 “entth Rad 90 STOCK AVERAGES | NEW YORK Dee 27 Compiled by The e ’ | Associated P | She Soe i comratne = WHEN YOU NEED MONEY—$20 to $500 | Indust Rass Util Blocks : awril change . ‘ Here's all you do. Simply tdlephone or call Noo tod ‘ WT4¢ 1217 #74 F532 pious ase) pent a3 7S anes ot ,our office. Tell us how much money Week ago 7080 1210 614 #151) Month tee veee M27 119K BAA 1484 you need Year ago .. 1498 7a? S52 1080 1944) high 20a @ #11237 681 534 184 low ss fase 778 836 1000 @ NO ENDORSERS REQUIRED 1983 high 1S! a 918 ASR LTR . “es veg sees @ LOANS ON SALARY, CAR OR FURNITURE DETROIT STOCKS Hornblowe & Weeks! W Figures chee Gav iwal points are eight hs e CHOOSE YOUR re) N PAYMENT PLAN i High is Noon ‘ Baidain Rubvber* ya" : Gertty Michigan* ; 4 4 7 Cash Monthly Payment Plans H Kingston Products? 14 4 Vou 2 | 18 12 e i Masco &: * cae Vt 12 Get . Midwe strats e* . fi a4 e REASONABLE cost _ , j Paym't) Paym’t Paym't Paym’t | “ : ., $ 50 i $ 5.03) $ 9.24 aa a zane eeue 14 Payments shown in the table 100 $ 665 $ 7. | on on 200 = #13.11 14.21 £ : i include principal and 300 1955 2120 29.55) 5478 charges You can cut the 500 31.39 34.16 48.09! 90.02 See or Call Genera! Insurance Phone FE 4-4523 THE PONT LAC PRESS, ‘Highlights of the Year MONDAY, DEC ‘EMBER 97, 1954. f Doyal Jones Nathed Nation Ate Up $64 Billion lraq Grotte Monarch By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS NEW YORK—How were things iin. 1954? Fine for’ some, not s0 apples’ Macintosh, fancy. 430\ in the face of tax selling and un- | good for others. Here are the high- apples, Northern | lights: Output of goods and services _10- Rex 356 billion dollars, second only to the 1953 ‘peak of 364 bil- ‘lions. | Bersonal income about matched . Ameritans kepf,on saving at the rate of 19 billions: a year. Lodge Calendar Special meeting Pontiac Chap- ter #228 O. E.8., Monday evening. Dec. 27th, 8 p. m. Pontiac White Shrine practice ‘Tues. eve., Dec. 28, 7:30. Ceremonial ‘Wed, Dec. 29th, 8:00 Refresh- | ments. Bessie Howell, Scribe. —Adv. News in Brief Thieves broke into a filling sta- tion at 714 Baldwin Ave. Saturday night and took $25 and other small items, reported Pontiac Police. Four ceiling fixtures valued at | $100, were reported stolen Friday in 1954, Survey Indicates —Adv.. Joives monarch for the coming _ | Life imsvrance companies sold year. Other officers named for = 47% billions in new insurance, year include: up 21 per cent from the year before. : Electric power output climbed 6% per cent to 471 billion kilowatt hours. Sales of utility gas surged to ’ 60% billion therms, up 7% per cent. Lee Hunt, Chief Justice; Robert Peterson, master of ceremonies; P. .William Ander- The Chemical industry completed “Gus Couretas, another billion dollars of plant secretary: Meri- and rang up sales of nearly 20 cus McCoy assist-| * __ | billions. ant; Eugene Red- Housing starts totaled 1,200,000, -up slightly from 1953. - Americans consumed an esti- mond, prophet; Fred Bluth, mar- JONES: shall, Harold Rynderson, assistant Iraq Grotto has elected Doyal | son, treasurer; mated 64 billion dollars worth of — marshall. food, about a billion dollars more Past Monarch William Ww. than in the preceding year. dercook was elected to the board | Construction hit a record at 37 of trustees. billion dollars. i million phones to bring the num- | pointed offices will be filled later. ber in use to 52’ million. The new officers were | day of January A.D. 1955, at nine o'clock ‘4m the forenoon, and you are hereby The new monarch appointed Rob- | The telephone industry added 2% ert Wall as chaplain. Otber ap- | . 3 ye : . ee aa ee : i ‘ | anges tofarper pevouair st i) yeh Gr Gary Bien oi wade | MR eis imoracical vo make perennal | uezed bel ee, ater Ht Ferg and shai prol opUigoom yg by publicetion of e N. Paddeck. Pontiac, Oakland County, | one a een previous to said cp A public sale of eee tiac Press @ ——— pr’ ' 4 dr. bearing serial number 4A Scene | soreuloned im said Count be held, for cash to the highest s Witness, the Honereble Arthur E. | Inspection thereot may be mete Moore, Judge of said Court City | Schroeder's Towit Laecskgarrt — of Pontiac in seid | County, this en | Storage County, igan, the p Dece ~ + | eat - = ARTHUR E£ MOORE, CIFIC on ener ag ge A true copy Judge of Probate. By H PAULINE HEWITT, 1107 altars Street, Deputy Probate Register. Port Huron, Mich. es aha | Dated December 34, Dec. a, 18. “86 HCHIGAN—In the probate | NOTICE OF PUBLIC BALE cat ie ‘igi onree of Oakland, On December 20th, 1954 at 10 o'clock Juvenile Division |am. et O'Brien Tow Co, 11 Mile In the matter of the petition concern- Road, Oak rk, Oakland County, Michi- No ie A geome: sale of @ 1954 Chevrolet thee —_ ello dpe | serial number C54P023451, To Lester Cahner, father of said chiid. | wit be held, for cash to the highest biti Petition having been filed in this der. Inspection thereof may be minor Cause Court alleging that the present where- et.the above address. | abouts of ne father of the said minor) ASSOCIATES -DISCOUNT child is unknown and the seid child hes ATIO! violated a law of the = — re pl aegis said child —z be placed under the. roit, jurisdiction of this — D. LAUGHERY, In the name of the the State Attorney, of Michigan, you are vl notified Dated. Dee. 13. 1064. . that the heart on said petition will Dec. 27, 28, "64 be held at the Court House in the City —— : Pentiac in said County, on the 4th PUBLIC SALE 1949 Buick, 4 — Motor No. 54696605, Bale to be held p.m. Jenuary 6th, Color TV set production was, by Past Monarch Clyde Tow /small but black and ‘white sets assisted by Past Monarchs. Samuel million. . The value of retail merchandise sold came close to matching 1953's ‘high of 171 billion dollars. Commercial exports rose million dollars to J2'2 bilion Automotive inustry output was offf sightly at 5,385,000 cars and . Crawford, ** Reds Again Shelling Nationalist Island EXCELLENT CARE IN DRY CLEANING IMPORTANT! MONITE MOTH PROTECTION! FATHER & SON CLEANERS FE 2-6424 Plant and Office, 941 Jeslyn Ave. cost of the loan by making 7 — State's charge is the monthly rate of 3% larger payments. on that part of a balance not exceeding n use Mounted to. areund 3344 Smith, Charles Kugler and James | Van-*> commanded to appear personaily at said se0s Ml 223 8. eat lecant, ieee — being impractical to make personal Dec. , "6 _ service hereof, this summons and notice a ne | shall be served by publication of a copy = — — to said ring nhs ERO ‘ t ntiac Press @ kono ag prin and circulated in said Co Aoverrisinc Witness, the Honorable er E. GENCY installed | Moore, Judge of said Court, in the City Pa Pontisc = Norge f this 23nd a = pager Lewest Cost Printing al i se ty ARTHUR E. MOORE, Gare business and popes ag true copy ROIRNA R MURTHA, | ee "Calendars—Orde Probate Register, Juvenile | ee 7 (new phone) OR 3- 5053 * MAKE YOUR NEW YEARS RESOLUTION Dr. T. Zieminski Registered Optometrist HOURS: Nye TEL-HURON Mon. Tues. 9: —s F ‘SHOPPING Wei. sat.. 980-8 heb CENTER WORRIED OVER DEBTS? ts, debts or bills when due, a 9 if -y unable eee T MICHIGAN cRepir. "COUN and NO SECURITY OR Eilons 8 REQUIR ONE PLACE TO PAY — BONDED AND INSURED you can afferd, regardiess of how much or hew many you owe. “Let 9 years of credit c ling exp e assist yous Hours: 1G 9 to S—Wed. & Sat. 9 to ‘1—Evenings by A MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELLORS 411% South Sagina St. ry bove Oakiand Theater Phone FE $0456 UALITY TOOLS By ATLAS @ CLAUSING @ DELTA SHOPSMITH @ DeWALT PORTER-CABLE @ SKIL BROWNE-SHARPE @ MILWAUKEE RENTALS GLENN WING POWER TOOLS 1437 SOUTH WOODWARD AVE. Five Blocks North of 14-Mile Road BIRMINGHAM, MI 4-0444 | DAILY 8 to 6:00 — FRI. 8 to 8:00 | ————__— eeoee eoaeanevet? pescscsweseross*** eoeoee? eooet?® * BORRO WITHOUT ENDORSERS .--: CHOOSE YOUR OWN REPAYMENT PLAN w #20 TO $500 ° e ° ° ° ° ° * e « e ° ° e ° e e ° ° ° e e e ° e e ° e 4 e ee eoee e esevver® eese? eoeee? Now you can get a quick loan at sensible cost at HFC —to pay bills, get the things you need and want. verde] MONTHLY PAYMENT PLANE Easy-to-meet require- $ | perme: | perme | rarer: | paren | MeNts. For your quick, $ 50 $ 5.03 $924] One-day loan— on sen- 100 $ 6.65 § 7.20) 9.98 / 1839] sible terms you can af. 200 | 13.11 | 14.21 | 19.77 | 36.59] ford — 300 | 19.55 | 21.20 | 29.55 | 54.78 $20 a coe in! 500 | 31.39 | 34.16 | 48.09 | 90.02 ~— yours $50. 2% on that part of a balance in excess of $50, but not exceeding $300. and %%% om any remainder. © Same Day Service—Just Phone— and give us a few facts about yourself. We will have the money ready when you come STATE FINANCE COMPANY 702 Pontiac State Bank Building Phone FE 4-1574 | en | S22 eee F; _— on signature, car or furniture without en- dorsers. money WHEN YOU NEED i7 pnouseiioiD FINANC —~Coysoration E Pontiac —— eee 3% South Seginaw S4. The Kay Bidg., 2nd Fleer PHONE: FEderal 4.0535 Loans made te residents of nearby toons Blousehold’s charge ts the monthly rate of I& on 4 ‘the C. J. Godhardt Funeral Home. - He died Sunday. id ; a te. \ M : eae i J . : : r : sree 4 ; fe ’ * ‘ wv = ate eu fe PONTIAC PRESS. “MONDAY, DECEMBER wse9 - TWENTY-NINE 2 " y b) a . | ® ege spe oa Help Wanted Female 7 Building Service © 12° 3 Area Hi hwa F atalifies Troy to Discuss Probing Crash Death Notices GIRL aie WORK IN = STOMER) FLOOR eee iene FIN. Sewer Plans, —~ ~ | ORE Seas fe crtacaa | Beare OSes FS ° ° : SCHIELDs, D $5, opeg iit babe pply GUARANTEED Liquor License of British Plane ed es ait | ental ee” ee” | pela ee ee EE Bae | ong 0 | ay | BOK ENC | mer rowssiur — conser a eg eee ee seee | teeiiettc tacks tis | Re pttigimee te Bla me sist aa for pompebenetaras 28 Killed When Airliner eurvive, oneal service will be —™_ YE 24270 after ¢ MODERNIZATION AND CARPEN- The Oakland County area reg-j istered three highway fatalities during the long holiday weekend| Wagner, of 6400 Winkler Mill Rd., which began Friday. Rochester. Wilson jumped to Harold Weston, .43, of 105 Wom- safety. Hennard was struck as swucked ‘yen car of Maken 4. , 67, of 5901 Auburn Rd., Macomb Coun- US-10. = . ty, was killed when hit by a car Driver of the car, Derwood |*! 9:50 p.m. Friday. Neely, 22, of 41 N. Midland, Archie Wheeler of Driver Utica told Duschang walked into the path of his car. Wheeler is making a statement to the Macomb County prosecu- Truck driver John P. Sehultz, ter today. 37, of 5368 Dixie Highway, Water- ford, was unhurt. Funeral service for Weston was Arthur D. Hennard, 35, of 41724| held at 2 p.m. today at the Sharpe Dequindre Rd., Macomb County, | Funeral Home, Clarkston, with died in St. Joseph Mercy Hospital| burial in Lakeview Cemetery. at 5:30 p.m. Friday after an acci-| Surviving besides his widow, dent at 7:45 a.m. Gwinevere, is a daughter, Gail, and son, Harold, both at home, and two brothers, Willard of Pontiac, and Jack of Albion. County Deaths Funeral arrangements soe Clayton E. Cox FARMINGTON TOWNSHIP — Service for Clayton E. Cox, 36, of 21213 Ontago, will be held at 11 a.m. Wednesday at the Thayer Funeral Home, with burial in Glen Eden Cemetery. Be died Sunday. Rosylon of Washington, and four sisters, Mrs, Evelyn Pinkerton of Colorado, Mrs, Fern €ook of Utah, Mrs, Lois Adams of Germany, and Mrs. Darlene Alexander, of Utah. Nicholas J. Doherty WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWN- SHIP—Rosary will be recited for Nicholas J. Doherty, 66, of 3911 Walnut. Lake Rd., at 8 p.m. Tues- day at his residence, with further service at 10 a.m. Wednesday at @ur Lady of Refuge Church, and ‘burial in Mt Hope Cemetery, by Recent Births Belew are recent births which have been reported to the Pontiac Health Department. The name of the father is given for each child. Boys caren P. Cartier, 2718 Corey Ivin J. Premont 8t, poet Brenner, 61 Clovese 8t. =, Batchelor, 3001 Fieldview, chariee H. Arnold, Drayton Plains, Timoteo P. Tovar, 178 johnson . 0 Lafayette at. Edward T. Richard, 3655 Joslyn Rd., . Lambert, Auburn Heights Bigler, 2955 Ken: Paul Anthony, 264 Rockwe NM st. Frederick L. Grubb, Ortonville, Rt. 2 Ernest L. Stocker, ‘2014 Otsego Henderson Payne, 90 Clovese Bt. .Rt 6 Mrs. William McCrea MARLETTE—Service for Mrs. William McCrea, 62, was held at 1:30 p. m. today in the First Presbyterian Church, with burial in Marlette Cemetery. She died Th ; 7. James A. Rollin, 2754 Horton Rd : Edw i Lee T on - Hutchinson, 6140 Hackett LAPEER—Rosary will be re-| John t. Drinnon, 1300 Tall Dr. cited for Edward Lee Truax, 71, of : 2403 Davison Rd. at 8 p.m. Tues- day at the Baird Funeral Home, Jerald A. Heinz, 3835 Joslyn e Rt“. ¢ Paul EF. ee "6 tdechanic urice J. Van Gordon, ase) ‘Mighiana with*service at the Church of the William R. Armstrong, 615 Coughlan Immaculate Conception at 10 a.m. Gtrts Wednesday, and burial in Mt. Lo-| John D. Adams, 7743 Locklin, Rt 8 Harold L. Wiliams. Farmington Carl MH Gtottlemyer, 60 Douglas 6t. Joseph E Galardi, 9 N. Ardmore John J. Verbos, 279 Whittmore George H. Taylor, 16 Rose Ct. Marvin E. Konkle, 641 Menominee Rd. Edwin L. Cline, Clawson Ronald K. Fockler, Keego Harbor — A. Grubb Jr.. 4936 Lockhart, meicheet D. Kotlarsky, 701 BE. Pourth St. George L. Perkins, 31 Allison 8t. retto Cemetery. He died Sunday. Fred E. Crandell LAPEER—Service for Fred E. Crandell, 76, of 3889 Hunt Rd., will be held at 3:30 p.m. Wednesday at the Baird Funeral Home, with burial in Mt. Hope Cemetery. He died Saturday, William J. Prisch, 662 E. Madison 8t. Philip PF. Appling, Walled Lake Leslie R. Wright Arthur E. Senior, Milford, Rt. 6 as E. Bracey, 41§ Voorheis Rd. caus E. Bychinsky, Birmingham Richard FP. Tippen, 26% Cooley St. James F. Valko, Royal Oak, Rt. 3 Gerald R. Michelin, Roya! Oak oa R. Campbell, 451 8. Telegraph Denaid A. Gabo, Milford, Rt 23 Robert L. Volk. 384 N Perry St, Apt. 1. Everett Dow. 5557 Berkley 8t Herbert R. Hames, Rochester, Rt. 3 Roderick E Hoover, 417 California 8t Bernard G Jeske, Lake Orion, Rt. 2 LAKE ORION—Service for Les- lie R. Wright, 64, of Brandenton, Fla, formerly of 242 E. Church St., will be at 2 p.m. Tuesday from Lake Orion Methodist Chorch, with burial at Seymour Lake Cemetery, Ortonville. The body will be sent to the residence Sunday evening and will remain there until time of service. Mrs. Cody R. Bay WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP. —| Service for Mrs. Cody R. (Alice L.) Bay, 63, of 1357 Cooley Ap-| John A. proach, will be held at 7 p.m. Irwin J ‘Sek x 7H Chntonytte Ra Tuesday at the Farmer-Snover Fu-| Rudolph W. Buchmann, 1921 Delrose neral Home, Pontiac, with burial in Franklin County, Indiana. = Donald J. Beedle, Waterford Howard L. Hale, Ortonville Duane M Heaton. 136 Hudson died Sunday. | rregy ete 4312 Giddings Ra. ohn oR u Gres. Rt. 1 Paul Polfthuk Paul H McGione, Perndale MARLETTE _ Service for Paul Stephen D Napter 36 Spokane Dr Cloyd L. Fowler, § Lake 8 George L. Cook, Romeo Porest Easterling. Milford, Rt 6 Bufemio G. Gurest!. §27 Pearsall Roy W ——— ae = Columbia Polishuk, 54, was held at 3:30 p.m. today in the Marsh Funeral Home. with burial in Marlette Cemetery. He died Thursday. Mrs, Grant Whitmore OXFORD—Service for Mrs. Grant Whitmore, 87, of 33 E. Burdick St., will be held at 2 p.m. Wednes- day at the Flumerfelt Funeral Home, Oxford, with burial in Ox- ford Cemetery. She died Sunday. Church Unit Plans Party WATERFORD TOWNSHIP—The Women's Missionary Auxiliary of Sunnyvale Chapel will meet for a | | 2 se RSS Se —— Surplus Boring, oe roduction Tools & Factory Equipment of Napco-Detroit, Inc. Pontiac, Michigan 2579 Dixie Highway Milling Machines: oe and M-18 Milwaukee Simplex; “ Cincinsett Aatematio Duplex; Cincinnati a4 #3V Toledo and pn Index pate Linley & ‘Snyder vata} Mills. Boring: Mills: 3—2¢" Bullard V.T.L.: 2—Barnes — Center Column i Boring, Drilling and Reaming Machines: Excelio 2-8pindie Permanently Inclined Vertical Cylinder Borer; }—Excello Single End Horizontal Borers. Breaches: a Hydraulic Vertical, 24" stroke; Ollgear Hydraulic Hori- sontal, 48" st 4 peice Beary Duty Vertical; Model MA Bunnen. Grinders: Pitchburg Hydraulic Angie; 78 Heald Hydraulic Internal Cen- terless; #16, Blanchard and 8° Arter Rotary Surface; #2 Atiantic Surface; Also Excelié, Norton, LeBlond, etc. Tool and Cutter; 10°x24' and ¢"x18" Landis and 10°x24” Norton Plain Cylindrical. Lathes: 3—16"x and 10°42” South Bend Engine; 2—#3 Ledge & Shipley Head Duomatic Production; #5A P and J and 11” LeBlond Produc- tion; 2—#@2A and 1—g6 Warner & Swasey Turret; #3 Acme Semi Universal ie Automatics; American & Zewo INSPECTION: Remmigrondd ath TO DATE OF SALE INDUSTRIAL PLANTS CORPORATION APPRAISER Ot NEERS « CHICAS! 4 WABASH 7.7315 er ewe Pee © i Gordon G. Dedman, Drayton Plains, the main business at the board meeting of Troy Township at 7:30 in the state legislature to re- Birth Rate predicts Problem of Future _ (Continued From Page One) in 30’s. Thus fewer new families than in recent past. (2) The ‘“un- doubling’’ of families, going on since war, seems at an end, We can expect a gradual tapering off of new houses in about another year. But another big boom, starting im early 60’s, is almost sure. The wave of births in past 15 years will become a wave of mar- Remodeling of old houses and rehabilitation of seedy areas; all ago, the people past” age 65 were 4 per cent. In 1950, they were 8 per cent. Twenty years from now the people past age 65 will be 11 per cent ... still rising. Our people are still moving (al- though less) so some states grow, some shrink, some are static. Southeast states, growing fast in business. Texas is still spectacu- -|lar, New England is lagging, ex- cepting only Connecticut. The big industrial states aren't keeping pace in creating new businesses. Florida is now growing at a faster rate than her old rival state of California. But California in 10 years promises to be number one State, bigger than New York State. In the past five years Michi- gan’s population growth has been 1® per cent; new business growth, 1 per cent. The average is 6 and 4 per cent, respectively. Widows outnumber widowers, be- cause men die younger than wom- en, and also because men are older than their wives. Divorce is now about level, or slightly-statistically downward. Almost 3 out of 4 of all divorcees remarry, after wait of | about 3 years. U.S. population now, 164 mil- lion, should be about 220 mil- lien by 1975. Each new estimate is higher than the one before, amazingly so. In summary, Kiplinger's report says: ‘This country is growing in many ways, In people. In re- sources. In ingenuity. In standard of living. In energy which makes for progress. It is anything but static. People with vision see great ‘expansion ahead, the years ahead. To expect it and to plan on it... that is realistic.” (Copy right, 1964, Kiplinger Agency) Overturns on Runway at Scottish Field From a study of the marks, the investigators said they believed the ship hit the soft ground 20 feet) short of a cement rynway, 200 yards, struck the runway, skidded and then turned over. * 2 2 The captain of the wrecked air- liner, Capt. W. L. Stewart, who had been confined to his room here for questioning by the investigators was allowed to fly to London today to be with his family. Investigators refused to let the gif Dr Small Takes Gifts fo Officials at Allegan | resident's ALLEGAN (UP) — Dr. Kenneth B. Small, Detroit society dentist found innocent here by reason of temporary insanity in the slaying of his wife's wealthy New York lover, remembered his friends in Allegan at Christmas. Small sent Christmas cards to “‘quite a few” friends he made in Allegan during the 24% months he was jailed here after the shoot- ing during the Memorial Day week- end this year. Then he slipped into this western Michigan community the day before Christmas to de- liver yuletide presents to a few friends. Small, who told his friends here that he is again practicing den- tistry in Detroit and ‘doing fine,” | to gave gifts to almost everyone on the Allegan County Sheriff's De- ema as well as Allegan City 4 Injured as Autos Crash in Southfield Four persons were injured Sun- day when a northbound car on Telegraph road turned left at Northwestern Highway and col- lided with a southbound car on Telegraph road. In fair condition today at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital is Mrs. Ma- | linda Dillickrath, 66, of 27620 Euri- _ka, Romulus. with forehead cuts and leg injuries. Treated at the hospital were her husband, Edward, 64, (chest and jaw injuries), Paul Chandler, 33, of 36910 12-Mile Rd, (forehead in- juries), and Chandler’s wife, Doro- thy, 32, (leg injuries). Southfield Township Patrolmen Melton Sackett and William Reed said Chandler attempted to turn onto Northwestern and drove into the path of Dillickrath’s auto. It requires about 14 pounds of air to provide enough oxygen to ‘burn one peund of gasoline in an auto engine. | Wife’s Death Follows Rescue Driver Holds Above Water A ‘S%éyear-cld Williams Lake woman, trapped for more than seven hours with her husband in their overturned automobile near Gallipolis, Ohio, died on™ Christ- mas after being rescued from the wrecked car. Mrs, Estelle Overstreet, whose husband, Robert, held her head above water in the ditch where the car over-turned, died en route to Holzer Hospital in Gallipolis. Her husband, also 56, is suffer- ing from exposure and shock but is reported in good condition. Their car turned over about midnight Christmas Eve in a ditch along U.S. 35. a heavily traveled route between Dayton and Charleston, W. Va. They were | lice on their way to visit a daughter. | Mrs. Homer A. Thurman Jr., of Cedar Grove, about 20 miles from Charleston. Throughout the night-long or- deal Overstreet held his wife's head above water which seeped into the car from the ditch. A passing motorist discovered the couple and called for help. Gallia County Coroner Donald R. Warehime said he placed the time of the accident at about midnight because a watch on Mrs. | Overstreet’s arm was stopped at that time. He said she died from exposure and shock. _ Overstreet said he never lost consciousness though his wife was unconscious when taken from the Mate’s Head in Long Vigil Mr. and Mrs. Overstreet were living with their daughter and son-in-law Mr. and Mrs. Loren Hossler, 6846 Brightwood, Williams Lake. Mr. and Mrs. Hossler left Christmas day to attend the fia- neral at Cedar Grove. No Drinking Drive Nets Three Motorists ‘Three Pontiac motorists were scheduled to appear in snag The rigid policy that ‘drunk drivers go Friday afternoon when police agen- cies and judges ordered the crack- down on drunk drivers to avert possible deaths due to traffic ac- cidents. One of the arrested motorists wag involved in a property dam- bottle of beer and driving his auto ‘at the same time. The third was driving unsteadily, said police. Police Chief Herbert W. Straley today said the strict order would continue, especially this week -and next weekend. “We will continue jailing all drunk drivers as fast as we to jail’ started here | OYSTER RECORD—Paris res- taurant employe William Bley claims. his feat of shucking 100 oysters in three minutes, fifty- seven seconds, gives him the world title. + Eisenhower Will Run i| Again in 1956 - Dutf WASHINGTON (INS) will be aveliaile tn 1908 lex suet er term. Communist Bird Jailed CANNNES (INS)—There won't be any spying from the air over southern France, even by Commu- man can help it. Agence France Presse reports that a Cannes fish- erman, who found a seagull wear- ing a leg band with Russian writ- ing, promptly turned the bird over the police. Pa Redwood trees secrete a poison which kills insects on which many birds feed, so birds are rare in redwood forests. Death Notices for service and interment, COX, DECEMBER 2. 1954, CLAY- ton E., 21213 Ontago St., Farm- Nicholas J, Margaret and Albert T Delors and Sitter Maria Gertrude Fu- neral service will be held Wedne»- day. Dee. 29th at 10 AM at Our Lady of Refuge Chure' vith Rev Fath G. Barto] off'rtat ing Interhient in Mt Hope ! Cemetery Recitation of the j Roeary will be id «6 Tuesday | evening at 8 P. at the resi- Funeral arrangements by Cc. Jd. ,Godha Home, Keego i teh. 26, 1064, Edward, 57! w 6t.. be- d infant som of Samuel £. Barbara W. Lemaster; dear brother of Jerry = Puneral was held this = sear et 11 AM. et Dray- Plains . Puneral ar- rangements by the Huntoon Pup eral Home ee = McCLUSKY, BER 1954, as A, 104 Union Bt., age oT: usband of Mra. Adana Mae McClusky dear father of John McClusky, Mrs. | Rendall He: elon ure i man, nist birds, if one patriotic fisher-| at the Farmer-Snover Funera) - Home with Rev. oe officiating. White Smale will Me im state at Gnover Funeral Maynard GQ. ree Mr. Schields So shad Parmer- SHERMAN, DECEMBER 24, 1054. Roger Dewayne, 110 8. Hospital! Rd. beloved infant of Clarence Cc. and June J. Sherman: napa Tuesday" Dec Mth at 1 Chi Rev. Henr 2 Ne ing. Interment fi Perr Baby Roger wil! le in state at the Voorhees-siple Funeral | Home. STILESKI, DECEMBER 27, 1054 Rose, 24 Putnam = e 68; be. Jeved mother ef ite, Fred Stileckt Mrs, Gertrude Bresier, Mrs. Pearl Benn and Mrs Leona Boomer; dear sister of Zephire DuCedar. Puneral ar- rangements, will be announced later by the Pursley Puneral Home. — DECEMBER 36. Se Grant. 33 E 20 at 2 p.m. at the Plumertelt Pu- nera! Home, Orford, Mich. with Rev wrence Graves officiating Interment in Oxford Cemetery Mrs. Whitmore will lie in the Plumerfelt Puneral bl Home. WRIGHT, y — . _ 1934, 2 . h, Lake Orion, Mich, age Sa; be: loved husband of Mrs. Agnes Wright: dear father of Leslie Jr., roel Kathryn and Mrs. 2 brother of tees Wright and Gienn Ham- Michigan and the Knights of Pythias will have the raveside service. A: geen at the residence. EB. Church, Lake Orion after Sunday, December 26th. In Memoriam 2 IN_ LOVING MEMORY OF THE rake — Alma wil. Dave & killed Dee. 37 3. - ef we f be ones we loved so mae day sometime our eyes Bg Alege we keep tn memory And will link the broken chain. Stil! © when we meet ‘in. Gadly missed by & Cora e amily, Flowers 3 PALE DUNSTAN'S FLOWERS 3484 W. FE 28301 cakiga oare Gi GREENHOUSE, Bs oe nite, 140 East Bivd. 8, FE JACOBSE __ in nN Mininse’ Poti 2 SCHAFER 8 123 AUBURN FE 3-3179 Funeral Directors _ 4 Donelson-Johns FUNERAL HOME “DESIGNED FOR __ FUNERALS” ~PURSELY FUNERAL HOME Ambulance day or nite FE #1211. SPARKS ORIPPIN CHAPEL — 1 Be FE 2-001 WSS Gex Siple FUNERAL HOME Ambulance 5 Mr Piane or Motor He QOUSE EKEFPE R, MIDDLEAOE _®pply 349 Judson. NTECLIONNT REFINED V WHITE = 40 years, general ouse work eed cleaner, must be experienced and good with chil- dren. Piair coaking Live in. $32. to start — have references Manes Women Part Time, Good Earnings Call Midwest 46277 Monday Or Tuesday 6:00-12:00 to arrange : personal interview. NEEDED STENOGRAPHERS AND TYPISTS I:xperience Preferred APPLY PONTIAC MOTOR DIVISION Personnel Dept. GLENWOOD AVE PONTIAC, MICH. NEAT APPEARINO MIDDLE- aged Woman without rmanenot home for full time w = store. Board room = Must ceed. Sdaronens Cee om hts rete tJ ¢ 6 pm of all day RELIABLE WHiTe MIDDLE. aged woman living in vicinity of — — Enginee I. Sapp eit wit on our home. PE 2-6732. peal GIRL MORE POR HOME an_wages, FE +6106 or MIDDLEAGED ) LADY TO care for aged lady. Oil heat, OA WOMAN FOR LIGHT | WORK Help Wanted 8 OPP PPL LLL LALLA ct Lt while — > oe tor work in -home ated in are. of Oakiand County, Will pro vide separate vaiden. | quarters, Light surroundings Kood Mich: | a to Mrs. Nelson, c Teng Rtate Emplerment rvice, _ Wayne Bt. _ Pontiac. Instructions 9 DIESEL _ HEAVY SUNS r not information with =e to arrange convenient Agree 2 we personal or dade i your town address lies to TRACTOR INING SERVICE BOX 3% PONTIAC PRESS dighdesoaaat FNGLISH, READINO, arithmetic, ete “Phone PE 23-5066. Work Wanted Male 10 MIDDLE AGED WHITE MAN wants any kind of work. Mandy with tools connected with meain- tence work. Ph. MA 54-4216. ai song gosh PLASTIC AND floor tile 5-8064. Press office in the following boxes: 6, 7, 8, 10, 16, 24, 25, 29, 36, 37, 89, 40, 44, 45, 47, 49, 50, 53, 58, 59, 63, A, 66, 67, 68, 69, 70, 71, 7S, 76, 78, 84, 85, 87, 88, _Help V Wanted Male « 6 COLD HEADER QPE I ATOR ABLE 10 SEY CP OWN JORS AFT ERNOON SHIFT. GOOD WORKING “CONDITIONS STEADY JOB. WRITE rel ele PRESS BOX ee LS MIDDLE-AGED MARRIED Wan ine ort oD tarm. © No. cl “Wawee fe _John R and Dequindre MECHANIC MUBT, BE EXPERI. enced on used cars. Steady job. _fo0d pay 2 Auburn, POLICE PATROLMEN of ede Btartin 3 JDhetroed vacation. SALESMAN HARDWARE §725 u Ref, Service man Li : = Couple five in Hee 00 up. Clerk, 136 type . $226 up. Janttor — wp Salesman, hy BOND eur W Heron AGENCE ee wa (Dated aw PARM r wae nel oe m ving og oe ~"Help Wanted Female 7 up. Com eter, payrol up. grapher 1 { Short peor po or soleeieiate Son - Wait; oleeee le. up. See 30 BOND EMPLOYMENT AGENC 53% W. Huron af two aren Peds of New Tw School. yom collar eM after ¢ p.m wou AN ged wurvey. 4 hours a irom own, nome Sala = com : & specialty, FE ? AMBITIOUS BOY 18 DESIRES BOX REPLIES car Please pecan MA Ot74) any. e At 10 am. today CARPENTER © i at CARPENTER WORK wi AN Lat ED. _Part time only, OR 3 COLORED Man. PART Bi full time "on farm Griver. Wil) oe on washer rem cite it 4! pe aon D. Dh "wright. modelin, cl [NEW AND GABINET MAKER AND > CARPER. % Kitchens @ specialty. EX-MARINE WHO. HAS JUBT BE. come @ father needs job badly Consider work af anv kind FE 5-7277 EY P©RIENCED STATION ATUEN dent, truck driver farm work ar mecha nic FE ¢06y) LIONT HAULING basement cleaning PLUMBING ne, WANTED Reasonable. FE 5 PLASTERING | cat * eatiind odd jobs. OR 3-4437, Work Wtd. Female i ATTTC AND PE 437M IPONINGS IN THE HOME. GIRL for r_ baby sitting PE 6-147). fRONING ‘DON® IN MY HOME. 5-400 LapY | WANTS WORK, hight, PE $-0619. - MATURE WOMAN WANTS RE eeption work tn office. Filing, — a. and bookkeeping itnepoomAPRING “TYPING BEC. Tetarial service. EM 3-2842 WASHINGS AND IRONINGS DONE in my tw E 2-77. DAY OR ome Work uaranteed WASHI’ GF ANP TRONINGS AND Soe" Pichur and deliver, FE WANTED IR TRONIN INGS, $3 A BUSH- WIDOW w v al “SCHOOL AGE EON, wishes housework in exchange for ogy board and co care for . Repty box 118 Ce Building Sei Service 12 POLL LOLO LD LLL LALLA” BLOCK coal CEMENT BRICK [ BLOCK CEMENT WORK and fireplaces. FE 2-2668. BASEMENT WATER PROOFING work done from inside. Guer _anteea. OR 3-9501. OUR SPECIAL’ basem ents. driveways. seston BUILDING F. H. A. mancing. Modernizing. re 4-5470. PLOOR SANDING eG Calj Bill's. FE 28 CARPENTER WORK. ALTERA. tlens. modernization. also custom _bailding, OLive 1 2732. RESIDENTIAI, free estimate: mn NDING A ND im. year’ 8 @ rience. squipment. soho Te Taylor, +0424, try reromenea recreation rooms aod Pree t rE PLASTERING NEW AND REPAIR FE 2- 2835 evenings. WABON & ‘CEMENT WORK. FREE estimaes 1 Wo guaranteed A. J. Wenste? _& Son. OR 3-0402. FLOOR LAYING . Phone FB R G SNYDER | sanding and finishing. 5-093 WE SPECIALIZE IN NT. Call for estimates, EM 3-4878. in DRILLING 4 AND @ IW. Business ss Services 13 cLecubers WALL CLEANERS, =a Walls And window preg oe el 28 E. Pike. PLUMBING AND D HEATING, H. oe & 8on. FE 64-3767, on eiaat TREE eno - RE- mova Ph 53-6503 OR __ 3-2000. A & B TRENCHING Footing Water tile. Field tile, FE 5-906) ALL MAKES OF factory “rained PERS Co. ‘on ene _Fence St. “APPLIANCE SERVICE We service all makes of —— ad an eat et onan aaetenee a pes am. is 4, Oakland Ave, PE 23-4021 iFlee + Sewers Cleaned ™ hr. service. No results, no charge; chemically extra cost, Roto-Re Sewer Cleaners at es see SEWER K CLEANING ee ee Serv, Fined ni PL. ~ SAWS MACHENE : PILED _ Manley Leac ante? os field. the pean tanks for cae instalied. Phone rE $0028 days, PED TREE TRIMMING AND '» Pree estimate. PE re Foot Specialist 15A PO EPR PES FRE ee ORM. Ca R. A. A. KANTER, FOOT SPE- ett 3% 6 Geginew St. FE Furniture Refinishing T6A PPLE LLL MAM AOL LLL LL Oe Pe REPAIRING. _tialty, FE Laundry Service 18 ER APIO LALLA AAD CURTAINS, NYLON ALL MA- — expe : latest eq near Tel-H autifully finished poll mg Phone co 7 Poo P'“ILY CAUNDR . neon Pontiac Laundry. FE 8 ae WEE WA 122 E_ Pike &t “Landscaping 18 TREE TRIMMING AND pameow ing Free estimates, FE 1-6622. Moving & t Trucking 19 MAULINO BAND. GRAVEL = Ph EL time, any place. te HAULING. A ae GHT AND ig Th a tiRab>ian hewed, FE HT HAULING AND M bey eel gd OR 34774 any- time, ~ O'DELL CARTAGE Local and ioen_8 Moving, REDUCED RATES ee to serve Smith pring FE +1 rn. RUB- sypoEn Sh VICE —ABHES, light trucking, PE 4607, Trucks to Rent THUCKS TRACTORS edhe ko ~ "7 Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. Ovgs Daily includ Sundays dee 7 re i442 ‘ous MOVING AND 8TOR- 2. ents for \. American Van vans anywhere in United root ad Quick service. FE $-6562 M1 ON, Perry, INCINERATORS CLEANED. .A: Asa me! eae hauled. Clean up. Painting & Detorating 20 1 DECORATING PAINTING and wai paperimg Call for este mate fk 40d A-| PAINTING PAPERHANGING. Paper removes Estimetes. PE +o0la PAia fl NG AND WALLPAPER- inn «= Whine UA 63807 of FE 23-0136 Painting, Wall Washing Pree estimates. Reasonable. FE _ 22106 - — -- ee PAINTING PAPERHANGING WALLS CLEANED TUPPER, OR 37061 PAINTING “AND PAPERING Mason Thompson, FE 46364 WOMEN WANT WALL WASHING. painting JR 32284 or OR 3-000, WALL WASHING AND PAINTING. _Free estimates, PE 6-2211. 21A Phy siotherapy DAY & EVE MASSAGE a, apy & spectal foot technique Eim @t FE 42861. GRADUAT# MASSEUR. EVENING and weex-ends Home calls only. _FE 21214 Television Service 22 ead ys? pol TV SERVICE FE ue > STRAKA BERNIE S RADIO-TV SERVICE = MOTOROLA Bales & —— south Bivd, E. OUARANTERD 7 TV REPAIR ANY MAKE 44-0738 CON- pow: 8 Radio @ TV tm = Parke ~~ HOME, SERVICE cals MITC HE ELL’S 5 TV 48 EF. Pik: FE 23-2671 _ Typewriter Service 22A TYPEWRITERS RENTED Mitcheil's 123 N Saginaw. St. TYPEWRITERS AND ADDING Ma- chine bg Subme Expert work. pan and Office Sup- _ply_ Co, | _ Lawrence. Upholstering 23 THOMAS UPHOLSTERINO 34.8 TELEGRAPH PE 5-8888 SLIPCOVERS. DRAPES & BED- 8. ner material FE 5-5797, ae MATERI- FE 5- 1937. DAY General als. Bendin se 8 CUSTOM UPHOLSTER. Sea 174 Cooley ps Rd. EM 1. free 24 LOST: BEAGLE, FEMALE, VICIN- ity Bald Mountain Sunday sight. : ze ce re ge lem, oes wane es IN OR NEAR store and cash, Reward. ve papers §-0371. ea a uineiin oe ere go neuen ia: ie DA aa cesta wri | <2 Age ae . ors ie ry . a: ___ Lost & Found 2 a ¥ a 8 24 Ww " _ ae i anil — ‘eri ee tuain . . oe UP x 5 y 8 L ‘ . EB WANTS lon 31 Ww : 4 - %» | Stray y"yarms, ont 6-8 td. , / aS reais Wid, Contract, é : BLACK A MA 62435, Watertord BE! LI ntracts M - ; AN PONT tows | S » me ioat tl inity of AND > wae FOr 1AC Pontiac F TINGS tes. 3 32) _TH N ens School Ov EE E88 "| properties Seis W ‘CAR ee in FE RD — “= R ss WANTED of NIVAL PONTI ace aad re OR 8.30 INTO : RIDE . Ye oy K comm | AC. + 1 cash. R rE iN’ Ld c Ww sHu nauf, R ercial | PRE aE ces) kta ae cars semmere | ¢ Ss, 7 ady’s Fed vic BCA TIAL ANTED— _OR + Vanw AND FE i MO} ip ‘ : LOST erals INITY s LES, OR F Ww elt, 2 oom 2 | by D A 1 from Bearas sich coe go AGINAW OR TARE” G3 RES “Wanted Real Estate 2 ONTRACTS. | | _ Diek Y. D [= oft mses oe fold) ~~ Wed. rE Sout EO. EP Rea ee Hwy . po oe 2 Turn EC \ wi pam q of R Ni 5 86 i. | List OA I : = ed mon Bro STOLEN n J a N _ sta if oes epee us ne Lees k apa g ie 32h : Turner | Comes AER arai = ea! at page Us ; f ae r = : . FE ene’ , cApire on = d itgs. 3? BAGINA = LAK Farm. i ge Me cogretom n 7, 19 Se Lost: nieather 7 ant ASO s WIL NAW, EA amo. | OAKS Homes: 54 1 PAI = ewa w 8A mod NE -~ L B PE i. GEO. . rt ~ 38 | Sua. FE e OF La s eee meetoe per oR L te Woot : BoME. x A Fors . = . FE ited DY" : - LO oe IST : _! Ba ie = __ For Sale Houses 4 “ , Lost cien. * ox aecern Highest P PE 40861 cies pee LAKE she Fp ig en Ho a i 5 , * » 7 . > “a a picked “up | Sotumats rices Pai Ph, Pont ckINNEY. serres i hb $750 43 ~ oe ry ’ row. eat PER mae aid UNI palerserte Se tT eed =r Pull beth \ F . r py -Alglecrif ee ag | 38 0S Sean ve tes | Ho Bs, ouraing Soe dec Be er _ 3 ner FE urs Bt ite 4 we LIE FREE “pa wood ew o -f : 2-500 Giseno ce and merce H otel Roo cra aoa ply hothe. idee ae 4 H $0 He. ose ¢ urn ~ 5% st ARGE: ATTR Yes, ein Pias ses. 45 _Hobbies & St i srtbroken boy. ON F , MOR rir 88 | ie auaven wenn tet ‘Clove ple a HAVE Y¢ | “| SF a) - BA —~ & $u boy. % FARMS oO TGA Ee 5-618 | pooner xt STUDIO wr 39 lot. to soapy full | . in E YOU . bok ! : . ; CKEN ipplies see Se P BU GES oom clephone. =rrcunds- DRY C ED Boing a met you 8 or Sale H ‘ for ¢ STOSE, s 24 aisal fe 100 8 bURY ‘ "Daily og a TY $1 R y C too. eo and 6 Has 7 down % you saad) cauteast louses 3 by number 18 E 244 BD. it oe I AN f Ther. = | Fetes = TV sleeping rae Ae — vedatems bs would Ot 43 ‘ tie 8 _D. 3 rep rom at po Ww. io 3 do FANE r{ me ent tik ; j oun: Tal eer utta bie CHARLE Lm from | na a rien NE IT A | ks Nood wad vorsiee every = ‘al My sal) poe! copr ome? Ba cory Bes A - | . IN ian 1 69 E en Soctet E : nd per iks Gal R “ of AY Park | - Pp ot! trie 2 plu as rpg ae D : paintin, a P potte u pa y. 171 S rp all hoy a cent, We N) IT at. e.. (0 ‘ Cc rary rena, Put t Pi burnin wat mbing ull b bed « al craft. “PAInTIN Y- ‘ames F ew 78 Te quick os Geaperatety Bagh 80! GO! Z MOT Tosca ees 1 = CKI. E rice only —, sie ca Den Pctapege heat 83 saree IN , . 3 ing Taw a abive p Teens | Bye SI ae legraph | and cour in Hhetings | mG EL Rove | aa” RK R << -oposteigas! uble com Sdn forced cd NCO . __Hac Teague dey SD iii | the ‘re have ¢ Acti Seas cae pat ge Bes eh Palge ALe FE ee st FAT vagal ee ante look ME cee carne Hd eee ei om sper ie aa el a AL TY iar anid, oe a ving, ‘d Paint BY evens poljsh - _Mr. . Enoce FE tract i A ce Call nod, 1 A? t wo piece 143 fe 4 price § subd’ on le: setiect sink now b © pl us an inv j sats Bone “Fi ine std cial ot ts “A JOHNS _— Naar Motor “Lodge st yee a ERBE! en: AT bol pat “howtyet 3 . PONT TLLU ture .R Ee [NSON } oe se bp a me _ | es R Mpeliing ADA 100 - TIAC ‘AMS tr EO ask > N 10 orm e pena $7 Bide $1,006 Pon TC Tag | 382 AMS a ou rike svn wl 82 nl tor | FE _R TE Eo os 92 7 $1,000 ¢ entra ua C . MS R : tructions ICE 1W s. 0,42 171 > 4.25 eal Ir L . Ha t 000 Whi ranc c¢ Lak _DA Ol Aub ) year 7 <r a Sne® or b im O04 S 253 tor t's PO elles corr Ll e o Rd VIS oo . ‘ peed Sun eseae = cll tet ager ited S_.T 533 W _ the an NTI Pools JAC ore Pp’ : 2420 ave : oon eve mo: re Oty lan a ~ . Telegra EE ot A K° ERSC OR 3 . Center. oe erate gars Son per sctiea| Bor: graph EKLY R. Me re LOVE avper SoMER. Tee PE 0. pore ay leenee 1, all ra iR LA e UB LM ED Fi ee oe pane Com we A. yOu Mr dob tea, Fast | é $10 -Y RATES a Agere wa\ posers PALMER OH at 9 13, BEDR re Se | et ee ae HiNSON, Re ia voUR tT “oROR Wc re poe and - eege, Hares aa! eae eee | Bie eos i oon ‘$21.20: hiewor” N I < : U : a nH OTE : 5: 2408. 2 RANC E map . R: if a Ms. elec ce Bi fog r au i fe ate case TO Gi naar 2 Tel B33 ator J as Cee —— irae pa 5 For Col _ “and Tre sche ae ‘CH HOM “= woe “tor “at Sat moan ft 76 50 guarar eas a e i ee IN UI O : Ph wk room _olor - MA pia wow m Li E 8 a st oun eo aoe sist teed. onstr ovie| 1 tems legraph {\ RS TE ' stairs 8 & ed P fi ce b all and ving 600 A aes soe reels = cvcamera Pace MOsT ph Rd. 45 ae RIGH ane = L AUB FE & pa ps Aor un eople light bare to dining com with EMB . 4 with é beaut}, com RARTIF cae 8 | Casi ae see & YOUR eee T, Realt 1237 cooking aoe BURIN “Gl=No aireet_ ie , sbace bacement we een. “8k IRREE & G ° ' ’ ca cents H FOR | 2816 43 W.~ rtrid rev cel or A and Roo: Ww Cc o D Ez » ip he ead w door x U Union - GR — Fr} pega ard lo Jv LAN Maree Real, FE ’ uburr octneren eck Willa: Oo iY aa — 2 y to ith Pull | niv L EGG i 38 — 3 with oui 6 _OR 3 anw ND urco WIL: eal E 8-8 E $-0441 La HO rige part ie on wn Pay kes rport mo recre a a Lal ake 9050 1 Pelee et _+135 eit c L ata 3783 if) Bom of : ; ratio ment low Me co! ve ati ke Rd. , Bock pi Te oS MEPDIAE Siad Dine ey dein hme In SS hy ee He ee ee woes Rarmaet nit se fet ee Son FOL FE sn $2 £ D mond CAB e Hw ac om EDR = ie “y wwe, ne. ‘ospb re | V 230 Oo GU pt? ymen yme 4k Lak ‘corner ar IN HAM ten 150 Pad K. Foe ee eae y.| all gees OOM Pies : service. 1 coking to EL ronvil [eon ro 1M rent SO EPHE Nota RAPT 53 1CE. AD: i or R $14,000 laket he c AL W certai ¥ it in es g tor T vitie oom H New §143 MA N ’ ivilege RO! sate. a8: . 1056 W 2330 Te equity YOUR ga bra. ront aa of P L emble ainly WEEK ber bescl aot ho a $500. ¢ 132 Re 1919 omes, FE 5- Gass wisi {. Fl a7 A acta Bets, ‘es maasnziig racks, co! Leck mplet tm your a nest an ey ae y—for do vi =KLY and ‘hotel chole: 0. Dt terse _Ch M-15 “La Laon -LWOO Ine: wood $1.95 & ra OMMERC I Lak on ing r soft City ho n the am isit RA i Lak e of OW _Charges { FE 38 Lak ~ D 37 . oto oye As- arta haa ,R oom wate me _ = sit the . $ e. 3 N 3 3844 O eR = 8. Assorte oe win i aay ee cia stg akel — alana carted 5 _Rent Apts, Furn with a Se ee oo ROCKO oS eg ae . 4 Open A soos i ~ - : ss 5 O' {Role _ Notices eae Se geo ment interes mt hal Chay | pts, Furnishe bowing average!” BOONE tim REL licen ri J | Estes "spe , r 8 pm. cash rest. front i lot in ba _wele FUR ed ver enough | www R 126 D se ecoD- room m pecial. Eliza’ auD & P t WE WA F home trade on se- 3 ome 3 NISHE 33 age!" en 50 HO on- ; i pale ates tee beth Tink. wea ersonals 25 nm don TE . Phone ol ry re 3 ROOMS ae ED APT. eat: 3| Rent H : + BRICK ee os 19 Cass Bite RSE sam VILLAG cris " _ ely Lake NO elt soned ae A 6-3628 e 2. R rnish AT = D a ouse e F R _——— 40 JOY YE ance rick arw é E- ea. nd se e. tw full _vox_and Weste AIDES ‘ask P = ae LE peer SS eunw. wae, s Fu me E B ee Ae brick 3 > ‘ek nenayese men ae any ‘and W a FE K F Bee con! x P STA _ence < 1 Bto TH, U paced wl rn rnish 208 Ve 8 6-2655 LDG a 7 2b x = e Rd a ent, tt! edroo has 1 $2.5 e" car en Comes Gin metere +0529 FOR BoB" mace new RO 7 EE 2 = DULT! well, TIL- ildr NTE: ed Vv PAC 230 ake, edroo OUN . tall fivee be m o lar 3 00 DO gare ent a ‘ rn riz To befo. fo: or BLE ROO! 8. tie __High en Ww RIZ. Le 35 iéx60 81 oorhi Pp «20: x. Alum auto. m h DL ing. repl. th mes ge fa rick WN ge. “ friend's ae ae aud? you Bu MAHAN Fond Potr “MM? bu MS A 20% =F io wey ane 5 GOrTAc =; 3 STOR! 3. PE 3 x50 a anrerae T beat a > LAKE Bieesees ace, abe pl aT base: enn a treme w a 2 ad lealer BUY I N. te. : urn Hi ND LO U8Eu e 15 RE peas anode harde. eat at W iv.) ° ezeW hea nott aste se- Thi bun rame est a Confidentia, ee W NEEDING Bey se sents | COMeLe cal! us anh olgets. BATH. NE =| ‘AND APTS ie Dixie an Mig- J E AND 0x50 QUIRE aoa Sade nttlat atkins ecie cue “Complete. mors a is ope so (IS bedroo Special, wily afi Ox. Heal Galvation ‘pote tL INSURE w RVICE AI ¥ JUN ¢ : fur ND 3 RB me Vag entra at as clark. cca psec one on et Hei oe ORS yon auBune ie Re 2 aes oe crane ae $2066 condition. © years 0 yard, N. hd none __furelab ROOM A er ce. gency R oni at rE ORt mi R L v ‘50 : 900 st rge F DOW __and Boo reaaee on_ Arm it @. list UR Es ed. OOM AI 6. F EGO. piangreots ues 2363. and 1116 3-1391 le | coedera incoln One MO’ Open Oe es cor- red’ N and | satay Bee aes, A Sr cheedir cag eocies | a eB =| eae peor i 2 ae Glas eee Ie gfe ere Se ee Sei a rn Ele 38 R ° reed arbi ow. : 35 ance 8 R w NT. | 2 Ju EB Sa . | Lea en RO —- _Meit 0 ‘as? YM. oom. ea en ne OR W jec. audi EA ba he an rp = M e Suit IVA y 168 ne ED’ ie H FE s each ¢ 00 it L r] in 1 ft roo: ar St. . We WOM __deale vO cobs lake ve mes We ropert 3 ech TE MOD ptr ‘Ad cDROOM. oO .~-$100 10 B halt MS or wi eb: AND $16 g hous: or lar age ew _ Confide otvise AN } = ™ | 107 i ame oe veer tote with, one a sion ae for BATH oe saa uses NOTH M ) Peace | acre. zit ee Ton tee ton: dienes =. ge ta fidential. Maer comiach re Li) Ev ve eke your leges with pleaeg _88 Cad 8 MO & oupie 1 CABIN each ~*~ 43 ING oves st CRE se. FE 4-405 own pie! 8 OUR mily ered KEEDING | Con Murog MBE sieges "We “wil” oew |i mouMS hs DERN ae aeeie TN ney eIVILIAN sY =RESC rere Near st Mike's 2 oft ine sail pet = aes Bw orisre lace ioe re ig oe COMPETE Aeitie ‘NI = poigem et ou Tat] Ba SCENT LAK tarag re el ar z : : gf . RN i uplh e cLY t 3-518 pp seme rick 150 Die en Bull bas LAKE e. Re acd: I r month ay er ata. Bi APITOL. ASON FE 3-008 ;_3-6144 ard “preety ROO 2 CHIL 8M je pr a. Pi Y Mc 3 th rox ent, du t. Oa al baséane E ay and nq onth 3 rvice NG 78 W. Hugon SAV. ED ie “lcd _foom M8. ‘Pontiac CHILL ALL, re pes ODERN. — ing vgs miocth | plex b lorat Bales me 0 $26 500 ed st lar uarte 21 Ag ak, Ra. Vins LA IS] Rd. P 7 gomy Ce “BAT DREN house MO d FE ent N On Mode month or ome | _ Driv ed, loors eet au 80x fro JA reet ge 2 rs a = FE 5-0 LIS ae ND ING .__ Pon ROOM ouple H. Ra. onl MODERN. 2 entrance. Se 1 open dell oll heat. Drive Pho ore, $11. oe cas beers car TYP w ST ice LOAN re need 3S W rE rye entran FUR _only. “¢ ae Hw y, Dt co ~FURN . CUS Mt. Bivd, m dal udes eat. ef none 37 Cl "500 te atic ar bed K BL : - > aN. _FE AN, wy. aie mmod RNISHEI 8TO) A Cle oe 1 ever ane "E. linto rm two ara room vD Mrs. aD Ra bcc bbe need iS \ FE cae es ANT 280 Call ce and ae rgertel 6M Flo iti ISHED tn M Ar men wo 0-7 y ‘esti. rife cobalt! ge Ly . Burnes. FE d. f mM \ « te . TEL OL 1 ALL ral, es ED go BU ich 3. een pm . -0681 ne Sw epi Cen rick La! Byer wai POR SUPPLIES. = as TED. i Ea eae ah ire 1D Lele Vinevood “Cat sia “Dine nen as mt Pine TE pam, [JOEY S I sone nth ee Boats. Mark tnveste pe ty ue a you poe igs 4 ot |) ROOMS 1 ROO! vee | WALL =< uOUSE I amieg 2 oe eee ae pasion one stat Vv ARE Tt or ay, ~ FO! oM a eataesen y rsona buye pes of C req who r cal 30 Paros Ms MY | Me ALLE! aft BE. 7 of ng e Livin me room creat @ ROO! FE e ery aA 136 BR Fr and tie es FE R ark. our ged 7 posed ates -. a joa mati PR +1 faernponr loa er & 1430 feet il ekeeeure: Pu Gace la M 3-9504 nied Moy - ae FROWN & sER 2-681 SUPPLt eq cau Aloe | <P? ca we bere FY c_ 8 IVA psc ero KE : sen’ ese camee S , Seeeea eoeees oe em ctiv eater YR com = 4, ES. Lal uit rT] Al eer AU ve av ROO as he TE, ee ed c 1103 ia e k ure and aped as ndr. UBE wail. Side e b ber uron N, R : LJ VICE +9 M P ee 4 pay 0 nt L well ash = Ms at. BATH Detro Ti es 3 ALL hed iteh: living’ 32 Lak 1 em ¥ TOO Ww sveehe 5 ome Co- eal ’ the ercial, ark. AU on € v 264 D. for vate P aod bed M si ccomeas 2 ft. Say} ot act tank ITH Ps r lo op alto & comm nian 26% Ww oe a well “oc tor yesme Huron HAMM socetes Fata ee aE Heevet 360, pla et bath, Eerie rade ee egg ino oe smnen. ne for 2 poppe G Real Estate ae ; nmercial 5-786 FE 54- H ‘ {AN ated 1 Bt ON ot W erial sof ea conven LAKI 6-0086. m furn- clos va revol dou in- Lak. s Edw enso! and to Aare teday w & eded more ath te E 0 ' R . EDOM mito | MMON 5 ND cs hagdd i “automa water. PRI- ved niences 8 rage. bgt nom Ped pe e_ Man, —s. school nion ay eke ee -calyel 6 Bec: W xch. : - an ed 6-7R8 La = E went D ves Beans ROO! oe patra oe ae Seokly opty bedroom Mo full n 108x250" atta razsbe EM a Bus OTT gl mt. A ee uce i SS oeTRADES. ressane ED. NORDM as | ate mF URNI y FRE evil Lak 0 gamete coms bower, tation "call tached ee voues SAL ree gag OTTER T see A to Try RED ov’ om: rty fi es f = 1 _Lake NISH. gil Ww e D y unf ly age. wer " ‘all subu ond i: : O LEO a \ . Pp ? ER es jor or 4 RI 3 : Dec® ED allea v ‘u furni $18. CL. ry rb er- Bri RI F 8 KE wakes” CON! WE paym for sub sm. R REA MA ROC A eae rnished shed 50 . ARKS OW. an } ck iE rm LE 5 Indi cafe STIP, IGHT e ent ine: urban aller OME ESTA AN Ble OM na PART- Re e » ee or 54. OL TON }0- kiten 3 bed: Is R spo sa RIC widual © ec ATE: ? wit 5 ome or et _ 0, epin APT . Wa T- nt tak a OC _ en, r t nd | 21CK ive Bp, cee ace as seis __ re Pegi HURS _ Reet Homes me eat ae eae ee mene ginette "Ve ae inte ae bath on high atl K—NORTI Se once . nea 8 M. r N D eee nt 4 teh ea expat at oil e mote’ kai riv ani arly) si x} IKE: 1 ' Suth seed +4 * kR . aed, pbspaand dtr ear Bontia and 8 Pi oom ST mo. ROOM urn, Cn et pant iiitk road w er h neat teen at Pl lecirgs ; lege 2 ae 2 gbtly | a Seltene E's .SI ert a 4131 vais ag. AN * cal Am bere _FE # is 7L HOU 5 RC bath RIVA house. a 8060 co PLL LPS 36 he Neat, ith d livin, 2-bed it» $2 eate ng e full linds. in eakfa 3, ho orchard acres i~ edroom room SECT » DE a d Stud VITATION . i we NCH 1 us : ee ¢. Th SE 0M TE E | 3 BEDR MIs TTAG aan oases e inin @ roc ~ 700 Pul utom base. roo: sed tr rosa eae , Aiea Cake. and 10ON ~ od napkins. TIONS. 67 RS HO ms —, elma M per Low! ENTR j ile OOM Clar! E $50 aa ae rs Jectric seca’ wiLLie a est atic hot Bes tt te ewig ae aa’ tring cuted to os SS toes ok —— _ WW $7 50 Hu co-o! M F Large TRA M. OR ATT mo E En ote (ANCE i_E er N 210U Kaeo PE er Pa lot. c Ww ce vr LIS B ce $1 hot e it fare Mi poren 4 itche! Ving + fast to e aseme OOrs . with a If you INI a Huron GRE ron OOF soporte! lax ADES 6 Bisoot: Sons Fe % URN. “eer ev SE. L. = nsu moa ior A bey at pees por vay Sed 3,650 | G — Beas tea cant a plaste ing are EBT t_servic EN TE Ts m rty fo es fo ; mn ee a APT. $00. \ MM sot ete AKE P' hr pelanrtiad incl as at E'AVIN Roodevelt» Hote al . Full 4 bed- T. $750 Per Onened, red da your having ? vice. | “"H (ON “AKI ERS eayen for . pod ama: See one oe : ROO j Childr ee ch RIV- rest and nape ‘ $47 age G 81 tel bsmt YC own. fered lo- L) Snoutoan trou Cc EDQTRS FOR E “Gri 41557 ulty “incomen. | lier, ¢ TTRACTIVI PE #1 Ms ee: bee steht 3 eZ NEW 2 aot con ine bul’ ATE, FE_ B IU’ IT8 for Ms abo’ RS. AN its ible m ar ae poets L FIC ail pat ieee aa tare far ity | roo apa E 8T ae AND | Ba bloc some BEDROOM Spa 1? cent Tre auothee MOS8 2-8532 ere i LL FIN va- __sbov~ Onc! IN CR: see eet. Since ho AK E| * parti e arce. ree mas, ma rtm sag 23 5 b ks No OOMS_ cio RA ern it ing auto I om 3 AN IN . Ir Oa ic ED us e mes AL. Eg) bt en 8 . ¢ do room T ent: 10 12+ lock porth ba Ms. | fire us NCH = ohe b “SEL z es. be on Dp co ND AN land 41% iT to- | 7 1925 - Lot LL gation cone _— rade won|) =. hestars 3. A KITC _OL Fan toma e bof th | 1 plac livin HO lege ith rick oil t., ellen Lot drm on this NT P a ae sod Thewier PDEs wn cutee wand rental REAL j re) R nie 5 cal calisty epemn ~~ weeping 4 ROOM. He ons sc ghee auburn | 7 se “pearoor f, room. i ou, re ny jcarveting coe walls clecation ranch ' lan ae Fea: - ae 6 , Bald How Ood ward CE R RICE RE es «(182 Troms S& ua Bo 2 dloeds Pech service Pa y de HOUsE ‘ooklyn R. rge ar —_ oe Pgs Y 81. 500 ake mod ute with pa ea All an ype | mately ng w wl a ; knat — M i 5-77. D H , SO sou ard and he ehiid Soreca ONL sub. | of wood ached le bi 2 ae 690 L Gee od ee he : k of plas ex) 2 fo 175 ith ith cellent ie aeon tall PE S47. CAN ] 44 Rings f L uron_ COOP | N Ritz perl ar accents _aft welcom N LAKE. -. SS “ao tan s arsce _ +2383 Th DOW ate er heal tioned aa yauch Sretanes: approxi- eae — ligt mun {ST P wee TZ) N ee scceee thly |S er 330 OR Sain naden 7 ® sciis weal a win vies Epoeod “oe cater. Just $3 rec ful} fv. ch type vergreens. — mie FU ara oun after rest Pri ore Fe ING MBE {OT espn tine: span ate toh! fa EW. rablc tara vic. N ON 2 Fai “Sust Bie ara) teegan — tage OR PRESEN 2 | ia) pAbptclaatd 5 \ RS BASEX EL Ho wil HO 32157 imperil term pcre ed Flw MILY $325 so Ales ca firepl mae feat Sefer . ek IT R Du a land ces ta bus VA ? 41567 a “MED FE o- | F 4 seil USE nth 1 | INC 5 ban aes | J ow hot | and rpet ace eatu ba’ ee plastic ani cumee bai ioPRSAur, ANTE D manatee —- 8.0404 |" eH SE FOR REN | plus, 3uroom o= 7 John B plus | She screens, ‘iiving tunoe, 838 Vaite’ pe x NIC get “ co A IsH rae vO : r MR A own T OR ent m 3200 = if ed . ch e room rms Oren Eves ileum coe as Wtarestee wr rae OREE toe Realtor, rast, ah 2 MEL" Frid AND BATS "payment occas ‘sn nso ! A. drwin oe att & os . oF co = ad = A alt jeder APT ; weber <r B 42 BEI thre yan Umseeds tex F s 101 fees ioe : racers & 4 mi 2 tool ore toes eceniys ee ements LAKE GF 2740 Be RooMs Mona | * si er ranted tit ti ce | OR BETTER ene Nat ee _ fie, So wet Be naar _Lanion 1sTMA E: _ £ e $8 nt, n roo: art - ve Fe A Y 0 N: o g og ena teres Devo mm) a sin sR Flees | ie oe ue kat se coe | eee mate and | Ranch Ope ne: Arya ia tee |] espe beat TF, av —— e LH r 2 re U ; ‘ ov Ww ne toma pri yo a ape E . 21804 i= E R noe iS ettlem ™ ae ae URED cat Ne een, ee as refrigerator | na edge | ee 2 peoncon LAKE M WELL iNsuRE E FE ‘and wa e —__WOod ERCE | THERE leges. First APARTME ren. |6. OUSE Press 1 cell * teres ntage am | all M ho oter 2 pid f brick | ria A ing a ITH : E Ir” in moat nt a nt RU werd RD CE . ¢f106 J» floor, es woo _ MO! Box all RA stigate in on | rd ms gar irepla | r lot utoma rea larg : — DUC y Oat erect! fast 4 YE 5-T144 EM La locks Labora with beat o DERN | Mm | Yo ce Gan mg eles “re 818: leges poapret carpets hivi TIR yco our land oe eee RI RS! Rin, 3-44 RG ‘tro shing ITH La 456 1. F NPE! w yNE ay ‘4 LA we cesh a is | 62.1 ehrod earl Me gee REA in ee OVE EE ie oan on yo! hasta tt gs he: ule PLE enta ¥ ROE wou FIRED E | Phone Huron Fl ‘aoe SAI io CS cee iy Ee , aad dey Pecegac yeah ; oom con RWE MeCull meter or mty Pepe a = noe 3U YE re Pa r leirgercas wn. \- room 4@ ROC Hur D BTEAM Co-o' re} a Re: enced peele P li Band lake dry- | rare co. Itty. as eae 1GHT ] Hough pod hela Sb can Ne en RS eae pe, a 7. eee te MH EAM Serailve ev, alti _ | pers mie wie ARK | 6 IXC ie priv | ns REA op wl bie) Sage ? J. Cc gh FE ray cial 24 GAY aPO ! tties FU ‘alt ND rv} ard fidre ous ve R 103 a c and ot W om s ROO: nC | 1 Est LTO eat FE dual nutritional Baa * E Le AYDE on tlds: ments ieee oT CASH a ite cn ROOMS ye’ Fonte bane tee! ~pep. | RAI = of, OR pen oo vate te * sons 2g : Rate nt | Open Ee 2 ee TORS | _ u | e alt a e co me te a : e M 5 NCH T i eh ena, rene ones ae Orie rt Cots ' NE 15 t Seige on Realtor | Pg oi | Ber core na | SEE eee so | MAN TH Blatt aogier cece ape ae net ie ee 7 MORTG: " or UYER oo Hey Hollow L CABINS. CHIL- oa0e2. cant te one oats OF = PE SuELI — Rvs cal na Full price oe Privileges, tor $60 -— Ost toe WwW = 8 2 & MS IGAG Eves are | GAYLO 10 Mop iow M veryth 8. CH Pai : i oF _MA 5-600}. 1104 L. a i " call erful ‘pre a dow s on L $60 — OFF BRA , 67.88. ry cre OR 3AGES LAW ook! .OR a5 ote in 1L- ARTLY F c ROOM GOO = Mrs ler I Ey ak tC NC Wtd. Ho sw. “Huron poraical er, ¥s ema, RENCE ee fora 3s RM Writ jae Dial ARTLY PURN ee n Soee Se 10 ce | VAN Ww - Eo NCH : usehold _Huren, B. - loot a Y Ww of oe _F inte. M ch a aKa rE _ ra a clear ACRE der. | 21° et . nia. fro . 5-3 to err: URN _ us td anAGE F ; | t fies 3 ES ] FURN Goods Equitabie D. CH: MSR ge. me c mew _ sane Asa J ROc _ +7550 have Mreicome. 6 OTE be SS Fy eae Ue: ca rE {URNITURI pa EB id pm EWLY DE ee Ss — some, tee ets ne F550 top ho: “NE 1, NT =< Re T bat COR c. | ME stov ok. fam ir ants <p: a-: 1 a me I E ~ I ' — Pik al Es! we h FE AT i= tr EDI e F - 8 onta. a i en an EF ( sell jollar of od "E 1 “AS Tele Bt tate >» ROC E + ED 2. activ ATE xz THE OFFI Ke and 1) Sox Eve: r FES ES — i for pou, na pEY IF you have r roe a MAITAN Betas re ease Netea 4 Dw APT ao 7 ROOMS ae rims PonsEssioN IE“ MACT A. JO fe oren $24,- cooperate core e 5.2564 North PEERS R i outr ° tate cry ec mn! } Pee At bath RIV eed ho ath ‘ “Dp oe INS 94 ze unda Sid arene m7 ight ar | ee Sees eae me oo IAS NLT RIVATE — a oe ION ae 3 IDAY” NSO al Es ye . de PE ete. PONT! Secs | r clark ~ aap 6 enone BL Rent (Telegraph EN- A requ legen) Lox ed air | 3 BE NSON sats Weck Newly = ty rk ar eh fe em AN WY en aph y dec equire $65 eater: DR a 6 _R fom oe a Sees | Unlim Sab Pita ee nacrion. eas ves! Jo Pe oi ae Pf oa Be Reslnc | ee Na” eat ww eere tu | : } al toi aon te. Herat os BX EI IOS news SLC i) vel - fe =hial ech celleat) ca FE ure NTIAC 8 aitin, ie limi ae r year t to will © We r pal tho: DROO rnished n | po S| ox egr : rea shy Lk tapera? nt oc om, Let 47881 buyers cs &. or bu } ed — dealt of ae ; oo | ett o. Le Mi. ] WN P O50 e raph I aad ey eres er ondle De. ae Fete Meta ted $1 ae ns] fae bt == in K. rw pons rive Me m a [= om, tan fees LET oa oA ae “A meee Aira call Mr contracts ; handie a wi tek nee oairokl 7 "eer aa “a on room, kitten 101! eee In Carport ad RTGAGE p ‘S) IE 7 3 Bed , pee for | BU 8 2681 TUGE \ erson r ofr im! Fa ud ch ld ec 8 seur' te | ROC rea entrap eleo: teh: rE a N 1925 not ader : COS > WE roc at ma nee y Y 10 ; iK ally John me st you xing etail atisfi es ou mn OM rt ce. me en- 5-044 Sa ru. ty p floo STS E LS GE yms WA = La ox ani NIT EIN molec My preneite oars ; | bene sin brave pire Poe six 7 Eve FE bs ine k _he ant NCO -HELS New —V = \ or ype rty lu r fin Ww 238 wit UR ¢ m ve. Bt x6 hard fteh atin hom aid A 2 a SSE 3 a ANTE on ever ON Mr To ah, s ieles el el4 Sean NISH Columbia, IX ROOM B 7 ar FE? abs gn ees ei ‘ed ten ear MIE. a) Be DEAT Larg bedroo cant Tt D> F ON IT Pr EI Real You ay to ng coz ard titties, ED A bia J room 1804 apace! ore e e abinet. er : 7] Om bear : FH edroc | ing fe vin a Fy you U 7 4.2533 alto a To list | ed. YR ake Ad PAR R. ho RICK ast irdow sw ata ents ner, os oom A; ym Bri | floors. b @ Too ome tale’ and ‘was URNITUR w ae ‘Tele a8 r Yur WELL INS - Re avin oe ic “e its a —Muren. Lie Re SB ethieds cares) car er Koliing ey Priced: “rents “wT hitse is paces and Gl Brick ot kate < eae Pin E| land pate: - graph Rd | ul ee 4 Sy partie be * private SRA ealtor. eatin sete ae siding doors on | able only 88 23 ber se an street. cits Approv in arnt! ot basement = in nd co" 7 s th trac 08 ¢ | H OO 22 8 ent T 1 Ww ow te : LS n pay 250 mot y wa ree Near E 650, cl ot Oar &S cash the hike Bt e ‘bi ct R T FO | T wat Ms & Mar ran LE 6x s alam sm OM yme witt nth ( ter ' rk $2000 ose 1 LAN ca igh- Phon, rd’ ealt R YC \ ‘r ee fi BA shell ce w ‘EAS 10 1 inw A all ME nt ree il S$ sew ‘ast 4 to Dp i | IMM er to or YOUR | ea furn TH st 8 1TH ASE 100 aund m eet hou ERCE a a Seay er ‘4 err ow: vsny SOU aah CO. | MEDIATE 28316. 43 Partridge. Op ee oe ra eats = bedroom home E Lae atts room sliding win- with frontage © es E cows BIIN =e « bearoom Jr. = | WANTED A} var psaeen AR home a Fo Huron wentP Att ves NFW 4 sei < We oa ood e ety home ~ BUY KE Privitpor ved WEN down $2 Ce | coe Parent =0 saa a compete! +e EDO IOUE, PUR BUYER sine Gacnard “r ee) “your | ber Co-0 OU REAL ep oa we caretaker non 26 onaivon ida AMS AR MA ae ee rT SUBU wotal price hardwa bine home PLUS pared tre cn le cncelicns at een aa eo Ane Sees wo ical ea abate as ot Sa i a = ance ns alae URBAN” Brace Teams Seton on ale: dangle it you ip) EUR AND WE pes Relator | wext 208 Lhe tn * Oat MAND “ nd hot Bala ston A ra Are age door Lot Drive FULL RO) on daratony sae ae ee wun rustic see seater furnace ‘oe aes os RN “ s VE + a Hor Haire . evomscn, ATH er I er mo Q amily me ee take PRI ] $3 sink, plec pac cellin al 'T y. bi ent t eater | au- tec ae . ve bn i — aie 200.0 4563 wrp Pos’ RT urop , ib M eon H 3 bi INR TON onth lick pe ¥ oF prow Lake Dixie ae ss T 30 w +5 e. | 8x6 emaste ing el r heat ar lance oO res Low est vemant ean RE ea ae A » | ec Hou T oe BAAS OL on Ra i ale . OYAL "Ww Dk ISSO S- nign I's et way Op Orch emple {th on. | a6 sorage chee . : ge Tot like ponsible ] price in Bees for lbs Baer vets Hi les Cs Es a" | © RO a fork seat = Lawr a eau to W ee ee ton, R |, Lars ed ad wa. = At ent esa ea agin hee Ea Fanaa a moar Ss ied) Hol rene res W Uae Alea Realtor: Psst ee mo ae USE D Pe ro i Tr B efore or © r al 23-7124 orrith ROP. = RO New! R ARHAG Ol onsum FE or pen en 31 F ¢ \ ULL ndow vin om ern D cov S “ yot »>B MAH you ur ited: 26: P- _FF 5. vd ARAGI we | ers F 5-6 c un 1 45482 1 PRIC tur er e on 4 eanED FRUNITURE Lane BU oY To ae AN Joell 5 1 “Tome _ sw S_ROOM 3030 J OARAGE, CAR- wee eet B ent 108 E mde REARF y toi Located “S11.950" { see aor. ot B ag WELL 1 1 AU and es. Fatme do 8 — . Adults | els 2b RO = bit brick) wel sey Fern al kite din. {th ne- furn’ ae uy ST. LL neur 822 M s Nene wnto ANI = 7 85 re at ed roo! vAIN br : bed ck ell bi © Re Tak rbe ? b avato hen ing na- "FUR tare Bur INSURE 1 Wong mitra ms irigerator heer — 20M Whipple. pangs | poe uns ist A d and ere phase ry on. pol por NI = Ph ret. z turon ES R acts , mantt or eet H CLOS =| ake a le Difeadretss ; . i. room jere kind nom Lahey See oft : ga Caeel o a first room En ‘ _ ces EAI en sae See hea ET | Wh n offe e. As Phi eorane tin with e sunt Ha Be t rage. ‘ Later ba floor, 3 bom a NE 23. R Last \ Estate Bt Mies aw and o| ONE PTE k- one RF ing Dav Aa air eed ae ott rans{ frui erh th up. ; EA . \\ TE 8m 380 re ; 1 ER __ oO OR Al s Tak eee d Ae Te place : c erred tt eat. up. or waollar EEDE co- ALTY ; alien | b | 35 th 2 cw EFT RANS _Open 31 TOR es ilent atrest Ft t a Su rees 2 ca m i) or odd " OPE c po eal ie uy a8 28 FE per ft sta AN | ® 872 Ss abe pl a Fi a k aire . ow r eanTED on wi buy ‘DED | 107s. ” >ERATIV REALT | ee trade OY aN nee full basemen pare cem | WE to 8; Bune OR l mes Ince for ae Al Take F ner of — a tins outright = nett Stolle eae | s Call ed aN busine types 78 £ nN! nett $500 ee ver expan ion atic | gne EST Sl jay 1 to as Sate Ronse on ets 2) oe nes ront WAN rnitur BUY $271 Com: Pt Sund | R] C s ties lan “ an 28 FO Mur RE tt | wo nted f all o attic e * wh SURUR - __| low ean 6 a Lisi ‘ ‘ ase it ape 6 roo wou iam -ANTIQL reese yt CA ren PE Seoes ple rel GE er in ree NC a a rates Only eyes RBAN | stoker er a eienter goes REALTO : laa ee aie ips. M UE -5 ES ey De onerant: A 5 Mens FE . 1 0 “> y cent ce ched ; win be eat . em | rood pen OR ‘ORS nese 2 ougbeus ome) Y D Co~operati a 5 oF ar derail Co aki CET lswae 6 parc 2 th b On plast bu r) yer? : ie ie as teat 21 ISH. SET atis Y | 200M nd 8 ral 3-7 op jand ; s im re b el. ca ree ly ered nee | S to " pe eee an n vin feet eee _pamrs AND TLE a es Garage Swen ad gape ROC he esa 2 cabs race Located “ath Jon seme MA pie bun 1 ins eee rai 'hee Ea i ee I M 1 . a « Bs 442 1 est 1A : : E F Baa room nm: t : ern Ww 8 RT ee i sun re- WANTED ans u fand” contrac Le EN Dra} to i LO ace ‘ noonts weet see TH UPPER a HT ENT a Sis hese cine esa a fern bungalow, t Pasa LE v BI Ns nF modern porate od is) s Oak! ract? ast ; 2 on, C tn ICA c FE Es r 53 iu ratic 205 x ange pe ia! aint 1 2) etty. § ile 5 | Ff , EF Ys plast ue ue mite : para Kise BUY: OE 28 your kland l deal at lake Clark the I LOSE E 5 T sl 0 Dec _ 1933 oil rebits URE rm cel $4 ed ba cing! vy. §9 ile bath room yer hu “AR: pissteted Senne ity hen. 12 with x dum A GOO adn or contra cee on To i tr y Wi areas ston Wat Cas TO. 4478 DE. R \ SAL heat m ho \ AN 000 comes Os ; ied | rate st $750 % S ] ‘ fi OWS mara “ atedy Pan long “ dim p tru Dt Me er) act) ot nly disc aT ates th a to! or s erford ae as 8 own 4 FASO! He 4 are fe mo OR NOT own & t eph home New down IOM i fens ae “ ached c P p Gees = ATE Cullo 0441 7 te Brin punt your on firm det + rca. ‘ corat roo N = N- = O1ll ites WY He nd $31 | Too 3 Year: v0 : iGiud Dr tm umin high: BUY Sutton ¥ or Che ri Te ugh and FE ge in. area? sellin th our nd- elt ed m @ TOWN, rR or O ATI R Coc wR | ost ms, I ligh rs uica : led apes s re : _le est ING TW! a d ask ; 3. mM gee at prop FO Ww J partm N — 13 ree ent ML, M v Rr = ‘ ip E 3 ~ Ope uro . . all — ivin t a A ¥ n cele- and and : eville Rd RAW F “MY 24431 aoe for ea | ee ee ae | pioaa ae nt Rooms _ 37 Mac Day RONT HON | rative. Real eisz aed * oy A dock alton A | ig roe ( r e a s — lo pe ow : : E< F nce : : b de : want Sci onnane ar REAL I . Realtor IT Whed y cleat ATACTIE Se Kae well landscapes OME START T tate Exchange: ieee San wae ene nnett I _ farce cottages Look | PRC PSEATE Baek A aera ne ‘aus TOP -Pe A henner pp ae rece ee rite baee none TORE nc Sutton, M = or athe b ' SOBLI E | R | 108 under ROOM 4 are = 2 a 2PRIVA IR LA : HA nit nitéhen. Fu with bath ced ine be 2 nic en ce YEAR ay 2 lot 2 OTD rive TEDIBES FEd : yd. : i ? — - DY N f en te cu up she autifi e be dar jal ery s, this Ty _and cderal yg See arns i 4 ie NEW N ore 18 — eNO an in and le ATE EN ced urnac Full dinin t sto insule at al pl droo shak hade pict is 7 Wo nd Sun 37 . Ww 2-6432 do bides ga- c CAL “ | : Ly mant 0. We D BATH. i SINE: undry NTRAD | sold 2 som e base ® ee $1.45 ted A I plastered fh e| and ieee uresq foom ¢ { _Sunday ue anted | Gow “wot -OMP ALL US & One eo oa DEC a FE ee bes | oe 88 v 499 ANCE. | gen as oO iecomcs ok ait | coo | Maia eR iene paveiaiat hie | -4 8E LE 8 __ OF e OF Tw i) OR 2 e@. -| Ish 3 GIR w | in settl ecor: red with own s vac bat walls th ed nd: spot me | C toR ¥ | RVICE A pen 9 , ayo O2 an M ATED 1337. ~| Kitch ed ts Hu- ett at Sint est ating wal cant ho fully aes raspb drive 2 ca late OU od ent w MICE AT oe to? a or “0 wen ROOM lene 5 R _| trance. efi ving | EVERY er hur tha) ina A Must Md G ane fl on a Cie e ettice Gard earn = PLE W ey gle YOUR COMM HOUS ee 1 ee oe Ca FE pais tleges EATS PAU vee 83.500 ¢ Sed Snaci Bel a oe is) Chace biacktos ead. ve feo old bab ITH 7 NN | aa and and ‘sell Goma Buy USFS \ “1 to ae NicHoLt sees Las OL a 25 ae pe aera sca LA k ‘ove a lous Lin ete | an ee ag rete aes Taber West unf Bf desi 10 We used au ba) we 5 $5000 a waltis VAN? ee fer E < > oN tlitte ART. & Pine SLEEPT soetisen. | akiand ER | loots, bath am i air in bath on | ee ie ae Side . sir S la case Ge cn wa hee lager atl iting ANT PPE An GeRT tae St FEPING | ee | an een N, apache pai with with [ee 7 bed Fey Phas is a ‘ Re hous e 5 ge arittees en in nail hes Grrow sent with fi ED a) pau pee cone EAN mS NG ROOM fen! Eat Realtor | a ae Bae anne | Cece oe te ped reais Spe easo e room | on ro yrivile a wit all ve ne w se yment from - tt adult aR co. a = 5641 ia 59-6407 aoa | tate altor tak ens. tus ine linds wer ne) tion * Bp ae cal Sela im ui val t nab oO | SP oe h o ar oe UR e Ril ts F $500 __ Wood . oN ATH FE Dov 5 R 3 MS. 51. I S14 Sine FF 2. es @ 3 m °s full” oak | fee asem Ve th i ed bears oral give le se 1 lot or We r o& eas DR ey ane a to iward ear t UBL o WwW BU 1| arge AW) T e 1919" 9200 | nd in per m storm base m se ent stibu load a<em ms atge ex rent n 233 sy! oura will ithout _RILE day deal | 210 Fae Ue =< beds LE Ro Hu- DDIES dition neat IOWN o suranc onth s and R nd fet with le e a} gara ent 2s t fam erence celle ~ Wi : ae Or VAN build eo! EY ; Rent ) Nebra oseph IFS _ bloc for a OM SFE ment Son home N —— W e includ d | W ts of cree. lace. 2 3 Car cae 4 See ome Lake . Re toe BR Seca Ss Pat wee SE beate ue tose” I ee F torace, feat cena io pes full . eR 144 Lak LTyY c nt Al 1157 ROK use — GE bu dies W H ee a ! heat furn nom « nal ; | ek ae t ca vile ear ca 8ER E &- . ef . e R co pt $7 ER 2R s F as kee . Cc s FE est TWIN | ouble er St ace Fu con: AL 3 A mditi ges achool Eg VICE 1215 - 7 ¢ P I" 4. us oR |" chue w urni a0 Non LEAN L totes’ 4 stric carace. Nitemane : EST Sita W ere ae Lak ce ands ots _ ont! i s = No r N 300 : rict ra w! ma ace AT ves ea <€ . and ex Bae 2 ee ot | ED! NO iy PE samo hoo a urnished 33 33 iS ch wee AP hed 35 as orton ae ek ik WNT Quick ps windows Taree ee Sate Baldwin AY ME} Burs l MY 3-7085 Orion pecs ' i: ‘ i / 2 1 A A i c gir _ 3 tw 3%. | ~ : pase \ ge - _ A | : lords ins 2 fOUNC arises. | ane ; ROOM A Te! \RTMENT oes Re ty eos ARTMENT ee oR See ONIN ee ry iaree Ranch 1 E Arete eve SEE re aise Laketront moaerl hie To A TAL MEO ESTATE \ {1 S ea ne EM PRI- R a i oa nova Ta FEP E eral WORKING | a CO | $12 ry — ArH | ME TH au aa rith 1 — P M ATE fi AR Aubu Fal 33846 | t REN? EM fro SE TO | er’ ING 23-9983. Hos KING S ___F ( 2.500 ype I - 1 TAI ty an nr G 00 H fenante He Late ICH urt GE VAT 46. furn hi Tr BMAL ea D fo _F s On ROQ pital SAY _FE 5 tate TE To IO'*1 - le iehe ft . Fi ‘OU’ eras c — “ can $2.1 Priv RO EE __ 34922 hou SMALi 340 _FE ¢ b M. N 1 75 E T 5-278 hikes [RMS me | VB down Jor shin eae A vat OM le nN. 2? 22 se § ar a q3 81 1038 us tin NE ~ IN u itche ny fi S3-W Rp 1IC oe Fun s oom ze 2 im- poe ONnv feat RGF e entra "CT \ ROO 40 Pp LL MOD FEPT : e. F AR ME! eled ms eatu codw | efor 1O IK ut ob mpl lg U fa y : : | : a “PING RO or FI “'o§ et re om Tes ward 4 e th ME porc base ete DP @ mi- AL th ENI roe chute LEAN nee F Ir ITIE. sm MS er mo ODERN ein G ROOK 2 ISH- ervd ol to-m creat e gia like ps Fe | left ey y h ment with nd yY ings 4 ENT me ve ance N ROO FE 413 :8 on ch _ $50 a mth ae 8EE Near meant vVdav solve fintshe ‘ tion &e ike pase! s- is ope This aa 5 1 st Ext bath 5 FE one! WAY ROOM Adults Ms ie c As ca ae MY - PING: PO FOR W s p ro 5 ev- car edu screen oom, k op ed n dai eauti i} go cli re la 8. 2-818 Cle To ishe s i a Foe RO ee - nd hy “ROO _172 ORK W ! eel ae mS bree ialee an- ppeaaiiai? ne 22 ie R Tee 4 1 seified GET | N au 5 EVE iF ishe: JMS Jateh e with _ 2-6655 ot WwW M N. Mi IN ant = em all Sydol reere airs heat, | 2° rick ony wit 2 Tri . ads! chuarea RYTHING ine 5 a oe eote ey ha. Spee u Ad s th —— way au un. 400 2-2 PN home cwreuce wat cau? _arove walk ING ROOMS” Detaradencs = Rd. | w R on b 0. Hf Ww e oe ant sy ae 4) R M FE S8lel o p. Re BED no drt fro FUR Or Ms _ urnis! TH i oom us ln EAT] FE av! nd m 2 rive Ro 2 6161 to alto ROOM nke m to N- | _t h ion Fl AND hed F FUR s Ww e F ; a 228] vi PI ore ‘Moe out =e Z ree - r ‘ i ood © H Ta 69 wn. eat. C ectcs BAT E 5 N- ‘2 8B ith E R] hone , tae \ to Wee riN i oe aaa ef Orn [OM “oxerp 0 Pair 'CLE all c H ID A280 w Upp B i ; fo ] nm ri ) Cres t Hh e 78 ngs 5 oorers er ry POR r LEAN ; Sele epaaiad Ri. Tce Waiting eis , u oard - 38 write roar = es . T hiliee CS, = - ananeee, RCHES, Gan tol! BEDE pm septal B b_ FE dicta Ls fr. y ad 131 REAL W block ‘ake reese ET e400 ee ed. | besinees. FGRNai Iotand ROOM ae a sans | gard 8-050 nee a _— =| oan ian K M. A s to an ANDY DOV a MY 23-1241. GANieaE: 5 noe e IM COTTAGE. | SOOM AND AND R mi fe = We Eve 1 W. Huron | N se each $400 WN os sie Satan eae West § x noe : ~ pe ee - | y |e on esr oe omar at| CAR st Sebarban Ee mn ee ¢ AN ne. 7 au 1 /_ mur ngs ' rea o ent n ateau factorie gue one = EST W ISHIN ‘ zbedroom ‘and. d eu 8 a pecs ae cue ae Spe Seed ex ale 80 7 CA G i fa e wit and alm ‘ ’ URE Kitchen tare. roem and ngalow off nd b bed JUTHER ' FO i £ h de ost ] cS a Re 8 sch 6 a 2 tS OR pet lisa priv n ra new. 3568 | con 3 hiv wi ool . Ba un Close N Sel RA ed beth flew neh qd wat ver pe ing th 8. a7 Nth Select 1 Ledigiel it od oe Ge n ste | mAs Mant ioe oF bath room. 3rd “phone FE eW it tod tile picture Ae aes uth $ a meth ie nach fee ects and FE | ant Ad ay in ioe ae fe Sindow’ ti var 2 50 D 2 | ae oe ane automate i 4 : = fi ee t bargai et Lor of] cca ane laree fireplace, 2 bedroom « Ow tae okt 7. $55 0 uF boo ins! ts of | 1201 oF | Mrs} corner = 7 alee” lot starter hom n |. 2 TH Bt — | ; o" = | n LJ “RUD” wie rs, Reichner, de use is ee ay ave F — es st — * e a * te a fines | ee oo MEWUTIE ’ ATE [IE ° Wo rar ket ae 3 alg ne JeOE : R od Closet edt ae now erst EA vy gue ee r Ww cre O ba: ® arpeled Dahiess : on- i R a eincat en PU liidals ha s Lake ore & denne ance and bh ke Rd street ee an oe oom end -eail lo h Bincgte MS au oh seid ose (Mas Oat ne AL ie EF, perat d Ay R ive e. ae Real E or "Exchange ' | . ee 1 ces * Ea Rea | 7 | a ote. uti ip ee f Po ae Seal { ae THIRTY-ONE tet a ae fo THE PONTIAC+PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1954 ’ = adi ee SEH BAG PEA 7 ,' For Sale Houses 43 Fer Sale Houses = For Sale Houses 43) Property 49, MODEST MAIDENS . By Jay Alan we PSG LPN Ay a ‘ RAEBURN ST. : 4 iS f CHEAP W. BusI.| : 6 room modern. On heat, e1seo ¢ neue: VETERANS | Ne 4 DRAYTON PLAINS AREA, 3-BED- na go ge caravan | J és ; payment (Mig. cost | reom shell home, exterior and wipoed. | Toole, pov a aa | . HANNAN rough plumbing complete. Phone of. Linens rage. Nat ._ Lovel On on - | For Sale or Exchange 50 Amen gow carpe, 4 aug Lincoln ¢-4900 —OLIDAY Pinas WOME “Wou'd coesider mogers trains ve - ‘Omianc 3-110 -| EQUITY IN § ROOM MODERN ant MOVE RIGHT I? i DOWN. TAKE OVER” PAY. home, PE +0528 after 4.30. and beth. Un room heme leceled in| mente Benutilus house. | Business Opportunities 81 pang vegies Fig Eos | Gebel Teeny halon | lr gat Ninny Gu [wetwnce OREerenee ae rere 22162 or PE basi ees fenced im “Det” com pleted” Call Call Maple $08 | TO BUY. TO SELL — REALTOR HOUSES AND PeeOMES-OF ATL | ii", Tus preReny in,» bareal = # TEL DINING | ROOM Fs a HOTEL FOR kinds. Also building @.1, homer’ — EXCEPTIONAL BUNGALOW |" Jase’ Reply Faatiad Box P. W. Dinnan and Bon, 66 West TERMS CAN BE ARRAN 58. Huron. & hems that we are ‘to| GAS STATION EQUIPMENT & ay or as neat and clean! jease. & inventory, for sale. 1334 lage. Realty. @s & with 3 on ——— Baiowin, FE nae 1S. ate roomy mante| opeEas Rang | ES eS | CLASS C-BAR Fo eae Te sa | Me Canina ave, “Tru easel | epee ae tecated ona, Gea | fh ion eets Tuntees Bare PARTRIDGE is THE “BIRD 0 Sider’ rent with option to ee Te. WILLIS BREWE MODERY 4 ae HOUSE IN Partridg e Q. 1. SPECIAL rE coy oouerelt Hotel asso furnac: . corner lot. No 888 : There is a fireplace that you | "ace -aBie ON ANNA ee dene IL 3-90a3. 8 THE “BIRD” modern practically pew pangs Mari Island Pia. All modern, on OXFORD AREA 2 FAMILY—$1 pn DY. To for cnasitive Wane ee ‘and out neuen “ht, no now = only $1.00 - income pays th FURNISHED BUNG. © a 6 room mod: galo Ww — right in ‘town. ui and try allt goed All completely, furnished, Only | baler nee ae La Golf course $0,950 on terms. “ elo o wll grill mage per | WARD E. PARTRIDGE Fee Sie eet fetal om eter REALTOR, FE 2-8316 av pon the Urge To get awa: cement drive and Ottawa Hills Thi one of ie Most clever! Leseuues oat decorsted hom met that we poles ever seen. 6 roo room en = cntieced 3 rooms, venetian blinds, ppm lg storms screens, Well located on quiet paved street. Owner mov- ing city. About down . JOHN Realtor eo W. PE ¢-3525 m Eves ‘till 9 Co-operative Real “Histate a emnenee 0 p.m. 4 ROOM AND BATH FUR y rigesiieime. + after 2: STOUT'S Best Buys Today INCOME Located on the east side. = family income with heat. y ted with new siding on the out- side, $1,750 down. SECRET Of wealth ig having your money working for you. This is vour chance to brin, in a good return on a wel constructed brick — house. 14 rooms all told, full base- ment with gas heat three car garage and convenient to buses, schools and stores. $28,500 with $8.000 down Shown by appointment noise and garage — children’s hou: = Hy Aredell as se. Price. $14, 43 W. Huron 8t., GILES $645 DOWN Heed nen bensee 3 : these over, _WHEN IT’S TOO HOT you'll appreciate a good for the summer. property can for $10,000 with RANCH TYPE If you'q like = Pay less than §2000 down and want to bey a pemtertable bome, then this is it! 3 bed- Peep astered walls, cove hardw Ts, brick pay Really a nice home and you can have im- mediate possession. GILES REALTY Co. 92 W. Huron FE 5-6175 open 9 till 8 Established 1916 SIDE pence AIN. Move thi 3-bedrm LJ Baeriee street. your own this Totel price, $8,500. startet HOUSE. Near Baldwin 8c Here is your chance for free living quarters, plus cones income. Corner loca- ale street. Owner might cons er good land contract as Christmas. BRICK STORE—HOME iaeee WISNER SCHOOL. 7-rtom Orchard Lake Ave. close to hea pie antag padnte store w wo 18 ispla vine dows. hree bedres cam " ot, in the rome yoo plastered walls and oak floors, Basement under the entire building Wull trade or sell on terms Edw, M. Stout. Realtor 77 iN. wecuse Bt. Ph. FE 5-6165 Open Eves. ‘til 8x ~NEW Gl HOMES $075 DOWN Includes the mortgage cost on these new 3 bedroom face brick | suburban | 24 W Lawrence FE 5-6105 open eve. Neat to Consumers Power homes. West Sepp — select oak floors — &, marble sills, tile ath Bebe divided basement, gas furnece & water heaters. See our model tod: New 2 bedroom modern homes with lake privileges. Picture win- dows, excelient kitchen, ample closet space, bath, ce of col- ors and elevation, lity room oil forced air furnace, elec. wa- ter heater copper plumbing Full price $7,760. AYDEN Realto E = Blvd. FE 8-0441 eal KNUDSE Wards Orchard New 5 rm. and beth home win | with attached garage. Good oak firs. plastered wall, and paint- ed trim. Includes tiled bath and good kitchen and bath equip ment. Priced at $11,500 with $2,500 down Dusght eS home in 6 bath cottons Full basement and | : car garage Call for particu- are Seminole Hill Well located 6 rm hone Near schools shopping center. Cail and beth bus and Indian Village A real home with 6 rooms and 1's baths. Also ha, @ den and otier features. Call to see it WAL 1H, KNUDSEN REALTOR $10 Pontiac State Bank Bidg. Ph. FE 44516 MILLER A Good Existing Home Is A Lasting Christmas Gift | Completely finished All work done. Ready to cecupy. No locee end* ho problems, No worries storm doors or windows No finish difficulties. dust use ® dust mop and move We heve existing homes in excel- lent neighborhoods with financing available on Veteran Loans, FHA Loans, Land Contracts or Con- Mpigpeces Poatte Let wo am how Wwe can assist L (aod “nis business for you. STONE REALTY CO. ote facta 2-0253 p.m Dally: Su. 1 to 5. INVEST buv NOW. See the Classified IN SAFETY, a dependable car | CHARLES DON'T GET SMART TOO LATE! Paying rent bet $50 per month for 10 years & per cent in- saphoserh ed wil, ean chcnen ear ~much more than e pay in full jor this nice 2 bedroom ong -tn porch for summer liv- «. Basement, 2% car garage. Four nicely landscaped lots. Only $5.950 with $1,500 down. Looks like a $9,000 bome! GET SMART Open Eves ° j get on the phone now. #. Nees highs PRICE, fully furnished & bath. Got $1,000 iy Fight in and STOP PaY- ING R | RESIDENTIAL ROCHESTER 6 rooms, bath basement. garage good street. $12,800. Terms. | B.D. CHEARLES, Realtor | ' FE 4-052] : 1717 & Telegraph, Open Evenings | | Co-operetive Real Estate macnenee \ | 08 DOWN To a G I ip Ward: Orchard 2 | bedroom ranch home, green fix- tures in a@ tile bath, iarge yeliow | kitchen. hidden stairway to stor: | age attic. cove ceilings, must be | seen to be appreciated | ‘LAKE FRONT BUNGALOW Beautiful brick fireplace cecurat- ing al} x living coom, large dining room, glamour kiichen with cupboards galore, Venetian blinds, oi! heat glassed in porch. well landscaped yard with sprinkling system barbecue pit cement breakwater, convenient trans and stores. A buy you don't see every day, so don't miss it We will take your home in trade on one of our new homes. Check for details. Russell Young REALTOR — 412 W. Huron 8st _ Open Eves. ‘ ‘ul o- ‘il @-Sunday ‘til 5 BROWN 30 DOWN -—attractive shell bunge- ao, Cedar shake construction and jake orivileges, Large jot 100x297 ft. Finish the interior yourself and save many dollars. $1,795 DOWN — Ranch bungalow with 12x20 living room with fire- place, oak floors, plastered — oil furnace and lot 100x300. Quic poasession $1,006 DOWN—"‘Better than new.” Pull basement, oil furnace. recre- ation rm., carpeting, cement drive and 2 large landscaped lots. $2,500 DOWN-Lovely 3 bedroom brick and frame bungalow. West = location only 4 years hegerse-ssggece: | clean and a pe rear ya . lee DOWN—Real value A large section for outstanding | values, 7 room modern near &t. Pres, Would make good rooming house ~ and ts priced at only $7,560 "$28,500 - JAMES ‘K. Lake front with 3 bedrooms that is omly 9 years old. 75 ft. om the water, two ear garage, extra stool and show- | er in bacement and two fire-| places. Shown c only. L. H. BROWN, Realtor 1362 w. Byrom eet PE 2-4810 bo | . iM se. ~ = ~ aa Open Eve. 7 to 8 part payment. $11,100. $2,100 down. modern home, 2 beths. rental | from smell apt will make your monthly payments Full base- ment, paved = street $8,750, terms. SPACE TO PLAY. Yes, with this large lot your children wiil have plenty of space to feos , West suburban area. Ranch home, new in ‘52. Full ba: = ment, finished rec rm heat, breezeway to attached > car garage. $13,500, terms. FLOYD KENT. Realtor ie) oil TWO FAMILY -TRADE PIONEER | HIGHLANDS BRICK BUNGALOW Li e ric rod omer sale. $11,075. WE SELL — WE TRADE DORRIS & SON LTOR, CO-OP MEMBERS 2 W Huron PE 5-156? NEW 3 BEDROOM ego SOME. Piains. Le poate with full oe cea. heat farece jocated on large lot 1803 . Two dandy % th, reec- jon = EST AURA WITH Liv. ing quarters, quick possession, _MA 5-4706__ ONE SITE ON ‘aa 6T_ IN we 100 x with RR. ronta. e@. = ~~ = ——— of Inglewood wi — wok of Dixie highway One site on Edinbu with R.R. siding ~ some buildings —2 to 5 acres available, Also pers some 58 e ~— on wet ally, all Pontiac, Nae e bg 2-4532° OR you = OR Partridge Ig THE “BIRD" TO SEE PAINT & WALLPAPER Hay our investment back mont All for Center of eb Huck flooring. birch _ doors, oes clusets, tile with colored fixtures, oul peony electric hot water .eater, Ls a knotty pine din! erea. Subst tia) down | apd . $10,500 Shown by anvpoin 3-1572. Bateman Waterfront Special at rags oghhd —— Lake. th bung % shad off pavement $850 down. LeBaron—GI 2? bedrocm =. Newly de orated and out, with plastered wea hard- wood floors, full basement, garage. Why pay the high dollar? See is home at only $8,750. No down pay- ment. One Acre and Income Brand new 2 bedroom bun- gaiow with attached breeze- way 2 car yereee. furnished 3 room bungal renting for $50 month. “A perfect setting in the Orion area. Only $2,500 down buys it! Lakefront 2 bedroom bungalow with ettached 2 car garage, GE_ oil heat. 100 ft. water frontage. Much more than you would expect at ONLY $13,500 p Kampsen FE 4-0328 | Realtors, (377 8 Telegrph Eves sun | Co-operative "Real Estate Exchange 7 For Sale Lake Prop, 44 WILLIAMS LAKE 4 rooms and bath Large corner, landscaped = “ block to beach | $5500. $800 do (PAUL M JONES. REAL ESTATE 632 W. Huron FE 4-3605 dale Suburban Prop. 455A “oe BEATER, $850 DO Located near Fisher Body, Oakiand. thi older home« WN off But still ¢ uften: . large living basement. auto. oil heat, ga: hot water a city Tota! $50 1362 W_ Huron Open Evenings Start the New Year In a home of your own. This 2 bedroom home needs some work done. but located near the Avon- dale School, with a down ment of only $1000. It is worth the asking price of & Roger B. Henry Inc. $11 Main &t. Rochester OL 10111 or. _OL 1-121 Rochester Real Estate _ FRANK SHEPARD 5624 Orion Rd. OL _1-7511 | For Sare Lots PLL A OL Al LL ALON LOLOL il al a LALO L Pl LOTS $10 | month FR 27073 WEAL BUILID .+ SITE 506x140. ever stree* near St. Joseph and cConne &chool. $750 terms. FE 58064 Pott. Realtor 45908 684 FRANKLIN RD. $1000 CASH. _G_ 1 Preston, 1 110 9 Jackson st FOR BETTER SITES FOR BETTER HOMES 8E CHELROKEDR HILL L S! Compare the advantages of close in country beth Lake Rd. 1 mile W graph Rd -and select your site soon CARL BIRD, Realtor 503 en National Bank Bidg | FE 44211 Eves. FE 31302 SPECI. ALS Lovely one acre parcels. ient land ‘ose bus, Excel- stores & mo. next spring r living.’ I... H. BROWN, Realtor 1362 W. Huron ss ‘FE 23-4810 For Sale Farms 48 “A little land and 7915 ACRES Ripe for subdividing. roved area. 3 miles rayton Plains. Level tabie-top land, sandy loam’ soil, suitable for septic tanks and shallow well pumps Good grade school and a church nearby. $42,- north o 156 L ee 2k ACRES Crooks tage. Bandy loam ene in - a state of cultiva- cod new eetes: onstructed brick garage. — mile good woven-wire fencing pies far for subdividing. Call further information. IF LOYD KENT. Real | 24 W. Lawrence St. Oven Evenings to Consumers tor Next Power FOR FARMS AND ACREAGE Call Rutledge, errr FE 40003 + $ ON 15, Suchy Realty, Ortonville, “t is one of Poolisc’s 8 its | location — Eliza- | of Tele- | bes DOWN AND $810) FHA ap. i 4 ] FE 5-6108 | i j i just $1,000 plus stock. LAKE GROCERY T = Lear AG aaa one a. ‘e tee a cag wit fo & to Fine ne . rm. modern home right on the lake and fixtures. every $15,000 dn. plus stock.. ge goes “at {DELUXE REST HOME | Beautiful 18 room rest home in ith ious land- a small ——— = Ww oo = room, excellent a AO as Takes W. ARD. FE. MICHIGAN BUSINESS, REALTORS oe as a UGHOUT Mm rE — just $9,000 43 W —_——_—~ 20 Per Cent Discount New homes. Local butider. Work- an, and ee ae: uareDn- . Contract balance t ag you — 85, y under- volge= i when . PE 5-9075 sold. gate Ask rk Ted Mc- 7 AYDEN, Realtor _Open Eves. 53 Cones i “C 86 E. Walton Bivd. ‘State Licensed Lenders) GET CASH QUICKLY Up to $500 1946 to 1953 cars. Bring your title. Most deals closed in 30 minutes. Loan, also made on furniture. Signature’ and other securities, OAKLAND LOAN CO. PE 2-9206 202 PONTIAC STATE BANK BLDG LOANS $20 TO $500 signature only HOUSE HOL D FINANCE CORP. OF PONTIAC Ys 8 Saginaw st FE 4-0535 FRIENDLY SERVICE WHEN YOU NEED 20-000 We can help you with your money problems. You can get up to Loc repay in small monthly ments lenhone Us or ¢ a our office FINANCE CO. FE 4-1574 __702 Pontiac State _Bank _Bidg. TEAGUE FINANCE CO. 202 N. MAIN ROCHESTER, MICH. LOAN 825 TO .500 AUTOS LIVESTOCK HOUSEHOLD GOODs Ph Rocheder OL 6-071] OL, 1-979! x eed Money? |- t's as telephone. Just ca “FE 9-812] | For euto financing. vee as your reeer ss oth payrmefit of debts or ri worthy purpose. most Teche are! completed om your first init and in a few minutes. Liberal tepayment pian. Home &« Auto Loan Company 407 er National Bank =e Hours Saturday § to _ LOANS | $25 to $509 COMM an co 30 E. LAWRENCE FE 2-7131 FRIENDLY SERVICE SHOPPING FOR “YES” promptiy to employed men Women-married or single, | Nationwide credit. Sing'e pon, loan Laspaged asp er come LOANS $25 TO. $500 BENEFICIAL FINANCE CO. GSTONE Lawrence 8° FE +1538 Mortgage Loans 54 LOW INTEREST Cnlimited funds for single famfly dwellings: m: age canceled | orc borrower die, see H, PETERSON 1210 Se. State Bank Bid¢. Phone FE 5-8406 or FE 5-6772 WHY BE A TENANT? Many excellent home- buys at easy terms in the Classified Ads. PARTRIDGE | ,, Sale Latta Contracts 52 $2, dangerous man!” vy PRLAAI “I'm carrying the red lantern because I'm a_ very 12-29 Swaps 55 Sale Household Goods 57 BUY HIM 4 NEW LAWN Mow. er for dD int Swap in old one irag - your “oe fies skates aon: Same _——- Barnes wate <7} sha, _W fara: ‘® CHEVig AND MONEY FOR <i car with sutomatic, HAIN SAWS, TRADE FoR building materia) or sell, MY c MODERN 4 ROOM HOUSE TO BE moved for: _Phone FE ;_ 9-2008. swaP EQUITY | In 3, BEDROOM : * newer. '}7 PONTIAC. GOOD TRANSPOR. tation eto PE 5-106), Re NT re Mamas SEAL FUR COAT. DAT. FE 5-9219. After 6 r ¢ p .m., FE 2-7872. BETTER USFD CLOTHING AN- — riec a Resale ic) op. B. Cad GIRLS SIZE 14 OnET ¥ REY WOO re Lc post. collar, pew, 3-2035. ore arts AND DRESSES, size 18; man's overc tweed, ge “4. Call r neon PE 5-0038. $4ou ILVER FOX JACKET. Size “014 $175. mene WINTER AL8O T BLUE _6:10. PE 5-8519 ge got, oy Sale Household Goods 87 APEX AUTOMATIC WASHER, apt. size electric ae ee with deep Te. table que organ. APT. GAS RANGE. R. B. =aee _Electric, 1060 West Huron ABOUT ANYTHING YOU vane CAN BE FOUND AT L & Oil space heaters, all sites; comael desks q@ith seats attached: nee book case bead board plete, $24; ref ranges, gas 2 PARKING OPEN THURS, FRI. SAT. 9 TO 4 WED. NIGHT TO $30; SUN.” TO 6 L.& 8 SALES CO.. 4 mit, east of Pontiac; or 1 mt. east of Aubura Heights ee cme Rd. 2- ANTIQUES Colored cho: FOR CHRISTMAS, giass, china furniture, tee ms. MY }3-4308. BUY SMALL RA- In _dios; 96 and $8. FE $-6755.__ AUTOMATIC ELECTRIC DRYER. tomatic wash per month Phone MY 3-3711. ADMIRAL TELEVISION, 20 eat age cellent condition. Now only 890.95. _MI_6-1300. ANTIQUE GOSIP BENCH. PLAT- form rocker bene dishes cruet _Set_and china, EM_ 34047 | BOTTLE GAS Inrtalled in your home for $23.77 | complete Kenyon Fuel-gas 6268 _Divie Hwa OR : 3-2491 | | BENDIX DUROMATIC. TEN months oid. $375. FE_5- BENDIX AUTOMATIC WASHER, Delu iromatic model. Regu- | pow onty 6149.05. a| | FOR oR FURNITURE - OR | Phone OR 3-271 i | CHROME | DINETTE ae AS- Ie these vourself and save 4 | chairs and table $6965 value, $1995. These are brand new i954 modeis, Fanoue mekes Formica | top:. All poprlar colors, Come in look, compare and be convinced | of these extraordinary bargains Michigar Fluorescent 393 Or-— chard Lar. Ave ] DRESSER. $8 95 SIX YEAR CRIB, $5 Davenport ano chair $19 50 Table top cas stove, 819850. Torre berne> gas apt store $950 Pf $2050 Odd beds**395 Two | +te'a beds ey svrings § & 50) ev ch. bola bed, $14 } a BANK FURNITURE CO. 42 ORCHAPD LAKE AVE. NEXT TO FARMERS GAS STATION. E-Z TERMS Over ‘tl 9 Friday nights SASH FOR R SMALL. RADIOS AND _Tecord player: ™ 5-035. CHUCK'S USED FURNITURE end appliances, We buy, sell, “and exchange 240 "Baldwin Ave DEEP FREEZE. 15 FT. $150 BE- Olew ist. Warwick's, FE 4-5000. ELECTRIC FRIGIDAIRE AND stove Ot) burner heater with 275 gal tank 17” television. 2 bevroom suites. Misc. items. § rooms and bath house avail. for rent to party buving furniture __OR 3-9524. Call after 6. __ ELECTRIC LIGHT FIXTURES for every room in the house in newest 1964 designs. Terrific val- re —— $2.35. factory = HOLIDAY SPECIAL Frigideire 3 im range $189.95 — i ft. refrigerator - floor modei 169 G. E. refrigerator floor model a Demeeme ce machine, 4 { 4g rigidaite 6 ocr . | iresect | i eu. ft os $379.05 | CRUMP ELECTRIC | 3465 Auburn Re FE 43573 HOT POINT DRYER +130.65 R. B. Munro Electrie Co. 1060 A __ Huron, NO GUESSWORK: DIAL PE, 28181 J __For Sate Clothing 56 x SS pa tans CONDI Fon att GULRANTEED WE. FOR on ee RE- eg cleane:s Roy's 96 land LVINATOR Good work: "condition. $29.95. MI ¢- CLEARANCE 9240. inch Electric re ne Crone et 88.00 Apartm a Range ............... 138.8? 394.95 Automatic Gibson So ES BCA US We ei bn 285. Washer... pose 35.00 OTTO A. TRZOS CO. 201 ORCHARD LAKE ___Keego Harbor FE 202779 HEATERS, Of]. “BURNING HAVE several that are ideal room = orese - Look oe waneh, “sc Michigan Fivoree- cent, 303 Orchard Lake Ave. LINOLEUM .. seceu 250 Wall Tile, rn. ft.......10c Triple Vinyl Tile.....10c SYERS, 141 W. HURON MAN'S GRAY COs COAT. SIZE 96. Fe 2-3484 after 6. MATTRESS ~ AND ~ HOL. LYWOOD beds All new You save. Closed na = Hilberg 62 Williams. FE NEW WHIRLPOOL IMPERIAL electric dryers savings, No _down payment | kM e re a PRICES “SLASHED NEW FURNITURE Klond double dresser, bookcase bed, targe cnest, $99.50 up. Sofa 50 up. Bunk beds, com- B55 $70. Bewing sookne $7.98. Biond giase- coffee b! 95 bots lag 4 le 65 Nag ie = 4.06. vase weidrobes Everything BANK FURNITURE CO. 42 Sage ene LAKE AVE tl tan TO FARMERS GAS STATIO RES Open ‘til ® Fri. nights REFRIOERATORS “LAST YEARS models, one of America's hou brands Perfect, new guar- anteed for & years, buy @ new refrigerator for a little more an @ used machine Michigan een 303) «(Orchard «Lake SAVE UP TO ¢ O% $2.98 aie) $2 08 Se we Enam _ 140 $ SPECIALS Blond deak and chair GE, Spin dry washer 6 drawer ok chest ae Chifferobe with mirror...... Wi 448 cup elec Reg. Harold's 2 coffee urn .. $15.00 $68.00 blond cedar chest $39 New meta! cabinets $4 os All white coa kitchen heater $25 00 We buy. sell and exchange every- for the bome. O. akland Furniture 104 S. Saginaw FE 2-5523 16 INCH — WITH DOORS $99 54 Inside antenn W ALTON TV Walton, Cor. Joslyn FE 2-2257 “SOLD & &X- Mt. Clem- | GTOVES E BOUGHT. changed Turner's 602 ens FE 2-0801 | TWIN “LIGHT MAPLE BEDS. CAN be used #5 bunk beds less than half price, complete §100 2 Res- | tokraft mattresses included, new Th. “RANGES, 82050 AND | Munre | lectric, 1060 USED ¢ ce Woe <a a “$49.50 AND UP. RB. _Munro | Electric _lin0 W. Huron U sed Trade-in Dept. Bed and epring Large dresser $19.65 8 pe dining room set $45 00 2 pe. living reom suite $19 85 Studio’- couch $20 6 Apt. size ga, stove $29 9 Apt size electric stove $40 95 Refrigerator sag SMALL DOWN PAYMENT FREE PARKING WYMAN'S 18 W, Pike Only VICTORIAN OVAL TOP OCc- easional table. solid wainut, $22 89. sectional bookcase, 4 horizontal! sections, solid oak, $22.50: solid wainut bed. 55 Waido. FE 2-2066 WESTINGHOUSE ELECTRIC stove perfect condition. MA _ §-6047, WESTINGHOUSE aeeeeeearesy RANGE electric, New floor mode rt oleae now only $119.95. MI WAYNE GABERT’ S | APPLIANCE SPECIALS Used Television sets, from . $48. —_— Economat automatic wash- . like new . Jee had ‘refrigerator, like Sesser eas CELAIN sTALL &8HOW. ew, 2 Complete’ with fixtures. PE $873 pe “*? WRECKING SPosel cone — ber. arth a oth mae Union Wreck: Eight ee Road. 026° wood ALUMINUM. COMBINATION DOORS. 95 No money La __PREE ESTIMA 4 tree trial, be c <_vinced. Rules PE. 2-t900. ~BRICK—used—BRICK Common Brick-Fire Brick New Used Lumber Excellent used 2x4s—-2x6s— 2u8s—Ixn13—Julds Ued doors corp with frames —_ by getting our figures on SURPLUS LUMBER "AND MATE BALES CO. jal gar mypis peg mel Hoo ond BABY BUGGY, NEW. MYRTLE 29-1613. BATHROOM SARS. XTUALES SON. avpiuM iM HEARING Aiba Ant For Sale Miscellaneous 60 LIONEL & AMERICAN |*xDen. “GHAIN’ Saws, waALA. FLYER T ry TASKER'S. a3 W. Huren RAINS LUMBER | Decomver Eg peg ter sae Intertor ry Exters Stee} & oors Int~® ext ine, area —- pe foomtsned’ f cover all sizes culverts, — os epee r ‘ Paul St. Cyr 3" ener ons ote Roofing = bighest Quality and riced right 16“ ce oo fnewlatics enly $4.50 aed Windows, & Pir, prororel mahogany, Wolesscee. Suriw moo “aiding. Wood siding, White er sain Tendee? P.. flooring sold at oe ial price, & and build s your needs, ——_— 6120 Bogie Lake Rd EM 32731 while they jor doors, Weod, White Wood shakes, Pine and ced- ir lumber to be ail- under drain tile, Lumber Co. Commerce oll and gas water heater, ell and = pot wean on toed hot wate fired. HEIGHTS: SUPPLY Prose re _ Blackett’ Si Offer Beautiful 10 tn. red wood sidin, and er As low as $19.20 erry, Glightly higher Clarkston ores BURMEISTER’S * LUMBER TWO YARDS ao gb ag — DETROIT 8@ aM. TO 8 P Otmeetrock. ~~ _— A 8-961) BENDIX R o U —— D ro washer, Sw Electric, 835 W 3 Scene z; BURMEISTER Northern Luinber Co. 8197 Cooley Lake Rd. Pontitgelegraph & 8 Mite a, “en Detroit 1418 é W < Bike, 6i5- CHILD'S SIDEWALK Mpire 3-5847, evenings, Christmas Specials Televisions, refrigerators, {ree tov New jain Roches- ¢ 44-6 ENAME RECESSED bathtubs. Crate marred, $21.06 up. SAVE _ Supply 00 8. Saginaw &t. } | | j a779 98 ‘Norge ‘automatic _ washers, K Itke new - siee. 95 $189.95 penis dr er new ye Many ere te 4 CUBIC. FT freezer 1 yr, old, OL 2-9100 | For Sale Miscellaneous POPE Lt 18 SPR NLL Tiss PONG TABLES | eguiation — and thicknes! legs $32.50 _ A. Benson $49 sacioaw St, FEderai ¢2521 | 100 8 CHILDS 6IDEWALK BIKE. 614. saan ex Oat, venings. re] a our AT Bie “DISCOUNT Chirk Filia ry INTERIOR GLOSS DP watagaceon' iso aT oe YLOCK r paints. YLOCK COAL & ote SUPPLY CO 81 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 37101 2 POINTS. WN EW DAYTON SHALLOW-WELL JET $78 06. DePom’ fat wal paint $2.79 gal. DuPont interior semigioss 63.70 gal. McBride Hardware OPEN SUNDAYS § TO 12 FE 2-6393 1927 Auburp Ra. tat Crooks: FORMICA vig sietslons ooo ea. = aes HOP 0 8. Saginaw St. REFRIGERATOR, ot “ Co. MN. West alten & Opdyke. FE El TRAILER AFTER 6 2 WHEFI 193 Beach 1 OIL FLOOR FURNACE, CHEAP. EM 3-260. 00| FREE STANDING TOILETS $17 95. Washbowls with fittings o11.06 21x32 double sinks ; Vesters Seconds - Irre rit ‘purine 6U Sagina rR G&M COMPANY BAWS AND SCISSORS. MACHINE - Seveyssesecs cabinet » in. mirror, value, $3.05. Blt MYERS P 1-3 A. P. Myers she now $06 money down. Trade ins Reson = roms we VINKUDE OUTBOARD MOTORS KELLY’S HARDWARE 3004 Auburn At Adams MA TY CLOTH: m poole selection of m ‘UMPS Hl well Jet pumps 8 acc in. me. SIZE 10; MoUTO: of ot iver Ppa Hot w’ $329. New Hot Was urea’ Wen | Swart eT eT s AS oy sot Ban oe. re ¢ 28-49" Airport } Rd. All kinda, Kitehen cabinet Ll $118 Single i% H. best a or_tes tare, 8 “ab, & rim. opal Oaks ase c “eesher w 1340 06 how tise.90 a. $200, tee lL. a “Crosley ed Nae a im =e8° ; ‘3% Bad wr “sr ue re bos WP 8. tse _ senees LUMBER CO, 1047 Haggerty Hwy.. MArtet_ 41004. PETRO HEAT SERVICE less with i Ne guaranteed Lm ie room or ent duct- type of) furnece. So sim you can install and service your- = — fone Trailer Ex- change, . Telegraph 2. “after hours PE 00 NEW AND USED Ic WA ter pumps Shallow ~ dee well, HM and fy oot Biagese 1488 32-2843 &* GAL E TER 4 3 eal. auto gas beater ] Cab. sink & +... OMe. rrp gagt dba st. od faucet $21.60 BAvae u,Pp-y 00 8. St. REINFOR CONCRETE Ic tanks 28. ROMEX BY THe COT R _ft GA Thom 0 8 Perry. STEAM BOILER, CLEANER RE- move rust and eereos Mar per ean: GC. A. o 6 Perry. GAVE O aie iy CENTS Warwick 2678 GOrchara Lk. E. HHAVY Hurry M MOTOR. hase Ss =. gu warker " elotheg wee war mies see e eee ee: Sie M. ye PAINT ‘ORADE wat secesacesies pope Walled Lake & decorative doors & drawers ____Deo It_¥ Yourself! sl thrower, ham- mera. Je "Sadheun's Fam 62 bal Open Sun Pkg. coa +5340. 25 PER CENT > Discount on Sherwin Williame whined porting aelll aor Di tinded colors. Fuel and Paint. . as Orchard Lake” Ave. FE 5-6150 ! “Hobbies & Supplies Classification number 24A, _ Sale Musical Goods 62 PIANOS, PIANOS Just in time for Christmas. reductions on several used and wu Terms. G * Faxe colt aden TO ‘Sale ‘Sporting Goods 65 RAW FURS WANTED peteos paid. vEEEEn rete FUR CO. 500 Pontiac Tr. eerie Sand, Gravel & Dirt “6 CRUSHED STONE AND SAND. Gravel and fill dirt. Lyle Conk- * fin, -887T2 er 6-1112, FILL SAND, SAND, beach sand. Delivered, FE 5-8257. ree RAVEL. § ¥DS- delivered OE * a, ‘ cabinet at.as |, Krave! run Fol pee y . Also 46218 eine ~ n AM ‘at delivered EM 3-4207 : Michigan WOOD DELIVERED, 3 ft. to 18 ft. Special prices to and schools. $1.00 ead L. 8. _ For. Pets 69 AKC REG COCKER gals 2 months a Vicia cham sired 21738. OXER AKC REGISTERED — 3 MOS. OLD Si Sheppard, male, FE aKC REGISTZRED POMERAN- ian puppies. 4580 Kempf Gtreet, __Drayton Piains, OR 3-16 AKC GERMAN SHEPHERD PL PUP. pies, 12 wks. old, 3 : c NEGISTERED OERWAN si gag raves: 18 weeks E ot iiaee Powe KENNELS, 2 months e. MUtual 30 GALLON GAs if? 2 _6. 8 The ompson, Bt and trailer off damaged Down spout. 3 plus many 500 Flush Doors 2 ft. $6.50 MERCER FLUSH SALES 490 Pon. Trail Walled La. MA 62223 WEATERS. $36. electric ar $87.60. SALVAGE DEPT.. Used furniture New refrigerators inch bleck ellow and green plastic | Chena PUPPIES FROM Chipped | bath ndiing wood, DOOR 0 8. Perry. _ stoves, slightiy AQUATIC GARDENS rr. rm AND Fe sie. Baby Parkes. . + $2.98 - CAGES - S01 4th St. FE 2-4025 Closed Sun AKC REG. MALE BEAGLE 3 ears old. Complete black saddle me trained, §75. MApie 2 MALE BOX BOXER 1 Purine V WITH rs. Fawn colored, 5 mo. old, @ WEEK O1D CAMOYED PUPs. AKC registere¢ Out of champioa och Ca) MY 34705 after 3 30 BLACK AND TAN & RED BONE nd puppies. OL 2-404 BABY PARAKEET AND NEW eee $550. Also breeders. OL BABY TAKARRETS ON 218 PARK- smoke other i Hutchinson Trailer Sales | | CHAMPION © sIRED Germar BSheroerd mether FE +6784 . AKC REQ k cocks, spaniels FE_ $-6722 4615 Dixie Hwy. — | ear ISH 8PRINGER PUPPIES. TERR: TRAW Ae OR »% 0 BULL AKC ree Ideal Christmas gifts! _buy 9826 Comer. Talend "Rd = Rees. _Ph__Ortopvilie _12F 15. i REGISTERED 8 WEEKS OLD 12 TO TN ai OFFICE PARTIAIONS | pai pe — puppies, reasonebie. es Electric. 825 W Huron | FE 78 ae 2525 pee a | PARAKEETS ALL SHARPENED ALL WORK al GUARANTEED, PE 35-7635 2520 Opdyke Rd Garage Doors | Complete stock of number 2 doors | to be sold. All sizes py mlacvett oe reduced prices. We do gare: front remodeling and installing. | BAPE fuer “ Estimates ee 8 Pada FR 2-0203 ___BERRY DOOR SALES CO. GRAND PIANO AND “8L ED. . MI elas 1380 Maryland, Birming- am. Garage Doors. Time will tell you QUALITY CosTs LEse Taylor Made Garage Doors Great Lakes Overhe: Door Co. 2010 Dixie Hwy. PE ¢-6654 Pets Shop, 69 § Astor FE 44433. SEE US BEFORE YOU BOY JET BLACK COCKER SPANIEL. vour gas or ol} also instal! all ty fiat conversion, We s of furvaces wi duct, A terms. Stan Garwood EM 3.2080 “HIGH, 38° WIDE, | eep Ph Mr. White, FE | 2a01" _ | TWO Bildings. can be u storage or a smali home Reason- HT _*ble FE 5-14 ~ TALBOTT Lamber doors, Ware, plumbing. Septic tanks, rock, rock lath Wall furnaces. 1025 Oakland, FE ¢-2622. simp pumps. system for wet basements. sed for garages “LUMBER ~ windows, hard- B. P. 8. paint. . Thor Sheet and floor and Po. ‘| HOLLINOGSHEAD VARIETY store, 7 miles out Baldwin Arm- strong floor covering and Mac-O- _Lac paints. Phone FE 1-1845, HOME OWNERS: | ALUM AWN- _ings, factory price FE 46009 INTERESTED Pon PHOTOORA.- — equipment and dark room Nea?? See Classification's He BIES | SUPPLIES 244A. and CAMERAS — & EQUIPMENT, 1A JACKSON & CHURCH GUN TYPE oll burner, capacity 350,000 BTU guitable for Lope wade na buliding. Little & chine Co 104 ey Drive. _FE 44851. KITCHEN SINKS, 24X21, 6 $20 65 value $12 98. Toilets, $30.59 value $10.96, Lavaterion rs complete with chrome mixing faucets, 14 665. These aré factory marred. Michi- an Fluoresce’ 33. Orchard ake | are eIrch® NS OM $3.7) UP. B. Double 2 ee G. & Thom 8. a HP. JET PUMPS, 96950. % HP. deep well jet pumps with 12 gal. tank, $112 50. a. A __ Thompson 80 8 Perry | LARGE “DUO THERM OIL BURN- er with blower, '53 model. Used _j} month OR_3-0302. xEtvinator LINOLEUM ....... 27c /VINYL TILE ...... 12c o Smith's, 257 S S. Saginaw KITCHEN CABINETS AT ‘ OR- week WOLVE LUMBER AND WRECKINO CO. 300 8. Paddock No, 3 oak flooring Used sheeting, per New toile $ 15x14 lavatories with fittings $16.95 We carry a full plumbine = anri All priced right! USED Ol for installa: on. USEL LUXAIK furrace with al 1 year In good Parke USED — for use FE. Do It Yo USE OUR TOOLS drain Supply 136 West TAD oars through Wednesday bullders Peover rl BURNERS _ hecessa.y controls _i3_ 8, Parke st ELECTRIC. | Wilkinson, 651 40784 urself PL LLG LE RINE _s 84. MC. 818.00 ine in lum t8 WITH ALL Can arrange ~ GRAVITY Used | 3 8 ~ OIL eontrols condition WELDER. | on. farm lines Kennelworth ol DO YOUR OWN im Monatealm. FE ® to 6:30. Closed every Thursday COMBINATION DOORS, WHITE pine, $14.15. care side wall shakes $14.50, 5 | CHURCH'S SINC, | PE 20233 DO IT YOURSELF. SEPTIC cone cleaner. Oniy »$.95..G. A. Thom son, 86 8 Perry. a FOR THE HOME WORKSHP | am Skiltool Black & ker, Falls and atti tools, saws, drills | PARAKEETS ALL KINDS HAY, AKC registered PE 2-1207 MAIE BEAGLE EXCELLENT gun dog Satisfaction guaran- teed 9100 EM 3-2423 ONE FAWN MALE BOXER. Chean FE v-4774 2 PARROTS {| DOUBLE YE! LOW head. 1 panama FE 2-1811 |? PEMALE GERMAN SHEPHERD, 1 female boxer Both AKC. 4-2170 AND. _ 2489 Auhern Rd PARAKEETS, easy grea) CAGES, food, since 1927. 584 Oakiand Ave POMERANIAN DOGS AND PUP- CAN ARIES. PR 46510 pies make beautiful gifts Choose ours now Call 5-0851 of __ 2400 Woodale eee er PEKINGESE MALE PUPS. Ph. FE 17-0243 Fananacre OPALINES CANAR- les. 1304 Mt. Clemens. FE 4-6960. PARAKEETS. BABIES. 791 Mel- rose. FE 2-3340 PARAKEETS ‘PET SUPPLIES, Dancey's 358 Oakinad, FE 35-5031 SPRINGER SPANIEL PUPPIES AKC registered Reasonable. Law- land kennels. OR 3-4629 Dogs Trained, Boarded 70 LL LL LOLOL OLOL LLL OS G_ BATHING AND CLIP et ee ee DOGS & CATS. PRIVATE RUNS. heat. Burr-Shell. 375 8. Telegraph. _ Hay, Grain & Feed 71 STRAW, WOOD, corn pick'n oid and sew corn. _Tractor werr ta & CORN — OATS — HAY — STRAW. Large or small quantities. OA 8-2179 iD MIXED HAY. ALSO WHEAT “ee OA 8-3641, BOARD ping afte> 6 p.m. or Fowlerville, CAstle 3-9660. ‘SELL THE SURPLUS through Classified Ads. Land, livestock, machin- F. J. POOLECO.| 21 451 Oakland Ave, Fetes Bytes. this only. LOVELY Pic wee deb scl Body. Pa range yj. fice cheap. oo, Eat 34070 SP Sr a EE WED" Wie te SSL Comme Page ERE FE 1504 ery, anything! Dial FE 2 “| (r & : i * Soe TR ae NS bao a pa BE EEO IS ae en ell Se a relat x | i 5 ee ie ae aN ENT eT EERE HEN NNN nwa ANE r Inn (BYU ree i ern OM Cae Maat See MMe es). ) OOM RLV POe alan AMM ARE IRR Mest RET PARRY Ea wn A 4 la be E t we ~~ FREEZER SPECIAL caiiiana ee Set aeamnad ae : ey joe P \ e ils ey nr pone s mananeneranel For Sale Neuectrallers 78 “For Sale Livestock 72! stable’ Call after EM 3.5592. Lockhart turk Turkey Farm +1561 road breasted turkeys, pas ready or alive. Fresh killed ‘@aily. 274 — “Ra. 1% miles east of Auburn Heights. REEYS ROAD BREA er b Solos Alive or dressed. sUREEY OR | i ee Corn f were puter Farm, Phone “Sale Farm Produce ia = OxT YOUR apeuxe Al AND CIDER | t Sutton's N_ Lake Angeias Re Ré.Open Tues.. Thurs. BALED WHEAT STRAW, 30c A baie. Milford. MUtual 4-0624 BARGAIN « Manure Spreaders M. bay we ar, crazy but we fee! | er AMERICAN, con ie hae dl oe "Single snd eet our corey bs +A ogy Used ‘ratlers es low ax $50 down on renta! re plan 101 Dixie Hw price trailers as _ Genesee Sales, 2101 Dixie Hwy, feng S, ; LIBERTY. “6300 | PONTIAC | 2 NATIONAL . HOUSE- $721 PT ath trailer Will sel} reasonable. ter Bt. Rent Tratler ‘Space 79 PARKHURST TRAILER CT. reas ease. well eae roads Genesee Sales = 52 BUICK --—— = __ Far Sale Used Cars 91 PUNNY oni BUICK SUPER POWER iseied. * and tale and brakes. $1695 beater. 107 ry Ta 4 ot Oe BYNAPLOW White walls, Phone Fey i00 Priced | _to sell 3 = r mode! Hardtop. ut car with fine ap- searenes : $1,087 MICHIGAN’S FINEST THE BIO PAVED LOT ON CORNER OF | WOODWARD AND 13 MILE ROAD ‘60 BUICK 3PECBAL, 4 DOOR. RA- bi 2 heater. ae miles. FE. and ¢ s. Schoo! bus. tecilities MY 2-461! Auto o Acessories — ATTENTION! We are wrecking 1000 ears and trucks We have sev- eral late mode! low mileage used to 1954 nd voltage SCI HRAM AUTO PARTS 39 Div'e Hwy LOUIF'® *lTO P/ a Jmen Eves ( dave a —. Starter ar venerrturs $7 30 \ Rewvut + ore oy ot use* arts for "46 cars? est Oak's Ave Ph, FE 64513, GLASS, GLASS, GLASS W- nectaitze Ip +: ety glass for care trucks «rd bute insurance fors hon--e Wiwne installed ehile vor wall Free one pound cof.ee to @ custerer, With each BU CK isa CF NTURY REVIERA ecvne Dynafiew pow:r steering. or ac essories Officials car. Le new Oni 9°* miles. Phone FE 2-1262 _ ee CHEVIE 1933. 4 DOOR SEDAN. Power glide, Very clean. Well _ equipped. Priced low. MY 3-27748. i948 CHEVROLET BLACK 4 DOOR Goed condition FE 209469 436 Roland. after 7:06 pm ist CHEVROLET » TWO °° TO | choose from Radios and heaters. | One with automatic transmission. | Wholesale to the public $700 | SCHUTZ MOTORS INC. Birmingham - Piymouth MI 47811 tough-guy masks 9 “Those isquawking about the ste DESoto - ‘$0 CHEVROLEL HARDTOP $10 keep the customers down and assume yments, 464 8 Woodward Birmingham. 1952 Chevrolets. Formerly ; _ For Sale Used C Cars 91 | ae oe eee Dave) Gor ele oor Windshield All A . a Use* New Idea No 12 tractor ep — Ores Gat up ef sev.rel to choose from. Hub Auto Glass Co Oe Rew ice hen 10 C whee! | 122 Oakland Avenue ___ PE 4-008 red epreader. ‘to! 1950 FORD 6 CYCLINDER MO- 13 | tor in good —. $36. «Bill's | Uses i. C Otivers and Jona | collision = Ardmore. | Deere = . | __Phone FE 4 | and take our pic — “A = 81 rvice on OCGHTENS _____ Auto Service ar 528_N. Main, Rochester. ol | REPAIRS BUMPING & PAINTING BOLENS TRACTORS, BNOW | FREE ESTIMATE s Jert — blowers, chain ~* saws. Evans , oi Dixie- ALL MAKES OF CARS Hwy. Ph. OR 3-806 PAYMENT PLAN CHAIN BRAID MOTOR SALES Sales service & rentals, MY 3-589. PHONE FE 20186 MALL CHAIN SAWS, EARL 8 wo fone Pair Dealing astic! Phone Case at West Pike 8t. Co. Milford MU 47842 or MU 4-8078. M-59 at Mil- ford Road. HERE A BUY ON BRAND vol ooh 1964 MODELS, RIGHT IN THE ORL L SHIPPING CRA Boe fee BE a "KING “BROS. $2 EAGLE 850 CRANKSHAFT GRINDING IN THE ear. Cylinders rebored, Zuc ek Ma- -ehipe shop. 23 Hood. - FE 23-2563. _Sale Motor Scooters 82 SAO GPS ee $56 TOWN, WEEE. 96 Cush Scooters. 2's’ Paddorh nn” pe ease For Sale Motorcycles 83 FOR PARTS AND SERVICE ON Bevid cong Era en see barter . 372 8. Sagt For Sale Bicycles — 84 RRSP I ee 3 eto BICYCLES. 2 IN. — en with cultivator, . Practt- | GHILD's s SIDEWALK |B BIKE, . 88. cally brand new. Phove ME}/| ail eve EMpire ONE MAY CHAIN SAWS Boats & Accossstien a6 At, yl \ND SED PPRPA LD LBIPD LALO LLL LPL Pe Stop a time RU payments available. Miller's Gar A PENN Yat BOATS. | FR. 4 if _ Wood sodward” Giortn ot te Mine, E 7 termes lav-a-away Birmingham Ingham “Phone “Bt” 46000. ” Marin. Sales & Service SIMPLICITY GARDEN TRACTORS 427 4 Telegraph ; & as Mie JOHNSG CUTBOARD MOTC MOTORS. i at Ra, Pa Milford MU | Starcraft aluminum boats Tee- | iJ Nee trailers ve a for the | . ON used i) OWEN MARING: Bt SUPPLIES Y ew fillers packs faceaanee . Ph 396 Orchard Lake ave FE 2-8020 Wille. SAY NEIGHBOR! . Out here at MICH. CHAINSA\W DISTRIBUTORS we have used chainsaws sel from $35. New for $197.50. MY 3-681 SLIVER KING oIRECT DRIVE C for a } demonstration. CARBS warrin To best DRIVEN MERCURY OUTROARD MOTORS. Switeer Craft and Yeliow Jacket Boats. SHORTY — PLACE At Pine Lake. e¢ FE 2-6260 Transportation ( Oftered 87 PPL PLL LLL LA LL For Sale Used Cars a1 taxicabs. Reas. 101 W . | 1952 DESOTO HARD TOP AU10- H metic transmission radio and uron. — heater Exceptionally nice Will > ito} BEL-AIvy CHEVROLET. 4) ee for $1900 door fradin heater automatic i 7 tranes'sso 1700 actual miles. i Price $1350. OL 1-637. Call after \ I ae * RETAIL MOTORS INC | TRADE tow” Equity | a ioe 210 - } DeSote . aes Plymouth on S190 Mi 476M "33. ‘8! AND ‘50 CHEVROLET S | ORE (88 DODGE: V8. 200 MILES $1.00 kLCONOMY USED CARS, : oa ._ 23 AUBURN 1955 CHEVROLET. 150 SERIES: 2| _door. 200 mi, $1650. MA 4-2365 | GOODWILL * USED CARS “NOT A NAME BUT A POLICY” ‘<3 CHEVROLET Bel aie Sport Coupe radio, heat- er power steering. Power - glide | transmission '53 PONTIAC _ $1,389 7 4 door, Hydramatic. Radio and M ICHIGA N'S heate:, eee 495 Fi64) FINEST . oe BIG PAVED LOT CORNER OF WOODWARE AND 13 MILE ROAD a TWO BARGAINS 1044 Chevrolet club coupe, radio, | heater good ruober, interized, 31 FORD Sedan wits radio and beater. ‘Stock No, JT11-A) $625 { arts asics 1948 Buick Super 4° te r rea) good r-e., bey SoS . 68 Oakland ~ FE 22381 | $3 LINCOLN 98° CHE “= BEL-AIR «4 DOOR Coupe Radio, beater and Hydra- Low milea. Like new, 1 own- matic — No 381i) er No dealers, FE 56-0178. $1.795 CHEVE. ‘83 2 DOOR, RADIO AND — $050" OR") 1664 other accessories . $1 CHEVIE ~ ; $97 "33 PACKARD i ‘47 Plymouc* > $07 Sport Coupe with all power equip- | ‘#1 Pontiac $bo men ‘Stock No 3750) Pientv Other Late Models and Transportation Specials 115 8 8 Saginaw . CHEVF °50 DELUXE 2 radio heater, werglide good throughow No rust. 3-1642 1942 CHEVROLET GOOD TRANS. bortation. Rad‘o heater OL 92-9209. CHEVE. ‘$9 2 DOOR DELUXE. | radio and heater private owner. 5-8088 $13 5 .- 3 nook very 31 STUDEBAKER Club Coupe With radio and heat. | er. (Steck No 3632) 49 DE SOTO Sedan. automatic transmission ta- dio and Sls aria No 3646) ) Pian lace. | powriac baivmaway” AERVICE | _Unten, sw gs imton Anes GOING Ee raRi —— Ret" ef, ts =| elther way FE S606 ee rte * repair For All Dick's Air Cooled Pes Wanted Used Cars 88 ‘ eS aa | CALIF. BUYER HERE New and used far m apm . avait Soke DeRIE AVY : Repairs on all —. tractors _ _FE 20678 or FE ¢-6306_ _ ontiac Farm Supply THE HIGH DOLLAR JOHN —. DEALER Por hich ered: used cats We | 2711 Pontiac Rd. FE_ 46146 need them. Drive the extra mile 33 FT GRAIN” AND HAY Case elevator = 6 h.p. motor, $390 Tractor crop sprayer $100 No. 14 New niees manure spreader $300, Case stalk shredder. 1 yr. For Sale Housetrailers 78 78 1980 % FT. ANDERSON, aca — fully modern. All unhook ed nice jot. nothing ort to og ag oe Trailer Park. _12 Downing CO ipae ROLLAWAY HOUSETRAILER fo u're at 619 Cole, Birminghe Parkhurst Trailer Sales. All trailers on hahd at big savings | to you 22 ft to 45 ft. New-used- Demos. 1840 Laneer Rd. 1! re _herth cf Like Orion MY 2-461) “1 FT ” NEW } MOON, LIKE NEW, 1 ee full bath, shower, $3600 228 E. Walton trailers on rental pur Good ones as low as TRAILER EXCHANGE 60S Telegraph FE 2- Pick a Bargain FROM use@ all mode traflers NEW AND MODERNIZED ae | 16 28 to 37 ft Priced ‘o mceve with lbw terms and interest rates. 19 others used-must be sold - you make the terms Also see the ew Stewart's Generals Holliv’* end Skyline coaches Parts and accessories Oxford Trailer Sales Mile south of Lake Orion on M-24 MY 23-0721, . Pontiac | Chief | MOBILE HOMES 22 ft. to 45 fT tn length. U pto $ years to pay You cen buy a Les Hutchinson onditioned trailer as iow as 100 down Hutchinson's Trailer Sales #15 Dixie ees i Plains ‘A e Corner & Mile Ra. and Mound 2830 8. Dort Highway. Flint Trailer Exchange - Sales & Service . sabato Rova) mpion, Rit» Craft, Prairie Schooner, Beemer, | Tini-Home and many other 1 & 2/ bedrm —— Bu ~ 47 ft. Choose Cogan Lowest possi- terme as pra ot as little as % down a: long as 5 years to j { pa’ #40 D YL. J. VANWELT OR 3-1355 TOP CASH $6 Lh TOP CLEAN CARe ANY MAKE OR MODEL JNOMY CARS 22 AUBURN. ‘ett REST THEN GET ee SPENCE USED CARA it wi vow wel’ . baie | No Credit? ; a | DOD 4 | Bad Cred l t ? mock Nouns and heater Here’s the place to buy. | ECONOMY USED CARS 22 AUBURN DODGE ‘54 STATION WAGON Will take older car, you take over ep ments. Excellent condition MY 30573. $4 NEW AND DEM- Bargain prices A cars fully ESOTO'S 1 onstrator’s. allowances. SCHUTZ MOTORS INC. DeSoto . ar rtm tere - Piymouth MI 47611 51 FORD This Station Wagon will be handy for many uses i MICHIGAN'S FINEST THE BIG PAVED LOT ON THE CORNER OF WOODWARD AND 13 3 MILE ROAD is9 FORD RADIO RESTER. overdrive $325, 3008 ' FORD ‘30 FORD 4 boom afd assume payments Woodward Birmingham = 2 —— RADIO AND HEATER HCONOMY USED CARS _ _ AUBURN oe FORD 185: 2 DR CUSTOM CAN be seen at Hageu Sheil Service station at Therpe & Huron FORD COUNTRY 'EDAN, radio overdrive spotlight braces windshield washers ta. price $1 945. FE 5-0001 ‘tt FORD 2 DR 710 DOWN AND. assume payment: 464 8S Wood- ~ 1904. power To- | 53) BUICK SU PER No co-signere,--no past rec cc Ces. Sedan with radio, heater and credit references neces ote ie ee sary. If you are 21 and, $1,595 have a job, we have a car | €2 Oakland Ave FE 67333 WANTED: a MODEL WRECK cars ‘40 to * Bagley Date Parts FE 5-219 or FE 5-020) ; _ 170 BAGLEY &T 2 __ NOW BUYING Ct a CARS BOB FROST INC / 850 8 Woodward Birmingham See M&M Motor Sales For top doilar om late mode! cars 2627 -Diaie Hwy OR are | WANTED-[ ATE MODEL: Wrecked cars and junk ears Hel lerback’s Aute Parts FE 86-1431 SCRAP “CARS OR CHEAP CARS OR 3-451! |WTD. SHARP USED CARS “51-55 _ Get your high bid and see us ims tfuron Motor Sales 952 W. Huren FE 2.2641 wtp _ Fast service Call FE 40582. GLENN SEEDS Good used care Now paving the fieut pree ‘for the Tiatt cars (slenn’s Motor Sales 254 8 Saginaw St FE ¢7771 WTD SCRAP AND CHEAP CARS FE 3-047 er FE 2-2666 eves Wanted Used Trucks 89 WANTED TO operated Dodge tional or COEF. not older than 1952 for sutomobile hauling to Marviand. Virginia. N Carolina 90 per cent of traffic runs Penn- Call Detroit, LEASE OWNER trucks cdnven- sylvania turnpike. TWinorook 3-6550 Baker Drive. | _®say Co. Inc | For Sale Used Trucks: 90 SLL DILL OL a TON WRECKER. A:1} CONDI- tion M 3-2712 _ _ PICKUP EXCEL- Can be seen at- 1939 CHEVIE lent concttion Ryan. Pore Oi _Sbeth Lake Rd 1953. FORD LIFT GATE 15 TON PICKUP FULL CANOPY $1145 LARRY JEROME | wl and es low a* 5 per cent fice rates : . PARTS—STORE Rochester Ford Deale Bverything for the Traiier Home «porn MORE on sa ABARS A 8 g,relegraph Tetituren “Center” ——OOQD_PLACE _.0 Pn Daily ‘tl 6 p.m. Fri ‘tu @ | 1945 CHEVIE 1, TON Seeate, And Gunday P.M.— | Fair contition FE 5-0000, after : pe | | te TC SAVE THE aes Biles Ficx | WV HERE TO BUY IT? ups and trucks call FE 3-9060, See the Want Ads! They | 2-Fr. r SENL-VANS, VERY 0005 lead you straight to bar- | Trailer rae Drayton Plains. | BOA OaLING RU WIL | sell cheap, 2% Fister, FE 8-6021. JUNK CARS & SCRAP IRON. | Station om Elis- . for you. "SO CHEVROLET © | > 2 door, radio and heater ‘8tock uy Here No Ji88-A) Pay Here $345 NATIONAL I CHRYSI ER i ,c > SZ OL MOT OR SALES Convertible Royal Master tires 171 S. SAGINAW ST. | and ail power equipment stock | inst . No. Yipee: . | 7 aoe $1,195 63 CHEVROLET. SHARP. WILL , sell cheap. FE 32-2206 or OR W601 => . CHRYSLER WINDSOR. 5 PASSEN- 32 DODGI er coupe. radio, heater, direc- Sedan Wilh radio and heater Jona] lights, automatic transmis- iStock No J780: sion. §1 eras Wil- CTS ams Lake. OR 3-4656 sher 5 ie pm Le 50 CHRYSLER CLUB COUPE. 610 12) ’ . down and assume payments. 464 a HEVROLET 8 Woodward, Birmingham | Bel Air 2 door radio heater, | 33 ‘popar 4 “poor $10 DOWN | Powerglide (Stock No 3758) and assume payments 464 STAUS Wood ward Birmingham JEROME | PONTIAC | sag si75, RETAIL FORD CLUB COUPE WITH Ra. | STORE DIO HEATER AND BLUE FIN- 18H THIS IS A GOOD CAR ' : ’ 46 $185, | Factory Branch | PONT:AC TUpOR sepanette | 63 Mt. Clemens at Mill | BLACK TORPEDO MODEL P EE 3 - WITH RADIO AND HEATER hone Sant? NICE CAR ! ™~ Gs 46 $195 pond Bre soRRY PONTIAC & SIREAMEINER TU YOU BROUGH EY A DOR WITH RADIO HEATER & ; ae TWOTONE PAINT Usit D> CAR 5 Buv at North Pontiac Auto Sales 47 $2 and be happy. A fine selection 5) of used cars to choose on | 312° W Montcal mee yr) CHTVROLET TOWN ean se i WITH RADIO HEATER AND ' LUSTROUS BROWN FINISH 48 $295 Shop BLUE FINISH ‘ { 50 $435 in VICK SEDANETTE WITH RA- PONTIAC STRE AMLInER SEDAN COUPE WITH RADION HEATER HYDRAMATIC AND Bu HEATER, DYNAFLOW AND GREEN FINISH t '4Q SAAS JOIT Or Pe WwW ak MFRCURY TUDOR RS EDAN Vay ¢ a * to fen WITH GREEN Finish now nt dont have to look at RUPBFR RADIO HF ATER sow Covered) cars at AND OVERDRIVE TRANS Matthews - Hargreaves 7 We have many used cars | CTO! I le Sj parked in) our heated | | butlding at 211 S. Sagi-| B ; h S j naw St. for your con- | | ) rg { pot | venience | Orchard oe Cass | 1954 Cres rolet 2-door $1 643 | a | 1084 mouth lub 3 ] I ‘ O4RS | 1934 Buck Riviera ed Fees _ sseall iy | 1952 Pontiac 4-door 985 | 1952 Chevrolet sedan 96> 1951 Ford Victoria it 5) 1951 Nash Station Wagon 545 1950 Hudson 2-door 449 1950 Dodge 2-door : a9, a : ; ~ 1948 Ford tudo OW. BECOMI A O M E 1830 hc i : doer fe OWNER! You find) "ORT USED CARS . at what you want in the Want Ads! Sce ’em! J ll | 2 | NOW. | ae . Ss. Saginaw St. x := 44646 OPEN TILL 8 PM.) 4 . I. ‘CONOMY’ tr SE DC ARS 22_ AUBURN | 1951 fi DsON 145 HORSEPOWER | Hornet, radio, heater, Hydrama- tic. white walls) Take over pay ments. $46 per mo. Call MaAytair | 6-3420 1953 LINCOLN CAPRI all accessories, power steering & power brakes, power windows $2100 4510 Brookfield Dr., burg. ~ 20,500 MT, '°@7? FRAZIER GOON COND. $75 | _FE 4-6240 10 TORTON i LOS) KATSER 4dr sedan Radio, heater apd overdrive. Full price $295 Huron Motor : aa j 063. Ww. Huron 2-2641 | LOOK! 33 Ford Custom 8 Club) Coupe. Radio, heater and white walls STs Ford Mainline © 2-dr Xadio, heater and all the ACCESSUOTIES ’ i | | red ay ’ $1,005 SE Plamouth 4 dr. sedan $445 S00 Ford Custom 8 4 dr. Radi to and heater. $305 IS) Oldsmobile 88 2 dr, <e- dan. Lots of accessories Priced to go at ls DANVT DAWSON, INC. Cor of Clarkston Rad and M.2¢ a . LAKE ORION aly 2S _ALY 26211 DIESE PACKAGES ARE 1OO Bi _ For Yoyr Christmas Stock- ing Rut Not For Your Purse! "84 Ponuac 2 dr $1,550 “S3 Buick dr S iper V-8 $1,895 ‘s3 Dodge V- : Club Coupe $1.44 ‘33 Dodge Cub Coupe $! PBs 2 Pivmoath 4 dr $295 ‘os? Fora 2 door A990) 48 Poomiduti @ cr $150 AR Back 4 Gr $2807 rp oe * ‘of Nah Rambler Station Wagon $895 “49 Olde @ dr 98 $495 ‘90 Nach 4 dr $295 ‘#8 Buick 4 ar $295 ‘49 Dodge 2dr ....... $295 49 Ford 2 dr $275 ‘31 Dodge 4 dr $1,085 from Big Wee Birmingham ForD~ ‘46 EXCELLENT TRANS —Perveswe ae alia iopasee « Rd | et THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, DECEMBER 27,1954 - ees Hershberger _ Fé For Sale Used Cars PALPOL ALLL DP ~ LARRY. JEROME Rochester Ford Dealer ! >» “08. FORD. Country Sedan, 8 cylinder, | Fordomatic, radio, heat- ” $1695 48 ~ AUSTIN $195 LARRY JEROME Rochester Ford Dealer PH. OL 1-9711 “FOR MORE THAN 30 YEARS A ___GOOD_PLACE TO BUY" West Side Used Cars 923 Huron FE 4-2185 "0 to *5o models to choces_ from, ''49 MERCURY ..... $395 Cluh Coupe with radio and heat e aaa net Motor Sales hb. Saginaw &t. "53 a RCOUs GOOD CONDITION. 4 door FO 32-4821 Get Set for Winter With a Good Used Car From Community Motors 48 PONTIAC Streamliner “8” four door. radio. heater. Hydramatic, motor just overhauled | $395 $1 BUICK Riviera four door & Dynai'tr “$045 Super heater s S31 CHEVROLET Be! Air Club Coupe, 2 tone paint, radio, heater and Powerglide. $845 m3 CHEVROLET Ke! Air two door radio and heat er ~ . $1,395 '42 CADILLAC Club Coupe. radio, heater & Hy- dramatic, $345 49 FORD | | Station Wagon with radio and heater $395 '47 DODGE | Deluxe two -door with radio and heater. $145 Davis- | el STUDEBAKER 91, radio, | 9 POPP LLLLL AE SOI NE AAPA ‘92 OLDSMOBILE 6 ECONO MY USED CARS ee come 22 AUBURN PACKARD ‘82 LOADED WITH equipmert. s7%5 DeSote . Sraues pty mouth Mi ¢7#11__ ‘® PACKARD ¢ DR. $10 DOWN & assume payments. 464 8. _Wood- ward, Brimingnam. PETERSON 1953 Kaiser, ¢ door 4 door Les & SERVICE * 3T16 AUBURN AVE. PE +4693 iMod “PLYMOUTH STATION WAG- on. Very Lert , Rreaeneut: Bar- gain, FE PONTIAC, 1952 2 DR. 1 OWNER, Sa PONTIAC. pa pct oY nape strea. eater en. PE eg eo condition. oe YOU pared bored deals 1954 Pomnes Starchie 1955 Plym-uth, 1953 Willys Aero Ace, loaded ner Mercury hard top 1951 Ford convertible 195i Ford hard top 1931 ve, 1951 Nash overdrive 1061 Chrysier Mee) power steering | 1951 Ford Prefect 1950 Oids 88 club coupe 1990 Nash 1949 and 19% Olds sedan 1950 pesteeabee convertinio cae sedan 1948 Cadiline ‘ebullt motor 1940 Cadillac 1947 Lincoln Continenta WE ARRANGE FINANCE SMALL DOWN We also have 100 other car | choose from. Models from to 195, Prices finge from $25. | Economy Used Cars PONTIAC ‘55 oi39) NOME. SACRI- fice. FE 3-07. 1982 PONTIAC 8 , DEUXE CHIEF- _it SOF, a spin. 1953 Plymouth Cranbrook Sedan. Black and Grey. Overdrive, radio and heater. New car guarantee. Cost Our price 61,102. Bave $1,000. RA Motor Sales | DeSoto-Plymouth Dealer | #0 Years Fair Dealing Cas, at W Pike 8t FE 2 E 5-0315. | Deluxe 4 door sedan Low mile- ) See. _FPE 2..°' after u FE 2-8046. WHEN YOU THINK OF baker-think of Carkner’s in Bir- | _mingham Mi 43410._ Owens YOUR FORD DEALER Says | Don't Buy ~Anywhere Until You See These Commander Starlité Coupe- V-a- healer Slop and automatic transmis $345 20 PLYMOUTH Convertible Coupe, radio & heat. er £345 ‘51 PONTIAC Convertuble coupe. radio. heater Hviramatic and white wall tires : Qo" r: ’ : *1 Pontiac Cuctom Catalina heater and Hy- dramatic $95 "50 PONTIAC Streamliner “&'"-two door. and heater aoe $545 33 Pontiac Chieftain "8" two door, heater and Hvdramatic. $1,395 1 lord mo*H four duor. heater Pordomatié | SOUS , Cust Community Motor Sales Inc. 803 N. Main, Rochester Open mp 10 P.M. j_ Ot ive 99311 _ | LINCOLN | CAPRI 1953 HARDTOP. Radio Heater. Full power. $1875. _MArket 43265 ay HO] ESALE WEEK Week only we ate passing rine wholesale prices to the retail buver We are callin= this eur foo" will. eek 1s2 Fo T cus and heater ind er car t! miine door radio dark blue Clean as isi2 Chrvsier N -Ooraner 4 door / tone grev Radio and heater an auto transmtissn > 1951 Chrysler Windsor hard top 2 tone, radio and heatcr and auto trar mission | 1954 Chrysler Windsor deluxe 4 dr. | Many More To Choose From | Riemenschineider Bros. | Dodae-. Plymouth “The Cars Wath The lorward Leok” 232 S. Saginaw St, Phone FE 2-9131 | 1950 HUDSON, § PASSENGER coupe very good, owper, FE_}-7542 on see MERC URY 1930 OWNER. Clean radio heater on dig anes tires, 255 roo be Radin beater. auto trans- mission and white sidewall tires. Low mileare. 1646 Plymotth * door car and @ rea: buy CLARKSTON MOTOR SALES _ Clarkston Mich a a5 ie daily “WE BUY ‘SELLA! AND y TRADE SEE PAUISON For A Good Deal 66 S. Perry St. FE 4-6882 ‘S0 NASH RAMBLER CONVERTI- A clean Qprr # essume paym oodward, Birm! radio | radio, | tadio and 11952 DODGE 2 dr. sedan with radio and heater. $500 1951 FORD 8 cylinder 2 dr. with radio and heater. \ good one. | $495 | 14S Cadillac 4 dr sedan. A real a eaahie (1954 FORD 2 dr. A one! | owner, low mileage. Be- | lieve it or not, for only $1095 ;1954 PLYMOUTH club coupe (Savoy). 6,000 actual mules. TICAN.. it's yours $1295 11949 BUICK convertible. Here 1s and fully equipped. = $295 1953 FORD 2 dr. bargain. ders and is nice and clean. $950 A real 1931 MERCURY Monte- | | rey club coupe. One of those hard to find good ones. $795 TRANSPORTATION SPECIALS 1948 Hudson ........ $75 1949 Plymouth ...... $95 1947 De Soto Coupe. .$135 1941 Pontiac 2 dr......$35 am, j Hurry! Hurry! Owens “Your Ford Dealer” 147 S. Saginaw St. FE 5-4101 | ‘For Sale Used Cars 9! ECONOMY USED CARS| hy reamatic. all access. Very clean, excellent condition. Priced | for quick sale. FE 5-6768. ust Your Here’s our deal! No gimicks, just facts. If you own a 1946, 1947, or 1948 model car we will allow you a down payment on any of the following cars. This offer lasts until January, 1. Payments are figured on a 2-ygar basis. All completely winter- ized and ready to go. $21.89 Per Mo. 1950 Ford 4 Dr. Radio, fieater, runs good, looks good. $36.42 Per Mo. « $47.91 Per Mo. 1953 Chevrolet 210 De- luxe 2 Dr. Radio, heat- er. A very clean car. $13.42 Per Mo. 1951 Buick Super 4 Dr. 1949 Buick 2 Dr. with came and heater. i ‘ext | new $2,202. BY OWNER LATE 1953 PONTIAC | STUDE- | 2 dr. Just like. a bedutiful car. | New top, very very clean , It has 8 cylin- | 1941 Plymouth Coupe $35, —_ radio, heater and good motor. A nice car. & $49.82 Per Mo. 1952 Buick Super 4 Dr. Radio, heater, one own- er. Very good condition. $33.07 Per Mo. 1952. Plymouth 2 Dr. | and 4 Dr. Loaded with with Dynaflow, radio extras. Take your and heater. Ready for choice. winter. $25.42 Per Mo. 1951 Studebaker 4 Dr. $14.41 Per Mo. 1949 Pontiac 2 Dr. Ra- Radio, heater, dark dio, heatef. Another green finish. Nice. low priced Oliver bar- gain. $16.80 Per Mo. $28.77 Pet Mo. 1950 Pontiac 2 Dr. Se- 1951. Chevrolet Deluxe dan. Radio, heat er. Coupe. A,very neat and Very neat appearing trim car you'll be proud car. to own. $17.28 Per Mo. 1950 Chevrolet 2 Dr. with radio, heater and ready for cold weather $20.63 Per:Mo. | 1949 De Soto 2 Dr. Se- '| dan. Radio, heater, new paint. All good tires. REMEMBER lst Payment February 10th OLIVER BUICK 210 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 29101 $25 OVER WHOLESALE 1953 DODGE CLUB COUPE. This Dodge has 1954 PLYMOUTH CLUB COUPE. Metallic green finish. Hy-Drive transmission, the famous Red-Ram V-8 en- 3.800 actual miles, whitewall gine with overdrive transmis- tires, radio, heater, direction sion, large radio, large heater signals and backup lights. and many other fine features. ime One owner. low mileage. $1675 $1,125 1952 DE. SOTO CLUB COUPE. The perfect gift for your wife. Beautiful blue finish, automatic transmission, radio and heater. Very clean Inside and out. $850 1952 STUDEBAKER HARDTOP. Attractive two tone paint, radio, heater, overdrive, direction signals, backup lights and many other accesso $875 1953 CHRYSLER WINDSOR. Your choice of any one of the three we have on hand — ail are fine cars and all are completely equipped. $1.375 1954 PLYMOUTH FARDTOP. A car you've been waiting for — beautifully two toned, equipped with Hy-Drive transmission. Jarge heater, di- rection signals and backup lights. Only $1,775 1952 CHE YSLER WINDSOR HARDTOP. One of the nicest cars on our tet. Pow. |] er steering power brakes, au- tomatic transmission, radio, QO. Mig be f] heater. two tohe black and 1952 PON! IAC grey. exceptionally clean tnside HARDTOP. Beautifully twe and out. toned green, all-leather interior 3s with radio. heater and white Ob idewa ires, $1 150 8 tire $1,125 1950 CHRYSLER WINDSOR FOUR DOOR. If you're a person that enjoys all the comfort of the heavy car, then look at this — two 1950 Chrysiers, immaculate through- out, both tn perfect mechanical 954 CHRYSLER NEW YORKER DELUXE. We have four new Chryslers, ell completely equipped and we condition and beth — fully are willing to sell them at @ equipped. For only — Great loss. Prices range from 2% [= $675 $2,950 to $3,300 1953 PLY MOUTH We have three of these fine cars on our lot, all fully equipped and ready to go Pick the one you lke and drive it home for only — $1,075 1953 Dodge STATION WAGON. Beautiful green finish, gas-saving over- drive transmission, large heater, tinted glass, 15,000 actual miles. . $1,375 Pick out the car you want and drive home in a real bargain. We must make room for more new car trades. Immediate Delivery KELLER -KOCH Birmingham’s Largest Chrysler-Plymouth Dealer moon sD & 13% MILE RD., ROYAL OAK Liberty 9-4385 , MIdwest 6-1200 P.S.—Come in Tonight, We're Open 9-9} id a “ _, ~. THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1954. Art ‘Carney Moves. to $100,000 Be a oe ae — EE WEeitiince peal se = -- Today’ S Television Programs --| Channel 2—-WJBK-TV . Channel (—WWJ-TV Channel 7—WXYZ-TV = =—s_- Channel. 9—-CKLW-TV TONIGHTS. TV HIGHLIGHTS 6:00—(7) Little Rascals. “Free Eats.” (9) Capt. Video. Adven- ture serial. (4) Time for Music. Jane Palmer sings. (2). Gene Autry. Gene fights for honest election in “Boots and Ballots.” 6;15—(9) News. Austin Grant. (4) News. 6: 30—(7) Wild Bill Hickok. Adven- ture film with Guy Madison. (9) The Passerby “Blue Street,” drama. (4) Showcase of Stars: Dane Clark, Ann Rutherford, “Unfinished Business’ (2) News Ace. Ken Cline, Van Patrick. 6:45—(9) Frankie Connors. Shelia Guise, singer, guest. (2) Weath- ‘erman. Dr. Everett R. Phelps. 7:00—(7) Kukla, Fran and Ollie. Puppet show. (9) Hopalong Cas- sidy. William Boyd in “Guns Across the Border.” (4) It’s a Great Life. Boys join talents to help Mrs. Morgan get a driver's license. Michael O’Shea, William Bishop, James Dunn. (2) Fea- turette. “Drunk Driving.” :15—(7) Detroit Deadline. News. :30—(7) Name's the Same. Quiz with Bill Cullen-(9) Motion Pic- ture Academy. Vivien Leigh. Rex Harrison in ‘Storm in a Tea- cup.” (4) Tony Martin ‘Here’ and other songs. (2) News. Doug. = +3 Edwards. 7:45—(4) News Caravan. John Cameron Swayze. (2) Perry Como. Songs. : 8:00—(7) Royal Playhouse. ‘Pol- ly,” drama. (4) Caesar’s Hour. Musical numbers from’ Beeth- oven's sym . “Birth of the Blues,” Just One of Those Things.” (2) Burns and «Allen. Gracie thinks Robert Cummings is making romantic advances. :30—(7) Voice Program. Ferruc- cio Tagliavoni, tenor, sings arias from Verdi's “Traviata,” and “Trovatore."’ (2) Talent Scouts. Arthur Godfrey host, with so- prano, folk singer, quartet. 9:00—(7) Wrestling. (4) Medic. Story of the aging: ‘‘When Comes the Autumn.”’ (2) I Love Lucy. Lucy and Ethel room together in Spring,” sophisticated comedy | Faces Life. yee: 15—(4) Sonny Elliott. (2) Road 10:30—(4) _Ethel Barrymore of Life. Theater. Charles Coburn in ““Win- | ).99 (4) Good Cooking. (2) La- ter and Spring,’ old man goes dies Day. 11:06—(7) A Time to Live. (2) Arthur God frey. 10.4514) Three Steps ‘o Heaven ee 11:00 — (7) Creative Cookery. (4) Home, a ‘vacation, from marriage, Lu- cille Ball, Degi Arnaz. $:30—(7) Lynn Bari Show. Boss Lady comedy. (9) Mr. Show Business. Variety (4) Robert two of Dickens’ | t1:30—(2) Strike It Rich. ward,” part” “David Copperfield’. with David Cole as David. (2) December TUESDAY AFTERNOON Bride. Lily and friend Hilda plan a Luau to replace canceled Ha- waiian trip. Spring Byington 12:00—(7) 12 O'Clock Comics. -44) Betty White Show. (2) Valiant stars. ; Lady. 10:00—(7) Boxing. Middleweight 12:15—(2) Love of Life. . bout: Bobby Dykes ag ond 12:30—(7) Story Studio. (4) Feath- McNeece. (9) Boxing. YY") er Your Nest. (2) Search for To- weight bout: Dan Bucceroni vs. noe, Cesar Brion. (2) Studio 1:00 — (7) Lunchtime Drama. (4) Bob Maxwell Show. (2) Portia Charlies Coburn, Richard Kiley and Louise King in “The Cuckoo to work to help young niece. 10:45—(9) Ringside Review. Chris Schenkel commentary. Soupy’s On. Clare “Shanty” Hogan, guest. (9) Na- tional News. (4) News Paul Wil- liams. (2) News Jack LeGoff. 11:15—(7) Armchair Theater. Den-| nis O’Keefe in “‘Brewster's Mil- lions." (9) Good Neighbor Theater. Joe Kirkwood, Leon Er- 1:45—(9) School Broadcast. 2:;00—(7) Stars on Seven. Bruce Mayer Show. 2:15—(9) Bobo the Hobo. . | 2:30—(9) Myrtle Labbitt Show, (4) Jean McBride. (2) House Party. 3:00—(7) Theater. (9) Paul Dixon. (4) Greatest Gift. (2) Big Pay- off. (4) rol, Elyse Knox in “Fighting | 3:15—(4) Golden Windows. Mad." (4) Little show. Una .3:39—(4) One Man's Family. (2) O'Connor in “Buried Treasure.”” | Bob Crosby Show. (2) Featurette. Paris Is the ‘3: (4) Concerning Mics Mar- Mood. lowe. 11:30—(4) Tonight. Variety with| | : ; Sieve Allen. 4:00—(7) Captain Flint. (9) Justice Colt. (4) Hawkins Falls. (2) Brighter Day. 4:15 — (4) First Love. Storm. 4:30—(4) Mr. Sweeney's World. (2) On Your Account, 11:45—(2) Weathervane. TUESDAY MUHNING 7:00 — (4) Today. (2) Morning Show. (2) Secret 8:30—(2) Morning in Detroit. : 7) Ri . 9:00-(7) Breakfast Club. (4) “Ae7{7) Rickey the Clown, (4) Romper Room. (2) Welcome Traveler, 5:00—(7) Auntie Dee. (9) Go to the | | . (4) k 9:30—(2) Breakfast with Murphy. Srey ge —_— 10:00—(7) Beulah. (4) Ding Dong . 4. (7) Rocky Jones. (9) Howd: ; y School. (2) Garry Moore. Doody. (4) Howdy Doody. (2) Pi- (2) when Ricardos and Mertzes try 10:30—(7) Wixie’s Wonderland. (4)' rate Pete. - - Today Programs furnished by stations listed tm this column are subject te change 's Radio Programs -- without notice. WXYZ, (1770) WIR, (760) CKLW, (800) Www, (85e) WCAR, (1130) WPON, (1460) — WJBK, (1490) TONIGHT 1@:15- WWJ, Glidersleeve CKLW, Good Neighbor WJBK, News. George wa. x CKLW, Sammy Kaye WPON, 8. Kaye WCAR, News, Harmony 6:06— ews . | WPON, News. Records WWJ, News 10:30—WJR, World Neighbors) 9:45—WJR. Pete and Joe : WxYZ, Wattrick- McKenzie, WWJ. Two in Balcony CKLW, Good Neighbor 1:15—WJR, Ma Prrikins | CKLW, — CKLW, News wean — Academy 1:38_WJR. Dr. Malone WJBK, Don Mc PON, 1 | tas * (JBK © , CKLW, Story Time Eon. Nene wate tem lads 10:00—WJR, Arthur Godfrey | WJBK. T. George 6:15—WJR, Clark Quartet : WWJ. McBride, Smith | feb wom. Getaiee Tlaké WWJ, Bud Lynch | 11:00—WJR, News WXYZ, My True Story WIR, Ouiding Lig Lee mits WWJ. Charies Lewis CKLW, Homechats 2:00—WJIR, Mre. Burton CKLW, Eddie Chase WXYZ, Sports, Top WCAR, News, Temple CKLW, Davie: WPON, Serenade CKLW, Kuren, Spotra WPON, News, Party WJBK, T. George +0 WR. afuivoiane vcore | 10:20 WXYE, Whispering WPON, News, Bady ww. ‘ulhel , wwJ, Pran arris WXYZ, Bill Stern 11:13—WJR, Sports CKLW, Mary Morgan a ok ak Sion, eo Muste ee. Mayer. Muse WCAR, Wid. Lk. High WPON, Club 1460 o o caewe h CKLW. word Window 10:45—WWJ, Break the Bank | 2:30—WJR, Nora Drake | 6:45—WJR, L. Thomas WPON. bah WXYZ, Girl Marries WWJ. L. Jones Uiae in Ves Denies $1:30_WIR. deste WCAR. Gong Paredes WXYZ, Martin Block | RB CKLW, Feller, McKeller 11:00— WWJ, Strike It Rich WCAR, Hall, Sports \ 1:6 WIR. oo ware WPON, Sports wxyYzZ, Modern Romance 2:45-—-WJR, Brighter Day ww. be oy pcb _ CKLW. Florida Osa. WWJ, Marriage Pays gt al Mugoenl cst’ Jr. TUESDAY MORNING WCAR. een Song igen: har WPON, News, Gib Shanley | 9.39 won Agric. Voice 11:18—WXYZ, Companion “Wien 1:15—CKLW, Guy Nunn WWJ, Bob Maxwell WPON, Hyma Time WXYZ, Ed. McKenzie WWJ, Nation Bus. alah — Picdioad 11:30—WJR, Make Up Ming| CKLW, News, Living :: war, hers wie: uy Nun WWJ, Phrase That Pays WCAR, News, Carousel wwi, Morgan Beatty WPON, Jone Egan Caw Goon ee ae 3:15-WJR, Aunt Jenny CRLW, Gabriel Boater 1:00—WJR, Jim Vinal WJBK, McLeod =, 1:45—WJR, B. R. Murrow Sea apr Ralph ame Don’ MeLeod WWJ, One Man's Family WJBK, Gentile, Binge 1148—WJR, Rosemary CKLW, In the Mood 7:15—WJR, Music Hall ww, Chance 8:45—WJR, Gal sundsy 8:00—WJR, Norths CKLW, Terence O'Dell WJBK. News, McLeod WwW, Right to Happinees WWJ, Your WCAR, Coffee 12:00—WJR, Jack White 4:00—WJh, Music Hall WXYZ, ‘ Show Stoppers 1:43—WWJ, Newb WWJ, News WWJ, Backstage Wife CKLW, " CKLW, Break the Bank WXYZ, Wattrick-McKensie 8:00—WJR, Jack White WJBK, News, McLeod CKLW. Eddie Chase 8:15—WWJ. Best of All WWJ, Bob Maxwell WCAR, Newn WJBK. News, McLeod WXYZ, Show World WXYZ. = Cseeed WPON, News WPON, Sports 8:30—WJR, Talent Scouts sv st toe (12:15—WJR, Parm Roundup j94:15—WW4J, Stella Dalias = balan acl oe WWJ. Paye Elizabeth ©’ WCAR, Talk Sports CKLW. Bway Cop ; ' CKLW, Austin Grant WPON, Club 1460 8:45—WXYZ, Show Stoppers a wed Guest hahaa vosesey Caller 30 WWJ, Widder Brows e fe, Lo 0 ‘ usie 9:00—WJR, Perry Como WCAR, Coffee ; WJBK, Don McLeod ww. Te one Hour 12:3@—WJR, Time Out Muete WCAR, Your Land, Mine WXYZ, Voice Program 8:30—WJIR, Music Hall WXYZ, News. Music an ; CKLW, Charm Hour . ; | CKLW. Bud Davies 4:45—WWJ, Woman in Home WPON. News, Off Record §:45—WW) News WJBK. McLeod CKLW, George Wright 9:18_WJR, Bing Crosby WCAR, Radio Revival WCAR, Harmony Hall WCAR, News same am, Amon sw Aner | OTS bacage TRMRSWEYZ, Charm Lady | MORONIR, Mens 9 wxvt, Comante WXYZ, Breakfast Ciup | PON. Farm Mkts CKLW, Sgt. Preston CKLW, Reporter's Roundup WJBK, News, George | = WJBK, News, McLeod WJBK. Gentile WCAR, Newa, Rhythm : as WCAR, Sign Off | 10:00 —WJR. | Tenn Ernie WPON, News, Music AUESBAT APTERNCOM WPON, News, Music WWJ, Fibber McG 9:15—WJR, Kitchen Club 1:06—WJR, Road of Life 8:15—WJR. Revnolds, Musie a WJBK, Mulholland CKLW, Eddie Chase wars News, Top. , H. Plannery Sone: Houseparty 9:30—WJIR, Mrs | WWJ. News, News. Don McLeod | WXYZ. Paul Winter Page CKLW. Musical Airs 5: 30—CKLW, Eadie Che = No Contract Necessa FUEL OIL Call Today! Gregory Oil Co. 94 East Watson Bivd. Phone FE 5-6141 See Us Before You Buy GENERAL ELECTRIC HAMPTON ELECTRIC CO. FE 4-2525 825 W. Huren of Dragnet Gags | day. { Polcyn added: pride, adding. « “T was a sa sergeant in the Corps. 1910 to ‘14. When Joe Friday joins the beak a sidekick will be one ra Smith, a patrolman who focal his application in 1951 as Franklin New Cop Faces Endless Parade A. Smith. MILWAUKEE (INS)—This is the town, Milwaukee. One of the clean- a ok a oo Ga de | 2,500 Economists Gather | people. And the cops. Chief John in Detroit for Convention |Polcyn and the men he picks, \like his newest recruit—Joe Fri- DETROIT (UP)—Approximately ! 17th of January, Polcyn said today. “That's his real Xperts were, on hand today for name—Joe Friday—just like the the opening of the annual conven- Dragnet man on, television.’ tion of the American Economic As- What's the run-down? sociation. “Let’s look at the application,’ | Among the featured speakers at Chief Polsyn said. ‘‘ Born Stev-: vens Point, Wis., 28th February 1926. Machinist by trade. Married. | Wife, Mary Primus.” Notice any outstanding — teristics? “Take a look at the medical,’’ the chief said. “Five feet, 16. 100 New WV Stations H I. Fl | SYRACUSE, N. Y. —Televi- CAPEHART sion entertainment will be dished WEBCOR up from 100 new stations by the | V-M od ome - inn Electric MITCHELL Dr. W. R. G. Baker, vi | aoe and preeral aamaaer al HAMPTON TV ‘GE's electronics division here. pre- 825 W. Heren dicted yesterday that—at this time FE 4-2525 Open Eves 2,500 industrial and government | next year—‘‘at least’’ 530 TV sta- “The lad will be appointed the economists, university professors tions would be in operation across with 39 others,”’ and labor and industrial relations the country. That would compare 10 Tipplers Back in Jail Weighs 164. Nothing unusual.” Why did he apply for the force? “Likes people,” the chief said. Eve City Judge Q. Z. Valentine “Always interested in police work. released- 25 men held on drunken- | Really interested in people, in ness charges. working with them.” Yesterday 10 of them were back “He was in the’ in jail on the same charge. |Army, Oct. 30, 1944 to Aug. 10, 1946. Infantry rifleman—the next! Harvard, founded in 1636, was thing to being a Marine.” the first university in the United | ‘The chief said this with a little States. % ' WACO, Tex. @—On Christmas | ‘He said the retail cost of one color + | | t \ Mitzi Gaynor Spends Wedding Night Talking By EARL WILSON | NEW YORK — Mitzi Gaynor Bean spent her honeymoon talking. 2 | The happy bride and her lovin’ bridegroom, Jack Bean, em-) braced each other for a full hour to talk to me. A whole con-. veyor belt of reporters kept breaking in on the honeymoon. * * * * “We even spent our wedding night talking,” Mitzi—in a Aight fitting sweater and tight-fitting toreador pants—said in her honeymoon suite up at the Plaza. “We were sitting up on a plane fiying frem San Francisco te New York. Couldn't get a berth.” demented aoe i be “ ‘3 i ‘ategory*: ‘produce some dozen different TV “ y ~ 4 * line“ “best knawn name in the U. S. next to: President Eisenhower.” Hanging TV Sets Soon Available Detroit Police/Now Say “TV Curbs Delinquency; Monty Makes 13 Films NEW YORK (INS) — Art Car- ney's reward in the new Gieeam| prosperity will be promotion to the | $100,000-a-year category. . . Perry Como finally turned down the Jan. 4 extravaganza. They ; have ways of amplifying light the | couldn't: supply proper talent or | script. “Ty Love Lucy” started Desi and | Lucille along the oad Gleason ‘aims to follow: They now own and series, all of them sold. . “Lucy” re-runs of old episodes go into the “Omnibus” spot when the latter leaves the TV air in’ April . ... soap sponsor. . . This is Berle’s seventh highly successful TV year and his show still is by far the most expensive hour-long opus on the alr — $154,500 a week for talent and production alone — aetwork time charges are extra — Berle earning $30,000 of that ups to $40,000 next seasen. ee ee ol fe some npoh wecatdes 2 ee Tk a ae nh a ___ ‘THTRTY-THREE quency Te ws . - Almost three fourths of the weight of the humari body 1s water... 4 * 3 Turkeys Well-Done ‘Gen. David Sarnoff’s dream of a TV tube which hangs en a wall and can be moved to any room of the house now is an — : , : will be en sale in a couple of |: EASTHAMPTON, Mass. #—Fire years, ‘records today showed three alarms Both RCA and General- Electric , were sounded Christmas Day. All were for turkeys burning in ovens. | way sound now is amplified. . 1954 TV sets sold 4 million more than expected — 7.000,000 in all, | biggest TV year yet | Here's a pleasant switch: De- treit police say TV “curbs delin- | TV | RUMMAGE SALE! Wed., Dec. 29, 10 to 5 $10 buys a TV chassis, use Monty Weelley has completed 13 TV films culled from the eclassies (Wilde, Poe, Chekhov, ete.). “Marilyn Monroe snubbed $100,000 for a “spectacular one-shot. . . it to experiment — has The Ritz Brothers get $25.000 for $30 to $50 in TV tubes. (10 minutes of insanity in Max $5 buys a wrecked com- Liebman's Jan. ?° ‘spectacular.”’ bination . More nominations from readers ; $4 buys a small radic for our list of “TV Performers | $2 buys « console radio | With Class’: Bishop Sheen, Walter | 25¢ te $0c buys TV tubes Winchell, John Daly. Dorothy Kil-_ gallen, John Cameron Swayze, Jimmy Durante. Brazil comprises about one-half | of South America’ s area. ~ i eens ee PONTIAC'S FIRST | TV SERVICE DEALER! BLAKE RADIO AND TV SERVICE Authorized Factory Service fee 15 Ditterent Manufacturers 3149 W. Huron FE 4-5791 London paper says nasa is . — MITZI GAYNOR BEAN Mitzi gave me a Mitzi's-eye view of the flock of stars in “There's No Business Like Show Business.” “Johnny Ray—of course, he’s a little bit cuke— _" “What'd you say?” I said. “Cuke,” Mitzi repeated, then I knew she meant cuckoo. “But he works from his toenails up. And he gave every- body gifts. You say te him, ‘Johnny, that’s a nice ring you have on,’ and he says, ‘You like it? Here. It’s yours’.” * * * * “Did you get well acquainted with Irving Berlin?” “Sure! Do you know what he is? A song-plugger!” Mitzi laughed. “And such a cute one. “He comes up to you and says he wants to sing you his latest _ THE Good ‘HOUSEKEEPING SHOP of PONTIAC Many of these a song. You never know what the tune is, the way he sings it, | but he says, ‘Is that a beautiful phrase? Is that a beautiful phrase?’ “And it is! “And Ethel Merman and I would go to lunch and dish dirt about everybedy. We'd cut everybody up and put ‘em back together again.” * x One day Mitzi, a gifted mimic, couldn't resist doing an im- | pression of Marilyn Monroe, chest thrust forward and mouth open, as she walked into the studio commissary. Ethel Merman then did an impression of Mitzi doing an impression of Marilyn. “I'm a big fan of Marilyn's, but I could never get close to her,” | Mitzi confessed. “She's the hardest-working gal, and the most ime’ most ' feminine actress on the screen toflay. * * * * - “I guess she had all these other things on her mind. ~ | didn't seem to be aware of the rest of us. “One day we asked her if she'd have lunch with us. said ‘No, I’m going to have lunch off the lot.’ very moody and depressed. “When she came back after lunch she was smiling and friend- ly and said ‘Hi!’ to everybody. Ethel said, ‘Girl, do you know what happened?’ “Ethel said, ‘Why, she went home and had lunch with Joe!’ " Mitzi, a Chicago-born, Detroit-reared kid who's been in show business forever, worked her way up through many road tours of Broadway shows. She was also on tour with a — group billed as “The 13 Hollywood Starlets,” which played for service men. “Not one of us had ever been inside a Hollywood studio,” Mitzi admitted She She seemed * * * * After this talking, Mitzi and her bridegroom, a Los Angeles public relations man, were asked to pose for a honeymoon. smooching picture. They embraced and the photographer said | “Wait a second, something wrong with the camera.” “Oh, we don't mind holding it,” the bride replied. eer 1954) with the 430 Baker said are now on the air. Baker forecast the retail sale of about 5,800,000 black and white receivers and 200,000 color re- ceivers during the coming year. set would approximate that of three black and white receivers. Lignite has a moisture content up to 40 per cent. BED BUGS One Full Year Guerentee From Houses, Apartments, Rooming Houses. Remain out only three hours. No signs used. Rox Ex Company 1014 Pont. St. Bh. Bldg. . FE 4-9662 - S185. Rates Me | Sor M1 2 ter Gee Gaukler Storage 9 Orchard Lake Ave, She | Television All brand new merchandise . . Famous Brands at Lowest Prices! e-Inventory Sale! re floor samples . . . many one of a kind. . fully guaranteed . . . and serviced by Good Housekeeping Shop! SAVINGS ON EVERY ITEM! KELVINATOR AUTOMATIC WASHER reg $30995 $1495 Floor model... | only . 3.66. s4-05- eer . | FRIGIDAIRE AUTOMATIC WASHER Your Old Washer $4999 Full size . . . fully automatic ..... in Trade WHIRLPOOL ASTEBATIC WASHER Reg $319.95 § 95 Suds-Sever model _, with Old Washer ) DOUGLAS AUTOMATIC DRYER Foor Mose! $415 Q28 Gas Type. . . Free Installation ...... _HAMILTON GAS DRYER Save $100! $179% Free Installation... reg. $279.95 ........... Floor Model KELVINATOR HOME FREEZER Seve $100! $@QQIS Upright model... 12 cu. ft... . reg. 399.95... 1 Only KELVINATOR AUTO. DEFROSTER Reg $299.95 § 95 | 9.5 cu. ft. refrigerator .............. Sale Priced ed KELVINATOR HOME FREEZER Sove $15000' $ @QQ95 13.3 cu ft. chest type reg $449 95 Floor Model a dicta aera SEES ET OR on OUEAG $99095 Floor model... 9 cu ft eg 22012 ni FRIGIDAIRE AUTO. RANGE Reg $34995 $ 95 Fully automatic, with wonder oven |. Floor Model | KELVINATOR AUTO. ELECTRIC RANGE Reg $38395 § 95 | Deluxe model, fully automatic... ss... Floor Model FRIGIDAIRE THRIFTY “30” RANGE zg 2299; $4792 Trade your old one on an Automatic Model .... i adiiad 4 Television CLEARANCE OF ALL 24” ADMIRAL CONSOLE Big Picture Furniture Model 17” ADMIRAL TABLE MODEL With new power-packed chassis Preway, Duo-Therm ... Reg $44995 $329° $129 Save 10% a ee ee Easy Terms Floor Samples OlL NEATERS! 51 W. Wuron St. NO MONEY DOWN When Trade Equals Payment! The GOOD HOUSEKEEPIN Cop LONG, E-Z TERMS At Lowest Finance Charges! | of PONTIAC ‘Order ®¥ Phone - Phone FE 41555 4 ) : : 4. ; \ ES. ee r = ie ¢ : “i wi as ri * es Reese “: a ee So ee age oe . . : f » ¢ . rf, . = ~. i i . : « ; . . . , THIRTY-FOUR. THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1954 : ae a ae a ‘ ; nan. | ; : : : i be none transm ley, a local marksman, 4 Explorer ts Surprised. —_ [north this year was Thule, Green: Myd for Giant Roof _ fms. recs and ainuis wil Deft Definition disease Ganamitted to parents Y Breaks Bounty Fund =|: plugged 89 —_ i w : . L . : E val Ae * . < aoe CHICAGO (UP) + The biggest Grand Park Underground Garage, |< HARTFORD, Conn. (UP) — Dr. . BOSTON (UP)—The woolichuck at Arctic Community “My,” said Macaiian, “there BOOTHBAY HARBOR, Me. (UP) | must be 5,000 people there now | | «Rear Adm. Donald B. MacMil- | that the U.S. Air Force has estab- | proof in a strange way. About at its widest point. lan, the Arctic explorer, gays one lished a base. And whoever | 31,000 tons of mud have been of the sights that ps iP him | thought to see movie houses and dumped on it, and 44,000 tons of ‘most on his 30th voyage to the far | traffic cops so far north?" ~ | plack dirt will go over that. Then! trees and feeds on ants. (SEARS roof in town is being made leak-| 1,200 feet lon’ and 350 feet, wide | John C. Leonard, medical educa-, Warm Springs foundation, anti-| +, tund in Usquepaugh, RL, pe a | ‘| tional director of Hartford Hos- paralysis institute fo by the | almost exhiusted. The csuncil pattern pigment usually pital. told the New England con- late President Roosevelt, has | a cee z produced by “ sye- The goby, arf African fish, climbs | ference of “the American College norma! accommodations for about | Pays cen every deceased | adrenal and pituitary gland ‘of Physicians that “insomnia is a | 150 persons. woodchuck produced. Frank Daw- | tem. . 4 ‘STARTS TODAY come in now--save! ‘GOODS BUCK AND CO. oe sur d ;. buy now at this low price! q , ~ , , e ’ 3 Harmony House white : ~musiin sheets 100% All Wool Blankets 97 . Reg. 9.98! You-Save 1.01! reasons why e Beautiful all-wool with soft, lofty nop. 72x84-in. size : choice of flat blanket, acetate satin binding matches rich Harmony Harmony ° h House colors like Sage Green and Valley Rose. Wash- or fitted eac able with care; 3-lb. wt. House % sheets are _ @ Flat 72x108-in.; 81x99-in. or Twin Size Fitted your There's no need to go on tiresome shopping safaris _ : , around town... for, Sears can take care of all of your besf Duy sheet needs and still keep well within your budget! So, , take advantage of this big White Goods Sale now and save on these economical first quality white muslin sheets. 138 threads per sq. in. after washing. : Fey : 1 Atweys First Quality! Con- 81x108-In. or Full Fitted Sheets... 1.57) A sat eka as ftinveus Quality Control in a 27 biy Pine gi bredauten As. combed percale sheets Fitted Mattress Pads 3 sures Consistent Top Quality. Added Comfort and Protection! Save now on luxurious white Harmony House 97 oe 2 Fitted Sheets Senforized* percales that are 190 threads per sq. in ] Twin bed size. Always stays smooth, snug. Good qual- for Permanent Fit. “Maximum “after washing. 72x1!08-in. flat; twin bed ity bleached: muslin covering, all new bleached cotton Shrinkage 1%. size fitted. filling. Easy to wash. 3 Hermony Newce Coordi. 81x108-in. or Full Fitted Sheets ............. 2.17 Full Bed Size Fitted Mottress Pads... .......... vin nated Colors to Blend or Match . ee = All Other Household Items pastel muslin sheets Throughout Sears. SPECIAL NOTICE TO Harmony House exclusive pastels for color- 07 4 Seated in Air-Tight Plastic QUANTITY BUYERS! pai ong wast as eos pereg in alte 2 WN ete eee Se washing. 5 colors. 72x1!08-in. flat; twin et the Factory es te be Hotels, motels, hospitals, room bed size fitted. ee Clean and Ready for Use When ing Routes, ttions 2 81x108-in. or Full Fitted Sheets ..... 2.27 ~ 1adg (Wi in O80 VONI@G GO ae ee - You Buy Them. and ecg typical of Sears! . peear . age head, bu , sav t ° ° eaters 2 ; < 5 type tor Type You Can't Buy Sears low, oa wale ceices! best quality muslin sheets : es . — + : Finer Shoots Then Hermony Durable, long-wearing white muslin! 148 79 oe i “4 . ’ . g white usin: ) : “ ; House ot Any Price. WHY PAY MORE? threads per sq. in. after washing. Flat 72x ] li P d 87 G Satisfaction Guaranteed or 108-in. or twin bed size bottom fitted. Buy _.Muslin Mattress Pads ] Your Money Back. Home Furnishing Dept. yours today. Twin Bed Size Reduced! o Sears Main Floor 81x108-in. or Full Fitted Sheets ............. 1.99 ‘di ’ , Sale-priced sanitary mattress protection. Long-wear- raw Bae meee RT Ate rile ee P METIS ; 1 ing bleached muslin cover, semi-bleached cotton filling. ie, Eatbpiptisind, ‘ Bs Magis b | Rip-resistant zig-zag stitching prevents lumping. be! t- 8 3 vy : a8 agi S ! week ba rga in Ri : E uys e ey et Washable. Full Size oon eee eae sree eee eeeen ee .2.87 : 7, Harmony House CURTAIN SALE! i £, ca BEAT py ely fe: Hiei C: co ff Yi. | SAVE 43¢ » 56¢! pretty, dainty £: TEA ; yf : : ale ae < . RES me. Meee “ING cd | NICS) organdy Quilted Coverlet Plastic Shower Set Fitted Com Utility Blankets Traverse Rods. - 3 ~ Big Value for Little Price | : Rich Acetate Satin Cover Better Buy Several Soon! See ht Elsewhere for 6.98 : Sears Famous 4-Star Feature p risci Gg Ss sox 4.99 2Piece St 1.99 reg. 1098 = OY Reg: 149 99¢ toa 2.79 . oan shower and = pnacilla Harmony House ‘Fleure De | he line to build a lis Sears new vertical ad uct i. oe Tose o ven curtain set at pasion ke w ‘comtorter with soft warm 10/ it i) Conmec'alerrors oh : F i sket overiet at 1S rice {ustproo! yelets ein wool filling! Reversitle ! - - be eae ume lee Tice All cotton, reverses forced. oe ph ‘ one ‘ ° See Rasp sunnisg Reg. to save washing - . 3.89 Soe a i n 41x81 -in. . ASS rs AY J i SS | each side 41x90-inch organdy priscilla, reg. 3.98, 3.55 Muslin Covers Low Cost Mattress Protection Reduced 2 ‘s 6 6 Saniorized* unbleached muslin, zipper closing Lockstitched, rip- resistant seams. Full or twin. *Max. shrinkage 1°, Mattress Covers Harmony House Fitted Plastic Reg. 1.98 1.62 Waterproo!, odorless mattress protection. Heavy plastic wipes clean. Elastic corners. Full or twin size Soft Harmony House Towels Sturdy Selvages, Neat Hems Reg. ms 99° Heavyweight, 24 x 46- in. Harmony House towels with a new, super soft fin- ish. Extra long cotton loops .make towels 41°) more absorbent. Select from six washfast colors. 16x28-in. hand towel 58c 12x12-in. washcloth. .28c Muslin Sheeting Unbleached. 81-in. Wide Reg. 85c Reduced at. Sears! Firmy sar. Whitens oose yours at Pe Ae Percale Cases Pay Less for the Best at Sears Reg. 59c Pastel Percales Regularly 2.99—Now Reduced 81x108-In. 2.79 Fine percale sheets in four vely Harmony House pastels. yre completely washiast! yours teday! ae Pastel Cases “Better™ Quality Percale 42x38 %-In. Chartreuse or Sunshine y pillowcases of smooth, Curtain Rods Best Quality Lock Seam Rod ‘Singles 35 ¢ Durable, strong rod... no bending or twisting. Thimble ends for easy threading. Du- Pont ivory color enamel. long-wearing percale. 154 d Lowest Price of the Year ov Each One is Snowy White d Available Only at Sears Lovely Harmony House pris- cillas in sparkling white .. . with glacier finish that means whiter, cleaner weave .. . slow to show soil. No startching needed. Redecorate your home now .. . you'll save more — , id POA PA bi’ vi, at Sears! Sa i . ‘ a m ! Drapery Dept.—Main Floor . co pare the price. 1 UP to 40% OFF! . 7. Harmony House Decorator Fabrics C per / 88 yard Wonderful preshrunk, vat-dyed prints, solids. with only 3% max. shrinkage. Glorious assortment of fabrics, patterns and colors will add sophistication to your home! See them—save! North Saginaw St Phone FE 5-417] | . VALUES to 1.49