Details page two 118th YEAR kkkke PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 9, 1955—2 PAGES eee TERNATIONAL are ane Named Rose Tournament Queen Moser Gets Lie Tests Invade Disputed Kashmir Area SRINAGAR, Kashmir (?—Nikita’ Ss. Khrushchev and Soviet Premier! Intent to Ruin |Bulganin at Srinagar’s |mountain-rimmed airfield today for! (Md upp iers a 48-hour visit to disputed — mir, Claim They Seek Only Proportionate Share of, Parts Business * * * The Kremlin's two top men flew: ‘here from Jaipur in northwestern India. There crowds hailed the premier yesterday as ‘Maharajah Bulganin” when he and Khrush- ichev donned Indian turbans, The WASHINGTON (Pi—A de- di: “Indians and Russians are the bigness of General Mo- * Kashmir may afford the touring ccrporations went on an. Russians an opportunity for: more barbs aimed at the West. India! lovertime basis today. and Pakistan have been contend- | Rresident Harlow H. Cur- jing for the allegiance of this for-; : ; ‘mer princely state in British” ‘India| HiCe and his platoon of vice ever since the Indian subcontinent presidents and top execu- * * Top Red Tourists -GM Heads Deny: Tiny Mite Makes Grade ~Ineone two reponded by shouting in Hin- bate about the effects of ‘ brothers. 1 i Bes ‘tors and other powerful Se ee ee ” Resi sore Police Reveal | Area Man Questioned in Death of Three Boys Near Chicago 1 | Chicago police yesterday gave four lie detector tests ‘to a Fenton man being questioned in connection ‘with the October slaying of ‘three Chicago schoolboys. | Chief Thomas Brennan of the Cook County Sher- ‘iff’s Police said all the tests PASADENA COLLEGE FRESHMAN — Joan. Culver, 18-year-old Pasadena City man from La Canada, Cal., has been selected to reign as queen of the Tournament of Roses at College Fresh- Pasadena Jan. Militant Drive “ at Nation's 30 Million United Press Wirephoto 1, Joan, who will be officially | crowned Dec. 28, admires her bouquet of roses, | symbol of her royai title. F Higgins Back From New York City Satisfied With Toll Road Progress Chairman of the Michigan Turn- MH r m going to talk with Ziegler) Roads and Bridges Committee) pike Authority George N. Higgins |to see if we can't agree on a pro- said he wants the turnpike,” Hig-) returned from New York City yes- terday “well satisfied” that prog-' ress had been made toward ob-| taining a revenue bond issue to, finance the propaged Rockwood- Saginaw toil road. With authority members Justin, R. Whiting, of Detroit, and Cari! Smith, of Bay City, Higgins a eled to New York immediately aft er the State Supreme Court ruled the turnpike act constitutional pee 12 Members of.the roads commit- tees of the State Senate and, Mouse also made the trip. : “We conferred with our financial! advisers, Blythe and Co.,”" said Higgins, “and learned exactly | what we must do to Clear the way” “Tor a bond issue. “Our route must be comple tely agreed on over the 113-mile span.’ The J. E. Greiner Co., MTA consulting engineers, must map the| route_in final form and the author-| ity’s traffic analysists, Colverdale| tions traffic use caused by changes from the orig inal location. in projected ‘gram which will benefit the state, by coordinating the toll road mith freeway construction. “lf we can’t agree, I think the Legislature will step in.” |Emil A. Peltz (R-Rogers City) was! with him |(who is chairman af the House gins stated. Authority members Smith a nd ‘Whiting have been named by Hig: \gins to handle the financial ar- jrangements. Authority Chief Engi- llems along with Higgins who also in New York. “Peltz! plans to continue his extensive pub- lic relations program. All Worked for Paper | When State Was Young | ANN ARBOR (?—When your daily newspaper is ‘delivered to your doorstep, this way. The Michigan Citizen in the 1840s and 1850s. ready got his news on the hoof. ‘remember it wasn't always: One example is the Bark Shanty (Mich.) Times. ere was only one copy—everyone contributed to it— and Colpitts, prepare any altera-|it was read by all, all who could read anyway. any longer. It is now Port Sanilac. But when storekeeper \Uri Raym ond started his newspaper, it was February, “Thig information must be in- 1847 and still Bark Shanty.¢———-—--—— cluded in our bend prospectus before Blythe can begin to sell | the bonds,” Higgins explained. | Major route problems still to) be solved are in sections running, through Detroit and Allen Park, he added. “The bonding experts said they, could see no reason why we can't! get financial support. Our only worry lies in possible construction of too many competing free high- ways by the State Highway Com. amissioner (Charles M. Ziegler). ——_——________—_. + was called the Port Sanilac Times one of his noble bipeds. —-10-Board Members o Resign Their Posts Ten Royal Oak Township Board - members resigned from the board, at a meeting last night. Cause of the mass resignation was the new city boundaries of __ Madison Heights. The 10 would have had to’ move from the new city into the township to keep! their positions on the board. Among the resigners are George ‘Horkey, township’ supervisor for ‘18 years and Sarah E. Bradford,’ township clerk for over 12 years. | Horkey’s resignation is to take ef-, fect immediately. Appointment of a new supervisor was postponed until the next ‘board meeting. } || Clark M, Whéaton of the Pon- Raymond set up a ledger type book in his store. Everyone who came in would read it to get the news of the day. If they had anything to contribute, ‘they did so, in their own There were the same continuing news stories that there are today. | Because humans are fallible, there were mistakes made, too. Here's a sample from two days, when it, —Feb. 14, 1857. The next day, Feb. 15, there was. this message: “Correction— “We have to correct a state- ment made yesterday. We were misinformed about the return of the lost turkey—and to set all right we will give a correct ver- sion of the case. “Our honorable neighbor tmer-° _chant) we mean deater in dry) “goods, groceries and whisky, etc. one day or night last week lost) mean, cowardly. small-souled. if. “Tt is rumored foday that the. Honorable Mr. Mead—who lately jlost a noble turkey from his roost, |—has been fortunate. The said. turkey, remembering his good he or she has a soul at all which cs we doubt, went under cover of a |dark night and robbed our neigh- bor of one of his best birds. “Such an act or deed is too Unorganized Workers NEW gained independence in 1947. Pak-| itives __tistan is allied ae oe the West. + AFL-CIO Plans YORK (INSi—The AFL-' agreed with Sen. 0 Mahoney of Wyoming to iresume their public hearing a half hour earlier (9:30 ez. EST) than usual. The study of the multi- paneer corporation by | committee was originally — ‘Slated to wind up today, land there was still a slight: lchanee it would. So far, ‘CIO is set to launch a militant Oy a few of the GM lead- |drive to bring the nation's 30 mil-/€TS have had a chance to lion unorganized ner. | AFL-CIO President George Mea-| ny announced yesterday, in con- workers under: speak, se the new labor federation's ban-| Yesterday, Henry M_ Hogan, GM general counsel, asked for a chance “‘‘to rebut the chairman’ EVERYBODY HAPPY, NOW — May Lee Locke, weighing a7 |were “inconclusive.” ‘ Held was Owen Robert Moser, 23. He was arrested lat Holly last Saturday. | Local Police questioned him AP Wirephete pound, 10 ounces when she was born Sept. 23 in Salt Lake City, gives *0ut the strangulation of Robert a big leased this week from the hospital. Tiny Mary Lee now weighs 5 |and Anton “Sctrveted Gig Ws , Senate judiciary anti- pounds, 1 ounce. After living in an oxygen controlled incubator -doe-—whose-nude-bodies were found out= —_— Campaign to Be Aimed c ust and monopoly sub- tors declare she is in “excellent condition.” smile to her mother, Mrs. Willard G. Locke, as she was re- Peterson, 14; John Schuessler, 13 11, ‘side Chicago in a forest preserve ‘ Boys Group Bows to the Inevitable; Schedule Dances | | Girlfriends of Pontiac Beys Club, members will have their way at st. To the hitherto strictly mascu-| jline activities of the club will be \cluding the federation's first con. D€cause he - said O'Mahoney has added Saturday night dances for lvention, that the drive would not | been ‘any Milquetoast movement.”|®™0unt to testimony. jbe He said the 15,000,0000-man AFL-CIO will use “every legal | its organizational | drive and declared “no little men | | Means” in with loud voices in either politi- cal er industrial life are going to | turn us aside."’ ‘well past the windup hour, O'Ma- Walter P. Reuther, head of the! jneer E. Thomas Baker and Con-| |AFL-C1O's new Industrial Union| sulting Engineer Murray D. Van-| Higgins said that State Rep.! | Wagoner will work on route prob- Department, tile, wood and paper industries.) urged the federation! to take on: the job of organizing); the DuPont industrial system and) salens (the chemical companies, the tex-| ; and teachers, white collar workers) building trades. ‘liam C. Doherty declared an at-. 900,000 government land distribution and unorganized, William F. Letter Carriers President Wil it, GM—properiy making. statementS -that O'Mahoney promised ‘chance, him ted by O'Mahoney and Curtice in brisk but _ clashes about GM policies, Last night. as the session wen |Joseph W. Burns were’ asking i t manufacturers, whole |GM cars now on the road. No, said Curtice, Vice President! Hufstader and other As they pictured. — was trying to ;get its share of this off-shoot: of: eet will be made to organize the|the motor industry that is a employes, business in itself. 'GM_ executives. big ee now and the next conven-| tion. Meany said the federation ts | to cooperate with all | | Rroups, including industrialists, | | but that it would not abandon | ner.” at the “staff level” to work out a: '“live-and-let-live’’ agreement with. ithe National Association of Manv-| ‘facturers. But he explained-that he had jabandoned tis attempt after NAM 'Board Chairman Charles R. Sligh Jr. and denied any such move was | afoot. ———. 354,445 Get Degrees laber’s traditional “militant man- | The AFL-CIO chief previously! tion. Continual Bark Shanty is one Michigan city that doesn’t exist|had said that talks would proceed] (Continued on Page 4, Col. 1) Although GM has been selling | | half of all new cars and trucks | recently, they said, GM now has only about 20 per cent of the parts busifiess and is trying to get more. O'Mahoney said this is the trend |that he and many others concentration No Telegraph Light, Taylor Mothers Told DEARBORN (INS)—The ae Highway Department yesterday in-| formed the Taylor Tow mnship, mothers they would not receive the traffic light at Telegraph road and) WASHINGTON U®—The nation’s) Cypress for which they: have been. colleges and yniversities handed ¢r usading. out 354,445 | 1954-55 diplomas during the. college year. Commissioner S. M. Brownell re- ment, William L. Marvin, Detroit dis- Education’ trict engineer for the depart. telephoned Mrs. Clara ‘ported today. This was 4,254 less Tharrett, a leader of the wom. Some | than the number of degrees earned ¢"'S group, and said the answer -in 1953-54—-reflecting the-recent de- on the traffic tight-is-“stilt no:? > crease in the total number of col-: lege students, ‘Pedestrian Is Killed fare, returned last night and ap-|mean for any man. The creature! DETROIT «® — John O'Con. 63, /Peared this morning with a laugh-| ‘ing countenance, ready and willing. ito devour more corn.” that did it ought to droppings of a hen cof his days. itroit intersection, Meanwhile, the women said they, }would continue to blockade the intersection until the state provides, them with the traffic light. | The-women blocked traffic twice’ yesterday afternoon to allow ign he| sit under the!of Detroit was killed today when'children and buses to cross roost the rest'hit by a car while crossing a De-|embattled corner. They said i | would do the same today. Yule Brings Out Best, and Worst The infectious Yuletide spirit brings out the best in most people -and, ironically, the worst in a few. Sprinkled among the hordes of | shoppers. stor ming local stores to. buy gifts for their loved ones are a number of bad-check passers, pickpockets and purse snatchers, | Their activities were brought .to focus yesterday by Chief Investigator for the Oakland County Prosecutor's Office Robert C. Miller and Inspector tiac Police, Faced with a pile of tubber-| check complaints, Miller said, “It’s a mystery to me why they think they can get away: with it, but. its stranger ‘still when! you consider that most bum check Every year at this time. he ex- account charge can bring up to! bounces have I got enough identi- plained, a number of people who November decide they can write ichecks without having money in the bank to back them up. The official name for this is, “cashing checks without an ac- count,” “They seem to think they can take advantage of crowded store) to make purchases with only a scrap of paper,” Miller explained. “A big percentage of checks Written without -sufficient.funds ~ constituted innocent mistakes and are soon corrected,” he stated. “But merchants. must be careful of perséns cashing. checks with deliberate: intent to defraud.” Conviction on) a check-without conditions and hard-pressed clerks, four years in prison. his check will bounce. Many deliberate’ passers of | bogus checks sign their own names because a phony signature can ing charge punishable by up to 14 years in prison. The detective advised clerks | who are asked to cash checks to think to themselves , = this In Today's Press County News .,........000 on, AGay Me Cosbuoucooar 6 M, 3%, 36,37, 38 ih :22, 23, -, Womee’s Pages result in an uttering-and-publish-| No crime is fication to allow me to find this stay honest. from January through involved unless the person knows person?” i Ask the customer to write his address: under his signature on the check’s back, Miller sug- gests. Then examine the driver's license and compare the physical description of the holder with the customer. Write the number of the license on the check. Employers should give complete instructions on handling of checks to their staff, the investigator stated, especially new employes hired for the holiday season. Social security cards are easy to obtain and worthless as identifi- cation, he stated. All checks should be examined. carefully to see they are properly filed in and not dated ahead. ‘ ene on Page 4, Col, 4) a will be tomorrow at 8 p.m.. boys even acting as waiters to Michigan Farm Bureau warehouse | So far, much of the time hax S*™¥e young couples soft drinks northwest of Lansing was brought y and sub-committee counse!| |GM was trying to “squeeze out” and jobbers in replacement: | parts for the more than 24 million 0 on arrival at high school age couples. Grand opening of “Club 330” and snacks. The reason for the capitulation? | “The dance is for teenagers on |dates who find difficulty doing|‘han two hours. ‘ something attractive that at the’ same time is geared to their age, oe warehouse and contents were explained club director William V./@lmost a complete loss. Damage, i Coulacos. WO eats ee tne think it’s fine. City Man Killed Beneath Trailer George H. Franz Dead The one story, 200 by 240-foot in Telegraph* Mishap This Morning under the rear end of a truck, ‘headquarters located nearby, trailer tener ‘George H. ‘Dwight Ave., Franz, roman for the light, ship police reported. with A Pontiac man who drove his car’ hee 18. Moser, first arrested on a traf- fic charge by Holly police last ‘Saturday night, was released Tues- day night after 30-hours of ques- |tioning and a lie detector test ad- |ministered by Michigan State | Police produced no evidence of Lansing Blaze Under Control Fire at the Farm Bureau He was rearrested Wednesday | 7 any connection with the murders, | ling, at Telegraph and Maple grain elevator and other buildings | 26 to ques- Roads this morning was dead Were not touched by the flames.| St. Joseph Mercy [John 33, of 5918) Cause of the fire, discovered apparently went to) around 7 a.m, was not immediate-| \sleep and failed to see‘ the truck,ly determined. Bloomfield) [Remembered by Dems _ | pam M. dactuk, 31, of Wyan- | dette, driver of the two-trailer | rig. noticed nothing wrong and | | car, After he had started from the|and nation. Democratic friends of} light, did not feel the impact of Franz’ | going north on Telegraph/ the senator presented him with a ord: by Holly police acting for Cook County Sheriff's Deputies, who phoned the request from Chi- cago, and arrived Wednesday morning te transport Moser te Hiinois, Moser signed waivers of extra- dition after additional questioning yunder control shorly after 9 a.m.'by the Cook who ‘after burning fiercely for more said he had indicated previously ‘undisclosed. knowledge of the ‘crime, Chiet Brennan 6aid today that jalthough the four lie tests in Chi- : cago, like Tuesday's here, proved |was tentatively éstimated at $165,- “inconclusive,” Moser's reactioné (000 to the warehouse and $500,- to certain questions indicated he j000 LA} Gr wk was telling the truth in denying Flames shot 90 fect into the any connection with the triple | air as stocks of feed, seed, fer- jslaying. tar mer mere Sse iis Co Tonight, ‘Weatherman Says | of wind fanned the fire and the black eolumas The weatherman says that there tarpaper sent olf | er emeke to mark the site of the ea will be occasional snow flurries — tonight. It will also be colder to- night -with g low ranging from 16 to 20. ‘emorrow it will be ~ partly cloudy with little change in tem- _ ‘perature, The high will be from 30 degrees. Tomeeronaes will average from 5 degrees below normal for the: next five days according to bureau forecasts. It will be warmer Saturday, cold- er, Sunday and there will be only slight changes in the temperature thereafter. The lowest temperature preced- ‘ing 8 a.m. was 22 degrees. The MANCHESTER, N.H. uw) — The'thermometer registered 28 at ‘Democrats did not forget Republi-! 1 p.m. jcan Sen. Styles Bridges at a ban-! quet last night commemorating his 25 years of service to the state Warehouse Causes Loss. and Ruin of $665,000 | LANSING w — A fire in the. Farm bureau executives said) ‘warehouse is located just off U.S. 116 in Lansing Township. The build- of cement block construc- ‘tion and with a steel roof, caved in from the. heat of the flames. The new farm bureau office! a sensing. Lansing Township and » nm Bean Co. Fire Departments: joined in fighting the blaze. Benny No Longer 39 DENVER «®—Just for the ree- Comedian Jack Benny ap- Road, he was stopped by another'live donkey—symbol of the Dem--nounced—in public—he will be 62 ‘truck driver, who told him he was. ocratic party—at the dinner spon- next Feb, 14. dragging the wrecked he Police said Jaciuk’s tra fered only minor scratches { aint. Benson Says Farmers Should Pick 1 Path WASHINGTON 0% — Secretary of must choose between individual freedom of action and socialized agriculture. He expressed confidence they prefer freedom and added, in ad- ‘dressing the Vegetable Growers’! 'Assn. last night, that ‘‘a planned and subsidized economy tends to weaken initiative, destrov charac- ter and demoralize the people.” “There are now a few people in this country who apparently think it is small politics to capitalize on agriculture’s troubles,”’ he said. but added he does not believe farmers will be “easily stampeded . by unsound grams." Specific’ administration proposals|”” to help the farm situation will be presented to Congress next month, Benson said. He did not outline them but said they will not be “Quack remedies." “Farm people have a right to expect sound and constructive help from their Department of Agricul- \ture and from their political lead- ers,” ‘he said. He forecast “‘loyal. bipartisan support in the interest theories and pro- Agriculture Benson says farmers) .|important occasions. Benny spoke at a \sored by the Young Republicans $100-a-plate dinner raising funds - suf-'of New Hampshire. He placed it for General Rose Hospital here = his farm in Concord. Mast night ee ‘Your Shopping List Stuck for Milady’s Gift? Diamonds Always Nice ° By JANET ODELL The woman in your life will be thrilled with what- ever you buy her for Christmas. How nice it will be, if you can present her with just the right thing. How jabout a diamond necklace, for instance? Before you hit the ceiling, read on... store has Add-a-Link dia-*——— mond necklaces that are) leather hat box filled with cos- within many budgets. metics. You buy the chain and one diamond drop now; you acd more drops on other a local jewelry — eee ee Do you raise a ruckus when Mama uses your electric razor? You can stop that easily by buy- ing her one of her own, one de- signed just for women. A pair of pigskin gloves for driv- ing or capeskin ones for dress are always welcome. If diamond necklaces are out of your class—for this year anyway— you can still please her with a kitten-soft sweater. If she's the type who won't buy herself a cashmere, you pick one out in her. favorite color. Should she be al- lergic to wool, there are luscious sweaters in man-made fibers. She'd love a black ang silver stole or a filmy plaid one, Stoles come in all colors, light.or. heavy of our * r —_ apes TJ HE PO NTIAC PRE WAKE OVER PAGE Saow Fiurries Details page two St S 118th YEAR kkk ke PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. FRIDAY, DECEMBER 9, 1955—32 PAGES SMR EEE non TMT BNE? PHOT PASADENA COLLEGE FRESHMAN — Joan - Culver, 18-year-old Pasadena City College Fresh- man from La Canada, Cal., has been selected to reign aS queen of the Tournament of Roses at Pasadena Jan. Named Rose ' Tournament Queen ae i United Press Wirepheoto 1, Joan, who will be officially crowned Dec. 28, admires her bouquet of roses, symbol of her royai title. t Higgins Back From New York City Satisfied With Toll Road Progress Chairman of the Michigan Turn-| “I'm going to talk with Ziegler) Pineiro pdb Die land CE which will benefit the state, ress hed been made toward ob- >Y Coordinating the toll road with taining a revenue bond issue to freeway construction. aol, pet reowt Rockwood: ty we can't agree, I think the With authority members Justin 'sislature will step in.” R. Whiting, of Detroit, and Carl’ Higgins said that State Rep. ~~. poll fat mediately af Emil A. Peltz (R-Rogers City) was er the State Supreme Court rul the turnpike act constitutional Dee Ell | ed (who is chairman of the House Roads and Bridges ‘gins stated. -jbrothers.“*— Top Red Tourists: Invade Disputed Kashmir Area SRINAGAR, Kashmir (®—Nikita’ S. Khrushchev and Soviet Premier! Bulganin landed at Srinagar's. mountain-rimmed airfield today for | a 48-hour visit to disputed Kash- mir, * * * The Kremlin's two top men flew ‘here trom Jaipur in northwestern’ \India. There crowds hailed the. premier yesterday as ‘Maharajah Bulganin” when he and Khrush- chev donned Indian turbans, The two reponded by shouting in Hin- di: indians” a) Russians are. * * * India land Pakistan have been contend-| ing for the allegiance of this for-| mer princely state in British India ever since the Indian subcontinent. gained independence in 1947. Pak- istan is allied with the West. AFL-CIO Plans Militant Drive ' Campaign to Be Aimed at Nation’s 30 Million Unorganized Workers NEW YORK tINS!i—The AFL-| CIO is set to launch a militant) drive to bring the nation's 30 mil. | lion unorganized workers under the new labor federation’s ban- laa AFL-CIO President George Mea-| lvention, that the drive would not -be “any Milquetoast. movement."’ } | He said the 15,000,0000-man Committee); AFL-CIO will use “every legal | pike Authority George N, Higgins|to see if we can't agree on a pro- ‘said he wants the turnpike,” Hig-| means” in its organizational | a | drive and declared “no little men | Authority members Smith and with loud voices in either politi- i Whiting have been named by Hig-| cal or industrial life are going to | jgins to handle the financial ar- |rangements. Authority Chief Engi- lic relations program. 1 sinmmbery ot tee sents coment: | tees of the State Senate and Mouse also made the trip. “We conferred with our financial advisers, Blythe and Co.,"’ said Higgins, “and learned exactly| what we must do to clear the way’ for a bond issue. “Our route must be completely agreed on over the 113-mile span.” The J. E. Greiner Co, MTA got his news on the hoof. consulting engineers, must map the! route in final form and the author- | ity'’s traffic analysists, Colverdale| Th and Colpitts, prepare any altera- it tions in projected traffic - use All Worke When State ere was only one copy—e d for Paper Was Young | One example is the Bark Shanty (Mich.) Times. veryone contributed to it— was read by all, all who could read anyway. Bark Shanty is one Michigan city that doesn’t exist had said that talks would proceed | | turn us aside.” Walter P. Reuther, head of the! |neer E. Thomas Baker and Con.’ |AFL-CIO's new Industrial Union| |sulting Engineer Murray D. Van-| Wagoner will work on route prob-, lems along with Higgins who also 'with him in New York. ‘Peltz! plans to contifue his extensive pub-| the DuPont industrial system and lother chemical companies, the tex-' |tile, wood and paper industries, and teachers, white collar workers and distribution and unorganized, ‘building trades, Letter Carriers President W il-| jliam C. Doherty declared an at-| epee gd will be made to organize the! the motor indust government employes, Meany said the federation is | | groups, including industrialists, | but that it would not abandon | labor's traditional “militant man- | ner. ” = The AFL-CIO chief previously) caused by changes from the orig- any longer. It is now Port Sanilac. But when stor ekeeper &t the “staff level” to work out a inal location. claded in -our bend prospectus before Blythe can begin to sell the bonds,” Higgins explained, Major route problems -still to’ be solved are in sections running, through Detroit and Allen Park, N€WS of the day. If they had he added. anything to contribute, “The bonding experts said they they did so, in their own could see no reason why we can't! There were the same continuing; get financial support. Our only pews stories that there are today. | Raymond set up a ledger itype book in his store. |Everyone who came in would read it to get the Here's Because humans are fallible. there pant) _apean.. cowardly |Uri Raymond started his newspaper, it was February, “This information must be in- | 1847 and still Bark Shanty.¢— : The next aa Feb. 15, there was. this message: : “Correction— “We have to correct a state- ment made yesterday. We were misinformed about the return of the lost turkey—and to set all right we will give a correct ver- sion of the case, “Our honorable neighbor (mer- we mean dealer in dry goods, groceries and whisky, etc.! a sample from two days. when it, one day or night last week lost| ‘one of his noble bipeds. he or she has a soul at all which we doubt. went under cover of a dark night and robbed our neigh-| bor of one of his best birds. “Such an act or deed is too “live-and-let-live’’ agreement with, ithe National Association of Manu-) Ss. But he explained that he had, jabandoned this attempt after plrses |Board Chairman Charles R. Slig! Jr. and denied any such move oa ‘afoot. 354,445 Get Degrees WASHINGTON (®—The nation’s, colleges and universities handed, out 354,445 diplomas during the) j1954-55 college year. Education | Commissioner S. M. Brownell re-| Some than the number of eres earned, en's group, and iLin 195354, 1 ‘the recent de- crease in the total number of col-| lege students. ‘Pedestrian Is Killed | Kashmir may afford the touring) ‘Russians an opportunity for more | “| |barbs aimed at the West. t i Department, urged the federation! to take on the job of organizing) “Intent to Ruin Small Suppliers Claim They Seek Only Proportionate Share of ‘Parts Business the bigness of General Mo- -ltors and other— powerfut overtime basis today. President Harlow H. Cur- |tice and his platoon of vice presidents and top execu- ‘tives agreed with Sen. |O'Mahoney of Wyoming to resume their public hearing ‘@ half hour earlier (9:30 a.m. EST) than usual. WASHINGTON (®—A de- bate about the effects of, ccrporations went on an. 4 ct — AP Wirephote | The- study of the multi-' pound, 10 ounces when she was born Sept. 23 in Salt Lake City, gives billion-dollar corporation by. a big smile to her mother, Mrs. ieeeed this week from the hospital. Tiny Mary Lee now weighs Willard G. Locke, as she was re- oy) Moser Gets Lie Tests GM Heads Detiy“ Tiny Mite Makes Grade~" ‘Inconclusive’ a4 Results Gained, Police Reveal Area Man Questioned in Death of Three Boys Near Chicago ———- Chicago police yesterday gave four lie detector tests |to a Fenton man being ‘questioned — -in—connection ——— with the October slaying of ‘three Chicago schoolboys. _ Chief Thomas Brennan of the Cook County Sher- ‘iff’s Police said all the tests were “inconclusive.” Held was Owen Robert Moser,.23. He was arrested at Holly last Saturday. EVERYBODY HAPPY, Now — May Lee Locke, weighing a | [Cal Police questioned him about the strangulation of Robert | Peterson, 14; John Schuessler, 13 |and Anton “Sctrvesdl gig, i Senate judiciary anti- pounds, 1 ounce. After living in an oxygen controlled incubator, doc- whose nude bodies were ound out- trust and monopoly Sub- tors declare she is in “excellent condition.” ‘committee was originally — Slated to wind up today, land there was still a slight lchance it would. So far, only a few of the GM lead- ers have had a chance to, speak. Yesterday, Henry M Hogan, GM |general counsel, asked for a making statements ,amount to testimony. O'Mahoney promised chance. that, him been used by O'Mahoney and Curtice. in brisk but | Clashes about GM_ policies. | Last night. as the session wen well past the windup hour, O'Ma |Joseph W. Burns were’ asking i {GM was trying to “squeeze out’ independen: | salers | parts GM cars ‘now on the road. No, said Curtice, Vi | William F. Hufstader and other IGM executives, As they pictured, it, GM—properly — was trying to |get its share of this off-shoot of | ry that is a big, business in itself. ANN ARBOR (®—When your daily newspaper is. = BOR RRS EINEM COVER! Although OM bes beea setae | delivered to your doorstep, remember it wasn't always this way. The Michigan Citizen in the 1840s and 1850S ready to cooperate with all half of ali new cars and. trucks recently, they said, GM now has | friendly | honey and sub-committee counsel) it manufacturers, whole- ers and jobbers in replacement. for the more than 24 million ice President ’ Boys Group Powe to the Inevitable; Schedule Dances airl friends of Pontiac Boys Club) — will have their way at} \ *To the hitherto strictly mascu- ny announced yesterday, in con. Chance “to rebut the chairman’')line activities of the club will be, cluding the federation's first con-|b€C@uSe he said O'Mahoney has added Saturday night dances for! high school age couples. _ Grand opening of will bé tomorrow at 8 p.m., “Club 530" and snacks The reason for the capitulation? | “The dance is for teenagers on) Lansing Blaze Under Control | Fire at the Farm Bureau. | Warehouse Causes Loss _ and Ruin of $665,000 with, LANSING Ww — A fire in the boys even acting as waiters to Michigan Farm Bureau warehouse | So far, much of the time has 5¢™Ve young couples soft drinks northwest of Lansing was brought’ ‘di ‘after burning fiercely \Gcies whe find difficulty doing than two hours. i f) City Man Killed Beneath Trailer | George H. Franz Dead | in Telegraph* Mishap This Morning Coulacos. The exe eek a Ae think it’s fine. only about 20 per cent of the | | parts business and is trying to | 4 Pontiac man who drove his car, get more, O'Mahoney rape this is the trend that he and many |tion. Continual concentration (Continued on Page 4, Col. 1) No Telegraph Light, Taylor Mothers Told DEARBORN (INS)—The State |Highway Department yesterday in- \formed the Tawlor Tow nship. | mothers they would not receive the traffic light at Telegraph road and Cypress for which they have been ‘crusading. William L. Marvin, Detroit dis- | triet engineer for the depart. ment, telephoned Mrs. Clara said the answer on the traffic tight-is “stitt no.” Meanwhile, the women said they would continue to blockade the intersection until the state provides, them with the traffic light. The women blocked traffic twice mean for any man. The creature! DETROIT 1 — John O' Con, 63,| yesterday afternoon to allow school that did it ought to sit under the;of Detroit was killed today when/ children and buses to cross thé droppings of a hen roost the rest of = days. worry lies in possible construction of too many coimpeting free high- ways by the State Highway Com. Were mistakes made. too. aire boat Le ee a called the Port Sanilac Ue —Feb. 14, 1857, . 10 Board Members: “It is rumored today that the Honorable Mr. Mead—who lately Resi n Their Posts lost a noble turkey from his roost. Iq —has been fortunate.. The said, turkey, remembering his * Ten Royal Oak Township Board fare, returned last night eee members resigned from the board) peared this morning with a laugh- at & meeting last night. ing countenance, ready and willing Cause of thé “mass resignation to devour more corn.’ was the new city boundaries of — Madison Heights. The 10 would) have had to move from the new, city into the township to keep| their positions on the board. Among the resigners are George Horkey, township’ supervisor for 18 years and Sarah E, Bradford,’ The infectious Yuletide spirit township clerk for over 12 years.| brings out the best in most people Horkey's resignation is to take cf- and. ironically, the worst in a few. fect immediately. Appointment of) Sprinkled among the hordes of a new supervisor was postponed shoppers storming local stores to untit the next board meeting, ~ buy gifts for their loved ones are) a number of bad-check passers, pickpockets and purse snatchers. Their activities were brought Chiet ’ Faced with a pile of fubber- complaints, Miller said, “It's a mystery to me why they stranger stil] when consider that most bum check ss $ sign their own name to { 1 a \ i; pare \ i P f | hit by a car while crossing a De- ‘troit intersection, ‘embattled corner. They said they would do the same today. Yule Brings Out Best, and Worst under the rear end of a ruck, trailer at Telegraph and Maple on arrival at St. gues George H. Joseph Mercy Franz, 33, of 5918) 'Dwight Ave., apparently went to; around 7 a.m, was not immediate-/ something attractive that at the |000 to the warehouse and $500,- j00 to its contents. Flames shot 90 fect into the air as stocks of feed, seed, fer- tilizer, farm machinery and tar paper were destroyed, Gusts of wind fanned the fire porte ~ | tarpaper sent out black | of smoke to mark the a a a of = | blaze, The one story, 200 by 240-foot| | warehouse is located just off U.S.! 16 in Lansing Township. The build- ling, of cement block construc- |tion and with a steel roof, caved in ‘from the heat of the flames. The new farm bureau ottice| ‘headquarters located nearby, grain elevator and other buildings. others ques-' poids this morni ng was dead Were not touched by the flames. | Lansing, Lansing Township and John Bean Co, Fire Departments: joined in fighting the blaze. Cause of the fire, discovered ‘sleep and failed to see the truck ly determined, eee for the light, Bloomfield ‘ownship police reported, Joseph M. Jactuk, 31, of Wyan- | | dotte, driver of the two-trailer rig, noticed nothing wreng and | did not feel the impact of Franz’ car, ‘light, Road, he was stopped by another! ‘truck driver, who told him he was _dragging the wrecked sedan. _ , Police said Jaciuk’s trailer su fered only minor ae to the Benson Says Farmers, Should Pick 1 Path WASHINGTON — Secretary of Agriculture Benson says farmers must choose ‘between individual dressing the Vegetable Growers’ Every year at this time. he ex- account charge can bring up to! bounces have I got enough identi- Ass”. last aes that) 8) planned plained, a number of people who four years in prison. No crime is fication to allow me to find this 24 subsidized economy tends to stay honest from January through November decide they can write checks without having moncy in) the bank to back them up. The official name: for this is, “cashing checks without an ac- count,” “They seem to think they can take advantage of crowded store conditions and hard-pressed clerks) to make purchases with only a scrap of paper,” Miller explained. involved unless the person knows. his check will bounce. | Many deliberate’ passers of i bogus checks sign their own names because a phony signature can: result’ in an uttering-and-publish- ing charge punishable by up to: 14. years in prison. The detective advised clerks who are asked to cash checks to think to themselves ,-“If this In Today’s Press vane News... . 82 M38, 36, 37, 38 se eebenwane eee ewe person?” Ask the customer to write his address under his signature on the check’s back, Miller sug- gests. Then examine the driver's license and compare the physical description of the holder with the customer. Write the number of the license on the check. Employers should give complete instructions on handling of checks to their staff, the investigator stated, especially new employes hired for the holiday season. Social security cards are easy to obtain and worthless as —— cation, he stated. ‘All checks should be, Janne carefully to see they ‘ are properly filled in and not dated’ ahead. (Continued on Page 4, Col. 4) weaken initiative, destroy charac- 'tér and demoralize the people.” “There are now a few people in this country who apparently think it is small politics to capitalize on agriculture’s troubles,”’ he said, but added he does not believe farmers will be ‘easily stampeded . . . by unsound theories and pro- grams’ Specific administration proposals to help the farm situation will be presented to Congress next month, Benson said. He did not outline them but said they will not be “quack remedies.” “Farm people have a right to expect sound and constructive help from their Department of Agricul- ture and from their political lead- ers,” he said. He forecast ‘‘loyal, bipartisan support in the interest of our farmers. freedom of a¢tion and socialized! agriculture. He expressed confidence they prefer freedgm and added. in ad-| Remembered by Dems , MANCHESTER, N.H. ww — The’ Democrats did not forget Republi- ‘can Sen. Styles Bridges at- a ban-| iquet last his 25 years of service to the state After he had started from the|and nation. Democratic friends of. going north on Telegraph} the senator presented him with a junder control shortly after 9 a.m.\ py the Cook for more said he had indicated previously | Farm bureau executives said) ‘same time is geared to their age,”’\the warehouse and contents were) explained club director William V. ‘almost a complete joss. Damage, |was tentatively éstimated at $165,- “teenchuaive: ‘to certain questions indicated he night commemorating ‘side Cbicago in a forest preserve a 18. | Moser, first arrested on a traf- fie charge by Holly police last Saturday night, was released blog day night after 30 hours of que ming and a lie detector test er Sieeea by Michigan State Police produced no evidence of |any connection with the murders. | He was rearrested Wednesday by Holly police acting for Cook County Sheriff's Deputies, who phoned the request from Chi- | cago, and arrived Wednesday | morning to transport Moser te | MMinois, Moser signed waivers of extra- tion after additional questioning who undisclosed knowledge of the ‘crime. Chief Brennan said today that jalthough the. four lie tests in Chi- cago, like Tuesday's here, proved Moser’s reactions | was telling the truth in denying any connection with the triple | Slaying. Snow for Tonight, ‘Weatherman Says The weatherman says that there will be occasional snow flurries tonight. It will also be colder to- night ~with a low ranging from 16 to 20. | Tomorrow it will be partly cloudy with little- change in tem- & perature. The high will be from 26 to 30 degrees. Temperatures will average from 2 to 5 degrees below normal for the next five days according to ' bureau forecasts. ; It will be warmer Saturday, cold- er Sunday and there will be only slight changes in the temperature thereafter. The lowest temperature preced- ‘ing 8 a.m. was 22. degrees. The thermometer registered 28 at 1 p.m. Benny No Longer 39 DENVER «w—Just for the ree- ord: Comedian Jack Benny ap- live donkey—symboel of the Dem- ‘nounced—in public—he will be 62 vocratic party—at the dinner spon- isored by ,on his far m in Concord. ‘next Feb. 14. Benny spoke at a the Young Republicans $100-a-plate dinner raising funds f-'of New Hampshire. He placed it for General Rose Hospital here Hast night. - Your Shopping List mond necklaces that are within many budgets. You buy the chain and one diamond drop now; you acd more drops on other important occasions. Hf diamond necklaces are out of your class—for this year anyway—| you can still please her with a kitten-soft sweater. If she's the type who won't buy herself a cashmere, you pitk one out in her favorite color. Should she be -al- lergic to wool, there are luscious sweaters in man-made fibers. She'd love a black and. silver or‘a filmy plaid one, Stoles , te oft eatene, light or heavy Stuck for Milady’s Gift? Diamonds Always Nice By JANET ODELL The woman in your life will be thrilled with what- ever you buy her for Christmas. How nice it will be, if you can present her with just the right thing. How ‘about a diamond necklace, for instance? Before you hit the ceiling, read on. . store has Add-a-Link dia-*——— . a local jewelry feather hat box filled with cos- metics. Do you raise a ruckus ine Mama uses your electric razor? You can stop that easily by buy- signed just for women. _ A pair of pigskin gloves for driv- ing or capeskin ones for dress are always welcome. Consider a gala evenings on, ah ing her one of her @wn, one de- beautiful hand beaded bag Yor ber = _ of Supervisors Port Huron. today. mended the move 3 Counsel Harry J. Merritt as needed. ways from existing planning a plained. ounty Group OKs Road Move Action Needs Approval of Individual Boards A: six-county highway commis- sion was approved yesterday by| members of the Supervisors Inter-| County Committee meeting at, Before going into effect, }-» plan.needs approval by. Boards of... Supervisors in each county in- volved, West Bloomfield Super- visor Hiland M. Thatcher said the, Thatcher is chairman of the Reads Subcommittee of the inter-county group which recom. yesterday, — Oakland County Corporation| asked to draft the resolution for! cess highways, superhighways and presentation to each Supervisors’ group plus the necessary contract! and organization form for the com- The commission would be fi-| nanced by county contributions in| the following amounts: Wayne, 2,500; Oakland $2,000; Macomb, $1,000; Washtenaw, $600: St. _ Clair, -__9..V, Wwasnten $500 and Monroe, $400 — totaling ments, the Récreation Board last’ $7,000. The money would be used night proceeded to other problems; The group would gather all in- Fron Ice Skating Rink. formation now available on high road commissions, Thatcher ex- | Sent for admission to the rink and, Plans would be drafted for a co its warming house was considered! ‘The widow of % THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 9, 1955 i | | FORECAST FOR TONIGHT — The weather | =a ae slowly, Paper Strike Talks trite tte sits a Syhvan Council OKs Marking ‘Progress’ on ee: Moving (90,000 Bond Issue DETROIT (INS)—Mediators re-/Véry Slowly in State |, The. Syivan Lake City — ported “great progress” today aft-| 1 ANSING (INS)—Michigan_Sec- pony yr eee neon er the latest negotiating session in retary of State James M. Hare said|the complete acquisition of the Detroit's eight-day-old newspaper | in Lansing today that 1956 automo-| citys new $275,000 water system. strike. bile license plates are going very On Tuesday, the new. system Federal and state conciliators Hare said only 44,000 have been went into operation to the homes said the meeting, which adjourned 'soiq so far, compared to 75,000 at|/Which had been connected to the pared for publication. After pab- lication, a period of 30 days is al- lowed if referendum action is to be, taken on the issue. Drives Car Into Train, Says ‘Didn't See lt’ © Robert K. Dennison, 26, of 21 Lois St. , drove his car into a train stopped across. West Blvd. last night to take on water. According to Pontiac Police, resentatives of the three major | will serve to advance negotiations will be fair and colder over most of the eastern again have rain, and snow from the Cascades and further. It gives both sides the op- states tonight, although snow flurries are forecast northern Rockies will push into the northern Great for western New York, the central Appalachians Plains. Outlook for the Pontiac area is cloudy and _ and the upper Ohio valley. The Pacific states will colder, with possible « snow flurries. ‘The Day in Birmingham Concern City Recreation BIRMINGHAM—With announce-| |Fred Streng of Chicago, and al ae Ags ment of t Recreati "brother George of Grosse Pointe.| after the men entered his store one sala iad eae Semi baaregi al lof them pulled a gun and the other rector awaiting Monday develop) Mrs. — Schug Former concerning the under-construc tion! nd schools will be given cards to pre- Detroit. She was a life member of Pyt jian Sisters No. ordinated network of limited-access' but referred for advice to a com- itwo sisters, Mrs. Robert Conway, | highways, mea tigkwsy 8 inter-county roads Area Police Solve $400 Novi Breakin . A $400 breakin at a Novi Town- ship gas station was solved yester- day within 24 hours by Oakland Novi policemen. James Killeen, 21, of Novi Town- ship, is in jail today awaiting trial m the robbery. Detective in the cigarette machine. Killeen, who said he had used |Quinn will give a Christmas story. and mittee formed by Roland Reese with whom she made her nore land Robert Fauteck of the Board; at 340 Merryweather, Grosse: Frank Whitney who has handled: ,Pointe, and another sister, Blanche. | city recreational duties as well as’ school athletic director; and Dana Pontiac Sets Recor d Whitman Jr., assistant city man- ager. The board will announce the director's name at Monday night = Sales Volume Mark commission meeting. | The Pontiac Motor Divi ision de Pale ine ee nee ses ted ony pel livered 13.573 new cars during the it s tectives and lov: t y \Fire Chief Park H. Smith. His| @st 10 days of November, accord | department answered 13 fire calls, land first aid runs totaled nine.| Leo|There was*one false alarm turned | Hazen said today Killeen admitted|in, he said. breaking into Staman Shell Serv- ice and taking th intended! for an —— rita amen from, thered at the MOMS meeting Mon-) an unlocked safe which was kept | 4ay at Mrs, Harold Corson's home | jon +manager of Pontiac and vice presi- ident of General Motors. This figure represents an in- Christmas es will be fur- land| record pace set in the fall of 1954, Chesterfield. Mrs. Rowlan Critehhe id’ ssid. $71 of the money to pay for repairs;!he Mothers of Men in Service : to his car, piles $228, Hazen\are gathering clothing needed hae Seed i added, Youngster Sends Threatening Note |pi: Demanding $2 “ROSEMEAD, Calif: »—Sheriff's deputies went through the motions today of investigating a threaten- ing letter that was dropped into the mailbox of Mr. and Mrs. Wal- ter Doviat. The note read: ‘‘To your husben, if this is his wife: Dear Sir, I wanted you to give me $2 cash by Friday morning at 5 minits to 8 o'clock am. If you don't give me | the money by then your wife will be gone by the time you get home. Don't call the police or go to them. “You are being followed by my min. Put the money in the grass. (signed) The Dart. “The Dart,”” Mrs. Doviat told of- ficers, is an unidentified boy about 6 or 7 years old. She said she saw him drop the letter in the box. Man Waives Extradition _in West Virginia Killing F LINT uw — Roy Fitzwater, 19, waived extradition yesterday to be, returned to Fayetteville, W. Va.. to face-a murder charge in the Nov. 11 holdup slaying of 75-year-old _ Anderson Lewis, a tavern keeper. Authorities at Fayetteville allege; that Fitzwater shot and_ killed Lewis in a holdup that netted him a small amount of money. OK Yule Broadcasts NEW YORK w—The Lutheran; Church, Missouri Synod, says that Radio Prague and Radio Warsaw have agreed to broadcast Ameri- can-produced Christmas programs for the first time. The Weather PONTIAC AND VICINITY = yene? pal colder with eccasional snow flurries to day ané tonight. High today 26-28./Calif; two sisters Mrs. Roy Mc-| MEN'S WEAR ‘tow tonight 16-20. Tomorrow. —. little change in temperatures. high %%.90, West te northwest winds ——————-~....—__ __._. .._ .___~ thy 98-98 -m:p:h: eradus' ‘ener’ to nertheast and increasing to 15-22% mph. and gusty. ‘oday in Pontiac T Lowest temperature preceding 8 am = ® am: ~ae velocity 20 mph. Direction: Nort Gun sets Friday at 5:00 p @un rises Saturday at rt 0 - m Moon sets Friday at 2:02 Moon rises Saturday at 4: “r am. Rovere. Tompereterss m. Thursday in “Pontiac recorded Sewstern! SSnoy Murr r flureies.” One Year a se Peatia : oe, .. 74. M...,... 3 ia sam... 23 Hb popoope sa. m.. 24 § a. m... 26 S¥usy.ussess tresessaserz two boys, one a veteran's son the children’s home in Pontiac, Just a Hobby, M‘am and jewelry for some of the home's teenage girls; are purchasing cou pon books redeemable at the hos- Dearborn Veterans’ Hospital; and, he was an off-duty policeman. l2 Bandits Reveal Plans by Selling Out ‘Holdup’ jduring the latest session and the 5 Eton Ice Rink ‘nalblenns ar a ora in the hands of two. bandits spelled out a $262 robbery jat Bernard's grocery. A. B. Bernard, the owner, said iMrs. Jenny Schug who died yes-f a — ped: terday noon in a Detroit Hospital, | will be buried at 2 p.m. Saturday’ lat Woodlawn Cemetery. Her body Whether children of Birmingham!is at Verheyden Funeral Home, | took the money, forced him into ‘the basement and drove off. Mono Lake in California has no h. Outlet and is so densely alkaline 94, Birmingham. that it contams no fish. Bert Schug leaves; ASME. COOD Little GIRL Wants This BIG DOLL! | Cowboy Outfits ing to R. M. Critchfield, general ;% COWBOY HATS EE all 2.00) me ee |crease in sales of over 15 per cent during the comparable period last /year, and boosts Pontiac ahead for the month of November over the ¢ Washable SARAN Hair— Magic Flesh—Eyes Close | Total sales for the month ot, : Reguiler $3.98 Value 298 pol sor hese rooted pages ace TOKYO w—In a downtown . f ipartment store yesterday, police|/ pital canteen for 100 vets in the arrested a pickpocket, discovered), i Tae are making scuffies and gadget-| . Se Wspecrat PURCHASE] ‘Famous ‘NAZARETH’ Children’s Mrs. Katherine Drumm Service for Mrs. Katherine | Shields Drumm, 86, 776 W, Lin- | colin, who died yesterday morn- | SKI-STYLE ing, will be at.1 p.m. Saturday | p - at Maniey Bailey Funeral home, j 9 with cremation in White Chapel. . \ ajamas Born in Dundee, Scotland, she | $2.95 Value -had_lived_in_ Birmingham since |} [. 1917, for years in a home on — East Maple near the present site eof Walton’s Jewelry. She had made her home with her daugh- ter, Mrs, Susan Reid. A widow whose hobby was writ- ing poetry, she leaves two daugh- | ters, Mrs. Reid and Mrs. Walter Boscardin of Windsor Lock, Conn.; and a son, James, of Allen Park; and five grandchildren. Wilber U, Johnstone Service for Wilber U. Johnstone, |65, 952 Ridgedale who died in St. 4 to 10 Years Boys é& Girls Brushed cotton, knit cuffs and an- kles. Elastic waist. cs Children’s Wear —Main Floor et a eh cuahaliiel = Se aE 08 N. Saginaw — Candy Dept. ti ae | Box *| —- $1.95 to $3 Vaine filed ed the eh rae Ay eaeseoeeesosecesecese he Perfect Gift for Sportsman, Hunter, Fisherman, Farmer ss Joseph Hospital, Pontiac, yester- | SS day, will be at 3 p.m. Saturday, at Manley Bailey Funeral Home.+ Burial will be in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, under auspic- es of the Birmingham Lodge No. 44, FR&AM, Born in Huntington, W. Va., Mr.| Johnstone attended Butler Univer- sity and came to Birmingham in} 1935. He had been maintenance) electrician with GM Truck and) Coach since 1939. He was a mem-; ber of F&AM and the Birmingham ; High Twelve Club. Surviving are his wife Shirley; | { We Need Room—PRICE SLASH BELOW WHOLESALE te Sell-Out Just 34 of These Men’s TOPCOATS | 100% Wool Zipper Lining 18.66 | mii Water - repellent treated gabardine, raglan style, sizes ~ 34 to 44. ATI sales jinal—no _ layaways. SIMAS.@ his mother, Mrs. Cora E, John} stone of Bloomfield Hills; two daughters, Mrs. Irving Tallman of, _|San Mateo, Calif., and Mrs. Ralph |Purdy of Lansing; three sons, Hugh of Detroit, Richard of Dear- born and Ted of Mountain View,) 1 —Basement Cutcheon of Birmingham and Mrs. e a CS a i No More Bulky, Heavy Sox With ‘PLASTIC FOAM’ Boot Sock Ideal Christmas gift for men who © 00000000009 0000000000000000' eceoeese Sisensaessceonsssasesvean HESIAMS:' at 3:50 a.m. after lasting more ‘the same time last year. The next meeting between rep-| — = aanene © A Gift He Can Always | ee ee eee ee ee ee portunity to come back tom with what should be final pro- posals."’ All but ene of the issues in the dispute reportedly were discussed WESTERN GIFTS for Ait ‘Little COWPOKES' | Nia rnin ' LENTHERIC erty burmese 114 4 » ‘HIS’ “va than seven and a half hours, was | The secretary added that the “the most productive so far on Feb, 29 deadline is fixed by law)said both sides.”” | and cannot be extended. = : kit" wisins ; fae nt halt 9 has shave cream, WASHABLE TWILL 4.“ coe taeale py oe 2-PIECE | shave 7 cologne and | at ett - 85) Vest to match arcem y pants or skirt. | hn | . black colors. Sizes realty! ; 8-M-L Not as f f Felt with west- ern design. : COWBOY SHIRTS | ke : kK totletries Washable flannel. 7 , Cowboy patterns 1° 9 bal — 8 $524) SEAFORTH 0%. in assorted colors. PLUS MANY OTHERS | 3 to 6x Prices Plus Tax L 98 ~ —Mein loor Se Pa Boys and Girls Styles * 2 after shave and tal. 1.65 Bech lene me travel bag w famous ecaterth | naw Gc ae aR, Ba : |) SPECIAL PURCHASE---Save HALF and More! if Buy for Gifts and for Your Own Home Waste Metal boudotr § - basket covered ' with colored cleansing tissues. © glass panels. alit top ag Beautiful & use- pie tured, ful. Matches basket. Larger Size BASKETS at $1.98 and $2.49 cor LY i | GLASS metaee | Holds full box of * NO TRADE-IN NEEDED $28.50 and 95 $29.95 Values Models W and WL—brand new, factory eeoreeeee. complete with case cords. MAIL ORDERS* hoy $1 for sales tax The offices of the Pontiac Co-Op Federal Credit Union will be closed Saturday, December 10 in respect for Peggy Joyce Verch | Revolving Top — Heavy WROUGHT IRON Base Children’s TV HASSOCKS Save Almost $2.00 at Simms Reg. $4.95 Value $ 99 Exactly , as Pictured ROUND OR SQUARE Only 200 At This Price Over 14 inches tall, “13% inch’ diameter, heavy padded, leather like plastic top, easy to clean. ong legs. SWIVEL BASE , 98 N. Saginaw St; —2ad Floor project. Dennison told them, “I didn't see WY apres Ernest L. Ethier|the traip.’’ Damage to the car ordinance was being pre-!was estimated at $200. We Den't m't Take Holidays From LOW PRICES! Soman DRUG ST ORE Sam eas se sentanwes GERITOL, caps or liqui sist... 2... ‘S'LINAMENT. 6 c size . ees SARBASOF SHAVE CaraMe Se. size . BAKERS MODIFIED MILK—30c size Full Pound of . Petroleum Jelly VICKS rare 104 parte Le ceeeceueeee ..§ .28 ANACIN TABLETS—100 tablets, $1. 25 Value... .68 OSTREX TONIC a Gogo 2 “ “eeene .98 CLINIC COUGH SYRUP—3 ounces . oe vemece «if Full Pound of HOSPITAL COTTON 57° 30c Size : SIMILAC eo | - LIQUID | me 17° | Gmc ongere 7 oe Soft, ara Stsie ae) | Cleansing Tissues” VITAMIN AGD Bos rl ¢ _PERLES . 719° Full box of 400 sheets of soft and absorbent cleansing tissues. CHEX MOTH CARES—perfumed, 15c value... .$ .09 BREWERS YEAST—250 tabiets bee eee wees vos, a9 WHOLE FLAXSEED—Full pound ..... cissesss 69 CALIFORNIA SYRUP of FI nc size....... .39 Pie neers cee ‘ * ss “5 hie Waterproof Rubberized Gillette Type—BBB Shopping Bags Double-Edge Blades 7Se Sturdy —_ bag 3 ac $1.96 : no Seg bo of sharp 98° with reeves capacity double edge rasor for packages. blades. Buy now, pgs senescence BAY SHAVE LOTION—49c Value . COCCONUT OIL SHAMPOO—1 gallon... .. 89 SHAVING MIRROR—with stand, $1.50 value... .98 RUBBER GLOVES—75c Value.............. 29 GILLETTE BLUE BLADES—dispenser of 20.. 65 New Gift Idea—“ESQUIRE” ~ Shoe Shine Kit A ope. ap idea that's different - ideal for anyone on your list: Complete with 4 cans of shoe polish, saddle soap, 2 brushes, 2 - daubers and 2 shine cloths in sturdy = footstool. 100 caps.......... .66 ai Ded ce pedevecnsse Mle 6) a ee pe o40Vd WIAD INVA _GM Denies Attempt | to Ruin Competitors and the largest units a bigger one.| , Romie concentration, The latter}. * ’ « = ocr, Steg90ds trom: some, 21.000 1 J é THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 9, 1958 (Continued From Page One) business, he said, finds the small operators getting a lower profit “We don't want a world of politi- cal concentration,” he said. “We'd| better not have a world of eco- leads to the former."’ Curtice disputed O'Mahoney’s contention that expansion of GM had crowded out other business. He said GM gets 68 per cent suppliers and they, many small businesses, had all grown and prospered along with GM. : Curtice and Hufstader said GM had been in the auto parts re- placement business for many years and recently had broadened its| | ‘4 ! Service for j | (129 Raeburn | officiate Cemetery. lived ten hours. dependent jobbers and wholesal- eys. Formerly, they were.sold only to GM dealers. Curtice said GM had expanded | Ave. Pontiac Deaths | P| eee } Mrs. Willie T. Bass Mrs. (Clara Jean Darrow) Bass, 20, of %'andchildren. Ct. will be | Saturday at 3 p. m. in the Hun- |toon. Funeral .Home. 'A. J. Baughey of the -Evan- _gelistic Mission Tabernacle will with burial jcnerel Memorial Cemetery. Mrs. Bass died in Miami, Fla. - "|Dec. % She has been brought ber, from the Ira Kaufman Chapel, 9119) Dec. 3, She has been brought here: ’ at the funeral home this evening.. Mrs. Fred M. Su 055 ix . Fred M. 1 ‘Baby Boy Cruz {Prayer senvios Ter” Baby Hoy tenth of Mrs: Fredo. “tbottien se Cruz was held this afternoon at Suess, a former Pontiac resident. : 4:30 in the Huntoon Funeral Home with burial following in Mt. Hope) months’ illness, at The baby was born Tuesday at Joseph Mercy Hospital and Surviving are his parents, |Maurilio and Maria Limon Cruz,| pontiac, Mr. Suess operated a tool! jand a sister, Estella, at home.| and die shop. | The family lives at 906 Melrose -Mrs. Suess is survived: by her | bet, Huntington Woods, three as eee a a OO | years ago. oy . | Besides his widow, Rose, he is > ~ ‘survived by three sons, Wallace) ‘of Detroit, Allan of Oak Park and , T. Sheldon of Phoenix, Ariz. and two ~~ Willie — Others surviving are three sis-'+ ters, Mrs. Abraham Klein ofje Windsor, Ont., Canada, Mrs. Israel! V-' Moss and Mrs. Morris Cohen, both of Detroit; two brothers, Abe in. White Chernikoz of Detroit and Sam _Chernikoz of Huntington Woods. ; Service will be Sunday at 3 p.m. '. ) held The Dexter Blvd., Detroit. | Word has been received of the She died Dec. 1 after several’! ,# her home in, jLutz, Fla. ; ~ Service was held in Tampa, Fie. ;with burial in Houston, Texas. - When the family _was_tliving in.s° ae , husband, a daughter, Mrs. Char- v Open 7 Every - Night "til o Vere £10 0 EAL dG OES x ets Peon he Mio Br nto aa eis Pontiac’s -tore for ms because it had products customers wanted and efficient management. | O'Maheney said he was not criti-| cizing the efficiency of GM. Ford! or other large corporations, or the, integrity of their managements. -WORLD’S LARGEST JET ‘COPTER — The world's largest jet powered transport helicopter, the 40-passenger Piasecki YHI6A, made its first public flight demonstration last Tuesday after- | noon. Known as the “Turbo Transporter,” it about 150 miles jeeps. AP Wirephote| weighs more than 16.tons and has a top speed of Morris Cherney per hour. Being nearly 80 feet | long, it is large enough to accommodate three \lotte Powers, and one grandchild. ' Morris Cherney, 56, Pontiac Group to Hold Mining merchant for 20 years, died in Las Hearing in Houghton Vegas. Nev. Wednesday. He had. ees a, been in ill health for several LANSING « — A legislative in- JUST IN TIME. : dollars in 1941-1955 on an original’ - aS “a bully of the greatest mag-| - tion of that deajership. '. “badgered” Work into investing in| allotment of cars “would : and refused to let them reduce (0s involved legal matters and cated since July 31 to the states ‘+ eluding *. decisions than the individuals. * . _ together and write a fair dealer ~ that followed pestwar days of opinion. He said he ' said the problem for Congress was to find a plan ‘so that big indus-| ». trial Management and local busi-' "ness can both live.” j funbeiim He urged that auto maruisc- i Hufstader hit back at testimony’ by various GM dealers who com- GM policies may force govern- plained they had lost or been ment action, Curtice replied: threatened with cancellation of| “Oh, 1 don't think so.” their dealerships under GM pres- At another point O'Mahoney | sure for bigger sales. asked Curtis whether GM dealers He denied GM dealers were were ‘misleading the public” by threatened and said these whe (advertising bargain sales of ‘‘com-| complained had failed te keep iow executive cars." up with the stiffer competition | Curtice declined to express an _ easy selling. | cars im any quantity could have Hufstader said one Pontiac deal-| come from GM executives, but er who spoke to the Senate group| he wouldn’t know whether they last week, M. H. Yager of Albany, had been owned and driven by | N. ¥." made more than a million, officials of the companies operat- | prompting.” General Motors,” ©'Mahoney re- torted “and he doesn't need :1 5 “Lm asking ‘Red’ himself.’ he added, nickname, Curtice joined in the laughter and said “And Red will answer."’ of Checks, Thieves referring to Curtice by a | (Continued From Page One) “Be en guard,” he advised, “when a customer who bought | Two Officials Warn * 0 Ic the Chernikoz. ~ For 20 years, Mr. Cherney had operated § Allan's | Jewelry Store, 1 North Saginaw {present St. He had lived here 25 years |mining property. The meeting is | a tew-priced article asks to cash “ars. son ewned and lle was born i ssia in 1899, . e was a pt anes Oe its fourth hearing Dec. 14 in moving te his home, 10054 Tal- |open to the public. terim committee studying taxa- tion of mining properties will hold ‘Houghton, Rep. Rollo G. Conlin (R-Tipton), committee chairman, announced today. cs The committee is methods of studying assessing a check for a larger amount. “Honest people never refuse to Goff Sanity Hearing Delayed by Illness pon ident cat said — ing the sales agencies. investment of $10,000 but has now, shown an “inadequate perform-'.. ance’ on Pontiac -sales. | Yager, who. had described GM General Motors categorically de- nies that it coerces its dealers either directly or indirectly to pur- nitude.” last night termed the GM chase Genera! Motors replacement ” testiumony a ‘‘personal below-the./ Parts from it. belt attack." He added in a state-| Sen. Case (R-SD) suggested that pent) fram CAibany: ;some impartial body be created to ‘review the complaints of dealers “If only those who have been (who feel they have not been broken over-the wheel. or Whe treated fairly. What he had in are paupers, are safe to say what | mind, Case said, was not a new they think under subpoena in the federal agency but a board com- US. Benate—thea we have come |posed of representatives of vari- to a pretty pass. ous factories and dealers. Hufstader said A. M, Work of "Mahon ‘ Portland, Ore., put $90,000 into two aia ee e Pay “ee Pontiac dealerships and a few “fun State Commerce Commission to years later drew out more than” . star ee _1. review the findings of industry two million dollars in profits, sal | seview bennda: aries and bonuses. He said “poor performance” by! Under O’Mahoney's questioning, | F. W. Fraser, Work's sales man-|Curtice said GM never has can- ager at the Billingsly Motor Co.|celed a dealer's license for sclling of Portland, had caused termina-|cars into bootleg channels. Fraser; Rather, he said, when a dealer officials is detected doing this, his monthly be re- has testified that GM Pontiac dealerships of question‘ quced by a corres i able value. plus a heart to heart talk.” Curtice was drawn into the dis- O'Mahoney told Curtice he will cussion at one point when O'Ma- be asked in a closed door session honey suggested possible interven- coon to tick off the names of deal- tion by Congress. ers ‘‘whose allotments were re- Gevecal dcalera bad plained duced because they sell cars that i i he bootleg market.” that GM dictated the manner in 5°' into t which new cars were delivered I logan protested tha’ these ques- their | should have been directed to a law- t ne ephameonm ncbmase td jyer instead of to Curtice, a non- own deliv methods, — = | lawyer. O'Mahoney said this demon-; cigs strated the basic issue of “central | I'm asking the president of A Circuit Court hearing which: ‘will decide whether a Flint man| USUally leave the store or change Hupstader filed a statement that gocuseq of first degree murder;his mind about cashirig a check.””} will be declared insane has been! Wheaton warned shoppers not to | Postponed vn te a ores set packages down on counters, eee ea, Genera ern ‘and ladies were especially warned iZiem s sterday. ity | for Ray Goff.| °° keep a good hold on purses ee ee uns ‘during Christmas shopping. 32, of Flint, was canceled yester-| day becaause one of the psychia- Wheaton sald today that gangs jtrists who examined him is ill, of purse-snatchers and pick- |Ziem explained. pockets are expected to arrive | Goff is charged with the fatal im Pontiac this month from other ‘shooting of Mrs. Rita M. Cum- - cities. |mings, 27, of Flint, in a car parked, lon M87 near Holly Aug. 26. They come every year to a Four psychiatrists, who have Place where they are not known. examined Goff, ir nap at a every year careless persons hearing before Judge George B. - + Hartrick, who will decide whether serieg end Purses.” vhe ‘to commit the accused to lonia| | State Hospital As precautions against loss, the a inspector advised carrying only 47,790 Vaccine Shots | jceping « nond seas Cael eee ‘Allocated to Michigan | SALE! SALE! BUY I—GET 2 | look over our large stock of television, . washers, electric dryers, gos dryers, refrigerators, ranges, etc. on sale. Get a portable TV, clock radios, radios, automatic record players, steam irons, sandwich and waffle grills, scales, electric frying pons, toasters, mixers, shavers, roasters, FM radios, portable radios. For example: Thor Automatic Washer, $299.95 Get oa free portable, $99.95 TV G-E 9.2 Refrigerator, $259.95. Get a free automatic CBS 21” TV, $229.95. Get a free clock radio. Philco Apt. Etectric Range, $189.95. Get a good mixer. ABOVE GIVEN IN PLACE OF TRADE-INS TERMS AVAILABLE. OPEN EVENINGS HAMPTON ELECTRIC 825 W. HURON rs SALE! GET 2—PAY FOR | chermer! With 17 ewe *25°* | 4 record pleyer. 4 FE 4-2525 Near Tel-Maron Shepping Center — a sions. WASHINGTON wu — Another) The new allocation brought to |13,459.491 shots the amount allo- lfor private use. Another 13,542,441 ‘ lhave gone to the free program of. |the National Foundation for Infan- | tile Paralysis. control’in preference to local con- trol." He said some persons, in- Russian Soviet leaders, honestly believe that ‘‘some bu- reaucrat’’ could make better Turning to Curtice, O'Mahoney turers and retail dealers sit down contract. “lt eould net agree more that | ‘ our business sheuld be in our hands and not those of some bureaucracy," Curtice told 0’- Mahoney, ‘ Curtice and other GM executives have testified that management alone must be able to decide on terms of sales contracts and must | BABY'S LIBRARY oF een eeenee printed with non-toxic inks, velopes. ‘LINEN PICTURE BOOKS BABY ANIMALS In AN make these agreements with indi- vidual dealers rather than groups. When O'Mahoney implied that on page... . each 75c. MOTHER GOOSE PANORAMA hinged. 24 colorful illustrations rama. Opens out to TEN FEET THE BRIMFUL BOOK .. Brimful of* colorful pictures, ‘oO for little ones. MOTHER GOOSE RMYMES peers tier. 96 pages. edied by MY PICTURE STORY BOOK.... every page. -0st worneh ov - > |47,790 shots of Salk polio vaccine | jhave been allocated to Michigan : for use under its voluntary con-| foRtaN APministered by pri- jvate physicians and clinics. | | The 47,790 shots were among 1,-| |071,034 released yesterday by the |Public Health Service from vac- icine made by Eli Lilly and Co. of ees MOTHER GOOSE RHYMES. Pascinaing objects, first things tots see. pages. Beautifully illustrated in non-toxic colors Ages 1-5 First Books for Little Ones Gono ondsove$) 4 little cloth books with large colorful pictures cellophane en- IMAL FRIENDS 12 ceesee SS one GRANDFATHER'S FARM PANORAMA..... $2 Mounted on heavy board, die-cut and cloth in each pano- LONG. ...2,50 animal. stories. Rhymes and A-B-C.-Ideal volume . $2 @ees ee: This edition will make little hearts go pitter- : ges. WATTY PIPER, ull colored illusrations on every page. . faeces $2 Mother Goose, Animal and other fascinating stories. with full colored illustrations on almost books for every child 7 Ws to'3 These books and Boxed Sets for children are gay to look at, easy to read and interesting from the first page to the last. ACTIVITY BOXES MY STORY BOOK LIBRARY 1.25 Colorful story books in handsome box. Days .and days of delightful reading. PAINT WITHOUT PAINTS 75¢ Like magic' Wet’ the brush, paint the outline picture. up come the colors. 4 books with brush in box. CRAYON MAGIC 1.00 4 boxed books with magic crayon that brings picture to life; for active little hands. STICK ’EM TO PUSH OUT (4 books) 1.00 Die-cut gummed pieces to push out and stick on outline pictures. LEARNING IS FUN 1.00 The modern method for teaching the child reading. writing and simple arithmetic 4 sixteen page books illustrated in full colors DRAWING WITH DOTS 1.00 Four 16 pagé Dot Drawing Books The child draws from one number to the next to make a complete picture. Pencil in- cluded. PUZ'L LOTTO each 1.00 Three different sets. A combination puzzle and lotto game. Each set contains four colorful inlaid puzzles on sturdy frame. 1 CAN DRAW 1.00 Eight 12 page books for the young artist. Easy way to teach children how to draw. Educational and - instructive. With pencil and 48 sheets drawing paper. ‘ "FIRST STEPS IN COLORING 1.00 Six books boxed with 4 large crayons. Simple full color pic- tures with outlines on opposite pages to color, ~~ - THINGS TO TRACE 1.00 - Four tracing books of “outline pictures,: interleaved: with tracing paper in a handsome picture box, pencil included. HAPPY IS THE HOME WITH BOOKS , Waite’s Book Shen Bessenine Floor FOR CHRISTMAS! Beautiful New WADSWORTH “AMERICAN BEAUTY” _WATCHES wits BLGN DOLORES A little FROM Just D9 eprooucr of EIGIN styteo sy EIGIN ELGIN UNBREAKABLE DURAPOWER MAINSPRING MADE M # fs 2 a OVEMENTS! KATHRYN A most entrancing cose. 17 tewels *2°795 JANET. Delicately modeled. Has 17 jewel *25°5 Waite's Watch Shop—Street Floor Ages 4-8 COLORFUL STORY BOOKS THE LITTLE ENGINE THAT COULD........$1 suspense story about the brave little eng that chugged its way to success. A childhood classic. New edition, full colors on every page. CONTENTED LITTLE PUSSY CAT,......$1.25 By Frances Ruth Keller. A lovable little cat shows his neighbors how to be A b LITTLE BROWN BEAR LITTLE BROWN BEAR AND HIS FRIENDS. 1.25 Happy adventures of a little bear and his friends make these stories a delight for ali youngsters. Each 64 pages. a Ages 5-9 LARGE BEAUTIFUL STORY BOOKS CHILDREN OF OTHER LANDS. STORIES CHIL- DREN LOVE and TALES FROM STORYLAND.. Each $2 _ Each .of these delightful story books presents 80 pages, handsomely illustra Full colored jackets Chock-full of wonderful tales to remember always. THE BUMPER BOOK .......... oe A harvest of 22 delightful stories and poems. Colorful illustrations by EULALIE on each page. STORIES THAT NEVER CROW OLD......2.50 New colorful edition. A delightful collection of 20 children’s stories, beautifully illustrated by THE HAUMANS in full color on every page. Sturdy binding. THE GATEWAY TO STORYLAND..... oe 2.50 A beautiful new deluxe edition. 21 favorite stories and verses such as PETER RABBIT, THREE LITTLE KITTENS, GINGERBREAD BOY, etc., with over 150 illustrations in full | Ages 6-12 ANIMAL STORY BOOK ........... Children will be fascinated by picture book. All about animals—the cow, horse, sheep, sis: rabbit, etc. Colored illustrations by WESL! DENNIS on every page. PRINTER PRIMER ........ Sono Aen sas ae A novelty combination printing set, coloring and copy book — includes a printing set with 43 large letters and numbers and an inked stamp pad. Illustrated in color, ” t a 7 - - \ ‘ =< e «a THE PONTIAC PRESS MAKE QVER-PAGES: PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, Is Your High School Represented in the Press? FRIDAY, DECEMBER 9, 1955 FIFTEEN * _ Big Chiefs to Take On Arthur Hill; PHS Seniors Review for Exams By VICKY MICU { two weeks, will be located in the Tonight the Big Chiefs from Pon-| south side balcony. tiac High will take to the basket-| Biology club members have been, ball court and play the first home describing their recent trip, to New anh first. Saginaw. Valey Confer York. city. with.-club- adviser-John ence game of the season against; Youngpeter, and their visit with Saginaw Arthur Hill. The student; world famous woman biologist, body ‘will be out en masse to cheer|Libbie Hyman. the team on, with the PHS ed ote HOSPITAL leaders trying out new cheers: The Future Nurses Club toured’ _ Seniors got in that last bit of the University Hospital at Ann! ms ~ review in preparation for eenior Arbor recently and heard a dis-) a rs ee ey exams which start next week. This | cussion of nursing as a career in! week, too, sophomores were given the nurses’ residence, Couzens reading and maturity tests. | Hall, while the Future Teachers) Report cards dominated the | !istened Sunday to members of} scene at Pontiac High in the = their organization over station) middie part of the week. They WPON in a special panel discus- were distributed’ Wednesday. HON. With the annual State Retailing, With Christmas not far off, Congress fast approaching, the! ¢h'!+ and activities are turning Retailing and Office Club at Pon-| toward the holiday season. Vocal tiac High has betn busy electing Students will have their annual” delegates and working on a cam-° Concert soon, and Christmas paign for Kay Vallance, PHS-re-| Parties are being planned by all tailer who will run for the post of Clubs. state treasurer. Christmas party, The annual Christmas concert plans are also in the air for the by Pontiac public schools’ instru- Retailers, with club member mental music department was pre- Elaine Hamilton chosen to head sented Tuesday. the committee™ work. Some of the hobbies of seniors LATIN PAPER SOLD jin American Problems classes are Sidelighting the news, Latin stu- being displayéd in ane Raa __dents report the biannual sale of | rulents ome — att d ae the Latin paper, Epistolae Scholae,|UGem'S Of #dna Forman demon- . . strate that creative hobbies can has netted to date $118.01. which ea Rae . will) gollto various Ghantahle lor be a practical solytion to the prob- ee ‘lem of recreational needs. 5 | | = Projects ranging from embroi-, Work is soon to start on a new dery, car designing and gift wrap-| Bs Act Ap te the MP garantie etn JAM SESSION AT WATERFORD — Not only ballerina Diane Erickson is on her toes in this jam session at Waterford Township High School. At the pianos, Marilynn Keasey (left) and Margaret Studebaker (right) hammer out the rythm and, perched atop the press box for the high school | pirg to oil painting, woodworking | piano, Delores Kline is right on pitch as she practices a vocal solo “Kynr trom which-tocal-radio—an-—+and- baking-have been carried out! — = a = = Pentiac Press Photos number. The students are rehearsing for the A Capella Choir's annual Christmas program, to be given at 8 p. m. next Wednesday in the school. Waterford Township Recreation ballet classes also will dance in the concert. DISPLAY HOBBIES — Creative hobbies as part of personality development is one of the subjects studied at Pontiac High School in | __Edna Forman's American Problems Class. Here senior James Hois- ington shows his skill at cake decorating while Carolyn Killian exhi- bits a colorful crocheted rug. The class will also take up such serious problems as alcoholism, mental iliness, marital incompatibility, crime and divorce. nouncers and visiting announcers by the 31 students. They have will broadcast this season's bas- ketball games. ate seit" Stdents Sloe “Area Highs at Crest of Holiday Events St. Michael High usar Enjoys Holiday = |Dfamatics Club and the A Cap- Have Yesterday Off; ' Last night a different type of AT AVONDALE Sophomores Carry Out drarha—one with audience partici-) Christmas music. popular and — Se Students in Pontiac area high schools are riding the crest of a wave of hoilday events this week’! with Christmas concerts and ro-| grams in full rehearsals, special assemblies scheduled, and debates High, the Glee Club and A Capella and sparts drawing their quota of attention, will mean extra facilities for both High and Junior High Schools. AT WEST BLOOMFIELD At West Bloomfield Township . The four schools will meet at Farmington next week for two — rounds of varsity and two rounds Choir are practicing night and day’ o¢ junior varsity competition, A for the Christmas program, to be dinner will be served by the Far- ‘presented Dec. 20. The A Capella’ mington squad , Choir also has two outside ap- pointments—they will sing at Trin- one win and one loss; and Van | r : P Dyke and Waterford trail with two losses each, week presenting a play and pre- the annual Christmas’ An assembly. next Tuesday, the | Pella. Choir were kept active this pation—was presented by the Dra- classic, is ringing through the halls first to be held in the new gym, : RING CEREMONY HELD — Three of the 55 St. Frederick High School seniors who donned caps and gowns for the school's first ring cere- mony Tuesday night were, left to right, Jacqueline Johnson, Paul Grosse and Gloria Rameriz. The students’ class Rev. Alexander pastor of St. Vincent de Paul Church, in a cere- | mony in the church. A talk on the symbolism of rings was part of the service. Mission Supply Drive +matics Club. ‘The Night of Jan..at Avondale High. as the choir 16,” a@ court room trial in which'and band prepare for next Wednes- By JANET ENGLISH jmembers of the audience serve as day's Christmas concert, Books were pushed aside yester- UY: Ce also be staged at 8 p.m day as St. Michael High students | Morrow. ‘ jenjoyed a free day, in honor of the| Christmas melodies rang |feast of the Immaculate Concep-: through the school as the A Cap. | tion. ; pella Choir rehearsed for the Sophomores of Room 11 stressed| annual concert, sacrifice for the missions as they) Wednesday, carried out their successful “Op-| eration Education” ‘this week.|@ pantomime of the “Night Be-| Christmas entertainment, Each high school student contrib-|fore Christmas,” and ballet danc-| Avoninie’s fru | _ uted some school supply which ining by Diane Erickson, senior, | "VO e * JaTSt numer assem turn will be sent to a mission in|@md Waterford Township Recrea-|DlY will be held next Friday after- he) south; | by (these industrious|tion ballet classes. jnoon, Awards _for cross country sophies. The Skippers were guests of and football will be presented to Winner of the poster contest, (Clarkston High Tuesday. evening ir a = = eee ie elke sponsored by the Catholic Stu. 5 they played their second bas-| per Ol stulents will become. mem dents Mixsion Crusade, was ketball game. Tonight Waterford | ae, i a BaConal § Honor Aes Mary Singles, a senior. Eighth jwill meet Van Dyke on the home |S: ‘ mt counci] members ee eee ap ae =F commercial honor students grader Mary Ann deFager took Court. also will be recognized. * 2.8 second place, and juniors Bev | Eimy and Carol Cremer made | ls Your High School Represented Here? All classes will be represented in the program, which will start at 8 p.m., with the public attend- ing. Band director John Nez- tek and vocal director, Jean eneaea) hours with the music students in Highlighting the concert will be, an effert to give the utmost in Students will be keeping a close third place and honorable men- | Maal tien, respectively, |Wednesday under Jo Krout, the ¢d in this weekly high school page ‘new coach. , | should mail or telephone news Friday Avondale felt the blow of items’ Monday or Tuesday. so that eat when Shamrocks came out;they_reach The Pontiac Press by 9 fon top with a 66-35 score. Looks|a.m. Wednesday, deadline for Fri- like the team under Captain John|day's paper. Address mail to) Keller has started the season onj}Wima Greenway, high school edi- the right foot. tor, or phone FE 2-818]. rings were blessed by the ‘Most M. Zaleski, auxiliary bishop and St. Fred Seniors Receive Rings at Church Rite — By ANN SCHACHERN day to St. Frederick High School;/main sports conscious during this students, after yesterday's vaca- busy pre-holiday season. tion, is * * © Seniors found it hard to return; At Washington Junior High. 7B- Junior Highs Plan Yule Programs Junior High students planned Oboe,’ which will be dramatized! his Walled Lake heme. Teach. Christmas parties, plays and pro- at a morning assembly next Fri-| ers, too, will have their party— | there were 219 of them. Today seemed like another Mon-|grams and still managed to re- day. |with samples of spoiled ballots— | a steak or chicken dinner at an Homerooms are abuzz with area eaterie. “FOUR JOES” AT LINCOLN At Lincoln Junior High, the) talk of Christmas parties, and | Balloting to change the consti-| our loeg cl patonally known | one homeroom, that of John Bur- tution so that no Student Council: quartet, sang at an assembly last | to be held | Woodworth, are spending tong | watch on balloting in the Avendaile- e School Distriet election Monday. Girl's basketball practice started Schools wishing to be represent-| asoroval of an $85,000 bond ieee ington is in second place with ity Methodist Church Sunday and will feature Dr. Kurt D, Singer. au- at-Walled Lake Church on Dec. 18 Six other schools from the Wayne-Oakland League took part in the volleyball game Tuesday when the Girls Athletic Associa- | tien Play Day was held at West Bloomfield, A WBTHS student, Sue Zimmer ‘thor and former foreign correspon- dent. He will speak on current world. problems and foreign af fairs. AT BLOOMFIELD HILLS Vocal students of Bloomfield Hills High School brought Christ- mas cheer to the children at the man, has been elected president Maybury TV Sanatoriym in North- of the Wayne-Oakland League ville this morning. The concert in- | Student Council, the first from this | cluded Many carols, as well as school, |AT WALLED LAKE | Walled Lake High played host to Debate League Monday. Four schools debated on ithe subject of granting federal aid) jas college funds to worthy high ithe | Inter-Lakes i schoo] students. | Walled Lake’s two teams beat debaters from Farmington and Van Dyke. Tying them was South. field High with two-wins against Van Dyke and Watertord, Farm- Le isuch numbers as ‘Winter Wondecr- land," “White Christmas’ and “Sleigh Ride.” A chartered bus, jarranged by the General Iotors /Truck and Ceach Division, trans- ported the carolers. The BHHS Music department will present _its-Christmas~Concert- at 8:30 pm, next Friday in the school auditorium. It will take the |place of the December PTA meet- ing. Clarence A. Luchtman will di- rect the choir, and instrumental ‘mttsic will be under the direction of Bruce Warnock. ~ =) their caps and gowns today. They speech students are holding fina) | fon, is praying for the ice to officer could run more than one week while they were in the vicin- 1 freeze so that they can have the ity on a singing tour. “The Christmas, wore them for the school’s first/rehearsals for Ring Ceremony in the church mies hae Tuesday. Seniors marched im pro- cession, and the Most Rev. Alex- ander M. Zaleski blessed their class rings and gave a talk on the unity and oneness which the ring symbolizes. Yesterday, the Feast of the Immaculate Conception, seniors again marched in procession. for the 9 a.m. Mass, The whole con- gregation joined in singing the Mass, which closed with the singing of the Magnificat. Senior girls will have a taste of college life Sunday when they are guests of honor at Marygrove Col- lege. The girls have also formed a} dramatic club. | The whole school ‘is clated at the Rams’ 40-37 victory over St. Clements, Centerline, in the opener basketball game Wednesday. Balance of the staff of the Ram- rod, St-’Fred's first yearbook, was start the yearbook sales shortly. Mary Bieri-will have charge of i i z a ig 8 Z 4 avantage of this | fo| at Washington Junior High School | fnedel themselves after their) morning by, Janice Rivard’s 7B speech students. | Notre In this scen¢,-Linda Olds, cast as\ Marion Spears ! JUNIOR HIGH PLANS PLAY — “The Christ- sity. Many SFHS boys are taking, ™®5 Oboe” is the name of the play to be staged term passed with 460 in favor, 181 SS Bulletin boards are filled skating rty he’s promised at ie eee aon : Three of the quartet members are former Lincoln students, so : they came to visit their alma . : mater. Woodworking classes-are a bee-|- hive of activity, as members rush ity = to complete gift projects by the Christmas deadline. AWAITS YULE PAPER . At Eastern Junior High, stu- = = dents are awaiting the Christmas issue of “The Arrow" which will be out Monday. The artroom will have open) house all next week, so that stu- dents, teachers and visitors may get new ideas for the holidays. BASKETBALL GAME TODAY Wever Junior High students are looking forward to the first bas- ketball game today, with Lincoln But the glint in the eyes of Wever students isn't in anticipa- tion of a victory at today’s game. It's because one and all are happy over the decision to “share the Christmas joy’ this year. LET THERE BE MUSIC—Without the familiar carols and the great music of the masters, Christ- mas would lose much of its flavor: At Avondale | High, Pat Sallivan and Pat Hiller (left to right, standing) with Nancy Lowery at hearse for the the piano re- public. school’s Christmas concert to be given at 8 p. m. Wednesday. All classes will be represented in the program, which is open to the The fun will be at a series of! homeroom parties Dec. 21. Each/ two of ; place of gitt for each other the| THFe® West Bloomtield High money for gifts will buy a fine|School students made the grade in - ' present for the needy youngster. |typing tests and will be awarded in the play, enters with the oboe in her hand, to nara peel nd: a - bar al typing accomplishment _ certifi- find Mark Petrie as “Beany” and Roger Goltry | ijieg, cates. They are Kay Loveland, . Aright) as his brother “Chalky” discussing the | ‘The students made the decision|/0is . Zurbrick and Carole Lock- ' Oboe which Chalky hid to avoid playing in a |themselves with the help \of the|Wood, with speeds ranging from 51 _ Christmastime statewide contest. \ Student Council: ; to 42 words per minute. next Friday y . \ fom wil ite «needy eh «3 Win Typing Certificates! GwimSwing Club “A sock hop and co-ed swim ses- sion will be held from 9 to 12 to- night at the YMCA building, spon- sored by the Y Swim and Swing! go Club. _ Shoes will be checked during the dance, and decorations: for the affair will be crepe paper argyle \ i J Sock Hop Is Tonight socks in local school colors. Music will be by Russ Garcia and his orchestra. ; There will be co-ed swimming m 9:30 to 10:30 for aquatic minded teenagers, along with the dancing. Membership in the ejub now totals 275, and dues are $1 per year. “AA CaMd WA0 VW THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. DECEMBER 9.1955 e Although some areas have rice| pride surpluses, some of ‘the rice-eating peoples may go hungry because Se ae. says the N. tional Geographic Society. and political struggles pre- Boe: Historian Finds New Story ey play the assassin ae shoot him Albert B. LOWRIE LUMBER Company | NEED MORE ROOM?} Cramped for space .. _ like to finish off the ae tic, remodel the base- ment, put on an extra room? Don't put it off. “See US FORTALL YOUR HOME” BUILDING NEEDS .. . BUY ON EASY MONTHLY PAYMENT PLAN Curtis STORM SASH 44 sizes to choose from .. . all V3 OFF slashed to cleer our present stock _ LOOK AT THESE PRICES! 24x24 2-Light 28x20 2-Light 28x24 2-Light................ @ BUY ON OUR BUDGET PLAN eo : Phoenix KN OTTY . COMBINATION CEDAR goers PANELING has 4 horizontal 6” size in random lengths | 16'/2¢ @ EASY BUDGET TERMS @ 1490 scsmeet Qe @ BUY ON MONTHLY PAYMENT PLAN @ BE WISE... INSULATE! Save 20% on Your Fuel Bill! AVERAGE ATTIC Costs Only $60 to $70 ONLY $6.32 PER MONTH on Our BUDGET PAYMENT PLAN! Curtis Convertible Windows Complete with Screen and Storm Panels . as low as : oe + © © © ew ee eee ee © © © ee wwe wee ee Sterm panel panes. brense, wire screen. —se"' * widths, 14 any Rice | @ PAY BY THE MONTH eo No. = Common o 2 © © © © ee ee ee Ce eC ee | CHRISTMAS SPECIALS Knotty Pine 4’x8' Plyscore . : its ELECTRIC S 74 f omy 339 | Tay °4© oD eID DDD DL De Dc De Pe cD De De De De De De Di Be De Di Di De De Be ALBERT B. LOWRIE LUMBER 1441 Beldwin (Cor. of Welton) FE 2-9104 . fore, that he had again ventured ‘out on one of those personal recon- | |maissances by which he was al- & New light ts thrown on one of th strangest incidents in American ecm y by British Maj. Reginaid rgreaves. In a dusty corner of London's public record office, this British historian came atross a ter written™ 1776 by a British jor Patrick Ferguson. It told how Ferguson, inventor of a new rifle, once had Gen. George Washington let- Scotsman | Had Washington in His Gunsights he signed to: his companions : ‘to, on the Highland Grouse Moors in | tela ae so shameful a notion was jly feels a certain sympathy with, signaled them to hold their fire. sitting bird was anathema. To an experienced gun, raised | his own phrase, even to enter- down, all unsuspecting, in cold blood, was not part of the tradition & arms in which he had been raised. (Tomorrow: Does Ferguson overcome his attitude? Is he captured? What happens? Read the answer in the second and steal near te them and “fire a the traditional sporting code, the | “disgusting.” ithe man against whom he is pro-; tast article.) them.” But almost immediately he, very idea of taking a shot at a | Furthermore, Ferguson was a fessionally opposed. To attack and (Condensed from “American typical soldier; and the soldier's, | overpower him in the heat of bat-| mentality is such that he invariab-| tle was all in the line of duty; to, Heritage,” vel y-) the magazine of His- in his rifle sights at close range. | ._By MAJ. R. HARGREAVES For International News Service. | Although the American Revolu- | tion was fought with rare intensity , “goméfimes with that ruthless- ness which a quarre] between kith | land kin invariably engenders, it’ Was very far from lacking the. | saving grace of chivalry. | It was this instinct of chivalry) | which spared the American com- of his danger—he came within range of the rifle devised and! lwielded with such deadly skill by! | Major Patrick Ferguson. | The first opportunity for | Ferguson's little band of rifle. | men to show their mettle came with British Commander-in- | Chief Sir William Howe’s ad- vance on Pennsylvania. Landing | at the head of the Elk River, they were assigned to cover the | deployment of Knyphausen's di--| vision, probing for Washington's main forces, thought to be near | | Wilmington, Delaware. | i i . | By September 7 the American ‘commander-in-chief's dispositions | for barring the passage of Brandy-. iene Creek at Chad’s Ford were |very well advanced; with the |British concentration, four miles, | away at Kennett Square, still to be completed. . | ON SEARCH PATROL : In/the broken, wooded country: |between the rival outpost lines, |scouts pressed cautiously forward, jindustriously seeking intelligence | of their & es. Ferguson and three of his | riflemen were ranging far for- | ward of the British lines when | they heard the sound of horses’ | | hooves approaching from the di- | rection of Chad’s Ford. Sinking down in the under- | growth, they looked hastily to their |priming as a mounted man in gay, Hussar dress rode into the open glade directly in front of them. | | followed a moment later by an- other rider in buff and blue, ‘mounted on a bay horse and ‘erowned by what Ferguson was | afterwards to describe as ‘‘a re- /markable large cocked hat.” |BEYOND HIS LINES | Obviously, he was an officer of exceptiona] distinction, and there was, moreover, a look about him that seemed peculiarly familiar. The Scotsman, of course, had never seen General Washington | in the flesh. But there were | plenty of prints and cheap wood- cuts of him in circulation. Fur- thermore, it had been rumored in the British camp that, a few | days eartier, Washington had | | ridden out so far beyond his own | Mines that a sudden storm had | | forced him to take shelter for |B DRAYTON FU “This Your Give SLEEPING COMFORT. SAVE NOW oN TIME FOR Sie pase ee SA Be BR ctor sera “CREST : TASTER” “CUSTOM LINE” Regular. Firm _ Extra Firm ) MATTRESS q) — MATTREsS MATTRESS = DO eens | TH NSS. | LG BOX SPRING BOX SPRING BOX SPRING “SIESTA” SAVE $20.00 @ 510-coil spring unit @ Heavy grey and white pin stripe cover. @ 8-way, hand-tied box spring . @ You eliminate bed boards when you use Siesta SAVE $20.00 @ Made in Grand Rapids to our own specifications @ Beautifully hand-tailored and bench-built—405 coils @ Firm—Resilient—Supports back Twin or Full Size @ Twin or Full Size Twin or Full Size 10-YEAR GUARANTEE 10-YEAR GUARANTEE 10-YEAR GUARANTEE You Will Enjoy Shopping at GENTRY’S DRAYTON HOME FURNISHINGS 4479 DIXIE HIGHWAY OR 3-2300 Open Monday and Friday Evenings Until 9:00 . . . Free Parking : SAVE $20.00 @ 252 reverse coil spring mattress @ Hand-tied box springs ° © New fine quality floral covers @ Non-sagging edges the night at a farmhouse hard by | Gray's Hill—almost within can- ie non. shot of British headquarters | & at Kennett Square. It was more than possible, there- ways careful to inform himself of & the nature of the ground over & _which he proposed to fight. Ferguson's first unthinking im- pulse was to shoot down the two! ‘horsemen without more ado; and. — | No. 5500T AMERICAN FLYER FREIGHT. A lot of train at a low, low price! Everything the young railroader could want for years of fun: 10-wheel locomotive and tender, equipped with amazing Pull-Mor Power that permits hauls of 40 or more cars, PLUS three scale model freights. 50 watt transformer and 120” of track included. Train is 3 ft. 2 in. long. LOOK WHAT THIS:NO. SSOOT SET HAS! — © ethentic Seale Medel Controlled Operation! lie Seale Construction UL approved Transformer . 120° of realistic TWO RAN Track @ Worm Drive Motor Great Value! s-unit-AMERICAN FLYER Scale Model FREIGHT TRAIN complete with track and trenstormer... all ready to run ONLY Reg. $19.95 INCLUDES TRANSFORMER ) i No. §500T Train is packed with 50 watt Transformer. Tt’s all ready to set up and run! POWERED WITH PULL-MORI With Pull-Mor Power this ugged No, 5500T will pull 40 or more cars! 1” WILL HOLD IN LAYAWAY. Be Sure to Check Our Many, Many Other ri Wake Values ‘at Great Sevings to You! © HINES HOBBY HOUSE 7 $- SAGINAW. ST..* mou FE 8-0545 1 ¢ is : | tr; \S ~~" ts td hl hd Od Od Od Asad wih sd 4] af al. hdd hs bd Your Family Will Enjoy a , » Christmas More Dy a => With Carpet _ SOs on the Floor! 3 | Wea | > = I: = Brand New—dust Arrived! Oa © Lovely 3-tone leaf patterned mae. fi ALL WOOL . i hoe a i wee a a pia Phoeni\. Ariz., announce the birth room chairman, and Mrs, Thomas'high style mosaics for a_ living. | of tile into the mastic, leaving | Monday, Dec lz 2 to 5 and 7 to 9 P. M. After a holiday visit with Mrs. senting its Christmas Concert Dec, Of @ daughter, Linda Rae, Nov. 21, Cauley, PTA presidet, directed jSuggests that the handyman go| Small spaces between the tiles, > > ' : > 416 ay : . Educa. The infant's grandparents are Dr. the games and exchange of Christ-| about ‘‘doing-it-himself.” as you follow your pattern put- | » » . A Free Gift With Watson's, mother, Mrs. Earl E.'16 in the auditorium of the Educa- and Mrs. Irving B. Paul of Oge.™as gifts, ig ting in colors as planned.” He FREE GIFTS: “You c h ood | Every Appointment Mace. ee Mrs. Lee Baker and Mrs. Joseph ou can use heavy plyw | When you are all finshed, grout |; Crisp o Green Lake road, they will tion Building leave for Baltimore, Md. where + <« * . Arms presided at the refreshment | for the table top. Create a pat- ‘it—grout is cement that fills in’, 4 Refreshments they will make their home. Gail Mary Barber, student nurse table decorated with a Christmas| *®—°F trace one with carbon | ithe spaces, To “grout,” you cover s ve en * ; * #* jat Grace Hospital School of Nurs- centerpiece paper onto the wood surface. If lthe table top with alee oe Tiree Highiy Trained Styhsts to oe eu George N. Fizzard, son of Mr. ing, will spend the Christmas holi- | Mothers from Dorthy Virtue's! you've designed your own, sketch loft the excess andlallow (o dn ®MABLE WILSON © CAROLYN MEGA‘ and Mrs. William Fizzard of Lowell/days with her parents. the Wilson street, has been initiated into Phi Barbers of ( Therokee road. kta Sigma fraternity at Michigan Coleus of Marine: and “Perbrriogy tiie Pasi “tricia Wary Day | room and Nancy Prevette’s room served on the social committee.| “Use tile mastic as your adhe-, It's a good idea to wait three; They were Mrs. Arthur Mansfield.” sive, and be sure bbe , ~3299. W.. Huron TRS = phan tis ss ven fo.keep the can days for the mastic, tp. set. Mute, ace Rees — ~ ‘Mrs.-Fammes"Ferttinger, ‘Mrs Tames covered, as it dries very quickly. grouting. After grout sets. allow » ‘ it on with heavy pencil. opie . ® PATRICIA STINSON He 1s majoring in civil engineering ‘avenue entertained at the Statler | | Thompson, Mrs, Raymond Boone, With a putty knife spread a thin to stand, covered with wet cloth,| Ss Ce —— : ee Terrace Roam recently in honor | ; nate Arnis Hs and Mrs. Baker. ayer of mastic over four square ‘for another 24 hours. . : Mr. and Mrs. A. ©. Carmer of of her mother. Mrs Charles Daw B : —- Sa EES = — = Avondale avceee, pee Lake, _— — —— son Mrs. Engle Groenberg will leave Friday to join her hus- ; band who is stationed with the | the U.S. Army at Ft. Benning, (ca. Her mother, Mrs. John B. | Oakley ef Walton boulevard, | will accompany her to Georgia | | and will fly home Sunday. Mrs. | Groenberg was honored at an | [4 j open house for relatives and friends given by her mother | Sunday evening. | * * we Frrest J Kitson of Parkhurst, strect Was a delegate from Michi-; Sarehtyy Installs ‘New Members Beta Alpha Chapter of Sicma Beta sorority gathered at the! Francis avenue home of Joyce Set- ter for the formal installation of new members, Installed in a candlelight cere, mony were Rosalie Boner, Bar-! SMORGASBORD | ara Daniels, Mrs. Stan Fisher \| Youll Find A More Beautiful Gif -| For Every Name on Your List | At WIGGS SYROCO DIAMOND ~ Bik ay, 4730 WAIST 20°— 37° s : ‘ Avy ; hi BUFFET - ‘Phyllis Ginell, Elizabeth Kessel- SUNBURS oo ~ ‘ 4 ‘3 O hs : ring and Carol Ann Malson. Others ne SS ~ ar “YS Le SERVED EVERY DAY were Mrs. Paul Wetzel, Marguerite | ~~ sp j i . | =: + oF Windiate and Carol Ann Bolton. | Sew-easiest skirt flatters your ( LOC K oa ail ii MEMBER eee | Each new member was soins { > = ‘ ee. © : : | , igure—teams up with all sour : , ait = : GOURMET'S GUEST CLI'B ied with her pin and a vellow rose . . ; A = . . DUNCAN HINES SIQHET CLUB lthe Onty Gower : separates Its a smart Sore Lee te eg DINERS CLUB | * ey toner ninsaecl with ice ciie meet ermne : - _% seas Installation ceremomes were pre. Classic with just the right amount aan eel ae ee = Sao B: ceded by a dinner held at the of flare to hea cumpieteiv ~ew— . * . Sere j Villa Inn in Lake Orion to malts ps to 4 wi sieek, Weare : thd, { Mrs. Ron Weaver will be hostess jn peepee or + casnai ~avon, pr pee A for the Christmias Betty Dev We wid or ney RTT SF 7 eS Puts Oe wine want aes Wert a gitt a what a decoration gS 25. Me UT treme. Size on eer als sans c tA La ccs | noe Sls inspiring . . . ats tremendous om ; 4 = it itt am its decorative appeal has an we Ns uit ray 0 Me, SIN pie 8 dav front wind movement. too Vey fi pat now op Jetted We FT viet CWLER> 33 inches tall ' can be t 4j fe f ’ ° neie ilativsiend oomimuictiums. hung sideways, too , . . limited ¢ £an Fe Imported Fruit Bowls cane @ Gees oe ee ee ES A "TAA =e / i 5 SF o- ss - Tart > wi She e@act? pat- ‘ i \ Reg. $3.95 & 8 anaes fies a — GME GR en ; 5 eae (eles — MATCHING WALL SCONCES at We : ; ETS 5 West : . | ia # a a ie Double Candlestick Holders—Vases nas Print $795 Pair a it } oe! and Ash Trays to Match a zone f ni. : ae : Diamond shape wall sconces to match the clock { ¢ t ~ — only $7.95 pair. . . can be sold separately, too i Plaid coat lining and scarfs . e « « see them and many other kinds, too |make a strong impression in all size ranges. And the plaid boy ' Ral Gite Bcd Wise nana YOU'LL FIND 20 OTHER CLOCKS TO CHOOSE FROM AT lis represented in both smooth eo _ & woolens and chinchillas, : : Oxy » | a — COLONY COURT | ==: fn Open Ever , | et ) sight “eit | FOAM CUSHIONED Y Raa Aker’s China & Gift Shop 24 E. Huron FE 8-2771 MD nie SS # Night ‘til Chrstees SOFAS AND CHAIRS — _ | f : P ‘ > 23 Te. ° if Gwe the family comfort for all the year with Wiggs won. age S : a = 5 ; ee The fashion line iS the dertul Colony Court turmiture . , . foam cushioned for lasting a oe . , Re, s 4 . | beauty and durability . . . Choose from prize collection of . . Holiday Beauties . ... right from our stock for immediate ES % Credit-shop i delwery . 45 oes an z ; - cS PS with handy ——— et : ( 75 1 4 : Purchase CHAIRS 3O9 ie $ 50 . Coupons! . $ 50 $ SOFAS. O Planned long ago... Wiggs has a fine stock to select from nae and Now right now .. . Chairs in many sizes and shapes and colors... = ns aoe i} Just the one to please Dad and Mother . . . Sofas the whole ‘a ; “8 te : Playtex family will enjoy . . . Convenient terms can be arranged, ‘ “ 7 os < introduces aan JUST IN TIME FOR CHRISTMAS! IMPORTED CHINA \ SWEDISH S SERVICE $ A 9 50 FOR S STAINLESS STEEL Just arrived in time . . . World famous Noritake Chinas... STARTER | Ores the perfect — bra | Translucent and hard as rock . .. lasts for years .. . and the SET _ ‘ lovely patterns will be a pleasure to use everytime .. . in- v= te 4 , : : It's the most copied Stainless on . _ _ cludes 8 dinner plates, 8 salad or dessert plates. § fruit iheumarken get the original IN LONG. LINE S I YLE a & » . dishes, 8 bread and butters. 8 cups and saucers, platter, vege- Gense Swedish Stainless at Wiggs r : e e CV 4c 2 fix ot % : table bowl and cream and sugar. Place) settings) frome) 37-25 & ile "s—,.¢s be 16 piece starter sets low as $19 60 - *&, c% : . . . Satin smooth . . . it’s really Another Playtex first ... the new long- Per, Slt Ve, ,&, CHOICE OF 3 PATTERNS magnificent. Chorce of design line hra with ‘all-elastic Magic Mid- 5. 95 | * fe he weet. i | 52 10-40, Band C cups, Try it on, 9 ® “ege gee 1 OPEN TILL 9 P.M. EVERY EVENING UNTIL CHRISTMAS ! ! In 32 to 42, D CUP erecerernn 69S | Le | | - _ ; f A | PUZZLED? SAGINAW Conveniént Terms! A Trip Thru Wiggs AT WARREN Pay only 159% down... up to 2 years to pay Will Solve All Your ) “ _ PAK . i) the balance . . . or 90 days is ‘the same as * ci ift Probl dept. yas I ONTIAC | cash _— . , 24 W. HURON ST. . Gift roptems ie a : | : ne ae | . | , J ’ ' 1 > : b>, \; i ‘ . x J * | Rf ; | / ca a) ge ah Si eee os oe ee Ss ee et eee nae i | aes a Wi th hie acaba sitar call tae PSL AAUP or ere a Me ede cs ied es ee 2 ics aE ¥ ‘ * prog wi Vso Se a ay Nl hea Meera Ee See einai sii _6 pm. club's oldest member, repairs toys| THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, DECEMBER 9, 1955 Goodfellow Sale in Five County Areas Saturday Old Newsboys Take Stations W. Bloomfield, Oxford, Ortonville, Gingellville and Lake Orion Sell WEST BLOOMFIELD — Annual Goodfellow Paper Sale will be f° -spondored’ by” thie’ West Bidomtieny Township Fire Department to- morrow. ; Participating ‘ organizations will be West Bloomfield Township Fire Departments 1, 2, and 3, Keego Harbor Police Department, Sylvan Lake Poliee Dept., Orchard Lake Police Dept., Township Police Dept., Kiwanis Club, Chamber of Commerce, Union Lake Fire Dept. and the VFW. Goal this year will be $1,500 says Chief Ben J. Moshier, head of the welfare committee. The department plans to use the money for Christmas baskets for needy families in the township. Representatives of the Welfare Committee are: George Tucker, Station 1; Fred Rachawitz, Station 2; Bernard Bays, Station 3; and Irwin Maynard of Union Lake Fire Dept. SALES STATIONS Papers will be sold all day at the following corners: Cass Lake Rd. and Orchard Lake Rd.; Or- chard Lake Rd. and Pontiac Trail; Orchard Lake Rd. and Maple Rd.; Orchard Lake Rd. and Northwest- erm; Middlebelt and 14 Mile Rd.; Inkster and West Maple; Daniel Whitfield School; Commerce and Green Lake Rd., and Pontiac Trail and Haggerty Rd. Persons knowing of a needy fam- ily in the township may contact the fire depgrtment, FE 2-8626. OXFORD , The Oxford Lions Club Good- fellow sale of The Pontiac Press and the local weekly will be held Saturday. George Ramball, Homer Hight, 3. H. Trudell and Marvin Stevens have arranged for crews to sell papers from 5:30 a.m. to 8:30 p.m, Proceeds from the sale wil] be used to outift needy children in the community and in cooperation with the Oxford Veterans Assn., to give a children's theater party preceding the Christmas weekend. Other Lions Club projects which will benefit are: Helping the blind, hard of hearing and Boy Scout troops. ORTONVILLE This is the first year for a Good- . feHow Sale in Ortonville. The Rotary Club is sponsoring the Saturday sale and its commit- tee includes Arlo Davis, president; peas Burt, LaVerne Borst and Porter Martin. Rotarians will begin their sale at 7 a.m. and will conclade it at Proceeds will be dis- persed for ‘“‘needy purposes” of | the areca, Davis said. Members of the club will be; stationed at Mill Street, South Street at the Bank corner,| Owen's Sunoco Station and in the Bald Eagle Lake business district. LAKE ORION Business men and merchants! here will become newsboys on! Saturday, announces Jim Sheldon, | six-time chairman for the Lions| Club annual Goodfellow Sale. Some 80 Lions—Club members} will turn out to sell papers in the morning, beginning their sale of the Pontiac Press at 1:30 p.m. Proceeds will go into a spe- cial Liens Club fund te assure a “Merry Christmas for every lo- cal child” sald Sheldon, Each year the club buys out the State Theater for a special Kiddies Show, to fall this year on Saturday, Dec. 17, at 2 p.m. Harry Sutherland is chairman of this event. * * Distribution of Christmas bask- ets for the needy will be in charge| of Elmer Fairbanks. Harry Julien, | to be. given out at Christmastime. Appointments for the paper sale| and other projects were made by Dr. John Kuzara, Lions Club presi- dent. : _. GAINGELLVILLE The annual Goodfellow Sale !s being carried on in Gingellville today and Saturday. Dan Blanzey, is in charge of the project. Lodge Calendar West Bloomfield| i ‘REQUEST GRANTED’ — Al and Mrs. Fred Glasco, Wichita, hospital bed by toy cows. After a serious operation the boy wanted an Glasco, three-year-old son of Mr. Kan. is happy, surrounded in his United Press Wirephete a toy cow to cuddle and his parents were unable to find one. Wichita residents responded to a newspaper story with cows of all shapes |Of the $69.12, arid will take care and sizes — Alan's on the road to recovery now, Hospital Fund Records in Fire in Romeo Signed Pledges Safe in Bank, Say Officials Holdup Attempt Foiled by Royal Oak Man ROYAL OAK — A yeret | Royal Oak. motorist last night foiled a holdup attempt by two youths, Frank Dawe of 501 Lafayette South picked upethe youths at John R and State Fair. He said one of the passengers soon after pulled a revolver and ordered him to keep driving. ROMEO—The drive for funds to build a new $350,000 hospital near here continues despite the loss of all records in Tuesday night's fire. Hospital campaign headquarters were located in one of the offices above the D&C Store which was entirely destroyed in the con- flagration. Temporary headquarters have) Dawe swerved his car sud- denly, throwing both of the ban- dits off balance. He grabbed the ignition keys and jumped out of the auto, escap- ing through backyards. He reported the holdup attempt te police and then retrieved his car, which was still where he had abandoned it, City Backers Group Proceeds With. (Council, the Rochester Progressive) Committee and other interested parties met Tuesday night to dis-| cuss the proposal to change Roch-| ester to a city and annex fringe: areas around Rochester. |was elected president of the group; | |Dr. L. W. Melstrom, secretary- now been set up in the Romeo. Hotel where operations continue. A special emergency meeting ef campaign workers will be held tonight at 8 p. m. at St. Clements Parish Hall. At this ~~ie ‘School Additions Go to Pontiac Company UTICA — The Schurrer Construc- that their signed pledges are safely housed in the Romeo Sav- ings Bank, a hospital spokesman stated today. The proposed community hospi- tal will be constructed on M-53- Dec. 15 ¢° ~ 4 | Bs eer Ps - ig & | @ i Le similis Py DONALD W. ALBRECHT 40 Voices to Present Concert at Romeo ROMEO—Donaid W. Albrecht, * Community Chorus in a Christmas ‘Concert-at 8 p.m: Sunday in the: First Methodist Church here. This vocal group is carrying on the tradition established over five years ago of presenting arias and choruses from Handel's ‘‘Mes- siah” during the Christmas season. The singers are from communities which include, Romeo, Almont Rochester, Washington and War- ren. Featured vocalists will be Mrs. Fred Scheuneman Jr., soprano; and Mrs. Roy A. Borland, alto, both of will hold Davis No. 396, Austin Chapter Davisburg ita regular meeting in t Masonic Temple Tuesday. Area citizenry may be assured vocal instructor at Romeo High iit -direet the —40-veiee! Romeo; Arnold Sell of St. Clair Shores, bass; and Albrecht, tenor. tion Co. of Pontiac has been granted the contract by the Board of Education for the expansion program planned for three Utica district schools. Construction tefms of the con- tract include addition of eight south of Almont. The public drive! classrooms and an all-purpose for funds is scheduled to close room to the Auburnshire, Disco and Wiley Schools, This expan- | Sion ts part of a $2,000,000 pro- | garm. = —— | Low bid by the Schurrer Con-| |struction Co. was $465,121 for the, architectural trades contract. +twe per cent allowance was given! ito the company for supervision of | |the program. Bishop Crowley | to Officiate at Confirmation ! LAPEER—The Rt. Rev. Archie |Henry Crowley will administer the apostolic Rite of _|to eight persons at St. John's Epis- copal Church in Dryden at 9:30 am. Sunday. This will be Bishop Crowley's first Annual Visitation to St. John’s since his consecration in 1954, The following persons are to be confirmed: Charles Dockham, Imlay City; Mrs. Glen Church, Alicia) Church, Mrs. Cameron Stoddard, Nancy Stoddard and Sally McKay of Metamora and Helen Miller and Catherine Zelezic ‘treasurer; and L. A. Hoplins, | publicity. Proposed boundaries for new city of Rochester would 12 mile west of Liverneis cluding the new high the | go in- ; mile north of Tienken - the proposed Wrigicy Super Mar- ‘4 mile east of the present vil- eee limits along the southeast- erly boundary of the village in- cluding portions of the Parke | Davis property, and south limits | would be the same as the pres- | ent. It would not include the | South Hill area. Under the proposed city plan, there would be a municipal judge, who could be on part-time salary | or fee basis as-is the township justice at the present time. Also, A\the city of Rochester would have ja voiece-in county government with ee supervisors representing the rea, * * * The group plans another _— next week, | Sashabaw Church fo Present Program The Sashabaw Presbyterian. (Church, 5331 Maybee Rd. opens the | Christmas season at 7:30 p.m. Sun-' day with a notiday —- | Curerepniena! me singing will start the performance with Charles Hutton and the Pontiac Women's Chorus leading. The chorus will then present a group of Christmas anthems and Polish carols. Dr. L. LaMont Okey, profes- sor of speech at the University of Michigan, will speak on “Make Words Come to Life.” The public is invited to take part ~ jin the program. a a Sashabaw Group p Plans Saturday Smorgasbord SASHABAW PLAINS—The Sash- abaw Presbyterian Church smor- ‘|gashord will be served Saturday, beginning at 5:30 p.m. The free will offering for the various menus will go to the church building and expansion fund. Slate Joint Services ROCHESTER—The public js tn- vited to attend a lecture at 8 p.m. Monday eévéning in the Rochester High School Auditorium entitled “Christian Science: God's Promise Fulfilled. The lecture will be given by Walter S. Symonds of San Antonio, Tex., a member of the Board of Lectureship of the Mother Church, the First Church of Christ, Scientist, Boston, Mass. Sponsoring the lecture locally ts the Christian Science Society of The public is invited. Rochester. To Cast Votes Monday on $850,000 Bond Issue AVONDALE — Balloting on a new $850,000 bond issue by the Avondale School-District-will_take place Monday. Confronting the voters will be two separate propositions, One is the bond issue itself for the pur- pose of providing additions. to. the} buildings and also new will drop from 19 te 12.5 milis next year, even with the new bond issue. This ts due to an 11 | mill drop on the 1949 high school ~ fity after the additions will be 850- present facilities. The. second is a three-|Schools. mill tax increase in order to meet the added expense of operating and maintaining the new additions. Supt.. Raymond N. Baker pointed out that the debt millage = j aie i room with a small stage, are also necessary to handle the increase high school next year. Total capac- 900 students, 8 CLASSROOMS Shop space, cafeteria, librar music room and other class rooms are slated for the junior high. En- larged heating pear are_ going in at both Stiles and Stone. anc possible increase of 1,000 homes eight or more classrooms are planned for Stone School. With property developments in the school district on the rise, a Elect Officers Plans of Annexation: in Rochester ROCHESTER — The Village, cluding North Hill Subdivision, ket and National Twist Drill Co.; I | | i [ l Le iy Two precincts will have polls open in the district from 7 a.m. to} 8 p.m. All qualified voters west Adams Road will cast their vote at the Auburn Heights ‘Seymour Lake Circle Will Meet Tuesday “SEYMOUR LAKE — The Sally \Bailey Circle of the Seymour Lake WSCS will meet in the home of Mrs. Iva Miller on Pine Knob Road Tuesday in honor of Mrs. E. V.| ~Tincrease of almost $4.00 over last) Is road improvements, the con- Increase of Almost $4 Tax Rate of WATERFORD TOW NSHIE 70) morrow is the tax bill mailing) date for some 33,000 property own.| ers of Waterford Township. Their| tax rate this year will be $69.12 per $1,000 assessed valuation, an ear’s fi ; — Sah * ¢ However, the $69.12 is quite a bit less than the estimate of $76 made last spring. At that time Supervisor Lloyd Anderson took the township's cause before the State Equalization Board, pointing out the tremendous increase in population since 1950, the date of the last state assessment study. Both state and county figures were revised in- October, but -re- mained., somewhat higher than the township's. The equalization factor for Waterford Township last year was $1.69; this year it is $2.09 and is the reason for the $4 increase. Of the 15 mills levied for school, township and county oper- ations within the township, 1.38 mills this year for the first time will be allowed for township im- provements. This amounts to $2.88, struction of the new police and | Service building, and ten new vot- ing machines, ' Allocated for county expenses is ($9.10 and $1.04 will go into the shaeop education fund for exeep- tional children, a countywide proj- lect. Two rooms for these handi- | capped youngsters are included in the elementary building now under ‘Bailey, who is moving to Drayton ccnstruction on Pontiac Lake road. we A potluck luncheon will be served | at noon and gifts exchanged dur- ing the afternoon. RAPID GROWTH The balance of $56.10 goes to-| Saturday in Waterford $69.12 Due (OR Pe Pee ae high school bond retirement, $9.20 for junior high school bond retire- ment, and $8.50 for elementary building and site fund. Because of the rapid growth _of the township, the high school bond issue will be paid off with the 1957 taxes instead of nine years later aS anticipated. But this same rapid growth alse means that more schools will be needed. ° The School Board plans to pre- sent to the veters in-February—a; request for a $3% million bond is- sue to cover the purchase of six sites—four for elementary schools, one for a second high school and one for a third junior high—and the construction of a second junior high on the site already purchased plus four more elementary build- ings and possibly additions to ex- isting buildings. Because of recent legislative ac- tion, the retirement of the bonds can be spread over a longer pe- riod of time, making annual tax levies smaller. To Fete Families at Dinner LAKE ORION — The Buckner Acres Extension Club members will entertain their families at the annual Christmas dinner at 1 p.m. Sunday at the home of Mrs. Craw- ford McNeil, 2706 W. Clarkston Rotarians Hear Daton ORTONVILLE — Gene Daton, referee of probate court and child welfare of Flint spoke on delin- quent problems at the Tuesday ward school costs, with $29.00 marked for operation, -$9.40 for meeting of the Ortonville Rotary Pruning Meet Slated Dec. 16 County Agent Invites Orchardists to Attend Demonstration There will be an orchard prun- ing demonstration Friday, Dec. 16, at 10 a.m. at Erwin's Blood Farm orchard, New Hudson. The orch- ard is located on the corner of Pontiac Trail and Silver Lake road. According to John K. Bray, assistant county agricultural agent, ‘This is the time ofthe year to start pruning frdit trees, because next spring there will be other jobs that need the orchard- ist’s attention.” Karl D, Bailey, district horti- cultural agent, will conduct the demonstration. Erwin’s orchards have a wide variety of trees, all the way from two-year-old to mature trees in ap- ples and peaches. s * s “If you have a pruning prob- lem, it will pay you to attend, as pruning is one of the most im- portant factors in the life of the tree and the size and color of the fruit,’ Bray advises. “Pruning is an exact. science and does not just consist of taking a pruning shears and chopping off limbs, helter-skelter. All fruit growers in the Oakland County area are invited to come out to [the Blood Farms and see hew the experts prune their fruit trees.” Church Board to Meet SEYMOUR LAKE — The official board of the Seymour Lake Meth- odist Church will hold its monthly meeting at the home of Mr. and Club at the Hotel Miles. Mrs. George Miller Tuesday. Village president Clarence Burr! | | | , is is ee Features edjustable = ct ia l ( l | ! ' ' | ' J i t i a WIND ONCE VEARLY-= _400-DAY CLOCK Gest Regular 29.50 Value appears and entirely on Regular $65 Value ‘No Money Down OPEN EVERY NIGHT *til 9 [. (7 — every on the hour and once on the half hour while gong strikes. Runs Size - 9" x 6-DAY IMPORTED CHIME CLOCK 7 grained rw; Cocks! Substantial Reductions on All Modeis! i DELUXE BLACK FOREST . PULL CUCKOO CLOCK $9 525 sory term Will enliven the house for one. Door opens, bird calls off the fall. Rear weights and pendulum, 6". Highly SL arcognte richly y or erp veneers. 8-day Pe a ae oP a a Nand Mea "4 se “U if _ GENUING IMPORTED 6-DAY CUCKOO CLOGK TRAVEL CLOCK With Leather Case == GD a ae au sp ao om fy yee $495 Te at 4 W1A0 DW Bi Ig CHICAGO W—If Big Ten ath- tors and faculty representatives. {out of the Big Ten territory. Dis- letic directors have their way, the If endorsed, assistant commis- | trict No, 4, state of Iowa will have access to, sioner Bill Reed said that the | Regional television thus posed a regional football telecasts next) Big Tep_‘‘will. press the matter (ticklish problem for the Univer- season from several directions. | before the NCAA.” jsity of Iowa, which has a wide following throughout the state as They have recommended that, , bi mae this year itor Iowa be made an overlapping lens i NCAA Ps prohib. Big Ten member. A_ compro- state for TV purposes. One ath- iting regional boundary hopping of mise was made, but Reed tabbed letic director, Doug Mills of Illi- telecasts. The state belongs to it as “obviously unrealistic.’ | nois, said that this fall lowa was nisrict 5 which includes Iowa Part of the compromise in. | a ‘displaced state.” | State and other Big Seven Confer-| volved telecasts of District 4_ Recommendation today goes (ence schools. : | games only when no District—5 | before the joint meeting of direc- | This technically puts the state games were being played within Bears to Hold Annual Alumni Get-Together Party Follows Game With Hopes of Ram | Defeat by Packers | MIAMI, Fla. — Ninety-eight) iplayers compete today in the sec. [ond qualifying round for the $12,500 |Miami Open Golf Tournament. | A field of 112 toured the 6,620- jyard Miami Springs Course yester- | ‘day where par is 70 and 31 players | posted 73s or less, led by Lou Lindsay Versus Richard Barbaro of Deal N.J., with 34-33— . 67. Sixteen players posted 74s. Question Unsettled by Leading professionals are ex- Louis. Detroit gave up Bubba All-Star Picks Phillips, a promising young out- | Trucks Is Back in Bengal Fold by Inking Contract DETROIT \W—Virgil Trucks, a brilliant young outfielder, Myear-old righthander who signed several weeks ago. started his major league career! with the Detroit Tigers in 1941,| views one was” Qld Argument Trucks, supposedly traded into oblivion with the old St. Louis| . Browns in 1952, signed a 1956 i ‘ eS n Tiger contract yesterday. Nobody |~ would say what figures were on it. Trucks was traded back to the Tigers last month by the Chicago White Sox, who got him frim St. was Ten Will Press lowa TV Problem ‘tee granted additional varsity eli-' | gibility to Gerald Eisenberg and during the 1st semester. of his |= Ken Wellen, Minnesota* football sophomore year, the committee!” ‘western, “football: THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 9, 1955 Chio State pole Richards, Ohio Tony Turner, vaulter; State, 9 miles. A conflict arose when a Des Moines station telecast the Minnesota gume at lowa City Nov. 5 while some 40 miles away at Ames, lowa State was playing Nebraska. football; ball Under the new recommendation, lowa TV could choose which games they want to carry. im case of regional conflicts—those involving Iowa State or the Uni- versity of Iowa. The Big Ten eligibility commit- stations Henry Cryer, 880-yard star and iF team. He already had been ruled ineligible, based generally — * and had appealed the case. players; Clarence Krueger, North- ruled he had completed his allotted: © Jim Weaver, three years of competition. t _ The Best Place to Buy a Used Car! ~ The Best Place to sell a Used Car! L.c. ANDERSON inc. empt from qualifying and will com- pete for $3,500 in cash at a best- fielder, to get Trucks. | MONTREAL WW — An all-star ball tournament at the Lagorce “I feet good as ever,” Trucks hockey team selected by the gen- Country Club today. said after signing his contract lever managers of the six National OO ‘ “T'm sure I still can win a let of Hockey League clubs has failed Steel Bowl Cage games. : Le ees , - The big Alabamian was traded | '° i running argument over Tournament Starts to St Louis after hitting both the| the comparable abilities of Mau-. eak stand entice ape fe won rice (Rocket) Richard and Gordie| PITTSBURGH — Two Pitts- nalphtivelveaes an , To 19 but Howe: burgh schools aiming at national’ two of his victories were no- Montreal's Richard and Howe, Ebel s eee gl mak Bg hitters. | Detroit Red Wing ace, were tied eC ne h 5, tak om Sie In three seasons away he won a in the voting for the right wing weenie Pa . in aie pee total of 52 games. | _—pesition on the team of post: dt dittonatty toush Du. Trucks was the 2nd Tiger signed, World War II stars picked for a ae pee atl = text for next season. Al Kaline, the) hockey publication. Each player ar the year against ‘Genevalliz0). eecived three ae Place and pitt, whose victories include one One of Tartars’ Best ; three 2nd place votes. over Michigan, is expected to face | Others named to the 1st team Duquesne, its neighbor, tomorrow Wayne University’s cross-coun- were Bill Durnan, Montreal, goal: jnight in the finals. | try squad posted one of its finest) Red Kelly, Detroit, and Doug Har.) ——— | seasons this fall with five wins|vey, Montreal, defense; M ilt, Heavyweight boxer Bob Baker | in seven starts. It marked the 23rd Schmidt, Boston, center, and Ted was discovered by his trainer, Lou season that David L. Holmes has/ Lindsay, Detroit, left wing. Lind- Ledbetter, in a Pittsburgh YMCA | handled the coaching for the isay was the only unanimous where he was working out as a harriers. ichoice. ‘weight lifter. \ | awk ee See Ae a Y ee £3 pt ais eke fide Say Lae a eng 4 guide most ‘SAGINAW at LAWRENCE s ; Open Every Night ’til Christmas Lake Orion, Mich. MY 2-2411 MOST FORDS CHEVROLETS STUDEBAKERS s] Heavy Duty Muffler Lifetime Cuarantee INSTALLED FREE WHILE YOU WAIT © Motor Mart 121-123 E. Montcalm Auto Parts Fe 4-8230 Every man loves clothes! And he'll love you when you give him clothes with the Dickinson label. Choose from our wonderful selections of fine gifts. If in doubt—we'll gladly you in selecting these very important gifts for your important man. Initialed Handkerchiefs beautifully boxed. White and Colored Cotton or Linen—1.50 — 3.00 55¢ - 2.50 Hand-fashioned, hand-washable Sweaters. Wool and Nylon for softness, warmth and long life. Easy-fitting styles that are as comfortable as well as smart looking. 7.95 - 14.95. An ever popular gift... Pajamas... and this year we feature the Club Lounge Pajamas with Sport Shirt top. 4.95 - 8.95 A wide variety of Billfolds to select from—in fine leathers and many styles. 5.00 . 15.00 Sport Shirts of cotton, part wool—Lanella washables—all wools in stripes, plaids and plains. Many with the smart new Continental collar. . 4.95 - 12.95 Beautiful assortment of Cuff Links and Tie Bars by “DuBarry” Many in Sets 1.50 - 15.00 Give him a Stetson Gift Certificate’ for the always correct selection. 10.00 - 20.00 The famous “Hansen 55” Glove that offers you flexibility— freedom, comfort, style and warmth. 5.00 I Many collar styles to please him in white, colors and patterns, including the new “IVY” with the handkerchief weight collar and cuffs. » 3.95 - 5.95 Robes in a wide range of materials, Cottons, silks, terrycloth, flannels and wool in beautiful plaids, plain or stripes. eS 10.00 © 55.00 B Cc F G Smee, ONE MAN TELLS ANOTHER mee : ; ——" ; =a + * | Royals in Exhibition Basketball Saturday Class A City Baskétball League | \will meet Lincoln Center of Lan- ‘sing in an exhibition game Satur- David 44Y night at the Jefferson Junior| High School Gymnasium. The en- counter will start at 8 p.m. Michigan, swimmer, ceeds will be used to purchase and John Sundin. Wisconsin, foot-, athletic equipment and television \for the Lakeside Athletic Club, 198. They rejected a petition tor | W'sen- | captain-elect of the Illinois track | ~ PJ on a scholastic deficiency dur- {~ . — ing part of his ‘sophomore year, © if But although he participated only e EAST LANSING — Soph halt-| during 1955 with 584 total, yards back Walt Kowalezyk led his Mich-|and an average gain of 7.1 yards igan State teammates in rushing|per carry. MORAN’S HEALTH CLUB MARK A, MORAN _ Physiotherapyist SWEDISH MASSAGE PRACTIPEDICS 742 W. HURON 5-8273 The Lakeside Royals of Pontiac's) Pro- FE 4-6310 BUS. PHONE FE ee es aR btn sta a Ni ifts afoot for Christmas... A “Gift Certificate” for a fine Slipper or | Casual is sure to please. It’s the quick a and easy way to give year-round = -° ‘ pleasure! Phone or mail your order. e. . Freeman Moccasin Hand-sewn vamp, Brown or Black ‘ $] 19 « 3 ——-Chico-Moe ms Sheep-lined, i > hand-laced, 4 j Harvest:Tan , $695 9 Dickinson's Shoe Department Open Every Night ’til Christmas Dickciinsons GIVE HIMA STETSON GIFT CERTIFICATE iat + Tween § sagt ae & a Le OEY WEE | : i . | bs : a THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRID. AY. DEAE Se | 9, 1955 _ _ MARE OY PAS Waterford Plans ~ Races Begin for Loop T itlesicrey Lessons 38 aor Archery lessons for children and| Heaviest - action of the young This is the season opener for (0-1) meet Cranbrook (1). An- other scrap will take place at] cage season fills the prep courts Medizon and Lake Orion, which jand Tuesday, gets into league Rochester with Romeo the visitor adults, sponsored by the Waterford, _ tonight with title races getting)makes its debut in the league, play at Clarenceville and Brighton, while Oxford plays host to Imlay Township Recreation Department, | started in four leagues. ainst the title-favored FEfgles.| ‘ : * The ° Inter- Paks circuit has | seaainae attack will be headed is host to Fenton in a non-Joop,City. Lapeer is at home with will begin Tuesday, Dee. 20, at the full schedule of games which in-|by seniors Jim Simer and Jim same. |Flushing, and Bloomfield Hills pe ilpialed a aocted cludes Farmington at Southfield,|Myers, two of the top scorers last Almont and Dryden get to. ‘travels to Mt. Clemens St. Marys. asses! sonducted cact ' i: ala week throughout the winter aad Walled Lake at Berkley and Van year. gether in a Southern Thumb TONIGHT'S SCHEDULE 17 10 8:30 p.m. Instruction in bow Dyke at Waterford. | Fitzgerald got off on the right League game at Dryden. Almont | Farmington at Southfield, Walled Lake. man craft and target shootin r On the Jay court it will be the foot by surprising Rochester 50-40 (1-1) presently has the area's (*t Berkley, Van Dyke at Waterford. | : 8 LAMY s Cane battle of the winless as both teams, jlast Friday. Troy fell to Shrine) top sco in I Kersten who Cm@nbrook at Birmingham. Troy at scheduled for each sesion go onto the floor with two losses. | id iscmies ] a St. Michael | tie bonged Garcack 87 > fact in jgeraid at cioaeent Ea rane cepa tiie lasers eeuom can Belmade at the ne vondale lost to & ichacis| has e rou; ‘7 2 ore a awson tland at Rosevil) jan ° id po Mt. Clemens at MaEItTeRck! Midland ect jIst class. A limited supply of equip- Farmington has lost to Bently 59-/in the openers. | two games. | 39. s | | Port Huron, Flushing at Lapeer Romeo|ment will be furnished. An adult Gi : M Gift H Cc WwW. | olan vay sa aliens we Competition in the Wayne-Oak- | In other encounters a_neighbor- chy ol Oslerenineoateercine. a at’ archery Jeague “is slated fo start ive a ana UI e an. cor. field has fallen to Ferndale 56-48) ae ‘hood tak l B Clemens. 8t M H ob and Bently 62-51. ' | Iand league is on the upgrade | i aU (aod Ge a ville, Milford iClarkstes, Sreavecnnai| jJan:"3"and will follow each Tues- } y oe with three loop games on tap. |ham high school _where the Maples’ prighton. West Bloomfield at’Nertnvitie day night lesson. ia + Southfield is defending champion a obesiones z ow ar! Ww | Top encounter is at Clarkston Phar varhervarter ope eae a SE oe ieee = | TEE OLE ELLE For a Real Sport and the Wol t | his team thus far. ja rennerup Wolves tangie. Give Him a Smart Suit or Coat! Top game in the league is af | The edge has to go to the Red- : ; Berkley where coach Niles Free. Skins of coach Jack Minzey who land of Walled Lake is ready {have the height and experience ad-, f I L I HING considered as the leading con- Northville, a team expected to tenders for the Jays. imove in the title circles this vear, i ies iPlays host to West Bloomfield. | |Mustangs lost ,a poor shooting | toa strong MT. Clemens quintet.” Skipper wins Were 52-51 over Mil-: ford and 41-37 over Clarkston with! big Chuck Gillis getting a total of ‘game 42-26 to Plymouth last inn A Berkley is 0-1 with a 44-40 feat to Fordson, and Walled Lake 4s 1-1 in non-league play. Waterford, the only unbeaten’ team in the league is host to Van Dyke: which lost its opener 66-40) 2 points = for an early showdown with the | Vantage. Both teams fell to Water- Specially Priced Sg Ss] 9 9 9 Bears. These two teams were ford in close games. ¢ > ri 06°. weel in meitons, tiecks and novelty while the Lakers were opening , : Oakland tee Mer aaa le fabrics — all warmly interlined. Grey play with Troy visiting Avondale, wn eal win over Orchard al See peck se Y mens 2 Madison at Lake Orion and Fitz- ary beige, black, royal and charcoal. Sizes 36 : gerald at Clawson. Holly. 62-49 winner ‘over Hart to 44. _ oF — Year Round Gilt . Ideal Giit : Long Wearing A Usetul Gitt Flannel Pants Sport Coats 110.99 *24.95 : , Another for Yale ocsc Holds hoor] | , AMHERST, Mass. u—The Yale | Leather Jackets Campus Coats swimming iam extended is phe- Yule Turkey Shoot. | AT. 99 9.99 FREE GIFT BOXES! = eco ri tie iat uae Petes ce ate is gy nomenal victory string to 128 last! : night by defeating Amherst. 65-19.) Arrangements were completed a! —ltoday for the annua) Christmas | x |turkey shoot for Oakland County |& \Sportsmen's Club. The event this) year is a 2-day affair this week-|& end, Saturday and Sunday, Aco it T \ Vary , ee ing each day at 9:30 a.m lf | vA | [- Range officers of both the D. R. Wilson and the OCSC Rifle clubs will be in charge. Special events. for all types of rifle, scope sights, | Me e | Exclusive and iron sights will be offered & ¢ ‘ wv’ along with ‘lucky targets” for the! & : dressed turkeys. hy Public is | invited. mee GOLD MARK FFE een me TO ANY PURCHASER LRMAGEAIAN I OF A NEW CAR deliv- ered before Dec. 24, Schutz Motors will give TO YOU! an outright gift of 100 Silver Dollars 100 SILVER DOLLARS This amount is not added to the Price of your car. It is not financed. It is not deducted from the value of your trade-in. It is an outright gift to you for trading with us. You must bring this ad in with you... and you must have your car delivered not later than Dec. 24. Groucho NOW Says — IS THE TIME JOIN THE Plymouth Sales Stampede at SCHUTZ MOTORS—Your DeSoto-Plymouth Dealer in Birmingham < 74 N. Saginaw St. Get Gifts With Holden Stamps YRBIIART DARI SISTSSIISIVIIOISIS Famous arteal Long Sleeve 3” Fur Lined *3” ARGYLE sOX ORLON SWEATERS LEATHER GLOVES OUR CHRISTMAS GIFT ooereeren rite For His Leisure Hours at Home! : GIFT ROBES $ =99 to 10.99 Full cut. handsome and comfortable. P! aid and solid colors. Choose from many fabrics. Sizes sma!!, medium and large. GsW SEVEN STAR . at No Extra Cost! ‘—e ee $5 Group of Gilt Give a Woman Smoking Pipes Gift Muffler $1.98 $1.99 FREE GIFT BOXES! Special Group 3 GIFT PAJAMAS..... GIFT TIES....7). We Mean Business! EC a SS SSC. eg! SE Se ee Just What He Wants! Handsome ¥ Sport Shirts $e) 99 od ’ to 5.99 "ee Use Our CREDIT TERMS . en i an eck Our Trade-In Allowance! f 49 Models. . . Trade-In Allowance. . . Up to’ 821 50 Models. . . Trade-In Allowance. .. Upto 935 crrreiae ebb ys: occ rere PPLE TAR Re E EES OTST OS nemadiminmenivenait or with the werd Rye, e oe “His” sport shirt from these out- Bo-109 dor bchs snips No 1 mira & J. B. Johnston, 49, of 187 South $!-12?2: soybens Uy'to ‘S al ee -1$0 'y bu. Peppers, Cayenne, NolAir Reduc BS Jones eb sis 32196 Goddard St., Detroit. Inter- ary : f mal Seley - ot at ces -y JAllied Chem elsey Heyes 16 _ p Bivd. W., pleaded guilty to dr wing) January ee ee 180” 0-10 ‘Goat me's. ane pe wlaille chaimers (ase Kennecott 1) 117 ment will bein) White (Chapel under the influence ‘of liquor-yes- Pts 4 ats OWT cag Pumpkins. No 1, 100-125 pa Rad-;Alum Lid 1104 Kimb Clk 454 Cemetery. Burial office and litany terday before Pontiac Municipal December as Se ps Oe ne Pear | ASarraran Sst con oie to4 Will be Saturday at 830 am. 7 * < -s hothouse, No 1}, oz Ss, tad- i 23 Fass : ee eae . hee cell fancy 1enldosslbchas woud |Am Can 473 Lib MeN & L 155 from the William R. Potere Fu- Judge Maurice E. Finnegan. Ik rain Prices 73-85 coz behs Spinach, No 1, 178-225 Am Cyan 65 Like & My <3 Home, Rochester. failed to pay $100 fine, and wax oat openine 2a jSauash Acorn, No 1, 106-125 bu, am Gas & El. 523 Lockh Airc $44 Ne! ral Home, Rocheste - ae ; ‘ nae ls c ! ‘AP) -- Openinr squash, Butternut, No 1, 25 bu, Am : Fdy 2 ws oe Fee sentenced to ten days in Oakland g,ain 7 . sauash, Delicoten NOT IT 00 150 bu Am Motors 87 Kone § Chess aa Mrs. Neva Nelson = ey al Wheat Any ee squash, Hubbard, No 1, 100-150 bu..Am N Gas oriliard 20 3 eae —— . County Jail. - Des os 2106 Ib ou Tonidtoes hothouse, No i 200-240 8b Am News 216 Lou & Nash 494 LAKE ORION — Service for Magic scrcs 2087. Daeeeees ° \bskt tomatoes. outdoor, No 1, 100-150 Am Rad 22 fack Trk ... 2 N Elaine Nelson, 39, 1340 Marjorie K. Smith, 1991 Little sta, ..... 2047, Rye pk bskt Turnip. Ne 1, 75-125 doz behs; Am Seating 337 Maran: Gi... 341 Mrs. Neva Elai Sea Fen oe told police she lost her 2° Do. 195', Dec 114 turnip, topped, No 1, 178-225 bu. Am Smelt 4y4 May D Sir .. 42 Square Lake Rd., will be held at ‘ Sepp Se pe : is Sep see HOT: Mart .cs.cu- 1 164 LETTUCE 4ND SALAD GREENS: Cel- Am TeiaTel 1792 Mea dCp .., 683 11 am. Monday (rom Allen’s Fu- billfold with $2 in it while shopping me 1 Mey Lise, Qty cabbage No 1. 125-175 bu. Endive. :Am iose *1 Sipsinten as 1H th t 1 in East | : lesterd: ec 26%e) JIN 115*4.No 1 150-200 bu, Escarole, No 1, 1.50- 4 Se desi O00 neral Home wi puria ast | i atid ui eas May fae fe rOeS Vor Gee ee kc cool aa serl Anac Bo ce Montiwerdi pst Lawn Cemetery. Mrs. Nelgon died | 7 popes A BiG Vag pK bas tuce, : . > ‘ d 2 Donald C. eG dich hs She ES aa hie ope te let He he Bote arts Armour Co 171 Motor Wheel” g8q this morning m Pontiac General ns ~ r$-0 e - bs Plains, reported his car windshield p22 6x, Mat N22 "bu lettuce, leat, Rov, P33-139 bu; AUMRCD, «OSS Mitray Gps, aga Hospital smashed yesterday, while the car —— " mere ee laycorsd te 6 Nat Bisc’’’ 396' She is survived by her husband, was in the Pontiac Motor parking’ yew yone mec 8 Compiled by The CHICAGO POTATOES iBait & Ohio 47 Net Cash R.. 37) yoann: two sons, Kenneth James, ] Lh BS ' : CHICAGO, Dec 7 (AP) (USDA\—Pota-'Bendix Av 656 Nat Dairy .. 412 2 | ot. ECS Ue 1s 18 69 tes. Arrivals 74, on track 258 and total Benguet = 1.6 a Re 538 and Timothy Kent at home, her! * hee Cee stocks US shipments 533, supplies mederate, Beth Stee 69 ; nos » rs F Perry; four Clifton Lewis, 33, of 122 Wessen wee chance Ue Bee t 1 os demand moderate and market about|Boeing Air... 73 Ps central soe mother, Mrs. Mamie Perry; | ; a N en ars "ost 1386 «724 steady Cariot track sales’ Idaho Rus-|Bohn Alum 287 Nort & West 57.6 Sisters, Mrs. A. S. Nelson of De-} St., found guilty on a charge of Noon thurs... ss) ; a 340-360 utilities 220-240, Oregon|Bond Strs 17 : te Ae . 9 non-support, } ¢ BreiGus) (Gs) tees 2 Russet bakers 4.00 Minnesota-North Da-|Boraeh atin eel os 794 troit, Mrs. Eugene Woolf of Royal ou was jailed for 90 dayS: Week ago 353 4 tee? Lok ear Kota Pontiacs 280-290 washed and Borg Warner 43.2 Nor Pac ee 782 Oak, Mrs. Harry Geist of Detroit | by Municipal Court Judge Maur-(Mor'h so 2887 tet ate laos waned [Briggs Migi(g) 2273)ne Gee 20 Fr ce Canael Ostrander of > so 5 ne ; a Bris My 32 ee rs. G ice E. Finnega yesterday. 1955 hiet 2574 1424 757 1815 > 32) Owens In Gl. 644 = ie Je ga 5 : 11955 kit 2031 1149 #72 14648 CHICAGO FOGS aan Balke rls Pec G & El .. 90. Royal Oak; and one brother. Carl) 5 1954 higt 2119 1270 683 1552) CHICAGO Dec & «AP: Hutter steady , : = an A Aw (176 St - f Rove : | Found guilty on a Coe of 511554 iow 1439 778 94 108% receipts $47 1st wholesale bu; me paces Palasvel a H 11 Eeonetp bed Sh LIGEING Cee Roval Oak: sault and battery, James Bowman. _ -.lunchanged to ‘s higher 93 scor: AA Camp Soup 445 param Pict eat Mrs. Leona Verch , 32, of 47 Pleasant View Drive. Te f Nephler Ge) ne ne Mae et ee a Penney. JC “100 6, Peggy Joyce Verch ; 7 : mi td t £ 4 - Cdn ¢ 3 > . . | : was sentenced to 9) days inh jail Pieures after decimal porte air CRIT’ “rags weak reeeipis 11031. wholesale Capital Aicl... 412 Pepa Cola... 23. DRAYTON PLAINS — Double F marie man > ver spay eg Duyin tees unchanged tr 53 weet dts chee D. Uiticrein te: ain muvee... NS MTa' gaming peters, unchanged, to 1's ower, carrier, CP 322, Bilge 7 Ha service for Mrs. Leona Verch and | Munici ourt yesterday. Jerity-Michigan® == ..6e - a 465 US standards 45. ditties MoiCater Trac . 618 pane Sos i ahiz sogy Jovee. 4369} TKingston Preductes eves: <8 32+ checke 33. current receipts 40 Ches & Ohio 543 Philip 34-her—daughter Peggy Joxce { M Screw 1 p Mor : 7 a) Ch ed with drivi der the Maldeet Abr osive® a -~> » Commercially graded Chrysler 932 Phill Pet ar} 25 Midland. will be held at 2 p.m. i ; nil are {1 : ea ld FREY Mtg see 12 ners to UL ie tal te aN FEO tal be Co cce ai Saturday at the First Methodist | influence o iquor, ona - Waine Screw 12 :2 12 tum 44- {Climax Mo 7 ullman . 04 | ~ os oh 2 - = Colg Palm .. 594 Pure Oil ...., 83 Church of Pontiac with burial to Squiressc61) 01/22 sFiorence Ct” aio > ssicy Cus0c ci a . aero BA EA a Re Es cl. Memorial | : was found not guilty after a trial ; CHICAGO BUTTER AND EGGS — [Col Gas 161 Repub stl ..,. oliow jin) Wie s Chapels peer ~ . Korea Was an ancient kingdOMm CHICAGO, Dec 7—:AP)—Butter aboit|Come Ed 417 Rex Drug aa before Judge Maurice E. Finnegan a tor Ak . > steady, rece sts 69 6 mm irolewale) bays ‘Con Edis 477 Rey Met ..,, Cemetery. > ; yesterday in Municipal Court with a history dating back to the neicee s recep! as a 2 hakese ler ey ig Con Nites ee fable Mrs. Verch and her daughter | 2 . : ik 4 ¢ ¢ a . { y 12th century B. C., long known as--xa 5725; 92 A 5775, DO B 5675, 89 C [comcm core FAG Mie ed were killed Wednesday in an auto- r . ~ - 54.75 90 B S67 n Pw pt i oe - 1 Two. 18-year-olds, Darrell R- the Hermit Kingdom.” era weak: Secinarted 664. wholesale\Cont Bak 36.1 Bt Jos Lead mobile accident. ; Perkins, 57 Tregent St., and Jerry : ‘buying prices unchanged to 3', lower.| cont cea si ae yen AS Emma L. Proper habe .| ‘ |US large whites 60-699 per cent As/COrD , Sri . ‘ D. Zimmerman, 4030 Sashabaw| B Notes |43, mixed 48 mediums 46 US. stand-|Curtiss Wr. ae Fe Ross WALLED LAKE — Service for | ” ; ‘ share | 5 t c . : i | ; iy were found at a a ae usiness nas 48 - dirties 34, checks 33, current! Det ea 31 Simmons on “a ; Emma L. Proper, 78, 1331 Bas : urn: > ors. They : ; — : oe . oe SR gs tentenekd Al The promotion of Richard A. Doug Airc as Socony Mob |. 607 Fe ; pa a er at 2 2 oe ee ‘ere i é $ RS pee : enn DETROIT EGGS |Dow Chem 66 Sou Pac . 58 ay from e Virgo kh. ninsey "3 ee reat A Spaulding, accounting supervisor Du Pon 3313 c 10 days in jail by Municipal Court . ; TETROIT, Dec 8 (AP)—Eges fon DU Font Sou Ry 109 4 ; ifth, ' ys in} K ote “an Consumers Power Co.’s Flint petroit. cases included. eegte. FOP east Ale L 53 Sperry Rand 247 neral Home, Lafayette at Fif : Judge Ceeil McCallum yesterday. ‘division, to the position of assist- graces EA arnt 32 me Sra ie py ete Nl mith (burial ine Ross sion, : Ant Whites—Grade A Jumbo 60-67 weighted ute Cite: Bipot Calta) Urgent that we must contact ant accountant superintendent of average 61 large 53-58 wtd avg 55‘), El & Mus 17 gtd Oi Ind 526 lawn Park Cemetery. Mrs. Proper : ei medium 46-554, wtd avg 49's. small 37- Emer Rad 133 std Oil NJ ..149 | died early this morning in Pontiac i woman driving two-tone green the company 8 (40 wid avg 39. grade B large Ps Erie RR . 216 B8td Oil Ohio 3 . - husband. 2 ick at f id heas ; ; Browns—Grade A Jumbo 60-€¢ wid atg Fairb Mor 38 = Stevens, JP .. | She is survived by her husban Buick at scene of accident on southeast division, “A Re ANE S40 0 tr inceRiteatone mala | M-59, Wed., Dec. 7. 9:55. Kenneth headquartered at eo Sati eid ane be’. suns 40) geaceum Pecdi Mach) .351 Sind beck) es be Nelson B.: three daughters, Me- C. Davies, 2117 Penobscot WO- pontiac, was an- « iene a0 aE wid are $2', grade C large Rucerote Sul a6 = anes tla |lissa Batchelor of Coral’ Mrs 5-4800. Call collect. —AdV. nounced today by Checks 36-38 wtd avg 36 Geni Dylamnes See raat aa eumels Tenney sol soy al os and om nye rcraly) €reded Gen Ele 545 Thomp Pd + a Mrs. Dorothy M. Casey of Miami . nd Division Manager . Whites— Grade A extra large $5 large G : : P i . Q If your friend's in Jail and n 5 = 53-54. medium 45-48 . aeons rails oye lame us Beary 8 Fla.; two sons, Nelson B. Jr. of bail, Ph. FE 5-9424 or MA 5-4031, David H. Gerhard a aecei dst avexera iarael 4. large Orn ucTe 81 tran |W Air 1384] : Ady. Gerhard said $0',-54. medium 47-48', ee rns a2 Lad eel sled nee ee Detroit and Clarence A_ of meh = 3 N - went en x. Hs os Spaulding’s pro- lpurastarene) eak 00, large mith, supplies ron oes $3 ¢ Underwood .. i7q\Lake; five grandchildren one Bazaar at Macedonia Baptist motion is effective — Jinstances to stimulate movement Bal-| ux mice. 2 Un Carvide . 1113) sister, Mrs. Julia Chase of Madi- }ance of offerings about steady with SUP- |G |G o Ry = Unit Air Lin 406; : > Church Center, 420 Bloomfield Ave. ne. 15. and that ~ plies ample and clearing Price struc- West § .21 Unit Aire . 69 json Heights. and one brother, Gat. Dec. 10.9105. ACY ie will come to: Aer sedteae sep eens aia, fom Semen 8 UR Fra By David R. Germain of Detrot. Pontiac as an ad- gpa uEpDING Lemme te Us Lines... 2 Carl Stuart Voorheis Position Wanted “ivr. he net Poultry Moore BL g27 Us Bere $81] WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP —| rl + } | of Accounting Superintendent Mor-) CmChGo eOULtEY Indust Ray 1 Walgreen : 321/ Service for Carl Stuart Voorheis, | 7 Have experience in ship ton P. Bacon. | ee finland Stu. 90, Warn B Pic. 197/83, 4901 McKeachie Road, will be ‘ CHICAGO, Dec. 5 (AP)i—Live poultry|Inspir Cop 593 west Un Tel. 22 ping and receiving, also! An employe of Consumers in firm on hens, Tae on balance: re-jInterlak Ir 301 Westg A BK 276 | neld at 2:30 p. m. Sunday at the s ceipts in coops 1.224 (Friday 497 coops, Int Bus Mch .410 Westg El 584 = mail order, parcel post and Flint since he joined the company 10/59 iby fob paying. prices ueciInt Harv 381 Whit Mot... 29) Presbyterian Church at White, warehousing. Have some nStep iy veces gechatie ast Sree ry Tee ee ‘iver gaat aa. tne Pape "3 muse ace Fe Lake with burial to follow in W hate | L 7 > t C Beas = oilers or fryers 22-23; o n feted! o* Wootwort backaround in finding new 1936, Spaulding has been account: jocsrers 145-15 5 caponeties under 44g Int 436 ynest Shat 1004: Lake Cemetery. Mr. Voorheis died | : { : 44. 4@n supervisor for that division !> 24- 28, over 44 tb 28-29. +Tnt wel “K Tel 292 Zenith Rad 136 | yesterday afternoon. | = out fo) n Mme: = 5 : “—_ a ~-- ——— will’ - ‘or ealary ond since 198 veteran oly Arey Survivors include’ one daughter, | vaclon Hees ae) eee gin Mord War tb he "GM. Defends Lifting of Franchise ee Stuart Patterson, with whom commission. Have car. tended Flint Junior College before iMr, Voorheis made his home; | BOX 14 ‘joining Consumers. ‘one son Clare of White Lake — — TOUP Told Lee Anderson trrnr cam sanaemiaien Cash for acreage, lake property or farms, any type, any section, with or without buildings, within 35 mites of Detroit, on main roads. We are the buyers. We will buy directly from owners or through brokers. Phone or write us what you have and we will give you a quick reply. Bernard Edelman, 10300 Woodward, CLIP THIS A 7 WANTED 70 8-501 Auto Body Bumper Plenty of work year-around, Excellent facilities in small community. For interview write Pontiac Press, Box No. 5. Give Age — Experience — Reference and Phone Number. LAND WANTED nd 10 great-grandchildren. The body will be at’ the home Patterson until Sunday Earned $674,000 at Orion.,’.: as Dealer Since 1946 at 1 p. m. | Dryer Funeral Home of Holly. E | Mrs, Bessie Miller SPECIAL TO THE PRESS | WALLED LAKE — Service for ne Gti a tet dealer’ Rd.. will be held at 11 a.m. Sat- in Lake Orion, made a net profit after taxes of $450 405 urday from the Wilkie Funeral from his dealership and also drew a salary totaling Home in Detroit with burial in $224,504 from 1946 through 11 months of 1954, a senate Parkview Memotil ‘died yester subcommittee was told today in Washington. ‘day morning in Pontiac. W. M. Hufstader, vice president of General Motors in She is survived by three sons, i istri j , Eddie, Dale and Dwight Monroe, fee of its distribution staf, revealed Anderson's) three sisters. Mrs. Alice Weber, ‘Ashley; one brother, William relations with GM. Miller; and 11 grandchildren. He said that throughout five mectings between July ee 1954 and May 1955 with H. E. Crawford, general” sales The St Joe River. Idaho. in tel manager of Pontiac, Ander-+ ‘ area of the largest stand of white cars should be sold at a! Mr. Anderson's disagreement discount to any Pontiac or with a personnel policy of General | General Motors employe or! Motors, because, in his opinion, executive because it hurt/it adversely affected his business his business | Opportunities was the basis of Gen- eral Motors’ dissatisfaction with Death Notices — PRP PLLA LPP BASS, DEC. 3. 1955, CLARA JEAN i 129 Reaburn. age 20; _ After .the mectings and his! Mr. Anderson (pees eS fod speech before the Oxford Rotary Inved daughter of Mr. and! Mrs. “Mr. Anderson's general sales manager evidently does not share this same dissatisfaction, because he is now taking on the Buick and Chevrolet dealerships in Lake Orion.” Hufstader also denied Anderson’s = allegation before the committee H. P. Radcliffe; dear mother of Michael Bass, dear sister of Mrs. Ruby Joy Bredwell. Funeral yao ice will be held Saturday, 10, at 3 pm. from the Huntoon Funeral Home with Rev. A Baughey officiating Interment in White Chapel Cemetery. Mrs. Bass will He in state at the Huntoon Funeral Home _ : CRUZ, DEC 6, 1955, BABY BOY, Club on June 7, 1955, Anderson ‘was advised that “since he; seemed irrevocably committed to complete disagreement with Gen-| eral Motors’ policy with respect, to employ discounts, it would be} | impossible to continue a successful saci. We all agree y 906 Melrose, beloved infant son of Mrs. and Mrs. Maurillo Cruz; dear brother of Estella Cruz. Fu- neral service will be held today | that Harlow H. Curtice, president ou must see and then you will |ot GM, had called him a “red.” . -¢ ’ : Hufstader said he was present at 4:30 pm from the Huntoon Qo ! ‘ ’ Me . ' a : Funeral Home. Interment in Mt. ren the beautiful new 1956 Cadillac sith CurticelallAnciereon alkeacina Funeral Home. Interment in Mt JEROME OLDS - CADILLAC before the dealer relations board mente by the Huntoon Funeral 280 South Saginaw on Anderson's appeal. and heard) warRNacK. DEC, 7. 1955, HENRY ea. everything Curtice said. H., 76 Williams St. age 85: dear father of Mrs. Harry Loch. Hugo, => *>* Clyde and Stuart Harnack: sont : . | Hufstader suggested Anderson} —prother, of Mis. Sophie vi meete imay have heard him address Mr. urday. Dec. 10. at 1 p.m. from | Curtice as ‘‘Red,” which is the the Grace Lutheran Church with Rev. Otto G. Schultz officiating. > nickname Curtice’s friends . have Interment in™ Ferry bt. oe Cemetery. r arnac w e used for him for many years. in state at the Snarks-Griffin Hufstader also said there was Funeral Home until Saturday ll’ am. He will then be taken to_the church ee service. , 1986, CATHER.- “no substance" to Anderson's charge he was obliged to lose money in providing warranty serv- ice on cars sold to employes un- ter of Mr & Mrs. Makary Lov. uc jear sister ionhn, \- ghplmmmangel er rea tineeee ak i" ria: ice an ny He further said Anderson built saith ba) mat dap. Dee squat his “elaborate building” strictly 0:38 am, Paners service wi oe ie] at at tl oly nity on his own initiative and without Russian Orthodox Church, 12916 any demands from Pontiac, Goddard Rd. Detroit, wih Rev. , Bondarchuck officiating. E. “At no time did ‘Pontiac require Taterment in White Chapel Cem- : anything more than adequate fa- etery. Miss Lovchuck Will lie in I cilities,” Hutstader declared. nara at the Wim. R. Potere Pu a) i 2 y f ‘ i a) 5 Mrs, Bessie Miller, 63,245 Fisher + Arrangements pare by | earnings in a 10-page resume of Anderson's dealer Mrs, Bertha Lynn and Mrs, Stella) son remained adamant in|pusiness relationship.’ Hufstader pine in the United piales: is wet his assertion that no new said highest navigable river in_ the . | . world. | | | | Death Notices NELSON, DEC. 9, 1955, NEVA Elaine, 1340 Spuare Lake Road, Lake Orion, age 38; beloved wile of John C. Nelson; beloved daugh- ter of Mrs. Mamie Perry; dear mother of Kenneth James and Timothy Kent Nelson; dear sis- -ter of Mrs. A 8. Nelson, Mrs. Eugene Woolf, Mrs. Harry Gelst, Mrs. George Ostrander and Mr. Carl St. Henry Funeral service will be held Monday, Dec. 12, at 11 am. from the Allen's Punéra) Home with Rev. Willam C. Hamm, Vicar officiating. Inter- ment in East Lawy emetery, Mrs. Nelson will lie in state at the Allen's Lake Orion PROPER, DEC. 8, 1955, EMMA Lucy, 1331 East Lake Drive, Walled Lake, age 78; beloved wife of Nelson B. Proper, dear mother of Miss Melissa Batchelor, Mrs. Eimer Penney. Mrs. Dorothy Casey, Nelson B. Proper, Jr and Clarence A. Proper; dear sister of Mrs. Julia Chase and David R Jereee: Funeral service will be held Saturday, Dec. 10, at 2p nn from the Virgo E. Kinsey Funeral Home with Rev. Donald Carpenter officiating. Interment in Roselawn Cemetery. Mrs. Pro- per will Ne in state at the Virgo Funeral Home, 420 South La- fayette St. Detroit, Michigan SPIERLING. DEC. 8, 1955, EVELYN Me Auburn, age 80; deur other. of Mrs. Helen DeLapp, Funeral service We) be held Sat- urday. Dec 10, at 230 p.m trem the Melvin A. Schutt Funeral Home with Rev A. H. Mullens officiating. Interment in White Chapel Cemetery. Mrs. Splerling Will lie in state at the Melvin A Schutt Funeral Home. STEPHISON. DEC. 7, 1955. CLEORA H . 98 South Tilden. age 87; dear mother of Earl Stephison, Mrs. Vada Shaver, Mrs. Bulah Cotcher, and Vernon Stephison. Funeral will be held Saturday, ; at 130 pm. from the Huntoon Funeral Home with Dr. H H. Savage officiating. Inter- ment in Oak View Cemetery. Mrs. Stephison will He in state at the Huntoon Funeral Home. TEDDER, DEC. 7, 1955, WILLIAM V. 3354 Warringham, Drayton Plains, age 28: beloved husband of Rosemary Tedder; beloved son of Mr and Mrs. James B. Tedder. dear father of Deborah Lynn, Larry Vaughn and Roxanne Ted- der. dear brother of Eleanor. Thomas Tedder and Mrs Robert Martinson Funeral service will be held Saturday, Dec 10. at 130 pm. irom the United rres- brterian Church. Drayton with ev. Walter Teeuwissen offictat- ing Interment in Drayton Plains Cemetery. Mr Tedder will he in State at the Fariner-Snover Fu- nearl Home until taken to the Church at 1230 where he will le until time of service. VERCH. DEC 1 1955, LEONA Virginia. 4365 Midland Drayton Plains, age 46, beloved wife of Carl Wiiham Verch. beloved GQaughter of Mr and Mrs Henry Cuninings dear mether of Mrs Virginia Cooper, Vernon. Charles and Cleo Verch; dear sister of Glenn, Clitford Wilbert Cum- mings. Mrs Rita Slade, Beatrice Hunt and Mrs Beebe Funeral service will held Saturday, Dec. 10, at 2 pm. from the First Methodist Church with Rev Paul Havens officiat- ing Interment in White Chapel Cemetery. Mrs Verch will ile in State at the church from noon Saturday umtil time of service Funeral arrangements by Pursiley Funeral Home NVERCH. DEC 17 Joyce, 4365 Plains. age 19 Funeral Home, 1955, PEGGY Midiand. Drayton beloved daughter of Carl William Verch; dear sister of Vernon Verch,. Mrs. Virginia Cooper and Cleo Verch, Charles Verch Funeral service will be held Saturday. Dec 10. at 2 pm from the First Methodist Church with Rev Paul officiating Interment in Chapel Cemetery). Miss Verch wil} Wie in state at the church from noon Saturday until time of ser. - he Funeral arrangements by Pursie, Funeral Home WATERS, DEC & 1958 LAURETTA A 127 Henderson, age 13, dear mother of Lisle L Echtinaw and Mrs Garnett Dorsick; dear sister of Ray Beebe and Mrs Wenry Vesnaw. Funeral service will be -held Saturday, Dec 10, at 3 45 pm from the Farmer-Snover Funeral Home with Dr Wm H. Marbech officiating. Interment in White Chapel Cemetery. Mrs. Waters wit!l Ite tn state at the Farmer-Snover Funeral Home _ Card of _Thanks _ 1 IN GRATEFUL APPRECIATION r the kindness and sympathy shown us during our recent be- reavement the family of the late ugene Churehiit wtshes to pub licly thank all whose messages. cards, flowers and offers of as sistance helped to lighten our setrow. Special thanks to the Rev D. D. McColl and Huntoon Funer- al Home WE WISH TO THANK ALL OUR friends and neighbors for their kind words and expressions of sympathy during our recent be- reavement and especially the pallbearers Rev Benedict and the Goddard Funeral Home. Keeeo Harbor Mrs Flora FE Booth MRS A M DAVIDSON WHO Was dismissed recently from the Henry Ford Hospttal to her home et 122 Putnam St. Pontiac wishes to express her and the family's thanks io all those who . her with cards. and many other kind- nesses during her 7 weeks in the hospital! WAY T EXPRESS MY APPRECIA- tion to mv friends for remember- ing me during my extended ill- ness To Rev Waiter Teeuwissen of ms and Rev Johns of Hdl lane Park for thelr prayers and vi my professional friends, ior doctors and nurses: and a host of patients for whom I have cared: please accept my heartfelt thanks for the etfts, greetings. and tele- phone calls ay Peace and Happiness abide with vou this Christmas Season rs Rav ‘Dora: Upchurch, RN Drarton Plains Flowers 3 IRI RIPE, DUNSTAN'S FLOWEPS Jat we Huron § St FE 2-A0M1 Funeral Directors 4 AN RS ARN AmR AMBULANCE GROUND Pursiev Funeral Home. FE 41211 COATS FUNERAL HOME - Complete facilities. OR 3-T1787 Drayton Plains — Waterford Twp. DIONIFIED SERVICES : Kirkby Funeral Home PE 41882 ~Donelson-Johns FUNERAL HOME “DESIGNED FOR FUNERALS” FPARKS-ORIFFIN CH CHAPEL Thoughtful Service FE 2-5841 Viel wee Sie FUNERAL HOME Ambulance Service Plane or Motor FE 2-6378 Monuments 4 A BUY DIRECT AND SAVE Pontiac Granite & Marble Co. Robert J & George E. Slonaker 269 Oakland Ave. FE 2-4800 Cemetery Lots 5 Ane A SIX GRAVE CEMETERY LoT in~-Perry Mt. Park in Sec. 3 _ Phone FE _4-5801, Pontiac. ATTENTION: WANTED WHITE cepa Cemetery lots. Lincoln WHITE CHAPEL BEST LOCA- tions. Two graves. Real bargains. LI 2-2167. a ” BOX REPLIES At 10 am. Today There were replies at the Press office in the i$, 16, 18, 25, 28, 58, 60, 71, 72, 80, 89, 90, 97, Lot, 10. | Chassis, Open Wed. "td AUTOMOBILE SALESMAN Help Wanted Male 6 FORD MOTOR CO. Tractor and Impliment Division BIRMINGHAM NEEDS Product Designers hydralics, engine or farm machinery Design Checkers Design Detailers Cost Accountants Varied industrial cost experience. Design Cost Estimators Forging or other broad proc- essing and estimating experience. Accounting Systems Analyst Broad genera) and cost account- ing experience Sales Representatives Broad Experience and contractor contact or fleet sales. “Model Makers Pattern experience necessary Layout Inspector Apply 2500 E. Maple Birmingham Mich. ®, Sat 8 “til ou EX- perienced or selling background. Age no barrier for active man. You can make money under our pay plan. See Mr. Haw ee Centra! Lincoln Mercury DRIVER | 2 experienced on doubles _ Plains, AUTO SALESMEN Oakiand County's newest Ford desler has openings for two ambitious - weil organized salesmen who would like to get started on oor Wilh «@ and working condition are est in Michigan. HOWARD LARE, 2705 Mahe ame Rd bo Harbor E 5-0204 INC. AUTO SERVICE SALESMAN AND sho: to p foremana,_opportun: 5 vance. See Mr Scantlang Centrai Lincoln Mercury, 40 W. Pike. +— BROKERS WITH LATE MODEL tractors, experienced car haulers ap peter Excellent weers. haul- by y loads. Apply Auto For ing] Co! $000 Mt. Eliott. Oe tral tt, WaAinut -2420, BARBER WANTED: STEADY 5's cent. Good for $100 per . Farmington. 33321 Grand River or call GReenleaf +1148 after 7 pm . 16 per CAB DRIVERS, STEADY, NIGH13 or days. part time, mornings or evening shifts. Apply «38 Orchard ake Ave CLERK-TYPIST days a week Bie nabe of- hee Young le mingham ‘em 139 W Maple DRIVERS — Who own or are able to purchase small tractors to’ tow house- trailers from Southeastern Mich- igan to all Points In U 8 If interested contact MORGAN Driveaway, Inc. OR 30181 FOR DRY CLEANING Must De neat appearing know city Salary and Apply Box 88, Pon- roule and must commission tac Press DRIVERS Rauling in Michigan Ohio and In- al 0 22788 or apply 10501 Fenkxell, Detro. 20 cree _ STEEL FABRICATING Shop. Requires man to manage shop. Must be able to do layout and estimate. Give age and ex- riences write Box 638. Drayton te DESIGNERS DETAIL ERS CHECKERS Body layout, ease Tans and special machines, body fixtures, and auto- matics. Plenty of overtime. Long program. H RATE Interviews daily till ®@ pm Ail dey Sat and Sur. Efficient Eng. Co. 21680 Coolidge, Detroit JOrdan 46-3163 1965 8S Telegraph Designers Detailers For automation type machines - also jigs & fixtures. Top Tates LOCKHART & WRIGHT ENGINEERING SERVICE FE 2-32 DESIGNERS (90 Needed) 5 FOR -Body Fixtures Welding Dies Automation 58 Hrs. Min. Interviews ‘til 8 p.m. MODERN Engineering Service Co. Near Woodward Berkley, Mich. 1695 12 Mile Rd. EXPERIENCED tie 4 MAN ON _ OA, 8-204) dairy farm by month. 1. 7NGINEER $600 Finest company in ita line wants o Riker Bide. EXPERIENCED TRAILER SERV- ice man. Must be familiar with bottle gas stoves, trailer heaters, ete. Trailer Exchange, 60 8. Tele- graph. FE 2-: ~ Experienced Bartender Call or apply: LOUNGE FE 48582 EXPERIENCED STERL BROKERS with tractor and trailer. Trans-American i 8. Bivd. East., nes, osher repairman TOM ERS fakes f ied Ads. - REACH CASH CUS- . Call § aca Gassi--7 Ford dealer wants 2 new car salesmen to complete small sales force in new Ford dealership. Some sales experience neces- sary, must be hard work- er, guarantee, hospitali- zaiion plan and demo plan. Call for interview Mr, penteye Jeffrey Ford Sales, 10 N. Washington, OA 82521, Oxford. Oak- land County’s bu sie st _Ford dealer, FIRE FIGHTER City of Pontiac, applicates must have lived within city limits for 1 ed to in deduc to 16", weight roportional fo ly Personne) Of- S. Parke to pick up cleaners for service and pelle FE 2-2811, 8 to 10 INSPECT OR LATHE OPERATOR With some tool making expert- ence. Apply in person only. No phone calls) Employment Toltice Daniels Mfg. 2677_ Orchard _ JANITOR AND HANDYMAN TO * . This is closed Saturdays chard Lake F a 831 Oakland Ave. Machine Designers and Fixture Layout ~ Men Establshed Machine Tool Manufacturer ts Expanding Its Engineering Dept. Located in Royal Oak, Mich. Experience on Automatic Parts Handling Desirable , Good Opportunities for Top Men SALARY OVERTIME “FRINGE BENEFITS AND PENSION Call Royal Oak L17-7474, from 3 to6pm. Monday Thru Friday for Appointment MAN TO CUT FIREPLACE WOOD AA fers Some tools furnished MEN | SALES-CI. eR iCaL ECRIOcAL PONTIA Employment Service is Ew Huron FE +2551 MEN ant opportunity men who ews bury VIOOAISO™ weekly, The opportunity requires no cash Investment. Apply xX 2105 Pon- tec, Michigan 0 MIDWEST JOBS FOR MEN NO EXPERIENCE Credit Adjuster, car furnished be Sheet Metal Worker exp Electrical Engineer , General Office $909 Bookkeeper and Manager. $40 Chauffeur , cone $290 MIDWEST Employment Service 406 Pontiay. Ese Bank Bidg. PORTER FOR CAR LOT ROGER 3 Sales & Beriee an Auburn x PARTS AND ick MA a ee teas tear? ii “studevater. PHARM! ACIST Top salary, goed hours. Ne. Sun- ay. Thrifty Drug. 148 N, Sagi naw See Mr Dunsky PINBOYS - OVER 15 and weekends. Motor 5-€032. EVES. Inn. FE Pontiac Motor Employes Earn up to $200 per month in your spare time selling the new "96 . For a dealer that's out for deals—~et on the band wagon for more. extra money in ‘96. Call Mr. Jeffrey, OA 8-2521. Jeffrey Ford Sales Oakland Co.'s busiest Ford Dealer 10 N. Washington Oxford Mich PRUDENTIAL INS. CO. Announces an opening for an executive salesman salary plus bonus Call FE 2-0325 for ap- _ bointment _ REAL ESTATE SALESMAN Kiacellent opportunity for proven salesman, Must be est. sober and experienced Our operation covers homes farms, acreage lots and business properties. e pay more —20 per cent on listings. pius yearly bonus Plenty of floor time All inquiries strictly con- ftential Giroux & Franks, ome Hwy. OR 3-9701. Not in the Co-op SALESMAN We need two men to sell te home owners, One of the west ame in this area. Must hi sales experience 8. uums, cemetery on $75 per week salary, plus 10 per cent commission. Call bet. 9 and 1! am. Sat. morn. For _appt. FE 5-6318. SALESPEOPLE MUST Studebaker experience. salary for, right men MI] 43410. TRUCK DRIVERS Experienced driveaway driv- ers only. for long distance trips. Must have references showing thetr past experi- ‘ust be physically I. ers’ test. - Apply = 12 noon Monday Friday at Guard cone Fleet Car oe heh $86 8. Bivd. East WANTED: EXPERIENCED SALES- men to sell Chevrolet and Olds- pee Salary commission. Demonstrator furnished. Rathburn Chevrolet Sales. Northville. Pontiac. o¢