ENS BATH TOWELS 8 Grandma's House O UTICA TOP OF THE LINE "EMBRACABLE" BATH TOWELS BATH REG. $20.00 WASHCLOTH REG. $5 00 13 99 399 799 HAND REG. $10.00 399 FINGERTIPS REG. $5 00 1999 16" BATH SHEETS REG. $35.00 TUB MATS REG. $25.00 Farmington Hills Orchard Place 30875 Orchard Lk. Rd. 14 Mile & Orchard Lake Rd. 1 0 41 MatleLCord 855-0122 NOW OPEN: 011110 Madison Heights 32115 John R Madison Place Btw. 13 and 14 Mile Prices good thru April 22 14 Mlle S. ■ ci S. O 13 Mlle 589-3033 Hours: Monday thru Saturday: 10:00-9:00, Sunday 12:00-5:00 FURNITURE NOVI 43236 Novi Town Center Grand River & Novi Rd. South of 1-96 347-4610 Patio Furniture 14 HOME year. The fourth wall of the sukkah was the house itself so that Grandma could open the window of her kitchen and pass the plates right through into the sukkah. A polished wood staircase led upstairs. I can still remember my brave cousin Marilyn sliding down the smooth banister, the only one of us who ever had the guts to do it. She never got caught or spanked al- though we all lied to protect her when she hit her head on the metal orna- ment at the bottom. There were three high-ceilinged rooms with polished mahogany doors on the second floor. The first was a room with twin beds where my brother and I often slept. On Friday nights, someone would bring a can- dle for us and put it on the dresser because it was already Shabbos and we could not use the lights. Left alone to sleep, we would hold hands across WATERFORD 7350 Highland Rd. (M-59) 7 miles West of Telegraph near Pontiac Airport 666-2880 Hours: Mon., Thur., Fri. 10-8 Tues., Wed., Sat. 10-6 Sun. 11-4 Here was the location of the largest seders I have ever seen. 30 to 40 people. Tables added to each other, as many as needed. the gap between the beds as we watched the dwindling candle cast strange shadows on the walls. There was no bathroom on the second floor and we would not venture from our beds in the darkness, so we would lie there waiting for morning rather than go downstairs in the darkness to the bathroom. The second bedroom was Grand- ma and Grandpa's room with twin beds and Grandpa's porcelain chamber pot. The last room was the parlor, my favorite room in the house. It was about two-thirds the size of the entire floor. Rust damask drapes hung from the highest ceiling I had ever seen Between the front windows was a mir- ror that ran from floor to ceiling with a small ledge at the bottom where a child could sit. There were a sofa, several beds, easy chairs, another fireplace like the one in the dining room, a player piano, giant paintings in gold carved frames, wooden ward- robe closets to hide in, and best of