» The Raa ieee U,f, Weather arian Forecsst — (Details Page - Cs : pola | ‘PONTIAG.| MICHIGAN, ‘SATURDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1958 | Va PAGES SoH EE J UNITED maTionay CLEAR THE WALKS — The weatherman was piling up added chores for wives this morning. The light snowfall, enough to bring out dad or the youngsters with Pontiac house- not doing here. Pontiac Press Phote shovels, was being swept away with brooms, as Mrs. Charles Harmon Jr., 48 Thorpe St., is eplaces: Top Army” Brass a , bh ¢ t Traffic Fire Total Tibet Defies Red China; 65,000. Reported Dead TOKYO (UPI)—Reports filtering out of remote Tibet indicated today the tiny, ancient nation is waging an armed revolt against Chinese Communist rule, They said 65,000 persons had been killed in the months-long fighting. The reports said the Datat Lama, spiritual leader of the mountain-top nation, may seek asylum in India. The reports came from New Del- hi, Calcutta, Bhutan, Katmandu, Kalimpong, Darjeeling and smaller hill cities near the Tibetar border. . Commercial travelers and refu- gees said the latgest flareup came in the August-October period when the proud Khamba tribe in the easterm province of Kyam revolted. They said about 50,000 Chinese Reds were killed, Tibetan death estimates ranged from 5,000 to 15,000, The cumanmuniate tacitly admitted) they were having trouble in Tibet when they announced. that they, were delaying imposition. of their heavily-criticized people's. com-| mune system in that county. There apparently has not been, any large-scale fighting in the past two months, but numerous small» scale actions have occurred. * * * Nationalist Chinese volt also has spread to four prov- inces in northwest China. In some areas, rebels have. seized key po- sitions and forced Communists into the mountains, they said. Adding to the Chinese Commu- nists’ woes, most of them | brought on by the commune sys- tem, -were the thousands of ref- | ugees fleeing into Burma. Rar goon reports said these refugees refuse to return te China even on the threat of death. i sources on, Formosa claimed that the Tibet re-, ceeded in infiltrating areas which the Reds previously considered “safe.” Communists * * * There was a recent fight at Shi-| revolt. gatse, headquarters of the Pan-| was thought this was an attempt | ‘in India, the underground resistance move- on the Lama's life because sev: oral ment in Tibet already has suc-,of his bodyguards were killed. It is generally believed that the, Dalai Lama is being forced by the|tional Safety Council. However, a NSC spokesman re- ported Friday night that the soar- ing toll might not be bound for, the all-time high of deaths, set in a similar Christmas period two years ago. Two more highway fatalities teday boosted the Christmas hol- iday death toll on Michigan high- to . cooperate with| \them and some circles believe that! ‘he himself might be behind the The Indian government still has chen Lama, whom many consider/not formally denied reports that tto be a Red Chinese puppet. It, the Dalai Lama has sought seh the Orinoco River delta. The amateur radio operators reported that the balloon and its four passengers had landed near Pedernales, a {ene port on the Atlantic at the northern edge of the wide delta. The town is just 20 miles west of the tip of Teinlded in the British West Indies. x '6* * | Hams Report Balloon | Landed in Venezuela CARACAS, Venezuela (AP)—Aerial searchers tried today to pin down unconfirmed reports from ham radio operators that the British balloon Small World had landed in east- ern Venezuela after a transatlantic flight. The air search began Friday over the jungle area of few The CiNil Aeronautics Authority said, however, that it had nothing to confirm the report. It was supervising the search by a Communications Ministry DC3. After searching for-enly an hour or two. the plane was forced by darkness to land at Maturin, 60 miles west of Pedernales. x * Reports reaching New Delhi said! the main road from Tibet was. clesed in October when the Kham-! bas booby-trapped it with ditches covered with earth and sticks. They also destroyed several trucks by. rolling huge boulders down the’ mountain sides on them. The reports said that the Ti- betans were angered by the in- crease of Chinese settlers being sent into the nation and the de- portation of about 5,000 young T)-| betans to Red China for “higher training.” The immediate cause of the fall flareup, however, was the Chinese Communist scheme to divide Tibet into three areas. The central portion would have been under the Dalai Lama and the western section under the Pan- chen Lama with the capital at Shigatse. The Chinese Commu- nists intendeg to control the east- ern state of Kham themselves. The Khambas objected with force. The Communists promptly, called for ‘“‘complete. annihilation” of the rebel forces. Travelers in Bhutan said that| across the Atlantic. -The purpose was to study weather ‘conditions and wind currents. Prince Philip, husband of Britian’s Queen Elizabeth II, was the patron. Those aboard were pilot A.B. Ejloart, 51, a London busi- nessman; his son Timothy, 21, radioman; navigator Colin Mudie, 31, who crossed the Atlantic in 1952 in a 19-foot whaleboat; and Mudie’s wife Rosemary, photographer and co-pilot. . ® The Small World cast off from Santa Cruz de Tenerife in the Canary Islands, 65. miles off the coast of Morocco, on * Dec, 12. The goal was to drift with the winds to Barbados, some 3,000 miles away in the West Indies Federation. This was the first attempt of a free balloon to float today, | Caro, who % | he report gained strength«when Minister of Communi- | olina 17, i cations Oscar Machado Zuloaga was quoted in Caracas newspapers as saying the balloon had landed in Venezuela. * * IHit 382: State Has 19 Killed thet Holiday Toll Won't Set Record s**t owners Miscellaneous * * ; From Our News Wires | Careless driving and whirling speedometers swelled an awesome Christ- mas period traffic toll to- day but safety offic out hope that auto fatalities might not hit the all-time holiday record. The deadly traffic tally, ‘which zoomed Christmas Day to a record-breaking \pace, was still “substan- itially ahead” of 620 deaths predicted for the four-day ‘holiday period by the Na- ways to 19, ranking the state among the first six in the na- tion in traffic casualties. The latest victims were Philip ‘Creel, 23, Detroit, whose car blew ‘a tire, jumped the curb and struck ia pole, and Miss Ethe] Davis, 26, rammed into the rear lot a parked car on a highway a miles from her home. * Three young men riding with her were uninjured. driver of the parked car, Richard Lee Scott, had stopped his car to talk to Miss Davis’ brother. California led the nation with | ‘further investigation, police said. 40 traffic deaths, Texas was séc- | ond with 35, dead, New Yerk 26, Michigan, Ohio and Pennsylvania | 19 each, Hlinois 18, North Car- Massachusetts 14, and (Continued on Page Ironically, the} 2, Col. 6) * State to Achieve Cut in Highway Deaths EAST LANSING — Michigan will achieve its goal of reducing traffic fatalities by at least 10 per ‘cent in 1958, State police predicted The forecast was made despite ithe high holiday death toll. This will be the third straight|; year the state has accomplished al similar saving of lives. 30, the cook, Projected figures for the entire | year are 1,375 fatalities, a saving | ‘of 162 lives and a 10.5 per cent re- duction from last year. There were 1,537 persons killed | 'on the state's highways in 1957, held 706 traffic Room Under the ‘Tree ‘ a e GRANDPA’S GIFT — Marvin K. Maus a Denver gave this full-sized fire engine to his , grandchildren for Christmas. Shown efijoying PSE Church News ............ 8-9 Cones eases sieees s caw 18 Editorials ..........6....... 4 Green Empress ............. 5 Home Section .......... 13 - 15 Markets 19 Obituaries ............0..55. 3 Sports .......6..0..005, 16-17 Whieatere. ... 6666055 ss serees IL. TV & Radio Programs ..... 23 Wilson, Earl o.............. % Women’s Pages .........- 6-7 the new toy are (from left) Dick,.5, Dén,,3, and 4 \ : Q AP Wirephete -Debra Maus, 6. They asked grandpa, a fire equipment salesman, for the present, and really: gave thé siren, lights and bell a workout. te “ty <\She Knows Why Handcutts Not ja Good Present Then yesterday, her son, Vincent, locked the handcuffs on his right free the lad. “I’ve hidden the handcuffs so that neither my boy nor my hus- ‘Husted said today. Boy, 8, Killed by Girl's Car Driver Says Youngster Darted Into Path of Her Auto James C. Hanke, eight-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Hanke, 4820 Rochester Rd., Troy, was dead on - arrival at ‘St, Joseph Mercy Hospital, Pontiac, after being struck by a car about 6 p.m. yes- terday. the car, Donna M. Sutherland, 19, of 204 De Villen Oakland | **.. oe os . told them the Highway darted into the Toll path of her car in °58 | on Rochester road near Glaser 92 Street. |. James was re- — turning home! , from a store with his sister Lois, 12, and a neighbor, nine-year-old Diane Barryman of 1105 Glaser St., police said. The girls said the boy was a few feet behind them when they heard a bump and looked back and ‘‘saw Jimmy rolling down the road.” Police said the girls ran to the boy’s home, and that his parents called police, No charges have been made against Miss Sutherland pending Little Change in Weather Forecast Here Cloudy and little temperature ‘change is the forecast for the Pon- tiac area by the U.S. Weather Bu- reau for tonight and tomorrow. The low tonight will be about 30 degrees. Tomorrow's high is expected to ireach around 37. Winds will be 8-15 m.p.h., becoming northwesterly. The outlook for Monday is mostly cloudy with some light snow and little temperature change. Twenty-four was the lowest ther- | mometer reading preceding 8 a.m, ‘in downtown Pontiac. The record- jing at 2 pm was st was 34. Charge Couple Couple Led « Youth Burglary Ring | DETROIT WA Highland Park |fireman and his wife were accused by police today of directing opera- tions of a ring of juvenile burglars | who broke into at least 63 homes, apartments, businesses and auto- mobiles in recent months, Police Lt, William Stephens of Highland Park said John McFar- land, 42, and his wife, Mary, 39, woulld be charged with Possession | of stolen property. Stephens said a number of stolen items were found in the McFarland apartment and that they included two television sets, an outboard motor and clothing. The lieutenant said the arrests were made on information of three juveniles who admitted 63 break- ins and said the McFarlands di- rected them. Railroad Seeks Approval to Drop Suburban Trains NEW YORK — The Delaware, Lackawana & Western Railroad said it will ask the New Jersey {Public Utilities Commission today |for permission to drop 42 suburban passenger trains, Meantime,. the Interstate Com- merce Commission ordered the Le- high Valley Railroad Co, to keep its passenger trains operating while the agency conducts an investiga- tion of the railroad’s proposal to abandon them. wy ankle. Police had to be called | to) , band can play with them,” Mrs. , Troy police said the driver of. Admits questions Moya. in Murder of VENTURA, Calif. woman to have her boy.” Killing Nurse is AP Wirephote HELD IN SLAYING — Luis Moya, 22, left, has admitted, police say, that he and Augustine Baldonado, 25,. were hired to kill nurse Olga Duncan of Ventura, Calif. Detective Ray Higgins Indict Mother, Two Men. Young Bride (P—“She didn’t want. another Dist. Atty. Roy Gustafson was discussing Mrs. ‘Eliza- beth Duncan, 54, who was indicted Friday on a charge two men she is accused of hiring to kill her daughter- in-law. Talking to reporters following, (the return of the indictments, | ‘Gustafson, said it was a dramatic midnight confession by one of ihe| laccused hired killers that led to ithe county grand jury's swift action. The jurors deliberated only 15 minutes before indicting Mrs. Duncan, Luis Moya, 22, and Augustine Baldonado, 25, for the murder of Olga Duncan, 30, preg- nant wife of Mrs. Duncan's son, Frank. | | a ae Moya, a drifter with an eight- year record of arrests, had main- tained a sullen silence since the body of the Canadian nurse was found in a hastily dug grave near here last Sunday. But as midnight tolled on Christmas night pe called in his jailers. jof murder, along with thet 19 Below in Colorado NEW YORK (UPI)—The na- tion’s lowest temperature today was 19 degrees below zero at Fraser, Colo., the U. S. Weather Bureau reported. Yesterday's high was 78 at Key West, Fla. Dag Visiting Sudan KHARTOUM, Sudan ® — U.N. Secretary General Dag Hammar- skjold is making an official two- bit Sends Troops to Halt Rebels in Las Villas Revamps Staff in Face of Castro’s Drive to Cut Cuba in Half From Our News Wires - HAVANA—President Ful- gencio Batista shook up the central Cuban army com- mand today and ordered 2,000 reinforcements to the “waistband” province of -\Las Villas to halt a rebel - drive to split Cuba in two. The rebel radio has said the fall of Santa Clara, capital of Las Villas, was a “matter of hours.” It also claimed that the port of Caibarien on the north coast of Las Villas had been. captured and that the south coast naval base at Cien-. fuegos was “besieged.” Batista met with his top army, Inavy and “police officials at the presidential palace and later issued The rebels control acne con necting Havana and Santa Clara, and travel is risky. While Castro’s forces appeared aining strength on arms smug- gled from the United States, there was grumbling in government cir- cles at the attitude taken by Wash- ington. Thé Uniied States was soemeed by many of helping the rebels, in effect, by maintaining an embar- go on shipment of weapons to the Batista government. The insurgents, in a more confi- dent mood’ now, are able for the first time to occupy populated day visit to Sudan. (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) City Doctor Urges Vivisection “Yask forgiveness,” he told them jand gave a statement the district! attorney said corroborated in| “I have confessed to God and) | WASHINGTON (?) — Condemned prisoners, ‘Use the Condemned to Advance Science’ before ‘every detail one made earlier oy being put to death, should be allowed to volunteer for ipainless medical experiment under anesthesia, a Mich- 'Baldonado. The two men say Mrs. Duncan promised them $6,000, to kill the woman her son had married last June. They carried out the murder plot last Nov. 17, they said, luring the bride into their car and chok- ing and beating her to death. * * * A fierce jealousy “lay behind! \Mrs. Duncan’s plotting, Gustafson said. She did everything she could ito prevent her son’s marriage and to break it up after the ceremony. |Duncan has separated from his. bride after two weeks and gane)’ back to live with his mother. Mrs. Duncan has denied any con- nection with her daughter-in-law's death. She also has denied being jealous of the pretty nurse. - «Mrs. Dunean did not testify. Her son did, however, and it was a shaken, dejected man who walked from the jury room. * * * Duncan, 30, a bushy-haired man: with heavy, dark-rimmed glasses, | told reporters he had been asked’ mostly about hig mother and her many marriages, four of them in eight -years to men much younger than she. They ended in annui- ment or divorce, “T find it fantastic to believe that méther killed my wife,’’ he said. ‘‘I never recall her being cruel. She has never been able to hurt anyone or anything. She igan doctor said Saturday. Dr. Jack Kevorkian, 30, 2 294 Cherokee Rd., proposed Policemen Save 3. From Detroit Fire DETROIT «—A Detroit couple and their granddaughter were led to safety by two policemen today ing cleaning shop. A burglar alarm short-circuited by the fire attracted patrolmen Bernard L. Quinn and James P. Carolan as they were passing the Mack avenue shop at 3:40 a.m. Led to safety by the two were Theodora Angott, 16, and her grandparents, Peter Angott, 78, and his wife, Elizabeth, 66. The Angotts had been asleep. ‘See You Next Year’ | | LONDON (UPI)—Convict ap- plause changed to frosty silence yesterday when a woman choris- ter closed a carol concert at Pen- tonville Prison by saying: ‘‘Good- bye, -see you all again next year.” Hay Ride & Sleigh | _— Pony Land Farm, would have to be insane to have done it.” 1507 N. Adams Rd, Thesiaatons Mich, Olive 1-0151 -m from their apartment above a burn-| ——*that in the end death could be induced by an overdose of the anesthetic. A former staff member of the University of Michigan Hospital in Ann Arbor, Dr. Kevorkian re- signed in June to do private re- search. mind. after volunteering, he should be permitted to back out a week before the date of his scheduled execution, Kevorkian said. He did not indicate how long the experiments .would be carried on, Kevorkian told a meeting of criminologists that the plan would mean active participation for the law in helping science and hu» manity. “For the condemned,” Dr. Ke- vorkian said, ‘‘it offers one last privilege—be it warranted or not —to decide how he should die, The purpose .of capital punishment will be fulfilléd—the man’s life will be ended; but his death will be subjectively more tolerable to anticipate and to experience,” Speaking to the American Assn, for the .Advancement of Science, he said © scientists, by ~ studying living human bodies, could make (Continued on Page 2, Co Le And if the man changed his . fyi 8 : . 4 : f : t Es e j ft m4 f » A f § >. % ~ Mclean Buys - 110 GMC Units tim vow vunss, aroma, peor sre { No Settlement Near, | ait al eaileesientiatalaiadl Say Airline Pilots 5 ba 4 “Largest. Trucking Firm '¢ | BIRMINGHAM — Monday junior] The several Kenya gems includ in ‘South Purchases) CHICAGO (UPI) — Spokesmen still maintained by the striking en- se Oe ont — peed ed in the display now Der ee Highwe Tro for 1,500 American Airlines pilots} gineers, now in the 34th day. a hae play children are attracting attention in the area. ig way ractors today indicated predictions of an| Should the engineers settle their a sponsored by the : eee . — = early end to the strike that has|differences with EAL, the airline .. |chapter of American Association of Described as “more brilliant McLean Trucking Co., of Win-|grounded the nation’s largest fleet/has still another problem — the Yl University Women. '| than diamonds,” they include the ston-Salem, N. C.,- largest motor of airliners may have been’ pre-| flight attendants union is threat-| , Performance will be given at the largest cut synthetic, rutile, a 62- freight common carrier headquar-| mature. _ |ening to strike if an agreement is| Birmingham Theater at 10 am. carat stone, sald to outshine the tered in the South, has purchased * * &* | not reached in its negotiations with ai pm. Wee mae: famed Hope diamond, the insti- 110 GMC Diesel cab-over-engine| C. N. Sayen, president of the the company. : a tute reports, - 1 highway tractors, Air Lines Pilots Association, said . The play, “The Broken Doll,” | 5. aucts of the Kenya Gems Cor- ee that although he spoke by tele- “4s wee writen and Gupcted ._|Poration of Philadelphia, Pa.,, the Anmomcement ‘of the sale was Done sith Leverett” Eawardss Dan ti ae Woman Tee, meceing oo nn Vigne [atey es bem Doone we Coat made by R. C. Woodhouse, general chairman of the National Mediation : —- per brook by the Chicago National His- | truck sales manager for the GMC Board. about a truce proposal, he Mary } tory Museum. It will remain there Truck and-Coach Division. had ‘‘no idea’ where Edwards had. ' Claire Cantow, through Jan. 22. : got the impression a settlement) The cast includes 13 other young-| : % units involved in the (was in the offing. S X ta | Q sters and three adults. _ . 2 Pratt » mane 6 = : *The annual play is one of the James i. a. + Edwards announeed yesterday that the results of a conversation between the three-man mediation The — the GM super econonty di engine developing 190 < * horsepower and are rated at 65,- Eleanor Joann Wilson 000 pounds gros combination hinat t t t a urch weet ALPA in Chicago made. bin a renee bie " Bloomfield ‘Hills dogs will sport|"s{ rn or the church, he is They join 185 similar tractors in| “hopeful the strike may be re- red hydrant-shaped.dog tag$ next). oo. of Mr. and Mrs, Homer the McLean fleet,which have been) solved within the next few days.” licenses may be ob- Pratt, 16162 Wetherby Rd , in use over the past 10 months. . ; A 21-year-old woman arrested in tained at the city hall, , : a The only thing discussed was) pontiac Thursday has been charged A check with clerks in surround _ the proposal forwarded earlier by with first-degree grand larceny in ing municipalities revealed that At the Lutheran Church of the The models sold have been set-| Edwards,” Sayen said. “There/the robbery of a North Syracuse, the rest of the area canine 'citizens|Redeemer, & special 4 p.m. com- ting performance records this past were some points on thet proposal'y y salesman. will have to get along with ordi-|munion service will be held tomor- year with scores of the nation’s that needed clarification.” a nary dog tags row for college students and their parents, The Rev. Theodore Wug- gazer will speak on “Christmas Tears.” Orion Father Dies in Wreck Crash Near Pinconning Miss Eleanor Joann Wilson, a night club entertaiper, was re- turned to Rochester, N. Y., last night. She waived examination before Justice of the Peace La- mont McNall and was ordered held for the grand jury. She was picked up Thursday by Detroit. police at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Randall Wil- | son, 73 Seminole Ave., on a fugi- tive warrant, . « The salesman, George Fisher, is * * * Neither Edwards nor Sayen said which of the 12 points in the pack- age proposal were discussed. American Airlines,. which has been strikebound since Dec. 21, accepted Edwards’ proposal shortly after it was proffered but the union has held out for further clarification of the terms. The strike against *Amierican, coupled with twin strikes by flight motor freight carriers. * * * Production schedules at GMC Truck and Coach have been re- vised upward to meet the heavy demand for the vehicles, Wood- house said. : Ike to Tour Farm if Cold Snap Breaks GETTYSBURG (UPI) — Presi- dent Eisenhower may be able to terday were Norman Kuijala, first vice president; Floyd Temple, second vice president; Gordon Reynolds, third vice president; Smith Falconer, secretary; Kenneth Hempstead Jr., treasurer, and Keith Johnson and Morgan Siple, members of the Board of Control. NEW EXCHANGE. CLUB ‘PRESIDENT — Byron Cole (right), installed as the new president of the Pontiac Exchange Club yesterday noon at the Waldron Hotel, is shown here receiving his president’s pin from LaVerne Scanlin of Battle Creek, president of the Michigan Exchange Clubs. Other officers of the Pontiac Club installed yes- i Boy Driving Without License; . Was Team’s Widest Flanker Trio Bound Ovet ineers and mechanics at East-|. 4 : : ° | oa <2 : t and his fro Rolls Car Over |e ae yma idied one third|i® critical condition after being to Stand Tr ial = ; Rmuend Soday i tie ‘eetterl (ss : A lbyearold Milford boy was|of the nation’s air carriers at the beaten in a motel near Rochester. 0 e e res en rrives paras iap aise dearecs an ce Injures : Pontiac Man; ticketed for driving an sas with-|height of the Christmas holiday ee aid ce) a gold f Or Br eak - I n cast. < * * Car Overturned in Ditch out an operator's license and his friend was taken to Pontiac Gen- eral Hospital yesterday after the auto rolled over in Milford Town- ship. * * * Oakland County sheriff's depu- ties said Ronald A, Kunder of 1748 Handy Dr., was ordered to appear in the Oakland County Juvenile Court within 15 days. The accident occurred on W. Commerce at Hickory Ridge road. The passenger, James B, Sal- keld, 15, of 1736 Shoreline Dr., travel rush. Although machinists have accept- ed a new contract, a spokesman said they will not cross picket lines Britain to Allow Pound Exchange Expect Other European Countries to Follow Suit in Money Conversion Three men will be arraigned Jan. 5 in Circuit Court on charges of breaking and entering. The Chief Executive, with a file crammed with preliminary drafts of his state of the union and up- coming budget messages, drove up to his farm from Washington yes- terday, prepared to stay through New Year's. Weather permitting, he was ex- pected to get out at least part of the day with his 10-year-old grandson, David, The other three Elsenhower grandchildren, daugh- ters of Maj, and Mrs. John 8. Eisenhower, wil] join the Presi- dent and Mrs. Eisenhower here next week. The temperature at the farm went to nearly zero the night be- fore the President’s arrival and his acreage was crusty hard from re- peated days of sub-freezing weath- er. The putting greens of the Get- tysburg Country Club were as hard Miss Wilson told Detroit au- thorities she had spent some time with Fisher at the motel but de- nied any part in the beating or robbery. She waived extradition and re- turned to Rochester with a mem- ber of the Monroe County sheriff's department. A 36-year-old Lake Orion father of five children was killed and a Pontiac man was injured last night about 10:15 p.m. in an auto acci- dent near Pinconning. — : ke * * Dead is Jack Edgar Johnson of 262 Lakeview St. Joseph Creger, 68, of 2682 Walton Blvd., a passenger in Johnson's auto, was to be released from Mercy Hospital, Bay City, this morning after treatment for, a bump on the head, according to his daughter-in-law, Mrs. J. V. Creger of 5658 Eldridge St. * * * Johnson's wife, Ethel, was noti- fied today of the accident by State Police. Police said Johnson lost contro! of his car on the divided high- finally took the bus because he was afraid he would be late for the kickoff. * * * Missouri Valley's football team will play East Texas State in the Tangerine Bowl this afternoon and Collins planned to be in the stands. But for a time it looked as though he would be the widest flanker in the history of the game. *® x * His wife reported him missing Thursday and set off a search by police agencies, news reporters, family and friends that stayed one step behind him across the con- tinent. U.S. Heads Toward Record Death Toll ORLANDO, Fla. (UPI) — The \Missouri Valley football team’s -Bound over yesterday by Mu-|““Lonesome President” arrived, nicipal Judge Cecil McCallum were here by bus today and said he Howard H. Hatchett, 21, of 180)couldn’t understand why family Wesson St.: Alexander Spaers Jr.,;and friends had thought he was 24, of 33442 Wesson St.; and Ar-| lost. thur P. Brown, 21, of 318 Howard McNeil St. * * They are accused of breaking into the Pontiac Auto Body Co. offices on Dec. 24. * * * Dr. M: Earle Collins, president of Missouri Valley College, said he caught an earlier than planned train in Missouri and did not tell his family because ‘‘they were all The three men waived examina-| asleep” when he decided to leave tion before Judge McCallum, who | around midnight. » bond at $200. : ‘seb bond at $ | ‘+ can’t understand why they Hold Detroit Man | siztticits «rehome: mo in Robbery - Beating Cuba Staff Changed as Rebels Advance (Continued From Page One) |placés instead of waging stab al Rona ‘ tacks and hasty retreats to hide-| able sage lacati he cnctaae LONDON (UPI)—Britain was re- ‘outs in the countrysid >. : liably reported today to be on the} The rebels are reported creating wee = ere Cove verge of permitting the pound ster- | jo) l ts i tici 4 - ~| local civi ernments in anticipa- and the pavement was wet, depu li to t ¥ y ireely, into gov * * didn’t hear from me for weeks and. weeks at a time and they didn’t worry about me then.” Collins said he got off the train) ties said. ; tion of taking over complete towns lin Jacksonvill "ers rc ' i é e because he was way, and that it skidded and The car is owned by Rona OHM exchange Several other] The goverment called the rebel, JACKSON (UPD FONE OY tnd ater the long day conch Hie as pol table Pe aes a father, John. 3 iclaim to Santa Clara ‘‘premature, for investigation in the hammer| from Missouri and got some sleep} (Continued From Page One) thrown out of the car. . . low suit. Rossellini Seeking Custody of Children “ROME (UPI)D—An attorney for Roberto Rossellini asked a court today to give him custody of the three children born of his mar- riage to Ingrid Bergman. Mario Cavalieri presented Ros- sellini’s petition to the Rome civil court, An Italian custody verdict would not necessarily be of much value to the movie director. The chil- dren—8-year-old Robertino and the 6-year-old twins, Isotta and Isabel- la, are living near Paris with their mother and her new husband, Lars Schmidt, ft oe The moves coincided—with an expected announcement later today ‘that France would devalue the franc and, possibly, replace it with a new “hard” franc with most of the post-war inflationary zeros lopped off. - * * * The British Treasury scheduled a news ‘conference at which it was expected to announce that the pound would be freely con- vertible abroad. Similar announcements were ex- pected in West Getmany and Nor- way. * * * In Copenhagen, the Danish gov- ernment announced today that the Danish kroner will be made freely convertible abroad starting Mon- day, Relief From Winter Warm Air Invades East By The Associated Press A warm air invasion, triggered by mild southerly winds, hugged the eastern third of the nation to- day while rainfall licked the South- east and the Northwest. | The warming trend offered more Christmas season relaxation for many parts of the East from the winter cold. The generally fair The Weather Full U.S, Weather Bi PONTIAC’ AND VICINITY—Cioudy with eccasional snow or sleet this morn- ing accumulating less than one inch. Partial clearing and warmer this after- neen, High teday 49. Gouthwest winds 815. Partly cloudy and little temper- ature change tonight and tomerrew. Lew — 30. High tomorrow 37. Westerly winds tenight becoming northwesterly temorrow. Teday in Pontiac oe temperature preceding 8 2#.m. At 8 a.m.: Wind velocity 5-10 m.p.h. . Direction—Southwest, -Sun sets Saturday at 5:06 p.m, Sun rises Sunday at 8 a.m. Moon sets Sunday at 8 a.m. Moon rises Saturday at 7:03 p.m. Friday in Pontiac (As recorded downtown) Highest temperature ....-...-5600> Lowest temperature ..00-- cesessecrekd an temperature .....05 nouodored 31.5 Weather—Pair. eee sheer e wens aseceneeseconenss 908 Highest and Lewest Temperature This “- Date In 66 Years ae 29 Bi -4 in climes also provided a_holiday- season attraction for motorists to hit the road despite the tragic highway death toll. x * * The Weather Bureau forecast daytime 40-degree temperatures \for much of the Northeast, slight- ‘ly less readings in the Ohio Val- ley and portions of the Midwest and South,. and temperatures up- wards of 50 degrees for a vast area of Dixie. However, forecasters also saw occasional rain moving into the mid-Atlantic states and New York during the evening. * * * southern Florida an _ overnight dousing with half inch amounts already reported at Fort Myers, Palm Beach and Tampa. More than six inches of precipitation has drenched Port Everglades, ‘Fla. since Christmas night. | Portions of Georgia and Ala- bama also got a sprinkling. * * * To the extreme northwest, spreading rains swirled through Washington, Montana and the cen- tral portions of California. For a six hour period Friday night, the San Francisco area caught more than an inch of rain. Along the northern California coast and parts of Oregon, simi- lar amounts were measured. * * * : Hail accompanied heavy show- ers at Hoquiam, Wash, Precipita- tion, in the form of snow, hit Meacham, Ore. There were traces of rainfall in the mid section down through the South. Amounts. generally less than a tenth of: an inch were re- ported from Illinois to Louisiana. A stream of cold air, although ? S8Besansescesss not of major proportions, poured into the Central and Southern ¥ ere yy. Light to heavy rainfall gave| ‘but did not directly contradict the) other rebel claims, which indicat- ‘ed an all-out insurgent effort to | split the 750-mile island in two with! Eastern end and Batista’s govern- ment holding the west. ernment proclaimed an_ all-out drive to wipe out the insurgents. ready to have bombed: the out- skirts of Placetas on the main province. The two-year rebellion faced its bloodiest turm as government forces struck at heavily populat- ed districts which until now have been kept out of the range of gunfire, in Las Villas said that henceforth army planes and troops would at- tack rebels wherever they are hid- garded as belligerents. A shortage of weapons and am- munition was hampering the gov- ernment of President Fulgencia Batista in countering attacks by Friday boasted that even Havana would be taken over soon. bludgeoning and robbery of a wom- an clerk in a Jackson dime store. The victim, Miss Ruth Nichols, in A Jacksonville hotel. He had planned to catch one train this morning, then a later one, and 11 each in Florida, Georgia, New Mexico and Missouri. * Fidel Gastro’s rebels occupying the| Civilians were warned to keep clear of rebel positions as the gov- Army planes are reported al- highway east of Santa Clara, where the rebels are tightening a ring around the capital of Las Villas The 3rd Military Dist. command the rebel forces of Fidel Castro. |, With the fighting moving toward the bigger cities, the rebel radio 38, was in critical condition at Foote Hospital, Jackson, follow- | ing a night of surgery, suffering Dying Mother epett at several tamer views, (Mary Not Get Miss Nichols was alone in the Back Home store last night when her attacker entered. He apparently demanded LOU ‘ . 1 — Mrs. age : ou may ee aa Water 2 one Sane cy ie e beat her over the head with the ! H : hammer. Miss Nichols, in the strug- see her native England just once gle, tore a pocket of the assail- ant’s jacket and a piece of the cloth was found clutched in her hand. The robber ‘took $116 from the cash register and fled. Heart Attack Fatal fo Jackson Resident Harvey T. W6odfield. 71, presi-| dent of the Michigan Wholesalers, get her wish after all. Her doctor told the Military Air Transport Service that the young mother of two took a turn for the worse Friday and the plane trip home is not ad- visable now. Mrs. Walter has blood cancer. She knows she is dying, and her greatest wish is to see her home soil, ing out. Civilians staying in’ . houses occupied by insurgents|Inc., suffered a fatal heart at- New FI yesterday, en route home to Jack- son. Firemen were unable to revive Woodfield after he had been taken to the home of his daughter, Mrs. Dexter Horton, 1120 Country Club| windows Fe miles around. -. Woodfield was prominent in the mber and building material busi- ness. They had been visiting their |daughter. corn. No one was reported injured more before she dies, may not LIMA, Ohio (UPI)—A series of explosions ,early today wrecked the Ohio Fhuity Exchange grain elevators near here and rattled in houses for several Damage estimates ran as high as a million dollars to the 135-foot elevators, filled with wheat and Thirty-three persons had died ac- cidentally in Canada during the Christmas holidays up to 6 a.m. today. * * * Of these, 23 were traffic deaths, 3 by fire, 1 by drowning and 6 | miscellaneous fatalities, ~ The survey started at noon Wednesday and ends at midnight Sunday. : Members Revolt in Japan Party Rebel Group Threatens Kishi Government; Asks Cabinet Reshuffle TOKYO (AP) — Leaders of Ja- pan's ruling Liberal Democrats met behind closed doors today to try to quell a rebelion of dissat- isfied members which could threaten the government of Pre- mier Nobusuke Kishi. * * * The rebel group has presented the Prime Minister with a virtual ultimatum for postponement of a Jan, 17 election for party presi- dent and a reshuffling of Cabinet _ QUESTION PAIR — Newaygo County Sheriff Robert Dougan, left, questions Lee Ragas, 30, center, and Fred Kensalski, 28, both of Baltimore, about alleged bogus-checks the pair were passing. State police say they admitted passing $30,000-in by AP Wirephote _wothhiless checks in the past nine months. They were caught when an alert Newaygo grocery clerk saw them throw away a ham they had pur- . Chased in her store with a payroll check. ‘and party posts. x *« * The group wants time to put up its own candidate for party presi- dent and is seeking a bigger share of top party and government jobs. Election to: the presidency. of the majority party means election as premier, * * * Three Cabinet members who be- long to the rebel faction say they will resign and their followers will boycott the January election if their demands are not met, No solution of the situation was in sight. Bank Guard's Gun | Stolen From Desk A Pontiac man pleaded guilty yesterday to stealing a revolver be- longing to a guard at the Pontiac State Bank. ; k « * Municipal Judge Cecil McCal- lum fined Clarence Gerber, 36, of 690 Kenilworth St., $15 plus $5 costs, or four days in jail. * ¥ * theft of the gun was dis- covered yesterday morning by Frank Winters, 42 Washington St., the bank guard. The weapon had been taken from a desk drawer which was forced open. Gerber has arrested a few hours later on adarceny charge. 4 Flight Into Exile Made by Cuban Air Force Pilot Refuses to Bomb Cities, Flies B26 to Miami MIAMI, Fla. (AP) — A young Cuban air force pilot flew a B26 bomber to Miamj and exile Fri- day night ‘because I don’t like to en and children.” * * Lt, Jose A. Crespo, 24, said he forced his mechanic to accom- pany him. , “I put a gun to his head when we took off,’’ Crespo told the Mi- ami Herald, ‘‘and then made him sit in front of me on the flight to Miami. I know that if I return to Cuba I would be killed.” * * * Crespo refused to reveal the name of his sergeant-mechanic who was scheduled to return to Havana by commercial airliner. The plane carried no bombs but it mounted eight .50-caliber ma- chine guns. : * * * Crespo’s lawyer in Miami, Jack King, said a- hearing will deter- mine whether his. client will be admitted to the United States: * * * The pilot said he-had been or- idered to bomb Cuban cities in the ,government’s fight against rebel forces and decided to get out, His parents live in Havana, he said. Cuban sources here said they never had heard of such an or- der. . bomb cities and kill innocent wom- * * * Mrs. Creger said her father-in- law was en®route to a cabin in Grayling owned by Edward Shedlowsky, who was following the Johnson car at the time of the accident. Pontiac Doctor Urges Vivisection (Continued From Page One) rapid progress without having to guess how work with animals ap- plies to humans. * * * There would be important dif- ferences between his plan and work on humans conducted by Nazi doctors in World War II, Ke- vorkian said. The condemned prisoners | would be asked to volunteer for these medical research projects. .| The experiments would be well thought out and significant so that the life would not be wasted. -* * * Nazi scientists were either out- right sadists or fanatical party members—by no means represent- ative of German medical genius, Kevorkian said. “Experiments are to be aimed at general objectives of great value dealing with unsolved rid- dies of human health and life, for ‘the good of every human being,’ he said. | xk * | And the subject who volunteers for such medical experiments will be thoroughly anesthesized—‘‘be- ling executed after feeling no more | discomfort ‘than a needle prick in the arm," Kevorkian said. Plane Wrecked on Take - off 60 Escape, 3 desia (AP)—Three persons from Johannesburg, South Africa, were killed Friday in the crash of a French charter airliner ag it tried to take off in a gusty rainstorm. x * & The other 60 passengers and all seven crew members got out be- fore fire consumed thé American- made DC6, Twenty-four were hos- pitalized with burns. The hospital said all were off the danger list today although one woman still was in serious condition. A South African travel agency had chartered the four-engine plane from the French Union Aero Maritime -de ‘Transport. Most of the passenger were on holiday excursions to Paris and European winter resorts, ; *x* *« * The plane had stopped in Salis- bury to refuel and was taking off Die in Crash SALISBURY, Southern Rho-'for Brazzabille, French equatori- ‘al Africa, Just as its landing gear was coming up, it twisted and plummetted to the runway from 50 feet up, possibly because of a violent gust of wind, witnesses said, Fite broke out immediately, Ypsilanti Smoke Due fo Fire in Gas Tank YPSILANTI — A fire in an abandoned gas storage tank sent towering clouds of black smoke ,over Ypsilanti yesterday. Firemen said the blaze appar- ently was ignited by an acetylene torch used by workers dismantling the tank. No one was reported in- jured. . The tank was located at an old gas plant no .loriger in operation, ¢ THE. PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1958 Deaths i in Pontiac and Nearby erat , CONLEY DAY JR. Prayers will he offered at 3 p.m. in the Huntoon Funeral Byron of Tucson, Ariz., Beverly MISS PANSIE DOLLERY of Flint and Glenn Medler of Mil- - : : 2 lea , Wis-; 10 hildren; Miss Pansie Dollery, 77, of 178 te aes dud sate ~r v N. Perry St., died in Pontiac Gen- eral Hospital this morning. Her body is at the Brace-Smith Funeral Home. MRS. WERNER HOHLSTEIN Mrs, Werner (Elfreida) Hghistein| - of 101 Auburn Ave., died this morn- ing at her home. Her body is at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home- MRS, KARL J. KRECKE Service for Mrs. Karl J. (Grace) Krecke, 68, of Sarasota, Fla., who died unexpectedly Thursday at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Carol G. Watson of 1875 Warwick Ave., Sylvan Lake, will be held at 1:30 p.m. Monday in the Farmer-Sno- ver Funeral Home. Burial will be in Forest Lawn Cemetery, Detroit. Deaths Elsewhere SOUTH PASADENA Calif. (AP) —Thomas F. Ford, 85, a Demo- crat who served in Congress from the 14th California District from 1932-1944, died Friday. For 10 years, he also was literary editor of the Los Angeles Times. INGLEWOOD, Calif. (AP) John J. Sullivan, 93, editor and publisher of the Graettinger (Iowa) Times for more than five decades, died Thursday. Sullivan retired from the publication in 1952. NEW ORLEANS (AP) — Walter Miguel, 49, king of the Miguel Gypsy tribe for more than 20 ial years, died Thursday night of a kidney ailment. LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) — Rufus Charles Childress, 91, a leading Negro educator in Arkan- sas and first graduate of Philand- er Smith College here in 1888, died Friday. OBERLIN, Ohio (AP) — Dr. Whitelaw Reid Morrison, 72, pro- fessor of anatomy et Oberlin Col- lege for 30 years, died of a heart ailment Fridny at Allen Hospital. OCEANSIDE, N.Y. (AP) — Ru- dolph A. Langer, 63, president of the ‘‘The American Metal Mar-) ket,” a trade newspaper, died Wednesday in South Nassau Coun- ty Hospital. ~ TOPEKA, Kan. J. Laubengayer, 74, president of radio station KSAL’ and former publisher of the Salina (Kan.) Journal, died Friday night of a heart attack. NEW YORK (AP) — Eva Gauth- ier, 73, mezzo-soprano died Friday in University Hospital after a long illness. MADRID (AP) — Gen. Rafael Rodriguez de Rivera, 86, a well- known Spanish soldier, died Fri- day. MANTON (#—John Muche, 72, Manton and Cadillac businessman, died Friday at his home here after a long illness. '|Lambert of Flint; five sons, Rus- “!sell of Pontiac, Leo of Lansing, from the Voorhees-Siple Funeral (AP) — Robert| JOEL R. McCARTY Joel-R. McCarty of 2205 Wolcott St., ‘Flint. formerly of Pontiac, died yesterday after a long illness. He was 89. A. retired employe ot Pontiac Motor Division, Mr. McCarty leaves a daughter, Mrs. Raymond Service will be held at 1:30 p.m. Monday from the Voorhees-Siple Chapel with burial in White Lake Cemetery. F MRS. MILLIE E. MORRIS Mrs. Millie E. Morris, 84, of 87 N. Edith St., died yesterday in St. Joseph Mercy Hospital after an illness of two weeks. Surviving are a son, John Buster of Springfield, Mo.; six daughters, Mrs, Clark Halstead of Pontiac, Mrs. Maude Scott of Kansas City, Mo., Mrs. Sadie Gould of. Little Rock, Ark., Mrs. Cora Reeves of Cleveland, Ohio, Mrs. Snowda Walker of Hardy, Ark® and Mrs, Thelma McGranhan of Springfield, Mo.; 15 grandchildren; 26 great- grandchildren; and a sister. Mrs. Morris’ body was taken Home to the Higginbotham Funeral Home in Walnut Ridge, Ark., for service and burid] Monday. MRS. TENNESSEE YANCY Mrs. Tennessee Yancy, 91, of 31 Blain St., died yesterday after an illness of three weeks. Surviving are four daughters, Mrs. Delia Croney with whom she made her home, Mrs. Pearl DeFord of Fisk, Mo., Mrs. Anne Burton of Waxachie, Tex. and Mrs. Lucy Smith of Nashville, Tenn. Mrs. Yancy’s body will be taken from thg Huntoon Funeral Home this evening to the White Funeral Home in Fisk for service and bur- GEORGE R. ALTSMAN MILFORD — Service for George Robert Altsman, 16, of 498 Mar- tindale St., will be held at 1:30 p.m, Monday at the Richardson-) Bird Funeral Home, Burial will be in Milford Memorial Cemetery. The boy, the son of Earl F. Altsman of Ann Arbor and Mrs. Ruth Grunder of Harrisburg, Penn., was dead on arrival at Ann Arbor Hospital! Friday. He | had been ill three years. | He attended Milford Junior High! | School. | Surviving besides his parents are| |his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Louis Campbell with whom he lived in Milford; a grandmother, Mrs.} Mary Weiss of Beaver Falls, Pa.; /and a brother, John Earl Altsman | of Milford. GEORGE BARNEY ORCHARD LAKE — Service ‘for George Barney, 73, of 3400 Field- view St., will be held at 10 a.m. Monday at Our Lady of Refuge Church. Burial will be in Holy Sepulchre Cemetery. ‘The Rosary will be recited at 8 p.m. Sunday at the C. J. God- hardt Funeral Home, Keego Har- bor, Mr, Barney died Friday at his home following a 3% year illness. MRS, FRANK GOTTSCHALK LEONARD -- Service for Mrs. Frank (Mattie) Gottschalk, 75, of 5855 N. Rochester Rd., will be held at 2 p.m. Monday at the Leonard Methodist Church.. Burial will be in Lakeville Cemetery. The body will be at the Roches- ter road home until time of funeral and arrangements are being made by the Muir Brothers Funeral Home of Almont. Mrs. Gottschalk died Christmas morning at her home following a several day illnéss. She was a member of the Leon: ard Women's Club, Lakeville Cem- etery Auxiliary and Dryden Center Cemetery ‘Association. She was a lifelong resident of Leonard. _ Surviving are. a daughter, Mrs. Julian Blum of Leonatd and a grandson, MRS. HAROLD LIND LAKE ORION — Service for Mrs. Harold (Ella) Lind, 49, of 45 E. Jackson St., will be held at 11 a.m. Tuesday at Allen’s Funer- al Home. Burial will be in East Lawn Cemetery. Mrs. Lind died early this morn- ing at Pontiac General Hospital following several years illness. She was a member of the Sioux City Iowa Methodist Church. Surviving are her husband, Har- old E. and a daughter, Laura. J., at home: MRS. ARTHUR MAJOR MILFORD—Service for Mrs.- Ar- thur (Maggie May) Major, 80 of 216 Clinton St., will be held at 2 p.m. Sunday at the Richardson-Bird Fu- neral Home. Burial will be in High- land Cemetery. Mrs, Major died Friday at her home following g seven-year ill- ness. She was a life long county resi- dent and member of the Milford) Methodist Church and the Milford | Rebekah Lodge 511. * * Surviving are her cane Ar- \thur; two sons, Herbert and Mil- ton, both of Milford; two daugh- ters, Mrs. James Roberts of Mil- \ford and Mrs. Gordon Calkins, both of Milford; two sisters, Mrs. George Buell of Howell and Mrs. Frank Buell of Milford; a brother, Charles Ward of Howell; and sev- en grandchildren. Drives Crooked on Straight Street PATERSON, N. J. street sweeping machine in his city job Friday. * Police said that Rush, who unfit to drive. * ran into a parked station wagon. Dr. Joseph Donnelly checked Rush for alcoholic consumption and found him He was held in lieu of $250 bail. Street Sweeper Booked (AP)—Because he failed to drive his a straight line down North Straight’ Street, Seymour S. Rush, 55, was suspended from * also lives on Straight Street remembered. BUSINESS ETHICS BOARD Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce Waldron Hotel wes Let. us develop the resources of our land, call forth its power, build up its institutions, promote all its great interests, and, see whether we also, in our day and generation, may not perform something to be of the New Year’s Message ca —Daniel Webster Phone FE 5-6148 Hanke, eight-year-old son ot Mr. and Mrs, Louis.G. Hanke Jr., 4820 Rochester Rd., will: be held at 1 p.m. Monday at the Price Fu- neral Home. Burial will be in Union Corners Cemetery. The boy was dead on arrival.at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, Pon- tiac, after he had ‘been struck down by a car on Rochester road yesterday afternoon. Surviving besides his parents are a sister, at home; grandpar- ents, Mr. ‘Mrs. Louis Hanke of Warren and Henry Harios of Tem- * rance; : He was a third grade student at Troy. JACK E, JOHNSON - LAKE ORION—Service for Jack E, Johnson, 36, of 262° Lakeview St., will be held at 11 a.m, Tues- day at the Flumerfelt Funeral Home. Mr. Johnson was killed Friday about 10:15 p.m. in Pinconning when his car went out of control on US 23, Surviving are his wife, Ethel; three sons, Gerald, Johnny and Jackie Jr.; two daughters, Cherie and Susan, all at home; his father, Samuel Johnson of Lake Orion and a sister, Mrs. Helen DeClute of Pontiac. Dairy Farmers Advised to Improve Forage EAST ,.LANSING w — Dairy farmers faced with slumping net incomes have been advised to improve forage practices and re- vise crop rotations. The advice comes from Roy Hog- lund, Michigan State University Farm economist. He says higher yields of’ better quality forage more than offset the cost of changing from aver- age to improve forage practices. Colerain merry School in P. '> |inereasés and other concessions. _|4,500-member union walked out. 5% million copies daily and 8% Presses on 9 Dailies May. Roll _Again Manday Settle New York Strike ew YORK (AP) —A tenta- tive settlement has been reached in the costliest newspaper. strike} ' in New York City history. A back- to-work move hinges. on a mem. bership vote Sunday by striking deliverers.. ~ * ok * The peace formula to end the strike, now in its 18th day,- was announced Friday night by the na- tion’s top federal mediator, Joseph Finnegan. He expressed him- self as ‘‘mighty pleased’’ by the package settlement granting wage The nine struck dailies may be back on the streets by Monday if terms are accepted by the inde- pendent Newspaper Mail and De- liverers Union. Asher Schwartz, union attorney, said union officials are confident the terms will be acceptable to -+the membership. : Twice before, the union mem- bership turned down tentative set- tlements proposed by their nego- tiators. * *& * 7 Newsstands have been bare of papers since Dec, 9, when the Normally the nine dailies print million on Sunday. According to officia] estimates, retail sales dropped by 7 per cent during the pre-Christmas buying rush. The newspaper industry has lost about 25 million dollars in ad- vertising and other revenues. The walkout idled 15,000 nonstriking newspaper employes, who suffered a payless Christmas. Some 5,000 others stayed on the payrolls on a standby basis. The previous longest strike in in 1953, when photoengravers walked out for 11 days: The newspapers involved are the Times, Herald Tribune, Daily News, Mirror, Journal-American, Post, World-Telegram and Sun, Long Island Star Journal and Long Island Daily Press. * * * - Most newsstands. in the city have shut down. Nearby Newark, N.J., and Westchester County, N.Y., papers have been publish-| ing, but are not sending extra! edpies into New York, Newsday, | a daily at Garden City, N.Y., con-|# tinues to circulate. in Long Island’ | Nassau and Suffolk counties. After 35 Sessions WASHINGTON (UPI) — Amer- ica’s Atlas satellite stil] is ‘‘talk- The Defense Department said the four and a half ton satellite ex- changed four more voice and tele- typewriter messages yesterday with Army ground stations. The All sides seemed agreed tha t,|92% since the balloting runs until late Sufhday night, there was more likelihood of the first publishing being by Monday afternoon papers rather than by Monday morning papers. &. »® Nine other newspaper unions;|: all AFL-CIO, have not been sup- porting the deliverers walkout. Two Held for Arson in Chattanooga Fire CHATTANOOGA, Tenn. (AP)— Two white men, one a city em- iploye, have been charged with ar- son in a fire Friday night which damaged an unoccupied Negro- owned house on. the edge of a white district. The men told City Fire Marshal Mike Quinn they set fire to the house because they heard Negroes were going to move in. - They were identified as Herbert A. Gray, 51, a city playground director, and Ray Skinner, 21, a tree trimmer. i un z z ed as saying it was = half of a vestibule pa explained. today, ever, he had said merely that ably. was the only chance the could have left the train, 2 Climbers Missing TOKYO (®—Two Japanese Uni- _ versity mountain are re- ported missing today, bringing the total dead or missing through- out Japan to 18 in the past two weeks. ¢ é r Hn 4 ’ Commercial cargo shipped through the Panama Canal the year ending June 30, 1958, giant missile was “‘interrogated and tested successfully’’ on four suc- cessive passes across the United States. It marked the 35th time since the Atlas was shot aloft by the air force Dec. 18 that the delicate out- er space communications ‘brain’ has been interrogated. The Pentagon reported that thus far since President Eisenhower's Christmas message was broadcast to earth a week ago, the relay equipment has been loaded and the city's newspaper history was | Atlas Stil Talking unloaded with messages 29 times. came to 48,124,809 long tons. Sparks- Griffin FUNERAL HOME “Thoughtful Service 4 Williams St. . 24-Hour Ambulance Service Phone FE 2-581 | | | sys ~ WN | Earn Where All. Savings Current Rate Paid Semi-Annually—Insured to $10,000 407 Main St., Rochester 4116 Dixie Highway, Drayton Plains 16 E. Lawrence, Downtown Pontiac Federal Savings 761 W. Huron Street 4 OFFICES to SERVE YOU BETTER “9 te aun 1. roils | "RHE PONTIAC ;PRESS § . Editorial Page- President and Publisher Owned and Published Locally MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ~ Ok ir It Seems to Me wee Notre ee Actions Toward Brennan Bring Much Criticism At a time when most universities and colleges are retrenching in their football programs, Notre Dame leaps into the limelight with an unmistak- able challenge. * * * Notre Dame proposes to win. Make no mistake about that. The “victory-at-all-costs” ban- ner is unfurled and Coach Terry Brennan is tossed into the ash can on Christmas Eve with an utter’ disregard for human feelings. x « * It isn’t becoming. If Notre Dame still regards a winning football team as an irreplaceable asset, that’s her privilege; but it would be more seemly to give the young man a chance to resign with honor and dignity to himself, his family, and a wide circle of friends. The cries ot disapproval are drowning out ‘the original proclamation, for the pro- tests have been nationwide. My friend, Bos Reynotps, told his radio listeners: “You'll regret this, Notre Shame.” LyaL, SmitH headlines his denunciation with: “Look, Notre Dame. Tail Wags Your Dog Again.” Terry Brennan’s brother, Jo- seph says: “Notre Dame is throw- ing out the pious pronouncements and is going to win at all costs.” If there exists this burning desire to win, win, win, it would be more becoming for a collegiate institu- tion to mask the hot heat or clothe it in greater respectability. And I don’t suggest hypocrisy. * «vw * A persistent rumor suggests that a wealthy group of alumni and friends are sponsoring a gigantic drive for endowment funds and one. of their primary stipulations is a football team that wins about every game it plays. This would be one of the great- est mistakes in judgment ever ‘exer- cised by frenzied friends of “educa- tion.” It would place a definite stigma on a great institution. x *« * _ Collegiate football isn’t gain- ing. Colleges and universities that once claimed the best high school talent are progressively _ looking the other way if these young men can’t “cut it” scholas- tically. They shrug their shoul- ders and close their academic doors. The recent collegiate panels at MSUO have made this plain. They aren’t discontinuing football and they offer scholar- ships openly to worthy and de- serving boys. But there’s no “win at any cost” tag tied to the deal. x* & kk ° In five years, TERRY BRENNAN’S Notre Dame teams have won 32 and lost 18. That’s a stout enough record for anyone that isn’t maniacal on the subject. But it isn’t enough at Notre Dame. They demand more. If Notre Dame wants to win at any cost, she can do it. That’s for sure. She can sail into the open market and corner the scholastic rejects from other institutions. x * * Personally, I refuse to believe that this program reflects the hearts and desires of Notre Dame graduates in general. I don’t be- lieve it mirrors the undergraduate opinion; and I’m even certain it THE PONTIAC PRESS pearl Tue Powrtac daae — O Compa: ‘somtg +d chigan Mark. Daily teceps Sunday 4 W. H Trade Ma "iegeemn, Baseerr Vice President bog woos vAdvertist ‘end Advertising Director Manager ™ any H. Prreceraty un, Eart M. Treapwent, President and Circulation Manager ess Manager ane = . MARSHALL Jonpan, W. Frreoraas, Local Advertisin A and Editor Manager : Hay J. Ree, Grore Iwaean, » Managing Editor Classified Manager = The Associated Prese ts entitled exclusively to th we for republica XA ‘ne local ne a printes in this ° P news di tion iperias Well as pwtiac Parse is Dated oe contion fer @0 cuits cafrier service is not available b ieeste tnd it ts $12. ; ‘elsewhere { derplecer it Te united” Sus / ns AD Fy doesn’t echo the sentiments of all those fine churchmen on _ the Notre Dame faculty. Somewhere, the wrong boys got too much authority and the megaphone section took over. xk k * Notre Dame has always played Clean, fierce, expert football. Her -Squads behave and they reflect credit and honor on intercollegiate ath- letics. You don’t see unsavory in- cidents involving a Notre Dame player or coach. They’ve been exemplary in their conduct and behavior. x *& * In the meantime, we extend the . hand of fellowship and sympathy to personable young Terry Bren- nan who encounters an unhappy - deal and who is the victim of a fading element in intercollegiate athletics. And in Conclusion.... * sJottings from the well thumbed notebook of your peripatetic re- porter: Not many people know it, but one of President EIsENHOWER’s best friends in Michigan is “Box” BiccERs ofChrysler.......... PHYLLIS BATTELLE, our own feminine colum- nist, is a niece of Mrs. JamMEs NANCE of Lone Pine road. She’s due here in March and I promise you a photo of the two together. PHyYLuis will have to be at her best to keep abreast of Oak- land County’s own Laura (BATTELLE) Nance in looks, gracious bearing and feminine charm.......... The great, vast reaches of Western Can- ada had more snow through Decem- ber 20th than-they had all of last year... 7" * * * Corn and wheat crops on this continent will break all records in 1958 in spite of reduced acreage eae At the Jones’ recep- tion for Victor Borge, he turned - out to be just as entertaining in- formally as he is professionally touod noe me Bill Downey, vice pres- ident of the Detroit Lions, tells me they’re really after Michigan’s Jim Pace. They had a deal well along when Albert left the Forty Niners and now they start over We ee ese Bum: “Gimme a pen- ny, huh?” Man: “What good’ll that do?” Bum: “I wanna see how much weight I lost since yester- day.” x «*« * “TEDDY” ROOSEVELT once said: ‘You are the government — you and I.” But that was before Horra....... . . Purely personal nomination for an especially attractive young lady: NANCY NICHOLSON .... . . GISELE MACKENZIE says: “Happiness isn’t getting what you want; but in want- ing what you get.” Another straight “A” for one of: my favorite entertain- see ers.......... They tell me in Gotham that the professional bookies were taken to the cleaners this fall on the pro football’ results which “wouldn’t behave.” guy with a million friends: MAXWELL. EARL —HArRoOLp A. FITZGERALD PEOPLE have been brainwashed .so long and so thoroughly to do their Christmas shopping early that many of them this season did all or most of it in November. IT 1s no wonder that a large num- ber of people are ailing physically and emotionally. Having to put up with this world and one another is hard on people. Ir WE could see ourselves as others see us, we'd feel certain their vision was exceedingly poor and enormously distorted. - “Tue National Safety Council is urging sobriety at office Christmas parties.”—Press report. That’s an ex- cellent idea. For an employe to tank . up and insult the boss.is highly un- safe. cael e ee se RE \ ‘ “Ring out the old Ring in the new Ring out the false Ring in the true.” —Tennyson [The POWER of FAITH vmweem | New Year's is a time for taking spiritual inventory, for looking back over the old year and assessing the good and the bad, for looking forward into the future with hope and faith and courage. The Romans had something like this in mind in their ancient god Janus, who repre- sented the first hour of the day, the first day of the month and the first month of the year, and who was always first in prayer. Janus, from which we derive our word January, was always portrayed looking backward and forward. New Year’s gives us a chance to profit by the past and rekindle our faith in the future. “So teach us to number our days that we may apply our hearts unto wisdom.” % —Psalms 90:12 Cabinet Silent About Revaluation France Awaiting Word on Francs By HARVEY HUDSON PARIS (AP) — An eight-hour cabinet meeting in Premier De Gaulle’s office broke up today with only a brief announcement that decisions had been taken on the 1959 budget.and on economic and fiscal] matters. * * * Frenchmen and foreign bankers thus were kept waiting amid wide speculation that the French franc might be cut in value and then replaced with a new franc.: President Rene Coty was sched- uled to preside at another Cabinet meeting this afternoon to ratify the financial decisions. The word might be given out then or in a Sunday night radio and television address by De Gaulle. It is generally expected that the france will be devalued — latest speculation says from an official rate of 420 to the dollar to 500 to the dollar. Then a. new franc might be issued that would be worth 20 cents each, or 100 times the devalued franc. This will] be done by printing new notes with an exchange on the basis of 10 new francs for 1,000 old ones, * * * Some reports said Finance Min- ister Antoine Pinay felt a 10 to 15 per cent cut in value would bring French prices into line with those of the other five nations in the ‘European Common Market, which goes into operation Thursday. However, he is represented as expecting French prites to edge up even further in the next few months and wants to make ad- vance provision for this. There- fore, a 19 per cent drop from 420 to 500 was expected. There was also speculation that some kind of convertibility will be arranged. The franc now is gen- erally not convertible to prevént black market purchases followed by conversion at the legal rate. The black market rate was 471 when exchanges closed Christmas Eve. They were kept closed on THOUGHTS FOR TODAY Thus saith the Lord, Learn not the way of heathen, and be not dismayed at the signs of heaven; for the heathen are dismayed at them.—Jeremiah 10:2. * * * Holiness is the architectural plan upon which God buildeth up His living temple.—C. H. Spur- geon. “The Country Parson _— a oo tet e ee wy OS OS “I guess it isn’t so bad that we want ‘fine things as that we want not” whether others get them or not. { & official order Friday to prevent a further decline in the franc’s val- ue. on the basis of devaluation ru- mors. * * * In Norway, the Oslo exchange suspended all quotations on for- eign currencies on order of the Bank of Norway. An exchange spokesman said the suspension obviously was a result of unstable conditions created by uncertainty over the French franc. The same action was taken in Denmark by the Copenhagen money exchange. A Danish gov- ernment spokesman. said there will be an official announcement if and when the French govern- ment acts. Dr. William Brady Says: Reader Thankful to Know Why Eyes Glow in Dark “TI read your explanation for the mother of the child whose eyes glowed in the dark. It reminds me that we should be so thankful that we can turn to Dr. Brady for comfort when troubled. Long may you live and write.” (Mrs. P. L.H.) - Answer: That query comes up from time to time. The answer is that light from behind the observer is re- flected by the ret- ina at the back of the eyes of animal or human being to the eyes of the observer. The. retina has a golden orange hue. * * * “To make the best bread, should I get unbleached flour, graham flour or .-, . where may one get the wheat you mention?"”’ (Mrs. R. W.) Answer—Get it from farmer, mill or feed store. Grind it your- self, fresh for each baking. Send stamped, self-addressed en- velope for my free pamphlet Wheat to Eat, Barry, age 5, seems healthy and bright, but we are worried because his brother, aged 3, seems to de- velop more rapidly . . . they them- selves notice the difference at bath time . . . our doctor says it’s all right, tHat no treatment is neces- sary. (R. W. H.) Answer—It can do no harm), while waiting for the child to de- velop, to see that he gets his daily ration of iodin. Send stamped, self-addressed envelope for the free pamphlet The Iodin Ration. If development is not normal by the age of 12, perhaps three or four injections of hor- mone will help. x & * “Recently heard that distilled water is far better for. drinking and for all cooking purposes than tap water. Please explain why." (J.M.B.) , Answer—Perhaps because your informant considered you credu- lous. river or lake water is better than distilled water for drinking and cooking, DR. BRADY * * * “Child left handed. | Father in- sists this is God's gift: and let him be. Mother insists a stitch in time would make the child fit anywhere. . Well water, spring water, — Answer—I agree with father. Forced change to right-handed- ness may handicap the child in many ways, * * * Bigned letters, not more than one page or 100 words jong pertaining to personal health — hygiene, not dis- use. di i treat t, will be ans liam Brady, if a chuapeed red by br 'w envelope %; sent to The Pontiac Proce entines a Michigan. (Copyright 1958) a TV saa match, and ! Stotee ef the Pesinte ‘Keego Raid Deseription Was Not Accurate” ab ‘cold: elo Sains ele nk a4'ak 2 s certainly ‘net fled alone ‘When police arrived, the audience was viewing not waiting * .W 2: for an obscene film. @ his own place when nothing improper is going on? * & How do police define “organizer.” If it's what I believe it is, I'm one of the organizers and those two were just picked for “‘fall guys." As one Vet to another, the whole operation was strictly SNAFU. ‘Each Lost Right Is Step Toward Reds’ Those letters wanting to close stores on Sunday make my blood boil. Next they'll want to tell us we have to go to church Sunday, and then what church we must attend. One of the great freedoms of this country is freedom of religion and that includes Christians, Jews, Hindus, even atheists. * *x* * Anyone wh8 walks into an open shop on Sunday does so of his free will. As for the salesclerk who must work, she isn’t chained © to the counter. What of the taxi- cab driver, doctor, bus driver, druggist? -And even the poor factory worker gets called in occasionally, * * * Let's not give up any more of our freedoms. Each time we de- prive anyone, by law, of one of his basic rights we take a giant step closer to communism, Read your history books, It can happen here. I attend church of my choice every Sunday and don't shop on this day. You can do the same, but if you prefer not, that's your privilege. Not a Hypocrite Warns Readers of Booby Bird The booby bird works hard for its living by diving into the water te catch fish, but when it comes out other birds snatch it away and it must try again. Many people are like that. They’re loaded down with stocks, installment payments and insurance, some not worth the paper they’re printed on. There are things people pay hard earned money for that they would be bet- ter off morally and . health-wise without. There are many preying on the worker, so don't be a booby. See that you get something of value for your meney. E. O. Bareis Highland ‘Cost of Living Is Same for Oldsters’ We need an increase in the old age pension. Living costs have © moved up but those of us living out our last years find the pinch getting tighter. Social security should keep up with costs, also. Sixty-Bight ‘Look at Calendar to Settle Question’ From the time of Creation man has been expected to work six days a week but the seventh is the day of rest. .A quick glance at the calendar will settle the question and great happiness will result. Another American Citizen Organizer ‘We Aren’t. Ones to Be Worrying’ Why worry too much about Rus- sia? She doesn't have very many of her war planes near the U.S. and we have a circle around Rus- sia. Our big jet bombers are better than any she has shown and she seems anxious to show her best at all times... * * * Russia may have more subs, but she hasn’t any nuclear power subs and they're the best. Russia may have a bigger army, but you don’t invade a few thousand miles away with an army. We have four satellites in orbit and she has one, * * * We've made two great shots at the moon that went far beyond anything Russia has done. The Russians are the ones that need to worry and jot us. Ex-GI ‘When Is Earth Closest to Sun?’ When is the sun the closest to the earth — winter or summer? E. Dingell Lake Orion (Editor’s Note; The encyclo pedia states the earth is nearest the sun when it is winter in the northern hemisphere.) Puts Name In . for Future Bergman's married for the third time. I'm not interested in Number Four but can I qualify for Number Five? . 16-Year-Old ‘Berlin Is Jt ust Added Reminder’ This Berlin situation is one more reminder that FDR was the inter- national flop of this nation’s life. La ‘ Conrall | Heartily Seconds Letter on Sports The article by M. Cagle concern- ing PCH joining a lesser league in athletics as some have suggested was outstanding. He certainly has the proper view of the situation and those in command: should act to prevent such a sad let down. A véry intelligently-stated piece of PCH sports information. 8. Shearer 613 Raskob Smiles It won't be long until it will be time to turn over a new leaf —and maybe fewer cars will be turned over, Case Records of a Psychologist: Here’s Simple Way to Break Habit Laura has met her Prince Charming, but she has learned that he has no use for a girl who has her bad habit. So she wants to know how to break her slavery. Scrapbook this case for it gives you the latest medico-psychological advice on ~ getting rid of bad habits. They are 5th columnists, so banish them now! By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE Case A-412: .Laura B., is a lovely college senior. .“Dr. Crane, I have a very seri- ous problem,"’ she began, ‘“‘for it means I may lose the only man I have ever wanted to marry, * * * “He is a medical student and has no use for girls who smoke. Thus far he does not know I am a cigarette addict. “So I want to quit. But it is dif- ficult for me to do so, since most of the girls in my dormitory smoke. “Fh fact, one of the cigarette com- panies furnishes free cartons of cigarettes to the age 20, DR. CRANE sorority houses every week, just to help encourage us to learn the habit, “What is the simplest way to break my slavery to tobacco?” BREAK BAD HABITS * Bad habits are like fifth col- umnists. They rise up and may ~rujm your chances at a crucial moment. * * * ‘Laura may thus lose the only man She has ever cared for. And ff so, it will be her cigarette habit which serves as the fifth column- ist. "If you are addicted to any bad habit, the best way to become free is to make an open, public revolt. Utter a vow in the sight and hearing of others that you are quitting liquor or tobacco or over- eating or whatever may be your vice. For this public declaration puts you on the spot. And your pride will then help you maintain that public declaration. It is almost impossible to taper off with tobacco or liquor, although that is the only safe method for losing excess weight, That’s why dieting is actually more difficult than to break the liquor or tobacco habits! HOW TO STOP SMOKING After you are a tobacco addict, you reach for a cigarette subcon- sciously ag a means of Saas pent up nervous energy. + Tt really isn't the cavial for nicotine, for experiments have shown that when confirmed ciga- rette smokers had 98 per cent of the nicotine secretly removed from their tobacco, they didn’t notice the difference, No, it is primarily a “muscle hunger” that makes you feel.a desire to reach for your ,ciga- rettes and then wave your| arm around in the act of smoking, So try to substitute some other habitual act so that you can go through much of the same old mus- cular pattern. For example, carry candy coated gum in the same pocket or purse where you formerly had your cig- arettes. ee &® Then reach for the package, shake out a piece of gum, restore the package to your pocket and, chew vigorously, The act of chewing exercises the muscles of the jaw. They aren't as large as the arm muscles so they * 4 don’t drain off energy as fast, but -you can chew longer, so the net result is about the same. FINGER GADGETS To help occupy your nervous fingers, carry a rubber ball in your pocket so you can keep squeezing it as you walk along the street. This muscular action of hand and arm can drain off as much energy as the former habit of smoking. And if you hostesses will keep some hand gadgets around the house so young people can use their fingers constantly, you will find they do not feel as much need for cigarettes or liquor glasses, Young people crave hand action to keep their nervous tension down to a complacent level so give th more wholesome substitutes than liquor or cigarettes, * * * Send for my booklet, ‘‘How to Break the Tobacco & Liquor Hab- its," enclosing a stamped return envelope, plus 20 cents (non-profit). You give yourself a $2 wage in- crease per week when you quit cig- arettes for that's what they cost the average smoker. Always write to Dr. George W in care of The Pontiac Press. Pontiac; Michigan enclosing a long 4c stamped, self-addressed envelope and 20c to covet typing and printing costs when you send ica his phychological charts and pam- (Copyright, 1958) Crane:Ae ae ; ; ; & t -_ == | The Green Empress. - .y by Elizabeth Cadell o y . (Copyright 1958) ‘THE ‘STORY: oy Graham, tn- valided out of the Navy, is amused at hired ", Sir Claud as a “iaison officer” for the simple job bus tour f eur cee "tuting te nh ‘ E for ‘ a wen. M § sounds salve — fe of a Navy im’ pg ys Rig ~~ daughter, Is secretary, Al and Lione] Yule, obviously in love wi ele: Mr. Zoller, philanthropis is wife; Admiral Peterson an hic «sister, Mrs. the trrepressible youn Maurice Tarrant: Stanton Holt, an American. who asks to meet Miss n, Ww the warm, humorous, intelligent eyes. The crossing to France is uneventful, Miss Seton conftdes to Angus she fs half-sister to Resamund Blake who has just comnleted a film in Italy and is sailing to Seuth America She plans to surnrise Rosamend by meeting her | boat in 'isbon. Ferdy Rrewer, the driver, olans to stav close te the | Green Emopress-durine the night. In the middle of the nicht Miss Seton receives a mysterious phone call, with bad news. Ferdy Brewer, the driver, reports there were prowlers someone tried the complains that Tarrant is a nuisance and believes he iss annoying Miss Clunes. CHAPTER XI Maurice Tarrant joined them and they went in the direction of the dining room. “If he was just on the point of proposing to you,” he said, ‘‘don’t let me interrupt. As a matter of fact, he’d make an excellent’ hus- band for you. I could support you until amy money ran out — which it’s doing with regrettable speed. * * * “By that time, he'd be making) some, and he could take over. He'll wear longer than I will. I'm in full possession now, but my father was as bald as a pebble at thirty, and I shall go the same way.” 5 “Don’t you ever,”’ asked Angela, “talk anything but rubbish?” He grinned. “Seldom, Seldom. But when you've finished having what you think is an intelligent conversa- | tion, have you ever stopped to analyze it? You'll find that everybody's talked tripe, but on serious topics. “You can talk tripe, write tripe and act tripe — just so long as you keep it above the comedy level. I don't know why this is. I) haven't had time to work it out,| but you can take it as gospel. “I've just proved it, as a matter) of fact. I got tired of the dirty glances Mrs. Denby-Warrehorse kept sending me, and so I went over and talked to her and hinted — oh, so delicately — that my manner concealed an inner trag- edy. ‘MIGHTN’T BE BAD’ ‘‘And now... I'm at her table for lunch, at her earnest request. So long.” “If he could ever persuade a| gir] to marry him,” said Angela, | looking after him thoughtfully, “he mightn’t make a bad husband. What did Lionel go and sit beside you for? It wasn't to look at the map, was it?” “It was to complain about, Tarrant — and it was also to tell me, in an oblique way, that | he had a lien on you.” | “Well, he hasn't and he hadn't) and that’s that.’ she said. “Be nice to father at lunch.” “All I want to do to your father is telk him about us.” “Then do. It'll take his mind off his other troubles, whatever they are.”’ “I'll tell him at dinner tonight.” x * * Say after me, Angela Rosemary, , I love you very much indeed.” “Angela Rosemary, if you wait fifteen years, I think I'll be able to keep you in something like com- fort, but in the meantime, you'll have to put up with less than the best.” “Other women have done it.” “Not many women have ‘had your gilded upbringing. A man who comes asking for your hand in marriage will be expected to | bring something besides his hopes. And here’s your father and here’s our table. Be seated, | Miss Clunes.” | Lunch was a pleasant but not,! today, a leisurely meéal. There! was a marked change in the at-| mosphere; qa general feeling that! the interesting part of the trip was about to begin. The Loire was before them and) soon they would cross it on their) way to the beautiful district of the Dordogne. ‘THEY SHOULD FLY’ “It’s a pity.’ remarked Mau- rice, as they all settled themselves in the coach one more, ‘‘that you can’t put wings on cars and coaches and fly ‘em over the dull bits. “Especially in your country,” he told Mr. Holt. ‘“‘Why don’t you bring your scenic splendors closer together?” “ , “We like to build up a lot of anticipation before you get to them,” explamed Mr. Holt. “Look.” He jerked his head to- wards the view. “That’s the Loire. Ever seen Angers, ad- miral?”’ The admiral, with an effort, roused himself. “Who?” . |bathroom adjoining his room. “Well, perhaps,” conceded Mr. Holt. “But it's also the home of ‘Cointreau.” “Who?” “‘And there’s a Chateau there,” persevered Mr. Holt. : “Daresay,” grunted the ad- miral. “Scores hereabouts.” He looked at Angus. “How far do we get today?” “To Beynac, sir." ‘Where's that?” demanded the admiral. “It's about sixty kilometers past UX, id “And where's that?” “Perigord region,” said Maurice. “Where's that? It's the district in which you'eat better than any- where else in the whole of France.” A PIG TALE “The home of truffles,” came unexpectedly from Mr. Zoller. “Is it true,” asked Miss Seton, “that pigs dig up truffles?” _“It is quite true,” said Mr. Zol- ler. “But the pigs must be preg- nant.”’ Mrs. Denby-Warre grew pale. “Must be . . . ” Words failed her. “Enceinte,” explained Mr. Zel- ler kindly. “They dig at the roots of stunted oak trees and find the truffles.” Having given this information, he closed his eyes, and. the pas- sengers relapsed into silence. Angus closed the door and set- tled down for a few moments to himself, but he could see in his mirror that Maurice Tarrant had changed his seat and was in earn- est conversation with Miss Seton. She looked interested in what he was saying, and Angus was glad to see that her ming was being kept off her troubles. There was a brief stop for tea and then the coach went on | through country that increased | steadily in beauty. The air was. soft, and the light remarkably, clear. It was late when they reached Beynac. Ferdy brought the Em- press to a stop at the hotel, a converted Chateau high on a slope above the river. It was to | be a two-night stop. The passengers walked up to the the driver and thanked him for) his excellent driving. Ferdy, beaming, handed the lug- gage over to the hotel servants and then took the coach round to the garage situated on the other side of the courtyard. REPORTS TO LONDON Angus reported their arrival to London, checked the list of rooms, distributed the mail and then went upstairs to enjoy the luxury of a Emerging fresh and relaxed, he went downstairs again to inspect the tables in the dining room. The | air was so mild that he ordered them carried out on to the wide terrace. He heard his name, and turned to find Angela coming out of the | house. She had changed into & summer dress, and he fingered | it and raised an eyebrow. “Cotton — already?” “Why not? It’s so warm. Have, you had the tables put out here?” “Yes. As you said, it’s so warm. Come and sit down.” | They sat at a table and a waiter brought them drinks and then they were alone on the dimly-lit ter-| race. * * * “I've just been in father’s in Toy Auto | result: three days in a hospital ia Kefauver's Leg Hurt WASHINGTON . (AP)—Sen. Es- tes Kefauver (D-Tenn) tried jout a toy electric automobile his 12- year-old son wanted to buy, The and three weeks in a leg cast. xk & *# Aides said a neighborhood chum of the senator’s son David got an electrically powered toy auto for Christmas. David wanted one like it to replace his homemade mode] powered by a salvaged lawn mow- er motor. The senator took the manufac- tured model for a trial spin, and tried dragging his feet when he couldn’t find the brakes to stop it on a downhil] run, the aides ex-| plained. But his leg was twisted! and his foot pulled under the machine’s rear wheet — ke ®t A trip to Bethesda Naval Hos- pital disclosed badly sprained lig- uments and a dislocated knee cap. A cast was put on the injured leg. | Doctors said the senator could leave the hospital Sunday. Wyatt Earp’s Father to Face Grand Jury CHICAGO (AP) — A coroners jury has recommended a father who fancied himself as a fast man with a gun face a grand jury in the shooting death ef his son. The son, 14-month-old Wyatt Earp Bender, was killed Christ- mas Eve as he walked into the line of fire from his father’s long- barrelled revolver. The jury Friday asked that Jack Bender, 29, be bound to the grand jury on an_ involuntary manslaughter charge. Rev. Rahn to Minister at Congregational Church ROCHESTER—The Rev, Sheldon | Rahn will be guest minister at the | First Congregational Church Sun- day. There will be two identical services of worship at 9:30 and) 11 a.m. Rev, Rahn is the director of | the social service department and | the executive secretary of the | Division of Christian Life of the Detroit Council of Churches. He | has served in this capacity for more than 10 years. He was ordained a Methodist minister. “The Hopes and Fears’’ will be | his sermon topic tomorrow. Bad Grammar Allies’ Notes Expected to Resume Suggestion for 4-Power talks WASHINGTON (AP) — The early next week. Diplomatic informants said sim- ilar but not identical notes from the United. States, Britain and France are almost completed and probably wil] be delivered to Mos- similar note from West Germany is expected’ to be ready about the same time. The Western. powers are report gestion of last Sept. 30 for a four power conference to study the en- tire problem of Germany. any Russian effort to limit the dis cussion to the future of Berlin. Premier Khrushchev’s and turned into a free city, per- (haps with some form of U.N. su- pervision over the air and ground routes established for Western ac- cess to Berlin. Newark Student Corrects Mayor's NEWARK, N.J. (AP) — “The mayor & members of the council extends to all season’s greeting,” the sign on a downtown street said, It annoyed high school student Delancy Gregory, who wrote to it was gramatically incorrect -to have an ‘‘S” after “extend.” “It is a reflection on our entire school system and the manner of teaching English,” said Gregory. The ‘“‘S’’ has been taken out. Here IS a Credit Union for YOU! Anyone may SAVE in this Credit Union. Savers tor the past 3 years were PAID Judge Who Sentenced | Man Gets Cheery Card 4% DIVIDEND Get the Details Pontiac Co-op Federal Credit Union 40 €. PIKE ST. PORTLAND, Maine Ditrict Court Judge Edward T. | Karol Van Collins to five years for | an $80,000 York Harbor jewel The judge disclosed Friday he | got a Christmas card from Van | Collins which said ‘‘No hard feel- | ings — honest.” | (AP)—U:S | Gignoux last September sentenced |§ cow before New Year’s Day. A). But they wil] reject, informants said, |? The notes officially will be e|; reminder that Russia has not yet): replied to the Sept. 30 proposal. |: Their effect will be to answer |: Thanks- |: giving Day demand that West Ber- |. lin be cleared of Western troops}. Mayor Leo Carlin and said that. _THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY; DECEMBER 27, 1958 See West Move on Berlin Crisis West’s next move in the contro- |= versy over Berlin may be made} edly planning to renew their sug: | | 4 NEW ‘59 WAGONS pain, $1995 BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER MI 6-3900 WISHING YOU A HAPPY NEW YEAR! JOHNNIE WALKER Style Center 86 North Saginaw Street Pontiac room,” she said. ‘I’ve been talk- ing to him—about us.” He stared at her for a moment. and then his head went back and | he gave way to unrestrained laughter. “What's funny?” she asked. He looked at her. “You. Didn't we arrange that I was to introduce the topic, tact- fully, at dinner tonight?” “Yes. But whenever you leave me for an instant, I get panic.” “Panic?” “In case you get away again.” “What did you tell him?” “T didn’t have to tell him much. He's got eyes. And he’s got a sort of fatalistic feeling about this, just. as I have. He’s always own | about my hopeless passion for you, and he’s got used to seeing that photograph of you.” (Continued Monday) Start Formosa Shelling After 35-Hour Silence TAIPEI, Formosa (AP) — The Chinese Communists resumed shelling the Nationalist-held Que- Ey EW N year, think if he took a pee If nothing else his eyes would o astonishment. cap, a rocket going 90,000 miles man win his race against tim progress ever and bad fort day is clean, period, dot o to make 1959 Happy New P. S.—Our our friend d M. &, SIPLE VOORHEES-SIPLE 266 N. Perry Street YEA What would Janus, Roman God of the new In spite of a vessel sailing under the ice a valid clue to the cause and cure of cancer, sun-powered batteries and drugs to help surpass all technological, scientific and social period of time. 1959 has everything we want; 365 days of timé, sunshine and rain, cold and heat, good wish, or promise, or prophesy, or complete the work we've started: there is no law, no man, no condition to make you alter one greatert assistance to you, our neighbor and p at 1959? pen wide in into space, J. L. VOORHEES e, 1959 will given to mankind, in a like une, family and friends; each new, on it we may doodle, or r letter of your determination . the greatest year of your life. Year to all of you. 1959 resolution: To render uring 1959. FUNERAL HOME Phone FE 2-8378 moy Islands today after more than 35 hours of silence. According to the Reds’ timetable the Quemoys are shelled on odd- numbered days only. | 147 W. Donaldson-Fuller Agency, Inc. : ‘Reliable INSURANCE Protection” Phone FE 4-4565 Lawrence Street pres SALE Priced from *1.00 18 E. Huron St. Open M Pre-Inventory of LP’s Records GALLAGHER MUSIC CO. DOWNTOWN PONTIAC * Limited Quantity FE 4-0566 . MoM. o © \) xX SKX x SS . 7°. YW Oy © @ @ & 5 xx 4% oneee 6, \/ 0% ¢, e Ki V CX % (K/ Ms Ks VW, < 00,0 \/ % O %, aK aneee © v) SKX O & @ S54 Pick up your phone. - Dial FE 2-8181. Tell the girl who answers what you have that you would like to sell. Sit back and wait for the cus- tomers to bring you the easiest money you have ever made. GOT IT? Easy, isn’t it? It works too! When you sell your “don’t needs” through a Pontiac Press Classified Ad, you get fast, sure results... and for a surpris- ingly low cost. c If you want to pick up a fast buck right now just round up the things you no longer need, call FE | 2-8181. .Let the friendly ad taker help you write _ :. your ad. o ; DO IT NOW! Dial FE 2-181 The Pontiac Press Ss IM Teh aaa Si ARTES on Bat Na i ee UR a nh WT haat Nai Ramen eam yt et Ni ilar 3 ta rin ene ah tae ab as if be aS sh De eT SD INTO SOT TTS é a * % Ee JUDITH L. SMITH Mr. and Mrs. Hugh C. Smith of Draper avenue ‘- * announce the engagement of their daughter, Judith L., to David Robert Tarr, son of Mrs. Robert B. Tarr of West Iroquois road and the late Mr. Tarr. Judith _ is a junior at the University of Michigan, where David is a senior. He is a member of Sigma Delta Chi Fraternity. A June 12 wedding in Ann Arbor is planned. ~ Military Duty Facts Outlined § NEA N EWSFEATURE It is the law of the land for young men reaching the age of 18 to register for selective serv- ice What effect will military service have on a young man’s higher education, on his nonmil- itary career, on his earning power? Should he serve with the armed services before he starts college, or before he looks for that first job? * * * These questions recur end- lessly, prove that few of us know, the facts relating to the miliary service law. The law says registration at 18—not service — although the 18-year-old may volunteer for two years of service. Under the current law, each man has a 6-year obligation to the military: The-inductee or vol- unteer who has served actively for two years joins the reserves _ for the balance of this period. CALLING 22-YEAR-OLDS Throughout the United States today selective service is not calling the lad of 1%. The law states that, working backwards from 26 years, men will be called. Right now the 22}4-year- olds are being asked to serve with the following exceptions: If a young man is in the midst of completing his col- Airman Spends Holiday Here Philippines Air Force Major Mariano Navarrete, grandson of Robert A. Fernandez of Esther street, spent Christmas in the city and has left for Washington, D. C., where he will spend New Year's Day with officials of the Philip- pines Consulate. He then will return to Montgom- ery, Ala., where he is attending Command Staff College, Air Uni- versity, Maxwell AFB. He will be in the United States until June, at which time he will return to his wife and five children in the Philippines. JUDITH B.\ ELDRED a " 4 o lege education, taking a full- time course at a recognized school, most probably he. will be deferred, * * * Medical students are not be- ing called. It is hoped that upon graduation they will seek commissions. If too few doctors do this, they will be inducted, but probably not until they have completed their intern- ships. Married men with children or pregnant wives, where military service would - cause an extreme family hardship, are not being called: WAYS TO SERVE Currently there are sevéral ways that military service can be met. This gives consider- able leeway in planning for” _—_ education and earnings ies can join the Reserve Corps, serving six months on active duty for training with either the Army Reserve or the National Guard, with the remaining 514 years spent in the Ready Reserve. This en- tails drilling once a week, 48 times a year, and two weeks on active duty each summer. The Ready Reserve may be called into action only by the president. This differs from the Standby Reserve, where there is no training, and which can be called out only by an act of Congress. Students attending land grant colleges who have served for two years in the Reserve Train- ing Corps can get credit for military service by taking the junior ang senior ROTC train- ing. Upon graduation they be- come officers and enter active duty for a two-year period when called by the service con- cerned. x» -% * Additionally available is a Marine Corps platoon leader course wherein two summers are spent training with the Marine Corps. Upon graduation the trainee becomes an officer, serving for six years with the reserve, including two or three years on active duty. A fall wedding is planned by Judith B. Eldred, daughter of George R. Eldred of Watkins Lake and the late Mrs. The prospective Richard J. DeShetler, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Harold DeShetler of West Iroquois road. Miss Eldred attends Michigan State University. Eldred. °~ bridegroom is | Wedd An News Focus Family visits and“births as well as weddings-and engage- ments highlight social news in the Pontiac area this weekend. On Christmas day, Mr, and Mrs. Marshal! G. Jordan of Walters Lake, had a surprise telephone conference call be- tween their sons, Richard and Marshall Jr., both of Royal Oak and son, William who is studying in Kirksville, Mo. &. * * x. George Babbington, Mrs. May Henderson, Mr. and Mrs. Austin Hunter, and Mrs. A. J. Hunter, all of Toronto, are holi- day visitors at the home of Mr. MRS. INgS, and Mrs. Ralph Babbington of Lakeview avenue. * * * Former Pontiac residents, Mr. and Mrs. Christian H. Greve of Auburndale, Fia., are - visiting their son, Robert of Silver Birch avenue. * * * Shelby Murphy, daughter of Mr. ind Mrs. W. C, Murphy of Spence street has graduated as a qualified dental nurse from Elkhart University of Medical and Dental] Technique. * * * Mr. and Mrs. Fred Coleman of West Iroquois road and Mr. Kathleen and John Mertens Hackett were married this noon at St. Vincent de Paul Church. Parents of the couple are Mrs. William H. Currier and the late Dr. Currier, and Dr. and Mrs. Daniel J. Hackett. JOHN M. HACKETT Kathleen M. Currier Weds John Hackett Given in marriage by her brother, Dr. William H. Currier of Wallaceburg, Ont., Kathleen Marie Currier became the bride of John Mertens Hackett at noon today in St. Vincent de Paul Church. The bride's cous- in, the Rev, John Trese of De- troit. officiated at the cere- mony before 400 guests. Parents of the couple are Mrs. William H. Currier of South Jessie street. and the late Dr. Currier and Dr, and Mrs. Daniel J. Hackett of Owego drive. IN EMPIRE GOWN The bride wore an Empire styled gown of dull luster Skinner satin. Chantilly lace over the bodice also accented the back panel and formed a chapel train, Her fingertip veil of silk illu- sion was held by an open crown of pearls. She carried a cas- cade bouquet of white carna- tions and ivy centered by white sweetheart roses. * bd * Mrs. Ronald M. Slack was ~ matron of honor Bridesmaids were the bride's three sisters, Mrs, Robert O. Backenstose of Omaha, Neb., Mrs. Joseph E. Kleist of Oak Park and Mrs. Grant J. Browning. Kathleen Kleist was junior bridesmaid, All wore identical dresses of Courage Now May jade green peau d'or with full skirts and draped cummerbund sashes. Their headpieces were white fur tiaras and they car- ried bouquets of white carna- tions on white fur muffs. x *« & Daniel J, Hackett of Ed- wardsville, Ill., was his broth- er's best man. Ushers were William C. Perkins of Drayton Plains, Thomas J. Howley of Cassopolis, James F. Brown and Richard-F. Deschaine. BREAKFAST RECEPTION A breakfast reception was held at Elks Temple. Before leaving for a honeymoon to Chicago, the bride changed to a brown and beige paisley print wool sheath dress with brawn accessories and a corsage of sweetheart roses. The couple will live in South Bend, Ind., where the bride- groom is teaching and doing postgraduate work at the Uni- versity of Notre Dame. He is a graduate of the University, * * * Miss Currier was dressed in a mink-colored silk faille dress with bronze accessories and a corsage of Harvest Moon car- nations for her daughter's wed- ding. Mrs. Hackett wore an oriental green lace dress with pink accessories and a corsage of pink carnations, Marie Currier THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1958__\, Isits and Mrs. ‘Enoch Eley of Rose- wood drive will attend an open house Saturday honoring the 50th wedding anniversary of their parents, Mr. and Mrs. David Eley of Flint, formerly of Birmingham, England. Mrs. Coleman and Mr. Eley’s sister, Mrs. Anthony Shepes of Flint also will attend. * * * Mr. and Mrs. Charles Abair of Yale street (nee Jacqueline Fortin) announce the birth of a son, Daniel C., born Christ- mas day at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. Grandparents are Mrs. Louise Abair and Mrs. Yvette Fortin both of Burlington, Vt. x * * Mr. and Mrs. Ralph L. Wil- son (nee Patricia Hasse) of Oneida road announce the birth of a son, Ralph Gerard; born Dec. 18 at Pontiac General Hospital. - Grandparents are Mrs. Helen Hasse of East Iroquois road and Mr. and Mrs. James D. Allen of Grasse Pointe Park. * x * Mr. and Mrs. Jack Goodrich (nee Lois Vosburg) of Livonia announce the birth of a son, Peter Guy, Dec. 19. Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Guy Vosburg of Nelson street and Mr. and Mrs. Clare Goodrich of Farmington. x * * Mr. and Mrs. George L. Thomas (nee Patricia Young) of Birmingham announce the birth of a son, Lee Edwin, on Christmas morning. Grandparents of the infant are Mr, and Mrs. Luther Thomas of Birmingham and Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Young of Drayton Plains. * * * A daughter, Kathryn Lynn was born to Mr. and Mrs. James P. Marakas (nee Mary- alice McFall) of Dearborn, ec. 24 at North Grace Hos- pital. Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. John H. McFall of Sylvan Lake and Mr. and Mrs. Peter Mara- kas of Detroit. * * * Together for Christmas for the first time in 18 years at the Auburn Heights home of Mr.’ and Mrs. C. J. Pizzala were Sgt. and Mrs, George Pizzala and family of Minne- apolis, Minn., Mr. and Mrs. Clarence J. Pizzala Jr. of First street and their family and Mr. and Mrs. Harland Pizzala of Third street and their family. * * bd Mr. and Mrs. Richard Euler and son, Richard, here from Syracuse, N. Y., are visiting their families, Mr. and Mrs. Harold B. Euler of Ottawa drive and Mrs. Moffatt Gray of Lake Angelus. Cox - Vaverek Nuptials Said Before members of the im- mediate families, Annabell Vav- erek becanie the bride of Da- vid Cox. The wedding took place Friday at St. Michael Church.. * * r Parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Vaverek of Joslyn road and Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Cox of Mechanic Street. * * * Sheila Vaverek was maid of honor, with Milton Vaverek as best man. Help Boy: Later—Abby Father Wrong to Put Son By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN “DEAR ABBY: As I write this my son is sitting in jail. His own father put him there. He is ve and NOT a bad boy but some of his friends have been in trouble. He confessed that he was in on a holdup ‘(no one was hurt} last year but he wasn’t Picked up and nobody told on him, His fa- ABBY ther told him if he ever broke the law again he would turn him in. His father found a switch-blade knife and some marijuana cigarettes in his pocket when he was asleep so he had the cops come and pick him up. How could a fa- ther make a convict out of his own son?” HEARTBROKEN MOTHER DEAR MOTHER: Your hus- band had great courage and should be commended. It -is far better that the law should e take over your son now than for a more serious offense la- ter, * * * DEAR ABBY: In answer to that man who bought his wife a cemetery plot for her anni- versary gift when she was ex- pecting a sewing machine: I think it was the most heartless thing he could have done.” A SEWING MACHINE SALESMAN * * * “DEAR ABBY: My __hus- band’s folks do not know we are married and J think since the baby is due in March we ought to. tell them. We live quite a ways from: them (I work and he goes to school) but he writes to thank them for his allowance. I got mad and told my husband if he didn’t tell them we were mar- ried, I would. I think it’s a dis- grace to keep it a secret any longer. I am proud of my mar- riage and am hurt to think he's still hiding it. What would you advise me to do?” SECRET BRIDE DEAR BRIDE: The longer your husband delays telling his folks, the angrier they will be when he finally breaks the news. It’s his place to tell them, not yours, and the soon- er the better. * * * “DEAR ABBY: There is a man who comes to my house on business every so often (he is a meter reader) and in the | summer I give him iced tea and in the winter I give him hot coffee, I am a widow and he told me once he lost his wife some years age. I think he likes me and I know I like him. He has good manners and is nice looking. He acts lone- some, but I don’t want him to think I’m running after him. How can I get to know him better?” DEAR LONESOME: He's a meter reader—not a mind read- er! Ask a féw of your friends in for dinner, and include him. * p “DEAR ABBY: There is this boy at school named Gary and I like him very much and he liked ‘me. He gave me a note saying he’d like to kiss my LONESOME - Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Palmer Estes are visiting their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lovell and Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Estes, homes during the holidays. The couple 3 2% Borg ae _ URS. JAMES P. - KLINE at their Birmingham Married this morning at St. Vincent de Paul Church were Joan Agnes W yzgoski ‘and James P. Kline. Parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. John J. W yzgoshi and Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Kline. Joan Wyzgoski Becomes Bride ot James P. Kline Palms and poinsettias deco- rated St. Vincent de Paul Church this morning for the wedding of Joan Agnes Wyzgo- ski and James P, Kline. The Rev. Cronan Kline, the bridegroom's brother, offici- ated at the Solemn High Mass before 300 guests. He was assisted by the Rev. Robert Wyzgoski, the bride’s brother, who acted as deacon, and the Rev. Fabian Weber as_ sub- deacon. * * * Parents of the couple are Mr and Mrs. John J. Wyzgoski of Middlebelt road and Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Kline of Dear- born. ° The bride wore her sister's gown of brocaded silk. The bodice was accented with seed pearls. The gown featured long sleeves and a long, sweeping train, A crown of pearls and rhine- stones held her fingertip veil of silk illusion and she carried a bouquet of stephanotis and an orchid on a white prayer - book. in Jail? ruby ilips and stuff like that. I wrote back to him that we were through because he was too fast for me. “Then his best friend told me that Gary didn’t write that note, somebody else did and Gary was asked to hand it to me, [ still like Gary and would like to go back with him, but I don’t know how to make up after telling him we were through. Can you help me?” MISTAKEN DEAR MISTAKEN: Ask Gary’s friend to tell Gary that as long as Gary wasn’t the one who wanted to ‘‘kiss your ruby lips and stuff like that’ you'd like to see him again. Good luck! * * * “DEAR ABBY: I am re-mar- rying my ‘ex.’ Could we use the same wedding invitations and cross out the date?’ J.J. DEAR J.: Certainly not! * * * For a personal reply, write to ABBY in care of this paper. Enclose a_ self-addressed, stamped envelope. Mrs. George Sullivan of Berkely was her sister's ma- tron of honor. Her waltz-length dress was of white peau de soie with a fitted bodice and red chiffon streamers at the back and she wore a red crown. Attendants were Mrs. James Bendig and Mrs. Lorin G. F. Kline, the bridegroom's sister. Their dresses were similar to the matron of honor’s, but with green chiffon streamers and green crowns. All carried red carnations on white fur muffs. * * * Pamela Stockman was the flower girl. She wore a waltz- length dress of white chiffon over taffeta with a velvet head band, and carried red carna- tion petals in a basket, ATTEND BRIDEGROOM The bridegroom's brother, David Kline of Detroit was best man, Ushers were Ramon Valentine, John Annis and Mil- ton Hill of Detroit. Stephen Valentine was ringbearer. An evening reception was held at Knights of Columbus Hall. Before leaving for a honeymoon through the Eas- tern states, the bride changed to a two-piece wool print dress with royal blue accessories and the orchid from her bridal bouquet. They will live on Salmer street. Pentiac Press Phete _was married in a civil ceremony Sept. 13 and on Dec. 6 in an Episcopal rite at Kelly Hill Chapel, Ft. Benning, Ga., where the bridegroom is now stationed. Wedding Followed by Visit Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Palm- er Estes, the former Susan Scott Lovell, are visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lovell of Birmingham, and his parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Estes also of Birmingham. The Lovelis and Mr. and Mrs. Estes attended Susan and Tom's wedding at Kelly Hill Chapel in Ft. Benning, Ga., Dec. 6. Tom now is on a 10-day leave and is scheduled to go to Ger- many in the spring. He attend- ed Michigan State University before serving with the U.S. Army. The new Mrs. Estes was graduated from The Grier Schoo] for Girls, Tyrone, Pa., and Centenary College for Women, Hackettstown, N. J. She is employed as a secre- tary at William Beaumont Hos- pital. Nancy Fish Reveals Betrothal Mr. and Mrs. Theron J. Fish of Swampscott, Mass, announce the engagement of their daugh- ter, Nancy Louise, to Dr. Ber- nard A. TePoorten, son of Mrs. Bernard A, TePoorten of Syl- van Lake and the late Dr. Te- Poorten. Miss Fish is a graduate of Colby Junior College and the School of Medical Technology at Abington Memorial Hospital, Pa. Dr. TePoorten graduated from Michigan State University and Kirksville College of Oste- opathy and Surgery in Kirks- ville, Mo., and is practicing in Kezar Falls, Maine. A January wedding is planned. Hang Towels Low A neat bathroom with chil- dren in the family is a rarity. But some simple tricks keep items like towels and wash- cloths straight and off the floor. Snapfasten ordinary towels together and hang them over a low bar for the little chil- dren to use. This also encour- ages handwashing. Annabell Vaverek and David Cox were married Friday at Michael Church. Parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Vaverek and Mr. and Mrs. a Herbert Cox. DAVID €0X= 4) - « } - = LS i af ey : te ; 1 ‘ A rye) mf i ie ae if by ‘ . ‘ta rd T Ask Your Doctor Mild Exercise. for” ‘Older Persons Walking is one of the very best, . { THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1958. 4 is believed: ee op one on the other, you Ce re ee Pe Superstitious? Check Spaces _ Between Teeth Did you know, according to. . vind teak Mie, th. hak wanes in: fleet. of vei-end tele thew with your legs straight and your riches when a quarter can fit Maay folks in their sixties and| but here are a few more: from the hip, Turn relaxed and loose. legend, that spaces between your right |Wrists are and ae Bet & exer- “1, Stand tall. ‘Place your Jett | Side toward the wall and place a ee your teeth foretells a_lucky 1 would ‘sot’ tet pry bodiee bing| Mand on the wall. Lift your ‘ight your right hand on the wall and'| 3 Lie on the floor or on the life? , Around the world there's . exereises for the S| leg wp a little behind yeu sag | Shake you: lett leg. bed, Bend your left knee up close many a myth concerning the iat | o without first asking that he or she| S™aMe the right leg.: Have the soe = % to. your abdomen, Slide the. left position of your teeth, say a. physical check ankle and knees relaxed and let '. 2. Stand tall. Lift both hands up| foot along the floor or bed back to dentrifice researchers. all-Tex® ‘ manne pear yo angry shard : place, Do the same with the right}- * * * 1 = to the physician. . Hs tag knee and continue, alternating. A Canadian superstition - _ The ideal procedure, of course, 4. Lie on the floor or the bed claims you're in store for great is one of the problems of later years. The motions I am describ- ing today are so mild that your doctor probably will agree with them, but get his advice first. arms resting on the floor or bed overhead, Bend both knees up close to your abdomen. Grasp the knees with the hands. Return hands to overhead position as you slide both feet along the floor, straigh‘ening the legs. Continue, Be Sweet and. Act Natural By EMILY POST | “Dear Mrs. Post: I am go- ing to meet my fiance’s par- ents for the first time soon and I would like to know the proper way in which to greet them. Should I kiss his moth- er, or do I shake hands with . his mother and father or do I simply say “how do you do” and nothing more? Also, when leaving do I say “It was a pleasure meeting you?" Answer: You kiss his mother and shake hands with his fath- er saying with enthusiasm, “Oh: I've wanted so much to meet you.” Then, be your own natural sweet self and be guid- ed by what they say to you. Whatever else you do, don't say, “It was a pleasure meet- ing you.” Say instead, ‘It has made me so happy meeting you at last!” or ‘‘] can hard- ly wait to know you better’ or anything else that comes to your mind that will show them that you are really glad to meet them, and that you hope they will get to love you. ‘Dear Mrs. Post: I am going to be married in a month. Two weeks ago my cousin died rather suddenly, She and her husband were on my list of wedding guests. I am about to Mail my wedding invitations and I don’t know what to do about sending him an invita- tion. Would it be proper so soon after his wife's death, or might this seem heartless?"’ Answer: Send him an_ in- vitation and enclose a note with it saying that you merely want to inform him when your wedding day is to be and to let him know that he would be welcome should he feel able to come. “Dear Mrs. Post: When eat- ing in a cafeteria-type restau- rant, should one ask permis- sion of a stranger to sit at her table? It is not possible for each one to have a table alone during the noon rush, but I “wondered if this sould be done in courtesy?” Answer: Before sitting down, it is common courtesy to ask, “Are you saving this place for anyone?”’ Give the Scalp Frequent Care It isn’t just the hair that needs cleansing at shampoo time, it’s the scalp, too. The skin on top of the head doesn't get the exercise the rest of the skin gets. Nor does it get the health-giving sunlight. Give the scalp special atten- tion during the shampoo. And | 5. This one is also taken while lying on your back. Arms rest on the floor at your sides, Drag the legs apart and then together with- out lifting legs or feet from the floor. Continue.. x * * Surface circulation is important to the older individual, A brisk rub after a bath which makes the skin pink is a beneficial routine. between your teeth. Folk lore of various countries seem to tie up teeth with travel. * * * Throughout Europe, legends promise a stay-at-home life for those whose teeth are set close together, long journeys if they're set far apart, Even in parts of the United States, it and Matching Fabrics See Them at - Brown Bros. 704 W. Huron FE 8-9311 AMINE A AENNRI BID BA 4 ees CBB ORR 5 I gh eoten entnd Sturdy Marriage Is chuckles from both husbands and, Here is a mild exercise designed especially for the older folks: Place your left hand on the wall and lift your right leg up a little behind you and shake your right leg. Let your foot flop. The shake comes from your hip. Able to Take Fights By RUTH MILLETT truths out in the open, and lets a} James Thurber, who has the de-/™2? andy Norman get yan tem lightful knack of being able to [0k at each other and at them- make us laugh at ourselves, has selves. come up with an article, ‘My oan) * : Rules for a Happy Marriage.” and wife who} It is sure to get appreciative | * * It’s the husband ‘and tell their troubles to anyone willing to listen. The husbands and wives who wives, * * * The rules are as sound as they ‘are funny. But there is one rule 4ren’t above taking little digs at each other . In front of their friends and who air their frus- trations to any listening ear are the husbands and wives who are too “civilized”? to battle out their problems at home as they arise. You can be pretty sure that the | Smiths who aren't afraid to blow |their tops will be living together until the end of their days. * * * But you'd better not make any |bets on the Browns who are as polite to each other as strangers, lend who have never stooped to a really good ‘‘'Now-you-listen-to-me- for-a-minute,"’ fist-pounding, door banging, family argument. Dark Blue Last Hue Preferred by Homemakers Popular colors in the home this year lead off with beige, go on to sandalwood, pink, oys- ter. white, light green, tur- quoise, light blue and yellow. Dark green, popular during for a happy marriage thet Mr Thurber neglected to mention: “Never be afraid to have a fight.”’ A good, fair, marital row now and then with no verbal punches | pulled and no bitter pills sugar- | coated is the best way in the world for a husband and wife to remain a devoted couple. A good honest fight clears the) air of resentments, gets plain’ between shampoos, stimulate the middle ‘58s, is number 20 the scalp with massage. on the color parade. Light Cleanse by rubbing the skin gray has slumped to ninth with cotton pads soaked in place, good quality witch hazel. Many Apply Wax. to Brass, Copper As a work-saver, many wom- en are waxing their silver, brass and copper home acces- sories. For best results, apply wax ~ to metal pieces only after wash- ing away all traces of tarnish with soap or detergent suds. Dark blue has been consist- ently in last place since 1946 says Faber Birren, color con- EVELYN M. DORMAN sultant who compiled the chart ‘are afraid to do battle occasionally| who snipe at each other in public, Exercise Can Firm the Arm The problem of the flabby — upper arm is one that plagues many older women. It’s a real problem because it makes impossible the wearing of many pretty clothes. * * * Sleeveless daytime dresses are out and so are sleeveless evening clothes. A cap sleeve or stole must cover that upper arm. * * * Actually, a little patienice and exercise, either passive or ac- tive, will firm up that upper arm in a matter of weeks. The passive exercise can come in the form of electric massage. This can be given in a salon or you can buy a machine and use it at home. * * * Active exercise is simple. Stand a foot away from a wall with both feet together. Place the palms of your hands on the wall, elbows bent. Now push yourself slowly away from the wall. Do this for 20 counts a day and gradually work up to 50 : And if you really want re- sults, never skip a day. Cave Man Was Dashing Fellow Primitive man lived in a cave and fought for survival. against maurading animals with nothing more than a club. * * * It is known that the male dressed his hair and curled it, and the female did not. A comb recently extracted from the earth has been scientifically calculated to be approximately 9000 years old. It was carved from the bone of an animal. As exciting as a round trip ficket|solves packing problems assures to a far-away place is Vera Max-|you of always being well-dressed. well’s famous sleeveless sheath ee € with a shortened jacket. A COS) Make it in linen, line the jacket tume to travel in, sightsee in, and with a contrasting cotton, trim it dance in with the jacket off, it) Vith braid. Pique; shantung, nov- elty fabrics or even lightweight worsted are all good too. For eve- ning, dress up the sheath with jewelry, filmy scarves, or a stole. From this size. chart select the one size best for you. ’ Wash ‘n’ Wears Require Extra space on the shower rod. * * * Plumbers consider this to be an interesting and practical new trend for an extra bath- room that is strictly ‘‘his’’ outfitted with plenty of drip room for shirts, shorts, and socks. » Obviously, everybody expects papa to do his own sudsing and rinsing in the not-too-far-off sweet bye and bye! Shoulder Pads Now in Plastic Now there are new plastic shoulder pads which retain their shape through all the washings any dress can take. What’s more, they come in assorted contours appropriate for the popular trapeze and raglan styles. Size 12 requires 4% yards of 36 et, 1% yards of 36 inch material for contrast. * * * To order pattern No. 1176, state size, send $1.00. For VERA MAX- WELL label, send 25 cents. For 96 page Pattern Book No. 15, | send $1.00. Address SPADEA, Box 535, G.P.O., Dept. P6, New York 1, N.Y. If paid by check, bank re- quires 4 cents handling charge. * * * (Next week look for an American | Designer Pattern by PHILLIP | MANGONE). Little Visitors Enjoy Balloons Keeping toys for visiting nieces and nephews always is a good idea. At least, get some balloons based on actual records of con- Mr. and Mrs. Russet] Dor- sumer r buying and demand. for the youngsters to play with. They'll keep bouncing them around for hours, but remem- Mr. and Mrs. Clyde T. ber to caution them that there “. is a limit to the supply. This Smith of often saves tears when the last Mark avenue | balloon bursts. “announce the oe Colorful Cover oj their daughter, | for Heat Pad Patricia Ann, to Robert E. Jarrard. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Electric heating pads are now available with colorful cov- ers to help cheer a suffering patient. These covers are re- moved for machine washing in soap or detergent suds. Not only is this hygenic, but Space to Drip tengtn noe Be Now that men have adopted | S### Bust Waist | Hips Neck & wash-'n-wear clothes as en- " _ bod bod ped thusiastically as their wives, 14 36% 26% 31% Hi there is nightly competition for | ]§ Fs boy by ive inch materia] for dress and jack-’ OPEN SUNDAY 2 to 5 New Year's DRESSES and SEPARATES tvs. HURON at TELEGRAPH BEST OF THE SEASON TO YOU AND YOURS! from NELLIE’S ad RUSS'S COUNTRY STORE 4500 Elizabeth Lake Rd. Your Holiday Beauty “Buy” Thrift Wave with haircut so much Lai so little eeereee a BEAUTY SALON 42 N. Saginaw St. Phone FEderal 8-1343 2nd Floor $595 NEISNER’S Appointment Not Always Needed as STYLED HAIRCUT _ Henr y P. psychologists say that clean J arrard of things contribute greatly to the Third avenue.| ™orale of anyone who isn’t feeling up to par. A July wedding is man of South Shirley street announce the engagement of their daughter, Evelyn Marie, to Richard Dale Seets of Jud- son street. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Marion Seets of Harrisburg, Ill. No wedding date has been set. Throughout the New Way Rug & Carpet Cleaners e 42 WISNER Seasons Greetings H olidays! ! ~s 3—RCA Record Players, 45EY4 1—VM All Speed Record Player 3—Spartan 3-Way Portable Radios 2—RCA Portables Radios, (Battery) 1—Zenith Badio, Push-Button Tuning.... 2—Hamilton Beach Food Mixers 1—Zenith 3-Band Portable Radio. 1—Spartan TV Console 21” 1—Sentinel 21” TV with Doors Ce ee CC ie eC Ce ey ee on me eo we ee et le and Many Other Outstanding Values ° Stefanski Radio & Television 1157 W. Huron St. $54.95 $ 29.95 Ea. from Mabel and Ralph J. Austin Nokomis, Florida (formerly of Pontiac) Plan Now Your Winter Vacation at Austin's: Idle While Cottages on Beautiful Dona Bay, Nokomis, Florida today temperature is 74, tomorrow predicted 83 22.95 14.95 Ea. 32.95 19.95 Ea. 24.95 14.95 Ea. 39°95 24.95 Ea. 46.95 24.95 Ea. 89.95 49.95 ® Gulf Bay Fishing 299.95 99.95 e Swimming 399.95 199.95 : 524.95 399.95 Ea. FE 2-6967 ® Mineral Springs @ Oil Heat @ Boat Docks @ White Sand Beaches © Shuffleboard Featuring Luxury Living @ Two Bedroom Cottages @ Electric Kitchens @ Clean and Quiet For Information and Reservations, Write or Phone P. O. Box #147, Nokomis ‘Flo. © alin: Za 3-4644 © Golf ea alls Mec é H 2 4 } x { 3 We shall all stand To *; judgment seat of Gaia. change for his soul? sat shall a man give in ex- Confident Living : _ aganeae 4 46 North — yi A. M. MORNING ma Fett A. M. ant dae i wareH SERVI MOORE, a:80 Fe Te LEROY maria, PASTOR FIRST CHURCH OF THE BRETHREN / Wauteak fo Assist Pastor College Youth to Give Brief Messages, Prayer Sunday School . Morning Worship .........- Pee ee eee ee rere e etree eeee oeeewrr ree eee ee eeee EVENING WORSHIP .. 0... 2c cen eeeeenes Billy Graham. Film, “OIL TOWN U. S. A.” Rev. M. F. Boyd Ir., Pastor Cooperating with Southern Baptist Convention =~ 9,000,000 Members — Columbia Avenue : BAPTIST 64 vet — Ave. a A.M. 11:00 A. M. 6:30 P. M. «oe 7330 PLM. NEW YEAR’S EVE WATCH NIGHT SERVICE 8 P. M. to MIDNITE at Vespers Service “After Bethlehem’’ will be the subject of the sermon by Dr. Jo- seph I. Chapman at both the 8:45 and 11 a.m. services in Bethany Baptist Church Sunday. : Kenneth Young Jr. will be soloist and Dale Quinn, youth assitant at the early service. At 11 a.m. the soloist will be Robert Wil- liams. Karen Sigler will assist the pastor. Dedication of children and re- ception of new members is sched- uled for the later service, College young people will be in charge of the Vesper service at 7 p.m, Ce ee ao DR, JOHN H. DAWSON Adrian College Life’? wil] be the theme. Sharon : West Huron at Mark Street DR. JOSEPH IRVINE CHAPMAN, Paster PERCY M. WALLEY JR., Minister of Education ‘Two Worship Services—8:45 A. M. and i 00 A. M. Sermon: “AFTER BETHLEHEM 9:45 A.M.—Church School Classes for All 7:00 P. M.—Veayer Fervice im Ch ef Our College ¥ People NEW YEAR'S EVE WATCH NIGHT SERVICE 9:00 to 12:00 P.M. “An Americen Baptist Convention Church” Bethany Baptist Church Wolfe will be at the organ and _Rebert Wilson will give the call to worship and invocation. Delivering brief messages will be Roger Anderson, Robert Hunt, Sharon Boyce, Evelyn Brown and Ruth Cook, Special music will be a trumpet solo by Jerry Ryan. Pastor Chapman will speak on “Greeting the Future With Cheer” at the candlelight worship service |° set for 11:15 to midnight New Year's Eve. The program will begin with recreation from 9 to 10:30 p.m. Head to Speak | Students to Participate | in Recognition Service at Oakland Park Church Dr. John H. Dawson, president of Adrian College, will speak at the 110 a.m. service Sunday, which will ibe the annua] student recognition jservice in Oakland Park Methodist Church, Dr. Dawson has spearheaded lwhat has been referred to as an {followed by refreshments. FIRST SPIRITUALIST CHURCH 576 Orchard Lake Ave. Lyceum 10:30 A. M. Mead, Edwin Haddick, Speakin Social Evening, Wednesday. Loe 8 P. M. Rev. Harold Marshall Pastor “unequaled small college expan- sion program.” It includes the con- struction of four new buildings, a women’s dormitory, a men’s dor- mitory, student union center and a dining hall, * Elders, Trustees to Be Installed Sunday Morning * * Under his administration, fac- ulty salaries have risen to the Newly-elected elders and trus- ATTEND ANNUAL WATCH-NITE SERVICE 8 P. M. ‘til Midnight—At the "EVANGELISTIC TABERNACLE 2800 Watkins Lake Rd., 4 Mi. N. W. Oak. Co, Mkt. Rev. W. A. Rogers. Dist. Supt. Gulf Cen. States of Church of Nazarene, Speaker and Singer y Rev. Rogers is a Composer and Recording Artist © Sender Schoo! 10 A.M. — Preaching 11 A.M. and 7:30 P.M. @ CELW at 7:30 A.M. Rev. A. J. Baughey, Pasfor ‘tees of the Auburn Heights United Presbyterian Church, 3456 Primary St., will be installed at the 11:13 a.m. service Sunday. Named elders were William Van- cil, Ray Isanhart and Orvin Weav- er. Mrs. Robert Benedict, Walter Meyer and extent that the college salary seale ranks Adrian near the top amohg Midwest colleges, x * * A minister in the Pittsburgh Con- ference of Methodist Churches from 1941-1955, Dr. Dawson was a delegate to President Eisen- nower’s ‘‘White House Conference’’ in 1956. He became president of | Adrian College in 1955. election. The Rev. F. William Palmer will preach on ‘Solutions and Sundays’’ FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Oakland and Saginaw Pontie-, Michigan onan {etl Rev. H. H. Savage, Pastor @)Qaama \ I Ei Rev. W. E. Hakes. Ass‘t. Pastor ee 9:45 AM—SUNDAY SCHOOL Classes tor Ali Ages 10:45 AM.—MORNING WORSHIP “THE FINALITY OF LAST THINGS” 7:00 P.M.—EVENING SERVICES “THE SOB OF THE LOST SOUL” Dr. H. H. Savage Preaching in the Morning College students participating in the service will be William Hertel, Michael Gallagher, Ann Coombe, Joan Wagley, Robert Baynes, Benn’ Johnson and Kenneth Jilbert. lat the installation service. A lnursery will be provided during the worship hour. Sunday school classes wil] meet at 10 a.m. and the young people's Be content with such things as lye have. row. Mrs. Thomas Pfaff | were named trustees at the recent meeting is set for 6 p.m. tomor-| Professor in Boston Gas Recipe Long Time Ago By NORMAN VINCENT PEALE A while back I happened to be waiting for a train in the South Station at Boston. Strolling around the station during the few minutes I had to wait, I passed the restaurant. Mem- ory carried me back to an old friend — now gone to heaven—by the name of William L. Stidger, preacher and professor, affectionate- ly known to his friends and students as “Bill” Stidger. I recalled one winter evening when I had an oyster stew-wth Bill Stidger in that South Station restaurant. Bill was one of the most - eager, enthusiastic men I ever knew. He ef- fervesced, he bubbled over. Life always seemed wonderful to him. PEALE And, as we ate our stew that night, I said, “Bill, I've always wondered about you. You seems so com-~- pletely and thoroughly happy. You are a happy man, aren't you?” “Sure thing,” he boomed, “my life is full of nappieess: The world is wonderful and exciting.” Then I began to probe for his secret, for I knew he had one, and finally he said something most significant. Bill Stidger told me that the secret of his life full of happiness was simply that he had learned to penatiee) the attitude of gratitude. Bill Stidger went on to tell how to practice the attitude of gratitude. When he woke up in the morning the first thing he did was to give thanks to the Lord that he could wake up| . that he was alive! “The more you remind yourself that you are alive the more alive you'll be,” he said. Next, he would tell the Lord that he was grateful for a “delicious night’s sleep.” What a description! .. . “delicious| night’s sleep.” He would give thanks to the Lord for his wife and children. “And,” he added, ‘I give thanks for the work-I have to do, for my friends and for my opportunities.” I never forgot) that phrase and I hope you won’t either. * * How can you fill this new year and, indeed, all the rest of your life, with happiness? The Psalmist tells us how: “O give thanks unto the Lord: for he is good: for his mercy en- ++ Plan Aids Pastor lin New Location know is always difficult. Joseph County (Ind.) Council of| \the Council of Community Services. Indiana County Group The he Episcopal Church of the Advent W. Long take Rd, ot Middlebelt. THE REV JOHN W. WIGLE, Vicar tay weit ae prowl Boly Communion First. Senday Conducts Regular Tour of Social Agencies The adjustment of a pastor new- ly arrived in a strange city i) minister to parishioners he doesn’ . BETHEL TABERNACLE Fist Pentecost Church of Poutine SS 10 a.m. Worship 11 a.m. Evangelistic Service 7:30 p.m. Tues and Thurs. 7:30 p.m. ev ang Mire & Urouch saan Raldoin Ave FE 9-426 To make things easier, the St. | Churches recently took a group of newly arrived ministers on 4 “ome and See Tour” to acquaint them with local social agencies. * * * “In addition to learning about the extensive resources available First Christian Church Disciples of ak ae i) School ..1 es an 658 W. Huron Rev. D. D. McColl for service to parishioners in South Bend,” Mr. F. Eugene Hess ex- plained, ‘‘the ministers made im- portant personal contacts with so- cia] work leaders.” A social worker himself, Mr. | Hess is chairman of the Council's Social Service Committee which Highland Congregational: Church Milford Rd. at M-S9 Sunday Schoo! 10 A. M. Morning Worship 11 A. M. REV MAURICE DIRETTE, Pastor arranged the tour. x * The ministers spent one morn- ing visiting the County Depart- ment of Public Welfare, the Ju- venile Court, YMCA and relief; agencies, and conferred with ex- ecutives and staff members on their various types of service. * * * At a noon luncheon they were joined by local representatives of the YMCA, Goodwill Industries, the Salvation Army, American Red Cross, the Adult and Child Guid-) ance Clinic, Family Service and) The ‘Come and See Tours,’ in- itiated in 1956, are modeled on a program developed in Indianapolis by Dr. Grover L. Hartman when) he was secretary of the Social) dureth forever.” Of course, this doesn’t mean closing your eyes to the fact that life is filled with hardship and all kinds of) difficulties, that there is much suffering in the world, much) pain and hard struggle. But it does mean that we can rise above life’s troubles by the power of God within us. In that rising above diffi- culty you'll find the attitude of gratitude a big help. So try being grateful for people and things and life and |God. If you get up every morning and go to bed every night Service Department of the Church ASSEMBLY OF GOD SUNDAY SCHOOL 9:45 A. M. “The Christian's Greatest Reward” Morn. Worship, 11:00 Evangelistic, 7:45 C. Wibley oth Services Pastor Wesle Speaking at Watch Night Service New Year's Eve Federation of Greater Indianapolis. Dr. Hartman now heads the St.) Joseph County Council. ithanking God for every wonderful blessing he has given you, and physically, more positive in your thinking. And, when you develop these attributes within yourself, you are acquiring the qualities you need to make this new year and your whole life overflow with happiness. * * * They say that happiness is a habit. That's right, it is. But lit results from another habit, and that habit is one I suggest _ OAKLAND PARK METHODIST CHURCH REV. DEEG, Pastor—MONTCALM and GLENWOOD Morning Service: Guest Speaker Dr. John H. Dawson, president of Adrian College ‘we all begin to cultivate now. It’s‘one that will help you start ‘the New Year off right. Cultivate the habit of gratitude, the attitude of thankfulness. Think gratitude, speak gratitude and you will help other, people to be grateful. As you spread gratitude you will have a FIRST METHODIST South Saginaw'at Judson Paul T. Hart, Pastor Harry J. Lord, Assistant Pastor 10:00 A.M. MORNING WORSHIP “WHERE DO WE GO FROM HERE?” PONTIAC CHURCH OF CHRIST Welcomes All Visitors oben se eee we 11:15 CHURCH SCHOOL Wed. 7:30 P. M. Bible ody and Prayer Fellowship Youth’Fellowship ....6:15 P. M. , Bible Study. 9:50 a.m. Morning Worship 10:50 a.m “Looking Back” Luke 9-62 sunday Kvenine Wershtp 6:00 p.m. “Religion of the Heart’ Matthew 15, Mark Wednesday Evening Service 7:30 p.m. Listen to Herald of Fruth WXYZ Detroit 5:30 to 6:00 P.M. Sunday Everybody Is Invited! 1180 North Perry Street w ww Hath Minister New Year full of happiness. | (Copyright, 1958) College Students |Catholic Pledge Hits to Be Honored With Reception The annual reception and tea forjnewed a pledge of the National college students, sponsored by the|Legion of Decency, a church Tuxis Society, will be held at 5:30/agency which evaluates motion p.m. Sunday in First Presbyterian| pictures. The pledge states in part: Church. All students are invited. “I condemn, indecent and im- “Light and Shadow”’ will be the| moral motion pictures and those topic of the Rev. Galen E. Her- shey’s sermon. at 9:30 a.m. tomor-|, . row. WASHINGTON (ih — At mid- . I promise, further, to stay! away altogether from places of ; Central Methodist REV. MILTON H. BANK, D. D., Minister REV. DANIEL J. WALLACE, B. D., Assoc. Minister REV. JOHN H. HALL, D. D., Assoc. Minister MORNING SERVICES, 8:30 and 10:45 A. M. Sam IT RING IN ou ED HAPPINESS bs ENDURING PEACE ye \" THE TRUE JOY OF LIVING © MAKE ‘59 A VICTORY TIME VAN NAN Visitors in Our City Are Especially Invited. Baptismal 7:30 Sunday Night | Radio 2 Revival WPON 10:15 A. M. Each Sunday y | | “Sunday School Attendance Last Week 1.308 “BECOME STRONGEST WHEN YOU ARE WEAKEST” | Dr. Milton H. Bank, Preaching e (BROADCAST Over WPON, 11:00 A. M.) * * * Mrs. Barbara Harris will sing the solo in -Handel’s ‘‘He Shall Feed His Flock.”’ Singing Han- del’s ‘‘Come Onto Me”’ will be Pa- tricia C. Bennett. Dr. William H. Marbach will preach on ‘‘You See What You |Are” at the 11 a.m. service. The choir wil] sing Sowerby’s “‘Venite Adoremus” as well as carols. The Women’s Association will meet Friday for its regular meet- amusement which sbow them as a matter of policy.” Christmas Tea Sunday A Christmas tea will be held from 4 to 6 Sunday afternoon at Bray Temple C.M.E., 320 Rockwell Ave. In charge of arrangements are Mrs. Titus Taylor, Mrs. Frank Cobb and Mrs. R. H. McEwen. ling. Reports of officers and a FIRST OPEN business session will follow the BIBLE CHURCH noon luncheon. 1512 Josiyn Mrs, Mahton A. Benson Jr. will § Block N of Walton Bivd EVANGEL TEMPLE —Interdenominational— 1380 Mt. Clemens SERVICES IN NEW BUILDING : REV_ G. DAY Sunday Services: Sunday School ........ aecsee--+. 9:45 A.M, Worship .......... ......... sieteieteye 7s oseees- e+ 10:45 A. M. Evangelistic ................ ees “ewseisswes css 92500 P. M. SPECIAL NEW YEAR'S EVE SERVICE 9:00 P. M. “Road to Jericho”—Color Film have charge of the worship service.|| Sunday School 10:00 A.M vanes Worship ee s a out! ervice . 6: Guest Speaker, Sunday Evangelistic Service 7:45P.M Wed. Prayer: Meeting 7:45P M The Rev. David L, Collins, pas- ‘tor of First Baptist Church in The End ot Williamsburg, Va., will be guest Your Search speaker at both morning and eve- for a Friendly ning services tomorrow in Trinity Chareb Baptist Church. Members and their Rev. BE. Staten FE 2.8497 friends are invited. - Evangelistic Service 7:30 P. M. “THE DIFFICULTY OF SELF KNOWLEDGE” Kenneth A. Hutchinson Pastor Richard North Minister of Music UNION WATCH NIGHT SERVICE SUNDAY | Musical Program — Quartet, Trio, Solo : Holy Communion — Midnight . WE We SERVICES | = SUBJECT FOR SUNDAY “ 10 A. M. “CHRISTIA CIENCE” Dr. Tom Malone CHURCH «: the "NAZARENE — Nis : A Dr. Tom Malone. Pastor | Sunday Services and Reading Room W ~11 A. M. SUNDAY SCHOOL 60 STATE STREET Sunday School 2 East Lawrence Street Dr. Tom Malone sine Bible School ...... 9:45 A. M. Wednesday Evenina uawosema WW 7:30 P. M. . Worship oe @ a6 11:00 A. M. Service 8 P.M Friday to 9 PM Mn) ower May ae ee ns el ca THE RECKONING (OF IME? FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST S SAVED” Modern Supervised Nursery. | Youth Service 6:30 P. M. Lawrence and Williams Streets . U | Baz | HOW CHRISTIAN SCIENCE HEALS to be held at the Pontiac Parkdale. Nazarene Nazarerie Churches Participating Gi 645 TELEGRAPH CLINTONVILLE + PARK & Past ZION FIRST NAZARENE : | . : he oa 4 . uA , 2 4 *s | . _ h + ¥ \, }, Indecent, Crime Films | December Sunday Masses, Roman. Catholics across the country re- which glorify crime or criminals ‘Evangelist, City Pastor to Debate Next Week A public debate will be held at. 7:30 p.m, on Dec. 29 and 30 in the Church of Christ, you can’t help being more healthy-minded, stronger spiritually | sap an’ Hor Rie even ies ‘of Detroit participating. * * “The Bible Teaches That There) i\Is Only Person in the Godhead”’ jwill be the subject, The Rev. James will speak on the affirma- tive side and the Pontiac pastor, | the negative. Follow righteousness, faith, char-| ity, peace. M 210 Hughes Worship—Fellowship Beginning at 9:30 P. M. Holy Communion “Visit the Church of the Old Fashioned Gospel” ‘210 N. PERRY AT Rev. Wesley C. Wibley, Pastor r. United - Pentecostal 08 Green 8&t Rev E. Sunday Services First United Church Pontiac L. Reberts. Pastor 10:00 A. M. Devotional Services " :00 A. M. Evening Services ... 7:30 P. M. Presbyterian | Churches E. Pike at Anderson Sundav School, 10 Morning Worship, 1 A. M. Evening Labeda Youth Night, Wed. 7:00 P.M. CHURCH of GOD OAKLAND AVENUE Oakland at Cadillac Theodore K. Allebach, Pastor Audrey Youth Director Limkeman, Worship Bible School Fist Sunday School METHODIST CHURCH | 501 MT. CLEMENS STREET Lyal H. Howison, Pastor Worship 10 a.m. and 7:30 p.m. 10:00 a.m. Prayer Meeting. Wed. 7:30 p.m. “Light and Life Hour” | Broadcast, Sun. 3 p.m., CKLW WELCOME! i _ “Weccaia ad Fama” LU eet Youth Fellowship .. 5:45PM CKLW Sunday, Paster Evening Service .. 7:;00P M 3:30 P.M. 2-8609 Wednesday 3 Prayer Meeting .. 7:00P.M JOSLYN AVENUE Joslyn at Third Edmund L. Watkins, Paster Bible School ...... 9:30 A M. Worship ......+.. 10:45 A M. Evening Service 6:30 P.M Wednesday Prayer and Study ..... 7:30 P.M. AUBURN HEIGHTS 3456 Primary Street + ASCENSION National Lutheran Council Churches || : W. Maple Near Ladd Rd. M. Prederick Foutz, Pastor Ff Wm ‘Palmer. Pastor 11:15 A.M. 10:00 A.M. Worship | ...++8..- Bible School ..... | COMMUNITY UNITED | °? PRESBYTERIAN PONTIAC CHURCH 96 Williams St. Wm. LaFountain. Pastor Drayton Plains, Michigan SUNDAY SCHOOL 9:45 A.M W. J. Teeuwissen, Jr., Pastor CHURCH SERVICE .11:00 A.M. 1 Bible School 945A M Morning Worship 11:00A M CHRIST Youth Groups .. .. 6:30P M WATERFORD TWP. Evenina Worship 7:30 P.M Airport at Williams Lake Rd Wed Prayer and Arvid E. Anderson, Pastor Study Hour 70 FM SUNDAY SCHOOL .. 9:30 A.M. i} CHURCH SERVICE .11:00 A.M. CHURCH OF THE ATONEMENT r) ST. JOHN’S __ United Presbyterian PONTIAC 87 Hill St. at Cherry St Featite 2 Sol en 3535 Clintonville Rd. Carl W. Nelson. Pastor : AL SUNDAY SCHOOL 9:45 .. A.M. O Anarewe, inesiet CHURCH SERVICE 11:00 A.M. | Bible Schoo! ...... 945A M - Morning Worship 11:00 A M SHEPHERD of the LAKES | L WALLED LAKE LAKELAND Meeting at Walled take, tlem Schoo! : Maceday Lk. & Wms. Lk. Ra. Rev Roy F fambert Pastor F Sunday School .. 9:30 A M. CHURCH SERVICE 11:00 A. M. Tf Morning Worship 10:45AM SUNDAY SCHOOL 59:30 A.M 2nd Sunday School ,...10:45 4 S RADIO STATION v C CKLW EVERY SUNDAY W (U soo KC. CHANNEL 7 =U Im Sunday 9:45 A.M. | ' 9:300.M. fj VEVE LL fEJE —V~I{[Afj-B ' | cs gi ee ‘ » *« 2 raty/ pontiac PRESS, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1058 oe, the presidency Yi tee Chamoh of lena! Corte ot Saints, was honored) Latter-Day | ,and politicians are Ter amen Seti: ptsble| among. the special groups who will Assurance Society AmeT-| ,ttend international conferences t ica, for his long service to hisi. icumenical Institute t Bos- countgy, hig church and his fallow ag —_ is TeN0W) sey, Switzerland, in 1959. 24 a ee oe The Newnesicel Seetiete li on educational center maintained Letters, Etc. FAST . SERVICE! Christian Literature Sales 99 Oakland FE 4.9591 New Location 70 Chamberlain, Cor. Edison Sunday Service 11 A. M. — = CENTRAL CHRISTIAN CHURCH a i ll i i lt ~ i Be Be Bb Bn bi te Be bn i hh hn he hi a he Mn i i nile and Bible ednesday 7:30P.M. peers Attend {stitute ts by tele abel nesting color, language, and Christian con- Jilater than March 15, to Miss Fifth Avenue, New York 10, N.Y. ial Groups , World Institute. ‘NEW ‘YORK: = Philosophers, architects, / between people of different race, * * * : ’ Recruitment is now under way for United States eter age in’ four courses scheduled for sum- mer. Two of the courses are de- signed for laymen and women, one is for missionaries and pas- tors, and there is a course for theological students. ~ oa Applications should be sent not) © Frances Maeda, Administrative Assistant, U.S. Conference for the World Council of Churches, 156 Defend Belief Bible Was God-Inspired CHICAGO wW Evangelical leaders from throughout the United States met yesterday to call for acceptance of the Bible as the inspired word of God, and warn against any other interpretation. * * * Leaders of the group were sum- moned to Chicago by Dr. Bob Jones, head of the university which ‘bears his name in Greenville, S. C., remaining Michigan architecture, the 100-year-old STEEPLE RESTORED — One of the few churches of New England Sashabaw Presbyterian Church, 5331 Maybee Rd., hag just had its steeple restored. The over- all structure rises to 70 feet from the ground. white frame and the pastor, Williams Lake Church, of the Nazarene Corner Airport & Hatchery Rd. 10 ae 2 SUNDAY SCHOOL 11 A.M. WORSHIP HOUR 7?.M, WORSHIP HOUR 316 Baldwin. FE 2-0334 Sat. Eve. Service ... 7:30 P.M a School .....10:00 A.M, Mornin we nee 11:00 A.M Adult Bible ee 6.15 P.M. orship ....... 7:30 P.M. Tues. Young People. 7:30 P.M. Thurs. Prayer 7:30 P.M. REV. TOMMY GUEST, Pastor 1st CONGREGATION newspaper, Jir- uding and Dr. John R. Rice, editor of a Wheaton, Ill., evangelistic weekly Youth Rally Tonight in Christian Temple A Christmas Rally of Oakland Youth Fellowship will be held at 7:3 tonight in Christian Temple, 505 Auburn Ave., with the Rev. Vernel D. Shannon, executive di- rector of Christian Witness to Jews, Inc., the speaker. . x * * The fellowship quartet, com- prised of Douglas Brown, Linda Lankford, Naricy McGown and Marshall Causbie, will sing por- tions of ‘ is Transcending.” Those attending the meeting rep- resent religious colleges and uni- universities and the religious press. Aid Racial Relations NEW YORK w — The number of Roman Catholic interracial councils is rising rapidly. Such groups, working for equal treat- ment for Negroes and whites, are new active in 36 communities, eight in the South. Pat — ei: be visto accom- panist and Philip Somers Jr. will George K. Hunton, New York|be organist, William Meyers will council executive secretary, pre-|lead the singing. dicts there'll be 50 of them by| Young people of Evangel Temple next summer. will challenge the youth of Mem- aL | CHURCH | Mill, E. Huren and Mt. Clemens | Rev. Malcolm K. Burten, Paster Rev. Kari W. Ostberg, Asse, Paster Morning Service 10:30 A. M. “SHAKE OFF THE DUST” The Rev. Mr. Burton, Preaching Lutheran Churches MISSOURI SYNOD ST. PAUL Joslyn at Third (North Bide) George Mahder, Pastor” BISAM © * Early Service ... » Morning Servite ..10:45 A.M = Sunday School .. 9:30 AM BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP Square Lake & Telegraph Wm. C. Grate. Pastor . 10:00 A.M 11:00 A M. . Church Service * Sunday Schoo] .. ST. MARK a el PILGRIM | ns HOLINESS CHURCH Community Church young people Steeple of Sashabaw Presbyterian Members of the Sashabaw Pres- byterian Church of 5331 Maybee Rd., this week festored the steeple to the original house of worship. Known first as the Church of Orion and Independence in 1830, members voted to join the Presby- terian denomination in 1843. es a. im 1856, is the only house of worship the ck the church has ever had. Early trustees were heis, J, M, Fair, E, lee, John C, Fisher Beardslee. Dedicated in 1956, the church was constructed at a cost of $3,000. In recent years, the building has been modernized and reconditioned | with the original architecture pre- served. A year ago a full-time pastor was called to the Sashabaw Ghurch to take care of the growing con- gregation. Since then a new manse was built. When a gift was made this fall ioe: Oe reerene ot eG Beards- T. and George are presently holding the award. An award will be given the church group having the largest ttendance. Andersonvill Baldwin cat Fairmount Office Phone FE 8-8651 “Tlaverage a e — ae ee SUNDAY SCHOOL, 10 a.m. a committee was appointed to promote the project. Members of the Sashabaw Ceme- itery Association and Westminster Fellowship contributed - the extra Further plans include installation of a lighting system so the steeple can be lighted at night and an electronic sound system for the belfry. Re- storation committee members were Mrs. Ray- mond Gates, Mrs. Ida Stewart, Mrs. Ward Poole Peter Voor- |side New Manual . Ho Assist Family Senior High Fellowship to Entertain 39 Students of Orchard Lake Church Priest, Grange Master Os Father, Francis A. Candop, Si. Patrick’s Church in Pandata, Vt., is belleved to be the only Catholic priest, tng is also Master Vic a local. Grange, “Grange \peo- ple are people at their finest,’’ Father Candon declared. ‘‘There is nothing artificial about them. The Grange is an agricultural or-' ganization and 1 live in an agri- cultural. area.” The f-yearall churches, has adopted a $3,925,720 budget for ~ its program of aiding the world’s needy peoples in 1959, The figure is a half million dollars” lerert, than in: 1958. 4 “The Church in Your Heuse”’ will be. the sermon topic of the Rev. Edward D. Auchard, pastor, at both the 9 and 11 a.m. services Sunday in the Orchard Lake Com- munity Church, Presbyterian. The sermon will introduce a new devotional manual, ‘‘Today,” pre- pared .by the United Presbyterian . |{Chureh. It is intended to relate education program of the serch school, ; Thirty-nine college students of Orchard* Dake Church will be —- a a from 6 to 8 p.m, Sunday in Fel Hall on the second floor of the new educational wing. A room with picture windows overlooking Orchard Lake has a ‘acon ~ WESLEYAN METHODIST 6? NORTH LYNN STREET Sunday School 10 A.M. Worship 11 A.M. Evening Service 7:30 P.M. We. P. S$. 6:45 P.M. - Wed. Prayer and Bible Service 7:30 P.M. REV #. L. JOHNSON, Pastor —. MEMORIAL BAPTIST CHURCH 351 Prospect St. Rev. Gerald H. Rapétje Sunday Sehodl....10 4. M. _ Morning Worship... .11:15 A.M. : Young People’ ........ 6:15 P. M, Eve. Worship seieatl 7:30 Wednesday Eve. Service... :.7:30 P.M. BRANCH SUNDAY SCHOOL Held at LONGFELLOW PUBLIC SCHOOL 10 A. M. ‘ |fireplace made possible by contri- butions from the youth groups. church has been authorized by the Session. The 85th anniversary of the dedication in 1874 will be cele- brated next year. . ; The publication in book form is expected prior to the dedicatidn of the educational] wing on Feb. 8. Pentiac Press Photo to Show Slides A history of the Orchard Lake | Marcia Smith | @ 11:45 to 12:15 Noon—Sunday ‘School Classes 6:30 P.M.—Young People’s Services 7:45 P,M.—Evangelistic Service, Rev. Sheffield 7:45 P.M. Wednesday—Bible Study 7:00 P.M. Thursday—Sky Pilots A Friendly Welcome Awdits Youl At Open House Young people of Al] Saints Epis- copal Church will hold open house at 6 p,m. Sunday for college’ stu- dentg and post-high school mem-| bers of the parish in the Men’s Club room. x «* * Showing pictures of her trip to the Rev. Clifford H. Haskins. ye Europe World’ las She spent severa] weeks in Swit- money needed to complete the con-|zerland under the program known struction, as ‘Experiment in International Sashabaw is one of the few re- maining churches in the state built in the traditional New England architecture. The “old’’ has been along with the ‘‘new.” cemetery, dating back to 1830, is on FIRST GENERAL BAPTIST CHURCH 249, Baldwin Avenue Sunday School $45 Moming Service 11:00 Youth Service 6:00 Evening Service 7:00 We Service 7:30 A, Rev. Paul Johnson FE 4-7172—FE 5-9822 DONELSON BAPTIST cia a Elizabeth lake Md ot Cilden Sunday Schoo! 10 a.m. Secnig Weattp Senior and Geginners’ See Youth Service ........ O8Fe CHR RO ew eree oon il ea Church Service OOOO OPORTO ROH PEO H He eee eee 7:30 Paster—REV LEE (alONS SB. Supt. ‘ois. fe needay FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH the west side of the church and a new elementary school on the City Pastor Serves At Chicago Meeting HURON AT WAYNE =cut. Poster REV. WILLIAM H. MARBACH, 0.0. Associate Postor REV. GALEN E. HERSHEY, 8.D. WORSHIP SERVICES . . . 9:30-11:00 CHURCH SCHOOL... . . 9:30-11:00 Dr. Tom Malone, chairman of © the board, president of Midwestern | Baptist Seminary and pastor ot |b Emmanuel Baptist Curch, served , on the resolutions committee when a representative group of evan- || gelists and Christian educators met |) in Chicago us week. * * The more than 150 evangelists |” and 1,200 pastors adopted a reso- > lution reaffirming ‘‘the funda- mental Bible doctrines accepted by | all orthodox, Bible-believing, evan- gelical Christians.’ Dr. Bob Jones, | | REV. WARREN A, ROGERS Rev. Warren Rogers ae 7979 Commerce Rd. NEW CHURCH BUILDING (West Bloomfield Township) Wm. C. Grate, Pastor ’ Sunday School 10:00 A M Church Service 11:18 A M _ Cedar Crest off Union Lk. Rd. : (Next to Dublin School) - © Howard E. Claycombe, Pastor : Services at 8:30 A M. and 1] A M. | Sunday School . 9:45 A.M. Conway. N. H. Apostolic Church of Christ 459 CENTRAL Young People Saturday ........ 7:00 P. M. Sunday School and Worship ..... 10:00 A.M. Sunday Evening Service ........ 7:00 P.M. _ Anniversary Dec. 28 to Jan. 3rd Services Tues., Wed., Thurs., Fri, 7:00 P. M. Saturday Youth Rally jan. 3rd Church Phone FE 5-8361 UL 2-5142 . Bishop L. A. Parent GRACE _ Corner Genesee and Glendale © (West Side _ e| - Richard C. Stuckmeyer, Pastor —| 4 * Church Service ........- 9:00 & ; Sunday School ...... 9:00 = & Church Service ......... 11:00 3 & | Sunday School St. Stephen V.F.W. Hall—Walton Blvd. (Between Dixie and Sashabaw) Guy B. Smith, Pastor Church Service ... 9:30 AM. & , Sunday School .. 10:45 AM. ST. TRINITY | Ralph C. Claus. Pastor School i ervice & Sunda Z First All Saints Episcopal Church Williams St. at W. Pike The Rev. C George W'ddifield. Rector The Rev David K Mills, Curate SUNDAY SERVICES 8:00 A.M.—Holy Communion 9:30 A.M.—Morning Prayer and Sermon by the Rector Church School AD ff | ‘il uy Fe ew oe, CHRISTIAN: PSYCHIC SCIENCE CHURCH 30 Whittemore Street Sunday 7:30 P. M. Watch Night Service Pot Luck Lunch New Year's Eve. Marimont Baptist Church Invites You: Morning Worship, 11 A.M. Sunday School, 10 A.M. Youth Hour, 6:30 P.M. Evening Service, 7:30 P.M.. MARIMONT ...A Growing Church With a Friendly Welcome! Rev. Philip Somers, Pastor Walton Bivd., 1 Block Off Baldwin veteran evangelist, presided at the | session, * The purpose of fe Chicago| meeting, according to Dr. Jones, | was to rally old-time, Bible-believ- ing Christians to oppose this i scriptural corhpromise with mod- ernism and neo-orthodoxy. Speaking and singing at the! annual Watchnight service at Evangelistic Tabernacle, 2800 Watkins Lake Rd., will be the Rev. | Warren A. Rogers. The service Watchnight Speaker WATERFORD COMMUNITY CHURCH » Andersonville Road — Near Dixie Highway canter Perky 2000S A a0 orning eeeeeeepeeev eter : . Evening Service . CCCOSCHHC CC ECHHH Ase eeeneoeesene 7:00 P. Family Bible Hour Wednesday .......--+ 5-00 50+> 7:30 P.M. Robert D. Winne, Paster Fund Und inational - Attend our growing | Sunday School. WORSHIP—11 a. m. | Join in worshipping with |] . us each week. | Youth in Action | GOSPEL HOUR—7 p.m. || _™-58 ct Cass Lake Rd. Rev. G. ]. Bersche, Pastor Salvation’s Story || Sunday School . 0:45 A. M. a | Sunday Worship —'11:00 A.M. “THE HOLY BIBLE” ie ae jayrpo. 6:00 P. M. Changing years will not || Evangelistic Service. .7:00 P. M. |! change us. We must be “THE HOLY BIBLE” born again.” Jn. 3:7 | GUEST SPEAKER: Pastor 0. D. Emery Mr. Paul Hazlett a we will begin at 8 p.m. and continue Y MC A, 131 Mt Clemens Street Rev. BR. Garner, Evening Service .._ 7:00 P Watch Night Service Wed.. - 30 P. M.—12:00 “Where Friends Meet Friends and God Meets All’ until midnight. x * * Composer, recording artist esa singer, he is superintendent of the) General Baptist Church Paster — FE 4¢-7407 clueeeses toeeees 1000 AM Gulf Central District of the Church! eueeeenereee 5 f . Ll CII 0 BM. Gt te ikearene: tee tec syne 2 so will take part in the musical program. * * * | The Rev. Rogers has been as- | sociated with the Church of the L. BAGGETT, Minister—FE W. Travis General Baptist Church Seymour Lake Rd. at Baldwin Rd. Sun. School 10 a.m., Morning Worship 11 a.m. Sunday Evening 7:30 a. Wed. Watch Night Service 8:00 All Attendance Records Broken Last Week | Nazarene for 18 years as singer, ‘choir director, musician and min- ister. ° | m. The Salvation Army @& Sunday School 9:45 a.m. Young People’s Legion 6 p.m. Morning Worship 11 a.m. Evangelistic Meeting 7:30 p.m. Wednesday Prayer and Praise Meeting 7:00 p.m. CAPTAIN AND MRS. J. WILLIAM HEAVER Good Music — Singing — Tree to the Word Preaching God Meets With Us — You Too, Are Invited |said the public is invited, The Rev. A. J. Baughey, Pastor. i 4-0840 CHURCH of SPIRITUAL FELLOWSHIP. Malta Hall—82 Perkins St. Affiliated with Federation of Spiritual Churches Sunday Evening Service 7:30 P. M. Mrs. Lillian Winters of Detroit Open Forum Thursday 7:30 P. M. (Off Auburn) Classes for 11:00 A. M. WORSHIP he Value of T: 10:00 A. M. SUNDAY SCHOOL All Ages We Cordially Invite You to Worship With Us FIRST UNITED MISSIONARY CHURCH In Eastern ie High School, Sanford at. E. Pike 6:45 P.M. JUNIOR AND YOUTH FELLOWSHIP PROGRAMS 30 P. M. WORSHIP SERVICE Topic: “So Run” 1517 Joslyn 11:00 A.M.—Morning Prayer and Sermon by the Rector Church School ‘Tl. tit PP a ei eh al | <0 ae ST, GEORCE’S ST. ANDREW'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH | : EPISCOPAL CHURCH Milford, Mich. _ $30) Hatehery Rd.. Drayton 8:00 A. M.—Holy Commufion 8:00 A. M.—Holy Communion a : “9:30 amd 11:15 A. M.—Identical LE) To yee ey Noe fied = Services ot ip heer | Prayer 11:00. A. at ae Prayer Church geno! at Sack Sessioa The Rev. Bertram T. White, Vicar The Rev, Waldo R. Hunt, Vicar # % SUNDAY, DEC. 28th, EULAS HOUSTON, Pres. United Singing Convention © First Social Brethren Church 316 Baldwin Ave. Featuring Quartets, Duets, Trios and Solos. Plus Choir and Congregational Singing. Don’t Miss This Afternoon of Good Gospel Singing "2:30 to 4:30 P. M. Prayer “The end of -MODERN NURSERY ; -GASKIN, Sec.-Treas, ! Revival! Reviva!! Evangelist FRED JENSEN NIGHTLY. 7:45 P.M. December 98th thru Jan. 11th FIRST OPEN BIBLE CHURCH 1 BLOCK NORTH OF WALTON BLVD. ute Lost - Sick - Troubled and Disconraged, R. E. STATON, Pastor “Known as The Walking Bible’ 7 (Except Mon. and Thurs. Nights) FE 2-8497 of Deliverance Offered For your Search for a friendly Church” SPECIAL MUSIC ee ee el a Fe a wt SCHOOL CONTROVERSY — Little Rock Hall High School in September. Little Rock high School Board guard William Mansfield stands — schools were closed in the controversy over in- beside misspelled sign announcing closure of tegration of Negro students. : s Di TO ROME AND THE WORLD — Pope John St. Peter’s Basilica. Blessing followed his corona- XXHI, wearing symbolic triple-tiered crown, tion in November as 262nd Pontiff of Roman : ; FIRST SATELLITE, — Gantry moves away from Jupiter C raises hand to impart blessing from balcony of | Catholic Church. missile prior to January launching which carried the first U. S. satellite into orbit from Cape Canaveral. UNDER FIRE — Presidential. assistant Sherman Adams, un- der attack for alleged influence dealings, lea vés Washington PREMIER'S PLEA — Gen. de Gaulle asks Parisians in Sep- home to go to his White House tember to back his new constitution. Overwhelming acceptance desk. Adams’ resignation cli- led to formation of Fifth Republic. maxed story that made head- lines. DEATH WAS BELOW — A dangling coach Central train which ctinged 48 to death in New- . and open drawbridge mark the tragedy of Jersey ark Bay in September. QUEMOY CASUALTY — Wounded mother feeds infant in - Quemoy shelter in October. Red Chinese harassed Nationalist- x« * * held island with alternate-day shelling. : +. AT PROBE — Boston magnate Bernard Goldfine displays wrist watch at House probe in July. vs am MOMENT OF HORROR — Faces of parents grade school as fire claims the lives of 90 in BEIRUT WATCH — U.S. Marines man machine gun emplace- mirror concern outside Our Lady of the Angels the Chicago school in December. ment high over Beirut street in July after U.S. landed troops in : ; - Lebanon to stabilize peace in the area. He said watch was one of two : given to him by presidential aide EPIC VOYAGE — The nuclear sub Nautilus ties up at Port- Sherman Adams. Later he was land, Eng., at end of voyage from Hawaii which included historic cited for contempt of Congress. underwater crossing of the North Pole. il ae a j ae GOP WINNER — Nelson A. Rockefeller raises arms in salute ) i Y WELOGOME — Jeering mobs Caracas, Venezuela, during: South’ American tour’ as returns indicate his election as New: York governor despite the SINOSOVIET SMILES — Soviet Communist _ part, Mao Tse-tung, smile during August meet- _ crowd ‘close to “ Presideht Nixon's car in in May.'Car was stoned. nationwide Democratic landslide. boss Nikita Khrushchev and his Chinese counter- _ ing in Peiping, China. H 4 ‘s 4 fia f : 3 ; ae ee . : “a me hall tim PONTTAC. PRESS._ _SaTURDAY, DECEMBER, 27, 1958. — a | ipemeteaas Snes tn 7 compared “Thanked With Biases Black Mini | Pontiac Theaters |i aaa "Snark Base located: wae fe Agi _————,, ae Bi shoe be = THURS. — FRI. — SAT— su. te Sumnay rey JURADO. CLAIRE KELEY th CINEMASCOPE AND METROCOLOR AND THE WILDEST SNAFU the Army ever knew! MGM.u. GLENN FORD DAN DURYEA LOCKHART PATRIC KNOWLES THURS. Open 6:30 P.M. SAT. tor otal SUNDAY ONLY Open 6 P.M. Starts 6:30. —— |the stage with huge floral bou- agegrega’ portedly Lesa $10,000 a week. Prima and his waiters and aller marched to quets for Miss Smith. * * * At the end of the parade came Moulin Rouge owner Frank Sennes with a box, Inside was d black 1 | LAST DAY Walt Disney's “Xmas Festival’ & “Stormy” “Harry Black & Tiger” NEEGO SUNDAY MONDAY, TUESDAY | SATURDAY SUNDAY MONDAY Doors Open itp BUTTONS: ~—a ELG The wonderful story of a sergeant who ‘“‘promoted’’ himself to a general . . . and led his army of 12 sad sacks to the most hilarious victory of the war! *PLUS* ROBERT ROBERT a: MITCHUM WAGNER RICHARD = MAY COLOR by DE LUX@ CINEMAS coPeE TONITE---Last Complete Show Starts 10 P. M. Ea BRITT *\ SPECIAL MATINEES NOW Thru Jan. Ist ‘Steve. ‘Cochran, Diane Brewster; “Thun- | Sun.-Tues.< Par Sat.: “Cat on | Paul towenas | Sun.-Tues.: Dean Martin, Jerry | Thurs.-Sat.: k send the ry ce “Quantril iders,” color, Rex Reason, Audrey Dal- Hills-Rochester “In Love ter War,” Robert Wag- ae oesun, -Wed.: Whi a hag i el “Paul bier doen "both oy. Walt Disne: -Bat.: Tunnel m4 Love,” Doris > Das, Richard k ——s Jets,” Sat.-Sun.: “The areked Earth,” Rich- ard Todd, Juliette Greco Thurs.-Sat.: “Damn Yankee,” Tab Hunter, Gwen Verdon Keeg Sat.: “From he Barth to the Moon,” color, acme “Sones ton, Debra Pa et; “Harry Black and the Tiger,” color, Stewart Granger “Houseboat,” Grant, ara ga Loren ~Bat.: “Man of the West," ¢col- “In the Money,” Bow- color, Cary or, Gary Cooper; Boys jer’ z Lake-Walled Lake Sat.: “Tank Force,” color, Victor Ma- |ture; “Wind Across the Everglades,”’ | Burl Ives, color Sun.-Tues.: “ " color, Cary Grant, Sophia Loren; “Affair in Ha- vana,’ — Come votes ine West, Burr Thurs Se “Man color, *lholding three aces and his wife ia, have?” asked the judge judge Sides With Husband, His 3 Aces LAWRENCE, Mass, (AP)—Dis- trict Court Judge William E. Daly heard testimony about a poker game and then dropped a charge against James Hester of assault and battery on his wife. Hester testified Friday he was would not lend him a dollar to bet the hand. “What did the other fellow “Only two pairs,” replied Hes- ter. Mrs. Hester testified her hus- |band knocked her against a chair dollar. Sitting in 1 Post Office HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) U.S, postmaster here has 15,000 excuses for folks who got Christ] any themselves. Postmaster John F. Heneghan, are still in the post office, can’t be delivered because of in- correct 6r incomplete addresses, ||} or illegible handwriting: Gary Cooper. Julle Ae dh “Reluctant utante,”" color, Rex Harrison, Bay Kendall lene Hot, rn we acl color, Elizabet “At War ‘wit ‘Damn Yankees,” Gwen Verdon, Tab Hunter Sat. ie

SIZE | Factory to You fave Salesman's Commission S115 ae Aluminum $26.95 Complete -wwevwrw"Trw.wTwTewTwetwTt’ CO nce Alum. 4 iy &. Telegraph FE 8-0495 4 PUUCCTUCCeCCCCT T PLEASES US |Family Approves Living in Experimental House WASHINGTON — What is it like to live in ‘a million dollar” ex- perimental house? “Just fine,’ reports Mrs, Betty Averdier, the housewife. who has given it a family-wear test for 10 months, Mrs. Verdier still marvels at how much storage space she has, how éasy it is to keep the house clean and how readily she can put her hands on exactly what she wants in her kitchen cabinets. (FE 4.0528 | 7 mstses TO PLEASE YOU ¢ PIPPI O OP OOOO OO L. TORIDHEET WALL-FLAME OIL HEAT for the Tops in Comfort, Convenience and Economy! For Free Heating Survey and Estimate, Call \ AUTOMATIC HEATING CO. - $.000 Successtul Installations in Pontiac Aree 17 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 2-9124 ay) By . N . \ OL AL LAA LA Ad ld hahahahchhahcdicdaedicdahatth CONVERTIBLE 24’s ALL BRICK nasty fall... them with Ornamental Ornamental : Iron =| project to find ways to build better S| houses for less money. Don't let iey steps cause your family to take a . protect Iron Railings. ‘CONCRETE STEPS | No Sections to Be Forced Apart by Frost or Settling CONCRETE STEP CO.. 6497 Highland Road OR 38-7715 jals and equipment. The first of re- : under an agreement permitting Mrs. Verdier, her husband, Quen: itin, and their three children moved ii built by the National Association of! Home Builders and 23 cooperating manufacturers to test new materi- search houses sponsored by the NAHB, it is part of an over-all The Verdiers bought the house matiufacturers whose materials The house is known as “‘a million dollar” experiment because tt is eatinpated the ma- at least that much to develop. Eventually it ts expected many of the products will be placed in quantity production. Mrs, Verdier has little concern for the technical construction fea- ‘tures of the house. Her husband, |a government personnel officer, is ‘the family authority, What inter- ‘ests her, naturally, is whether the ‘innovations make housekeeping | easier. [PLASTIC WALLS ly by such things as an experi- mental plastic coating on the walls. SEE US FIRST i] ter Land Contracts — Rea) Estate — ‘| inseranee = fnvestments - Trust Service. | DAWSON & WATSON QR § Dawsed Hugh 4. Watson tity N “Gagines Bt Phone FE 2? 540 Poptiar are being tested, to make regular | terials and equipment in it cost | Her work is simplified immense- A whisk ot a Pe cloth is all that is needed to make them clean. With children aged three, six and eight, she appreciates the finish, which she said is almost. ‘‘child- which runs the length of her en between more conventional wall cabinets and her “assembly line’ working ‘counter. Problem Differs Only in Timing cteesh, room cata It thei room has a ceramic tile floor, be sure to install a i dass at elke, when knights were bold, milady had some real cleaning problems, There was absolutely nothing like a rusty suit of armor to mess up W. MOTE too difficult to clean up after Sir INC. Knight even after a hard day joust- . ee Slectrical * * * While today’s lady of the cas- ec Cc tle doesn’t have a husband kick- CONTRACTOR ing around in an iron suit, she State and City Licensed Stauet tee based ails Commercial pd the benefit of stone walls . Immediate Occupancyll! i, © Industrial * *&* * © Commercial Today's homemaker licks the problem of her ‘knights’ who now Maintenance joust with a muddy football field © Gesidention Wirng = or a weekend in the garden, by providing a cleanup area that can double as a utility room or laun- dry room in the basement. Here’s a tip for keeping the Ove: 25 Years in Pontiec 845. West Huron Se. FE 2-3924 & FE 2-4008 near-by dishwasher under a kitch- en counter, A refrigerator and freezer re- from Mrs. Verdier. oven, with a separate “drawer” for pies, cakes and cookies, rates high. The curved range fits into | line of work space. * * * Mrs. Verdier considers the house! ideal for a family with small chil-| dren and she hopes that soon more 3 and 4 BEDROOM HOMES FEATURING # BUILT-IN G.E. 15.950 STOVE & OVEN Complete With Lot Conventional Mortgage MODEL AT * GAS PERIMETER HEAT AND HOT WATER * PANELED DINING ROOM Residential, Commercial cad Industrial Wiring and Repair RAGLIN ELECTRIC CO. EM 3-6234 Specialists in Electric Heating Installations 2345 Watkins Lake Rd. % CARPETING AND MANY OTHERS 12-8 Daily, 10-8 Sat. and Sun W. W. ROSS HOMES, Inc. 1941 S. Telegraph Ra. FE 4-0591 Model OR-3-8021 24 Whittield Complete Basement Waterproofing All Work Guaranteed — Free Estimates! Reliable Waterproofing Phone FE 4-0777 Within Your Budget » Big Bear An Addition to Your Background for Living _ reality or any Convert your dreams to to bring out the best in your home. Call FE 8-6553 to see our many planning ideas for kitchens, family rooms ... truly designed with your family in mind. * ... it costs so little home improvements Fear 8: 6553} BIG BEAR CONSTRUCTION CO. 7 Visit ‘Our Builderama 92 WEST HURON ST. For Our Free ) Planning Service Within 50 Miles of Pontiac ee tomy i 7 winnS)007,)m| t. of the ‘pioneer’ miaterials and/| /equipment to which she is giv ing ;a trial run. Tell of Cleaner for Drainpipes | Septic tank and cesspool owners— was announced today by Larry Drainpipe Cleaner, this new prod- uct consists of protein, ‘sugar- starch and fat-consuming bacteria ‘plus environmental ‘“‘aids’ which} pre-condition the drainpipe to pro- vide maximum working conditions for the bacteria, _ Formula FX-5 is non-caustie and} absolutely safe to handle. It ig ap- plied simply by mixing @ teaspoon-| ful in a cup of cold water and pouring into the drain. It solves the problem of drainpipe clogging for the septic tank and cesspool owner because the action of the fat-consuming bacteria changes the less liquids and does not permit ‘them to revert back to their orig- ‘inal form, to cause stoppage in an- other part of the drainage system. Although FX-5 “Bacterial” Drainpipe Cleaner was especially formulated to provide an effec- | ‘ive cleaner that wou'd not dis- - ‘urh the bacterial action ‘n sep- ‘fe tanks and cesspools. and to iwoid damage to the systems hemselves, it can also be used ‘afely and effectively in homes | systems, tub and shower, wash basin and washtub drains, the manufacturer lrecommends that each ‘trouble spot’ be treated monthly to av. oid | cessed in a kitchen wall is another) jarrangement getting an A-plus) A dual wall) a corner to complete an unbroken/§ cytton families will be getting the benefits i © ae tor Doors * | A new and revolutionary ‘“‘bac-| terial’ drainpipe cleaner — the) first of its kind on the market that) has been especially formulated for, ‘Davis, genera] manager of the F'X-! | Lab Company of Livingston, N. J.'[/ 225 N. Park Blvd. Marketed under the trade name of Formula FX-5 “Bacterial”, BLOCKS. “Tru-Bilt” blocks are tested to meet the rigid ‘requirements tS ell cre ‘made, using the very best and newest equibmen : it: nd weather resistance. Avoid posse oa walle’ 02 . .. use Tru-Bilt and be safe! QUALITY TESTED te Give You the Very Best BUILDING PRODUCTS CO. TRU-BILT 1992 Pontiac Dr., FE 4-9531 Necr Telegraph and Orchard Lake Rds. Eheits Permanent | ALUMINUM AWNINGS} @ fer Patios @ for Porch | House of the Week Let’s hurry on this one! A sparkling brand new 3 Bedroom Home all on one floor. Gleaming hardwood floors, lovely tiled bath, full basement. Situated on a lot 85’x342’. Best of all, the price is only $11,000. We have the keys and will be pleased to show you the fine value in this home. FE 2-6936 _Ray O°’Neil, Realtor 262 S. Telegraph FE 3-7103 Buy Direct from Factory and Save No Meney Down—FHA Terms Senuine Glass Fibre Insulation Average Brick + House top and ‘Slows ba ~orice ‘ walls aad $999 i=: Facfades "Saber and materi | THRIFTY ALUMINUM PRODUCTS, Inc. Lake Orion OR 3-0011 S0th ANNIVERSARY YEAR SERVING MICHIGAN WITH DEPENDABILITY AND QUALITY PRODUCTS SINCE 1908: fats and greases to soluble harm-|]. -onnected to city sewage — | Because the problem is an ever- continuing one in the kitchen, bath-| Call Us for All Your CONCRETE NEEDS CURBS — DRIVEWAYS — WALKS — WALLS ee ee Concrete Pipe—Send—Grevel—Mortor—Brick Building and Mason Supplies CATSMAN COMPANY 339 S. Paddock St. FE 2-0283 rd oe | EXTRA SPACE ) AT LOW . . . LOW WINTER PRICES Heating & Supply Co. 371 Voorheis Rd. ee clogging. * BASEMENTS FOR A FREE ESTIMATE Pee gue cer ke Announcing — WINTER PRICES Now in Effect at D&M BUILDING SERVICE * RECREATION ROOMS * ALL MODERNIZATION CALL FE 2-7004 ¢ D&M BUILDING SERVICE Our skilled workmen can quickly add an extra wing to your home . . or finish off your attic or basement. Cost? Less than you might think! Call us. Take advantage of our low winter , prices orf building materials now! OPERATORS ON DUTY 24 HOURS A DAY | FE 2.1211 |G & M CONSTRUCTION CO. * GARAGES * STORM WINDOWS * KITCHENS * ROOFING * RECREATION ROOMS * ROOM ADDITIONS * HOUSE RAISING | i ® 2255 E. Walton Blvd. & Nights to 2 speere my Neenee Codyes) 6, Sundeye 124 UG 2260 Dixie Highway, N. of Telegraph Rd., Pontiac VLQAALIJQILIJE YELLE . | \ zt PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1958 WINTER SUNLIGHT —Win- - ter days don’t darken this in- terior porch. An abundance. of natural daylight through the roof from this Toplite panel provides the plants with need- ed sunlight. Hence, there is no _ special growing season for this greenery — it has the bene- fit of. the sun all year, Thin-set mortars currently in use for the installation of ceramic tile have a bonding strength of up to 300 pounds per square inch. _[oedroom homes for sale at $21, ‘feet deep. The homes are for new homes is so here that a builder offered one- his only housing of their type in the country, \ Wap market fe Nantel bat cul One Bedroom House Hi as Appeal for M any Buyers ‘CHICAGO’ wPD.— The demani widespread| 1s dk kn, hart. feet, has a closet across the - Louvered doors open on a table- high counter separating the living room from the rectangular kitchen. NOT SOLD CHEAPLY Blietz said the houses ere not inexpensive. Most often they are bedroom houses are located in| whte' aay 34 felt lone, with 2 in the rear and with a: fro derly; couples. Two Famous Names IN HOME HEATING Bryan French DOWAGIAC One of the oldest and most re- spected names in home heating. Come in and see us about your gas or oil heating needs. Our men are all highly trained heating ex- perts. And, we handle the line noted for top quality — Dowagiac. Come in soon! MAC Steel Furnaces Weter Heaters « Air Conditioners onli Frew Heating and Sheet Metal Contractor 351 N. Paddock FE 5-6973 ete * * Fully tatomate WATER SOFTENER > SOFTENS > REGENERATE ITSELF > RETURNS TO SERVICE See This Seating Softener Today at H. H. STANTON Heating & Plumbing Contractor 103 State FE 5-1683 Store Kindling | Many home handymen have found that they can keep «heir workshop neat and accumulate a/ stpply of fireplace kindling wood at the same time by collecting leftover pieces of woode in a gal- vanized garbage can &t the end of the workbench. Th scraps can be brushed into the can quickly and easily after each operation. In addition to collecting a good supply of wood for the fireplace, this practice eliminates a serious ‘home fire hazard. Sparks from tools or a cigarette can’t ignite the wood scraps if they are kept) in a covered, fire-proof container. Even if spontaneous combustion should occur in the scraps and) fined to the inside of the covered can and would quickly die for lack of oxygen. The cover, therefore, |should be kept on ‘the can at all times. A small garbage pail is adequate | for a seldom-used workshop. If the workshop is used quite often, a standard garbage can may be used. The smaller can is equippéd jwith a carrying handle on the top, while the larger can has handles ‘on the side for carrying purposes. Both have close-fitting covers. Raised Rack Protects Your Garbage Can | One of the easiest ways for home- owners to protect their garbage cans during the winter is to build a sturdy rack for the cans. The garbage can lids, which sometimés are lost in the snow or blown away | may be attached to the rack with) light chains. City sanitation officials, who state that galvanized ‘steel cans are the only approved container for gar- bage and refuse, note that the lids must be in place at all times for adequate protection against rats and stray animals. The rack may be made from lumber or pipe, and should be at least 18 inches off the ground to keep the cans away from dogs and. rodents. It should be large enough | to accommodate at least three’ standard cans. Handy racks also simplify col-; lection methods because the gar-. bage cans are in a central location and easy to maneuver. An extra’ can for ashes or sand can be) stored on the rack during the win- ter. Play in Table Saw Can Be Dangerous When a rip fence on a table saw- Sincerest wishes for a Happy New Year! Oakland Chemicals Company 144 Woodward Avenue Pontiac | | I | has some play in it, there is more to it than the failure to get an |; accurate cut. If it moves at all while a piece of wood is being cut, there is always the danger that the wood will get pinched between the fence and the saw blade, with possible injury to you. Do not use the fence again in that condition. | Check the back end of the fence, the part farthest away from. you when you are making a cut. See if ere isn’t a tiny knob up under the metal housing. If there is, a slight turn of this knob may be sufficient adjustment to keep the fence in place. If this does not work, you have no choice but to take the fence back to where you bought the table saw (1) in hope that it can be fixed or (2) to buy a new one of the same size, |Tile’ Pleases Mother Merely mention the word winter and the woman of the house will recall with a shudder the vast quantities of mud and debris tracked into the living room by ing during rainy or snowy weather. A few square feet. of ceramic or quarry tile on the floor of the foyer reinforce mother in her winter-long fight against invasions of miid, be- cause these materials are as easy to clean as they are to look at. ba % a i" "i Blietz’s row of flat-roofed, one-| in Garbage Can | shavings, the fire would be con-} family members and guests arriv-| or the entrance to the kitchen will} bought by persons who have sold larger, nenttndeaiatain homes but who do not want to live-in apart- ments, For persons who can af- ford a d@eWm payment of about $5,000, the monthly payments would te - to approximately $70 to “Widows have about 80 per ” | cent of the wealth of the country, and they still want to live. well after they sell their big homes,” New York and Cleveland, Ohio — once considered pn are not so high. But the workmanship is ‘supe- rior, he said, even in the lowest priced homes, and owners have been forced to sell at a loss. said that even around | to the exposure of h Colored Stains . Change Floors Here's news for the horhemaker who wants something different in the way of room decoration: now you can have hardwood floors in colors to blend or contrast as your home furnishings, ° Because of the continued sheet floors, paint manufacturers have devel oped new stains which pcrmit the wood to be colored as desired with- out hiding the natural beauty of "the wood grain. One leading manufacturer has brought out a line of penetrating sealer stains intended specifically for use on hardwood floors. The blue, stains can’ be mixed, if desired, thus making ‘possible, if desired, limitless range of color effects. applied only to bare wood, Sur- taces previously finished must stripped by sanding or with on, it is allowed to set for ten to wiped off with a soft cloth. Drying time is about six hours. A coat of clear sealer is applied before the stains are available in twelve col-| ‘P- ors, including various shades of), , red and brown. Thet, final finish, which may be varnish, shellaé or any other seporigess f “Wood stains of this type are. | at al finish remover. When“ intended After the stain has been brushed 12 minutes. The excess then is AMBASSADOR’ epee CO. , Pontiac's Oldest Insulation Co. AT PAYS TO INSULATE Do It Now With FIBERGLAS © FEderal 5-8405 | Open Sundays 10 to 2 Open 8 to 5:30 Monday and Saturday JUST IN TIME TO GIVE THE WHOLE FAMILY THE ENJOYMENT Your big chance to really save on all . materials you need for finishing the basement or recre- ation room. 64 Pieces Per Box 11x11 DOUBLE COATED CEILING TILE Wi BE SURE TO VISIT OUR HOME PLANNING CENTER FOR FREE BLUEPRINTS AND VALUABLE ADVICE ON ANY MODERNIZATION PROBLEM — FIR — Dx4, WE HAVE REGULATION SIZ PING PONG TABLE TOPS Base Shoe Only . 100-Ft. Special . * * ° * 29: Door and Window sume 11/16x2% = 7¢ Lin. Ft. 4xaxVs Round 3¢ Lin. Ft. OF THAT FINISHED BASEMENT OR RECREATION ROOM! WE'RE CLEARING OUR ENTIRE STOCK TO MAKE ROOM FOR NEW 8 FT. 2¢ Lin. Ft. 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Witness 4 ie * . ; + : * ‘. : Fs We : ~ . * 5 - rs ‘Sunday's Finale Michigan Hoop Classic Favorite Pros’ Big Game on Air, TV, Starting at 1:45 P.M. NEW YORK (UPD — The Baiti- more Colts, a i football team backed by fans with the rah- rah spirit of collegians, are 314 peint favorites to win their first National League title Sunday by defeating the New York Giants at Yankee Stadium. A crowd of 70,000, including 25,- accompanied field in the seven-year history of the still-growing Motor City bas- ketball tournament starts action Morday night with Michigan a slight favorite. ment at the University of Detroit Memorial Building DETROIT (AP) — The classiest All four teams in the tourna- have posted strong winning records in early season Hest Detroit, 2 victor in half the previews six tournaments, is pitted against Army in the open- . ing game. Michigan goes against Princeton in the bettom half of | the doubleheader: and the victer Yankee Stadium. Hundreds of thousands of more comfortable fans will watch and hear the tele-j— vision-radio (N.B.C.) broadcasts af the yom, beginning at 1:4 et it Rg are a rpeeee i ad ~~ ae York's Stingiest defense. ‘ork’s defensive unit, led by Star linemen as Andy Robustelli, Modzelewski and _campaign. However, Unitas and L. G. Dupre, Baltimore’s regular bled the Giants to defeat the two weeks ago and force a layoff for Eatsern honors, beat Colts in that regular season encounter with a 28-yarder with | only 2:40 to play. - Unitas, generally considered the best quarterback in the league at present, fires most of his passes to Lenny Moore, Ray Berry and dim Mutscheller. Unitas has thrown at least one touchdown pass in his last 25 games, an N,F.L. Don Heinrich probably will start at quarterback for the Giants but Charley Conerly, oldest current N.F.L. player at 38, figures to do most of the signal-calling for the team. jincluding matches for the team CHOW FOR HAWKEYES — on the practice field during the outs at Pasadena, Calif., yesterday. Fullback John Nocera (left) and star quarterback Randy Duncani are the boys being served by waitress Shirley Fleming. A patiery Rented mobile carts to the field to provide the meals. AP Wirephete Iowa's Hawkeyes had chow right break between Rose Bowl work- Beverly Hills restaurant brought | ance in the tournament. * the championship Tuesday night. Monday's winners meet Tuesday after the two losers battle for con- solation honors. ‘ * *® * “This is our most attractive field,” said Detroit’s Coach Bob Calihan, ‘‘Michigan is the favorite because it has a veteran team with very fine sophomores." Michigan’s Bill Perige deesn’t appreciate the faverite rele for the Wolverine’s initial appear- “This is an outstanding tourna- ment,” he said. “Princeton has alway been a power in the Ivy League. And no team in the tour- nament is going to be as well conditioned as Army.” * * * Balanced scoring is Michigan's chief weapon in a bid for the tour- nament championship. The Wol- verines have three mc. averaging in the 18.8 point qa game range, veterans M. C. Burton and George Lee and sophomore John Tidwell. Princeton, coached by Cappy Cappon, an ex-Michigan player and coach, already hag defeated strong Temple, The Tigers are paced by the shooting of Carl Belz and Jim Brangan. DeVuono Goals Pace MSU Puck Win at Boston BOSTON (UPI)—Fred DuVuono Friday night to pace Michigan State to a 7-1 invitational hockey tournament victory over North- eastern University. . * * * ‘DeVuono's 35-footer came at 1:35 of the opening frame and State fol- lowed with four more in the first two periods. * * * Art Chisholm scored Northeast- ern’s lone tally in the final period, ending Michigan State goalie Joe Selinger’s hopes for a _ shutout. Selinger had 13 saves to Northeast- ern netminder Frank Carroll's 45. Other Michigan State goals were by Ed Pollesel, Terry Morony, Andre LaCoste, Bob Hamilton and George MacDonald, Michigan State meets Boston Col- lege tonight at the arena. Big Hoop Tourney Slate Tonight By The Associated Press ida State, Princeton - Ohio State College football comes up with and Utah State-Idaho, its first big year-end bowl pro- The tournament schedule, hold- gram today (Saturday), so college|ing the key interest at the mo- basketball answers with this salvo: | Ment, reaches the semifinal stage 1. Six major holiday tourna-| tonight in the ECAC’s Holiday Fes- ments. 2. Such important doublehead. | ers as West Virginia vs. North- western and Seattle vs. Chicago | Loyola at Chicago, and Butler vs. Indiana and Notre Dame vs. Purdue at Indianapolis, 3. A bundle of major games, * with the longest winning streak going, Auburn (against Florence of Alabama), unbeaten Bradley (against Gonzaga), and Georgia Tech-St. Louis, Virginia-Tennessee, Tem p!e-Connecticut, Minnesota- Washington, Louisiana State-Flor- Dawkins Leads North’s Power Game : | ht Tilt .- MIAMI, Fla. —An air-land foot- ball battle looms tonight as North and South college all-stars meet in the Orange Bowl for the bene- t of = Shrine crippled children’s ‘ * * * * The South, coached by Darrell a Tossup goal line, the privilege of a quar- terback to confer with his coach on the sideline during timeouts, and unlimited substitution. itival at New York, the All-College tourney at Oklahoma City, and the Southwest Conference tourney at Houston. The Big Eight Conference tour- nament at Kansas City has a second pair of first round games, and first round play begins in the Queen City at Buffalo, N.Y., and the Far West Classic at Corvallis, Ore. Here are the pairings: ECAC Holiday Festival (Semi- finals) — St. John’s (NY) vs. Day- ton, Utah vs, St. Joseph’s (Pa.). (Cornell-SyracuSe and Niagara- —— Holy Cross in afternoon consola- tion games). Finals Monday night. All-college (semifinals) — Bowl- ing Green vs. Duquesne, Xavier of Ohio vs. Oklahoma City. (\Wichita- Tulsa and Oregon-San Francisco in afternoon consolation games). Finals Monday night. Southwest (Semifinals) — Tex- as A&M vs. Rice, SMU vs. TCU (Baylor-Arkansas, and Texas Tech in afternoon consolations). Finals Monday night. Annual Contest Sunday at Niles Royal of Texas, is expected to rely thiefly on the accurate throwing arm of Buddy Humphrey of Bay- Jor, rated one of the best colle- giate passers in the nation. The North squad, coached by Northwestern's Ara Parseghian, has only average, passing, but boasts some great running backs, Dawking the Army’s famed Pete : * Saat Si winge wie ars are ily assembled and sent into | without previously playing . the outcome ‘af the con- fest is impossible to*forecast. Last the North, which has won of the previous 10 games, won cerned, the more snow the better. Softball Game in Snow? NILES, Mich, (UPI)—A softball game will be played here tomor- row... if there’s enough snow on the ground. About two dozen outstanding players from the city softball league plan to get ‘together for the “post-season” game in Plym Park and as far as everyone is con- Bob Johnson came up with the ‘idea of a softball game some time ago and it was greeted with great enthusiasm by many mem- bers of the local softball frater- nity, None of the snow on the diamond will be cleared for the game. Bases will be put at the approximate proper locations and a regulation game will be played. The only special equipment to be used will be a regulation softball that will be painted bright red so that it'll be easier to find in snow drifts and the players probably will wear heavier clothing than they do when playing ball in the summer. Johnson’s idea was greeted with isuch ehthusiasm that it was agreed the game will be postponed if there is not enough snow on the grourid, The players are hoping for more snow because the present supply is rather old and hard-packed, _f Big Eight (First round continued) — Kansas vs. Colorado, Nebraska vs. Oklahoma State. Winners ad- vance with Kansas State and Okla- homa to Monday semifinals. Finals scored in the first and third periods | Motor City Opens Mond ee oe | | Xavier of Ohio. ay, Army, because of recently re- laxed West Point height standards has the tallest team in its history. George Hunter, in his first season at Army, has moulded a strong unit around junior Darryle Kouns and sophomore Lee Sager. «? & # Detroit will peed its home court advantage to help its championship ambitions. The Titans have swept through minor competition, but have faltered egainst such major schools as Michigan State and FINAL REMINDER — Baltimore coach Weeb Ewbank gave Colts a final reminder the New York Giants’ defense will be mighty tough to with Johnny Unitas ere CI ee ee his standout quarterbacks. AP Wirephote Stadium. He spent a lot of time going over plays U. S. Davis Cup Captain Mum on Ringies. Lineup BRISBANE (AP)—Barring late and unforeseen developments, it where he says he has job pres- singles matches for the United States Monday in the Davis Cup challenge round. * * * And the American camp, which has beer under some strain be- cause of indecision, braced itself for a possible explosion from Ham Richardson, the country’s slighted No. 1 performer. Richardson, 25-year-old former Rhodes Scholar from New Or- leans had indicated be would be chagrined if he were not nomi- nated for singles, but declined to- day to say what his next move would be until he is given official notice. Rumors have it that Richardson might withdraw from doubles and with his wife, Anne, return im- Name MacKay, Olmedo . BRISBANE, Australal — Perry captain of the U.S. Davis will play the singles matches against Australia in the challenge round Dec. 29-31. Olmede and Ham Richardsen will play in the deubles, Jones added. Thus Jenes beached America’s No. 1 player, Richardson, in the singles, Richardson came to Aus- tralia tabbed as a certain The young aide to Senator Long terday and went to the races after failing to get a definite commit- ment from Captain Perry Jones whether he would or would 20t lay. “T tried several times to talk to him but got no satisfaction,” Ham said. “I have no idea what his plans are." The 70-year-old Jones continued ‘to maintain strict secrecy on what tennis thoughts are bobbing through his head. He indicated nobody, including the team itself may know his line- up until the official draw tomor- row. * * * Casey Stengel doesn’t tell nis pitcher in advance,” Jones said. ‘Besides, I want to keep the team keen and ready for no letdown.” Sources close to the captain said he definitely has made up his mind on MacKay and Olmedo be- mediately to the United States of Louisiana took the day off yes- cause he doubts the ability of Tuesday night. Queen City (First round) ham Young vs. Dartmouth,, Seton, Hal] vs, Canisius. Finals Monday night. Far West Classic (First round) — Oregon State vs. Air Force,! Iowa vs. Wyoming. Finals Monday | night. * * * One tournament final shows up tonight with Tennessee Tech playing host to Evansville for the title of the Evansville Invi- tational. Tech nippeq St. Mary’s. (Calif.) 67-65 last night and Evansville walloped Washington of St. Louis, 84-53. All four favorites won in day- night doubleheaders in the Holiday Festival at Madison Square Gar- den Friday. Dayton, showing the kind of class that could make it the favored team, bouncéd back from a nine-point halftime deficit to down Niagara 84-79 as Bobby (Toothpick) Jones and Frank Case combined for 34 points in the sec- ond half. — St. John’s whipped Holy Cross 77-65, husky Utah overpowered Cor- nell 80-61 and St. Joseph’s, the pre-tourney choice, defeated Syra- cuse 72-63 in other Festival games. Duquesne, winner of only of six previous games, pro ‘the upset of the first round in the All-College tourney, clubbing Tulsa 78-67. Bowling Green edged Wichita 85-81, favored Xavier of Ohio spurted at the end to de- feat Oregon 68-57 and Oklahoma City bounced San Francisco 72-64. Notre Dame and Purdue actually are playing for the ‘‘champion- ship” of the Hoosier Classic in the. doubleheader also involving Butler and Indiant at Indianapolis. The pairings for both days were set, however, and it doesn’t rank as an official. tournament, Notre Dame rode Tom Hawkins’ 31 points to a 73-67 victory over Indiana Jast night and Purdue, wibning its sixth straight, dropped Butler 78-65. — Brig. | 4 CHALLENGERS — Where the Davis Cup MacKay, Alex Olmedo and Ham Richardson, | was to be for the next year depended upon the success or failure ‘ of three Americans — Soe: By The Assocated Press Louisiana State’s national cham- pions turned in a spirited per- formance yesterday as they re- tsumed work for their Sugar Bowl game with=Clemson. Coach Paul Dietzet put his squad through a two-hour workout, the first since a five-day Christmas vacation. Kickoffs, extra points, field goals and punts were em- phasized. Both fullback J. W. Brodnax and All America halfback Billy Cannon were back at full speed. They had been hobbled with minor injuries when LSU ended pre-Christmas work last Satur- day. Clemson, irked by disparaging remarks about their chances © jagainst Louisiana State, flies to Biloxi, Miss., today to train for the encounter on New Year’s Day. Forty-nine players are included in the Clemson party of 71 which is making the trip. x * * Four workouts are scheduled in| the Gulf coast city before the Clemson team leaves by bus Wednesday for New Orleans. Only No. 3 fullback Harold Ol-~ son, with an ankle injury, was on the injured list yesterday. when. Coach Frank Howard put his workout at Clemson. Orange Bowl-bound Syracuse ¢ ended its two - week a stint in Raleigh today and prepared “hungry Tigers” through a final é to right — who tackled the stronger Australia . in. oe Challenge Round in Brisbane. to head to Miami, Fla., / morning. The Orangemen went through another relatively light workout in Raleigh’s Riddick Stadium, spend- ing most of their time on condi- tioning drills. Sports on TV BOXING Wednesday, Dec, 31—Carlos Ortiz ¥: Kenny Lane, 10-round lightweight bouts Beach Auditorium, ABC-TV, 10 pPriday, Jan. 2—De; i gett y Moyer vs. Gas- epee Ortega, 10-round welterweight bout, dison Square Garden, N.Y¥.C., NB radio-TV, 10 Le WLING Sunday, Dee 28—Carmen Salvino vs. Johnny King, ABC-TV, 4:30 p.m., ali time zones. COLLEGE BASKETBALL Saturday, Jan. 3—Notre Dame vs. North Carolina at Charlotte, NBC-TV, 1 pm. Texas Tech at Arkansas, Mid- Forest, Coast regional TV, 2 p.m COLLEGE FOOTBALL Thursday, Jan. 1—Orange Bowl, Mi- ami, Fia., ce sahoms vs. Syracuse, CBS radio-TV, 12:45 LSU vs. Cm. p.m ton Air Force’ ve. CBS radio-TV, immediately follow- Orange Bowl, approximately 3:15) wy, Rose Bowl, Pasadena, Calif., Iowa California, NBC radio-TV, following G etal an arora 4:45 p.m. jaturday, poeaer 1, Mobile, (Ala., NB ae 3 Saturday, Jan. walt ap gine ve. ‘Dow Finsterwald, pti p.m., all time zones, ai Orleans, ing mM. vs. 8u OCKEY aie teg © Jan, 3—Boston at Detroit, BS-TV, Bt RO FOOTBALL Sunday, Dec. 26—National Leaegue champlonshty, Baltimore Colts at New York Giants, NBC pedie~TV, 1:45 p.m. he 1 om Bowl Re- gaia, nbs: TV “TV, 4 tomorrow, Southwest regional TV, 3 pm Indiana at Michigan State, " Midwest lw. regional TV, 4:30 Clemson at Wake” Atlantic Time Growing Short for Bowl Foes They'll work out next week in Miami and meet Oklahoma New Year’s Day in the Orange Bowl. crew spent defense. for Oklahoma. The squad arrived at Miami-in two chartered planes Christmas night, and Coaeh Bud Wilkinson had them out early Friday for a strenuous limbering up of muscles unused during the week’s vacation he granted the squad. There was a second workout in a steady drizzle Friday afternoon after a pre - rain session devoted to picture taking. HOCKEY AT A GLANCE Fon Ww Warne, 2, Toledo RDAY'S SCHEDULE NATIONAL LEAGUE Boston at Montreal Chicago - Toronto repays Se needa Rochester fat Cleve’ Buffalo at Hershe' sn LEAGUE el at Philadel elphia at Chariote New Haven at Johnsto INTERNATIONAL I LEAGUE Indianapolis at Logue Louisville at Fort SUNDAY'S SCHEDULE NATIONAL LEAGUE Montreal at New York F hedraaeid tg at Chicago Boston - ay i ERICAN LEAGUE springfield at Bult ms cow ern ershey at Cleveland at Y aeeer ASTERN ern Jobnstown at New Hay INTERN ATIONAL. "LEAGUE Coach Ben Schwartzwalder’s yesterday running through all phaseS of offense and More drill was ordered today Looks Like MacKay, Olmedo © Richardson, a diabetic, to main tain topflight tennis over a three- Richardson is slated to play ihe doubles with Oimedo. With few problems, the heavily favored Australians, meanwhile, are tapering off for the three-de- fense of their trophy. Wimbledon, U.S. and Australian champion Ashley Cooper and Mal Anderson will pay singles—their last in Davis Cup competition— while Anderson and either Neale Fraser or Rod Laver will compete in the doubles, * * * Cooper and Anderson are ready to sign pro contracts with pro- moter Jack Kramer as soon as the matches are completed. If Jones follows through with his plan to play MacKay and Olmedo he will be taking a giant gamble and leave himself open for criti- cism. Richardson not only is Ameri- ca's No. 1 but has beaten Cooper in their only two meetings and took’ the measure of Anderson in their clash in the Pacific South- west tournament last sumer. Besides, he holds a competitive edge over both MacKay and Ol- Hart Winner by Split Decision Victory Over Dupas Helps Sugar’s Status as Title Contender MIAMI BEACH, Fila. (AP) — Youth and punch beat youth and experience last night as Garnet (Sugar) Hart of Philadelphia took a split decision over New Orleans welterweight, Ralph Dupas in a 10-round bout. 7 & * * The defeat put an end to Dupas’ boast that he never had lost to a welterweight, and the victory for Hart bolstered his positiqn as a contender for Don Jordan's crown. How soon the Philadelphian will get a title shot is problematical. but Harry Markson, International Boxing Club executive director who watched the fight, indicated Hart would have to wait a while at least. Dupas was not particularly down - hearted by his setback, which was by the narrowest of margins, Asked how he rated Hart among the other welters he has met, he said he rated him right along with Vince Martinez as the toughest he has fought, He beat Martinez. 4 * It was a ding-dong battle from the start in Miami Beach Audi- torium, and it was Hart’s punch- ing power—he had registered 20 knockouts in 29 previous fights— which was the difference. Former Bear Coach in Serious Condition FRIDAY'S RESULTS BERKELEY, Calif. (AP)—Stub Washin ington Clute Lee se dese head football ar Gerken LEAGUE coach at Cali la, was reported Loulsville 3 ” in serious condition Friday after suffering a heart attack Christmas night. Dr, James Harkness, one of the California team physicians, re- mained in Berkeley, instead of flying to Los Angeles with the football squad, to care for the ail- ing ex-coach. Cal is meeting Iowa in the Rose Bowl. Allison coached the Bears from 1935 through 1944. He took the Cal- ifornia ‘‘Thyunder Team” to the Rose. Bowl in 1938 where it de- feated Alabama 13-0. Zs DAY'S FIGHTS FRI MILAN, Italy — Emilio Marconi. 146'%, Louisville at Indianapolis Fort see at Troy Ttaly, ow France, 1 pomes Jacques Herbillon, 146, ein fi Ly SUH acre ie al SEVENTEEN ) aP Wirephote Left to right are forwards Horace Walker, Bob Anderegg and center John Green. They are three top scorers in four victories to date. MSU FRONT LINE—This is Michigan State’s powerful front line which will lead the Spartans ee the oe a Monday at Raleigh, N. C. Fish Division Moves to Save Trout Seeks More lies-Only Streams By JERRY CHIAPPETTA that if revenues don’t pick up ° ALL OUTDOORS (UPI) — Thejwill have fo cut down on src fish division of the Michigan Con-/planting. " relations experiment,” Wester- servation Dept., is seeking sore | But the main trouble in the) mam said. ‘We have to educate flies-only trout waters on an worms vs, flies controversy is that; our fishermen to the facts of life. perimental’’ basis and will ask the |the bulk of the trout fishermen are| We know bait fishermen are commission next month to approve bait boys and science is on the side | deadly on undersize fish.” their recommendation for addition- | of the fish division in favor of} “This (asking for more flies- only water) is mainly a public al restricted waters. bd * * Michigan has about 15,000 miles | of trout streams; some good, some’ poor. About 62 miles of the better | waters are closed to bait fisher- | men. Fred Westerman, head of the’ fish division, said he would like to get, “in the long range view, about | 200 to 300 miles of flies-only | streams.”’ Why? Bait fishermen complain that they don't want to be forced to | use flies, mainly because most of them don’t know how to fish that way. “We're being discrim- inated against because of a pow- more ‘‘flies-only” signs in some of anterless deer shooting as a con- our better streams servation measure. Many ool Experiments have proved that argue that the “doe seasons’’ ibait fishermen returning undersize jruining the Michigan deer ayy trout to the water kill a fantastic ‘amount of fish. Fly fishermen. on| the other hand—because of their - jmethod of fishing—have relatively | OW Ind few undersize reurn fatalities. | BALDWIN BOWLERETTES Reliable W 35 3 uniap 34 289 Drewry’s Pontiac Rec. 24 40 Fowler's Pood 7 27 Nightingale 22 41 Oak. Drugs Talbot Lmbr. 11 7 Bud & iew's 35 28 w Mildred Richards 193, mer Balek - M17. Oakland Rexall rugs 1008, Powler’s Pine Goods 2765 Strikes and Spares ELKS HOUSE wl L erful few,” they ch: eC. 3am Benson 21 24 Club “99” } . y charge. The in |Miracle M. 19 26 Town, Ctry. dividual stand may depend on Osmun’s 19 26 Carling’s 19 5 : 4 Sparks- Grif. 19 26 Drewry’s B 25 20; how one likes to fish, and where. Behr Cats 19 26 Huron Cin 24 21 Det. Des 186 27 Nu-Brite Phat 24 21) bok, aoe Co Iau { 21|considerable attention to passing, | E | J. Van Atta 235, J | Carling’s Black Label | Black Label 2838. It appears the fish division is moving as diplomatically as it can in its clumsy fishin’ boots. Trout) fishing is in trouble, Westerman | admitted. It is very costly to stock trout. | Michigan's financial problems have | hit the Conservation Dept. too. Director Gerald Eddy once said Atta 506; Carling’s| Van 982. Eric's Food po aa Lk. Drugs 35 17 Altes Beer 18 34 Penk L. L. 35 3ponsorless § 14 38 Art's Shop | Heineman 12 40 Twin Pines wo Myers 225, 573; Twin Pines 847, |2340; M. potegert 6-7 split; 8. Drouin | 6- T- io split. BEMIS-OLSON AMVET wth we . ; ; ;chureh’s I. 4614 Pont. Recks 30 30 12-27] |W.P. Squares 34 26 W.P. Chix 29 31 0 a lum | ! he al & 33 27 Pont Rec. 3 22 38 , rophies, 32 28 W.F. M'stks. 22 38 | r By podem art Bez yal WT Orante 21 30 ve been gettin lo’ of mail) ariearity 191, J. Apolloni 418; g' e ts f . Pontiac Rec. No. 2 693. Church's Inc.| |from bowlers with personal prob- 1973 lems, but giving the answers here Host Top Events T. T. BOWLING LEAGUE P genes Ss 32 32 Van Wage. I 29 35 ; A tsse. P. Sawgle 168. V Andrews directly to the foul line. 449: Heights Supply 683. If finishing sideways at the ply 1983 throughout the Great Lakes sector will invade the Pontiac Rolladium Team No. 13 Team No. 14 Team No 15 2 ferent divisions of the event. left foot facing straight toward his Ay pct?’ National Gold Metal tests will be target as he finishes his delivery. Erma’: held Tuesday at Rolladium, one of | 3. If rushing your footwork is Pa Npiadé o527 ¢ Aldridge $3 the few proficiency rating sites in| ‘giving you trouble, compare your |Howard 579: Z. Twitty © ee 2 the country, | footwork to the acceleration of an| service eas Electric 1101. Rink professional Bert Anselmy| automobile. It should start out, and Pontiac stars’ Mary Alice|slowly and gradually increase un-| HURON LADIES: LEAGUE Clouse and Louis Parker will miss | til you release the ball. Don't start|turon Bow! 300 Lounge tually racing. |Copyright 1958, John F. Dille Co.) ELKS LADTES of the U. S. Skating ie L = (Or Millers iL. O Lakes Woolivers Averill Auto Brewers R E Truckaway Chucks Shk Salfis Bar LeBarges Champagne Fds. 22 17 Seal Test | G. White 193. D. Ware 211 es Pidtuihein cee LaBarges 5 acks 869, La |Chucks Shacks 2361. peruse i lott aad Ww | | Dunseith: 8 wagiac lar s Corral | Oakland Vnd. i'Temple 37 ‘Cardinals Ed's Service Bell Bros. 20 18 22 22 33, Jen. 782, 2143, COMMUNITY Ww Stanton Pimb. 30 34 Foster-Kilby 30 34 Poole Lmbr. 28 36 Carl’s Serv. 27 37 Williams Bro, 26 38 Heiehts Sup. 26 38 | 3430 8 22 49 32 32 Ravenscroft 253, Poole Pamper 1036. Oklahoma 68, Iowa State 65 Red AL | Tenn ech St. Marys, Calif | evaneviite Pi “Washington. St.L. First Round |W Virginia Tech 100. Transylvania 78 | Pikeville. 91, Elderson-Broaddus 72 XAVIER 4OLIDAY First Reund Grambling 103. FRIDAY'S COLLEGE BASKETBALL « TOURNAMENTS | ALL-COLLEGE | First Boone Duquesne 78, Tulsa Bowling Green 85, Wienita Bt Xavier. Ohio 68 Oregon 57 Oxlehome City 72, San ace 64 OUTHWEST CONFERENCE First Round SMU 65. Arkansas 64 TCU 62, Bayolr 59 EVANSVILLE am plits Reliable FP. Pretsnow 47 We Lumber 2935 67 be No Foul- Play Here z Southern. Pg 68 Rice #2. Texas “S i ; Dillard 60, Xavier, La. me Texas M xas Tech & exes RN OLIDAY FESTIVAL OTHERS ckuas BOSTON (UPI) — In defeat- First Round Notre Deine 3, Indiana 67 ing the Milwaukee Hawks, 93-74, Utah 80, Cornell 6 urdue . Butler “Dayton 84, Niagara 7 J = | Southern, Catt, 61. Denver 51 on Feb, 28, 1952, the Boston Cel- St. sephs, Pa. 72. racuse ante a 49, [ st. donne, NY 7 Moly Grose 65 | Utah Sate 64. Idaho 63 |tics performed a professional bas-| Stanford 74, Arizona 59 |ketball rarity by not committing Firet ‘Round Idaho State 100, Alaska 58 | , al tout. Kansas Stale 69, Missouri 66 Kent State 80, Calif. Poly, San Luis a Single personal fou Heights S8up-! Sunday and Monday for the 2nd ton line gives you trouble, try to eee annual Great Lakes Regional Invi- keep your left foot aimed directly PONTIAC COMMUNITY ets tational Roller Skating meet. at your target throughout your fejcawn’? § i‘ peem Nes 3 Dance. free style, figures. pairs, Steps and slide. Note how the Sam's Electric 40 Gordon Mobil 2 fours and speed will be the dif- sketch today shows the bowler’s oe gages aa wo Admits Hawks. Deserve Role of Favorites Evashevski Brands Big Rose Bowl Edge ‘Ridiculous’ PASADENA, Calif. wy — Coach ‘|Pete Elliott of the California Gold- en Bears agrees that Iowa should be favored to win the Rose Bowl game, but he's not about to admit they'll do it. As for the 18 or 19 points quoted Big Ten, Elliott said he is neither concerned nor perturbed at such “| don’t know who figures those things,” said the handsome ex-Michigan star yesterday, in- ferring he doesn’t care who a are. lowa’s record of one loss and one tie during the regular season gives them an edge over the Bears’ 7-3 record, in the eyes of the ex- perts. * * * Elliott, who set up training shop in the Rose Bow! area yesterday, said he is not one to make pre- dictions about the outcome of a game. But interviewers got a strong impression that Elliott has a lot of confidence in: his Pacific Coast Conference champions. Elliott re- peatediy has said the Bears al- ways came through when asked after a shaky season's start. Forest Evashevski, Iowa's coach, from the outset branded the big point margin “ridiculous,” and hasn't changed his mind about California, which he ¢alls ‘‘a good football team.” * x * | Both squads hold single work: | outs today, each emphasizing de-| |fense and perfecting timing on of- | |fense. lowa, one of the nation’s finest | to the wire when a field goal re| would be decisive. | Evashevski had end Bob Pres- jing field goals from all distances. | |The reserve connected on several from the “Gian range. * meetin ee was devoting jwith quarterbacks Randy Duncan land Mitchell Ogiego tossing more W Uithan 40 between them. Duncan hit (on 14 of 22 in the workout, some | to end Curt Merz, who worked out | despite a bad knee. 2) 15| Three fullbacks alternated in the 27 1g} starting backfield — Jim Nocera, | Dick Horn and Jim Brown, pre-! viously a third-stringer. Nocera is jexpected to start. Junior Puck Action Northern B sextet, Spencer Floor Club were winners Friday in Rec- reation Junior Hockey League play, with the Northern B victory in| overtime the big feature, * * * Northern’s John Kendall broke a |2-2 tie in overtime to win 3-2’over on the champion Hawkeyes of the, x *k * _THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1958 nt Spread on lowa Ignored by tlio x * * Celtics Take Twin Bill Opener, 107 - 99 DETROIT (P—The Detroit Pis. tons turned in the hest period | scoring effort in the club’s history and..defeated the hapless Cincin- | {Starts this year and meved 3'4 games ahead of the third place | Basketball Assn. game last night. * * * nati Royals 131-91 in a National The Pistons’ one-sided victory came in the nightcap of a NBA doubleheader before 7,484 fans. Boston defeated Minneapolis 107-99 in the opener. * * * Outscoring Cincinnati 43-14 in the third. quarter, the Pistons won their 16th victory in 31 _Minneapolis in Western Division competition, The situation was compared to} offensive teams, won't be caught | | napping if the game comes down | cous rorrens ussove Overtime Tilt Marks _ Covering and Huron Valley Boys | nual | Classic Monday and Tuesday at By J i - Pistons Rout Royals Detroit held a slim 53-51 half- time lead but started the rout im- mediately after the intermission. *® * * . Piston coach Ed Rocha was taken ill at halftime and missed the first 26 minutes of the third quarter. When he got back the Pistons held an 11 point lead and were on their way. They didn’t let up until they had amassed a 46-point lead, 111-65, early in the fourth quar- ter. Their 43-14 margin in the third period was the second best scoring effort for one quarter in the Pistons’ history. And_ their 40-point margin of victory was 23 points better than anything they had done this year. George Yardley and Cincinnati's Dick Farley and Chuck Noble hit 18 each for {perm ‘ s Bob Coes ana Frank Ramsey snuffed out a fourth quarter rally by Minneapolis in the first game and the Celtics rolled to their ninth straight victotry. Cousy broke up a 92-92 tie with less than four minutes to play with a driving layup and Ram- Jack Twyman tied at 28 points |B each for individual honors. The [Leonard Pistons’ Phil Jordon added 24 and | * ball Assn. president Maurice Pod- oloff says the pro cage circuit may of Governors meeting here Jan. Tz. Podoloff Says NBA Loop May Be Expanded Soon DETROIT — National Basket- be expanded after its next Board will have to cancel plang to racc in New Zealand because of a! injury suffered in a traffic acci dent in Los Angeles Christma: day. x ot Five All-Star baseball gamer have failed to produce a home run. The 1958 test was the first homer: less game in an American Leaguc Crucial Soccer Game The Olympians and St, Andrew teams, powers of the Detroit Ma- jor Indoor Soccer League, wil! meet in the feature of a five-game Houston, "Baltimore, San Fran- cisco and Los Angeles also have shown interest in joining the NBA, Podoloff said. “Our Board of Governors meet- park. It was played in Baltimore. ing here Jan. 22 could be the most league schedule at. the State Fair- Podoloff, in Detroit to kick off CADET CAPTAIN ~— Darryle Kouns, one of the fop scorers in West Point history and cap- | cott hard at work yesterday kick-| tain of the Cadet basketball | be one of the top | | team, will players appearing in the 7th an- Motor City Basketball | the U. of D. fieldhouse. Record Entry Seen for 1959. Pan-Am Games CHICAGO (AP)—A record num- ‘ber of entries is expected for the third Pan American Games which, will be held in Chicago Aug. 27- Sept. 7, 1959. * * * Preliminary estimates made by |Michale J. McDermott and Ralph | Metcalfe, co-chairmen of the sport committee for the Chicago games, indicate more than $,300 men and women athletes will compete. . indicate more than 1,300 men and The estimate was made after | consultation with the National Olympic Committee and member {countries of the Pan American) i sports organization. * * * The United States probably will) preparations for the NBA all-star igame here Jan. 23, said yesterday ifive cities have expressed interest lin joining the league. He said he planned to talk to one group from Chicago at the | league meeting Jan, 22 Rookie Leader in Warrior Win By The Associated Press The headlong plunge of the Phil- adelphia Warriors to the lower ‘depths of the National Basketball |Assn.’s Eastern division has been it. * * * All-America from Temple put on) a great performance last night leading the Warriors to a 106-93 victory over the New York Knick- erbockers. In these days of specialists, Rodgers scored 28 points, handed joff a dozen assists and grabbed 11 rebounds. He stole the bail re- Gola ‘to fast-break the Knicks into) might help others with similar ts Pts Jim's Hardware. Jim's wiped out field a team of 300 men and, ‘the boards. troubles M Normans 30 Gingellvitle M P M ac da h * * * Hie fin shams R 28 Earl's Mkt 21 a 2-0 deficit in the 3rd, with Jim I aionte 4 ne an t piers ave E ; ; ; . c Rec : s Regional, Gold Medal one ne ' h eee drifting 10 Pepurke 163 Moore 452. Gingeltviie| Dieck getting the tying goal. \ wee f piel on ar “ wt K sane m we oa aay ut the other in your ap- Mkt 549. Shaws 1541 Bob Mellema’s five goals paced '€@8Ms © razil’s expecta- Knicks cut the Philadelphia mar- Set Here; Top Stars proach, try concentrating on keep- AUBURN UADIES iajous ‘the Spencer win, 140, over North. tions are 170 and Argentine has) gin to 73-73, but the Warriors let! Leave For New Zealand ing each single step in a straight: A eine s se Oeeniahre. 5s w | ern A clyb. Jim Dickson had four, |high hopes of sending | 200, loose again and coasted in. pee a mental line ee td A&C gta 8. 3 u The Party 8 31 32|Lou Preston three and Mike Kaines , a istarting position to your finishing er 32 uburn 31 es) two goals. ‘ Two hundred contestants from: positions, and concentrate on going |nelan ee oe eee bors’ Cut couted for woaem rlants, Colts OK Plans ‘to Split Players Pool ithe Ist period, two in the ond and two in the 3rd session to smott hee ‘Mt. View Rangers, 8-2. ‘ Schreibner led winners with a igoals. Rangers scored both their. jcounters in the 2nd. Norgrove, 17, Ranger goalie, was outstanding in "defeat. Some 121 boys representing 15 public and parochial schools will be taking part among the eight, ;prep (10-12) and six junior (13-J4): *| quintets. Monday's schedule: PREPS .m. Jets vs LeBaron .m. Wever vs Hawks -_m. Panthers vs Pistons JUNIORS p.m. All Stars vs Royals p.m. Tiger Aces vs Spartans ull Dogs and Royal Ball Hawks ae byes) Nomination Deadline Set for 2: Big Races | CHICAGO (AP) — Officials at | Arlington Park and Washington ‘Park set a Jan. 15 nomination ideadline for their two $100,000 + stakes for 3-year-olds in 1959. The two events are the $100,000 | added Arlington Classic and the) |$100,000 added American Derby. * .m. Cheetahs vs Globe Trotters “oer seater Y VIC A Tourney | .,, starts Monday the events. The trio left today for | out fast. Take a short, firm step. \Rare Recbelle _ pecats "Senliast | Fourteen teams in two divisions' New Zealand where they will par- | Increase your speed and length! trade Fair 38 Joe's cones 30 will beginp lay Monday in the Pon- $ ticipate in the world tournament. | with each step. The final two steps. | inert ina oe ous Recicn ?0\will begin play Monday in the Pon- They will also give exhibitions are when you shift into high gear nas Ber 33° Kav Baum 2 Neighborhood Gang basketball there and in Australia. ‘and get your top speed without ac- Isenitast 821 Ph eee Bowes ‘tourney at the “Y."’ Anselmy has been chosen coach | | t+ & NEW YORK (AP)—The more Colts and New York Giants each voted to divide their player pool from Sunday's championship | pro football game into 42'2 shares. * * * Joe Labrum, assitant to Com- imissioner Bert Bell of the Nation- _al Football League, announced the 'reults of the voting. | * * * Labrum said the Giants voted scout, ‘and decided on 35. full shares for the players, the coaches, and five half shares. Names were not immediately available. Baltimore voted 41 full shares and aly ided 1'3 shares among five Balti-| 1,800 in gifts including $500 to the) widow: of Jack Lavelle, late chief five for |players: |Simpson, Richard Horn, Fred Thurston, top. | The players’ pool of the title igame is 70 per cent of net re- iceipts, including the $200,000 tele- vision fee. Of this 70 per cent, 90 \per cent goes to the two teams |playing for the title, and the re- ‘maining 10 per cent is split be- | each conference, The playoff win- ner gets 60 per cent of the) championship pool, the loser 0, per cent, It is expected each full eure! . will be about $4,600 for a winner | and $3,000 for a loser, both record , jamounts, For Cocktails, Dinners, Chri Raymond E. Choueri General Manager MAyfair 6-2600 AROUND JOrdan 6-4662 SERVING: COCKTAILS and DINNERS ARRANGE NOW... Conventions, Bariquets, Meetings. Michigan's Finest 18-Hole Golf Course. Watered Fairways \ GLEN OAKS | Country Club | “30500 W. OPEN Just Off 13 Mile YEAR Northwestern = = stmas and New Year Parties Receptions, Dinner Dances Former General Manager, AILLCREST COUNTRY-“CLUB (Mt, Clemens, Mich.) for expansion,” Podoloff said. and Western Divisions, Ed Macauley of St. Louis>. West. (Wings Change - Forward Lines — momentous. in our history. They will have to formulate the plans As to the All-Star game, match- ing teams from the NBA’s Eastern : Padeistfl fe said five players on each squad will. be picked by newsmen and radio\.broadcasters regularly as- signed to cover pro basketball. The other five players on each squad will be selected by NBA coaches. Red Auerbacit.of the Boston Cel- tics will coach the East team and the grounds, tomorrow afternoon. The winner will be a strong choice to win the title. An exhibition staged — by oldtimers will open the pro ° | stopped and it took a rookie to do Young Guy Rodgers, a former Jack Gary | |Kerkorian and Avatus Stone. Gifts, totalling $500 were taken off the’ tween the second place teams in} For Sunday Tilt DETROIT — The Detroit Red, Wings,. held to only one goal in| their last three home games, will | |face the Boston Bruins here oan | day with four new forward lines.| Coach Sid Abe] shuffled the} Wings’ lines yesterday after a stiff we can get a goal,” said Abel | “what have we got to lose.” practice session at Olympia. Rookie Leonard Lunde was ele- | “We'll try anything to see if “Taal our fine. Castomers! from Murray White BOB’S BUILDING SERVICE 207 W. Montcalm St. ‘Abel took center Norm Ullman from the No. 1 trio and placed ; him between Johnny Wilson and © Nick Mickoski. Halfback Disc Jockey BALTIMORE, Md. (UPI)—Lenny, | Moore, star Baltimore Colts half-| lback, conducts a radio disc jockey |show in Baltimore. OPEN SUNDAY 9 A.M. to 2 P.M. EVENINGS DAILY to 8 P. M. BROWNIES Hardware Store Corner Sanford and Wilson FE 4-6105 DON'T TAKE CHANCES driving a car | | that needs repairs! Complete Parts and Service Department Bampiag—Painting—Alignment—Frame Service | BILL SPENCE - Rambler ape sey followed with a three point play and revived the Celtics. Ramsey was high for Boston with 28 points. Cousy had 18. 4 The victory boosted the Celtics’ : Eastern Division lead and gave the| Livonia Bentley and Redford Un- club a 21-8 season record. ion were easy opening night win- ners in the annual Northwest Sub- NCONATE 4g DETECT Cg yjurdan Christmas tourney last night “aa cas Oe 29 4at Southfield. Livonia walloped Rollins 1 1 3 Farley 6 416) Roseville 68-40 and Redford tripped palinet y 5 ii dordea 1 1H Lincoln Put a1o0 nee plays shir xd onroe an armington vs. averman 9 0 0 Noble,” # 2 18/troit Thurston tonight. Twyman 1 6 28 Shue 3511 Yardle 10 8 28 x *« * Totals 35.2191 Totals 52 27131 ‘ dee BS Sih) | Boston Celtic conch Red Aue = osTo ach announced y at nani: rr. N ovr troit he had placed 6-8 Gene Bie” = ¢ $3 Sema =f $1y| Conley, Milwaukee ‘baseball pee, fie tece tS Ma ney kim enc weer eG ee i ee ee ET ‘+ Mikk'isen 10 0 20 Swain 1 2 4) Emilio Marconi of Italy won the Leman vacant European welterweight Totals 4019.99 Totals en 7 17| championship last night by defeat- Minneapolis... 4 4 20 3i— 9 ing Jacques Herbillion of France. pe nel *.* * —_— aed het rs Lucile Wheeler, who won two eee 17 12 See Events in the World Alpine ski pera i413 389, Meet last winter, has been named WESTERN DIVIBION oth Canada’s woman athlete of the 7114) r. . De — ie nner is 3 ‘516 | a ee Minneapolis. ....... 005+ nov 383 | ‘ foe ee Z Sports car driver Bruce Kessle: \ Are t Mi — ) BIGHTREN THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1958_ Off Bald Widow ~ Count on Being Belfer Has Reason ~ in 59--But How Much? By L. A. BROPHY AP General Business Editor NEW YORK—You can count on being better off in 1959 than in 1958. Economists are not agreed, however, on how much better off. The: recession is over, It was short and not sweet. Recovery started in the spring of 1958 and continued at a steady pace until fall. Then, the economic indexes began te slow up over the rate that had been predicted. ss Reading these figures as a fever chart, it might be con- eluded the patient had a slight relapse, However, the economists say he is in good shape and that full recovery will come by the end of the new year. Your situation in the new year shapes up something like this: To the nearly five million out of jobs, the immediate prospects for a resumption of paychecks is not bright. There probably will not be a measurable cut in unem- ployment until the middle of the year. If you are selling things, the prospects are brighter. Consumer buying was maintained during the recession and constituted one of the really comforting aspects of the down turn. Indications are that people will be in more of a buy- ing mood in 1959 than in 1958. INCOME TO RISE Persona] income is expected to inerease and, in point of facts, it rose for seven straight months, beginning in February last year, but declined slightly. in October. Labor disputes in some major ‘in- dustries were held responsible for the dip. The National Assn. of Manufac- turers said three out of every four businessmen in a_ national poll expect their company sales to be higher in 1959. People fear further inflation, which. may have a- softening ef- fect on buying. But, government economists are hopeful that the price lines wil] hold relatively steady for the first half of the year. After that, if the momentum of recovery continues as expected, Price increases are expectd. The University of Michigan. which does a good job of anti- eipating consumer temper, re- ports its latest poll showed more families now say their financial situation has improved; they have hopes for higher income and a better year in 1959 all around. The gross national product, the total of ali goods and services, is expected to reach 460 to 470 bil- lion dollars in 1959, It was around 450 billion at the end of 1958. That pretty well tells the story of what's ahead for the new year—good times but not boom times. DEPENDS ON CARS How we-fare in the coming year is going to.depend a great deal Baltimore Stadium Shunned by Middies ANNAPOLIS, Md, (AP)—Navy will play none of its home foot-} . ball games in Baltimore's Me- morial Stadium next year. Alarmed by dwindling gate re- ceipts, Naval Academy officials yesterday announced that the only remaing 1959 game scheduled for Baltimore, against Maryland on Nov. 7, will be played instead in the new Navy-Marine Corps Me- morial Stadium here. The Academy previously had moved an Oct. 10 game with Syra- cuse to the Oyster Bowl in Nor- folk, And the Navy-Notre Dame game, a biennial tradition in Bal- timore, is not scheduled there again until 1060. Capt. Slade Cutter, Navy's di- rector of athletics, indicated the Notre Dame game in '60 might be moved also, Philadelphia re- portedly has offered its mammoth Municipal Stadium for a rental of $10,000, the same fee charged for the Army-Navy game. Gypsies Discover There’s Money in Hula Hoops — REGGIO CALABRIA, _ Italy, (AP) — Even Gypsies are whirl- ing hula hoops — but some get paid for it. While other Gypsies strummed guitars, Rosita Altavilla, 23, 23, danced with a plastic hoop Fri- day on a highway near this town in the toe of the Italian boot. The Gypsies collected the equiv- aent of $50 from the crowd of 500 that gathered before police made jon how the 1959 automobiles sell. The industry is hopeful it will dipose of five and a half to six million cars in 1959. If it does, times should generally be good. This year, for instance, the total sales are expected to be around the great boom year of 1955, sales were nearly eight million. Recovery from the slump this year demonstrated the ability of the economy to stand up under a sharp blow. Bullt-in stabilizers worked well, Unemployed _re- ceived some income genefally from federal or state funds. There was no panic, although many people suffered. severely. Extent of the downturn is shown graphically in the index of indus- trial production. In January 1958 ‘it was 133 of the 1947-49 average. ‘In the same month in 1957, the figure was 146. The index fel] to 126 in April. In May it roes two points to 128, but that compared with 144 in the jsame month of 1957. It rose two points more in June, and the same in July and August when it stood at 136. The September rise was only one point, to 137. : A really bright spot will be the construction industry in the new Year. The commerce and labor department expects spending on new construction to go to a rec- erd of more than 52 billion in 1959, spurred by home and high- way building. Outlays this year will be about 50 billion, a new high mark but reflecting price increases. The na- tion’s builders are expected to set new records in the coming year not only in construction value, but for physica] volume of work done. Adding everything up, you can enter the new year with the firm hope that times will be good and get better. four and a half million cars. In to Hate Men HOUSTON, Tex. (AP)—‘“I hate all men,” muttered a bald widow, Mrs. Georgia Bowman had rea- cost her all her. hair. * *.¥ Donald Parker, 48, of Indianapo- lis, told newsmen he had Mrs. Bowman in Indiana for about eight years, He said she left about a month ago and he traced her to a Houston apartment where he also found Lucius Wilson, 43. “I came here to take her back and marry her but I didn’t drive 1,100 miles to find this,’ Parker said. So, he told police and news- men, he drew his .38 automatic and ordered Wilson to shave first son to, A couple of them had just) known|°f a@ $500 watch and hundreds of Mrs, Bowman’s head, then his own. “Well, this Wilson is a barber. and if seemed appropriate,” Park- er é Capt, Weldon R, Wayeott pn | Parker will be charged with car- rying a pistol take life. \ Kaiser Home Robbed HONOLULU (AP) — Police, in- dollars worth of other gifts—from underneath the Christmas tree. Girl Born to Calhouns SANTA ~ MONICA, Calif. (AP) — Actress Lita Baron, wife of actor Rory Calhoun, has given birth to her second child, a daugh- ter, Tami Diane. She was born Christmas. . THE GIRLS * BOARDING HOUSE By Franklin Folger “I must say, some people certainly don’t have much Christmas spirit—I sent out 84 cards and only received 52!" Tne ENE YZ I'LL WAGER THAT CHEMISTRY SET IS is aS Z UA GIFT FROM OLD SANTA, EH, LADS 2 Meee Zi 7 EGAD, NOSTALGIA GRIPS ME WHEN = e ee 7\ L RECALL MY OWN BOYHGOD ADVENTURES} TRUTH Ff EERE ECT } Ee /\WITH THE TEST TUBES AND BEAKERS/ AEE Ae” || E AT THE AGE OF TWELNE I WAS LIKENED 2 TAL sce = TO THE GREAT ANTOINE LANOISIER, YH} UNCLE, | [= AND HAD DISCOVERED THREE RARE LZ / . = ELEMENTS.” UM Das AL Zi =] =o} lol= yo» EXPERIMENT == }} | . —— / ——— Wig ene) [i] | rr | ING ¢ FEE i ) (fm, e yj, ial ")) 2D == 4 \ /\ Cac. — ui { — == 3 z ori} c 5 >" Z = —— ——— —) Ye =| {| |= . : % z | ° = ¥ \ © < (S sal) 3 i) OSes YA SS an: S (2-27 _ =] St ee hi WAS THAT 2 | | ral | | EZ Weare? | \. © 1980 by MEA Sorvicn, tne. T.M Rog. U.S. Pat OM. . SPUTT-TT= OUT OUR WAY 7 A FEW ON THE NOW DON'T GO GETTIN’ SORE JUST ‘CAUSE I OPENED THE PACKAGE OF MARSHMALLOWS AN! ATE BEEN GONE, 1 WAY HOME! I GOT OH, SURE, SURE -- THAT'S ALL RIGHT’ FOR THE LENGTH OF TIME YOU'VE NEED SOME FUEL TO GET YOU BACK HOME / FIGURED YOU'D and threatening tol RIVETS BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES - Tank QUNING ILLY BOY! Fra Berea i On be coe By McEvoy and Strieber 4) : x A> Leder Aya) Awa | SP LERE soso NOW o n ; DIS % BUTHE'S REALLY // = SNIFF > cS / HE ) AN ’ ~|{ mis FING 5 wba ganar ha = ehh J BEFORE IT'S 100 ?° LISTENING ——— aa TA, BeLly- 7% WOMAN BY COINCIDENCE \ OH, YOU JUST \WAITLL HE TROUBLE... \ SHES A RINGER /WHATS ) DONT KNOW /WALKS OFF SOME DAME | FOR ONE OF THE DOC...HE TH’ DOCK... HE MET HIS OLD “ WARM \ GETS IT / THEN YOULL SEE FLAMES IN THAT? BAD _/ WHAT WE MEAN! ¢ a | P , J : jo () 1 4 i i i] “> ; Mu J] fUtHant NE f EB t \e. i a | ( ; i tea ‘ / z 12-27 4 Re pyltpedenagecldl toe. TM fag. US. Put. OFF By Leslie Turner “MRK 1S INDUSTRIALIST IN A RUSSIAN ral TM. Reg. US. Par. on, 12°27 © 1958 by NEA Service, tne. Rosita quit blocking traffic. ys + DONALD DUCK Dietrivuted hy King Features Syndicate, By Walt Disney NANCY ‘ ‘N SOMETHING IS WRONG WITH THE SET---THAT MAN IS SHAKING SUS) HE'S BITTERLY DISILLUSIONED. WITH THE REDS, ANO EAGER TO HELP JS! WE SMUGGLED HIM OUT, AND MUST A FORMER _GET HIM BACK, WITHOUT THEIZ PECTING! y AMERICAN INDUSTRY McKEE TO CONFER WITH HIM: AT LENGTH, IN A SECLUDED SPOT...AS HED EASILY BE RECOGNIZED BY RED AGENTS! = ae 4 SO WE CHOSE 1 SEE! A POLICE INVES-\ EXACTLY! OUR TIGATION OF MR. McKEES | AGENTS ARE DISAPPEARANCE MIGHT SEARCHING UNCOVER HIS COMPANIONS / FOR THEM! YOU IDENTITY! MAY BE ABLE TO HELP! HERES A LETTER TO THEM! EVERYBODY IS SHAKING THEY'RE LOOK AT OUR AERIAL NO WONDER SHAKING --- on Arsontimerr en BUSH ETe Cope. 1998 by ated Foren Syndicate, tne. ore -27 —— —E ANE By Dick Cavalli zs WO ita SN Bee wi ty wong wan fa ose, D JOE, PICK THOSE PIECES O’ DISHES OUT O’ TH’ TRASH BASKET.... 2 AN’ COME ALONG WITH | ME T’ TH’ WOOOSGHED/ THIS OL’ BOX HERE IS WHERE I THROW ALL TH’ BROKEN DISHES// - Hi i , Ay. 4 pet 4 Gah | ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY. DECEMBER. 27, 1958 Pes lo Charge Man ‘in Baby's Death Christmas. Eve Sitter Faces Second Degree Murder ~ Count | CADILLAC (PA 20-year-old con- struction worker faces arraignment today in Municipal] Court on a charge of second degree murder in the death of a baby he was mind- ing while the mother was Christ- |- mas shopping. _ * «* * Wextord County Prosecutor _ James C. Herrinton obtained the warrant against David R. Wilson of Cadillac yesterday. Herrinton said Wilson would be arraigned today or Monday. An autopsy showed the baby, John Lennon, 18-months, died of | a brain hemorrhage shortly after admittance to a hospital early Christmas morning, * * * Herrinton said Wilson told of hitting the child because he was tired of hearing it cry. When the mother, Mrs. Joan Lennon, 18, returned from shop- ping Christmas Eve she noticed the child breathing heavily. She and Wilson took it to Mercy Hospital where. the infant died shortly after midnight. Fire Levels Barn on Dryden Farm DRYDEN TOWNSHIP — Fire leveled a barn yesterday after- noon at 3716 Howell Corners Rd., the Lapeer County Sheriff's De- partment reported today. * * * Car} Panduren, who rents the farm and was away at the time, discovered the blaze when he re- turned. The fire consumed a large quantity of hay and straw, plus a tractor, a new bailer and a grain drill. No estimate of loss was immediately available. The Metamora Fire Department fought the blaze on the property which is owned by Sur ge Dan-; ilof of Grosse Pointe. 2 Gls Found Guilty by Yokohama Court YOKOHAMA, Japan # — Two American soldiers were convicted of burglary yesterday by the Yoko- hama District Coutr. They sere sentenced to five years’ imprison- ment each. . The two ae Specialist 3.C. Ger- ald Geller, 22, of Brooklyn, N. Y., and Pvt. Gerald L. Konczak, 22, of Detroit, Mich. The verdict said they broke into a business catering to U. S. Army officers last Jan, 22, slugged and injuured a Japanese employe and stole money valued at $374. NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING The annual meeting of The Monitor Mutual . Insurance Compe? of Mie igan. authorized to write insurance the State of Michigan will be held January 19, 1959 at 1 o'clock p.m. in the Auditorium of the Roosevelt Hotel located at 126 North Perry 8t., Pontiac, Michigan for the purpose of electing a Secretary-Treasurer and one Director full term and two Directors to fill va- ‘cancy and to transacg such other bust- ness as may lawful come before the meeting Also take notice that Section 5 of the By-Laws of our policy reads as fol- lows: No person shall be nominated or elected to any office unless he shall have filed notice in writing of his de- sire to be elected to that office with the Secretary of the Company at least ten days before the Annual meeting. Signed: HARRY Gaerne. ary THE MONITOR MUTUAL INSUR:.NC CO. OF MICHIGA 805 Community ‘Natlonal Bank Building. Pontiac 14. Mich Dec et "58, Jan. 3. 10. "59 TAKE NOTICE THAT ON JANUARY $ 1930, a public meeting of the White Lake Township Zonine Board will be cheld at the Township Hall at 800 pm ‘ANY person or persons or thelr duly appointed representative having inter es in the Township, will be heard relati to any matters that moe Braperis come before the aaeul ard. CHARLES HARRIS. Secretary White Lake Township. Zoning Board Dec. 27, ‘58 TICE Effective January 29, 1959, the Grand Trunk Western freight agency work for Auburn Heights, Michigan, will be per- formed by the Grand Trunk Western Freight Agent, Mr. N. Card, at Pon- tiac, Michigan, clephens number FE 5-8131, and who will accept -ollect telephone calls from shippers or re- ceivers of railroad freight at Auburn Heights Carload freight service to an from Auburn Hetghts will remain the same. Persons desiring to be placed on the Grand Trunk Western's Credit List. for the receipt of collect shipments, please obtain application forms from the freight agent at Pontiac or De- troit. Persons desiring further informa- tion please write or telephone Super- intendent T. D. Ash. Grand Trunk West- ern Railroad Company, Detroit. Mich- igan, telephone WOodward 2-2260. GRAND UNK WESTERN RAILROAD COMPANY Dec 27, 28, 30, 31, °58. Jan. 1, 2, "59. } PUBLIC sale 1957 Chevrolet. 2 door. Serial No _A5TF287873. Sale to be held at 10 30 a.m ecember 30, 1958 at 601 Pontiac State ford St., ‘reported to Pontiac police yester- day. Three straight razors valued at $20 were stolen. Dec. 11-20 Period Tops for Time of Month in Spite of Weather DETROIT (#—New car sales for the Dec. 11-20. period where the highest for that time of month in a year, Ward's Automotive Reports | Sects, said today. The statistical service said new ear dealers retailed 161,840 units for a 17,980 daily average that climbed 4.9 per cent over Dec. 1-10, At that time a 17,134 daily rate netted 154,213 sales, Ward's described the 4.9 per cent rise as surprising, coming as it did in the face of freezing weather and deep snow plus strikes which idled 80,000 UAW workers around the country. Despite such factors, Ward’s said, Dec. 1-20 auto buying is 24.5 per cent above the same period last month, with entire December sales certain to sur- pass November by nearly 100,000 units. Ward's said small car sales are highlighting year-end auto retailing | 6 with a total of nearly 70,000 sales targeted for 14 per cent of Decem- ber purchasing. The one-month total includes 40,000 import units and 30,000 by American Motors Corp. and Studebaker Corp. The latter two companies are chewing off 6.6 per cent of December purchases of. domestic-built cars compared with 2.8 per cent at this time last year. _ The reporting service said that Dec. 11-20 new car buying a year ago jumped 9.1 per cent over the Dec, 1-10 period, but added that = ‘the close out of the hectic Ford- |Chevrolet 1957 sales leadership bat- tle at that time prevents an accu- rate comparison with December marketing this year. News in Brief “Our Barber Shop,” 481 San- was burglarized, it was Burglars made an unsuccessful attempt to break into Spadafore’s, Market, 197 Oakland Ave., it was treported to Pontiac police yester- day. Wilson School was broken into but nothing was taken, it was_re- ported to Pontiac police yester- day. Utility Requests Election Reschedule Consumers Power Company said today that it will seek approval of Board to reschedule an election on its franchise in the township for Feb. 16. the “ Independence Township The Township Board recently set the election for an earlier date. The postponement is necessary in the face of a recent ruling by the state attorney general. He ruled that no special town. ship election can be held within 60 days of the state primary on Feb, 16, at which nominees for circuit judgeships will be chosen. In the same ruling the attorney general held that the franchise election could take place the same day as the primary. Waite’s Fiscal Adviser Given Retailing Award Paul M. Mazur, fiscal counsel of Allied Stores Corp. which includes a|Waite’s Department Store, 70 N. Saginaw St., 1958 winner of the Tobe Award, the Oscar of retailing. has been selected the Mazur is a senior partner of Lehman Brothers, investment bankers and an authority in the field of economics, retailing and agriculture, He will receive the award in New York City Jan, 14 at the an- nual ‘Boss’ Dinner’ for leaders in merchandising, government and Bank Bldg, Pontiac, Michi : n . . Dec’ 27, 29, ’s8,,communidations. rece PUBLIC SALE = evrolet, 2 Door. Serial No i i VBSTF266919 Sale to be held at 10:30 About 12,000,000 power lawn December J1st, 1958 at 601 Pontiac TY *State Bank Blidg., Pontiac. Michigan. ; Dee. 27, 29, °'58. mowers are in use in the United States. All Forms of Insurance (ee ea ote aes iene ti oe an a ee et eee ane? a ‘to ! carrying a Jamestown, New Car Sas{ MARKETS [Saul Shipping Continue to Rise\=x on ee sales . tous locally grown ey —* to the pad donieag de siege in gay forays Quotations are furnished by the Det-oit Bureau of Markets, as off Passing Through Locks rman Down From 1957 Detroit Produce exuits DETROIT W — Registered ton- Apples, Delicious, bu. .............. $4.25,nage passing through the Ameri- VEGETABLES can and Canadian locks at Sault — bar seeneeeeceenens “1s Ste. Marie this year was off 30 Pore cir oongel ee ae 48 3|per cent from 1957 shipping, the Borseradish, Wo. 1 pk, wsecceseceees ce a Army Engineer — said Leeks ors ’ eee oheenetes Onions dry ¢ ay ib. gevencons reley ( je tes sesene 7 oie — % bu nee ‘, 2.00 f ssecess | 10 maosaines: magi o0 es (behs.) “don. aeee 1.60 uash. Delicious, bu. ...:...-..-+- Noswes Hothse.; No. 1 @-lb. Dskt. 2.75 Turnips, [oh goose ccopeodse L175 Poultry and Eggs wteter tee POULTRY IT, Dec 24 en ‘or a gots t. 0. b.- Detroit, cual live poultry: laacy ty hens 19-20; heavy type broilers and fryers 3-4 Ib. whites 17-18; Barred Rocks 23; ca bore over 6 lbs. 21-22; heavy 26; Hghtd ucks 20; pect 30; are totaled 76,683,531 compared with hens 28-30; young/11? 803,494 tons locked through in a a young DETROIT LOIT EGGS DETROIT, Dec. 24 (AP)—Eggs, f. 0. b. Detroit, in case lots, grades: hooey Heppiares A jumbo <= wtd. a pe a, wa 44- Sef rae ae r w mediu 36- 4; laree ey 1; sae 31; grade B large 40- O43, aM «aoe. 42; browns—Grade A extral lai 48; large 45-46, wtd. avg. 45: medium 37; checks 30%-33, wid. avg. Commercially graded: Whites—Grade A jum e 44-46; large 42-45%; medium 32- mee rowns—Grade A jumbo 47; extra aeoe “ large 42-4344; medium 33-33%; small 2844-29. Livestock DETROIT LIVESTOCK Perec, Dec. 24 (AP)—Cattle—Sal- able Trade on limited supply eda steers and heifers fully steady, instances 25 cents higher; cows steady; other classes unchanged; load hi; choice to prime 1149 Ib steers 29 = scat- tering good grade steers 25.75-27.25;. util- ity and standard mized pPbbcibtace "20.50- 25.50; utility cows 18.00-19.00; canners cutters 14 50-18.00. Compared last ly 60 cents higher, full advance on good and choice yearling steers; cows steady to strong; and choice 900-1200 lb steers 25.75-28.50 two loads re choice hd goed 1120-1167 Ib steers to low io steers 33.75-93.50:. et steers 23.75; most good and choice su0-000. t. with 178,826 carried through the heifers 25 75-27.75; standard to low good heifers 23.50-25.50: utility Setters 20.50- 23.50: utility cows 18.00-19.00; canners and cutters 14.50-18.00- uuility bulls 23.00 25.00; cutter bulls 20.00-23 Vealers—salable 50. ot enough done test prices Compared Vealers weak to 2.00 prime grade; most choice and prime vealers 32.00-38 00: few high prime 38.00- 40.00; standard and good 25.00-32.00; cull and utility 16, 00-25.00. Sheep and lambs — salable 200. enow done to make a market. = r last week: Slaughter lambs 1.00 ower; slaughter ewes fully steady; feeder lambs 1.00 lower: most good and choice wooled lambs 18.00-20.50; few lots mixed choice and prime under 100 Ib. lambs 20 50-21.00: utility to good lambs 15.00-18.00; two loads choice shorn, lambs No 2 pelts 18.75-19.00; cull to choice Ml gered ewes 6.00-10.75; =oe € and choice feeder lambs 19.00-21. Hogs—salable 200. eee and past rg odd mixed No. 2 and 180-230 Ibs. es few mixed No. i and 2 19.25- ee Legislator Raps Rackets Group Says Senate Committee Has Outlived Its Use; Predicts an Extension WASHINGTON (UPI)—Sen. Pat McNamara (D-Mich.) said today the Senate Rackets Committee has outlived its usefulness but that ‘most people are afraid to say so because it has become ‘‘a sort of scared cow.” However, the Michigan Demo- crat, who quit the committee last April after 16 months as a mem- ber, predicted the group’s life vuuld be extended in January for another year. He also fore- cast the Senate would give the committee another half million dollars or $0, to be added to the $1,250,000 spent up to now.” “If the people genuinely want the committee to continue, it is all right with me,’’ McNamara said, “‘but I think they should recognize exactly what they are buying.” “They are buying a sort of extralegal police force, complete with all the dangers to due proc- ess o: law and individual rights inherent in the congressional in- vestigating committee system,” he asserted. McNamara made his comments in a speech on ‘‘crime ang the labor movement” which he pre- pared for delivery to the Ameri- can Society of Criminology. The society met as part of the 125th annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. Ohio Turnpike Driver Enters Innocent Plea SANDUSKY, Ohio (UPI)—John [|Hines Jr., 45, of Detroit, pleaded innocent yesterday to seven counts |: of second degree manslaughter in | {|8 wrong-way, head-on auto crash ~,4,on the Ohio Turnpike, Nov. 7. Hines was accused of driving his car,on the wrong lane of the turn- pike and crashing into another car N. Y., fam- ily of six. All six persons in the car were } killed along with a woman pasgen- wiger in Hines’ car, - bis Registered Tonnage 1.75) registered tons -passed through et 17 156, off 22 per cent from the nettes under §/passing through the locks “his year federal-state) the locks this year totaled 54,- bo 48: extraitons passing through the locks bulls fully steady; most goed over last year’s figures. The re- = Youth Stabbed = (ff 30 Per Cent in its annual report, the Army engineer’s office said 63,464,172 the locks this year during a 246- day season from April 15 te Dec. 16, compared to 90,375,078 tons in the 1957 season. esse] passages this year totaled 1957 total of 21,872. Freight, measured] in short tons, 1957. Iron ore transported through 188,010 short tors, off 38 per cent from the 1957 total of 87,424,879 tons. However, cement shipments in- creased by 34 per cent with 289,923 compared to 215,749 last year. Wheat cargo was off 15 per cent with 7,477,866 short tons locked this year compared to 6,491,362 last year. Great Lakes carriers also transported less new cars through the Soo Locks this year carrying £5,609 units compared with 42,839 units last year for a decrease of 40 per cent. But Lakes freighters carried more passengers through the locks this year for a 51 per cent increase port said 269,772 passengers were transported this year = locks last year. Leaving Dance Police Force Way Past 1,500 Teenagers at Dick Clark Hop POTTSTOWN, Pa. (AP)—A 20- year-old boy was stabbed Friday night in a fight with another youth as the pair ‘were leaving Dick Clark’s Teenage Record Hop at Sunnybrook Ballroom. Township and _ special police made their way through a milling crowd of some 1,500 teen-agers in the parking lot outside the dance hall to reach the victim, Robert Neiffer. * * * He was taken to Pottstown Me- morial Hospital where surgeons performed a two-hour operation to repair the wound in the left side of his abdomen. A hospital spokes- man said the Pottstown youth had lost a great quantity of blood but, barring complications, was ex- pected to live. He also suffered a minor facial cut. Lower Pottsgrove Township Po- lice Chief Harry Chrush said a second youth, Maynard Feno, 20, of Reading, in adjcining~Berks County, had signed a_ statement admitting the stabbing. He was charged with aggravated assault and battery and assault with a deadly weapon, pending further in- vetigation. * * * : Chrush said there had been ru- mors of trouble between a group of boys from Pottstown and others from Reading. Chrush said he understood Clark, a nationally known TV per- sonality, already had left the ball- room when the fight broke out shortly before midnight and likely | was not aware it had occurred. Papers, Union Meet Today, Tomorrow GRAND RAPIDS (#—A weekend round of contract bargaining be- tween Grand Rapids’ two strike- bound newspapers and employe unions continued today. * * * Some progress was reported in seven-hour negotiations last night between the Grand Rapids Press and the Grand Rapids Herald and the striking International Typo- graphical Union. Carl Linder, ITU international representative, reported prog- ress, but declined to say how much. He said a new meeting with the newspapers had been e Industry's ‘Man of Year’ George W. Rosseny, who as presi- dent of American Motors Corp. championed ‘the small car into a profit making operation, was named as industry's ‘“‘Man of the Year” in a poll of Associated| ; Press news editors throughout the nation. ; He lives at 1830 E. Valley, Bloomfield Hills. His leading role in his com- munity and the business world hasn’t caused him to overlook his Mormon heritage. * * * He is president of the large Detroit Stake, and under his lead- ership, the new Church of Jesus Christ of Later Day Saints was built on Woodward avenue in Bloomfield Hills. The church re- cently held its first services. GOLDFINE SECOND Second to Romney was Bernard Goldfine, the Boston industrialist whose gift-giving friendship with Presidential Assistant Sherman Adams raised such a furor that Adams was forced to resign. | The editors’ choice in the sports field was Casey Stengel, who piloted his New York Yankees to victory in the World Series after they had fallen be- hind the Milwaukee Braves, three games to one. Roy Campanella, catcher for the Los Angeles (nee Brooklyn) whose baseball career was ended by a paralyzing auto accident, was second to Stengel. * * * Charles De Gaulle, 67, and out of the limelight nearly five years, was the runaway choice as the year’s top newsmaker in the annual Associated Press poll of the nation’s news editors. The towering, taciturn French- man came to power as riots echoed in the streets of Paris, rebellious Army officers held sway in Algeria and France | t b GEORGE W. ROMNEY’ teetered helplessly on the brink of civil war. His first move as premier was to suspend the National Assembly and pack the bickering, factious deputies off on an enforced ‘“vaca- tion.’”” This enabled him to rule alone. . : NEW CONSTITUTION ADOPTED Then he set about the herculean task of completely revising the French political system through a new constitution which would give more power to the president and less to the chaotic Assembly. The constitution was voted in by an overwhelming margin and the 12-year-old Fourth French Republic passed out of exis- tence. to. be replaced by the Fifth Republic. New president: Charlies de Gaulle. Second to de Gaulle as a news- maker, in the opinion of the news editors, was Nelson Rockefeller, a Republican newcomer to politics who leaped high on the list of presidential possibilities by win- ning the governorship of New York amid a Democratic sweep else- where. top man in foreign attaizs, winning the distinction by a narrow margin over John Foster Dulles, Ameri- ca’s much-traveled secretary of state, * * * Pope John XXII, spiritual ruler of the Roman Catholic Church, broke lige — Graham’s hold on the title of Man of the Year in Religion. Graham was the winner in the past four years. Runnerup to the new Pope in the editors’ poll was the old one, Pius XII, who died in October after a long reign of nearly 20 years. Graham was third. “~~ ANOTHER HONOR Boris Pasternak, a Russian who won a Nobel Prize for a book critical of communism and then was forced by the Soviets to turn down the award, was the editors’ choice as Man of the Year in Literature. - The book “Dr. Zhivago” was published in the United States for the first time in 1958 and moved quickly to the head of the best seller lists. The con- troversy put Pasternak far ahead in the poll’s literary field. For the second year in a row, Wernher von Braun, the German- born scientist who is now a leader in American missile and space ef- forts, was the editors’ top man in science. * * *« American successes in the field during 1958—particularly its satel- lite launchings — gave Von Braun the nod over his runnerup, Adm. Hyman Rickover, developer of the atomic submarine. Van Cliburn, bushy-haired Texas pianist who leaped from obscurity by winning the International Tchaikovsky Piano Competition in Moscow, was adjudged the year’s biggest newsmaker in entertain- ment. Made of Plastic Impregnated Cotton De Gaulle also proved to be the Cars fo Have Oilless Bearings By DAVID J. WILKIE AP Automotive Writer DETROIT — Frictionless bear- ings that require no lubrication apparently are coming in for wider use in automobiles. Initially the bearings have been tested on automobile .front ends. They have been used for knuckle and ball joints, especially in steer- ing mechanisms. * * * The frictionless bearings are made of strong plastic and cotton strands impregnated with a phe- nolic plastic. The manufacturer says they can replace many con- ventional metal-to-metal bearings. In a recent test the bearings were used in approximately 200,000 miles of simulated travel without lubrication. They showed no signs of appreciable wear or oxidation. Another innovation may be the relocation of exhaust mufflers. Ward's Automotive Report says one leading car maker is conduct- ing experiments with the exhaust system at the front end. * * * “Information is the V-8 installa- tions would have mufflers standing upright under each front fender,” Ward's says. It adds that silencing 'resonators would be placed, one on top of the other, on the front grille floor. The short exhaust dis- charging pipe would be well for- ward beneath the radiator grille, pointing rearward. Claimed for the new exhaust system, says Ward's, is a sharp reduction in back pressure, mak- ing for more power and possibly less fuel consumption. The agency notes that in some states rear-end exhaust is required by law. It says if the laws re- mained unchanged rear discharg- ing pipes would have to be con- nected to the vertically mounted mufflers. * * * It adds that the rear-discharging systems are presently designed are expensive and inefficient and 30-Voice Choir At Oxford Church to Give Concert OXFORD — Under director of! imusic, Mrs. Dorothy Jean Valen- tine, the 30-voice choir of Im- manuel Congregational Church will present a Christmas choral con- cert 11 a.m. Sunday morning. Included will be four numbers from Handel's Messiah, ‘‘Come Ye My People,” with Al Weckle as incidental soloist; ‘‘The Glory of the Lord,”’ the ‘‘Hallelujah Chorus’’ and a vocal solo by Marilyn Un- ger, “Come, All Ye That Labor.” Also two numbers from ‘The Holy Infant,”’ ‘‘Glory to God in the ‘Highest,’ with David Skibowski as ‘incidental soloist; and set tentatively for late today. Neither the Press nor Herald has| published since Nov. 25 when print- | ers walked out in support of new) contract demands. Seven other members of Booth Newspapers, Ine., which were struck simulta- neously, have reached agreement with the ITU and resumed publi- cation, 'Gladness.”’ The minister, the Rev. Anthony Nelson, will present a medita- ‘tion on ‘‘Christmas: An Announce- /ment About God.” i Of all the accidental deaths in the U. S., about 70 per cent occur during the victim’s non-working Pon “As With! interfere with good car frame con- struction practice. * * * Industry engineers generally have not commented on the pro- posed relocation of the exhaust system. However, it could be as- sociated with proposals to shift major transmission components to the rear axle area. This is de- signed to eliminate the floor hump. Obviously moving a major unit from the center of the frame would require some general weight re- distribution. It does not presently appear likely the so-called trans-axie system or front-end exhaust in- stallation will be introduced be- fore 1961 or 1962. Preliminary work on 196@ models already is well along. Most indistry experts agree however, that car engineers are about ready for a major operation on the hump or tunnel in the car floor. Needed to provide space for the transmission and drive shaft, it has increased in size as the cars have been lowered in height. Questions on Social Security ments be?” * fourths the size of his. From TB. of Washington, tell you how. your state under the aid to husband is 65 to get them?” intends to get payments as a work under Social Security, * From Mrs. B.P. of Liberal, work. From LE. of Clearwater, poses?” i * As a widow, you'll be entitled to payments of three- From C.N. of Albany, N.Y.: cause of a serious disability. I never had a Social Security card or worked under Social Security. Can I qualify for So- cial Security disability payments?” No. You must have worked a certain length of time under Social Security to collect disability payments. How- ever, you may be able to collect monthly payments from * * From F.S.A. of Frederick, qualified for Social Security payments have to wait until her Benefits Start Right Away By RAY HENRY Associated Press Writer From R.S. of Hackensack, N.J.: “I will reach 65 in February of next year and will be retired from my job. Will I be eligible for a Social Security check for the month I reach 65 or will I have to wait until the next month? Unless the amount of your earnings prohibit it, you'll be entitled to a check for the month in which you are 65. * * * From Mrs. F.ML. of Columbia, Mo.; collecting Social Securty retirement payments of $116 a month after Jan. 1. I’ll be collecting an amount equal to half | of his payments. If he should die, how much would my pay- “My husband will be * D.C.: “Are Federal Civil Serv- ice retirement annuities subject to federal income tax?” Yes. Your district director of Internal Revenue can * “T had to retire in 1951 be- disabled adults program, ,* Md.: “Does a woman who is If a woman is eligible for payments based on her own work under Social Security, she can begin drawing pay- ments at 62 regardless of her husband's age. Sut, if she wife based on her husband's she must wait until he has reached 65 and applies for payment. * Kan.: “I will be 63 years old in March and intend to apply for Social Security benefits based on my own work &nd not on my husband’s. I under- stand that my payments will be less than if I waited until I reached 65 to collect them. Will my payments increase at 65 or will they remain the same as I will collect at 63?” Once you start drawing your Social Security pay- ments as a woman worker before you reach 65, the size of the payments will remain the same no matter what age you might reach—unless, of course, you go back to * Fla.: “I recently opened a small store and I plan to have one employe working for me, Must I report that person’s earnings for Social Security per Yes. Even in the case of a single apaye the omapiey- ° ment is coveréd by Social Security. State Group Probing - New Charge Against Coldwater Home DETROIT # — A legislative in- vestigating committee has been asked to check out complaints of a Detroit area couple that their son was mistreated at the Coldwater State Home and Training School. Rep, T. John Lesinski (D-De- troit) said yesterday Mr. and Mrs. Chester Nowak of St. Clair Shores told him their son, Ger- ald, 12, canie home on Christmas vacation with bruises and what they said were “scars” on his bedy. The boy was comfhitted Sept. 17. Lesinski said Rep. Harry T. Phil- lips (R-Port Huron), head of the committee investigating allegations of brutality and maltreatment of inmates at the home, asked him to look into the Nowak complaint. Lesinski, a member of the Phil- lips Committee, said State Police and a private doctor examined the boy in his presence. State Police took pictures of the child and the boy’s records were sub- ~ poenaed from the Coldwater home. “I'm satisfied from my viewing that there was ho deliberate injury to the boy involved,” Lesinski said. He said the investigation would- continue. The Phillips Committee was formed at the end of the last legis- lative session after a state repre- sentative said that his brother-in- law died of injuries suffered while at the Coldwater home. The committee is working with a private agency in making its re- port on the home. Man Fences Wife In NORWALK, Conn, (UPI) —Con- cetta Palumbo won a divorce after complaining that her husband kept her penned up at home for nearly eight years. Her husband is a fence contractor. Death Notice ALTSMAN, ple 26, 1958, Cuones Robert, 498 Martindale, Milfor 16; beloved son of Earl F. Ruth Grunden; + Holy ulchre Cemetery. Recita- tion of the Rosary will % Sunday 3. Godhard at 8 p.m., from the C. Pune: neral Home, where Mr. Barney will lie state, DAY, DEC. 25, 1958, CONLEY, JR.; beloved inf: Conley ; Ceme Arrange- the Wenioen Funeral GEA ART, DeC. 25, 1958, Harald’ Wesley, 3 Edward br., see 56; beloved husband Stee Gearhart; dear coe a Mrs. Barbara Epley, Janet a and Harold Gearhart; dear b er of James Gearhart; Mrs. James Kurtz, Mrs. rl Kline, and Mrs. : pfather of Mrs. Georgia Capps, Mrs. Lor- raine Davis, Mrs. werly Bar- rett, Charles and 5 Punera. oe will held Mon- Mt. Mr. Gearhart will lie in state at the Puneral Home, HOHLSTEIN, DEC. 27.1958, ELFRE- jede, 101° Auburn, Apt. 109; dear mother of Werner, Kari, and Guenter Hohistein. Pumeral ar- .Tangements will’ be announced oe anti Psaos Donelson - Johns Pune me, where Mrs. Hohistein wil lie in state. JOHNSON, DEC. 26. 1958, JACK, 263 Lakeview. Lake Orion, age 36; survived by his wife and- five chijdren. Funeral arrange- ments will be armounced later by the Flumerfelt Funeral Home, __Lake Orton. KRECKE, DEC. 25 arm or ce Sarasota, Fiorida, loved wife of Karl» 5. Decks: dear mother of Mrs. Carol G. Watson and Norman Krecke; dear sister of Mrs. Pear] Braun. Funerat service will be held Monday, Dec. 29, at 1:30 p.m.- from the Farmer-Snover Funeral Home, with Rev. Edward Auchard officiating. Interment in Forest Lawn Cemetery. Detroit. Mrs. Krecke will lie im state at the Farmer - Snover Funeral Home. MAJOR, DEC. 26, 1958, MAGGIE mel 216 Clinton 8t., Milford, age beloved wife of Arthur ; dear mother of Herbert _dan Calkins: dear sister of Mrs. * George Buell and Mrs. nit Buell; also survived by 7 grand- children. Puneral service will = held Sunday, Dec. 28, at 2 from the Richardson-Bird veecal Home, with Rev. Wm. Lovejoy officiating. Interment in , High- land Cemetery. Mrs. Major will lie tn state at the Richardson- Bird Funeral Home, Milford. MC CARTY, DEC. 26, ag JOEL 2205 Walcott Plint . age 89: dear w icee @) . Raymond Lambert, Leo, Byron. Beverly, Glenn, and Rus- sell McCarty; also survived by 10 grandchildren and 7 great- grandchildren. Funeral service wat be held Monday, Dec. 29, 1:30 p.m. from the Voorhees- Siple Chapel, with Rev. Arvid Anterson officiating. Interment in White McCarty will the a Siple Funeral e ome 26. 1958, MILLIB . Edith, es Buster; dear sister of Mrs. Sarah Ellen Childers: also —- by 15 grandchildren and % «@ [Sangean Mrs. Morris: was ken from the Voorhees - Siple Funeral Home to the Higgin- botham Puneral Home, Walnut Ridge, Ark., for service and burial Monday, Dec. 29. Ar- rangements os! the Yoorhees- Siple Funeral Home. a YANCY, DEC. 26, 1958, see, 91, Blaine, age Si, dear mother of Mrs, Della Croney, _ Mrs. Pearl DeFord, Mrs. Lucey Smith, and Mrs, Anne Burton. Mrs. Yancy will be. to e White Funeral Home, Mo. for service 4 ‘by the Home. Pareits Chim ; Resides in Bloomfield Hills Boy Mistreated ic af » pe ae eae Ve ee one. ie jee : } vu #4 | ” oo x ee . ! | : i ety i" \ j : 3 y , | _* rod 1 ie Hl : ¥ : eS ii } t ; = ; i ee i! \ } = \ 4 . , t ie wake ' : é wk Jy e \ oa os: a . : . : Ao pe pt dd ; is TWENTY. go ___»____THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, DECEMBER | 27, 1958 ae ee ‘of. aeeecay IONS Card of Thanks 1; Help Wat Female 7; CARNIVAL. ; : ~ Dick Turner | Wanted Real Estate 32A Rent Avis Furnished 33 | Rent Houses Furnished 35) Convalescent _ Homes 338A or —, CANNOT ettaee of Sales Opportunit oo ' : ete CASH S LAKE ‘eu Atcaney TOR MAM, 4 INDEX | Stinks" ang tee ne cee. 2 propre ies for -ex- SS Por hous a ioe acre- a = street and in the meighborkasd Ete ied. Abby to Miss \ * : | ) fuily with kindness ‘end’ 113: Dixie. Hwy., ‘Drayton. Plains’ eS ANNOUNCEMENTS : y the loss of our dear hus-| Sar ecr a an a J z ; S ae ‘ vg and fal er, H H, » toa, th arta me = Apply rf] f : ui - Card of Thanks mrceernecec la and Mrs. Paul and Mr, and ey - Hoan Memoriam _ Steen net enee ; a Paanat Oaee 4 “refined tamily. ‘near Walia Lake CALL %, purer eweee renee eeese unera Directors . ‘on evallabie, 'S IMMEDIATELY tf you have " il Taare Directors - e509. CT caren CHAR, : food salary. refs Call MArket a tara oe roperly. Home vein? ti, SBE CFs BOS zeae east sae es outa a porate: ses ssesevewveee OE Thoughtful Service FE 2-584) | WOMAN FOR BABY SITTi , cPARTM aoe FP beonoas in aa elderly. Oe aay pvt. home, FW eceeee eee ee §-9804. i “| i es é, Ne Lak MY Cymetery ans Voorhees- Siple FoCna SEL FOR BABYSITTING, Humphries town is Willams shen S| $300 : ) as live in FE 8.037 BACHELOR APARTMENT, SHARP. | ]’ROOMS & BATH. AUTO. HOT Hotel Rooms 39 FUNERAL HOME 83. reer 2.0236 Open Eves.| private bath and entrance, TV, | _waler & heat. ra oat ~~~ . a EMPLOY MENT Ambulance Service Plane or Moter Help Wanted 8 een aa Tensnoo ? 7 BEDROOM Ries pEARILY HOTEL AUBURIN a oe OSERE : tte and livin « Pvt. Ent. & y “NEW Rooms by Day Help Wanted Male ......... 6 4 HOMELIKE Te ERE" 4RE YOU WANTING WORK OR FOR YOUR HOME OR RQUITY. bath. ‘Uunlties, nr. General Mee | * ncn the keane ne te sakes. Also 1 or 2 room apartments, Help Wanted Female ..... 7. A). looking. hoping you don't find it? cash interes.s you let us look | ital, adults, after 5. FE 25662.| Reascnable OR 3-6603, Coe te Pp FUNERAL HOME Have cpening for man or woman. ve our property for a cash| COUPLE & eA as BATH & TU HOOMS GAT UTILITINS. 464 Aubur : Help Wanted ..........008+ 8 Diarsos waning on 3781 cs male above average wage. sale. In many cases we can get| entrance. FE ¢- furnished. %,09°4 Highland. LUXURY LI IN Employment Agencies ....8A N_Perty 6 to 13 am. ceuitiee Wy pica bere bevere fas YY oe eeeac: WaRW SURAN | 4 fee Ue iT BARN NT. PON: | Best buy in Oakland , reome 7. r =: @ iad ae Lin eee Donelson- Johns EVELYN EDWARDS tate igea, W Muon, PE «S402 oF furushed? ois Oranare Lake Ave MS KEEGO.GAS HEAT CHIL-| cred path fixtures telephone, TV 5.3289, * Work Wanted Male Work Wanted Female sveweenl oF @ SERVICES OFFERED FUNERAL HOME “Designed for Funerals” ‘Cemetery Lots 5 SRAUTECe 8 GRAVE LOT. Mt Part Cemetery. Will di 9882. : vide Reas. F FE ¢ Building Service ..........12 — Building Supplies .......,.124. Box Replies Business Services .........13 } At. 1@ a.m. today there Bookkeeping & Taxes .....14 ; Were replies at the Press Chiropodists ..............15 foffice im the — following Foot Specialist ..... sonooct ee | pera Dressmaking & Tailoring...16 Furniture Refinishing ....16A 1S, % St, 32, a, Garden Plowing ..........16B S74 76, 96, 108, 118. f Income Tax Service ......17 © ° Insurance Agencies .......1TA Laundry Service neeseeee m4 Landscaping ............ Moving & Trucking oe Painting & Decorating .... Photos & Accessories ..... = Physio-Therapy ....... 271A Television Service ....... Typewriter Service ee ‘A Upholstering ........<...<.23 NOTICES | Lost & Found ....:...2....6 Hobbies & Supplies ......4A Notices & Personals ...... Travel Agencies ........ 3a WANTED Wtd. Children to Board ....% Wd. Household Goods ....27 Wtd. Miscellaneous .....28 Money Wanted .......... 284 Wanted to Rent ...........3 Share Living Quarters ....30 Wtd. Contracts. Mtgs. ....32 GET 1) Guie K, through Classified Ads!| Yes, whatever it is — dial FE 2-8181 for an ad- writer and get it! The Pontiac Press FOR WANT ADS DIAL FE 2.-8181 AS Rent Apts. Furnished RECO: cae wane ab Bates Rent Apts. Unfurnished ...s4 ines bap 9-Oage 6k Rent Houses Furnished ...35 2 $150 $204 B Rent Houses Unfurnished .36 : = a” tse Rent Lake Cottages ...36A $ 250 438 670 For Rent Rooms scweeewcae| M res 3 > Rooms With Board .......38 s 400 130 116 Convalescent Homes e000 SBA le $.00 9.00 hin Hotel Rooms seseeeeecee ne 39] & Rent Office Space aay ay _ SAVE ENERGY, USE| Rent, Lease Bus. Prop. . Rent Farm Property .... For Rent Miscellaneous oe ee WANT ADS! To find a. job, place to live or a REAL ESTATE FOR SALE| For Sale Houses ;.........43 For Sale Lake Prope: 44 Suburban eoeee 45A For Sale Lots. ............46 Sale Industrial Prop ......46A For Sale Acreage ...,.....47 For Sale Farms ...........48 Sale Business Property ..49 For Sale or Exchange .,..50 FINANCIAL Business Opportunities ....51 Sale Land Contracts anon! Money to Loan .............93 Mortgage Loans ...........54 MERCHANDISE SWORE 55 oo sien escssaen DD For Sale Clothing .......56 Serap & Iron sonoden tn) Sale Household Goods ....57 Valentine Gifts ...........58 .Christmnas Gifts ............59 Christmas Trees ........ 59A For Sale Miscellaneous ...60 Machinery .............. 60A Do It Yourself ............61 Cameras & Equipment ...61A Sale Musical Goods .......62 Musical Instruction ..... 62A good used car, see Classi- fied NOW! PER. VOCATIONAL COUNSELING SERVICE PE 4-0584 IN 1959 Yes, another year gone by. your he you can better sition in this New fear in a _ HEALTH & WEALTH if you are a tie ME T have “tne right answers, that you are seeking. Phone FE 4-9227 Mr. King, if line is busy call FE 8-0458. Keep calling if you want $10,000. pus per year. It's so easy. a you neéd is the know | Employment Agencies 8A 12-27 “T not only have to keep up with the Joneses. Now I ‘ have to keep Junior up with the Russians! " 782 W. Huron FE Ask for Mr. Clark. GI AND FHA CASH FOR YOUR HOME Yes, we can sell vour home for cash with very smal) down pay- ment. Cal! us o, further informa. tion. Do not fee} obligated We will appraise your property and tell you = cash you can receive beay WE eee! BUILD 4 DORRIS & sON REALTORS Phone FE 4-1557 TM. Reg. U.S. Pat. Of © 1958 by NEA Servien, Ina SECRETARY. Aged 19-30 with good skills. At- tractive and voised for reception and secretarial duties. Midwest Employment. 406 Pontiac State Bank Bide. $-9227 Work Wanted Male 10 a CARPENTER WORE, NEW - Repair. FE 4-4210. A-1 Paterna INTERIOR & EX- . Free estimate Reas. OR OR 3-8117. AVAILABLE NOW. CARPENTER and cabinet work. New and re pair, D. B. Murdock FE 2-7861. Business Services 13 ~ Ne WANTED: WASHINGS AT SPIC & SPAN Laundriette. Do washings, dry and fold. Price 11 cents a pound bd weight. Guaranteed ood service. Shirt service OR 9351. 4696 Dixie Hwy., Plains, Mich. LO Dressmaking, Tailoring 16 OPPO LOLOL A AAA ll eal ALL KINDS OF ALTERATIONS. BOYS CAN PLAY MUSIC BE IN- terested tn a rock and roll band. FE 4-7310 CARPENTER WORK WTD. NEW & some - Satisfaction guar. OR cismner MAKER AND CARPEN- Kitchens a specialty. FE CARPENTER WORK OF Fate kind. Reasonable. Call after m_ FE 8.9439 EXP WOOL PRESSER. FULL OR _part time, FE 40752. time or full time work kind. . Parke WANTED CHAIN SAW WORK. 34975, of any 8. OR Work Wanted Female 11 BU. REF. '1 DAY IRONING. $3 k PE 5-147) 2 WOMEN WANT WALL WASHING and house cleaning. FE 3-1581. Aubero Averve Nurses Exchange NURSES AVATI.ABLE — | Day & ee Skee & Bonded | SEARING WANTED $1 hour, experience. FE 2-0378. GIRL DESIRES HOUSEWORK & babysitting in your home 5 days = wk. Pontiac vicinity. Between 12, AN GIRL EE WORK, | | IRONINGS, $250 A BU. PICK-UP and deliv. FE 4-8040. _MIMEOGRAPHING TYPING, SEC Pea rvice. EM 3-2842 NG AND TRONINGS. bakes and deliver FE 5-0724 WOMAN WANTS CLEANING JOB. FE 5-2928. Building Service 12 AAA Floor Sanding Floor Laying - Winienine Cc. BUD BILLS FE 8-2050 Help Wanted Male 6 pal =a PART TIME. CAR necessary. Retired man OK. Real estate exp. a Pontiac Press, Box 115. FACTORY Branch now acce ring apptice: tions, Apply 10 to 11:30 am 1064 . Huron, N FOOD COUNSELORS WANT- . No experience necessary. Will is verv essential Apply Waldron Hotel. 12 noon Monday Ask for G. Cartier, MARRIED MAN WITH CAR FOR established Fuller Brush route. No investment. $89 per week plus expenses guaranteed if qualified Also need one part time man. For interview, one Fuller Brush Company. 2-2318. SALESMAN WANTED $12,000 TO $15,000 YEARLY To enter training program for sales management. Positions with experieced in direct sales, and good closers. Leads furnished. aa future for those who qualify $100 WEEK PLUS COMMISSION. Apply 80 N. Paddock 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. Sales Opportunity Will train 2 salesmen for expan- sion program in food service. Earnings unlimited. Apply to Mr. Holt, Friday. 1 pm. Jan. 2nd., _4i13_ Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plains. ~ SOCIAL WORKER _ Male preferred, bachelor’s Bait, Minnows, Etc. ..... 65B Sale Office Equipment ...63 Sale Store Equipment ....64 Sale Sporting Goods .......65. gree. Starting year. 5 day, 40 hour week, paid | vacation, sick time & other bene- fits Reply Pontiac Press Box 90, Submit Resume, fidentia! eas PuMEEe AND FE 5-2146 | national heating concern. Must be | De-| salary, $5,000 per | all replies con- 4-1 SAND & FINISH, FE 5-3722. Pontiac Hardwood Pioor Service ANY TYPE O} Oo tame oe custom -ton Pickups 14e-ton stakes Dump trucks Semi-trailers Pontiac Farr and Industrial Tractor Co. WOODWARD 825 8. Open Daily Including wre! FE 40461 FE UNWANTED Fs up free of charge. FE Painting & Decorating 20 18ST CLASS PAINTING AND DEC- orating. Cash or terms. UL 2-2940. 18ST CLASS DECORATING PAINT- ing and wall papering. FE 4-0255 4 LADY INTERIOR DECORATOR: Papering. FE 8-0343 & ) PAINTING. PAPER Seas per removed. FE 4-6918 A-1 PAINTING AND PAPERING. Mason Thompson FE 4-8364. A-1 PAINTING INTERIOR - EX- terior, 10 per cent disc sors cash. Guaranteed Free est. FE 4-9205. AAA PAINTING & DECORATING. 20 years experience. Reasonable. Free estimates, phone UL 2-1398. PAINTING & DECORATING. REAS « Immediate service. FE 5-5006. PAINTING PAPERING & WASH- ing, Guar. Reasonable FE 2-2312 Television Service ae een lr DAY OR NIGHT TV Sve CALLS Rayal Electronics) FE 4 2418. DAY OR NIGHT TV SERVICE | FE 5-1296 or FE 5-8390 M. P_ STRAKA ranges ae JENSEN'S TV SERVICE AFTER- B Munro | noon & evening calls FE 2-0495. 23 Upholstering EY BEADLE DRAPES. SEIPCOVERS and materials, FE 5-19: ee S CUSTOM Se ng. EM Pe Cooley Lake Rd. HOMAS DEB OLS TERING 01 NORTH PERRY 8T TICLES PickeD | Any kind Real cheap. FE 8-2494 anrtime. LIGHT AND HEAVY TRUCKING. Rubbish fill dirt. gravel and front end loading. FE 2-0603. MAN WITH 3 TON TRUCK wants work. Call anytime. FE) 86348. Moving & Trucking 19, 22) | | Wtd. ( Children to Board 26 (Al LICENSED HOME NEAR_ IN DEBT? IF SO LET US ‘Give You 1 Place to Pay Ease Your Mind WE ARE NOT A LOAN COMPANY MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELLORS Room 716 Pontiac State Bank Bidg. | FE 8-0456 LOSE WEIGHT SAFELY AND economically with newly released Dex-A-Diet tablets 98 cents at SIMMS. OLD FASHIONED SLEIGHRIDES, hayrides, Team pulled. MU 4-0525. | WANTED: IM MEDIAv Sell Us You- Equity Don't lose hood home—cash walt- t tape. We also need itetings. Giroux-Franks 4395 Dixie Hwy OR 3} ELY omes farms lake property land contracts. Buyers wait- Paul M. Jones, Real Est. 832 wW. _ Huron 4-8550 “WANTED LI LISTINGS We need houses, farms, acreage. Land contracts bought & sold. Soul Riese aahens St Property PONTIAC "RE ALD 731_ Baldwin ‘Rent Apts. Furnished 33 ee 18ST FLOOR, 3 ROOMS, FE 5-2495. 40 Edison St i-ROOM, KITCHENETTE. PRI- vate bath, 2 employed (sae or couples Adults only. 200 N. Pad- dock Alberta Apts CLEAN, WARM, LGE. ROOM. - Adul ' shed. - REDUCE FOR THE HOLIDAYS Geers Uo tt Ss bays. Bee usit pends me, | 1. *RM_ WITH PRIVATE BATH. away fast safe scientific. 1 _arms., ist floor. Pvt. bath. Cali today for app't. Roach FE 5-4339 139 taeburn Health Institute. 44131. 1 AND 2? BEDROOM LAKEFRONT WILL RENT CONPERENCE room at Edgewater Beach Motor rivate parties & meet.) . parking: $10 per night. OR 4-0311, | _4pts, Partly furnished OR 3-9105._ La’ ROOM. fein” ° CLOSE IN. 1&2 Rit FS $35 WK. MOD- ern motel apts. $16 steady rent- ers. Nr. Blue Lhd ideal sory helors or coy FE 38-0058. _Pontiac Motors. FE 2-5031. LICENSED HOME, VIC. OF OR- onece Lake & Telegraph. FE Wed. Household Goods 27 FURNI- | CASH FOR USED TVs. ture & misc. FE 2-0367. 1 BEDROOM 1-RM. KITCHENETTE APT., PVT Entr.. shower, util. furn. West M59, on Pontiac Lake. $15 and $17, _wkly. } Royal Motel, OR 3-4555. 1 RM. KITCHENETTE & BATH. FE 5-158 402 W. Huron. APT. FOR LEASE, $100 per mo, Adults 130 Seminole. _ Bel | Air Manor _ FE 4-155! 1 PRM. KITCHENETTE | aS BATH Ent. TV. North end. $15 per = PE 2-4376. CASH FOR FURNITURE AND AP- puances. Odd pieces or house full. Hi ae courteous service. FE FURS NITURE NEEDED Entire home or odd lots. Get the top dollar. Wil] buy outright or sell it for you B&B communis Sale Phone OR 32717 18ST. FLOOR, 3 all utilities furnished. 2 bi. to GMC, Very nice, $18 wk. Adults | on'y. FE 46-4558. before 5 p.m. 18ST FLOOR HEATED 5 RM. FLAT, | washing facilities, children al- oe $75 mo. References. EM 2RMs “PVT BATH & TAD UTIL. & washer furn FE WANTED TO BUY — ALL 1 of furniture. Ph. FE 2-5523 28 Wtd. Miscellaneous CHURCH, WANTS Mee USED pianos. Phone FE 5- WANTED: FARMALL < SE 2 OR 3 RMS eS a Sona 405 W. Huron, FE 8-2512 or MA 5 5-3185. 2 OR 4 ROOM COTTAGES. CITY bus line. Across from Huron the- ater. Fo. 2-2915. 2 RMS. & BATH. GROUND FLOOR | Pvt. ent. Stove, ae util. furn. $45 mo, OR 3-19 with plow and snow plow. Call _ after 6:00 pm. OR 3-5467. WANTED. LARGE OIL FLOOR furnace. OR 3-8863. Money Wanted 28A $5,000 — 30 MO.. GOOD INT. AND Sahat Security. Pontiac Press, Box 6 Wanted to Rent” 29 _ BUSINESSMAN, WIFE AND TWO. children being trans. to Pontiac, wants to rent 3 bedrm house _With garage. Call FE 5-8708 LAND:|ORDS We fave over 30 rental applli- cants. Wanted homes and apts. All areas Fucn cf unfurn, ARRO RLTY | 5143 Cass- Elisabeth Rd. FE 5-3030 ‘Share Living Quarters 30 OO OOOO OO WILL SHARE MY HOME WITH young woman oF mother with 1 child, OR 3-0938 Wd. ¢ Contracts, Mtgs. 32 CA$H WE NERD LAND CONTRACTS |? LARGE ROOMS. 2-ROOM ae ENTRANCE. Util furn. Ideal for bachelor or retired couple. MY 2-1 2 LARGE ROOMS NICELY FUR- nished, near Bell Telephone and no drinking. FE 2-2181. 2 AND 3RM. HOUSEKEEPING cottages gas heat al! utilities. Winter rates Tru Rustic Cabinr 468 S Broadwsy Lake Orion. MY 3-9958 2 ROOMS, PVT. BATH, FE 5-2043. 116 Lafayette 2 AND 3 ROOMS PVT BATH. ' _Clark St. Apply Apt? |2 CLEAN WARM ROOMS CLOSE- _in $12 we FE S160 2 AND 3 LARGE RM. BRICK apartments. downtown location. Pvt. Ent. and bath Everything furnished. Inquire 22 Auburn, of- fice in rear. 2 RMS. & BATH NICELY FURN. Adjacent to high school. 102 | Washington. 2. 3 ROOM APTS, NEWLY DEC- orated. Pvt. -ntrance, _tonviile Rd. OR 3-4706 NEWLY DECORATED. | 2 RMS., couple only. 319 N. Saginaw. CLOSE 24 Fiorence Ave. FE 8-1987. 2-ROOM APi. WITH PVT ENTR-. Share bath. cud socom: $12 _per week. FEy 8-14 FE LARGE LOVELY 3 AND BATH. ear one Near airport. MODERN 3 ROOM APT. STAL! eaner oe rere __ sn es ra. h Orcha FE 2-5997. MOD ERN, J LARGE ROOMS, pvt. and bath, very nice an clean" toon: adults. 1833, PVT 3 ROOMS & he AT WIL- liams Lake. OR TWO ROOM eT OR 3-1388 Rent Apts. Unfurnished 34 Pp ll nue, Ht eee 1 AND 3 BEDROOM LAKEFRONT apts. Partly firnished. OR 3-9105. KITCHENETTE, PRI- hi Adults only. . Paddock. Al- _berta_Apts 18ST FLOOR i RMS HEATED __apt. N.wly decorated. PE2-7425. 290 N Apt clean, utilities furn,, no _ drinkers, PE 4-7850. 2 BEDRM. BRICK TERRACE, tile bath, gas heat fenced yard, _full basement. garage. FE 8-9018. 2 BEDROOMS LOWER, MODERN, clean, newly decorated, automa- uc of] heat & hot water fur- _hished, near GMT. FE 5-2864. 2 4ROOM APTS 1 5-RM._ APT NC _children, FE 4-1001. 2 RMS. & BATH. GROUND FLOOR 2 BEDRM. WEST SIDE UPPER | $40. TO ROOM FURNISHED MODERN house in Walled Lake, good lo cation, fenced yard, reasonable. MA 42897. + 1 LAKEFRON™, NEAT 2 BED- For adults or small fami- lies. Good calevaniee required. $80. Jack Loveland. 32-4875. FURNISHED HOUSE FOR RENT. orn the | karte — welcome. Pully equip __Children welcome, Call 163. FURNISHED HOME. 1 YR. OLD. 3 bedrooms, bath. Dining & living rm. Kitchen, New furniture, auto. & radio, free switchboard sery- jee. Take a jook & be convinced. Low aed = = Motor rates. ewater Bea 4 phe The Lodge, next oe Ho wa: 3664 Dixie Hwy. OR 4-03 Rent Office Space 41 0 . PT. AIR CONDITIONED tee sone in Phage ee. elon itol Savings & Co., 8TORE AND OFFICES belie ger b Dixie Manway: Ph, of- als a eebe a —-- oil heat. car gs 1% biks. from | Rent Lease E Bus. Prop. 41A high coheed: tio a mo. Call after p.m. MaAyfair 6-144 ‘ ROOMS & BATH. MAIN FLOOR ce ORION, 2 BEDRM., CLEAN on Johnson. Suitable util, ine. Reas® Cap's Place, 166 ften, ‘Beauty Shop, etc. Cal” Heights Rd. MY_ 3-1284. tor Partridge, 1. LAKE ORION, 1-BEDROOM, auto. heat and H.W., privacy, ap- ply 160 Heights ~~ MY 3-1284. LIVING ROOM, ROOMS, DI- nette & ki rite aaa bath, FE ATTRACTIVE OFFICE SPACH Ios eee a $,000 hoy gees wi 5 month. ated ted. 1683.8 South Tele- raph, FE 4-257. FOR LEASE 10,000 SQ. FT. WITH- MODN. 3 RMS. oe MA 5-5000. MODERN + ROOMS. FURNISHED RENT WITH OPTION TO BUY AT Wate New furnace too. Rent $70 per 3 ROOMS, UPPER APARTMENT on Oakland Aye near Baldwin Private bath and entrance. Ls con hot water furnished $50. 3 RMS. PVT BATH. GARAG Newly decorated. Corner Per Steam heat, hot water, stove, Re- frig. furnished. $65 month. FE 2-6127 . 3} RMS. & BATH FOR COUPLE, Nr. Blue Skv eee Exception- _ally nice. FE 3-74 FE 5-827 | 3°RM PARTLY, PVT. ENT. AND, Pvt. bath. 285 Whittemore. 3 RM. & BATH, NEWLY DECO- rated. Heated outside entrance OLive 6-9041. After 7 pm. OL iE 1206. 3 RMS. PVT. ENT CHILDREN welcome. 319 E. Pike. 3 UPR FLATS: TWO ?-BEDRMS., $60: and l-bedrm.. $55 Desirable location near Lincoln Jr High RMS. & BATE | 4145. Clin- | IN. Schooi on eerlta street FE 4-2523 or FE 5-117 3 ROOMS | = BATH. PVT, AT 3M Lake. Couple only. OR 3-17 3 RMS. & BATH ALL UTIL. FURN $13.50 wk, Located close downtown Call at 288 N. Perry. RM. LOWER UNFURNISHED apt. Tile bath, oak floors. gas beat. Clean. 9v Union St. Inquire _115 Seminole. FE 4-5425. mn ROOMS AND BATH, NICE LO- cation, couple only, _fent, FE 4-0367. | 4 ROOMS, DECORATED, ADULTS, | __PE 2-2948. after 6 4 RMS. AND BATH, REFRIG. AND stove furn. 454 Auburn, Palm _ Villa Apts FE 2-6859. 4 RMS GAS HEAT & HOT WATER furn. Bugs 22 Cadillac. FE 8-4473. leq & BATH UPPER DUPLEX. Couple only. No drinkers. Pvt. Util. furn. FE 4-6084. ent. U ¢ ROOM MODERN HEATED APT. | 4192 Dixie over Keego Hardware: $35 per month. FE 2-2944 5 ROOM FLAT. NEWLY DECO- |__Tated, West side, FE 98-9806 _ | RMS. & BATH UPPER APT. Winterized. Newly gecorared Plus | _&arage. $50 mo OR ae oF ROOM APT. REFRIG. furnished $86 month FE 5-3321. RM & BATH. CLOSE IN, NR. | _bus, FE 2-6332 or FE 2-5788. 6 ; ROOMS, AVAILABLE JANUARY Ist. Beautiful upper flat, 3 bed- rooms, large kitchen, oee Fe ace dining room. Choice West side | eation Close to schools. Rent reasonable to desirable tenant. Shown by on” Call FE} 2-5258 after 90 OAKLAND Clean 3 rooms and bath. Heat farn., $50 a month See caretaker. BACHELOR'S APT. 18ST FLOOR. _ Heat & hot water furn. FE 2- 6521. BASEM’T GRADE LEVEL 2 RM. apt. Kitchen & bath Steam heat, I}. _2-1337 | COMFORTABLE. UNFURNISHED 4room heated apartment. Cen- trally located in Birmin pom Available at _once. MI 4-12 CLEAN 5-RM UPPER refrigerator, gas heat 5-3413. | CLEAN 1ST FLOOR 2 BEDROOM. | children welcome, N_ side $60 | mo. FE 47581 or FE 4-0090 CLEAN 3-ROOM APT. PVT. ENT. and bath. Lotus Lake. OR 4-0237__ HOLLYWOOD APTS. Furnished or unfurnished 2 & 3 rms. bath & utilities furnished. 114 E. Howard St. FE 2-1834. LARGE LOVELY 3 AND BATH, near Airport, adupts. OR 3-1943. ORCHARD CT. APTS. AIR CONDITIONED Pontiac's most exclusive west | side apartment development Bal- cony type individual entrances. beautiful kitchens with stove and Pvt. ent. Stove, refrig. Util furn. month Phone owner at FE 2-7011 $45 mo. OR_3-1972. or cal] FE 2-5822. 2 BEDROOM. GROUND FLOOR. | SMALL ootes = GARAGE. LGE pvt. ent. 2401 Opdyke. $50 a lawn. FE SRM OPT One HEAT Wine WE | OY LVAN LAKEFRONT 313 s plete FE 5-5006 Neat 2-bedroom for adults or small family. Good references -re- herds $80. Jack Loveland. FE SMALL HOUSES Lee RENT IN- eure at 1676 Ta a eet ask for nnie Weaver. 2031. Rent Houses ietartl 36 3. ROOMS a FURN. | Very clean lotx of heat 309 N.! Saginaw. Teasonabg: RETCGE } washer & dryer furn, FE! Ove | furn, FE , 1 BEDRM. MODERN. 13 MILES out Dixie. $40 month. MAple 5-7086. T BEDROOM. TEL-HURON, MOD- ern, FE 2-6057. 1 BEDRM. ADULTS. eee home. Gas heat, garage, base- __ment St. Mike District. FE 5-6482 BEDROOM HOME, ELECTRIC EM 3-43 refrig. furn.. $60 mo. 2 BEDROOMS. CLEAN, OIL HEAT, [eer around rental 8990 Pontiac | BED-| in city limits of Pontiac, Excel. LOCATED IN CLARKSTON * ike for light manufacturing or light storins & screens. Com = ly in- storage. For infor. one Mr. sulated. GReenleaf ¢- White, FE 2-810). FURN. | SPACE SUITABLE FOR DENTIST or doctor, Drayton area location. OR 3.1315. For Sale Houses 43 eet WHITE More Space for Living Located between Maceday & Wile liams Lakes. is 44 ft. ranch home was built to fill your dreams, It features a 22 ft. livin room, separate dining room. large bedrooms, 1l‘a baths. mod- etn kitchen with natural birch cabinets, full basement, attached 2 car garage. And automatic heat. It's fully insulated & complete 2 car g@rage and automatic heat. a oot eos storms & screens. a Ot ft. frontage on a pared 7 Lake Frieses on oth lakes, $16,900. sh to mort- gage. Don't delay — see it today. WHITE BROS. OR 23-1295 5660 Dixie Hwy. Open Eves. ‘til 9 Sunday | 1 ul 5. aEDRoGN TERRACE. pide A MO. _Ramona Terrace. OR 3-07 | 2 BEDROOM MODERN. sits ‘DWN | |3 [owes jF REAL BUY 3 family. modern gas heat. paved a will rent. 5415 Elizabeth Lake | $lfeet. Only $9,250. Must be sold | y 3 EDRM. WALLED LK. MOD. QP, Ne DIN NN AN ” Close to city Reas. MA 4-2293. | 66 West Huron FE 4.2577 Heights. Automatic beat and hot water Garage. $85 per month. Ww. G. WHITCOMB, RLTR. UL 2-2930 J ROOMS AND BATH. IDEAL FOR 2965 couple, FE 2- } BEDRM BRICK RANCH FULL | basement. Studio ceiling. Soft wa- ter Oi] heat, fenced yard, storms & screens i's yrs. old. \% bik. from schools. Exc neighborhood Herrington Hills Subdivision Pon- tiac Rent or lease, by owner. RMS & BATH. GAS 3 HEAT. suitable for couple & child OR_3-2051 or OR 3-4773 after 4 3+ROOM DUPLEX APT. OFF CASS | Eliz. Ra., stove and frig. furn., | $50 a mo FE 42252. |3 RMS. NEAR CASS LAKE. $50 per mo. FE 5-5093. |3 BEDROOM HOUSE pydid! FIRE- place. $60 mo. OR 3-8966 | 3 ROOMS AND BATH ALL UTILI- | ties furnished, $13.50 week y. Call at 288 N. Perry. 4 ROOMS AND BATH AND UTIL- . furmace. ofl heat. $75. of Rochester road and d. Phone owner, LI 3-0688. '@ ROOMS & BATH. FULL BASE- __Ment with rec room, FE 2-7619. RMS & BATH NEAR ST, MI- chael’$ School, 15 F | $5 ROOM HOUSE ON LAKE Ga-| | rage. rent with option 2 buy | FE 25273 $ ROOMS, UTIL. AND ‘BATH. ‘MArket 4-3880 5 ROOM Ouse 90 S. Roselawn, FE 5-29’ 5 ae NEWLY DECORATED terrace, modern. FE 2-5700. 6 ROOMS AND BATH, NEWLY decorated ste ced E 2-0661. After 6 FE 5. |§ ROOM. FULL BASEMENT. Also 2 car garage. Located | on West Side. GILES REAL- TY CO 221 Baldwin Ave. FE 5-6175. 6 ROOMS AND BATH, CLOSE TO) _School FE 2-3946 after 4 | $59.50 —2-BEDRM. | Sssoment garage. $180 down or lease it while you buy. Builder. _FE 5-0885 ~ $99 — LAKEFRONT 3 Bedrooms 1' baths. ree. room, 2 car attached garage, exclusive _ Lake 2 Wood illage. EM 3-0242. | ALL RENTAL NEEDS 8/ SATISFIED. _ Homes and apartments furnished | or unfurnished All areas & price ranges RO RL cy | $143 Cass- Wileabeth Rd. FE 5-3030 _ BUNGALOW Near Tel-Huron. for working couple, gas . Mewly decorated liv. rm, | an dae kitchen, bedroom dress- rote oom and more. See oe Realtor. 1011 W Huron. FE. 5- COMPLETELY REMODELED AND =p 2 BEDROOM HOME IN AUBURN | COLORED G1. NO DOWN PAYMENT BEDROOMS FULL BASE- AND SHOPPING CENTERS. SEB THEM NO'V AT FE 8-0620 after | __4°30 weekdays Anytime weekends | ~~ | FE_8-2763 or Eves. | 284 SOUTH BLVD. W. i} Open Evenings ‘til 8 30 $50. | Phone FE 5-8875 or FE ¢-0823 3 Bedroom HOMES $100 DOWN Moves You In SO WHY PAY RENT? BUILT IN RANGES & OVENS LOADS ,OF MODERN FEATURES MODEL OPEN WEEED STG & SUNDAY, 1 TO ? XCEPT FRIDAY Bt Stanley at Kinney 2 bioeks aoa ie ee nco WE STOW N RE Al JULY ______siL:s«2-4679 SYLVAN LAKE Sam Warwick has new 3-bedroom brick, tri-level ranch nome. Fire- place built-ins. 2-car garage. 183 t seeded lot exclusive commu- nity sewer water. paved streets, lake privileges. $24,500, open Sun- day 1780 Sherwood F 4-3090, FE 2-2105 COMPARE THIS Custom built 1,200 sq. ft. 3 bed- room brick ranch home Full basement, 2 fireplaces, slate en- trance, 1'2 baths, ceramic tile with vanity. Plasered walls, oak floors, 22x24 plasered garage. All this for $17.000, on your- lot. P E N Custom Builder FE 41108 WEST SIDE RANCH HOME Custom built in "54 Hunting Accommodations 65A win RE | M Building Serna FE 2-7004 or REAL ESTATE SALES. | refrig. furnished Auto. heat and redecorated, . bedroo Sand, Gravel & Dirt ......66, pace Apoly AL eeuen 5 orem SS | best & Found a No biboee bees 2 ROOMS: BAT! “ci ¥ COT. | a Water also furnished, Adults| _ $85 Phone FE 50168 TUNER evening tee law bawie he MEon : -| only. Rea or immedia - cos —= : Wood, Coal & Fuel ........67 Pat Lee, FE 2-7922 FOUND: ON STREET . WED. . . ing washer & TV. Child welcome. pancy. Ge in touch itn” the FAMILY HOME dittue weece ne slace. with — Plants, Trees, Shrubs — ....68 Help Wanted Female 7 2. G. SNYDER, FLOOR LAYING. Clatted AdiDent Front, Olfice: Nicholie & Harger Co. 2 es ine ese ara | mer Me lor a Bh 10 Bak 8 LARG? ROOMS. 1'3 petite exrd Marapes, Large | Qa rere andin, finishing. Phone FE V , j er or call a BATH WEST H For Sale Pets ............69iprauticiaw wine wean on | sangine and & Pontiac Press. 33_W. HURON FE 58183) “ warm FE 8-2512 or MAple 5-3185. FE 8-6918 Se Se ee Pry tate aes Gi Hunting Dogs ......... OK a ee ee oe ROOF REPAIRS vicinity of Lk Oren Me a Ta C ASH +3 RMS & BATH UTIL FURN. OPEN DAILY &./ SUNDAY REALTOR. 345, OAKLAND eee te te ca! é ; : 2572 ove refrig. sonable. i : tips. 1 baths. Atta Dogs Trained, Boarded ...70 apaBie= WOMAN FOR GEN: | EAVESTROUGHING __FE 404 [OST FEMALE BOXER. TAN. VI-| qvartapim FOR LAND cone| ¥ Huron. og | URION LAKE Saou pare ee ee garage. Combination storms eral housework and child care, | TRENCHING EXCAVATING .FOR| cinity | Commerce Lk. Reward.| TRACTS AND HOME EQUITIES. | 2% ROOM MODERN APT. ON “panty style’ apt. Heat form By. | IDEAL WEST SIDE LOCATION. and screens. A back yard Live in. Sat. & Sun. off. Pvt. septic tanks, Field EM 3-2409. NO OBLIGATION. CALL lake to reepeee ae person. OR | erything private AGultae EM | Clean 6-room brick duplex. “Tile patio that is the envy of _toom and bath. $25 wk. MI7-0534.| _Ditches & boat well. OL 25408 LOST: SMALL BLACK FEMALE 3-5292, after 5 p.m -4285, ° . bath _and_ gas _heat. 8-3338. your neighbors. Landscaped FARM MERCHANDISE | CoMBINATION RELIEF COOK & Mexican Chihuahua and Dsshs- RMS. VERY NICE TV NORTH- | VACANT JANUARY 18T LOVELY ten Gen ee ee (ay ep DS waitress must be good baker, 5 Busiress Services 13 Dund ne wee ape Wey nson _end, $20 per wk FE 2-4376 rooms with refrigerator and — & screens. $65 mo. 8-6819. | Hay, Grain & Feed mi) oe reeks bem teisIONs cons) eR | GE Lebaten School Ce eee | nwATTOS FE 42533, 2 RMS. PVT BATH & ENTRANCE | sure, Full barenoncten heat, on, MODERN 5 ROOM Bouse IN| NOTHING DOWN : 90506 valescent home. Write full par- | Reward. FE 2.57 4-253 linens & utilities. Good residential James K. Boulevard. Call FE’ New Hudson. 5 minute drive to 2 Bedrooms, tile bath hard- For Sale Livestock .....,..72| ticulars to Pontiac Press Box 100. ALL MAKES OF FOUNTAIN PENS | _ Reward FE 2-577 | _____1704 8. Telegraph Rd. neighborhood, Adults, no drinkers. 4-3008 or Broker, FE 4-2533. Lincoin plant. Ph Fieldbrook (FI) wood floors. Just decorated. Ww . _ Please give Telephone number., repaired by factory trained man LOST — 4 ft eat on street. Re- CASH FOR LoND CONTRACTS.| FE 25236 or FE 5-7805. WEST SIDE. WEBSTER AND —°2593 Gas heat. full basement anted Livestock .........7. /COOK FOR “SHORT ORDER AND | a oer cirice Geos erer & ward. FE 4-6324 J. J. VanWelt 4540 Dixie Hwy.|3 ROOMS AND BATH, CLEAN Washington Jr High area - 5 NEW LARGE 2 BEDROOM About $275 closing costs and For Sale Poultry .........74, general cooking Position open | = ce Bt pao oe 3-0135 LOST BLACK COCKER SPAN- OR _3-1355 ; and roomy, priv. auto. heat to rooms. gas heat, $99 mo | house carpeted, storms and $ per cent interest. The Sale F. Prod 7 after Jan. 1 at Scrib’s. 130 8 ence one S fel. male 2 yrs. old. Vicintty of | _your liking, ‘couple | only, FE 5-4032 | 2 bedrooms. upper apt Wisner and screens. Built in oven and range. easy payments include taxes Sele vane Eq uce eae _ Telegraph Rd. ; | 5 Come ieD mate bs Ma fan . Cow License No. | CASH! 3 ROOMS. FULL BATH MAIN, _Lincoln Jr High area. $55 mo.' Option to buy. FE 8-6580. ee madi euice and are less e Farm Equipment ....76) EXPERIENCED COOK FOR a ene, wadows | Reasonavie: : 4-1131 | : floor Pvt. entrance. 319 Prospect. | ct before 5. FE 42521, or after: OTTAWA HILLS — 735 MENOM- en ren Auction Sales . 77| morning. Must be good breakfast _PE_2-1631. | LOST — TUESDAY. FEMALE, _FE_ 2.1643. FE 85-1172 | inee, 3 bedroom, 1'2 baths, fire peppy par ote eeneceeess cook and willing to work Sunday. | ELECTRIC MOTOR SERVICE RE-| white Angora kitten, reward. FE Wor land contracts, and equities, 3~RooMs & BATH. CHILD WEL. WATERFORD VILLAGE | place carpeting warm dry base- | B bs _ Apply 577 Auburn Ave. | cee ore oe 218 E. 8-6585 or FE 8-8995 ve a6 aerate Reesoreue come, 297 Voorheis 3-ROOM NEWLY REDECORATED/: ment, sun room, gas heat, ga- ae pin. Tile Rest, : FOOD cou i . scount, mo oO ation. Le i F = ; a eee One eK We wii aS CL eae ED AND : F experienced” man’ consult’ with | 3 & 4 ROOMS, WITH BATH, UTIL- roma es ae on. | ee aie Nee onthe ig ee iince he AUTOMOTIVE train only 5. For one of the high- iced. C. L. Nel sizes, Hobbies & Supplies 24A | you. call Fx 43844 or FE 5-9975,| ities. Pvt. ‘ent. west side, in WV | oak a has bought @ larger home. est paying ‘fobs in the country. | Rouge PLANS DRAWN WITH | TT ~~ ang nour. Ask for Ted Mc: / _quire 95 Dwight. WHITE BROS. rons sf8. ino av two-story (3 | TE YOUE credit te good, you /oM 8 ough OR coed y s house with For Sale Housetrailers ...78) !s"suik fos" Walt Hl | wametheauone oatieu vena” | PAIN BY NUBER picrunes, Manno weary |) ROOMS, MOUEREL WPT Batt See gt GuTPE Tae) hace a aan tt er as | 10 Monda: sk f HOTPOINT APPLIANCE REPAI 8 enstose 8143 Cass-Elizabeth Rd, Dies: en ee, "tl 9: Pilg To “til 5 month acd taxes and Rent Trailer Space coeesT9|_ Gartien’ y. Ask for G 2h poe ar agar ve eos PAIR, Book Store, 15 E. Lawrence St. IMMEDIATE FE 2-2974. WOLVERINE (APTS UNION LAKE — LARGE 3 BED- insurance : poet IA BI raat il PAINT BY NUMBER $100 0X1 ry 3 ROOMS AND BATH APT. EM roo’ A Auto Accessories .........80/OIRL WHO NEEDS HOME TIGHT | PLASTERING. NEW OR REPAIR. tas eA tee Gee : 3.3474 Downtown shopping and transporte-| pay" 3.qzqg0 O8® 0 Village For a segeePing and child cere. FE| _Work guaranteed. FE 5-0 bacher Art Supplies Sherwin Wil- ACTION OOMA & BATH NR eviza.| (100 vihin 2 Uiccks. Acie only = Sale Tires ...........80A) _2-1903. i 1 on 3 ROOMS & R, ELIZA-/ one block away. Children wel- For Rent Rooms 37 Auto Service 8] HOUSEKEEPER FOR BACHELOR. ean FILED oms,_Ti W._Huroo. ws meoge land contract. New| beth Lake everything furnished, come, Nice and warm. Nicely |W... eae eeedegeenee Room and Board with some pay. Manley Leach __10 Bagley St. L isactory” inspection of glee hers _ $16 wk. FE 8-0978. decorated © end) well i maintained | Sale-Motor Scooters ......82 \ WE SERVICE ALL MAKES OF : broperty 3 ROOMS, PRIVATE BATH & EN-| Rentals of $49 for 3 rooms and) AT. BUS STOP IN NICE HOME, & HARGER CO. - r 78 otices ersonais cs and, tithe Asa Ken Templeton. | For Sate Motorcyc! §3| MIDDLEAGE | wringer and a washers.; IK _ trance, gas heated. 87 8. Parke; bath Larger — higher. K. G | _comfortable room. FE 5-7332__ 33. W. HURON FE 5-8183 rcycles ...... 1D! LEAG D ou HOUSEKEEPER 30 years in Pont | ATTENTION ALL WIDOWED AND! ot [.. Templeton, Realtor st * Hempstead. 102 E Huron St. FE BUS STOP, COOKING LAUNDRY. | ; For Sale Bicycles suswees 184] _& wager? rE 18221 ood an nov bPEUANCE, SERVICE 5408 single Wien and women over 30 | 2330 Orchard Lake Rd. FE 4-4563| TE We nee A private. Seba 4-8284 a (CLEAN “Pvt. ent. 499 W. Huron. j SPECI, AT ; . i a pee) aaal me js : to $85 mo.. all private Seni CLEAN ROOM FOR A MAN. PVT. For Sale Airplanes... 86 py OPNNE January Stn Our pass UP eaten grta tee ay ra and Able yhas-rvr_sar 4 ext west Rent Houses Furnished 35 RES _HafiseOephonss fot #12800 can, seeees OO) Por w Na r i ‘- : side FE 8-6523 rn enrnns ~~ = _——— Transportation Offered ...87 sty & ss cates Ona formation) MY contract, Call Realtor Partridge, T ROOMS PRIVATE, CHILDREN 1 PEDRM HOME. cozy CLEAN, BY OWNERS 1 GRM & 1 SRM. wee | car Mecessary Write stating aun = RP A COMPLETE COLD WAVE $5 50 ae eed ne | okay. OR 3-890 : __util Furn. _FE 2-495 "Rooms With Board -38 anche wi Sacrifice, trade of Wanted Used Cars .....,..88 ifications & ohone number. MONEY! Sell unneeded Dorothy's. 600 N Perr FE | orn eet NEWLY DECO. |) .SEDAM | FURN, 2 BEDRM.| ~~ Join, FE 2183 | Wi ‘Used Trucks . —Fontiec Press Box 12 _2-1244 . | PLACE: A “LOST” ‘AD. |” rated Heated. outside’ entrance.” a ee ci ren (Bue EXTRA CLEAN. HOMESTYLE bh leas CARE F : y 4 or 7321 meals . 14 Matthews. ae re Used Pars ..<.5:: 89a) ae Ba EET!) belongings for cash. aenounEDs |Call FE 2-8181 for an ad, _ Ties oe ee (2 BEDROOMS, MODERN. com, | ©0377. | S! AVE ENE RGY. USE For Sale Used Trucks 00 90) week, $45 Write Pontiac Pre eh h Classi; F Ad f] Pied KNAPP SHOES to recover a loss. Dial FE 3 Rooms PVT. BATH. 107) N.| _n08 6 ND aoe poe qmontnly. EM MEN. oop poor Geen mop- WANT ADS! To find a = rou assitie s ted Herman OR_3-1592 _ Saginaw 3 or | ern home 2- Auto Insurance cece A) RELIABTE WOMAN " FOR g _ ANY GIRL OR WOMAN neepING 2-8181 for an ad-writer.|3-ig_NewLy pec. Rooms. | ? BEDRM SaLcEs LAKE MOD.| OLD AGE PENSIONERS. Hous | job, place to live or a : _& Sports Cars el call Te plant, Famous Cieaners. FE 2. 8181. : friendly advisor phone E|Sa “charge it.” modern, first floor dupjex, pvt. Close to city. Reas. MA 4-2203. .| privileges. Downtown, FE 3-0 good used car, see Classi- For § ‘Used Cars . oueees 91, Mple 1-l1l1 or KEowoed | 2-8734. Confidential, The Buiatin | y ent . drive & . oe ‘Child wel- | 2 ROOMS. GAg HEAT. $30 MONTH. | RM. & BOARD FOR MEN. vr, | Ro NOW. ; Army. come. F 18 Downing Ct. home. FE 2-5842. 53 N, Johnson. !! WV : %. ¢ ‘ t = ' i # a5 \ ‘ i» ’ i L i = y- , - > PB < “ ; < 3 : 5 . os ‘ 2 . ‘ \ A : “ = e = aa nde ch. Ses 5 lon ices socal, et aa i a a rae re #4 eo we * aes Se : ee z = = 2 5 7 A % i ae r Se Soh a Re econ 4 Tee fig eK ee i Pies te ey be. 3 ce ow #50 TP peers 28 go age ete ict Be BES am kt ok wee tt Ook gt eh ee Se em os «tie Oil eh cect eet eieeneernii meets teenies alin oe in, 4 4 4 : r | ater * » a al ; Pea «8 , 5 R 27, 1958 _THE PONTIAC PRESS. _ SATURDAY. Dpexune 5 + aporrses % om ' For Sale Acreage : Fer Sele Houses | 43; For Sale Houses 43 ) 3 a 43) SLICES. OF HA ee SMALL ACREAGE . by oe MULTIPLE LISTING xavice 4 te 2c _~*, fy ‘ : ' : — and area. | O'N ae — comet eT a CHILDREN LOVE THRE For Sale Farms fin ¢ needed on the two 235 a cure large Tt larg tn with aren ae 90 acres _ SUNDAY. 2 TO 6 Lfeplacs a oveclogting the Gren Tup. 180 acres Ranch Homes ~ 4 lake. Pull ~~ Groveland. AN ditferest Measles — "each have pe ee Seeehent pote P. W. DINN/ over 1.409 sq. feet ph ving, area. Good sand-and grovel besth | og wert “smvan tReet 3 and ¢ head ite terms, PRIVATE B Only * FARM WANTED of Roches- US show you tae ne ally zoned. levely’ 3 bedroom = 12@ acres, good buildings, ormferta “rare” dining rm. Wi Hudaie, Betrau 3. Tulsa . ' Knotty pine _— “eee lots af cabinets. Full base- . 49) ment with nice recreation Sale Business Property sLeam. space = Basin 5 age LAKE 5 large vores Siete $14,000 with COLORED — APTS. FOR ae eo Sous GIDDY UP, PONY | iis ane 56 Sunda °) , lose NAL LAKE FRONT HOME - ‘on gaol bcd LiNcoLN 7 ROFESSIO. “near! WM. H. KNUDS. 1 ace eg isaee ent a hence y SERVICE ~ car garage. on : — ° s Cee size kitchen, 2 master PE cane: Evening Be. Teem pol copes “ry with oi kitchen and re, Fine brick eore im. the a ‘ ; “ way an treba eres sanas, rao pen aes | GekTmares cy | eee of and “screened None ta) sand| kitehen, bardweos ows, caly 90,00. pga mel y a baer cline, aioe 100x280 corner let. a Winding UsED lot with : ) te diate possession. eak floors. cers: quarters. Pull price GasH FOR USED TVS TAPE Owner moving out of staie.| duste | Rs rit . ra Priced at only Plenty ef area. = &. aie eae ——— One, and bait siery, full rasement.| JOHNSON, Realtor CORNER CU a $9.060. See it today. aniy $24,500. ere FE 2 2 lots, Only A. + ae Solid built DGE | . new - Sharpes. ae Easy ‘lerms. Immediate, pete | is Telegraph Rd. ay gh Nine tule was. Mert cy =| REALTOR PARTRIDGE “Now shales 490 & Ww. sion, 2 car ¢ e. Spa- Full bath wi FE 43381 Barmes - Hargra Kinzler viene By ae ote EE Ae parvo | eke amides (TE shone ay me) BE sowsare™ o2 ~ it : y a one w : 1 — Mich. MU 42045 FOR SALE os Oak ; ~ HOUSE. : ehoiee of a dream $1,5 a ; ee ee . LATE MOD equity tor REALTOR ume | "OLE Zucsa <7 Mot wed clean| corte? Base. esuvianioes = YOU'LL BE firs, Fay i “acuied | Business Ope = down payment on house. O8 ore W. Buon 8. Pe VE 633) we eed Taueees furnace} ily house or a un hessepeal. for the new year ln room drapes are Lang less LOOKING FOR A BUSI- Fae N_EVE. in pasement, 2. car -gerege.| peat Pui bet Gai heat! . heme Tecus Uland nl peg pel es ARE YOU LOOK? SELL OR TRADE DODGE TAN. Pace tit Kumeadioe tosten | uv sewer end water, Gas heat. “RELAX! you are all wound up! ean pectens ¢) oem lene than $1,00@ dewn. Month ness? Get the tree” — A.C. K. model bull NT eden 1th | Sion, Omy $880 down. OR theice i Milford Manor Sub. at | Prenty of room for the large a) aoe) Pertrige & Asocimies, 1050 W.| dem dump A.C, @ Sedreem bungslow w a nothing down for Gls or very low) ___ mily. Priced for the lew TH END — $300 down ere atlas PE 4388). , ; poly "forms ouses 43 budget. “Only $6,200 NOR a oom Huron : = BAY SERVICE tende tor weed, MY S1411. base mt vith cas pet ane "| Model located at cia'nd im bawerc.| For Sale Houses 43, For Sale Houses 43 Seren “Wacast for im: Inte ibis "cule and “ferely | POtation st Jesiva & Montcalm. Wii” SWAP CORN FOR 04 semen! Comm. a a cae $35 per mo. - ‘bedroom home. ie é Lew imvestment, Good 4301 secoeeeee = room, eee | F H A. : Corner R Ity ——~— . mediate possession. yard has plenty Pontiac. Heat & water furs.) or pigs. MAple $480 00 at ad oats 1. .R. Wilson Rea landscaped shr and neighborbeed. to own your * SBShs eee" on Fata terme saniemsats your warehaze of Wis | ycinal @isis oe Wat 5856 1 V A | F S 20,ACRES is completely fepeea. neve | Avfealoppertumity levewn, You For Sale Clothing 56 . Something : paved 4 pm, bedreom winter price is @ 2-3433 after 4 p “5 “Lewy | EE Sie & Sete ee | eens cea | Sete OTe s Ging ee te wall carpeting. PA- lesseut If to see A OF PONTIAC — — 7 esa rich ments. bg d aa al tleacerate ants from de, Mar EE rm. and 2 bedrooms. Oil oe ee a a ead heol district. e eider road Pontiac, pay BUSINESS en 7 days, T @.m. PE e, Priced wonderfully this patel ac large nko z . . Ab heat. Lace be botentio’ down for. Yes vou will enjey the s: TH EAST SUBURBAN. Established in 1916 home im - earpet 4 home. Only $700 ; Vv oO NEIL, Realtor . S cial a 4 ve. polbaatacr| required clous rooms that are decorated Bedroom ‘home, Den could ee 5 saree ee ee oe anemia a $ Telegraph R¢ Open 0-0 Butcher's 5 Owner | 570 3 Gown. - paym Coay toa 1% baths. Im- THE UNUSUAL — in 3 rooms, : 22 3. T : 23-6836 Grand River . : RED te wail carpeting, S¢ a ee popes Poxssssion ” $1000 down.| modern ragch home eee al Roem ap basement, gas . . S Realtor PE_32103 = A price to move = Call PE 5-eoe?, yom Tooke ant beth far ows- Something tor large. two cor} ™ t.| attractive kitchen Pull bamt., ofl| eat. $12,800 terms, Edw. M. Stout. Re 45 LAKEPRONT Hot water; If you are qualified ae er; 3 reoms and bath up house — Ping tag! it is sfruc- ORnIO” TWP. Low down paymen a amid oak and COME — Zoned commercial. | 9, stns St Ph. os 5-81 2 Bedroom pnmeees ya | rere eset. NEW BRIDAL VEIL, : renting fer $8 per month. tocaite’ sound Make your sppeint | ell price $5100. niece es. for your sub | INC maa. dai family heme tl 6 pm heat. Attac se onky shoe Pav- Automatic Laundry PE 34 barchaosd ea Ot — sealing ment now!" 81790 down 3B. R. home| roan home. #12500" with 63360 = cE a crabie terms. Phone +08. pertect man and [al cease Tae price purchased en’ GI — not ON MICHIGAN 3 BR. dp. Sih 2 spariments, 256 belts ond us On YOUR HOME EEEDe | 00 SBOP location and price ¢ | Sale Household Geeds 57 “? OVER THIS—Beau- terms, Commer- = . Shou! IVAN W. |LAKE oe INCOME. North Side, 3,,ADt8.| DON'T OVERLOOK frept brick. | tial tot adjemaing Tal2e, $5500. FOR OTR ME ASE to tnworkable. per week. Down | DINING ROOM TABLE WIT | S( YI {I .AM OAKLAND . _ sree. ill duplicate. pane imidows, hres OMoets. hi Gece ce als Meee gael con. Y OWNER, 3 BEDROOM WITH ( lark kston eer vESS rads i snipe gets : CHIC: Ww e B 5 ; = “s s FE 5-9471| Toast MARSIDUALLOWS at vou toes, Low PHA. Term Cootey eieeee Tt, See | cua, “tregee, 3 *pasement. out| basement & scnoats | REAL ESTATE, INC. “ALES. CORPORATION toan's topcoat, size 40, PE $516. REALTOR oa eS SS S. Will dupli-| rate r- under-| used. com - $15,508, terms} Waterfard Twp. $1,000 to Gl mort. 2 = SALES —_ and leek out over 1311 MT. CLEMENS. Garegs) Pixie eeunetet Toa ||) tarncces bat eaeiee eae. ‘ Main. Clarkston. Mich. NDMESSER. B OS JOSLYE, COR MANSFIELD room, reom and three bed- $16,806. Terms. round sprinkling system. Truly - gage. OR 2 8. PROM BANK} JOHN A, Las OPEN EVENINGS & SU A dining an ideal family cate. iscriminating folks NP — Excellent MULTIPLE LISTING SERVES, | Tous make this an i ener EW YORK. will dupli- fog gome, fe beadie. Sacalient lake griviaeaa! ts aery 3-Bedrm. Bungalow Mto'@~Sundey 12 to 8, pane ae ee on DOOR DRIVE — NEAR SCHOOL.| home. 112 ¥, : R. $8500. Low F.H.A. Cine Coa im 1950, 2 fire- ‘ take Qpen Daily 9 re ' ; . R. s 4 i ween Ve ; __ OWery pee eg ae Now! sin9" Priced Hsht! banat En cheat Tce levetp: eeaer See ray et Es weit Hantoon a Income Property 43A | MODERN | F os re pear es down pay- ' kay : exeellent condi- r. breezeway and aed shade. Car- At Lakewood heat, large lot, Smal! HAYDEN, —— brick heme in 6 bed-| restion room. Lot a5xi72.| let. Nice lawn eo ~ rent, or lease. per ent. Owner, MY 3-372. ‘ eG tion, 27 ff. Hving rm. porch. 2 car garage. peted liv reom. ith PE 4-13 or FE = Cl l l I I } r1es ~ Walton ; a beet] rms. competely carpeted. ses $20,200, . tems. agp ~~ A-l besoment ¥ FOR COLORED STANDARD RDARD Oil, COMPANY 8-0455. ¥ 4 83 N. Tele 9236" Eves. Nap pat a a —_ . =y geavsloseeat, bomee. ple badly WATERFORD — > Corner Pool ct room. ‘Ou furnace, Dt 3 Roa & neal. ve See es yo z rate investaent, Ortegeibie, Beh outfit. Double Saal yap. s . Bi . Sytvan hos; a Andersonville rage, fenced rf MUL LISTING SERVICE lage Builder PE 446%} or Elgin| (0° SE ee ey re Pag] prea Soggy phooy down will handle. Ameng other Daeratys ro i me go Iey ity, RA eta4s: after aS _ Ai tor 60 Pay colgied westy, TLR Lering see i 500, 5 at homes. —— ME SEL : SHELL HOME, | 61535. Lot 167x197. -Alse small k ES = wsee-| ‘Lake ave. ee en eeazcuns tenga |® ful basement. ‘sacrifice. Of Floyd Kent Inc. Realtor | rear. $22,508 terms. Giroux-Fr anks For Sale Lake Prop. 44 a - 7 PIRCE “LIVING ROOM SUrrE, bling | * are es . i, 1°. ne davenpert with full besement. Alem, at en. | —3-0445- 200 Disie wey tee | 2% ACRES — Near pup ‘Tratl GENERAL REAL ESTATE _— INION LAKE cluded. Name your pric brand tables, matching oe nation” Pegmaniq, tae — = ER PARKING | Sea Maggeriy Rend cellent | 4085 Dixie Hwy. OR 34701 AT UNION LAKE — ANY tp ay ee tien.” Pay SOCIATE LE CUSTC home lim excellent . GIL COMP, cellent — per cent int. About —— ASS . _AMPLE 250 cam lia a luminum siding. PERSONALIZED HOMES Cozy 3-bedroom home with —_— Lee pared for lease, fi- Rule = k Py Orchard — Oo e¢d | BROKERS pie Mpdtng co. : $6 dining room, dining room, Eltchen. — and train’ : ee ee ee SS | The Bargams Living room. fireplace. . h. Of cireu- tal Lake Ave. s Ihe Barga wood floors. bedrooms first = tiled bath, sun area. Cal DOWN — La tue beacon a fiet Brick Hla MORROW — su-| * Toms am te etca’ and” painted, walls floor, 1 large. bedroom ao. ea! TO SETTLE 1 ESTATE et ene ee Setmae ee | Cee, says, et Imiay City, | 5779 Oxi2 Felt t Base ¢ Rugs $3.95 bungalow with 4 eBen- »edroom MODERN A8 TO eee. = ou f “| met, oil heat. — : Mae. 4 room house. = alled Lake RA €425 after 7. LTEST sliceal "bay “immedaie pone) FULL BASEMENT, — Oas Sind Be, Boca ees | Ga aia deen, as meee] a Will gacriice for ‘eaah. ‘Broker. cide tees, fo caty S| ceDARD lL COMPANY — “ALCOHOL. HI-TES somone! heat erials. tile ICKL Ee | PE 50885. ee Twoe-stal, ~ 8392 i ‘t afford to miss. rooms 3 large Brepine CUC “s I ee eee 7 Call MI 6-83 DOWN — Large 6 rm. modera| onc HARD LAKE AVE, | beth. enjoy the way fireplace 236 JN. Saginaw Roy Annett, nC; BEDROOM HOUSE CHEAP EMBREE & G GREGG Saye or Imiey City RA 043s g900 paved St. 1% baths 449 OR from the room. The beau- en HOUSE IN AU. 1929 565 LAGE after +. Fireplace. “Ouly $1000" | Oe HOME! WILL SELL| separate dining room. 1 end ples | "RM. MODEAW HOUSE DW Av. 20. Heres 'Praeral eu8| oiseia Listed sanvice | eng UMION LAKE VitLaa 32014 | SHOPPING CENTER ome SELL OR enw ie ont 1 acre, ae: MY 23781. pee oy modern = —— ail “kinds © kinds # ‘Bemes im Pontiac. Open Evenings & Sunday , ; ic Leak cad Lake Priv. urban, aren. (Owner retiring , a Fe eee mene OM AC 130 see this now, 1 ts an un-| Easy terms. DINNAN ERES Sctnaa:| sale terms. Phone OR ? tool in basement. 150. see this now, i fs an P. W. 13 to acre. Clarkston eble terms. Phone sire “Garage. ae letras a i I usually fine home 66 West Huron £2571 | Ay THE EXD OF TEE ROAD a churches, Prong A e~ price.| _ Taylor, Realtor ' Feusetraiier. land contract, Te NORTH SIDE ON Pungree st. ar d W Ross foros oped owtine ee eed PROOF $38 down: Cre on eT. = FOR LEASE sea model car or smaller home i Ses fece bees. b dares goareones W ° peng! ation room. that you can Hive in an on | re Phowe_t TION De | Modern 2 bay Service Apo trade Ask for one floor home 3 are tan base. reughout. Recre: take. A iborheod in Pon- = NT HOMES R rent, OR 3-429: i] $-2618 te dining room s N West end Elizabeth cellent neig' A KEFRO a ee eal 10-4 | 1 's Desi meat clean a bens be vis Ts it soe ies 24s Only LS Owner Gi tare “| Sana oasecvon trek . te en eal eee eee = OPEN SUN |Your Tleart’s Desire = soe ore sas NVEN . er hems gaee DOWN and frame home with full 1% © ne eo ae! ones floor. Excel , | s he i ' 7 te Box ROWN, Realtor] In this exciting 3 bedroo paneled | Ony A900 —‘e : Metis LE RD. Buys this ‘cheertal @ rooms and Sao Pee eS Der tare aaa Conk fan wasemsenk, parking. Lif interested ve I. H. B ‘ & Ph PE 2-4810 a cuwitier foots with dream bar, William Miller 7 sa OR_ 3-802! bate, 23 hs +5303 hain cea seresns. $400 down | rs miles Sonik) POSSESSION eT eee ee cay eee Sewn home. Si | UTICA AREA TAVERN or must . | west : D NEW ee et a) tan | |) tek sivenk i peu-reund reste living qgareare. Ounar tenet ve ‘5 161 H SIDE = General tal aw Cen- uated on @ level lot with 67 ft. rifice ie Only RO MONET DOWN, a mi|“BUD” Nicholic, Realtor Nothing owe “GMbedreom b nv. gee, beat. RANCH HOMES. tral Bigh ae || Es lake frontage, Besutitu with $2,600 do Mors Mt. Clemens St. Will build starter “Ss Per MONTH. NEAR NEW Se ee | weeps song agen’ yl Py ANY TYPE lock f home located on, 49 : Dos ans of r plans. neue ala hool en a corner lot. We rill. 6 large rooms, t. Cons Mi the north side | Call Mrs. lot. Our rough ac Northern High 8c for immediate occu-| & automatic oil hea Ess “inres Sr ean ond ee and; FE 5-1201 or EM 3-4290 cer cam Den WE WILL BUILD eee ee FHA T ‘ mee Pull price $7,750. This sis a, 8.00 Mem, priced st we hove ‘what you want in. Jour three rooms and a | Donald. OR 3-2837. that home you lot or on| sy erm c = Les ice Beat: ‘Culy |i. pee: : NCH HOME ; dreaming of on your lots. CE ‘OOLEY LAKEFRONT “USTOMERS - OUR | NEW RA a desirable TOTAL PRI COOL. SATISFIED C i 4 : 4 ROOMS,/ one of our FOR- home at EE? cee aoe | REAETLSPY [ou omen pe. « noows| Sad, Sale 250 , erence pee, al ge E TADeOtT. Ay Lexely alee Ome and a bet Buser of Nationa] Homes floors, plastered walls ae — MA : $8 lay H ELLO"” . ay agcitctndy the next 30 days. The ST ATEW — = a MI ¢ baths and all storms and rE 2013 rere gies Can FR 44563. ' ee eee ee a Service of Pontiac Birm screens Only _§14.950. Call for, . CS > t = iretag. fa tay, Sanity prod hag desea bom iy ale BD CHARLES. REALTOR i ANCES AT A appointment |CURISTMAS Sear TY) mens FE *2:9122 9122. | ew, 3-bedrosm erage! ee ceramic ‘tile bathe, oak Heors ‘111 8. Telegraph PE 4-0521 | © prices. eee, See i Cc . | into a new with attached ga: ceram Full b it ullt-in ovens burners. A ¥ e005 te east one nate ee ‘ ' ace. Thermopane/ y piastered walls. eee teas s. Samuel Ap- John kK. ion “ cea ea arse — Dorris & Son Wideman 3 gzwo. BEDRM. ames | Sone ceaees and a with 2 nother "fireplace © Sale Land Contracts 52 plianees. Maple Saou, - since 1935 =e See dn. ‘payments. OR 31555. sive. wu Gcebente won walk-out basement doors to lake ~~ D ~g'~4 313 wes pee Be as 4 ROOMS — #300, DOWN COUNTRY LIVING RE AL ESTATE peti bes : = acaan " Priced at eel. eee LAND CONTR acta 70 we on tors, Pe oe ar — "EVE FE 5-4 2 ter. 1 bik. to Oakland bus: WINTER & SUMMER SPORTS | FE LE FURMIs MODERN only ean terms, LET 509 Eillzabeth Lake Rd. or EM 3-4086 e. Sayenes OF et ° rel ores. $3.300. a = ar Be oe to see Sis 978 Los FOR ALE FP _ with garage. = SHOW you: — PE 41157 FE 4-4821 SACRIFICE MY EQUITY jorry pel Schick's. 3-3711, | nh stead at pi 44068. OA 6.2018. me with full basement, Gail" Pe 892 after @ pm. ND CONTRACTS For Sale Lots 46 room_modern, city, Gtins e with glass door, € er oS 14nld bregeeway and, 26224 YEAR. SALE | paved vaventences Open for in- [aCe Bangelom for TRADE cue eae ‘Hu FURNACES WHOLESALE, GAS & MApie 5-6011. — FREE eS TOILETS. $18.95 oe ROW MATTRESS esbbowis with ath ‘nie cin COTTON TTRESS 510.95 wis W gs... Basser MAT “org sig bath sets w ith trim... $89.95 Breakfast aa eee eewe sees omasie ees. colored path sot with a Electric : : 5 ene en Seen es oases : : inge! hit $10 Fac Qnds —- Irre Ou sewing ene $10, | SAVE PLUMBING SoPrcy Rollaway bed with tnnerspring im FE 5.2100 Gance Doors STEEL OVERHEAD Pactory seconds and all standard sizes, and oe ood and steel foldaway closet dra. |Disappearing stairways. ‘Steel outside window shutters. Electric garage door operators. Garage front remodeling. | Stop in iy eall pole bed ear Open “til DOOR BERR DOOR "SALES and vacuum sweepers, $16.95 up.|371 8. Paddock - yie. Electric. cor-| HOT W: WATER | HEATERS, GAS, AP: AP- ner ot N. J a ard. i hig hard Lake Ave. INVENTORY CLEARANCE D chain saws, 25 | eent off. Used chain saw, in | i good condition, $75. MY 3-5821. “7 up payments of $8.56 for 8 months or will discount for cash. FE 44507. JELLED MAGIC Capitol hanes. This paint needs no stirri will ; not drip, sag or co Rubber or oil base. Hundreds of colots to END OF THE YEAR choose from, e OAKLAND FUEL & PAINT _ SPECIALS! — | 48 Orchard Lk. Ave. FE 5-6150 . KIDDIES R FLOOR MODELS chairs, . trains—wood, $1.50 DAMAGED MODELS Dog houses $11 to $20, ins’ 3 DEMONSTRATION MODELS PE 46546. 770 E. Walton Blvd. — YOUR CHOICE — Meee e a Sot! pipe, $3.35 per is RANGES — REFRIGERATORS ee WASHERS — — Romex 1 Tee ft. FC TV's — HI-FT "S ALL MARKED DOWN Sale dada oles 2 JUST IN TIME FOR NEW YEARS Uprient Bi piane. ‘reduced from 38 ol apt. .» reduced from Ta Tae Ea oo =. like new Used 2 Used blond ar ewes organ Gallagher Music’ ¢ Co. 18 E. Huroa PE ¢-0566 MAGNAVOX CONSOLE COMBINA- tlom ste: FM radic. Lasers fal oad Gage fice. FE USED LOWREY ELECTRIC -ORGAN —— condition. Save plenty Cena ee hear the tone the new 1969 sone! Conn Minuetis Electric organ: MORRIS MUSIC MoS. Telegraph FE 23-0667 Across from Tel-Huron ¢ PIANO TUNING — OSCAR SCHMIDT FE 22-5217 WIEGAND _. MUSIC CENTER MINCHELL Electronic Organ $680 Double full a — — als beautifu MIRACLE MILE BA! BAZAAR AREA Piano WIEGAND MUSIC CENTER Sale Office ce Equipment 63 63 oax R DESES, $10 for 8, Misc. = showcase, $125 value Snes ss tybewttier Sales & ae wood shelving & 13% Ww, next y Store. PE 2-2201 Sale Store Equipment 64 terrific values in town, i: c The a selection of ubs, GOOD HOUSEKEEPING sHOP stall showers. kitchen sinks. Mich- Of Pontiac igan 33 Lk 51 W. HURON FE 41555 Ave. LE WITH ZIG- GALVANIZED PIPE Zag $19.50. Late mod- ‘4-in. 21-ft. lengths .......... el vacuum aa %-in: 21-ft. ee sae Aarne Iie ft. attachments, $14.05. ‘s SAVE PL G SUPPLY OR 39702. 17] 8. Saginaw FE 5-2100 STRA’ 2 . ‘ $139.95 from Hudson, $38.9. FE Plywood Specials 5-475. | Pong tops ........ pepe TRADE-IN DEPT. Ping Pong top legs sons! 38 Easy Capper washber..... F Na Isai cine ae esos ‘ Apt. size fas elove ese: 9 nV M y $4.65 Table top 330 : ryog ie -g Ss $19. 4 pe. an | id ee . Gas space heater . ._ $58. 4. 2 at eatin BSI POLE Downe Lioits. sia VAL _ Television & Radios 57B) 1™ RCA posta. } YR. OLD, | ob gag SL —— for cash. #16) Com- merce ggvteness if’ TABLE MODEL, $25. 5-2257 SAVE PL 172. South Saginaw St, ANCHOR FENCES Sha teins rt GAL. G. sone Tonge ery ‘LASS- heater, heater, Pua SURPLUS LUMBER & MATERIAL ALES 6340 Hi Rd. oauan OR 3-008 Sowtine: BALL—$10 GAS STOVE—$15 __ WOMEN'S te ICE SKATES, 4 EMERSON Burmeisters CASH WAY LUMBER PRICES Aluminum Window $ - Burmeister’ Ss | NORTHERN LUMBER Le 3346 AvBURN RD, 3, — Fluoresc SPECIALS Mule Hide won ech Pee w pine ipping Ix} w me stripping 3c lin, = 2u4x7 KL W Fir ......... 56c Clear w gue 6c lin. ft. pioneod Ww orl < shoe od Tin. ft. ir c 15 Ibs. felt 432 ft = pioaranciarea MA wonsuce nes BARGAINS . SUBJECT TO PRIOR SALE Haggerty ‘LLUMBER CO. 17 Haggerty Hwy. Walled Lake Between W. — and Pontiac Peene Market 4-104 ‘ SPARTA WATER SOFTENER. Excellent condition. Large capac- pie two years old. Call Midwest SPECIALS Gas water heater 30 gal. Elec. water heater 52 gal, New Morrison space pooeere 7800 BTU $ Panalyte sq. ft. ........... ~~. — ry “Oak Seereeg, ¢’ 3.70 me ER INE LUMBER 320 8. Paddock FE_ 2.9784 SUMP PUMPS REPAIRED, ELEC. motors repaired. FE 38-6642, GLASS SHOW CASE, 6 FT LONG. Like new. FE 86-1431. Sale Sporting Goods 65 . $2.88 DOUBLE BARREL. 12 GAUGE shotgun, like new, FE 5-034}. GUNS-—GUNS. SOME REAL GOOD sa ‘ono, 18" «cut, only $99.50. Homelite saws now start at $169.50. cone out and try rifie qalues, aa cuff Dry jports Center. 393 Orchard Lake Ave ‘4 ‘sso ‘Golly Re” ony. MEIrose QUAKER ro CIRCULATOR, in te room at . assembled newsmen wil] Cate ’ a concre’ man who's spent years in 7:30 (2) Jack Benny. . | Even Thelma Dawson herself NBC and : only about four} : take a sional look at - emerges eee © Nosern Sesenee (4) (color) Nocthwent, Pes: 60 (Bae be ee ee aaron ot the Inet ten|can’t do it. Apparently the hand-|hours a week to do his show. | Ghers have tried « now seeks real culprits. sage. rice : : ; NL ‘|wrought indi i f Howd x (2) Have on Travel|: pA Cartoon Frolics. (7) Maverick. (7) Music Bingo. ei eae Cae just Sinema” on one Gy si uir hae tried to insure his| Sonotone has hidden its Sta heseeenes — (Vin-| ‘ Cecaran ay : 3 5 ” 1ee Came | significance from those which— can’t be reproduced. lpcize puppet but can’t do it. In- latest transistor hearing aid cent Ee. ace Morte) — sree heed Sullivan) Guess) are ie ah keny Bcheokime: lconsidered vitally important when A couple of substitutes do exist, surance companies tell him there’ s| in light, graceful eyeglasses. need Paladin’s help when oe _ Sam Levenson, Jane Morgan they occurred—have turned out to but only for special purposes. |no way of arriving at a true val-| Worn as one unit — nothing they arrive for performance 11:00 '<) Sagebrush Shorty. and members qf the cast {1:30 (2) Top Dotla.. ‘be of transient significance. “Doubleduty” exists for quick ue. Literally, Howdy is priceless. ~ @}c¢ tg wear. Choice of smart: during roundup time. (4) (color) George Pierrot from ‘Rally Round the Flag. | (4) Concentration. reas ‘Nes (or both a (7) John Hopkins. Boys!” (7) Peter Lind Hayes ’ a _ | styles for both men an 19:00 (7) Sammy Kaye. Musical (9). Movie. (4) (color) Steve Allen. (9) Howdy Doody. een hoe neers cat iaeiee diab Look your best \ variety. Guests are Four Lads, and ~ ene in = : t while hearing your best. (9) Hockey (cont.) | 11:0 Ps ale Carnival. | ice skating stars. | MONDAY AFTERNOON ee ogee Sed poniiald Red S et url lcture a one = (4) Cimarron (cont.) SESLEL | . | lobe— -_ COME IN, PHO WRITE (2) Gunsmoke. Dillon, Ches- ‘ 18:30 (7) Lawman. 12:00 (2) Love of Life. on the NBC-TV Network, Sunday, | t D li U S FREE DEMONSTRATION ter are hunted. SUNDAY AFTERNOON (4) Tic Tae Dough. Dec, 28 to review the significant || () e11nqd uency in oD . '9:00 (2) G.E. Theater. Art Link- (9) Follow Me. — pitpreaes age — SON OTONE . : te " Vi oT: ; ” rends. com. . : me (a) Gate: Chan jtasee a ae | (Oy ceolue) The Bore. 12:15 (9) Uncle Chichimus. The newsmen, six from overseas} LONDON (AP) — Moscow radio) up in his heart and mind — the ' . (4) Brains and Brawn. Na- ~(2) (colot) Little Lulu. Guests are Ray Bolger, Lisa and five from this country, will| painted a gloomy picture today of/word money.” , OF PONTIAC- tional Match Game Bowlers 12:15 (4) Michigan Conservation. | Kirk. 12:30 (2) Search for Tommorrow. gather in New York for the full-| juvenile delinquency in the United] Capitalism’s ‘decay is inevita-| §1) Pentise State Bank Bidg. . | (4) (color) It Could Be You. hour “‘Projection °59"" (NBC-TV | States. coat bly oo Le peat Phone FEderal 2-1225 : (7) Mother’s Day. Net work, 546 p.m.) The telecast . in culture, a Gecssitialen: t : (9) Mary Morgan will be part of the ““NBC Kaleido-, A broadcast entitled “The shameful and frightening a phen- _ tor FREE Home Toda S Rad 10 Pro rams _ scopé’’ series. \Growth | of United States Delin- omenon as ‘the broadcast ade. UTTLE AD e 12:45 (2) Guiding Uight.- arses, HE quency” gave this description of linquency, ” the cast a Y i ee NBC News foreign correspond f America: This state of affairs, Moscow | cco BIG: DEAL 1:00 (2) Ladies Day. ents who will participate are: |" On leaving the movies, the/radio said, shows how “Biblel}| © Ferches eo . WIR, (760) CRLW, (800) WW, 050 «= FWOAR, (1130) «WXYZ, (1270) «= WPUN, (1460) WJBK, (1490) (4) Amos ’n’ Andy. Cecil Brown (Tokyo), Edwin 2 ter sets out on a melan-|truths collapse as soon as they|{| e Aluminum Since!45- —— (7) Liberace, Newman (Paris), ae choly walk through the streets.|come into contact with lie.” @ Stone Free Estimates TUNIGBT CKLW christian wttnes WPON, Pontise Weekend | 9:00—WJR, News, Page (9) Movie. Harsch (Lenéen), Joba Mos. |C'arshaped gleaming Cadillacs And how are things in the Soviet|] | @ aaations | PR 9.9671 6:00—WJR, News Sports white Vacpom Treeeet | ee Wim inowtnent. Weve, wereaitaee Chew (Bertin), Irving Levine ( and Chryslers rush past him. In| Union? WXYZ. News, Weber WPON Armenian Gos ar. WXYZ, Revival CKLW. News Toby arid 1:30 (2) As The World Turns. tal po geo ae og restaurant windows he sees the| ‘Time was when our country too : Cepeda d okey ripoaly 00 ews, Casey ce) : home bu- |faces of well-fed and Satisfied/— then quite a young Soviet re- Rene Geeta etacteten Te | Sek BOE aya | BEAK kent wtto () ETV Digest. ream Each of these newsmen |p. public was facet with the prese | (naam World News Y4& News, Sun, ews has trave! extensively in on Lire proble of unattended chil- Sales and Service Ww Bible WPON Rpteeopal Servi 0:30—WJR, Jack Barri e, too, could have such a car) ing m 6:36 —WJR, Three Sons WiaK News, Bpisceped minroel Sereice | "GaLW News. Myriie Cavbite 1:55 (4) Faye Elizabeth, | area during 1968. and be sitting in such a restaurant|dren due to poverty, postwar col- , were weoets varade weON christeoner law Nees ged 16:00—WJk, Arthur Godfrey > , ' Domestic correspondents taking if . , . one word keeps creeping: lapse and _ fatherlessness,” the) SWEET’S RADIO-TV CKLW. Sec. of State 1:30 - Wen shape: Hour WXYZ, Story Princess We eee. wi bultor 2-9 (2) Our Miss Brooks part will be Frank McGee. Robert | broadcast said: . wine Melera ssanevers) ceLw wyetts A bees wien econ oceeca cauw nee Sie eee (7) Day in Court. MeCormick, David Brinkley, “The morality of Socialist soci- Open Mon. & Fri. Might wIBK. Lown alt sas WCAR News Chomae er hee Tos Gi) (4) (color) Truth or Conse Scherer, Herbert Kaplow ead eet ety could not tolerate such a) QRzZaAMMADEES FE 4.1133 : 4 ruuth Cho! ou TES ICS tal WPON Guesi St f ewe ae e ; ; WAYZ, Night Train hom (tage one suet . LEON (Chgck: tems ee ine Frederick. McGee will serve Boy, 11, Accidentally. ~phenome nor % ER eck aslo iwwo. @0 esute Catmearar | GWG noes anit loa0 CKLW News Davie : 9 se as anchor man. io didn’ wear news tose wave “yey Sunday “Bes aes, “Pilgrimage ‘awe ow 7 . ; oe a * peace Was Baggis : “™ * * Kills Playmate, ] That's all. Moscow radio eal BELTONE PONTIAC co. ontia . ™ ¥ sperin , . . . or batterie te pairs : iu WIR Lown Meeting WJBK News. india WIBK, News. Stereo eg eee ce (7) People's Choice On Sunday, Dec. 28 an 3 to 5, go any deeper Into ie ~ ci _ Mearing A CKLW. Word of Life WPON Centra) Methodist «wWCAR News, Thomas eo ING OD i . BS-TV will present “The | ‘of présent Soviet juvenile delin- 3 South Sas WAS2 eves ‘ime WK, Veberenan NOR Another! Shee WPON Lewis 2:50 (9) News. eae Pe By. ia ein trod | HOLLAND «® — Michael Foster| quency. Occasional Russian news- (Downtown = t one ; ear Gone By, ji the con- 7 *CRLW, Preview P| WJBR, Futn. tor Bling “CREW. The Quiet Br. M Oxi wecue Deke | (ae) (2) Big (Payot. - assessment of America’s arts, sci-| Schut, 7, was shot fatally. yester-’ peg eee people indicate FEderal WAR Nous WXYZ, Disaster | (4) Young Dr. Malone. ences and humanities during ‘1958, ‘day by an 11-year-old boy who po-/4)" .° 4 lot of delinquency there. | SLAaiiaMeali a 00 Win Mowat SUNDAY AFTERNOON ate wah Nene wees —— Y (7) Beat the Clock. ‘as seen by some of the country’s, lice said told them “I shot him. “CKLW. Gust Sanctuary (2:00—WJR, News, Quest. WXYZ, Star Time Baptist MUNDAY AFTERNOON | (9) Hour of Stars. ‘most astute and articulate obse Wee deal init unos) (nel gun oo ie ate = | ia BEon Niet cate |S a tes | ers, wae bated, Z Do ew er y Hl an : | s cl. 9:30-—WWJ. Old Oprey WJBK News Leonhardt s H CKLW Grant, ‘Livestock S:of (2) Verdict Is Yours. | Ottawa County Undersheriff Pe- W E SPEC [ALI E acme) mca: eee wee’ Piphad vty *CKLW “aitte etnd ay - WJBK, merece “ re ane V 7 It ter Meeuwsen ‘said Michael was} , “ WIR. Album” Time 12:30—WJR, Road Show Neo wie | Genk Rese oye ue “ Santa ISI Struck in the face by a shotgun e e ° 10:30—WJR, Choir Neue coe teens iia: ino ow symphonF 12:30 -WJK. lime for Muste 4:00 (2) Brighter Day t Teharge fired x eg hee in Corrective Heating 11:00—WJR, News PE. & acl Rey eee ctor CRLW. News, Davies (4) Queen for a Day. U POS [ine terpaar doy 1s) ie) waa) Bunker "WWd. News, Pre-game WWJ. News, Council News Shorr (7) American Bundstand, Sal of the dead boy's -stepfa-, 5 Mey, : eect ilelanae : La ’ : cr 1% ‘ ned A . : Le o? 2 CKLW rrank ane ernest wi New Mirste 1;00— WJ Petes Lind Hayes (9) Bi Rascals. t it er | ou ave xcessive ue Wis an oor WCAR, News sf WEOK. Youth Forum (emewws sternal! cigkt || Sete eos etree . in O p en Meeuwsen said Michael and his) Distribution of Your Heat, We Will Make a | WPON News Spor "WOAN a yoctwen Wate nondee ett WPON, Chuck Lewis 4:15 (2) Secret Storm. stepfather, Bruce Terhaar, were ISTHIDUT bI AT NO eon hone an WPON, Pontiac Weekend CKLW Rack to God Rhee ipa atatone | SEOUL, Korea (AP) — Santa hunting north of Holland. The boy Scientific Analysis of Your Problem CKLW. News Kaowles WIRE, Bandey Penne 11:00—WJR, News, Sporte WYT New 4.30 (2) Edge of Nighi. _ Claus was a bit late but he didn’t| told his stepfather he felt cold and} (COST. WXYZ Melodies 2:00 WXYZ. News, sun. Bes! oh w, “Rew eens a 2:00—WJR, Rt to Happiness (4) County Fair. onget two U.S. soldiers manning) went back to the farm house to | . ——— ees cca oeken News Concert fall aN “Austin Grant mo (9) Sherwood Forest. ‘a lonely television relay station|play with Jerry. The stepfather! SUNDAY MORNING . — News ; ‘high on a barren, snow-clad hill/said he heard a blast minutes la-' ROBERT C CAMPLAIN 6:00 WIR Farm Review rie ean kee, Draenrs “Business WPON. Bob Lark 5:00 . Sai mint ‘south of Seoul. ter and went to the house where s out te : denr’ 2:30— WK Coup.s Next Door! ( "s Gre ife. xt «cs * he found the boy shot. . CKLW Alb Time es . r WIRK Adolecrents 7 | 6:30—WJR caved four Bm gait ie Bost a cKLW : ven gin trea | | es Scone il Medion re = # member of our boord WJBK i Sdhog age aie aa 9,000-foot Mt. Madison Friday. ,G; ae : ° : . WIBK Another Chance WJBK *onthall MONDAY MORNING s:00- wae een trent (3:38 (2) Detroit Bandstand. pet 1.€. Edward Tkachuk, Chel- Give Out Radiation Kits Is a Bonafide Heating Engineer pews wok ceverite Homes Seen Nex hogan dre Wik res Ae cle wee News. Matinee 7 | (4) (color) George Perr! og. Mass., and Pvt. Telesfor) new YORK (UPI) — Radiation- CREW meccone: greene WKYY Bont of Nectar pedi Ao atl dy WXYZ McKenzie | Ererent: Martinez, of San Francisco, hadi getecting devi ill be distribut-, WJBK Cruetfie a d in Faith CRLW Roneter Club - | ‘ Mouse Club {+ : meh ae etecting devices w istribu gh dene, | Senere ts aee | Se er ceo | Sy SE Eiyrme) Mey ne Ch ncn ctr al alae art cae'n| IE We Cannot Solve Your wok earm rerum WXYZ, Revival — WPON. Early Bird WEOK 7 co) Dare ions ae fer ext Ge 646 New York pa New rhiteed Problem You Are in Trouble! "aws Mariner “hnreh 4:30—WJR, Big News 6:%0.-WJR Music Rall aw. ve womescte tesla 8 Area Men Awarded sa : ; high schools. civi efense officials WXYZ, News, Challenge WWJ, Jim Deland CKLW Nunn. Davi WRYR News. McKenzie “ee was still a week away. |said the instruments will be used CREW Bouyer wwernacle] ware ted winieCinse | WIBK Farm Reptt. George| Gna News @ chase Water Plant Certificates | x * * as training aids in teaching the Seon ficccnen Gear “eel eda, ce SPOR Berle re ees SISK News Metcoe - | Sgt. 1.C. Ivan R, Pavlovich,| youngsters how to survive in an - en ee corwtea WJBK. Sunday Sounds ene — 4:09 WIR, cysts san Eight Pontiac area resis Altoona, Pa., lifted from the heli- ete attack, ic igan eati g P ne. | ee 13] : ee Merayttane, | taeeaaya or gee | RRR Rese aang | Et BRIS Het er a ne ny trough |Comec” a, box wrth Christmas erap-| | CKLW your Worship Hour! WJBK, Sunday Sounds WORK Seren Porn Ceeree wien Wet News Bennett Git Michigan who received ‘cortil ee SiGe se as a Answer to Previous Puszle ~ 88 NEWBERRY | vmme Cie ; Le ; : 6:30— wt YZ. Truth ferald WPON News Casey Cs MacKinnon ‘icates of achievement from the ner. The gifts had been, sent by FE Ls 51 FE 2-2254 2 “wre nwree at eanne Geue bade a han owik stuete Bal $:40- "VIM Music Hal ‘state health department after fellow GIs. Stat AIMEE RICA NIS FE 8-6621 8 66 ig ea WPON. Pontiac Reports jolt te isos aM eg a as acicwesie passing written examinations, ac- ek * * SL eRibies) ANI eisitls WUAR Rack te (300 —_ , WIRK News Por Cimorge | iT Mowe haar ’ cording to Dr. Albert E. Heustis.! The helicopter was flown by Lt. “ 4 | we era inert SUNDAY CVENING © WAR Newe therifan WPON. Sports. McKinnon | +5te health commissioner. ‘Harry R. Mitchell, Jane Lew.) ff TIAiL le! = 24 HOUR SERVICE ON ALL MAKES — if am ite News. fart 6:00 WIR. News. Priars 408 WIK News Cinest vom Wik News Muste Included were Mansell M. Cor- Ww Va. ial mee eirict 138 | "hey s U " a vews R + Pp WWJ, N Deland i * \ wy, “Walon sews” | watya, Marion Forum’ | MH News" Wai) | wits “Wattink. Mekenrte win of the Oakland County ‘De The station manned by the soly VSEMCEIE Tee = | | cop CLEANING: We Have One of the CKIW Aptheane temple WEAR News ie ioe cK Nene tee proces | WAR Sports, re chase ernie partment bf Public Works; Homer diers relays television programs iatedalel-4 ASIOluie 4131 in WRK News Music « WPON. News. Carey WIRK Mrlend ‘W. Case of Bloomfield Township! from Seoul to the U.S. armed ug 2% la WORLD'S | MOST POWERFUL VACUUMS. PERG ASO IN a8) ere uae wie he Pre| 4:20 WIN “tnete Ball a McKinnes { and Leon J. Lasky of the Ford forces Korea network in the Petit = : ae , 6:30--CKLW News, & Chase : i ee i ™ } oe el aera Mee CRLW. Sr Polling. Heater WRK, Rowe, cide George *wxY2, Newa, “MeKentie 0¢| Motor Company in Wixom. south. — : ee go aoe ) _THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, DECEMBER, 27, 1958 eS a Se aren / TWENDY-FOUR sts s hes ~— Mags., is surrounded|’" No womail ever has een elec- auseng the tan th MT ht Sr tie cresyl eat 'ly_wed to ige, |tated that each aad naik he | a at, sl 6 for mgrder rnger edt Pacific. Coast, “potlatch” |stature in the eyes of his fellows|bit made himself ie emee © ee 2 eee Oe | ‘Compare Your. Feaeen: mainland by. bridges. * Jersey. - |was the wintér's main social event.|by giving away his possessions.|er than before, Self-esteem dic-|the one received. a, shea tsi leatame vbr DAILY ¥8 A. M..to 8 P. MW. — SUNDAYS: 10°A. M: to 3. P.M. — BURMEISTER OPEN DAILY 8 A. M. to 8 P. M. With Wilson Review, + NEW YORK — Fee Christmas and New Year's, I give you} the Best Laughs of 1958 — all about Bernard Goldfine, Brigitte » Bardot, Ike's golf, Mlorida'’s weather, Eddie and Debbie and Liz, Junior Trujillo’s gift packages (foreign ears), Maria Callas, and that other singer, Jerry Lee Lewis, to whom Bepend said, “Yankee, Go Home!” We can laugh, now that the recession’s over, about Herb Shriner claiming, “There really isn’t ahy unemployment — that’s just a rumor circulated by a lot of people out of work. w» “And now, several ambiane said from night club floors, “a message from ; our President: ‘FORE!’” . , . As -Toots e Shor peddied his restacrant site, becoming a millionaire, _ he recalled how fellow tycoon Jackie Gleason once asked for a loan of $2,000. Toots asked what he wanted it for, and Jackie snorted: “Don’t get so nosy, or I won’t take it!” Spoofers Allen and De Wood defined the Eddie Fisher Cha Cha Cha: “You take two steps and then change partners.” . Steve Allen, talking to Bob Hope, said he was going to Eu- rope and Bob said: “Don’t miss Paris.” Steve said he wouldn't; his wife Jayne Meadows, was going with him. Bob groaned: a it’s SURMY’S for Better Buys! “BARGAINS BUY AT MYSTERY SALE PRICES “= oe 3 . OUTSIDE FLUSH DOORS Electrical Supplies DUPLEX RECEPTACLES .- 14c DUPLEX COVER PLATES. . 8c Gold Bond eee miss a * * * 28x68 and 30x68 “16¢ The risque attracted attention. An American exclaimed With Lights ‘ TOGGLE SWITCH . to a Frenchman that the best-seller “Lolita,” was “about 1% Fully SWITCH PLATE COVERS. . 8c a middle-aged man in love with a 12-year-old.” The CEILING TILE Acoustamatic Guaranteed $ 95 14-2 ROMEX, 250 coil. ft. 3¢ ¥renchman yawned: “A 12-year-old what? And a Broad- CEl LING TILE Grade A . way producer, moaning over the critics’ blast at his flop Double Coated S518 acca aa Weather Stripping : . an ‘ show, wailed to one’ critic: os pais ~ Qcer| « 00 Aloninge| Threskelde wan eee 3.95 SLIDING DOOR FOLDING STAIRS “Couldn't you have at least said it was dirty?” y Qeuany ] 29 , Per M HARDWARE When shapely Liz Taylor was at Grossinger’s on that fate- ic A — 16x32 ROYAL fold. xe . GRADE A INTERIOR FLUSH DOORS For Doors %” to 134" Thick ing ot ére OPEN DAILY 8 A. M. to ‘8 P. M. — SUNDAYS 10 re M.to3P.M ful Labor Day weekend with Eddie Fisher, she got a blister on, ., A her heel and a doctor was summoned. “What! Elizabeth Taylor Also 10 other different types of ceilng BURMA SUPREME GUARANTEE SETS COMPLETE safel Guaran. has a blister on her heel!” he exclaimed. “I'll get my stetho- tile at comparable prices. 20 x 68x 1% $5.25 26x68 1% 4! teed by Public : ! ee ee Ne le ON ee eee es eeeenes we? ’ lebili scope and be right over! l | 22468 x1%.......$5.95 28x 68x1%....... os Nocoda ee od x «*« x 24x 68 x 1%....... $6.45 leys * Easy opera- Jerry Lee Lewis’ young cousin, Carl McEvoy, also appeared on the singing scene, the same hair, same eyes and same voice. “Are you married to a 13-year-old gir] too?” he was asked. “No,” he answered indignantly. “Separated!” President Eisenhower was once again the victim in a story alleging that he’d been asked “What are you going to do about the Civil Rights Bill?” Purportedly he anewere) “I thought Goldfine had paid it.” tion © Convenient metal handrail * Treads securely joined and tie- rod reinforced. pence PRICE SALE $9 4’ $49 35 PRICE $3350 $3” Ideal for Closets Gi PASSAGE SETS 1x6—1x8—1x12 KNOTTY PINE BU RMEISTER * * * EARL’S PEARLS: A psychiatrist consoled a woman aad pate 4 98 aoe V2 39s Pr. V-GROOVE came to him complaining that her husband called her ex- travagant. “You seem very normal,” the psychiatrist said. le’ P ANELING SLIDING DOOR “That’s just what I told my husband,” the woman said, “this JUST ARRIVED Top Quality morning while I was putting on my mink eyelashes.” ° NEW SHIPMENT OF CLEAR WHITE PINE 5 00 POCKETS WISH I'D SAID THAT: “The best camouflage for a girl's 2 ag uperios Quality bow legs is a plunging neck line.”—Yates Center, Ia., News. |_: ay el mae MOLDINGS & ore $8.9 5 TODAY'S BEST LAUGH: A friend of ours must have been & RANGE TOPS KILN DRIED comps a very naughty boy at the country club because the monthly < % x 2% Casing........ Lin. Fr. 6¢ statement—according to Ted Chinell—shows that they made’ 11/16x2% T.D, Casing Lin. Ft. T¥2c 4 him write “Seotch and Soda” 250 times . . . That's earl, brother. © 11/1642" Ovele Casing. .Lin. Ft. 7¥3¢ ‘PLASTER BOARD (Copyright, 1958) in atts Base Shoe ns Lins Ft. 2e ! > 44x34 Ve Round ...... Lin. Ft. 3 i< 15/16 « 2 Brick Mould. Lin. Ft. 13 GYPSUM S ALE Nab FBI Wanted Man? ia BE ’ | MSS STOO Wwe eee. in. PT. € ad ante ans %x1%— T. D. Stop......tin. Ft. 3¢ | 4K8B% ......0.00.0.. 00... cee $1.15 4 Lumber continues as the favorite material for today’s SxI% T. D. Stop...... Lin. Ft. 3¥42¢ 1 Qy B% ©... «ddd... ee eee $1.35 ° | modern homes. That's because lumber is unsurpassed %x1% T. D. Stop....... Lin Fe. 4¥oc 4x 84 $1.60 Pp ; G d - in warmth, JERE TC and fits any architectural 84x% Cove Mould ...... Lin. Ft. 3 Yc SS 2; . / OSINgG AS A VAGENeF |z sve H1/N6e194 Cove Mosd in Te [AR IO% eevee $1.55 ° " /16x2% Cove Mould. .Lin. Fe. ic _ le West Coast Kiln Dried Also good stock of | 11/16x2% Cove Mould. Lin. Fr. 10¢ 16 x 48 Rock Lath in Lifts. .... EL SAN DIEGO, Calif. (AP) —|and throwing him off the road in 2 2 Ranges from $69.95 200 FT, SPECIAL Seen a 2 No. 1 Dimension Lumber ~ as Art Nelson, a gardener o'ce ek & ad i= r ALUMINUM y DS handyman. ‘Connor was arrest on a ° ° . * 2 . wartank chasing tim) withthe = . Kept in Sheds—Clear, Bright and Dry 4x8x/4"" FIR ‘It wasn’t unti) police at nearby|theft of a $15 trailer fro San ¢ . : EI Cajon picked up Nelson'on a|Diego man, (et ao ere $ 00 — 000 COMBINATION Plywood, Good 1 Side $798 routine petty theft warrant Friday} He will be arraigned Monday © B10 to 14 Fi. Measure DOORS PER SHEET ................ 2... 20. -" - and He admitted his identity. He _ property Using a number of aliases he vic- that they learned his true identity: Danie] William O’Comor, 29, ene of the FBI's 10 most wanted fugitives. He also had been tagged by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police as one of their most wanted men. In an effort to evade capture, ttoo on his arm. He insisted his name was Art Nelson. * ‘* * But his fingerprints tripped him said he had lived in fhe San Diego area for three years, moving of- ten and working at odd jobs to avoid using a Social Security card. ‘The FBI called O'Connor a chronic bogus check passer, He had been sought for taking stolen across a state boundary. timized merchants in Montana, North Dakota and Oregon, agents said. *Q’Connor was wanted by Cana- dian authorities for beating a Roy- before a U.S, commissioner here. Tito Talks With Sukarno on Atom Weapon Tests BOGOR, Indonesia (AP)—Presi- dent Tito of Yugoslavia began of- ®+|ficial talks today with President Sukarno of Indonesia. The talks are expected to end in Bali Wednesday with a joint statement opposing nuclear weap- ons tests, démanding disarma- ment and announcing economic cooperation between the two na- tions. Lighting Pipe in Wind Very Dangerous Business DALLAS, Tex. (AP) — Charice! W. Leach, 89, went to a hospital after trying to light his pipe in the wind. Police said ashes blown from. Leach's pipe set fire to his cloth- al Canadian Mounted Police offi- cer with -a pistol, tying him- up ing. He was burned about the chest and neck. This is our sincerest _ wish for all our Saeoeeeel Fuel & Paint 36 Orchard Lake Ave. a with second-degree burns Friday! Almost All Our Lumber Is Stamped by Quality West Coast Mills “TWINSULATE” YOUR ATTIC THIS WEEKEND ! MYSTERY PRICE WILL BE POSTED IN OUR OFFICE Sacrifice Price, We Are Overstocked FIBER-GLASS 4. INSULATION 1" § : Sacrifice Price—We Are Overstocked INSULATION » ) FIRST QUALITY @ Uv. Blanket type, full encased with paper, nail fin, matt thick, spun mineral wool. INSULATION—Aluminum Foil, 500 Ft. Rolls, Reg. $9.95 - 4 © we ee ee . $5.95 Guaranteed First Quality Reg. | g* $34.95 ALUMINUM : Combination WINDOWS Basement Selt-Storing Jack Posts Limited Adjustable Time Only ‘6° Quantity Limited at This LOW, LOW PRICE! 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Over 3 Carloads in Stock. . = WOW! 215° Asphalt Roofing Per Square Top Name Brands SHINGLES $6. YOU MAY BUY BUILDING MATERIALS at NO MONEY DOWN & a MONTHLY PAYMENTS 7940 COOLEY LAKE ALL PRICES IN QUANTITIES QUOTED, Fa 1 j BL RMEI RD. ) RS _, Open Daily CA ea 10 to 3 ‘ PHONE | | DELIVERY SERVICE AVAILABLE BURMEISTER'S—OPEN oes 8 = M. to 8 P. M.— SUNDAYS 10 A. M. fo 3 P.M, — BURMEISTER OPEN DAILY 8 A. M. to 8 P. NORTHERN. LUMBER CO. EM 3-4171 ‘Wd € 8 'W ‘Vv OL SAVGNNS — ‘W'd8 °% oz