WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1952 TH E MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE - , EXTRA HELP NEEDED: Yule Job Outlook Fair Signs Of The Times RUSH EXPECTED: City Business Prepares For Christmas Crowds By ERIC VETTER That seasonal replenisher of de- pleted student bank accounts, the pre-Christmas job, will be in short supply locally this year, but ,stu- dents who stick to Ann Arbor for the holiday season should have little trouble finding employment. Nearly all the large department retail stores in town plan to take on additional help during the Christmas buying spell and many smaller shops intend to hire an additional worker or two. * * * BUT THE FLY in the ointment for those taking their vacation at home is that personnel managers and store owners intend to hire help willing to work up until Christmas Day. This is the peak of the buying season, managers say, and thus the time when extra help is needed most. The situation is not totally bleak, however, for students leaving town on Dec. 19 or 20. Nearly every store manager ex- pressed a preference for help which will work up till Christ- mas but a number of the larg- er stores will take on students MAGIC "8" Fascinating fortune teller paper weight ornament . .. When this glossy block '8" ball is turned over, hand written answers to questions rise mysteriously into view. II ROVER For overnight "parking". Park the wallet, watch, cash, keys and rings. Ceramic in brown finish. MANICURE 1 in Miniature Scissors, tweezers, nail file, cuticle pusher and cleaner in German steel. Cowhide case $2.00. ALL IN ONE SHU-BRUSH 9 Contains shoe polish, applicator and flannel 9 shine cloth concealed in hollow metal mirror top. Lie Flat on your Back and Read or Teleview fiPrecision-made of optimcaly approved prismatic glass . . Needs no professional fitting. 4 ? f . fashioned by A ( /tr 6 0 v The DUCHESS Jewel Case A charming case with swing- .l I up tray and room enough toU hold jewels by the dozen - beautifully covered with handsome leather-grain X.:. Texol in Jade Green, Rose, Blue or Sand. Ohrfr 1 Fed. Tax Others from 1.95 going home for Christmas if they are not able to get full-sea- son help. Several campus shops, which re- ly mainly on student pre-Christ- mas trade, also will use part-time help who leave town when classes. end. Most of the job openings are for sales women and clerks. Male job opportunities are fewer but exist in men's apparel shops and in de- partment stores. PAY FOR part time help gener- ally starts at 75 cents an hour for women and $1 an hour for men. Higher pay, however, is available for those with extra qualifications and experience. Top scale is paid by the post of- fice-a whopping $1.56 an hour. About 75 new men are taken on by the system to handle the mail and gift rush as mail sorters and truck loaders on evening shifts. Post- master Oswald Koch reports that most of the jobs have already been filled. Out of 24 stores checked on job opportunities, ten reported openings available. Nearly all women's shops, dimestores and department stores will supple- ment their sales forces. On the other hand, book and shoe stores are generally set with their present work force. Some men's shops plan to hire new help while others do not. Ann Arbor high school students provide most of the competition for University students in search of jobs. The high schoolers have the advantage of living in town and thus being able to work up un- til Christmas. By GENE HARTWIG1 Christmas came to Ann Arbor Nov. 21.I With the placing of holiday dec- orations on lampposts in the shop- ping districts of the city Nov. 21 Ann Arbor businessmen bracedi themselves in preparation for four| weeks of Yuletide gift buying. Working together to provide traditional Christmas street trap- pings, the Ann Arbor Retail Mer- chants Association and the Cham- ber of Commerce this year spent more than $4,000 on illuminated plastic wreaths and evergreens. In order to handle the large gift-shopping crowds, all the stores in the downtown area .will remain open until 8:30 p.m. six nights during December, according to Harry J. Lepard, president of the Retail Mer- chants Association. Lepard listed the following days when stores in the downtown area will be open: Dec. 7, 8, 15, 19, 22 and 23. In addition certain State' Street establishments may re- main open an extra night just be- fore the University's Christmas re- cess in order to handle student trade. * * * to be distributed Christmas Eve. Prizes for the best home decora- tions will be in the form of mer- chandise. A plaque will go to the business establishment with the best display. The twenty-fourth Christmas Pageant and Community Sing will be held at 7 p.m., Dec. 14, in Hill Auditorium this year with an esti- mated 4,000 people expected to at- tend. ............. . I A FURTHER reminder LAST CALL Christmas Cards Largest Display in the City 40 Personalized Cards for $1.50 Ulrich's Book Store Read and Use Daily Classifieds that I heres how to build a Christmas gift or /mother a dainty nylon nightgown by Juliana, pastel or white 10.95 . . . long, elegant nylon-suede gloves 6.95 . . . Total-17.90 for sister a white satin evening bag overlaid with golden mesh and paillettes 5.95 . . . a dazzling white orlon sweater by Glasgow 6.95. . . Total-12.90 for your roomnmnate one of those satin scarves from France with a delicate woven pattern, fringed ends 3.95 .,.. a pair of striped flannel p. j.'s 3.95.. Total-7.90 for your best friend rhinestone earrings' with the holiday sparkle exquisitely cut in marquise shapes and set in rodium-plate 5.00* . . . a fancy nyron slip by Trillium 3.95 . . . Total-8.95 for a fabulous friend an all-wool intarsia sweater in grey or tan 5.95 . . . a trio of Glentex scarves in their own lucite box with gift card enclosed 1.95 . . Total--7.90 *subject to 20% Fed. Tax -Daily-Alan Reid CHRISTMAS COMES TO STATE STREET Postmaster Koch Offers Tips forGift-wrapping Season "The best is not good enough." delible pencil is the best instru- That's the way post office offi- ment to address packages with, be- cials look upon package wrappings cause snow or rain will not smear for Christmas mailing, the address. They point out that articles suf- A good solid or double-faced ficiently wrapped for normal mail corrugated fiberboard box fas- handling are often damaged or tened or sealed with twine, wire lost during the holiday season. Be- or banding material is the best cause of this, Postmaster Oswald type of container to use, Koch Koch, recommends the following continued. Gummed paper tape methods for parcel post mailing has little chance of holding gift during Christmas. boxes together under rough mail * * * handling and is especially inade- FIRST, Koch emphasizes that quate at Christmas. the name, address and postal zone Pressure will cause boxes not of the person being sent the ar- firmly packed or overpacked to title should be clearly printed on break, he continued. heavy wrapping paper along with Fragile articles, like musical in-c the same information of the sen- struments, toys, millinery and ar-J der. A ball point pen or an in- See POSTMASTER, Page 4 s Christmas is upon the city came when the Junior Chamber of Com- merce decorated the traditional Court house Christmas tree last, Sunday. This year's tree, a 25 to 30 foot fir, is one of two cut by the park department for use in the city. Santa Claus is due to arrive in Ann Arbor almost a week before Christmas when an airplane bear- ing the jovial patron of children will land at the Ann Arbor Air- port. A JCC COMMITTEE has made plans for a parade to accompany St. Nick on his way into town where he will greet the children of Ann Arbor and hear pleas for toys to fill their Christmas stockings. Later he is expected to put in appearances at the children's wards of the local hospital dis- pensing candy and making a list of Christmas morning orders. With store windows in the business sections of the town competing sharply for the at- tention of the passerby as Dec. 25 draws near, the JCC has also planned a decorations con- test for homes and business establishments in the city. Judging will be done several days before Christmas with prizes for the most outstanding windows and home lighting arrangements MAIN AT LIBERTY ANN ARBoR I S Give her a Blouse from Kessel's VELVETEEN a wonderful rf' s ' ; NYLON selection . COTTON $298 JERSEY Sweaters Cardigan or Slipover 9 of ORLON $398 NYLON CASHMERE WOOL SCARFS ...69c up ORLON... WOOL ROBESRAO .. from 4.98 RAYON F LAN NE L$ 9 I HOSIERYF ( $498 from 88c Skirts for tall girls DALTON'S GOa~hfnepe &eautie4j THE GIFT EXQUISITE New Shipment just received in wonderful color and style variety . .. beautiful deep or pastel colors, and whites, in long or short sleeved styles, slipover or button styles. All sizes, but not in every style or color. $11 C95 In $12 I II III i