WHMI Forced Off Air By Theft of Parts
Transcription
WHMI Forced Off Air By Theft of Parts
#* r o. r r *** A i J PINCKNEY, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY. DECEMBER 24. 1963 VOLUME 80 — NO. 50 The way we hear it... . . . . the dinner last Tuesday right that the Kiwanis Club had for the senior citizens of the area was a terrific success. We have pictures coming on it, and will publish them in next week's issue, along with a more justifiable story. « * • . . . . Mrs. Germaine Stackabie is the proud possessor Of a beautiful "manger scene." the work of Mrs. Donna Lee art elas* in Brighton. The Elementary faculty had their banquet m the "Gas Light Room," and the high school faculty used "another room." There was a gift exchange, and everyone had a good time. * * * . . . . the Rudolph Raetzes completed what was a "safe trip to Florida" and are all settled at 1211 - 36th Avenue West, Bradenton, Florida, C/O •HUk-.aSSOS-.-JLzm rode) i SINGLE COPY lOe Speech Students To Present Yule Plays Class Offers Holiday Fare OTHER "BETHLEHEM.S" Well-known "Bethlehenis" in the United States include Bethlehem, Pa., and Bethlehem, Ind. The Pennsylvania Bethlehem emphasizes the religious meaning of Christmas during it-s annual cetebiatiom Jusi a short time a^o, th< student* in .Mr. Don Gibson'.-, speech class agreed to learn '-H*F. John Burg's industrial arts classes of P.H.S. The figures Included in the Nativity scene were made by Mrs. Stapleton. They are pure white ceramic figurines and range in site from about 10 inches down to the very tiniest of lambs. The features of the s e v e n t e e n figures ^r^very distinct, including the one of "the Babe in swaddling clothes." The industrial arts class made the actual manger, and the art class painted it. A very beautiful and almost precious gift. . . . . George Roth and Chuck Hewlett report it is very cold these mornings about 7 a.m. when they get out and weather the elements of nature te put more and more water on the skating rink. They use the tank truck belonging to the fire department, and get tlie water from the new well at the high school. It is a tremendous amount, the number 6f gallons of water they have poured onto this rink, and* they figure they have •lot* more to go yet." Any volunteers to take over some of these mornings? These two would appreciate a h e l p i n g hand, I'm quite sure, • * • . . . . Mrs. Betty Rieman of the McPherson State Bank in Howell is taking over th duties for Mrs. Roberta E burg at the bank in Pine for these next three w< The Essenburgs, Bruce a Roberta, and two children, are in the sunny south now, and plan to visit Mrs. Essenburg's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Shirley, and do "lots of sightseeing." They will be back in 1964!! • * • . . . . of course e v e r y o n e knows by now school is not in session due to Christmas vacation. The teachers s«em, so nappy about it all—they don't seem to take us parents into consideration one bit—taking a two week break like this! . . . . the teachers of both, the high school* and the Elementary, had their annual Christmas party at the Canopy TJKH \\cmiff tituvj, <i rri'^s.ijii' <> WHMI Forced Off Air By Theft of Parts HOWELL — Thieves broke into the WHMI transmitting station on Mason Road sometime Saturday night and stole hundreds of dollars of valuable equipment. The theft was discovered at 7:15 a.m. on Sunday by Bob PLonka, chief engineer for WHMI. The loss forced the station off the air on both Sunday and Monday. Entry was gained by pryIng off the hasp of the padlock which secured the door of the station. Sheriffs deputies called to the scene found two fingerprints but no identifiable foot prints or car tracks due to the fall of freak snow. William Doucette. 304 S. Walnut Street, reported to the sheriff's department on December 21 that someone had pried open the rear door of his plane which was parked ai the Howell city airport and taken the radio out of it. He estimated the loss to be between $300 and $400. When deputies were investigating that theft they also discovered that a radio had been taken from another plane—one belonging to Joe Grostic, 120 University Drive. The door of that plane had also been forced. Grostic estimated the loss at $750. •.rood will to their follow clas-.In order that more studenlcould take part, two pluv, were selected and parts were i lied out for and assigned, and ; I'heaisals be^an, under th*1 (lireetiun of Mr. Gibson. Monday, Dgcenihor 16, tlv '^roup presented the play loi Uie students of Si. Mary School, and the ft, 7, and 8 trades from the Pinckney V'Acnienlary, and Thursday, December 19, they ^a\e it forr, the entire hit^h school. One of the two plays was entitled, "Grandma's Christmas Guest," and the cast of players were Beverly UmstiviM. Niun Bollen, Larry Bowles. Melody Morri-s. John H;m-;. Larry Davis, Jim JennetU1. Marion Tail, and Pat Wiltshire. In Ihr second play, "The Vision." the cast consisted of Si an Kosey, Laity Buerwald, John Haas, Bill Backluml. I«iury Davb». Larry F on1 ash. Rochelle'RandHll. Martha Na*h Melody Morris, Sherri Darrow. Rhoda Baxter, anil Joe DarJ ow. "Grandma" performed BO ably by Beverly I mstead. 4-H Pioneers Enjoy Skating S e v e r a l neighbors, ques* tioned, stated that they- saw a car about 9:30 or 10 p.m. stop near the driveway of the station but paid no further attention to it. One man said the The Pinckney Pioneers 4-H car was of a dark color and group held their Christmas looked heavy. party Thursday afternoon at the George Wlodyga home at was estimated t h a t White subdivision on n $600 and $800 worth Cordley Lodge Lake. to tubes, both used and the frequency crystal, Twenty nine girls enjoyed and copper tubing were the ice skating on the lake, taken. games and the gift exchange It was the work of a profes- afterwards. sional," said Barbara BekkerGroup leaders Mrs. Ralph ing, WHMI's news director. Hall. Mrs. Ben Pietras, Mrs. "He knew what to take." The crystal has to be Wlodyga, and Mrs, Thomas specially ground to transmit Line were present. on the frequency (1350) which There will be no sewing has been assigned to the sta- meetings for the Pioneers while tion. school is not in session during Owner Frank Bignell made the holiday season. The next a hurry-up call to Arkon. Ohio, meeting will be held January to try to borrow a spare cry- 8. stal as they are on the same frequency, but it ' was not known whether this would be STAR IS BEACON usable. The station was still Near Palmer Lake, Colo., an off the air at noon Monday. electrically lighted star on a Meanwhile another erystal is mountain top is a Christmasin the process of being ground. season beacon for motorists on highways many miles away. "The Viltian" played by Jim Jeannette. was set to doing good deeds, rather than bad, by "grandma." KOHKKT E. PITKKTT PINCKNKY Robert K. jPuckelt, 48, of Iil8i#5 Spear>. Putnam Township, died suddenly Saturday morning at lii> home. . * He wa> horn April 28, li>l."> I at Prestuiisburj;, K.\., a sun ol William Pre.ss and Junnie Risner Puckell. He married Del ores Lay m Angola, Itxl., on Aug. Ill, 19otJ. She surv i\ e-». Mr. Pucketi was an employe of Hoover Ball and Bearing Co. at Ann Arbor. Surv ivinjr, in addition to JiN wife and father- of Putnam Township, are two sons. Rolx.vt and David, and one daughter, Diane, all at home; four brothers. Lark of MKluffey, Ohio. Andrew of Chelsea. Ashfor;l and James A., both of Ann Arbor; two sisters. Mis. L'thyl Stapleton of Pinckney and M n . Polly Risner uf Cary. Ohio. Funeral services were held 1 Monday at the Swarthout Funeral Home, with Rev. GernJd Bender officiating. Burial was in Pinckney Cemeteiy. Elks Announce Scholarship Program HOWELL — To aid the nation's superior students, the National Foundation is offering 142 scholarships total* ling $110,000 in its "Most Valuable Student Competition." Ruler George Johnides of Howell Lodge announced today. According to John F. Malley of Boston, Mass., chairman of the Foundation's trustees, the scholarships range from $700 to $1,500 with boys and girls competing separately for identical awards. — TUs Is t*e Mth conwpfittve year ttwt tfceFwflidatfttt pKaathropft trust ef ~U» Beaevoleat mod Older «f Elks, ha* to provide financial isHstsiTf for exeepttoMlly taleated bat seedy KtiX HENDRIX, Publisher DOLLY BALGHN. Editor ALICE GRAY — A w t Editor M •'*.] Obituary Nian Bolien and Larry Bowles, grandma's colored serranta!! Frow The PlaekMy Bhpateh Staff Joe Darrow. so aptly took the part of a priest ill the play, "The Vision." To be considered, applicants must have a scholastic rating of 90 per cent or better and be in the upper 5 per cent of their dam Other merit standards are dt&ensbip, personality, leadership, perseverance, »sourceI fulness, patriotism, g e n e r a l One of the characters from the cast, Rhoda Baxter, gives a Uttle assistance to the "making: up* of , grandma. Three of the cast. Rochelle Randall. Martha N and Sherri Darrow "fretting ready" for the opening curtain. Expectant Mother, 19, Thrown from Car, DiSs worthiness and financial need. The competition i« open to &H high school ftenlorft or college students, except seniors, who are I'.S. (itizen* residing In the jurisdiction of the order. Besides the above awards, the Michigan State Klks Association at the May, 1964 State Convention will award eight scholarships, four**f.'r and four for boys, for $750, $725, S675 and 5650. The HoweJl Lod^e is going to FORMS AVAILABLE GKh'KN OAiv TOWIsSlUl'— aw&rd a S25 Savings Bond fo. Johnides said that applicaAn expectant mother, 19, marthe best girl and boy application forms may be obtained ried last summer, was killed tion turned in for considerafrom Gene Burroughs. Howell tion. Tuesday at an intersection, felt Lodges Scholarship Committee ! to be in r"ed of traffic enLas I year the Howell IXJO^V chairman, or from the high ' jjinerrinK by the Michigan school principals in Howell, received an application from St<ite Police. Pinckney. Brighton, Hart land Richard Harris of Howell. w!io Mm. Judith L. Atrhfeon placed third in the Slate and and Fowlerville. died In a two-car crash went on to the national jud^a % her vehicle rounded a Application* must hav* inp; and finally received <:n curve a* *be fta* traveling the endorsement of the How • $800 scholarship. Richard ree*«t on Silver Lake Road ell Lodge. The completed ceived his at the State Conand wan struck by a car brechares mast be returned vention m Pontiac in May of beaded ea*t on Ktmhtun to Chairman Burroughs by 1963. Road, driven by Eugene F. Jtarch 1*. ttrove*. 41. of Pontiac. The Elks National FoundaThe v ictim. wife of P'red K. Next weeks paper will he Atchison. 9684 Silver Side D r . tion does not limit its aid tu the country's top students. published on Tuesday, a day South Lyon. was thrown from Other scholarship programs in advance of its usual publi- her car. according to state with less strifiRent scholastic cation date because of the Now police and diod about two requirements provide assistance Year's Day holiday on Jan. J. hours laier in Si. Joneph Mercy each year for nearly 200 stuChurch and club, news and HospitalMn Ann /\rhor. dents. In addition, the Founda- correRpondete^colunms should Trooprr* lndk>*4e<Mn their tion makes many grants ecoh' he submitted by~hV>n on Fri- report that thex approach X^ year to doctors, nurses, ther- day.. thill Mrs. Atcbfeon made i* apists and technicians for*-adDisplay and classified adver- on a rlM with a "Yield Right vanced training in 'cerehrsl tisement* will be accept ed of Wa>"^»tga that i« hard to Thev feH Ku*hton palsy therapy. * until noon on Monday. Early Paper IM» nutUe m Mrs. Atchison was born May 16, 1944, in Houston, Tex, a daughter of Peter and Gladys Deleruyeile. A graduate of South Lyon High School, shs> was marnexl on June 28, 1963. She was a member of thf South Lyon Methodist Chui and employed as a pa] clerk at the Michigan Tube Co. She is survived by her band: her parents; three "ters. Mrs. Thomas Stock of Chelsea, Mts, 'Millie* Rooneyof Wi and Kathy, at four brothers, Richard of , lantl. J a m e s at j Beach, Fla., Tom and 'at home. Funeral Unices at the Phillip* . it 2:30 p.m. Sunday Rev. Ferris, Woodruff < incr. Hurial was in, krj Cejncic»>. I- A • - » 2 PINCKNEY DISPATCH r • • —r * • % , *, - , ber 19. Funeral was at the North Hamburg ChurchProf. Weeks and Prof Hall will give a Scientific Entertainment in the Monitor House Hall tomorrow evening Dec. 21. This entertainment is to consist of "Beautiful and Brilliant Experiments explanatory of Natural Phenomena^' includ- TUESDAY, DEC Pinckney Prattle ... By ALICE GRAY Welton Chamberlain was unable to teach same or his classes at the PHS last week. Mr. Chamberlain was confined' to his bed with pnemonia, but at the percent time is recuperating very satisfactorily. • • « Mrs. Tasch's 6th grade class gave a Christmas program sponsored by the Pinckney Elementary P.T.A. last Monday evening, December 16 in Mrs. Tasch'a classroom. Students appeared in a play called "Heidi." Refreshments were served afterwards. • • • Rachel Nash, daughter of the Mark Nashes, home from her studies at Michigan State, had as her guest for several days Ephram Ma, an exchange student from West Africa. • • * Mrs .Ross Read is spending come of the holiday season with her son, Russel Read in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. • » * HOSPITALIZED WITH BROKEN ARM Don Ch&rboneau of Rush Lake Rood came home from a week's stay in St. Joseph's Mercy Hospital last Tuesday, December 17. Don suf- • • * fered a compound fracture of bit right arm when he fell through a chimney openIng in the roof of the house he was helping build on Farley Road for his brother Jim. Do you suppose he was practicing to be S a n t u Claus? — the hard way? • • • Over 75 people attended the roller skating party at the Island Lake rink that the Boy Scout troop was sponsoring. Girl Scouts, Cub Scouts, Boy Scouts and their guests attended. • • • The Jim Whitleys^re spending the holiday season in Florida. • • * Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Beck have sold their house at 409 Putnam to Herbert E. Erke of Chelsea. Mr. Erke expects to move to Pinckney in the next week or two and live in one of the apartments in his newly purchased home. • • • Mr. and Mrs. Joseph King of Rush Lake celebrated their wedding a n n i v e r s a r y last December 19. This makes 27 years of bliss for Joe and Hah. W e rejoice in the happiness of the Christmas season, and extend our withe* that your holiday b the beet ever. Abney's Frozen Food Service 6025 Pinckney Rd. Pinckney, Mich. Kaye and Carol Pietila gave a bridal shower at the Pietila home on Patterson Lake Road last week honoring bride-to-be Diane Cook. Thirty two guests were present. Miss Cook will become the bride of Wesley Pietila on January 18th. • * • BUSTLERS?? When the Ray Kellenbergcr family on Monks Road heard three shots around 5:00 A.M. on a dark morning recently they certainly didn't think that some modem day "rustler" was out in the Kellenberger pasture performing a do-it-yourself butchering job on the Angus heifer that had been earmarked for the Kellenberger freezer in the near future. Ray found the remains of his heifer later. It had been shot in the head three times, the hind quartei-s detached and taken; the rest left to spoil. State police said it was a rea sonably professional butchering job—they deduced by the texture of the bone shavings found at the scene that a meat saw had been used. To date no arrests have been made. * * • Guests at the Herbert Bryan home on East M-36 for Christmas Day will be Mr. and Mrs. Pete Rahrig of the Rahrig Bakery and Holmes Bryan, .Bert's brother from Detroit. Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Meeden and daughter, Liza, of Champaign, Illinois arrived Saturday, December 21, to spend the Christmas holiday at the Mark Nash home on Pettysville Road. Mrs. Meeden is the former Nancy Nash. • • • The school children's choir from St. Mary's were out carolling in Pinckney last Friday evening. • • • WHAT NEXT? Kenneth Harden, two year old ton of the Lloyd Hardens of the PUKkney Howell Road i» now home after a week long stay in McPherson Health Center where he was taken w h e n he contracted pneumonia. Mrs. Harden says he Is now recovered from the pneumonia but seems to have caught the mumps! • * * We hear the Christmas party for Senior Citizens given by the Kiwanis Club was a wonderful success, aid really appreciated by all \vho attended. Mr. Marion Reason, a guest for the evening, told us the roast beef was the "best and most tender he had ever eaten." • • • Short column due to the very early deadline enabling our readers to have their paper before Christmas. • • • MERRY CHRISTMAS TO ONE AND ALL Pinckney $ Past Gleanings from the Back Issues of the Pinckney Dispatch FIVE YEARS AGO DECEMBER 17, 1958 Walter L. Clark, 53, died suddenly at bis home here last Wednesday, December 10. He married Blanche Hendee in 1925. Mr. Clark was the father of one daughter and six sons, —one son preceding him in death. Two brothers of Walter Clark are Pinckney residents— Hoy and Floris Clark. Otto Schaner of Cedar Lake Road has purchased a registered Shorthorn biu^jrf Leo Davis of Pinckney. Don Baughn, Larry VanSlambrook and DuaneHaines attended the Howell Masonic Installation Saturday night and sang with the DeMolay Quartette. Robert Meabon is getting the ski jump west of town ready. He will be the manager. George VanNorman has been made an honorary member of Strathmore Chapter OES, Detroit. Mrs. Ethel Sprout flies to C h i c a g o , Wednesday. From there she goes to New Orleans with Mrs. Ethel Sprout Loring and husband where they will depart for Venzuela, Cuba, Trinidad, Haiti and the West Indies. On her return she will spend some time in Florida. Mrs. Emma Dinkel who has been at the Doolittle home re* turned to her home last week. Mr. and Mrs-.Lynn- Hendee the Dr^ y attended the graduation of their niece, Mrs. Margaret Goetz at Mich. State University. Miss Rebecca B u r f i e n d, home economic teacher at the Pinckney School was married to E. J. Krause at Ann Arbor last Saturday. TWENTY-FIVE TEARS AGO DECEMBER 14, 1988 The Pinckney grade school pupils will put on their annual operetta December 21 in the school auditorium. M u s i c a l director is Mrs. Iva Meyers. The operetta is based on Christmas and the part of old Santa is played by Garth Meyers. Maynard Clark and Neil Baughn take the parts of Nimble and Wimble, the two maids. Miss Nellie Gardner was the Putnam chairman for the Livingston County Red Crosi Drive this year. The S w a r t h o u t Home has erected a holiday emblem on its this year. Commemorating the first Christmas, the city vof Bethlehem is portrayed. Appropriate lighting will be added in the evening. Muskrat trappers are reaping a good harvest this year. Rat hides are worth from 50c up and are very plentiful. Lucius Doyle, local B u y e r , bought 2200 the first week the season opened. There is also a demand for the carcasses for muskrat suppers. A muskrat supper was served to the sportsmen of Pinckney Monday at the Caldwell restaurant In the first game of the newly organized girl's basketball team, Pinckney lost to Stockbridge 26 to 23. Victoria Kulbicki was high scorer for Pinckney with 11 points, Muriel MacEachren got 8 and Kay Dilloway 4. Pinckney team consisted of those already mentioned and L. Shirley, L. Kennedy, R. G. Read, Helen Reason and Geraldine Vedder. Sheriff and Mrs. Irvin Kennedy entertained his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Pat Kennedy, for dinner one day last week in honor of the latter's 78tb birthday. Mrs. C o n s t a n c e Darrow Loomis had several of her drawings p u b l i s h e d on the women's fashion page of the Detroit News last week. William Kennedy, who has been working the Johnson farm owned by Dwight Wegener for several years, has left there and moved his stock and toois to the Harold Swarthout place in Pinckney. **>BS¥ TI5AR& AGO Madeline Roche to represent the grammar room in the county spelling contest, January 13. Lauretta Clinton was named as alternate. Mr. and Mrs. M. E. Darrow of, Ann Arbor and <Clyde Darrow and wife of Jackson spent the weekend at the home of W. B. Darrow. Miss Alta Bullis of Ypsilanti is visiting friends and relatives here. Fred Read and wife of Detroit spent the weekend with the Thomas Reads. 'Tony the Convict" in five acts will be given by the High School seniors at the local opera house Thursday evening. Paul Curlett of Detroit was a visitor here Saturday and Sunday. Herman Vedder spent Christmas with his parents at Ypsi lanti. EIGHTY YEARS AGO DECEMBER 20, 1883 William Yancy from North rille has opened a barber shop in the room west of the Moni tor House office. Monday afternoon, Henry Gillet, carpenter working on the roof of the new depot building, lost his footing and fell head first over the edge of the roof, and broke his leg. Dr. Sigler dressed his wounds and reports him doing well. Churchill Hendee, aged 72 years, died Wednesday, Decem- inp the following: the fountain, firing a cannon with an icicle, explosion of bubbles, and etc. Admission 19c for adults, 10c for children 12 and under. • Mr. James Timmona hat taken the contract for building the board fence between Pinckney and Stockbridge. lessings hark in our heart* to the angeiie tidings, and extend best wishes for a happy and holy Christmas season SHIREVS RADIO/ TV and BOTTLE GAS 125 Pearl Street Pinckney DLSrATCH IN Tetepftone School r e o p e n s Monday •- Rex E. Hendrix. Publisher morning after the Christmas DOLLY BAUGHN, Editor ALICE GRAY, Assistant Editor holidays. Honor students for Second Class Postage Paid the month of December are: at Pinckney, Michigan Leora McCluskey, Lucille Bro- The columns of this paper are an open where available space, gram* gan, Raymond Harris, Claudis forum tnatica), legal and ethical considerHinchey, Aria Gardner, Am- ations are the only restrictions. rates: $3.00 per year In brose Murphy, Lillian Glenn, Subscription advance in Michigan, $3.50 in other Beulah Martin, Helen Cam- states and U.S. possessions. $4.00 to bum, Zita Harris, Francis Mc- foreign countries. Six-months rates: 12.00 in Michigan, 12.50 in other states Cluskey, Roy Campbell, Jennie and U.S. possessions; $3.00 to foreign Docking, Ferne Tupper, and countries. Military personnel: $3.00 pier I less than six months. Advertising rates f Gladys Van Blaircum. year. No mall subscriptions taken lor Supt. Doyle has n a m e d upon application. shine brightly in your heart. Christmas gtowfaf with cheer. NATURALLY AGED - - - NO ARTIFICIAL CARBONATION One of the Last Brewerlea la Michigan Still Using Natural Carbonatton and Aging FRANKENMUTH BAVARIAN SPECIAL neetings Your Choice — Light or Dark Otrcr a m . Bml&f Ct., FrtntonamU, Via All. STAR BEVERAGES 9455 MAIN — WHITMORE LAKE PINCKNEY TYPESETTING CO. PinckiMf 250 Dexter Rd. We trifle when we assign limits to our desires, isnee nature hath set none. —C. N. Bovee A great deal of talent is lost in this world for waqt of a little courage. —Sydney Smith Gregory News tttay the blessings of the night when Christ was born enkindle in your heart a happiness that shines ever brighter throughout all the days to come. CLARK'S GULF SERVICE Hackney BY: M. COSGRAY The Gregory P. T.O. met an organ recital performed by Monday evening at the school. Mr. Virgil Fox at the First Presbyterian Church in Jack• * * Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Glenn son. • • • entertained the Plainfield Farm Mrs. Nettie Caskey and FerBureau D i s c u s s i o n group ris were Sunday dinner guests Wednesday evening. of Mr. and Mrs. Glen, Caskey • • • Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Chip- and family to celebrate their man, Mr. and Mrs. Robert daughter's 21st birthday. Reid and Mr. and Mrs. Alex • • • Reid were S u n d a y dinner, Mrs. Duane Jacobs enterguests of Mrs. Gertrude Bradshaw, to celebrate Mrs. Chip- tained her brothers and sisters man's 90th birthday. for a Christmas Supper Sat• • • urday evening. The Gregory Baptist Church had their annual "Candlelight and Carols" Service Sunday evening. Following the Services .Rev. and Mrs. Ramseyer held a Christmas reception. • • • Mr .and Mrs. Arthur Bullis were Sunday evening guests of Mrs. Helen Mitteer and family to celebrate Jack Mitteer's 21st birthday. • • • Mrt. Robert Reid, Rev. and Mrs. Ramseyer, Mrs. Grace Rockwell, Nell Denton and Mr*. Lloyd Hodges attended Culture is the habit of being pleased with the best and knowing why. " —Henry Van Dyke neighbors HftKM IMERY PINCKNEY HAMBUBQ HOWL HAMBURG. MICH. PINCKNEY GENIRAL STORE PCVCKVEY , —««« •-• » - JOSEPH MARTIN WHITNEY KIMBLE LARA1N ANTCLIFF KMCUtl Hamburg Bianch M LEFT TO RIGHT: SITTING — Marion Carney, Clara DanieUs, Emma Westin, Esther Kilpatrick, Ann Dillon ay, Mattie Appleton, Roger Orndorf STANDING — Marlene Rusling, Katherine Dilloway, Alice Newcflmb, George Seger, Dwi«?ht Matteson, Violet Jacobs, Elaine Paquette, Ruth Snyder, Henrietha Pearsall, Lee Healy, Tillic Lueker. It is this time each year that we at the Brighton State Bank thipk of the many pleasant experiences we have had over the past 12 months. The Directors, officers & staff are grateful for the privilege of serving you during the past year. These have been pleasant months, and we appreciate the confidence and faith you of the Brighton area have placed in our institution. To you we extend our very best wishes for A VERY MERRY CHRISTMAS & A MOST HAPPY and PROSPEROUS NEW YEARS! The BRIGHTON STATE B LEFT TO RIGHT: LMHC Wkifi, Herbert Um&ktam, WajvcPntat, Marfint BUwtU BBIGHTON HAMBVBfi - < AJtOUS.# SAOLE * < • PEC. 2 1 1963 of Mr And Mrs. Harry Daley of Lakeland. The bride wore a flobrlength gown of white silk, fashioned with a scoop neckline. The skirt fell into a chapel train. The bodice and front panel of the gown were detailed with seed pearls. A double Paul Pretzloff officiated at the tiny pearl and crystal crown held double-ring ceremony. the elbow length tulle veil in The bride is the daughter of place. The bride carried a casMrs. Elijah Widmaier of Ypsi- cade bouquet of white carnalanti and the late Mr. Wid- tions, pink rose buds and stepmaier. hanotis, centered with a pink orchid. The bridegroom is the son The maid of honor was the bride's sister, Sharen Widmaier. Sharen wore a floorlength gown of powder blue satin. Her bouquet contained pink carnations and pink rose buds. Sharleen's bridesmaid was Carol Hardy of YpsilantL Her royal blue gown was identical in style to that of the maid of honor. She also carried pink carnations and pink rosebuds. Dawn Reynolds, a cousin of the bride, of Wayne, was the flower girL She wore a powder blue floor-length frock and carried a basket of white carnations and pink baby roses, Ronald Widmaier, brother of the bride, was the ringbearer. The bridegroom chose Ronald Hollis, of Hamburg, as his best man. The guests were seated by Ray Hardy of Ann Arbor, Clarence Reynolds of Wayne, and Harold Bennett of Ypsilanti. For her daughter's wedding Mrs. Widmaier chose a Kellygreen silk sheath with matching shoes and handbag. She wore crystal jewelry and a gold carnation corsage. Mrs. Daley wore a gold silk dress with matching hat and shoes afti-«£st# ^eweliy, -S£r wfere a white and gold carnaH0WELL tion corsage. A reception for 200 guests was held in the church parlor immediately following the ceremony. Mrs. Fred R e n d o n served the coffee, Mrs. Edwin Conklin poured the punch and Mrs. Harold Bennett cut the DXSPAIC Lakel'nd Man, Bride To Live In Ypsilanti w MAM.TT DEWOLF On December 14, a 7 P.M oanrilettgfat xerem6ny in the £nunanuel Lutheran Church of Ypsilanti, tras the setting tor the marriage of Sharleen Louis* Widmater and Dennis David Daley. The Reverend Fashioned Little But Legend Marriage Surrounds Visit Licenses Of Wise Men Many legends have developed around the visit of the three wise men to adore the Infant Jesus. Even their number is legendary. S t Matthew, the only book in the New Testament that refers to the visit, reports that wise men came from the east, without stating how many there were. It was not until later, in a legend which can -be traced back to the second century, that they were called "kings," according to the Encyclopedia Americana. In even later times, they were distinguished as Melchior, Gaspar or Caspar, and Balthasar. The magi originally stood for the priestly caste of the ancient Persian Zoroastrian re. ligion. As the religion moved westward, it came In contact beth Hathaway, 19, Brighton. Dean Elwyn AHmand, 19. Fenton, and Patricia Joan 19, Hartland. Paris Collin Copeman, 20, Howell, and Linda Jean BenHowell, and Mary Magdalene nett, 22, HowelL Andrychowski, 17, HowelL Virgil Herman Koning, 22, Edward English, C o r l 33, al Framingham, Mass., v1 SharHowell, and Joan Marlyn Griton Louise Heller, 22, Framing fen, 21, Howell. Roger Arnold Scharman, 22, ham, M Lansing, and Janet Elaine NelWilliam Earl Porter, 22, son, 23, HowelL Fowleryille, and Anne Rita Donald Larry Momar, 20, Leeson, 16, Fowlerville, by conNo. Royalton, Ohio, and sent of her father, James W. Jeanne Marie Neale, 19, No. Leeson. Royalton, Ohio. James Lee Grace, 22* CenHarvesting of forage crops ter, Texas, and Noreen Eliza* shoulud begin when the crop reaches one-tenth bloom. Cows with Babylonian beliefs and like the early-cut forage and practices and derived a strong it is more digestible, higher in interest in astrology, demon- protein and produces more ology and magic. milk. By the time it reached the Graeco-Roman world, it was practically identical, in the popular view, with astrology and magic This explains the use of the term "wise men" by S t Matthew, since they were astrologers. LEGAL SY4XS OF KKHMAH Cmmri tar tto IB the Matter of tl» Estate of EMORY G. HOARD, Deceased At a session of said Court held on December 17, 1961 Honorable Frauds E. Barren. . Judg* at Probate. kMt ftwrtMB O 0 days prior to IUCB hearing. •• . - • . - FRANCIS E. BAKKC.^i Judge of Probate. A true copy; [ fOlEH M. GOULD Register of Probate. VanWlnkle. VanWlnkle a- Helkkjnen. Attorney BoweU, Michigan Dec 24 - Jaa i. • SS HEREBY GIVEN, That all creoitcvi of said deceased are re* Wired b. present their claims in writing and wilier oath, to said Court and to serve a copy thereof upon Claude C Hoerd of Qre«ory> Michigan, Stfudary of said efctat*, *nd that such claims will btUMaed by said Cowrt at the Probate Office oo March 3. 1961 at ten A.M. It Is Ordered. That notice thereof be given by publication of a copy hereof tor three weeks consecutively previous to said day of hearing, in the Pinckney Dispatch, and that the fiduciary cause a copy of this notice to be served upon each known party in interest at his last known address by registered, certified or ordinary mail (with prco! of mailing), or by personal service at "A grouch is a'guy who has himself Biased up and is sore about i t * JOYEUX NOEL TO ALL OUR FRIENDS Snrith A Lowe Furniture ;i7 T to AppKr &?m ; --"' "' A rehearsal dinner was held on Friday at the Farm Cupboard on Plymouth Rd. in Ann Arbor, For her going-away outfit the bride selected a gold satin dress with gold accessories. She is a graduate of Willow Run High School and her husband is a graduate of Pinckne&^High School. The newlyweds will make their homes in Ypsilanti. Two out-of-state guests for the wedding were Dennis's sister, Sharon, and niece, Andrea Singleton of Cambridge, Mass. Mary-Jo Shoppe DODDS SHOES 104 E. GRAND RIVER HOWELL 203 W. MAIN BRIGHTON 2 Howell Grads Will Marry WILSON MID-STATE «09 E. GBAMD KIVEE , INC. HOWELL GREW Mr. and Mrs. Russell Engelhardt announce the engage* ben of their daughter, Joan, to Duke Yung Yoon, son of Mr. and Mrs. Doo Sun Yoon of Ann Arbor. The announcement was made at a dinner for the immediate families held at the home of the parents of the bride-elect Miss Engelhardt is a 1962 graduate of Howell High School and is attending Michigan State University. Mr. Yoon, who is a nephew of Mrs. Winfield Line, was also graduated from Howell High School and expects to receive hte degree in packaging engineering from Michigan State Universtiy this summer. No date has been set for the wedding. The idea of the Peace Corps was encouraged by the success of the International Farm Youth Exchange, which has exchanged nearly 3,000 young people with foreign countries under the sponsorship of 4-H clubs. ^-V. < GOOD WISHES TO ONE AND A l t This is the season of the year when gladness and joy prevails—and most especially for us, when we look back over the past and realize how much you have contributed to our success. To our many goodfriendsand Thank you, dur many frltndi and customers, for yowr loyaty during tlM post y#ojr# State Bank GAMBLE'S 434 W. Mate BrightM 'rmm V avm Open for Your Convtnfenc* 9:00 TO 4:30 MONDAY THRU SATURDAY AND OPEN TIL 1:00 FRIDAY EVENING Represefltative Takes Mm View Of Roai Patrol was that state police highway federal taxes, hut for anyone recently In announcing the actually h a v e towns named Irrigation boosts crop yields patrols be paid for out who might have any doubts, Official theme for the 1964"Christmas." Then there are and quality besides offering highway funds. Other sugges- records clearly indicate they observance. Christmas Cove, Me.; Naza- protection against frost, acreth, Pa.; Bright Star, Holly cording to a Michigan State tions included using highway do. Grove and Holly Springs, Ark.; University agricultural engimonies for safety and driver F e d e r a l tax eoDeottons as well as Noel, Mo.; Noel, neer. Shallow-rooted c r o p s education programs. jumped over the $100 bUhoo Va.; Mistletoe, Ky.; Wiseman, show the most response to Mackie disliked these sug- mark for the flint time last Alaska; and Santa'Claus, Ind. irrigation. gestions, but now has anBY ELMEB E. WHITE nounced that between $1 mil- This included individual InMtoklfaa P M M Association lion and $1.5 million will be come taxes, which soared to Nearly every community has Mktdgea'" Highway Depart- used annually for a "freeway almost $53 billion; corporation its special way of observing ment has been the object of service patroL" taxes, which jumped to $22.3 Christmas —- and in some criticism in the State LegislaUnder department plans billion; and excise taxes, which towns and cities the spirit of ture periodically during the the patrol would assist mo* accounted for $15 billion. Christmas prevails, literally, last several years, at least torlate who become stranded In the categories of individ- the year around. partly' because of its financial on freeways, thus taking the ual and business levies, a ComIn Waterbury, Connecticut, burden of services off police merce Clearing House report independence. an all-year reminder of the patrols. These service* would Almost sJl of the Departshowed Michigan was third first Noel is the re-creation of include changing tires, promeat's monies come from earhighest among six states which the Town Bethlehem on viding gasoline and starting marked gas and weight taxes forked over more than half nearby Pine of . . . and one of our happiest holiday HUL stalled oars. and tedeiml fund*. It relies the total federal tax bilL traditions is wishing you and yours a season This non-sectarian "Bethleonly sltfhtty on the LegislaThe barrage of criticism ex- Michigan citizens and busi- hem" was constructed to scale filled with merriment and good cheer. ture for money. pected in the Legislature has ness concerns contributed $8.2 after research and study of The department also is one already started. Rep. Russell billion into the collections from of the largest of state agencies. H. Strange, R-Clare, termed six states which totaled $57.7 photos showing the Biblical This also is a factor in the the announcement as "a classic billion. Others states in this country. The cave or manger INSURANCE AGENCY where Christ was born, inns Legislature's criticism. example of how a governmen- group were New York, Cali- like the one where there was 142 Mill Street Pinckney p • • • tal agency can thumb its nose fornia, Illinois, Pennsylvania no room, and the Roman legaUnder the new Constitution at Michigan taxpayers by fla- and Ohio. tion where the tax collection ffucfa funds will no longer be grantly violating a law which decreed by Augustus Caesar "USUALLY UNUSUAL" specifically earmarked, except prohibits the establishment of was to be paid are among the to the extent that certain mon- any new spending programs Michigan Week is an annual, buildings represented. ies are designated for use "for without expressed legislative but ususual, event. It is "Poetic license" has been highway purposes." for nearly 11 months used to include some buildings approval. definition of highway Strange also took a slap and three weeks; finally car- which were not, or may not however, will come at the department's con- ried out in the remaining week have been, located in Bethlefrom the Legislature. State struction of tourist informa- of the year. hem, such as "David's Home" Highway Commissioner John tion centers and rest areas The 1964 observance Is set and Herod's Grand Palace. 0. BtscMe and others con- as actions outside its Jurisfor May 17-88. It* theme Crowned by a Cross, Pine oened in the roadbuilding win be "Michigan, Great in Hill has proved an ideal locadiction. i n d u s t r y have expressed The Clare Republican's re- Resource* and Opportunl- tion for the project, since its strong concern about this marks more than likely are shape is similar to the limepower given the Legislature. just the beginning of many Gov. George Romney is hon- stone cliff where Bethlehem Mackie recently made an an- more to come. orary chairman of the annual in Judea was built. nouncement which is likely to brag week next year. He notes * * • the future for Michigan is turn the tables on him. YULE TOWNS FULL TAX LOAD good. "Michigan is at the Yule-named towns have a • • • Michigan citizens would be threshold of the brightest era special interest in Christmas. Pinckney, Michigan One ef the sncgetttons made the last to question whether in its history," Romney said Arizona, Florida and Kentucky in the Legislature last year they pay their fair share of YuKetide Spirit Lasts All Year ^ s PINCKNEY DISPATCH • TUESDAY, DEC 24, A tiny bat will eat a"quarter Tho' we travel &» •arid of its weight at one meal and over to find the beautffiA * • more than half its weight must have it in us or find it every night. not —Ralph Waldo Emerson Noel 'U/ishing you all the joys of the Christmas season. ROGER A. CARR Blanehe's Beauty Salon LOIN'S BARBER SHOP VAN'S MOTOR SALES Dexter, Michigan E. Main S t Pinckney, Mich. CHRISTMAS ' 3 m Chr/ifmol bills peal Joud ond clear. As you hear tbtir message, mo/ your near* befi/Zecfwith /o/. GENTILE'S HOME CENTER Pinckney. EautMaiiL Howell Sanitary Excavators . . . Ronnie and Louie Wellman 5212 Pinckney Road Here's with viry bttt wiihM for alL ACO, Inc. *>4«l'Dexter Street Averybfg thanks to all our loyal patrons. PEIRCE'S STORE for WOMEN Pinekney 115 E. GRAND RIVER Best Wishes fora Merry Christmas WARMEST WISHES May this Christmas glow with joy for «*&*> MAY Christmas Day be an especially merry and bright one, bringing you full measure of joy, peace and contentment MAY THE THUE CHEER OF CHRISTMAS COME YOUR WAY ALBER OIL COMPANY WILTSE ELECTRIC Jack Reason, Your Pinckney Area Driver PINCKNEY you. CITIZEN'S FINANCE HOWELL 115 W. CLINTON May the true,rfeipmeaning et Christina make the season bright for you and yours. HELL CHAMBER OF COMMERCE HeH, Miehigan Qgotrish tt this glad Christmastide, we wish for yoo the great gifts of faith renewed and spirit uplifted by the joy and promise of His holy birth. The Village Beauty Shop ^ e Christmas Lee's Standard Service Pinckney 115 West Main are taking this way to express our holiday wishes to customer's and friends. In lieu of sending individual greeting cards we are donating toward the Christmas party Swarthout Funeral Home 250 Mil Strttt — at the "Boy's Training School.tJ. W t ' r t hoping Yulttidt it full of bright surprtits. Gerald Reason, Real Estate PINCKNEY, MICHIGAN Pinckney \ ARGUS • EAGLE • DISPATCH • TUESDAY, DEC 21, i I Girl Scout Troop 101 d Christmas party at the Ila burg Township Hall. There were 24 girls at the part: and one of the highlights was the By; MABY DEWOLF gift exchan^a. The leader of the troop is Lois Borton and A week ago Thursday, BarLast Saturday Karl Baschai the co-leaders are Helen Gunbara Waterbury attended a was honored at a small birth- dek and Carolyn Nichols. dinner at the Elks Lodge in day party at the home of his Ann Arbor, in honor of two mother-in-law, Mrs. Louis MilLast Wednesday night Cub co-workers, Mary Ho and Mar- ler in Dearborn. Those who Scout P a c k 37 had their ilyn Bennett. Mary and Mari- attended the party were his Christmas party in the Hamlyn have since left fpr Hawaii wife, Mary, children, Freddy, burg Township Fire HalL Sanand Washington, D.C., where Jimmy, Carolyn and Susie & ta Claus was there to greet they will make their homes. Jean Deitmyer. 25 b o y s and their families. All of the ladies are employed • • • The leader of the pack is Morby Bendix Systems Division. Guest* at the h o n e of ton Scott and the assistant • * • Doug and Kay Phillips last Yesterday morning, Nancy, Wednesday w e r e Mr. and leader is •Earl •Murray. • Wally and Tommy Hayes left Mn, Wekton Phillips and for Detroit, where they will children, Wynne and David, Pinochle Club No. 1 had a s p e n d one week with their of Grand Rapid*. They Christmas party on December father, Walter Hayes. stopped by on their way 18 at the Caravel House in home from Livonia where HowelL • • • they had been visiting relaThe Hamburg. Befcekah Gail Reeb is now home for tives. Lodge No. 889 met last WedChristmas vacation from Westnesday at the LO.O.F. Hall • • • ern University where she is a hi Hamburg for a combinajunior. She will be home for On Christmas Day, Karl and tion meeting and Christmas 11 days. Mary Baschal will h a v e as • • • their guests, her parents, Mr. Margaret Smith entertained and Mrs. Louis Miller of Dearher 500 Club last Saturday born. Julie and Billy Damm, chilevening. Four couples enjoyed dren of Mr. and Mrs. William The Annual Council, of the dinner and cards. Damm, attended a Knights of Columbus had their • « • party at the Braun -School in annual Christmas party for the Whltmore Lake, laft ThursOn Christmas Day Mr. and children of members, on Sunday. They were the -guests of Mrs. Glen Borton will enter- day, Dec. 22 at 2 pjn. The their uncle, Larry Shepperd* tain their son and daughter- party was held in the new K son, who is a 7th grade stuin-law, Steve and Myra Borton of C Hall which is located at dent at the school. and their son, Jerry, of Fern- 3555 £. Grand River, HoweU. • • • dale. Jerry's girl friend, Janice, Santa was there to talk to all will also be there. Last Friday, Dec. 20, Barbthe kiddies and give each one • * .* ara and Duane Waterbury atgift Refreshment consisted ....Last Thursday, Mrs. George aof cake tended a Christmas party for and coffee. the employees of the ConducMay went to Detroit to celOn December 21 Barbara tron Corp. of Ann Arbor. Tha ebrate her granddaughter's and D u a n e Waterbury atparty was held at the Washtesecond birthday. Carol Sutended the ftendix Systems naw Country Club. san is the daughter of Mr. Division Annual Christmas and Mrs. John Harm. which wa» beW •* t**e Hamburg Township News Notes iA,rch,e6 Last Saturday and Sunday were the final games of the Pinckney School District BasGREEN OAK UNITED BRETHREN ARGUS • EAGLE • DISPATCH • WED, DEC. 18, 1963 ketball PeeWee League. CHURCH FREE METHODIST CHURCH The Hamburg Merchants deT400 Stow Road feated the Pinckney Merchants 10111 U A 23 Rev. W. O. Season, Pastor Saturday by a score of 44 to 24 HI *235? Worship Service at 10:00 and on Sunday they defeated 10:00 a.m. Sunday School. ajn. FIRST METHODIST St. Marys by a score of 39 to FIRST BAPTIST CHLRCH 11:00 JUXL, Warship. CHURCH Bible Study at 11:00 ajn. 17. 6:45 pjn., Young People. Christian Endeavor 7:30 pjn. By doing so, they won first 6235 Rickett Road Brighton, MtrJy'g^" 7:30 p.m., Preaching Service. Evening Service at 8:15 pjn. place in the league and first Brighton O. T. Nevln, Minister Light & Life Hour on Sun- Prayer Service on Wednes- place in the tournament and Dewey Bovender, Pastor days at 1:00 pjn. — WBFG- day at 8:00 pjn. ACadcmy 7-7181 have two trophies which will AC 8-9068 98.7 FM. be on display at the Hamburg Church School, 9:30 ajn. Sunday School, 10:00 a.m. P r a y e r Meeting Thursday, School. GRACE LUTHERAN Worship service, 10:45 a.m. Morning Worship, 11:00 a.m. 7:30 pjn. Coach of the Hamburg MerCHURCH Evening Worship, 7:30 p.m. Coffee Hour, sponsored by chants said that the b o y s 312 Prospect Wednesday Prayer Meeting, the Youth Fellowship, follows played like a bunch of pros Rev. P. Fred Houston* Minister FULL GOSPEL MISSION 7:30 p.m. the second service. and that he was very proud Early Service at 8:30 a.m. 9342 Main St. Youth Fellowship, Sunday, of them. Late Servic at 1:00 a.m. Whitmore Lake, Michigan 7:00 pun. The members of the champChurch School at 9:45 ajn. Rev. A. Robertson Junior Choir Rehearsal, 7:00 ionship team are Rocky BenTHE PRESBYTEBIAX Sunday School, 10:00 ajn. p m , Wednesday. nett, Dave Bennett, Cory MurCHURCH Worship Service, 11:00 ajn. FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST Senior Choir Rehearsal, 7:30 224 E. Grand River, AC 7-6891 ray, Leroy -Gavins, Don Jones, Evening Service, 7:30 p.m. SCIENTIST P-IXL, Wednesday. Dan Radloff, Alan Young, Jim Robert Coffey, Pastor Missionary Service, Thurs- 6*6 W. Grand River, HoweU Tolbert, David Swift, Charles AC 9-6489 day, 7:00 pjn. First Church of Christ, Scien- Veneable, John Emery, MarGordon MaUett, Choir Director tist, holds a service each Sun- vin Waterbury, Lynn WaterCHRISTIAN CHURCH Sirs. Charles Birch, Organist day at 10:30. Sunday School bury Milton Huntley, L a r r y OF GOD SUNDAY SCHEDULE: for pupils up to the age of 20 Addingham, Dennis Zebel, and 9:00 to 9:30 a.m., Short fam7864 W. Grand River convene at the same hour. A Jon Smith. Pastors Rev. Bhoda Schroder ily Worship Service. Wednesday evening service is CHURCH OF THE This p a s t Sunday at 2 9:40 to 10:40 a.m.. C h u r c h Aast. Pastor: H. R* Fornash held at 8:00 p.m., at which pan., the children of St. NAZARENE Sunday School, 9:45 a.m. School, age 3 through adult. t i m e experiences, testimonies Paul's Lutheran Church pre422 McCarthy Street 11:00 to 12:00, W o r s h i p Morning Worship, 11:00 a.m. and remarks may be given. HoweU sented their annual ChristEvangelistic S e r v i c e , 7:30 Service. R<»v. R. N. Raycroft, Pastor A reading room is maintained mas program. The youngsThere is a care group for pan. Sunday School art 10:00 a.m. at 122 N. State Street where ter* presented a wonderful pre-school children during both Worship Service at 11:10 ajn. authorized Christian Science program which consisted of Wednesday Prayer Meeting, Worship Services and Church Evangelistic Services at 7:30 literature may be borrowed, a skit, recitations and songs. 7:30 P-m. School. Midweek prayer service at read or purchased. It is open Friday Young People, 7:30 * • • You are welcome at our 7:45 p.m. on Wednesday. to the public Monday through pjn. Mr. and Mrs. John Harm and worship services and other Saturday from 11:00 a.m. to daughter, Carol Susan, spent Saturday Praise Service, 7:30 events. 4:00 p.m., and from 6:30 to last Saturday and Sunday at p-m. ASSEMBLY OF GOD 9:Gfr Friday-#wm»g*. thefc-Qare of >T r *.. H^nn* ; affair atteaoea me annual mother, ^ r s . C5&or£* Msv: st 4 ST. er attended the Christmas proChristmas party of the P a s . t whieh was attended by 200 SALVATION ARMY Lakeland. Sunday School — 10:00 a.m. f gram at St. Thomas School LUTHERAN' CHURCH Chief i of Arbor Temple No.. 80 Ml N. Michtffcn, HoweU couples, • • • Morning Worship—11:00 a.m. Phone 229-8863 last Thursday evening. Jackin Ann Arbor, last Tuesday. 80S W. Main St. HoweU 8OT8-W • • * Thelma Wmklehaus and her ie's brother, Gary, was one of The party, which held at r, Rev. Leo McCann Brighton, Michigan Cadet Howard F. Guetschow, sister, Doris Pietras, spent last On that same day, Shirley the Elks Hub was was the participants in the proattended ftsststr-t Reverends AC 9-2768 officer in charge DeWolf was the guests of Bar- 16 women. Muriel was oneby Tuesday in Lapeer visiting gram. ST. JOHN'S of Brandon K, Ledwldge, Rev. Robert R. Olson, Pastor Sunday Schedule bara Waterbury at an annual the hostesses for the affair. their brother, Vernon Smock. EPISCOPAL CHURCH • • • Sunday School, with classes Leo Poster, C.M.M. 10:00 a.m.—Sunday School. children's Christmas party * * • Sunday Masses, 6:30, 8:00, for children age 3 through high Gladys Lee entertained six 11:00 a.m.—Morning Worship. iponsored by the Bendix Corp. Sibley at Walnut, HoweU Sue McMillian. daughter of school, and adults, is held at Rev. Richard Injfalls, Rector On Sunday, my husband Jer10:00. 12.00. 6:00 p.m.—Youth Meeting. the John McMillans of R u s h wpmen for a luncheon at th« They party was held at the Si45~a.m eaeh Sunday. ry and I entertained Mr. »nd Weekday Masses, 6:30, 8:00. 7:30 p.m.—Salvation Meet- take, spent lastr week irr De- CanopyTasrFriday. Her guest! Michigan Theater in Ann ArThe> H6I>'Communion every Mrs. Jack Terry and daughter were Mrs. George King, Mw, ing. Holyday Masses, 5:30, 8:15, Worship Services are held at Sunday at 8:00 a.m. troit at the home of her aunt, Conrad Lau, Mrs. LorettA fe . Highlights of the party Vicky Jo, Mr. and Mrs. Jerry 11:00 a.m. each Sunday. 12:15 and 6:00. The Holy Communion at Mrs. Daisy Malazo. Sue is tak- Gardner, Mrs. John Blake, Mrs. « ,rt the appearance of Bozo Nowak and Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Supervised Nursery care for 10:00 a.m. on the first and F i r s t Fridays, Masses at ing part in the Christmas Bernice Baiter and Mrs. Viola The Clown and Santa Claus. Anderson at a pre-Christmai 8:00, 11:20 and 6:00 p m Con- small children during the 11:00 third Sundays of each month. • • • School play at Rosary H i g h Gay. party. fetskSM Wednesday and Thurs- a.m. worship service. Morning prayer and sermon School where she is a tenth L a s t Monday evening, Jr. Visitors are always welcome! day evenings. Holy Communat 10:00 a.m. on second, fourth grade student. ion at 6:30, 7:00 and before I and fifth Sundays of e a c h • • • the 8:80 Mas*. month. Last Tuesday, Mr. and Mrs. N o v n a to Our Mother of Church school classes on PEOPL£S:CI«ttfCH William Mosher of Dearborn 385 l/nadllla Street Perpetual H e l p Wednesday Sunday at 10:00 a.m. were the visitors of Mr. and HIAWATHA BEACH Rev. Thomas Murphy evening at 7:30. Mrs. Reynolds Densmore, Sr. CHURCH Morning Worship, 11:00 a.m. Holy Communion at 6:30, Last Wednesday, Leslie McBuck Lake EVANGELICAL SundayN^chool, 9:45 a.m. 7:00 and before the 8:00 Mass. Afee, daughter of Ellen ^McUNITED BRETHREN - Y o u n g ^-People's Meeting, St. John (Mission). Located Rev. Charles Michael, Pastor Afee, arrived at Metropolitan UP 8-8249 East Crane & McCarthy Sts. 6:00 p.m. ^ ~ on M-59 two miles west of MPtnckney, Michigan Rev. Charles Kolb, Pa*tor Evening Worship. 7:00 p.m. Airport to begin a two>week 23. Sunday School, 10:00 a.m. Thursday Prayer Meeting, vacation with her family. She Sunday Mass at 9:00. Con- Morning Worship, 11:00 a.m. Worship Service at 10:00 a.m. arrived here from Los Angeles, Sunday School at 11:00 a.m. 7:30 p.m. fessions before the Mass. Holy* where she is a student at the Youth Training Hour, 6:30 Midweek Worship Service on day Mass at 7:30. Cerritos College of Fine Arts. p.m> Wednesday at 7:00 p.m. ST. MARY'S GRACE BAPTIST She will return to California Evening Service, 7:30 p.m. CATHOLIC CHURCH CHURCH on January 1. Prayer Meeting, 8:00 p.m., » FIRST PRESBYTERIAN Wednesday. • • * Sunday Masses 8:00. 10:00, *1M Backer Ed. CHURCH Today (Tuesday), M a r g e Stockage Meeting, 6:30 p.m., and 11:30 -a.m. Bttghieav Tifti>K<f * 333 West Grand River Monday. Novena, Thursday, 7:30 p.m. dago arrived at MetropoliHow ell tan Airport to begin a oneBattalion Meeting, 6:30 p.m., Weekday M&ss, 8:00 a.m. 4M42U Rev. Wm. R. Jones, Minister week visit with Ellen McAfee Monday. 10:00, BiMe flcbooL Church School at 9:15 and 11. BETHEL BAPTIST CHTRCH and Mr. and Mrs. D a a n e Colonist Meeting, 4:15 p.m., 11:00, Morning Worship. Waterbury. Marge makes her Worship Service at 11:00 a.m. Wednesday. Robert M. Taylor, Pastor 7:00, Evening Worship. home In Downy, Calif. 4060 Swarthout Road All art welcome. CHURCH OF GOD 8501 Splrer R<l., Hamburg ST. PAUL'S LUTHERAN 3940 Pinckney Road Phon« AC 7 6870 CHURCH Rev. Alan Hancock, Pastor BETT^SA TABERNACLE Services: M-36, Hamburg, Michigan Worship Service at 10:30 Sunday School, 10:00 a.m. 6401 U. 8.-IS Luther H. Kriefall, Pastor a.m. Morning Worship. 11:00 a.m. Brlfhtoe, Michigan 227-3961 (Home Phone) Sunday School at 11:30 a.m. Young People, Sunday, 6:00 Pestor, Geneva Kalteabach AC 9-97+4 (Church Phone) Young People's Meeting at p.m. Sunday School, 10:30. 9854 Zukey Lake Road 7:00 p.m. Evening Worship, 7:00 p.m. S u n d a y Morning Services, Lakeland, Michigan Ordinance meeting, WednesPrayer Meeting, Wednesday 11:3a D i v i n e Worship Services, day at 7:00 p.m. 7:30 p.m. Sunday E v e n i n g Services 10:45 a.m. at 7:30. Sunday School, 9:30 a.m. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Prayer Meeting, Wednesday, Communion - First and Third COMMUNITY 210 Church Street, HoweU Sunday of each Month. 7:30 CONGREGATIONAL Tfoun*; People, Friday, 7:30. Mary Martha Circle — Sec- Rev. Merle R. Meeden, Pastor CHl'RCH Church School at 10:00 a.m. Corner of Mill & Inadilla Sts. A Friendly Church with a ond Monday of each month. Worship Service at 11:00 Voters' Assembly — Second Spiritual Atmosphere where Rev. Gerald E. Bender a.m. o Wednesday of each month. God Answers Prayer. 878-3692 Baptist Evening Fellowship Mqrning Worship, 10:45 a.m. WEMJEYAX METHODIST ST. JSTEPHEVS EPISCOPAL at 6:30 p.m. Sunday School, 9:30 a.m. ••A Friendly Church With A Gospel Service at 7:30 p.m. Pilgrim Fellowship. 4:00 p.m. CHURCH Spiritual Atmosphere" Hamburg, Michigan Choir Practice, Wednesday, A. O. Barker, Pastor Minister, Deaconess 7:00 p.m. WALNUT STREET Sunday Services, 9:45 a.m. Olive Robinson METHODIST CHURCH Bible School H o u r , 11:00 Morning Prayer and Sermon, GALILEAN BAPTIST HoweU sun. — Harvey Young, Super- Sunday, 10:00 a.m. 9700 McGregor Road 305 Sooth Walnut S t intendent. Church School, 10:00 a.m. Rev. Rolland Croaby Rev. Allan Gray, Minister 11:00 a m , Junior C h u r c h Holy Communion, Last SunPhone 426-4328 Worship Service at 10:00. ot children of school age.) day of each month. Sunday School, 9:45 a.m. Church School at *10:00 a.m. 11:00 ajsu, Morning Worship Morning Worship, 11:00 a.m. and 11:15 a.m. jtSermon Hour). Church Service at 3:00 p.m. Youth Fellowship, 6:00. 6:30 pjn., Wesley an Youth Evening Worship, 7:00 p.m. on Saturday. Service. Wednesday Evening Prayer 7:30 p j n . Evening Evangel meeting and Bile study, 7:30. Boor. OUR SAVIOR LUTHERAN ST. PATRICK'S THE MENNONITE CHURCH S3 75 Fenton Road Thursday, 7:30 p.m. Prayer CATHOEIC CHURCH 204 Putnam Street Rev. F. «J. Pies, Pastor Meeting; Masses: 8:00 and 10:30 a.m. Rev, Melvin Stanffer Sunday School at 11:15 a.m. Thursday, 8:30 p i n , Choir Morning Worship. 10:00 a.m. Worship Servtae at 12:30 pjn. ST. JOHN'S EVANGELICAL Rehearsal. Sunday School, 11:00 a.m. LUTHERAN CHURCH BRIGHTON Evening S e r v i c e s as an2945 E. Northfield Church Rd. SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST CONGREGATION OF nounced. Northfleld Township Salvation Army Hall JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES Raymond Frey, Pastor T. J. Rasmossen, Pastor Presiding Minister Phone 633-1669 Brighton Insurance Sabbath School at 2:00 p.m. Brighton James P. Sazame. 321 W. Main Sunday School,- 9:30 a.m. Agency on Saturday. 'Corner 4th and Chestnut S t Morning Services, 10:30 a.m. 307 W. Main, Brighton Phone 229-9201 Confirmation Classes: Brighton, Michigan Adults, Thursday, 8:00 p.m. ST. JOSEPH CATHOLIC JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES Thursday, 7:30 pjn., TheocraHowen Children, Saturday, 10:00 Comer Brogan & West M-36 tic Ministry School. Father Joseph Welber, Pastor, Gregory, Michigan a.m. Thursday, 8:30 p.m. Service Rev. Jerome Schm'dt, Warner Miller, presiding Meeting, Assistant Pastor Minister METHODIST Sunday, 2:30 pjn., WatchSunday Masses at 6, 8, 10 UP 8-9929 COMMUNITY CHURCH tower Study. and 12 o'clock. Meetings held at 11448 HolRev. Wm. Johnson, Pastor Tuesday, 8:00 p.m. Area BiHoly Day Masses at 5:30, 7 mes Road. 9:45 ajn., A d u l t Sunday and 9 a.m. ^12:15 and 6 p.m. P u b l i c Meeting — Sunday ble Studies at following adSchool. Week Dayjfcasses at 6:30 & 3:00 p.m. 9:45 a.m., Sunday School. 47M VM.-tt Brighton, Mich. 8:00 a.m. At this Holy Stoon, It! os mmmkr Watchtower Bible Study — 11:00 a.m., Worship Service. 1004 UA-W Brighton Mich. Confessions Saturday f r o m Sunday, 4:15 pjn. 6:30 p.m., MYF. |g FanhalMne Rd. 3:30 to 5:00 and 7:30 to 9 p.m. Bible Study — Tuesday, 8:00 Hun Whom wi sttkf ond uoy Mi Hsrtfaftd, Men. P.m. • (\ CALVARY BAPTIST Ministry School — F r ft a y spirit bt witti ymfad * •faysof EMMANUEL BAPTIST CHURCH gft PAVV& XPMCOPAL 7:30 p.m. CHURCH OF HOWELL 279 Dartmoor Drive CflUKCH Service Meeting — F ri d a y th# ytor to como* 4961 W. Grand River, HoweU Whltmore Lake, Michigan B T « M W I Pond 8:30 pjn. Rev. Harvey Hafner, Pastor William F. Nicholas, Pastor JMwH 'O* EMson, Sunday School at 10:00 a.m. Hickory 9-2842 Vter Sunday Morning Worship at Pianist, ServkW, 8:00 ajn. 11:00 a.m. Mrs. Walter Tucker, Sr. Sunday Evening '•' vice at Sunday School, 9:45 a.m. Mornmg Worship, 11:30 a.m. 7:30 p.m. Young People meet on SunJet Cadets. 8 years through ««Pdnys: day at 6:00 p.m. V 116 W. GD. RIVER 12 years. 5:30 4o 6:30. nt both Bible Study on Wednesday Evangelistic Services, 7:00 p.m. at 7:30 p.m. BRIGHTON CHURCHES HOWELL . • • • - • • HAMBURG * • ' • • - - PENCKXEY CHURCHES Whitniore Lake Area Churches Colt Park ELECTRIC GREGORY Christmas Attend The Church of.' Your Choice D. R. ELECTRIC TOP COVERAGE OF ALL LOCAL SPORTS EACH WEEK fa Quarter Seals Bulldogs' Doom • ••••••••••••••••«••••••••••«••••••••*••••• BY LEE NILES The Holly team corralled big Bruce Evenoon, the tallest player on the floor and held him to only 11 point* and a minimum of rebounds. BRIGHTON — The Brighton Bulldogs went down to defeat at Holly Friday night 80-47. The game was put on ice in the first quarter when Jack Bennett was hitting on Ihe Bulldogs/ couldn't break his superb jump shot from the zone and the score zoomed anywhere on the-, court and ARGUS • EAGLE • DISPATCH • TUESDAY, DEC. 24, 1963 23-7 against Brighton. led his team's scaring. Alonj, with Bennett an* his teammates fighting against the B.H.S. squad, the Bulldogs were hurting on their percentage of shots made. In the first quarter, only 3 Bulldogs scored points: Evenson had 3. Stellwagen had 3, and Voltz made a free throw. A bit of determination crept into the orange and black atGiving good performances in BY DENNIS HAINES But the next five pins went WHTTMORE LAKE—Whit- the course of the night, me to Whilmore with Freshman more Lake lost its first wres- Trojans looked good even in Don Lupi winning in 3:00 mintling match of the season at defeat. utes flat, Sophomore Doug the hands of Lutheran West. The final score was Lutheran 28, Whitmore 21, with Burton winning in 2:48, Sophomore Dan Zalewski winning the scoring going this way: Walter SZegda won a de- in 3:21, Junior Ron Nix wincision over Fish. ning in 1:55. and Heavy weigh* BY LEE XILES Jim Nicsatii, tie 5-5, with Dale Withy, the Wrestler of The Bullpups beat the Holly Pasztak. the Week last week, rounded J.V. in a squeaker, 44-43. The Bruce Schewemmin lost by up the finale with a pin in final period told the tale as decision to Ebendick. Phone 1769 Chuck Curry was pinned :58 2:43, rrfaking the final score both teams blew leads of 4 Whitmore Like 45. Chelsea 15. and 10 points Brighton fougni by Loughnor. We<L, Than., FrL, Sat. Don Lupi won a decision Bee 25-26-27-28 over Kepperon. Open eve. 8:45 Starts at Doug Burton lost by decision 7:00 and 9:00 to Baetz. Sat. matinee—Open at 2:45 Dan Zalewski won by ji\n, 8 t * r t s a t 3:00-5:00-7:00-9:00 time 2:29, ovti Toby.' ..3;ftOO -ijrwplr a r r 4 a m i itfcU ijr~ "St>t»,OLlt>" Ui C C;^ you,'"' is the message" the U.S^ time 2:18, by Jackson. A6AIKST THE Ron NLx l©t>t by pin, tinw Department of Labor is trying abled in farmwork each year. X e w and different mato gat across to the more than WILDERNESS 1:38. by Headadoc. chines and farming methods Dale Wit hey won by pin. one million youngsters under can be particularly hazard18 who "hire out" for all time 2:20, by Gar.tha. ous for inexperienced youth After stomping the Detroit kinds of jobs on farms every whose immaturity in JudgCountry Day School by the year. ment only Increases the lopsided score of-40 to 11, the The work experience is fine, chance of work accidents. Trojan matmen added another but some jobs can be danger1 victim to their winning list in ous, the Department cautions 'Going to—Do Fa rmw ork ?— the form of Chelsea. The Chel- in a leaflet described a* a Take Safety Along" is the title sea cre^w met the Whitmoie pocketful of safety tips, just of the new leaflet, especially wrestlers on Whitmore's home issued. suited for handout during job mat and found them hard to With frustrating persistence, registration or at farmwork Sun., Mon., Tues overcome. The final tally read accidental death rates in agri- sites. Dec. 20-30-81 Whitmore 45, Chelsea 15. It gives a series of commonculture continue to rank third Sunday matinee continuous among major industries — sense "do's and don'ts" to safeChelsea hit the scoring colOpen at 2:15 Starts at umn first as they drew a for•-4:80-4:45-7:00-9:15 feit from the Trojans in the Mon., Tues., Open at 6:45 05-pound cUss. 'vhich gave Starts at 7:00-9:15 them a fast 5-0 lead over the Trojans. However, the score changed 3 minutes and 8 seconds later as little Walter Szegda in the 103-pound class pinned his man tn 3:08 in the first match of the night. Walter's performance gave the Trojans a 5-5 tie with the Chelsea team. Carrying on where Walter left off was Jim Nicastri as he pinned his man int,Jus.t 43 seconds. hcK*tirr^""fctie'***lfrojsn lead to 10-5. Not to be counted out, Sophomore - Gary Nollar . C;td«4M MCWW UMf followed up with a pin in one T«C>»HCOfcOIM minute and 44 seconds, adding five more points to the Trojan Wed., Than., Fri., Sat. score, making it 15-5. Junior Jan. 1-2-3-4 Bruce Schewemmin came up .HAPPY NEW YEAR with a pin in one minute and Opes eve. at 6:45—Starts lit 23 seconds, to mount the score 7:50 ami 9:00 for the Trojans by scoring live points and making the scor: 20 to 5. The streak was broken when, senior Chuck Curry was pinned in 4 minutes and 48 seconds, after putting up a good bailie for the Whitmore Lake cause. The score then read Whitmore 20, Chelsea 10. Whitmore seemed to ?t^rL declining as Larry Nix was pinned and Chelsea mounted their score to 15 and the sco<'e stood 20 to 15 with Whitmoie From a rota! of eight animals released in the Pigeon River area leading by a mere five points. during the 1918-19 period, Michigan's elk herd has grown to become one of the major tourist attractions in this neck of the state's northern woods. It also has expanded to create a problem of numbers-, a problem marked by such storm warnings as overbrowsing and indications of elk starvation. Size of the herd is estimated between 2,000 and 3,500 animals. The Conservation Department has undertaken a long-range research program to refine this estimate and cross-check other information which has been collected since the herd was established 45 years ago. While this project has not been completed, one fact stands out clearly: Some small-scale, carefully controlled hunting is going to be, needed soon, and carried on from year to year, to keep these aro> mals from doing further damage to limited winter food supplies which are also used by deer. Main goal of the elk management program, of course, will be to maintain and promote the value of this herd as a public viewing attraction. Mich-Dept. of CoMertatioa Eagle Grapplers Lose First After Toppling Chelsea 41-15 As both sides went to plan new strategy at halftime, the Scoreboard read, "Home 39, Varsity 20". In a wild third quarter. tht> point* once again piled up for the Broncos.. Foul shuts, technicals, and more technicals went to the victorious Urunci.s, while Brighton was stunned at several calls l>v the refs. Wlit'ii Flown.s, Jim Cliff Volt/, RitttT Larry .Steil- wagen, and Kvenson staggered off the floor after the mixed up 3rd quarter, the score was 58-31. Coach Kucher's young, inexperienced team wouldn't handle the speed .-ind accuracy oi t V sharp Holly boys In the final minutes of play, l^:->.rli'.on wa.^ spa; keel by Cliff Ritter, but there was never a doubi nbout a !i'c tJnfit to b/.:-' Holly :n the contest, Jnv B.MS, t.'jni w u SC i-rjji teams in *\\j area over the holiday's, and will resume league play Jan. 7 when the Bulldogs host Clarenceviile. The Brighton toys have lost •4 Wayne-Oakland games ami arc 0-5 oil the season. Bullpups Wiin Close Contest UOWELL " tack and they were only down by 19 points at halftime. Stellwagen and Ritter started shooting trorn the side and made if tough for the zone defense of the Broncos. Theatre b a c k ti(\in a 27-3,'! t h i r d qi'Uit e r ' o w i n . C'H'.cii K U I C ; A : : I e \ - •-'amc. Foul after foul changed IIH1 lead from t e a m t o t e a m . c I a i m e a , "B-e-a-u-i-i-f-u-l," Mu.sch, Herbst. Lueker, Lewhen a ^ ;.»!» lit t ' H ' . ' i - . ' l ' i r y , nujrie and Gilbert c o n t r i b u t e d fouilii q;i:ui'.'i The e^ to the \ictory by pulling t h e th? climaxed a c t k i . i - : - i r k e d lead out of t h e confusion and |chao>. j With ">0 seconds ^o go. i.Musch fouled out and Rick I Leitz came into the t,ratpe. j As ihe seconds ticked off. ' t h e BwJIpups -took Youth Safety on Farms Described i . Elk in Michigan DEBBIE REYNOLDS B * Area Bowling working around machines and animals, using hantkools and ladders, and performing the hundred and one jobs that involve^ lifting everything from boxe^or baji> to pails or pitchforks. The importance of proper clothing to protect youngsters lronT^M|i), insects, JMMsonous'weedstaiKl chemicals, are tips optfred alon<j with friendly advice on the need to get plenty of rest and nourishment to pnovirie the energy needed to prevent accidents and increase production on lurrii jobs. — — Copies of the leaflet air available in limited numbers, without charge, as Ions as the supply lasts. Address requests to: U.S. Department of Labor. Bureau of Labor Standards, Washington, D.C. 20210. Winan's Lake Man Graduates Among 1,284 candidates who were awarded degrees tt ^'&yne Slate University's midyear commencement exercises. Dec. 15, was Gregory Norman Austin, of (illO Winan'A Drive. HP received a bachelor of arts degree. Dr. Clarence R Hilberry. WSU president, conferred 812 undergraduate and 419 graduate degrees, Mfi Ph.D. and 17 Ed.D. degrees. BKK.HTON WKDXKSDAY AKTKRNOOX LA INKS' LKAOLK I Won L o s t Northerner ;;7 19 . Hell Cal.-s 2H 27 Alley Ciitv L'H 27 RiLhtv l;u-tv> _'^ 27 2h' -j 2 7 ' j 2K Lakers 2.") Pin Busters IS1.High (james: B. Campbell, 171 K. Fish, 166 K. Davvson, BRIGHTON FRIDAY MORXIMi M E N ' S LKAtifK Won Lo.st 4 lti 44 Co. No. A. S. Sti lit Lucky 2S H. S. Co. No. 2S SpotttM'v 30 Chargers:i4 -'6 Sweet Three Team No. 4 .T6 •J4 Team No. ti HAMBURG DAIRY HAMBURG, MICH. il'll I l l f ( i d W l i l l points while Lemorir had 5. Herbal had 6. Gilbert made !, and Shuck, who fouled out earlier in the contest, made 7 points. In ihe rif\t couple weeks the J.V. will not be playing league uamev On Jan. 7 they play Clarenceviile here at Brighton. Young Bowlers To Try Skill Saturday Night BRIGHTON - • The Youth Bowling Association is sponsoring a Y.B.A. Double Tournament at. th,e Brighton Bowl on Saturday at 6:00 p.m. This includes all sanctioned bowlers in the Bantam. Girls .Junior League and Boys Junior League. These leagues are under the coachinp staff of Howard Taylor, Jack Collett and Doris Rawski. "We would like to have all parents and friends come^and watch the children boui. Con re and yive them some moral support, and see what your children have accomplished," sni.d Mrs. Rawski. # 30 As the world '_':nas smalle", Christmas observances in dif• ferent countries ;.;row mure similar. Santa Glaus in red .->uit and white l«>ard drives ! his reindeer-drawn sleigh to I North, Centra! and South America and to many othxT countries as well. In tact, when the first explorer lands on Mars, he shouldn't t>e too surprised t<> BKK.HTOX IXUl STIIIAL however, only server to LKA(ifK |><jint up the fact that this :« W L l 1 a holiday for everj'one, and a Ainer. Aulo ACT. 4 0 - 2I) .holiday which draws ideas Howl N Bar :«i 28 from all lands and thnes, unitFislier Abrasive '•',/> 29 ing them in both religious and Ad. Sluinpin:-: No-. 2 'S,\ 31 secular observances of the Ad. S t u m p i n g No. 1 1)2 'VJ season. Van Camp Chev ?,'! 32 Bo«;m Insurance 31 33 Caffney Klecti'ic ,'<i\ 34 H.-unms VR Wesson (ilen Oaks-Hint/ QQS ,',() 3(J 29^ 25 ?A —SI'X-SEKKIXfi SATELLITE 34 The United StatesVEros sat.'{41ellite, now under development, 39 is expected to be the first orbiting space vehicle equipped ST. P A T R I C K ' S BOWLING with a solar reflector to collect the sun's heat energy and conW L vert it into electrical power. (lamble's 41 19 The reflector, consisting of a llobert s precision grooved electoformed XorWest Klectnc 24 nickel mirror, is to be attached Kluck's .",8 24 to a liquid-metal cell which Drowry's .".4 will transfer the solar heat to B'.atz * .",3 27 a generator. The nicket mirror Busy Bee 29 will emerge from itt housing Corrigan 28 28 only after th« satellite it in Wilson Ford _'(>' .".;*', orbit Carl ing's 26 Brownie Neon2 0 ' .14 Budweisei7 '.!• 49 WKDVKSDAY NKiHT LADIKS LKACiTK W L Brighton Bow N1 Bar40 24 Mid way 2") De Rrisia Cal)inot«; 25 P.'wing'.s Fui'nituie 27 t.'lxtr's :\\ •I & M '.Y2 Mary Jo Shop), iteOUL "Man Ins always kad a fallMttpr< / We herald glad tidings of the Jog and Peace in this most beautiful of att seasons.«. Christmast May it be your Merriest! lifiSOSri S1EST11BS J BRIGHTON 34 Yule Is Time For All Lands vn From the Staff of JARVIS For Lad's * Dad's j Zindell's Oldsmobile 29 35 Cozy Inn 25 39 Guest House of Jieauly 'JQ 44 Pick up - S. Sixbey 4-6-10; M. Golden 4-7-10. .&&&? Wishing AH Our Customers _ and Friends A Very Merry Christmas And A Happy New Year 205 W. MAIN X I Brighton Boul I Walt's Farm SEASON'S We're bearing best wishes to all our many wonderful friends, and thanks for your patronage. m there .>1U>(.'1I lifteK GARNER TODAY m Scores 4 - , . . •••••••••••••• APPfiRAL Located In The Howell Shoping Center • Northwest Pipe & Supply Co. 620. W. GD. RIVER, BRIGHTON We of Kiwanis accepted the each day of the week doing support of this community many unusual favors for us, venture as service to the comis the art teacher at Pinckmunity. The collection taken ney high, Mrs. WUhemina up was to help defray the exSwarthout. We are most gratepenses which we felt we could ful to her. Without the help and co- not carry alone as we are only operation of these persons and 19 in number. The collection that of others, not mentioned eame to $262 and was a most at this time, we could not con- gratifying display of commutinue in the capacity of which nity spirit and endeavor. When the expenses of telephone bills, Mrs. Mary Golden, a social we do to pursue the true con- printing We, the members of the of programs, purchase cept of our dub, — that of "Care Club" of Pinckney High, worker at the State Hospital service. Thank you again, and of music, paying the accombeen very patient and nas are most grateful to the has given us guidance whenever "Merry Christmas" to every- panist, and gifts for the soloists are paid we will be a many persons who have co- called upon. For this we are one! few dollars ahead. This money operated so «plendidly to make most grateful, and especially this club the success it is! This wish to express our gratitudeMembers of the Care Club will be spent for some community service. Pinckney High School is a unique organization in a to her for arranging a tour Our New Year wish for the way, since it's purpose w serv- through the hospital in the fail, -community is that our com* for setting up a schedule ice, and this service is chan- and muriity can move forward in so that we could visit the neled, primarily, to the re- p a t i e n t s on Floor 2, West 1964 in many united efforts in ••His" service. tarded patients at the HoweiJ December 18. Sincerely Yours, State Hospital Don A. Gibson, Pinckney It was this - day, December Kiwanis 18, we presented the 65 reWe do not need or want tarded women patients with publicity, however, so many The presentation of Handel's people have stretched out a gifts that had been donated helping hand that it seems to the club by many local Messiah in the High School on residents. For this we are December 8 was a Chirstmas Only fitting to say "thank- most grateful. We also put on present to the community that you" during this season of a brief talent show, for the many shall not forget. It was Daniel J. Williams, seaman good wilL patient's entertainment, and also a demonstration that men apprentice, USN, son of Mr. The group was formed in the we appreciate those who parti- of good will of all faiths can and Mrs. Frank S. Williams fall at the Pinckney High cipated and gave of their time still join together in giving in of 2977 Patterson Lake RtL, this little community of Pinck- Pinckney, Mich., recently reschool with Mrs. Raymonda for this. ported for duty at the Naval Morris as our sponsor Mrs. Some of the 36 members of ney. Air Station, Key West, Fla. Morris claims she has received club, Cathie Bauer, Judy PRINTING SERVICE the inspiration for the club the Everyone who played a part The station provides services Miller, D o n n a West, Barb in this presentation should take 108 S. Patterson Lake Rd. and material for the support of from Mrs. Cheeky of HoweU, Grant, Nancy Bond, Linda Plnckney who sometimes does volunteer Wegener, Martha H i 1 e m a n , a bow. We of the Pinckney of fleet operating forces. • • • work at the hospital. Mrs. Judy Pepper, and Jeanne Ken- Kiwanis would like to thank Steve Jones for his tremendous Chelsky, a registered nurse, Marine Private Gary F. have been doing volunteer effort and ability in putting Every business should do has acted as advisor to the nedy Szalwinski, son of Mrs. P. J,, work at the State Hospital in some advertising, spending its club members, and has been their free time since Septem- the presentation together, each O'Leary of 3058 West M-36, advertising money wisely and most helpful at steering us in ber. This constituted the prob- of the soloists for their superb Pinckney, Mich., c o m p l e t e d carefully in the way it will do the right directions. For this lem of transportation. For this talent and generosity, the recruit training Dec. 3 at th* of the chorus who Marine Corps Recruit Depot some good. we are most grateful. we thank Judy Miller's mother, members gave unstintingly their time San Diego, Calif. Nancy Bond's sister, Bonnie, and talent, the of members of The training included drill, and Cathie Bauer's father, who each of the churches University have taken of their time to of Michigan Orchestra for their bayonet training, physical condrive the gilrs to the hospital. artistic talent and gjsnerosity ditioning, parades and cereinonies and other military sub> >t TJiKi? 1& i 3 PINCKNET DISPATCH # TUESDAY, DEC 24, 1963 Letter To The Editor Care Club Expresses Gratitude! Memorable Best Wishes Servisemen UUuutuu JACK'S school ,it requires great pa- finally the people in the area tience, cooperation, and under- who attended and helped to standing from the administra- finance this community entive department. This we have deavor by their contributions. had in full measure, and Mr, Surely, God must have blessed Reader and Mrs. Stackable, and done his part to support we are most grateful to the these people's efforts. Men both of you. alone could not have produced Another person who has had such a piece of aesthetic patience with us and helped us beauty. To All Our Friends Bitten Brother's Farm Implement Sales BRIGHTON 130 U.S.-23 M-14 rifle and other infantry weapons. Recruit training prepares Marines for further specialized training in a service school or with a unit of the Fleet Marine Force. They will report to Camp Pen/ileton, Calif., for combat infantry training. OVER 100 YEARS OF PINE IREWINfr 1862 • 1962 NATURALLY A*ED _ NATURALLY CARIOMATID O I T U BBOS. BBSWtNO CO., TRJtSKMSUVXE, MICH. ALL STAR BEVERAGES 9455 MAIN — WHITMORE LAKE e ukt this opportunity to extend warmest p to our many friends. Hope you are heading for the happiest holiday season tverl Hope Santa's bringing our many friend* tha Man-test Christmas avart BLUE WATER STORE 9704 Kress Road Lakeland, Michigan ..-* «•>•""••. V / * "A Christmas Carol in Prose, Being a Ghost Story of Christmas" was first published at Christmas 1843. and since that time its popularity has never waned. Generation after generation has laughed and cried over the story of the miserly Scrooge, who through the revelations of three spirits — Christmas Past, Present and Yet to Come — became a man who "knew how to keep Christmas well, if any man alive possessed the knowledge." Charles Dickens, creator of the "Carol," loved it as well as, or perhaps even better than, its many readers did. He told of crying and laughing again and again as, captivated by his story, he wrote the 30,000-word book in six weeks. When Dickens gave readings from his works in England and America, the story of Scrooge was always the prime favorite with his audiences. Perhaps the best kjiown part of the story is Christmas dinner at the Cratchits, where Scrooge and the Ghost of Christmas Present observed the family of his clerk, Bob CratchU, making merry over a simple Christmas dinner, highlighted by a goose—"There never was such a goose"—and a pudding—"Oh, what a wonderful pudding!" And a favorite character is Tiny Tim, the Cratchits' crip- ; Qt the joyous Christmas s e e m WB greet you with our hopes for your he&fcy Betty Yaye Beauty Shop 127 E. Main Street Hope Santa fills your Christmas stocking with' _ T 4,«.rC Tie Beef Profits Yourself. . To Buying' Skill About one-half the profit In It's Lighter Than You Think raising beef cattle is.due to GEYER'S BEER leaders Still Loyal to Dickens 1 'Christmas Carol One of the most famous speeches in the English language is, doubtless, Tiny Tim's, at the conclusion of the Chris > mas feast, "God bless us, every one!" Add ennial "lives every your heart desires! life's nuisance: The peplayboy of fifty who it up" too much at football game. Thos. Read Lumber, h e . 475 Webster Piftkney Who can remember when Americans longed for the day the Japanese would leave China 'so that China could enjoy peace? the farmer's skill in buying The nation needs statesmen the right kind of cattle. The searching for what is right other half of the profit comes rather than for votes. from feeding efficiency. K. T. Wright, Michigan State University agricultural econoCyCo^ocystz mist reached these conclusions after analyzing the costs and Incomes of 60 Michigan beef farmers. He found that the average price farmers paid for their cattle was 134.94 per head of the 519-pound calves subtracted from the total receipts at sale time for the 995pound market animal left farmers with a gross margin of $111 per head. After deducting the cost of feed, these farmers had an average margin of $31 per head to cover other costs. LOCAL TUMMAIKS, There were wide variations IF YOU HAVE NOTHINGamong the farms in the study. MORE TO GIVE THAKl For instance, feed cost per A SINCERE ©RENTING, hundred-weight in 1960-61. and YOU'RE GIVING A LOT their final sale price was 124.14 - or 80 cents a hundred less. Please accept our sincere However, the original cost per wishes for a Very Merry hundred-weight of gain on in- Christmas, and our thanks dividual farms ranged from for your continued patron$12.31 to $22.77. Returns per age. $100 of feed ranged from $32 to $203. Wright says the feeders who received the highest return on CONCRETE <X CO their cattle, fed fewer heifers, got about one-third of a pound *\ Mow ELI. faster gain per day and had a feed cost of $14.72 per hundredweight your holiday be blessed by the peace that first Christmas in Bethlehem. And may your heart and home be filled with joy ERRY HRISTMAS 'KE'S MOBIL SERVICE 850 East Main Street Pinckney GRAVEL GRA §1389 Rev's Beauty Shop Hi Land Gardens * • * * Herb and Bev Bowles Why is it that most people get so excited over nothing? MERRY CHRISTMAS AND SNEDICORS CLEANERS JOIN HAPPY NEW YEAR THE ThomM E. Sharpe CROWD HoweU, Michigan \ May the season bring great joy to you. BEV'S RESTAURANT State Representative 126 W. Main Street AT THE ANCHOR INN'S i\iW0! New Year's Eve Party • Hats, Favors & Noisemakers Make You* Reservations Now r Btstwtshttforqflnt /el(M0shioA«d Christmas '\ B#eD Saaltaiy Co. 6680 Plncknty Road Pinckney v HAC-S1S3 CALL OR Bfjfjt holiday wishes and sinctrsthankstoTOO all I WAGNER'S GROCERY HA4M1M PINCKNEY BODY SHOP «00€ Pinekney. ftmtfl Kmd Pteckicj 114 HoweU Street r J - » • • • " - > , - , . . - . - . . . , - , - * . - » . - ' - ' f - * - - * " * *~" - •- i v.' • • ' • • • » - • • r ' - • r — . • Henry Fork's Interest in Education Noted During Centennial of His Birth For a man who frequently had considerable influence — To provide the fledgling newspapers often carried want mitory, a recreation building fey collector. contributions to> c o l l e t s , uni- J Compam donated 210 acres of professed disdain for formal continuing today in many Ford Motor Company with a ads for "expert mechanics — and a classroom building. On One would recitL' a line, vereities and secont. •ondary schools, his Fair Lane Kstate state to t h t •ducatian, the late Henry Ford farms — on the schooling of source of employes abreast of graduates of Henry Ford Trade several visit* over a period of then the other would follow gifts of aulomoine equipment l'niversit> of Michigan to e*» s tJKM»tfin^s of students. 23 years, Mr. Ford and his wile with the next line, and so on, for technical training, and di- tahhsh a Deai born campus. new manufacturing techniques, School preferred." The interest of the indus- he astabliehed the Henry ford When the school finally delighted in helping the stu-untii one or the other was rect ca^h "<ifts. Fold Motor This gut was accompanied trial pioneer in providing prac- Trade School. It opened its closed its doors in 1952, it had dents personally and in joining stumped. Then, they wouid Company Fund, a nun prolit by a $6.5 million donation from tical training for youth is but doors in the fall of 1916 tograduated mare than £.000 their extra-curricular activities. start afresh with a new stanza. corporation operated fur edu- Ford Motor Company Fund t© LIKED MctiUFFEY one of many remarkable as- poor boys who wanted a tech- boys. INTERNATIONAL ' cational, scientific and charit- aid in the development of the pects of his lile recalled dur- nical education. In 1923, Ford became a Throughout his life, Heni-y Today, the company ho able purjx)i>es and supported new educational center. ing the Centennial observance Even earlier he had set up patron of the Berry Schools Ford had a passion for the sL\founded mirrors an even broad- primarily by contributions from of his birth. Eclectic Readers er interest in education that Ford Mo lor Company, uranu d a basic employe education pro- of Mount Berry, Ctootgta. McGuffey used in the elementary schools touches nearly every counl.r> approximately $l.y million Ni THE PINC'KNKY D I S P A T C H * Martha Berry founded the Back In an era when in- gram. In May, 1914, he had of his time to introduce stu- in the free world. dustry was on the tfcrcabokl established an English school Mrbool in 1904 and opened it education last \e;u\ dents to literature. Though of m y r i a d techmiloffcttl for immigrant employes which to boys and girb who dkint Ford M o t o r Company's TIKSDAY. DEC. 24, 1963 Q Among the Ford Fund's edubreakthrough*, Ford saw graduated 1,500 men during have money, fcut wasted to they did not coincide with his worldwide training .jiroffrtun* cational activities is the an- I that the few years before the U.S. work for their education. own school of learning by do- etptui the range from appren- nual award ol 70 futw-year ! conditions called for changes entered World War I. Like Ford, she taoufht tne ing, he felt that the readers tice* to college, graduates to college scholarships lo son-> in industrial training techbest way to help anyone was had a good influence on him. niangeraent personnel, of- arid daughters of Ford emHELPED NEEDY Ford has a collection of the fering thousand* of employe* ployes, and $2.10,000 yrant that From the beginning, admis- to give him a chance to help McGuffey readers second only opportimititw to p r e p a r e hits been made for the third himself. sion to Henry Ford Trade to that of the University of themselves for better job*. Ford made a number of contime lo ihe IrMilute of InterSchool was predicated on need. Virginia where the author had Last year, the company do- national Education for the tributions to the school — Boys were trained in the industrial arts with a minimum first, Clara Hall dormitory, once^ taught. One of his favor- nated $1.8 million to education. Ford International Fellowship of attention paid to academic then Henry Ford kitchen and ite pastimes was to test his Its activities included a pro- Program. The latter program subjects. Those in senior den, followed by another dor- memojy with a fellow McGuf- gram for matching employe allows 4."> outstanding foreign scholars to come to the United classes worked company hours 2 States for one >ear of and attended classes in adgraduate-level study at the vanced drawing and matheuniversities or research centers matics. of their choice. Enrollment at the school in 1920 stood at 400 with a waitlT OF M CAMPl'S ing list of 6,000. This prompted We wiih you a Day,. Heniy Ford's instinctive inLivingston County, like evFord to tell the school's head: bright with hope, terest in education also en"Reverse those figures. Let ery other community, has its 205 N. Walnut Street dures today on the very 400 wait." Then, the school old timers who hate banks and rich in the blessings HOWELL grounds he called his home began admitting 400 students insurance companies, debts and of the season. for more than 30 years. In a month. But when registra- borrowers. So, like all old December, 1956, Ford Motor tion reached 1,800, the wait- folks of their kind, they hide ing list had grown to 15,000! their money in tin cans, glass Growing as the school did, jars, etc. Occasionally, one Monday and Thursday it wasn't long before its grad- runs into an old coin collection I have been disturbed by from the State Department of And this county, like all the reports that I have retreated Social Welfare, which has had uates sought jobs outside Ford 9:30 to 2:00 Motor Company. Effectiveness others, has many an old house from my fight with trie fed- long experience in administerof the school was reflected in in which is hidden riches the eral government over Aid to ing such programs. It was the fact that nearly all grad- owner failed to reveal before the Dependent Children of the cleared in advance by the Department of Health, Education Unemployed (ADC-U). uates were employed i Farm Loans 6V % Federal Laid Bank Associatioi wvmnt wshes tor a happy holiday. (targe's Barber Shop 132 West Mala Old Homes Hide Buried Treasure Phone 1422 bi the Spirit of Christinas f GOVERNOR ROMNEY REPORTS HELLER'S FLOWERS Seethe Bluebonnet Bowl SATURDAY December 21 Brought to f * by your HirtfwdAfent r Channel 2 Group The scene is set for gladness and cheer...sowe send our brightest wishes with a happy Thank you" Jor allowing us to serve ywt COLT PARK BRIGHTON* INSURANCE AGENCY 307 MAIN ST. ANN ARBOR BANK a PHONE 227-1891 DEXTER OFFICE tvfrat H "aaU $10,000 was swelled to more abandoned and I do not in- meant left it up to the states to detend to abandon my basic than $100,000 when, nearly fine unemployment, the debated, an old safe was finally fight with the federal govern- partment drafted standards ment over the misuse of authree years after it was pro-thority by federal officials. that formed the basis of a opened and revealed a treasure I think it is important to workable piece of law, and in rare stamps and coins. review the major events of above all, one that could get The collection had not been that dispute, in order to put through the Legislature. examined since the man's the most recent event in its After the bill passed, offideath. It rested-inan -old safe proper perspective* — c i a l s o f the Department... of that had been hauled to a In 1961, Congress adopted H.E.W. changed their position storage room to await legal legislation extending ADC, and rejected Michigan's applidisposition of the estate. then ava^able only to children cation to be admitted to the The 1850 model safe was in need Decause of the death, program. They said the standbroken and flimsy. Experts' disability or absence of a par- ards of eligibility did not meet belief that the horde of coins ent, to children in need be- their specifications. I refused__to yield in my and stamps would not be note- cause of the unemployment of position because the departworthy seemed confirmed. No a parent. ment's position amounted to a one would keep anything of In doing so, Congress made misuse of its authority. I *till y threat value in such a vulner- it absolutely clear that the believe that. j able safe. definition of "unemployment" In July, I asked the GovIt had been sealed by the was to be left up to the states. ernors' Conference in Miami court. -After this was broken Rep. Wilbur Mills, chairman Beach to support a movement it was an easy matter to open of the sponsoring Ways and designed to obtain the right of the creaky old box. Means Committee, said: judicial review for the deci"The question of whether a sions of federal officials. The One of the expert's first finds convinced him that this parent te unemployed is left conference gave unanimous was not juat a routine collec- entirelv to the determination support to this movement^> ., tion ,pf Indian Head pennies. ~O~f the state. ITI this ~instance With the "ih'tyest and "help "H^J&en among about 10,000 we are not telling the states of the governors of other penmesTx he said, "was anthey cannot do this, they can- states, I trust that we will be 1856 Flying Eagle ceiH wortl? jiot do that or they cannot do able to obtain that right - of about $800. This was jyst a something else. What we are review, so that arbitrary detelling the states is this: You cisions by federal beginning." officials find out that this family is in which clash with the will of The men kept probing need and what its need is, through the dusty papers and and you decide if you want to Congress can be effectively envelopes and came upon one put up state money to help challenged. But this fight will take of the rarest of U.S. gold the problems of the needy time, I see no reason why coins, an 1861D $1 gold piece. children, and if so we will join Michigan should continue to be Up until this time only 15 you under the formula now denied these funds during .the were known to exist, applicable under the^ADC pro- period in which this battle is This rare coin was wanted gram. That is all we are say%*$ by the Confederate govern- ing. It is entirely up to the being waged. That is why I have'Trended ment when it seized the U.S.states." mint at Dahlonega, Ga. How Michigan did not participate to introduce new legislation to many gold pieces were minted in the federal-state program In bring Michigan under the federal program. is not accurately known since 1961 or 1962, In 1962, Conrecords were not too well kept gress extended the program, Then there are people who by the harassed government. still on a temporary basis, to think everybody wants to know Until the Detroit find, eyperls 1967. how they feel, and why. had been able to' locate and Following my c a m p a i g n register only 15. The coins are pledge to do so, I gave full extremely valuable. backing to legislation to bring Michigan under the program. But equally exciting to the This legislation was drafted on experts was the fact that this the basis of recommendations collector, working alone and apparently quite secretly, had a complete collection of all the $1 U.S. gold coin dates along with a complete collection of the $3 gold pieces. When the experts advised the lawyer and the man's family, all were completely astonished. An estate that was not expected to yield much Bread Auto more than $10,000 now had protection at swelled to about $100,000 be"Safe Driving cause of the rare coins the Plan" rates. man had painstakingly invested in through the years. No Farm Bureau membership Culture is one thing and required. varnish is another, COMMUNITY SERVICE AUTO INSURANCE Jfft thank you for your marry Chistmotf and thank and loyalty is tha sinc*r« holiday you a Marry Chrbtmat! LAVEY HARDWARE 114 East Main Pinckney HENDEE BROS. TRUCKIN6 00. Pinckney FOR —Ralph Waldo Emerson School examinations are onesided; it is not so much academic education, as a moral and spiritual culture, which lifts one higher. —Mary Baker Eddy RPY, ME RISTM Chriatma* -2310 Dutcher Rd. Howell, Michigan Phone 820-M-12 ff Lake Hackney K X ftk 34IK) s\w»rthout Rd. I'inckney ishing you all the joys and blessings of Christmas. West Main St. IM great sincerity, we express our appreciation for our friendly association. May you and yourf have a holiday season abundantly filled with joy. Lav<»y Insurance Agency 114 East Main I'inckney Wishing you and f eun a happy holiday* FARM BUREAU INSURANCE4 King's Barber Shop Companies of Michigan East Main Pinckney Merry Christmas # # # BECK'SMtMaiaStmt MARATHON "Say It with Flowers" Ucvera«e Distributor Donald Brinks-agent , Jack Hannett GROCERY Phone 284 JOHN PIETRAS Contact mo today! from ffttmtt we rftoftn hem wmA Udmeto you, we me mott d HOWELL, MICHIGAN" Dtgter in Watkins Products Minnesota Woofenff Packard-Made to Measure Shirt*— Home Land Made to Measure Suits <* and Top-Coats Bfaaon Shots P. 0. M X SM — riSCKSZt — S7S417S We pray that "your Christmas will overflow with health, wealth and happiness. SINTER'S MARKET BON AND KATE WEED * 10623 BROADWAY, HAMBUM M" '*•*! V WANT AD RATES 12 WORDS MINIMUM CHARGE 75r PAPERS fie PEB WOKO OVKK It WUHDS SECOND INSERTION fOe F1KST 13 WORDS 4c EACH ADDITIONAL WORD ttc EXTRA FOB A BUS BEPLf THE •iftiWUTADTOMU Brighton Argus DEADLINE TIME SCHEDULES ARUUS — TCE8. NOON — DWPATCB TUBS. NOOK EAGLE — TUES. NOON NOTICE FOR SALE Household KARL'S TV now open every evening until 9 p.mM large stock of reconditioned used SINGER, DONT MISS THIS big sale on sewing machines, TVe. 104 W. Grand River. vacuum cleaners, etc. Slant-Ot-f-x Matics $50 off. Phone Norman Pilsner AC 9-9344, your only authorized representative for the Singer Co. I repair all makes. 1-1-x IF YOU HAVE a drinking problem. Write Alcoholics Ano- USED HOUSEHOLD — furnymous. P. O. Box 162, Whit- niture for sale at 10603 E. Gr. more Lake, Michigan. tfx River. Phone 229-6517. tfx Personals BRACE YOURSELF — for a thrill the first time you use B l u e Lustre to clean rugs. Rent electric shampooer $1.00. Geo. B. Ratz & Son, Hdwe. 12-25-x Card of Thanks We wfeh to take this way to express our "thanks" to all sets of kindness and sympathy L during oar recent bereavement. A special thank-you must be said to Mrs. Alma Chambers, Mrs. Wanda Morgan, Mrs. Vir~ ginia Gilbertson, Mrs. Iola Hall, Rev. Hancock and to the Past Matrons of the O.E.S., Chapter 145, for what they ^ did, We are ao grateful-to-yotr all. The family of W. H. Meyer GREETINGS! Since I am unnbte to say this to you in pernon due to an auto accident Dee. 15, which has laid me up for perhaps another two weeks, I wish to say to all the patrons on my route that I wish you all ft Very Merry Christmas and t Very, Very Happy • New Year. -¥eur Postman, Frank Rodriguez SINGER SEWING MACHINE In modern w o o d cabinet. Equipped to zig-zag. Will accept $5.00 per mon. This machine is being sold for an unpaid repair bill of $42.50 with new cabinet included. Will accept any type of trade. Call HowelL 146GJ2. 12-25-x Miscellaneous FOR SALE BARGAIN HUNTER'S paradise! Enormous supply good quality clothing, books, dishes, knick-knacks,, h o u s e plants, furniture, etc. Open every day. House of Rummage, 4485 E. M-59, HowelL 2-26-x P R O T E C T YOUR HOME FROM TERMITES. For further information call F. T. Hyne and Son. AC 7-185L t-f-x WINTER SKI EQUIP.—Boots, poles, wax, etc. Wilson's MidState Marine, Inc., Lake Cheraung. Phone Howell 274. t-f-x AUTO PARTS, Mufflers, Generators, Fuel Pumps, Brake Shoes, Glass Packs. American Auto Ace 126 E. Grand River, t-f-x 6 YR. CRIB & DRESSER — Brightonexcellent condition. AC 9-6452. 12-25-x-UXB COMPRESSOR tor rent SterBng DrUUss Co, Call HeSC, ZAG-.SKWXKG MaI'm. -r - - t-t-a chine in original factory carton. Sews on buttons zig zags, WOOD BY THE CORD — makes f a n c y designs, mono- stove furnace or fireplace. AC grams, etc. All without at- 7-4921. 12-24-p tachments and just by dialing. Our sacrifice price $44. Terms CORD WOOD AC 7-3642. available. Call Howell 791. 12-25-x 12-25-x FOR FRESH HOT PASTIES SEWING MACHINES zig zag- —Please place your order 2 1963 Model. This machine still hours in advance. Phone 685carries service and parts war- 1496-170 Center St., Highland, ranty and sewing instructions. Mich. (2 blks. So. of M-59.) Must sell $5.00 per mon. or tfx $49.95 cash. Will accept tradeins. For information phone MEN'S HOCKEY SKATES — Howell 146652. 12-25-x with tendpn guards, size 11, used only twice, $8.00. AC 9SINGER SLANT NEEDLE 6042. 12-24-p in cabinet. Just insert magic cam for design and fancy work. SEASON'S GREETINGS — Will sacrifice for balance due and Best Wishes for a prosof S59.90 or take over pay- perous and productive New ments of $7.00 mo. Call How- Year*. Hartland Area Hdwe, ell 791. 12-25-x Hartland, Mich. 1-1-x FOR SALE Miscellaneous . " FOR SALE * ^ household COMPLETE SEWING Machine Sales Jk Service. Also Authorized Hoover Dealer, with Sales * Service Whitmore Lake. 4499551. t-f-x FIREPLACE wood — mixed hard woods, fruit, oak, cherry and maple. Free delivery 20 mile radius, by the cord only. N E E D CASH? We pay cash or English Nursery. Call 227-4171. 2-12-x trade; used guns and outb&frrd motors. Mill Creek Goods, Dexter. Sporting ONE NICE gentle 4 yr. old t-f-x pony, mare; one 7 mos. old BRYANT Gas Circulator Hea- Shetland Mare Colt. 713 S. ter, 35,000 B.T.U. thermostat Main, Milford. Call 684-6732. 12-24-p control, $35.00. AC 9-6159. The heart has reasons that 12-24-x reason does not understand. —Jacques B. Bossuet FIREPLACE wood, seasoned or green, delivered. 438-3662. 12-25-x There is no instinct like that, to of the heart. — AUTO INSURANCE For Cancelled—Rejected — Financial Responsibility No waiting. 20% down and 6 to 8 payments. NeJaoa Ins. 6 Real Estate 9555 Main St., Whitmore Lake, Michigan. Phone HI 9-8751 SEE THE N E W 3020 power shift tractor—now on display at our store. You get top allowance here for your late model trade in on the new long green line of John Deere tractors. Hartland Area Hdwe. Hartland 2511. 12-25-x FOR SALE Mobile Homes AT BLUE RIBBON mo, of Dec. only, new Liberty 50' x 10', $3,195.00. 21301 Telegraph Rd. 1 block north of 8 Mile Rd. Detroit. Phone 356-9383. 12-25-x FOR SALE USED CARS PERSIAN LAMB Fur Ceat. like new, size 12. Metal Steamer trunk. Call 229-9895. 12-24-p I960 Mofu-Thura. 9 ajn.-10 p.m.—Frk-Sat, 9 a j n . - l l pjn.—Sun. 12-5 pSn. PACKAGE LIQUORS ope.s Party Foods Brandies Mixes COLD BEER — WINES 132 E. Gd. River, Brighton AC 9-6858 BUYER'S GUIDE MWM* BRI8HT0N SWEET SHOP DeLnea — Its v? Mala Bt — Ph. AO 9-7091 SEALTEST ICE CREAM Gamble's Store for — Paint HooMware and Apphaiiee*. EkctrkaJ and PtaBtlng SnppHct PLYMOUTH Suburban Station Wagon, p. s. — good tires, new paint, blue & white, rust proofed, Call 229-9895. 12-24-p 1963 FORD FAIRLANE sports coupe, like new, std. shift V-8, take over payments. Howell 373 after 6:00. t-f-p 1946 FORD tractor. AC 7-3642. 12-24-x 1960 RAMBLER STATION Wagon, excellent condition, 24,000 miles. Estate must sell. Howell 2426. 1-8-x Boats * Motors Marine ACT NOW — BOAT SALE Fishing Boats, Runabouts, Can oes, Pontoon Boats. All at huge savings. Watercraft Hdq.. 82 E Shore Dr., Whitmore Lake HI 9-8191. t-f-x 141 ALUM. "SEA-KING" — 18 Horse Johnson Motor, Steering and Windshield. Call 227-4524. t-f-p FOR RENT Pets & Animals Male or Female MALE FOR RENT Miscellaneous • A WATER WELLS, 3 m. to 16 in.; test holes, electric pumps, pump repairs, well repairs. Norman Cole. Hickory 9-2319 t-f x PAINTING a DECORATING, Free estimates, Maurice link, Phone AC 7-7531 or UP 8-3530. t-f-x LATEST KITCHEN cabinet*, remodeling, porches, basement Etc Wm. Davis — Howell 717. 12-24-p WELDING — REASONABLE rates, guaranteed, no Job too smalL Bill Willis, AC 9-7063. t-f-* DOLLS: Repair all makes, also accessories -for alf the Brighton AC T-635S; AUTO GLASSr Ftaest work and materials. Pickup and delivery service or use our car, your choice MUFFLERS, UNCONDITIONALLY guaranteed to original consumer for as long as he owns the vehicle on which it is Installed. AIRCO welding supplies. LEAF Springs, all cars and light trucks, IVi to 2 Ton Trucks, fronts only. TRUCK MIRRORS recondi t i o n e d, $3.50. ABE'S AUTO PARTS, Howell, Phone 15L t-f-x MERRY CHRISTMAS Emit E. Engel DECX)RATOK Signs Painting — Wall Paper 114 School St. Brightor AC 7-5941 tf Convert Your Land Contract To Cash! CALL AC 9 t-f-x FOR RENT Commercial FOR SALE SIGNS Professional and Business Directory OPEN FEMALE USED TV's tf SIDING — R ing - j Roofing since 1938. Wm, Davis. Phone Howell 717. 22-24-p NEED MONEY ? BALED STRAW — 400 baled loads, minimum. Call Robt PART TIME proof reader. Apply in person. Brighton Argus. Page, Saranac, MICJL, 3197. t-f-p t-f-* vttfrmi Business Services Schools Crops for Sale > - > • • ' Business Services SITUATIONS WANTED RECEPTIONIST A^general office work. Write Box K-317 % Brighton Argus. t-f-x JohnHoltz FEMALE Whitmore Eagle FOR RENT WANTED WAITRESSES W A N T E D , must be experienced. Apply in person. Pat's Restaurant, 9830 E. Grand River. " t-f-x Including BRICK, BLOCK, CEMENT and 3TONE Any t i n job wanted New or JUpair Pinckney Dispatch FURNISHED — Apt for rent 1 BDRM. APT, partly furnishin Brighton. Call Howell 1858- ed. incL utiL, $70. mo., 2 BDRM. APT. partly fura., newly J after 6:00 P.M. decorated, $65. mo.; 3 BDRM. BRIGHTON WHITMORB PINCKNEY NEAT ONE BDKM. — Fur- DELUX APT., very modern, ARGUS DISPATCH EAGLE nished house, Island Lake, $50 partly fura, 3 large picture AC 7-7151 UP 8-3141 AC 7-7151 mon. AC 9-9173. 12-25-x windows overlooking lake, $85. 2 BDRM. HOME — gas heat, ma; 1 BDRM. 35* trailer, sleeps 4, gas & elec. incl., $:20. ARGUS e EAGLE • DISPATCH • TUESDAY, DEC. 24, 1963 165 per zponth, plus utilities. per wk.; PINE LODGE on No children. AC 9-7933. tfx Woodland Lake, Phone 227t-f-x 2 BDRM. unfurnished yr. a- 7471. HELP WAITED round cottage. AC 9-6651. t-f-x MALE GERMAN POLICE dog, answers to name of "Keymo," SALESLADY TRAINEE want- 1 AND 2 bdrm. aptk, furnished belongs to 2 yr. old boy. 229- ed: We have an opening in or unfurnished. AC 94029. t-f-x 9088. 12-25-x our Brighton office for a lady to train for a lucrative career COMPLETELY FURNISHED ICE SKATES sharpened, all in Real Estate. Trainee will apartments or sleeping units, kinds of Saws sharpened. Ross start as a receptionist with sal- day or week. Lake Chemung Machine Shop, 138 Barker Rd, ary. Drawing account & com- Apartment Motel 5555 E. Gd. Whitmore Lake. 449-413L t-f-p TO DO REWEAVING, TAIL- missions when eligible for a River, HowelL salesman's license. Applicant ORING. MENDING and AL12-24-p TERATIONS. Mrs. Cecil Gore, must be at least 25 to 30 yrs. CALL THE FENTON upholsphone AC 9-2732. t-f-x old, be able to do some typing. ROOM ft BOARD, family style. tering Co. for free estimates. & have a pleasing personality. 614 Flint Rd AC 9-7065. t-f-x A-l workmanship — Lowest If you are willing to learn & WANTED—Deer skins and all prices. Phone Fenton -tiave -A-w&I deaine to mvJte tiEW GRANB View Apart- *52», f Ik fceftoy Sti qf_ra\v~fir & hMcs,: also sw>nejr^«Qntect Lynn Wright, S^!i Ludas " • Salesmanager, Liv&igston Real- room spadous Apts. Heat, wa- too, Mich. ••— UP 8-3123. " " ty Co., 113 E. Grand River, ter and Sewage furnished, modFOR SALE — Varcon batteries Brighton. Appointment o n l y . CORD WOOD wanted, split ern kitchen with build-ins. Pritires, mufflers, tail pipes and Phone AC 7-1431. tfx. or unsplit, large lots only. vate Lake Privileges, 10630 auto accessories. G a m b l e or unsplit, large lots only. Call E. Grand River, 229-7055 or Store, Brighton AC 7-255L Detroit, BR 3-3740 collect, eve229-9575. t-f-x nings. 12-25-x WHITMORE LAKE, unfurWANTED — Good used 2 or 3 nished, 2 bdrm., large living WE REPLACE GLASS — In a. sectional, good used rocker, room and kitchen, gas heat, Tuminum, wood or steel sash. 1 pr. size 2 boy's ice skates, CUSTOM CORN PICKING soft water, large yard w i t h C G. Rolison Hardware, 111 wanted, w i t h elevator and many trees it shrubs, private W. Main S t AC 7-753L t-f-x 40" sled. Call 227-5284. t-f-p wagons available. AC 9-6724. Must be responsible, will lease, tfx $100 mo. Call evenings for apMARSHALL ROOFING Compointment AC 9-6562. HELP WANTED pany we specialize in hot roofs. BABY SITTING — at my tfx For free estimate on any type home or yours, no transportaroof, call Howell 3083 days untion. 449-2706. 12-25-x HOUSES FOR RENT, fur- til 2:30 pjn. evenings after 6 nished, also all utilities, gas IMMEDIATE OPPORTUNITY, tfx heat 6337 Academy Dr., Is- p.m. part time, early morning hrs. land Lake, AC 9-7866. need car, bond required. Call t-f-x LET GEORGE DO IT - FREE 229-9250 between 9 a.m. —• 5 p.m. Detroit Free Press, 809 W. NEEDED — Men — Women- NEAT — 5 Rm. year r o u n d estimates on new gas, oil or Grand River, Brighton. Couples for immediate train- lakefront home, oil heat rea- coal furnaces and plumbing Brighton Plumbing and Heat12-24-x ing as motel managers. Wide sonable. AC 7-6287. Ing. Phone AC 9-271L t-f-x demand for trained personnel. tfx Now short detailed extension HELP WANTED at home training followed by FOR SALE — Extruded alumitwo wks. of practical training WARM COTTAGE, with bath, num storm windows and doors 12-24-p Gamble Store, Brighton. Phone in a beautiful motel under the for two. AC 7-2883. 1 BEDROOM apt, heat fur- AC 7-2551. t-f-x WANTED — PAINTER with direction of experienced mansprayer and room to occasion- agers. No interference of pres- nished adult couple only, no ally paint bicycles. Write or ent employment. Free nation- pets, shown by appointment. TOP SOIL, gravel, stone, landcome to Line's Wheel Shop, 130 wide placement assistance to AC 9-6611. t-f-x scaping, grading, mowing. SepE. North St., Brighton, (t-f-p those qualified. For personal tic tanks and fields. Trenchinterview write giving tele- 3 ROOM — Furnished apt ing, Bulldozing. Eldred Truck & HELP WANTED — Retired phone no. to American Motels, hot water furnished. Call 227man part-time to repair and Inc., 906 E. Carson, Box 160, 6836. tfx Tractor Service. 229-6857. t-f-x rebuild bicycles. Apply: Line's Las Vegas, Nevada, Dept. F. 5 ROOMS — Cottage for J & R HEATING CO., gas oil, Wheel Shop. 130 East North 12-24-x sale or rent. Year around on forced air & hydronic heating Street, Brighton. t-f-p Crooked Lake. Gas heat 229- systems installed. Furnace reEXPERIENCED Machinists & 6517. tfx pair and cleaning. AC 9-6719. machine operators, tool room 2-26-p 1 BDRM. TRAILER, comexperience only. Apply in person. Unified Industries, 1033 pletely furnished, all utilities, BOOKKEEPING and Tax serSutton, Howell. $17.50 per wk; 2 bdrm trailer, vice. Saturdays. Call 229-2656. ^ tfx TUXEDOS OR suits fot proms, $20 per wk. all utilities. Wood12-31-x weddings, or special occasions, land Mobile Court & Sales, APPLICATIONS are now being with all accessories, only $8.50 8005 W. Grand River, 227-7795. accepted for trainees in auto- at the Howell Apparel Shop, tfx motive plastic tooline, must be in the Howell Shopping Center. high school grad. Apply in per- Call Howell 2668 for details. SMALL COTTAGE for two, son, Unified Industries, 1033 furnished AC 9-6651. t-f-x t-f-x Sutton, HowelJ. 12-31-x FLOOR SCRUBBER and Pol- MODERN HEATED. 4-rm. duEXPERIENCED machinist, al- isher by hr. day. etc. Gamble plex, on lake, near Whitmore so experienced turret lathe Store, AC 7-2551. t-f-x Lake, private entrance. Phone AC 7-5713, nights. t-f-x operator, older man preferred. 8671 W. Grand River. AC 7FURNISHED COTTAGES, gas 4581. 12-25-x heat, utilities inc. by wk. or mo. 2 mi. from Brighton — ORDERLY TO WORK FULL AC 9T6723. 1-1-64-X time, high school education required, experience not nee, OFFICE SPACE In ne» Prowill be trained. Make applica- fessional Bldg. on North St. tion McPherson Community Parking, Air-Condi 11 o n 1 n g Health Center, Howell. f<ease Availa b 1 e. Box 291 12-25-x Brighton, Michigan. t-f-x USED CAR SALESMAN — HALL FOR RENT — Parties, experienced desired. Large pro- meetings. Call 229-6158. gressive lot. See used car manager, 2321 E. Grand R i v e r , AIR CONDITIONED OFFICE FUNERAL BOMB BRIGHTON AROtJS with 2 rms Phone AC 7-6151. Howell Phone 513. Brighton, Mich. t-f-x AMBULANCE SERVICE EXPERIENCED — Gas Sta706 W. Main, Ph. 229-9871 da tion man, good pay & working What is beautiful is good, conditions,, full time. Apply in PINCKNEY DISPATCH and who is good will soon be person, Jim's Standard Service, beautiful. —Sappho OFFICE 204 W. Grand River, Brighton. 12-25-x DR. JOHN R. TULLEY EXPERIENCED COOK — Chiropractor With references, for South LyTues.-Thura.-Sat. on area. Call GE 7-2038. 9 a.m. to 6 pjn. 12-25-x 440 W. Main S t AO »-63M HELP WANTED S-tt-p SPECIAL clearance on 1963 and used boats & motors. Wilson's Mid-State Marine, Inc., Lake Chemung, Phone Howell 274. t-f-x MASONRY WORK — V\l> J .V I ; " M O I H L S 449-9551 M 1 CHARLIES # HUNTING & FISHING EQUIP. • Gunsmlthlng • Complete Hobby Store # Camping Equip. Profesdoaa) Bid?., Brighton DR. W. W. MADDEN Optometrist Man., Tiie., rhurr, FrL 9-S Wednesday A Saturday 9-12 North S t * AC 9-6254 Use The Professional Directory T o r A Lovelier You" — Open Eveningi — RADIO & TV SALES & SERVICE 24 HR. SERVICE — EVENINGS & WEEKENDS NO EXTRA CHARGE CLOU'S FLORIST 449-2864 449-2507 INSURANCE Ail Forms of Coverage 307 W. MAIN STREET ACademy 7-1891 t-M-f Thoa. P. Andftnon DVM VETERINARIAN Evenings 7 - 8 : 3 0 PJH. or by appointment 324 W. Gd. River, Brighton' AO 7-4S51 Electrical Contractora * OAFFNVf BRIGHTON BEAUT? 8ALON 138 W. North S t AO T-*S41 Hours — 9:00 A.M. - 6:00 P.M. 92S6 Main St, Whitmore Lake COLT PARS 99M & Gd. River, Brighton Phone AO 7-«6f1 Sat 9 to 6 P.M. ELECTRIC SHOP Appliance Repair and Licensed Electrician , Ph. AC 7-7611, 321 W. Main ' PAINTING Interior ft Exterior Paper Banging A HemovtBt : Wall Washing LEO KUHMJBKZ AC 9-9241 •<"' •494 Island Lake Dr. Brifbton, Mich. 6-64-p < t SEASON'S GREETINGS: ATowrt To Our Friends The Christmas Season is upon us again. We hope you've had a fine year . . . that the coming Holidays will prove Joyous » . . and that the New Year will bring happy days and much prosperity. To our many friends, we wish the Best. Lou Parmenter, Realtor & Appr. 2-bedroom country home, lhoBSj room, kitchen, double garage. Located on paved road. Large lot 128 x 290 Immediate Pnwwaton. Reduced to $1,900. 15 Acres of Woods . . . Trees . . . 15 acres of them. Rolling land, phis 1H acre low «pot that is spring ted . . . always water. $5,250. $2,000 down. LIVINGSTON REALTY FACTS-KOT FICTIOX Brtffctoa Office: AC 7-1431 — BMKO Office: -EVENING CALLSLYNN WRIGHT. BRIGHTON AC >-7951 LOU PARMENTER, HOWELL 292 HELENE KENNEDY, HOWELL 204- W Fact b this 45 acres is aoout the prettiest piece of property. Ideal for building site — Estate, Recreation Area, camp site. *4 mile lake frontage, Located on paved road . . . *4 mile road frontage. 15 Acres of woods. $22,500. Country Ranch Home 3-bedroom country ranch home. Aluminum storms and screens, Brich floors. Aluminum siding. Large kitchen and dining area. Excellent condition. $19,500. Terms. LIVINGSTON REALTY CO. BRIGHTON OFFICE 113 & Grand River Phone AC 7-1481 McPkerson Community Health. Center Report HOWELL OFFICE 112 & Grand River Phone 2384 ADMISSIONS 13—Harry Hardiznan, Milford Janet Hartnell, Brighton 14—Elaine Pawlowski, Brighton Mary Mashik. Howell Jama VanCamp Gregory Patricia Roy, Brighton Fay Ryckman, Howell Martha Young, Howell Mildred Sergent, Milford Evelyn Martin, Brighton Charles Lyons, Brighton Bessie QCQSS, Brighton Billy Presson, Howell Claude Jones, Howell David W. Nunn, Milford 15—Richard Griffin, Brighton Helen K. Rhode, Milford Rita Peavyhouse, S. Lyon Henry Hanson, Howell Charles Larson, Howell Zella Lockwood, Fowlerville James Gleason, Howell MERRIEST HOLIDAYS, EVERYONE! May the gift of lasting cheer enter your home this Christmas. EARL KLINE REAL ESTATE Ike Bailey — Duane Hyne — Walter Fausett 9817 E. GD. RIVER — BRIGHTON FORCED TO SELL I have several real good 3 bedroom homes near Brighton to sell priced from $8,775 to $11,250. Nothing down. Up to 30 years to pay if you have good credit and a. regular income about $250. closing cost. Wm. Henry Groome's Real Estate Phone 449-8511 — Whitmore Lake Pamela Anderson, Fenton Joseph Bennett, Howell Richard Griffin, Brighton William Vaughan, Howell Ernest Nauenburg, Regina Liechti, Fowlerville Brighton 19—Keith Stewart, Howell Charles Lyons, Brighton Gail Clements, Howell Martha Young, Howell Kathleen Hatmaker, Charles Fouchey, Byron 1&—Terrance Devine. Gregory Brighton Max Schultz, Howell David Sergent, Milford Martha Harvey, Kenneth Brooks, Howell Fowlerville ^ Barbara Brooks, Howell Patricia McKinney, Fenton Donald Crosby, Brighton wailard Garwood, Howell John Minock, Lakeland Ralph Shaw, Howell Kenneth Root, Fowlerville Timothy Meinke, Hartland Carolyn Warner, Howell Jeanne Houghton, Howell 20—Beverly Simmons, Howell Patricia Chisley, Brighton David Jackson, Milford 19—Diane Cottongim, Brighton DISCHARGES Ruth Miller, Brighton 13—Leslie Webster, Holly Henry Hanson, Howell Margaret Trumbull, John Shelters, Brighton Howell Esther Majewski, Brighton 14—Marsha McKenzie, Howell John Shelters, Brighton Martha Pequet, Howell Jeffrey Shelters, Brighton Helen Becker, Milford Helen Rhodes, Milford Robert Groseclose, Eva Frisbey, Brighton Brighton Dorothy Hoy land, Kerineti Hefner, Elaine PawiowsXi, """"' - 16—Jeanne Houghton^HoweU Cecile Elwell, Fowlerville Brighton Pamela Anderson, Fenton Ethel Murray, Brighton Lyda Ann Carey, Donald Crosby, Brighton Ray Soaper, Mt. Clemens Fowlerville Beulah Lucas, Howell Kathleen Hill, Howell Harry Hardiman, Milford Frank Horton, Howell Ida Knapp. Howell Lola Lillard, Fowlerville Betty Yost, Howell Beryl Smith, Howell Frances Patton, Annette Wiggins, Howel! Marion Chambers, Howell Webberville Roberta Lorenz, Milford Lillian Wells, Brighton James VanCamp, Gregory Erma Jackson^ Gregory Joanne Fuller, FowIerviUe Glenn Allbright, Plymouth John Cyr, Byron . Samuel Fowler, Howell Patricia Callaghan, 17—Patricia Callaghan, Carrie Francisco, Brighton Fowlerville 15—Eileen Silver, Brighton Fowlerville Philip Lewis, Brighton Elizabeth Haslock, Kenneth Root, Fowlerville Judy Herron, Brighton Laraine Scaggs, Milford Fowlerville Larraine Scaggs, Milford Donna Narhi, Linden Gloria VanRaden. Howell BIRTHS John Shelters, Brighton Agnes Schluter, Howell 14—Mr. and Mrs. William Jeffrey Shelters, Brighton Ronald Schwartzmiller, Beck, Pinckney; Boy Katherine Glover, Brighton Mr. and Mrs. Martin Mildred Greene. Howell Fowlerville Sergent, Milford; Girl Mary Masluk, Howell Jackie D. Smith, Howell Mr. and Mrs. Roy (Robert) Joyce Chunko, Brighton John Quinn, Fdwlerville Brighton; Boy Judy Holbrooks, Dansville Kenneth Stambaugh, How15—Mr. and Mrs. Donald Gail Lanning, Brighton eU Rhode, Milford; Girl Marilyn Burroughs, , Iris Gamber, Fowlerville 16—Mr. and Mrs. Emmett Brighton Donna Eldred, Brighton Haughton, Howell; Boy Jean Turner, Brighton Janet Hartnell, Brighton Mr. and Mrs. Richard IS—Rex Catrell, Brighton 16—Awilda Newcomb. Howell Margaret Rogers, Martha Issac, Howell Marjorie Lukanchoff, Pinckney Judy Herron, Brighton Brighton Eleanor, Wilcox, Fenton David Nunn, Milford Gloria Cole, Pinckney Margaret Thompson, Beverly Munson, Milford. Webberville Barbara Wellman, Howell Phyllis Conine, Howell 17—Rita Peavyhouse, S. Lyon BRIGHTON OFFICE Judy Wise, Fowlerville Marlene Beck, Pinckney 108 W. MAIN Marie Roth, Fenton Mildred Serpent, Milford PHONE AC 7-1131 Dorothy Boutell, Fenton Zella Lockwood, Edward Auit, Brighton Fowlerville Ra^cfe He HOME FOR CHJUSTat £ » ] tfuaatry Uvtaff 3-bedroom country Exceptionally large kitcbeo with dining space. Birch cup- > boards, Formica counters, Hardwood floors. Interior newly decorated Aluminum storms and screens. Black top drive. $12300. Terms. Science Seeks Answer To Star of Bethlehem Since S t Matthew first de- the star appeared at intervals scribed the star of Bethlehem, of 310 to 315 years, three inits mystery has fascinated tervals of 300-odd years from mankind. Was it a miracle? the time it was first reported Or was it a brighter-than- would carry it back to about usual star or other celestial the time of the birth of Christ object? ANOTHER THEORY Astronomers, while seeking Johannes Kepler, a German to identify the star, emphasize astronomer, made discoveries that it may have indeed been that led to still another theory a miracle that can't be ex- about the star of Bethlehem. plained in terms of natural In 1604, he observed a configuphenomena. However, research ration, or close grouping, of has provided material for con- the planets Jupiter, Saturn jecture that the star may have and Mars. He determined that such a been a natural occurrence. configuration occurred each ONE DISCOVERY A Danish astronomer, Tycho 805 years, and calculations esBrahe, discovered a new and tablished that the same groupbrilliant star in the constella- ing might have appeared in tion Cassiopeia in 1572, ac- 6 B.C. — which, some research cording to the Encyclopedia indicates, may have been the correct year of Christ's birth. Americana. Since legends identify the Since that discovery, the Americana says, it has been wise men as astrologers, this suggested that this might be theory accounts for the fact an especially brilliant star vis- that, as reported in the New Testament, only the wise men ible only at long intervals. saw -the star. ARGUS - EAGLE - DISPATCH TUESDAY, DEC. 24, REAL ESTATE FOR SALE LAND CONTRACTS : WANTED j Immediate i Cash Earl Garrets. Realtor ••17 Commerce ML Orchard lake, Mkfc. , EMpire 3-2511 or 3-4081J IBC HOMES fittes: hesveis StxsuT tfce nrKRfit oi the 13th century, coupled with a vague account of a similar appearance a little more than 300 years earlier, led to the thought that these might possibly be former appearances of the star of 1572. If, as this might indicate, unusual brightness, the average observer might not notice them" "while the wise men, as astrologers, would. My Neighbor! Yost, Howell: Girl 17—Mr. and Mrs. Brian T. Callaghan, Fowlerville; Boy Mr. and Mrs. David Narhi, Linden; Girl 18r-:Mr. and Mrs. Richard Gambler, Fowlerville; Girl Mr. and Mrs. James R. Turner, Brighton;" Boy Mr. and Mrs. Louis A. Rogers, Pinckney; Boy Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Wise; -Mother—what button* do Fowlerville; Boy I push to make a cake just like 20—Mr. and Mrs. Donald P. you used to automate?** Simmons, Howel]; Girl Howell Town & Country, Inc. REAL ESTATE INSURANCE BUILDING HOWELL OrTTCE 1002 E. Grand River Phone Howel] 2005 fM DMT* • • ymt !•» — * •»M»«i»f lor 4 BMt. B M t e b ™ *d. at §Uvar Like — tttt Tf. I k i . OE S4138, VT VI NO. Custom Built Ranch Homtf ON FOUR LAND LARGE Covered Front Porck $6,850 Full Price NO DOWN PAYMENT $58.00 Per Month 3-Bdrm. Alum, insulated siding, copper plumbing, duratub 3 pc. bath, double bowl sink, installed. Complete wiring with fixtures. Walls and ceilings insulated, W drywall ready for decorating Model: 28425 Pontiac Trail 2 miles north of Ten Mile, So. Lyon. Cobb Homes, Int. •Mil 1»MMM frail Boat* Lyoa. Mleh. QIMTI V BRIGHTON NEW LISTINGS 10 x 46 — 1959 Van Dyke House Trailer. Priced for Quick Sale. Can be seen at the rear of Main Resturant Whjtmore Lake. THIS IS THE DAY THE LORD HATH MADE, WE WILL REJOICE AND BE GLAD IN IT. PS. 118:24 BUILDING SITE Lot Whitmore Lake Hills. $1,100. ON GARFIELD DRIVE, WHITMORE LAKE — Large Two Family House on 3 lots, with G a r a g e . Ground Floor Has L a r g e L i v i n g R o o m With Fireplace. Dining and Kitchen Area 25 x 12 Also A Thremo Pane "25 x 12 Glassed Porch. Plus 2 Bedrooms & Bath—Second Floor — Large Living — Large Kitchen & Dining Area— 2 Bedrooms & Bath — Some Furniture Included. $16,500.00 Terms $2,000. Down. 16 EAST SHORE DRIVE. 3 BEDROOM HOUSE — Aluminum Siding — 2 Car Garage — Fenced Lot — Real Sharpe — Only $16,000,s terms. 20 ACRE PARCEL — % Mile off Six Mile Rd. — $4,500 — $1,500 down. 101 LAKEVIEW DR. — Large 3 bedroom ranch situated across the street from lake. Full basement completely finished, recreation room, 2 ^ car garage attached, Now vacant and ready for immediate occupancy. Only $18,000 terms. HAMBURG, MICHIGAN — 10547 Livingstone, 10 room home can be used for one or two family. Now vacant, as low a* $75.00 per month. 199 EAST SHORE DR. — 2 bedroom ranch — This is one of the sharpest houses in Whitmore Lake. Come and see i t Easy Terms $2000.00 Down — $100 month. HORSESHOE LAKE — $600 down, $50.00 month, three bedroom. 42 REPOSSESSED HOUSES in Brighton —00— down up to $300.00 closing balance as low as $65.00 a month. Includes Interest, Principal, Taxes and Insurance. A MERRY CHRISTMAS TO ALL KEN SHULTZ AGENCY Real Estate £ Insurance 9987 E. Grand River — Brighton — P h . AC 9-6158 A FOND NOEL TO EVERYONE . . . a buyer for your car, or a sewing ma^ chine to buy, or someone to c l e a n your home? Just read and use oar. • . Newspaper Want Ads Ph. AC 7-7151 FARMS ABOVE ARE ONLY A FEW LISTINGS — 9555 Main St. — Whitmore Lake — HI 9-9751 WONDER WHERE TO FIND COUNTRY We Are Now Listing Lake Property Oren Nelson Real Estate 8 BEDROOM HOME — Living and dining ioom — wood paneling throughout house — 2 BEDROOM — Large spacious lot running Alum, storms screens andjdoors ~Ideal loto creek in rear — newly decorated. $8,500. cation — $14,090.'' y g* with $1,000. down. 5 BEDROOM attractive new Bi-LeveT — 13_ _PINCKNEY ~ ^ 2 •bedroom' home, full bath, enclosed fronT porch rWelFIandscaped" lot. - x 24 carpeted living room; 12 x 20 family $7,350. kitchen, sftding glassed door. to enetosed summer room, 13 x 24 family room, raised 2 BEDROOM — School Lake area—1% car hearth fireplace, t 2 car garage, excellent garage — 174x200 ft. Jot. $7,500. location. V/i ACRES — 3 Bedroom modern ranch with S BEDROOM ranch — near West elementary attached 2 car garage — Hardwood floors— school — panelled breezeway. $13,500. Make between Whitmore Lake and Brighton — cash offer. $17,500.00 with $3,000 Down. HAMBURG — VA story — 3 bedrooms — 2 BEDROOM HOME—glassed in front natural fireplace — ceramic bath, excellent porch including refrigerator—washlocation, $15,000. er — dryer — range and drapes on porch — $7,500 — low down. RETIRER'8 DREAM — Neat 2 B. R. home full basement, gas furnace, garage, small 3 B.R. RANCH — Ideal location — 2 baths — lot. Immediate possession. Only $8,000. fireplace — Breezeway A garage — See it with terms. now. SECTION — 2 bedroom ranch — 1 car GOOD STARTER HOME. Furnished, 2 B. R. t garage — family room 12 x 20. $11,500. full basement Immediate possession. $7,500. small down. 2 BEDROOM RANCH — two excellent 2 BEDROOM NEAR BRIGHTON, lake privlandscaped lots — owner wants action ileges on Noble Lake, basement with fur—we need offer. nace, completely furnished, living room and dining area carpeted. $8,500. 8 BEDROOM RANCH — Featuring the fam- HORIZON HILLS — 3 bedroom brick ranch —2 car attached garage — two fireplaces ily kitchen in this new home — excellent —studio living room — finished recreation location — $14,500 with $2,500 down. in basement — spacious lot adjoining park area. 8 ACRES — with private lake — 3 bedroom SPUR AND SADDLE LOVERS DREAM — ranch — 2 car attached garage — just 43 acres — ideal horse barn — garage — 3 off expressway intersection — income home bedroom ranch home with fireplace — also included. basement — adjacent to 2500 acre State Land — excellent Tiding trails. 5 ACRES — River borders one side of this 3 bedroom home — fireplace — attached 40 ACRES — classic large farm house — rollgarage. $18,000. Terms acceptable. ing land — 2 sprmgs — property adjoins 2 BEDROOM RANCH — Wall to wall carpetAlpine Ski-Lodge. ing — plastered walls — 2 car garage — Vi 20 ACRES — 3 bedroom, two story home, acre of land — $10,750, terms. other outbuildings. $14,000. From • • . "NOEL" P. BURNHAM 112 S. WALNUT TO HOWELL Mildred Shannon AC 9-6638 Virginia Herrmann AC 9-7923 Bob Fritch, Mildred Duff, Ralph Nauss, Roscoe Eager, Ralph Banfield, Frank Gould Charles Showerman Hollis Miller - s ^ Christmas ILL Sally Noeker AC 9-6874 Insurance & Real Estate Ma? » & BRIGHTON Detroit*™ call WOodward 8-1480 AC EST. 1022 Open Sundays A Evtninffi by appointment A C 7-2271 4-7S41 ARGUS • EAGLE • DISPATCH • TUESDAY, DEC. 24. 1963 It's Happening in Howell Recreation Room Damaged by Fire Fire did extensive damage tery when someone was cleanto the garage recreation room ing paint brushes. It was at the home of Mr. and Mrs. quickJy brought under control pftug1!!* Swann of Swann's An overheated chimney Court last Thursday morning. started * fire in a bouse trailer occupied by Carl Bailey at WUmar Trailer Court the fire about 11:46. oa Ea»t Grand River on started tram a g*s It December 19. No estimate te the garage. •f damage v u given. On December 17 a fire occurred at^the home of Robert Electric wiring caused a panning 1382 Elmhurst Dr., fire at the home of Glen Lake Chemung in Genoa town- Drazic, 3809 Chilson Rd., in ship. The house is owned by Genoa township on December Robert Gee. No estimate of 20. Howell firemen were railed damage was given. at 8:15 a.m. but gave no estiAt about 5 pjn- th£ same mate of the extent of damage. night a minor fire started at the city garage near the ceme- Drama Guild Tardy Parkers Get Yule Gift Offers 'Beekef For Sunday The spirit of Christmas has invaded the city police department. HOWELL — The capacity Unwary shoppers who forget audience that viewed the "Fall about the parking meters while Festival of Arts," at St. John's they make their purchases come Episcopal Church. Howell, in back to their cars to find a 'il> ^t- Westdale Resident Wins Decorating Prize Howell Area JayCees were gratified to receive 24 entries in their home lighting contest this year, according to Robert Alder, chairman. Nick Kroon, 130 Westdale Rd., was the first prize winner of a $50 bond from the McPherson State Bank and a $50 gift certificate from Artesian Soft Water of Howell. A. T. Fehrenbach, 715 North Michigan, was a second place winner of a $25 bond from the First National Bank and a $25 gift certificate from Artesian Soft Water of Howell. Another second place winner was Robert Schaoer, 1530 First St., who received Santa Claus Is Airborne On 2nd Try Santa Claus was airborne Saturday after his abortive attempt of the previous Saturday and dropped hundreds of ping pong balls at the Howell Shopping Plaza l o r an eager Jgopulace to scramble for. a $35 bond from Fin* Federal Saving* and Loan and a gift certificate worth $25 from Artesian. There were nine honorable mention winners. They were Donald Hoover, 205 Prospect, a fruit basket from Diamond Dot, a $2 certificate f r o m Baldwin's Hardware, and a $2 certificate from Pierces: Mrs. Donald Rhodes, 1444 Crest Drive, two pounds of Fanny Farmer candy from Baldwin Drugs, $5 in cash from Detroit Edison, and a five-pound canned ham from JeiTy's Foodlaiid; Meno Bailer, 1270 Henderson, two pounds of candy from Spagnuolo's. a $5 certificate from Gamble's; and a $2 cer- tificate from Garland's; Lyman Morrison, 1251 Henderson, three pounds of candy from the D and C Stores, and a $5 certificate from Joan Carol's* Marjorie Jensen, 515 E. Clinton, a pound of candy from Johnson's Drugs, a $5 certificate from Goodnow's, and 10 gallons of gas from Cavalier; WUbert Lehto, 514 Brooks, other general care. This has all been done under the personal supervision of the clinical instructors, Mrs. Ilene Ikens, R. N. and Mrs. Diann Korowin, R.N. T h e students are not replacing any of the staff members of the hospital. Mrs. P. J. Allen, R.N., Director of the school, quoted a letter from Mrs. Neva Stevenson of the National League of Nursing who acted as one of the consultants w h e n the school w a s being organized. a *S certificate from B C Floor Covertag, a $& tificate, from D i l Eleetrie aad It galtoas of gas from Clark; Mn. H. Matthtoaea. 151 Umiverelty Drive, a 9ft gift certificate from Color Center, a 98 from Jo Aue**, certificate from Bob Standard gsaftJea; Dr. Robert Greenway, 205 Pauline, a $5 certificate from Dodd's, a $5 certificate from Thomas Tots and Teens, and an oil change from Watson and Roberts Mobil Station; and Richard Adams, 509 S. Tompkins, a $5 certificate from Smith and Lowe, a $5 certificate from Western Auto, and a $4 certificate from George's school faculty gave us a group Mobil. of earnest and highly motivatEach honorable mention wined students." ner will also receive a $25 WILL GET CAPS gift certificate from Artesian The n e x t milestone and Soft Water of HowelL testing period will take place No gift certificate will be in January. All the students redeemed for cash. Winners who are successful at this will be contacted and arranget i m e will participate In a ments made for them to recapping ceremony. This cerceive their prizes. emony, will signify the stuThe two judges, teachers in dents are ready for thelf advanced training in broadened the Howell School art department, received a $5 certificate and more advanced skills. The training course will be from Utter*s and ItselTs for have the 26 students who enrolled, after the eighth week of the program. That is a wonderful record." "We were pleflkg to h a v e Mrs. StevensonVcoTOp^iqjent us on our no drdp-out recSrd^at eight weeks, and we are proud to be going into the twelfth week with the same record," said Mrs. Allen. "We feel the rigorous sifting and screening of the applicants in the begining, by the Michigan Employment Commission a n d the examinations to become Licensed Practical Nurses, commonly called L,P,N.'s. The practical nurse training school has held its classes and has done its clinical work in affiliation with the McPherson Community Health Center. The sponsoring educational institut i o n h a s b««-n the Brighton School District Board of Education, with financial advisory aid coming from the federal government under the Manpower Retraining Act. 26 Practical Nurse Trainees Stop Class Work for Holidays HOWELL — The students of the McPherson School for L i c e n s e d Practical Nursing stopped their work Friday for Christmas refreshments, and then started on a holiday vacation which will extend until December 30. The original 26 «*udents will return at that time to begin the twelfth week of the oneyear course. At this point the students are nearing the end of the foundation period of their study.. •EMC 4 : i Claus on i t Inside it says, •'Accept this Christmas Courtesy Ticket as a reminder that you have overparked. We hope you have enjoyed shopping in Howell and will return again soon. Best Wishes for a Safe Holiday Season." It is signed by the Hdwell l»5lTce Dept., R. H Evans, chief. As all good things must come to an end, normalcy will return after the holidays and overtime parkers w i l l be ticketed as usual a Becket," performed by members oi St. John's Drama Guild. So much so, that the Guild has been requested to repeat their performances this coming Sunday at 7 p.m., at the church. The performance is open to the public, and child care is provided by members of the Episcopal Young Churchmen. Following the performance, refreshments will be served in the Parish House I (across from the Post Office). Admission is free. had a lot of fun. Entries in the gift-wrapping contest were judged Saturday. It must have been a difficult task to choose the winners from among the beautifully wrapped packages but the Howell Art Club chose the following: Mary Jo Smith —of Fowlerville. first; Gertrude Voss of Fowlerville. second; and Joan Munice, third. Maury LaFlamme of Adams store presented the winners with their prizes. FOR AS LITTLE AS 75 Y0» CAN PUCE CLASSIFIED c IN 3 PAPERS BRIGHTON PLNCKNEY WHITMORE LAKE ARGUS DISPATCH EAGLE OUR CLASSIFIEDS REACH OVER 6,000 FAMILIES Looking For Don't Wait. For Fast Results READ and USE THE WANT ADS ^REGULARLY! A Bargain? Bead Our Oaisifieds Sell Those Unwanted Items Today DEADLINE IS 12 NOON TUESDAY WRITE YOUR AD ON THIS COUPONCLIP AND MAIL IT IN TODAY! ENCLOSE MONEY ORDER OR CHECK NO STAMPS 75c minimum 85c 80c 90c 95c Tt Plata Your Ad By Phone Call AC 7-7151 DON'T FORGET FOLKS— • - . • - / . - • Classified Ads Appear is S Newspapers 8 From County Receive Degrees Eight area students were among 1,254 students at Michigan State University receiving degrees at fall term commencement exercises, Dec. 13. From Brighton are — Gordon L. Mallett, 426 S. Church St.. M.A. Music. Howell — Edward W. Allis, 603 Fleming St., M.S. in Mechanical Engineering; James W. Kimmery. 11622 Durand Rd., B.S. in Floriculture; Helen Salmon. 4316 Crooked Lake Rd.p B.A. in Social Work. Fowlfcrville — Arlene Campbell, 7575 Sharpe Rd., B.A. :n History; Natalie R. Rreeger, 9181 M o h r l e Rd., M.A. in gihool Administration; Paul Vaupel, 663 Kern Rd., B.S. in Forestry, , - MHford — D a r r y 1 Apps. B.A. in Transport Adminis1000 L a b o d i e Rd, B. A. in Transport Administration. Pinckney Airmen Sent To* Alaska PINCKNEY — Aii-man Second Class Wayne A. Teachworth, Jr., of Pinckney, has arrived at Goose Air Base, Labrador, for duty with a unit of the Alaskan Air Command. Airman Teachworth, an aircraft mechanic, came here from an assignment at Duluth Municipal Airport, Minn. The airman, son of Mr. and Mrs. Wayne A. Teachworth, Sr., of 9254 Anne Drive, Pinckney, attended AnrPArbor High School. 15 Injured In County HOWELL — The Livingston County Accident Report for the period Dec. 9 to 16 shows 18 property damage accident and 7 personal injury accident?. There were 15 persons injured and 41 cars involved. 'These reports are issued weekly by the Michigan State Police. ^Minimum Charge 75c or up to 12 words THE BRIGHTON ARGUS 107 E. Grand River J& Brighton, Mich. (Dispatch - Eagle) tions, text-book study and papers in the fields of Nursing Arts; structure, function, growth, and development of the human body; the basic concepts of mental hygiene; and the fundamentals of nutritibn. The student practical nurses Tiegari their clinical experience with hospital patients November 4. They have been practicing skills they learned in the classroom — bed-making, care of patients through bathing, h e l p with feeding, and Slorei Pest-Yule Sals Dance Proceeds ill Benefit Hose Industries Everyone, loves a good time* And the nicest good time of all is the one which is of benefit to someone ^*y The good time which the Howell Area JayCees promise at their New Year's Eve dance will benefit a number of people. All the profits from this dance will be donated to Hope Industries ' which jgives em* ployment to the handicapped of this area to help them to be self supporting. The dance will be held at the Armory and the JayCees promise good music good company and a fine start for the New Year. City's Party Held at School The city of Howell enter* tained its employees at a din* ner last Friday night at tho Southwest School at 7 pjn. jjfrrtot pOBchr -sea* r served ~tai then the gtiesls saf <Iowir:ta a roast beef dinner. Replete with food, everyone sat back while City Manager John Deppen made a few re* and then passed out Howell stores will have a marks gifts to the women and cigars post-Christmas sale on Decem- to the men. ber 26, 27 and 28. Mayor Clifton Heller spoke Featured in the sale will be items such as gift-wrap- of the opportunities of Howell pings, cards, etc, which the for growth and expansion and merchants do not want to of the part which the city carry over on their inventory employees play in promoting friendship and goodwill. into the new year. L % • TO THE 1,185,000 FAMILIES SERVED BY DETROIT EDISON People often ask if Detroit Edison is a part of any other electric company which has "Edison" in its name. The answer is no. Years ago, Thomas Edison licensed a number of newly formed companies to use his patented devices to generate and distribute electric power. In each agreement was a clause—long since expired—which stilted that his name be a part of every company name. We are proudTfo continue this historic tie. Detroit Edison serves Southeastern Michigan only. This being so, we are always deeply interested in the progress of the area. Edison employes are your neighbors and their concerns, as good citizens, are the same as yours. About 110,000 individuals and organizations are Detroit Edison shareowners. Their dollars, working for the company, earn dividends at the current rate of about four per cent of the market value of the shares. Nearly 73,000 Edison shareowners live in Michigan. Of this number, 63,000 are also'Detroit Edison customers. So our company is very much a part of Michigan. Many insurance companies and retirement funds own Edison shares too. Thus other Americans, here and elsewhere, are indirect owners of the company. Investor ownership is basic to the American way of life and is largely responsible for the economic progress of the nation. Ours is an economic system which, more than any other in the world, supports and enlarges personal freedom. And it is an appropriate time, as an eventful and historic year drawi to a close, to pledge ourselves anew to the cause of freedom. May I, on behalf of my a*9odate$ and myself, with you a Happy New Year! New Freeway Link Provides Access To Slate Capital Sincerely, Lansing's "Pine Tree Connector" was opened to traffic recently. The freeway, known official' ly as Interstate 496, links Lansing, East Lansing and Michigan State University with 1-96 south of the Capital City. The $7-million project was built in record time, State Highway Commissioner Madde •aid, and he congratulated the contractors and State Highway Department personnel lor their "extra effort" to open the freeway this year. WALKER L OSIER, THE DO10IT OQQsi GQWAffT