VOL, m — NO; 800 THE PONTIAC TUESDAY, JANUARY *4, 1967 -30 PAGES ASSOCIATED PMSS UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL WASHINGTON W - President Jidmson called on the nation today for “a measure of sacrifice” — hi|d»er taxes, hi^ er postal rates, hi^er paych^ deductions — to help finance history’s biggest bu^et. Ah^ with 'a |135-bilUon q>ending blueprint for fiscal J968, the year atart^ next July 1, the President sent a bands-off warning to Congress members who are grumbling loud^ at rising deficits. Tin ipendiBs loomed mnch larger, and tine defleit snudh , er, in tm letwa-famnisr badget Text Summary^ A Pogro fi’2 yardsticks naeiationed by Johnson. * Ihe "cash txidgef’ adds up to $172.4 biUkm; the “national income accocmts” show $167.1 billion'with a defleit iIlion Defense Department budget ballooned $5.4 billion above ttiis year’s partly by mounting Vietnam war costs, the President cimfirmed that he has dedded against de{doying an antimissile tystem pendh^ ban talles with tte Soviets. Bat “if these discussions prove nnsnccessfiil,” Jolmson ssid, “our d^^4^ineiit de-cisiin will be reconsidered. “To provide fw actions that may be required at that time, apiwoxiinately $375 million has been included for the production of Nike X Idt such purposes as defense pf our offendyp weapon systems.” The administration said late last year ths Soviets are deploying a limited antimissile system around Moscow dettgited to knock out a^iroaching missiles. INITIAL EFFORT This is the first time the ad-ministraticHi has sought Nike X production funds. Last year, Secretary of Defense Robert S. LI’L ONES “How come the fluids I should drink when I’m sick are always something besides soda pop?” Full House at Cooking School In Today's Press Waterford Five more policemen to be hired; 13 on force get awards — PAGE A-7. Rochester EMerly pioneer rem-' inisces — PAGE A4. JFK Book President’s life hung in balaiiqe 'for 5 seconds, says author—PAQE C-ii. Area News......A-4—A-5 Astrology.........C-a Bridge........... C4 Orossword Panto ,...C4 Comics ...........C-* Editoriab ........A-6 High School ......B-1 Mirtets ..........B-7 Obitnaries ..... C-4 Sports .. ... .C-1—<>2 Tlieateri ......'..B-6 TV-Radlo Programs . .C-9 mbon, Earl Womeu^s Pages ..i' The Pontiac Press eighth annual cooking school opened last night witii a capacity crowd in Pontiac Central Hi^ Schi^l au-ditmium. Barbara Zimmerman, assisted by Harriet Cannm, presented a two-hour food demonstration. Both women are home economists at Cemsumers Power Co. in Pcmtiac. Before the program and during' intermissim, Robert Lil-leyman played organ music. Ushers were members of tiio county extension dobs who have given titis service Iot McNamara refused to- spend more than $150 million in unrequested money apinopirlated by Congress to finance Nike X IH-eproducticm activities. Cost estimates for a complete U.S. anthnissile system range to $40 billion. The President unveiled a Ending pn^al including ^1.9 bilUon to suppml Southeast Aisia Ygierations ip fiscal 1S|68, and said he will se^ Congress a $12$ billiim request to supplement the currmt budget The suipilemental wouU mean about $9.4 billion in expmditures by next June 30. NUCLEAR FORCES Additional bilUons are provided to strengthen nuclear and conventional forces with such items as new multipte-warhead Poseidon missiles for Polaris submarines; impibv^, land-based Minuteman missiles equipped with decoy devices desig^ to fool enemy defenses and the start (hi a third atomic-powered aircraft carrier. The budget provides for a uniformed strengfli o$ed to be avail-abto for each major party’s praidential spending. He said it also may act to cut off private amtributioQs. “Congress had the germ of a good idea,*’ Scribner said in an interview. “But I’m afraid we couldn’t collect the money in time to do us much good, since none of it will become available until after income tax payments early in 1968.’’ Scribner said the GOP wouldjcommunity junior colleges, be faced with the necessity trf raising about $4 million to get its campaign started, since it gets no money in advance but is reimbursed rnily for actual campaign expenditures. He noted that these reimbursements do not take effect until after Sept. 1, 1968. “It’s going to' be difficult to raise that kind of money because a lot of people who check off a $1 contribution on their income tax return—to be divided by both parties—are going to feel they have made their politi-carcontribQtion.’’ National Chairman Ray Bliss ^ It also meank Qtobjo-pay tlib fc^lis, the Legislature' wiu- be ask^ to approve the state's first income tax ratesprolpbly 3 per cent on personal incme, 5 per cent on corporate income and 8 per cent on financtol institution income. NO SPECIFICS Though the govaww has not specifically said he Will call lor incom# taxes, the,, call is expected, but with the promise of cutting and equalizing present taxes. State Budget Officer Glenn S. Alien said his staff of 12 plans to have the budget prepared by Feb. 2. The “general fund, general purpose’’ budget represents the amount of money Michigan taxpayers pay for the operation of statl government and a variety of services: education, welfare, mental and physical health, police and mil^ry protection, and recreation and conserination ★ ★ ★ The budget does not include revenue raised through special assessments for special purpos es. Fw example, every motor-is*t who buys a gallon of gu cimtributes 7 cents to help pay for the roads he drives on LARGEST ITEM the largest single item in the general fund budget, which is fw the 12-month period from July 1, 1967 to July 1, 1968, will be the appropriation for education, The Department of Education is asking for $689 million for elementary and secondary education, pliis $121 million for teacher retirement. The 11 public colleges and universities are asking for about $305 million, and about $26 million is being sought for aiding LANSING (AP) -- Democratic State Chairman 2kilton Fluency wouldn’t budge Monday from his position of last week that he won’t seek reelection undmr “current conditions and circumstances.’’ ♦ ★ Ferency dklined comment toW a news conference Monday about a flood ■ ■ ■ ' .'V ■■ 'f.' J THE PONTIAC PBBSS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 24, 1967 •lh«n thouldnf you ••• us soon? Loons aro avoiiobio up to 36 months. Toko advontog* ^ of our services ~ after all the/re for you. CALL .335-9493 CHIEF PONTIAC FEDERAL CREDIT UNION \ 790 Josiyn Avenue - Pontiac Air War Escahfion Said Near 3AIGCW (UPI) American dramatic dunfo in liie dirac-ainnea ale awaiting only final ai^vri fiem the White House to begin bmnbiiig Cwnmnniri MIG Obiter bases in North Vietnam for the first time, ac> cording to a hj^y source* The source said yesterday the bombing, desoibed as a ighV' escalation d the air war, would be (wttaed wi^ the next few wedm, barring SVORE CLOSn AU DAY WRDmSDAY, JAN. aoili TO AGAIN AAARK DOWN PRICES FOR THE LAST 4 DAYS OF VOlHilAND CHILDRrarS ded TEENS' CLOTHIRID ] LOCATED at 2161S. TELEtRAPIHIIRACLE mil | MEAT <70,010 OOIRO ODT OF OOOINEOO OALE Mirada Mile Store Only G.O.B. permit #0 Wait and Watch for Prices in Wednesday’s Pontiac Press SALE BEGINS THURSDAY MORNING JAN. 26th AT 10:00 O’CLOCK tionof ttewar. There fcBiaieed oonm doubt, hawevor, vMhor pilots weald be allewed t» attack the MIGs thmnaelves oi the ground. Undar one leading pn^tosal, the ideas would be to knodc out file runways without necessarily the Communist jets thNnadves. Ar ★ ★ At present, U.l^. fi|^ters are allowed to attack the MIGs only after they are airborne — that is, in the words of one idiot, “the instant their dieels leave the runway.” ★ # * The war coidd be over in one month if we could hit what we consider the key military targets in North Vietnam,” the sotacea^ed. These would include at least 7S targets in Norfii Vietnam that military officials want to bomb but are currently off limits. Among them would be the MIG bases, the. port d Hai' phong, hydroelectric plants and dams and selected industrial centers produdng war goods Key concern of the administration is that Communist China might be provoked by such attach into jidning the war. ALL BUT CONVINCED It was understood military of-fidals here had all but convinced President Johnson the MIG bases are “safe’? targets-one that can be attacked without danger of Ininging Peldng directly into the conf^. According to the source here, Johnson was expected to antfawize fiie “sdected” bombing of oome and poesi-bty all of the four key MIG bases in the Norfli-tiiree them in the Hanoi area and the fourth near Haiphcdlg. An Air Force reconnaissance photograph released yesterday showed a dramatic buildup of file Soviet-built, jet interc^itm at the k^ alritase 9D miles northeast of Hanoi The Rito-sians me repiHtedly stqiiifiifii up their su^ily of MIGs to North Vietnam. Old-Fashioned, Drafty house windows are replaced with test proved Nu-Sash • ...giving ultra-comfort and drastically cutting fuel bills Putting up with troublesome, outdated, loose-fitting problem windows is costly and annoying to the homeowner who wants to live in a modern home. However, a handsome new product — Nu-Sash — now. provides an easy, economical solution at an amazing low cost. Homeowners everywhere are finding that by converting to Nu-Sash aluminum replacement windows, complete and maximum comfort is gained without major remodeling. Nu-Sash is a window specifically designed to replace old, out-of-date windows. One of the greatest features of Nu-Sash is that the window is installed without touching ihside plaster and woodwqrk. This means no dusty and dirty installation work. Expert workmen remove the old sash and track, insert new aluminum jamb liners and tracks, then custom fit Nu-Sash securely into place. Complete installation, which is included in the new low cost of Nu-Sash, is done fast, safely and expertly. Nu-Sash Pays For itself f Nu-Sash windows perform where old obsolete windows do not! Furthermore, you SAVE MONEY by converting to Nu-Sash. Savings in beating bills will pay for a Nu-Sash conversion. Many more time and money saving features in Nu-Sash are gained since the anodized aluminum unit never needs paint, putty, caulking and other yearly household work and maintenance. Nu-Sash qualify for low-interest home improvement loans. The window is rated superior to standards set up by FHA for new construction requirements. The Nu-Sash windqw recently appeared in issues of the Better Homes & Gardens magazine. It was awarded the guarantee seal of that publication. /VO DOWN PAYMENT • MAKE YOUR MONTHLY » PAYMENTS W/TH YOUR FUEL SAVINGS! NU-SASH T0:NU-SASH 1004 Josiyn Avonuo Ponfidc, Mich. 48055 Engineered and Test-Proved by Weather-3eal, inc. CALL 338-4036 MMiber Fontiec Area Ckamber ef Cemmtrce Please send me Free Details and Sample Prices on Nu-Sash. NAME- NO OBLIGATION • FREE HOME DEMONSTRATION STREET-CITY____ -STATE- NEW SERVICE HOURS WMfciewlqr-il Ail. to i F.M. 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Let us put them on today. ..TAKE MONTHS TO PAY! • Modem high-performance wrap-around tread design * Firestone extra-mileage SUP-R-TUF tread rubber •Rugged full 4-ply nylon cord body •Extra deep precision,tread design for superb traction tura-wa Rfkad di ahewn dt Plrdtldne Sfdrat; cetripatltlvaly priced dt Firdotone Dodlar* dnd dt dll odrylad aldtidni dlapldyinv *hd Firtaldne ilgik PLASTIC TRASH CAN 7-IN-1 TOOL SET 1 All Weather Go-Polymer resists heat 4nd cold •Full 20-gnllaa capacity •Snap-on lid •Eaajrtodaail 6-Q-757 $199 UimltOne I Per Customer Additional $3.95 Each OmnLLlHiaiOOLSiTl^ with Ratchet and [ - . - . " |,Speed-0-Matic Attachment! | •Scrawhold to Wrench idfc •tartar #So«jkntiot •Screwdriver aBnce oNutdriver a^bit 6Q-75S Limit 1 per custonier at this price $3.95 Ea. TIRES 146 W. HURON ST., PONTIAC! APPUANCES PHONE 333-7917 .■p A—4' THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, jTANUARY 24. 1967 By JEAN SAILE Rodiester in the old days was no more like it is now “than cheese is like chalk,” said 90-year-old Ira B. Hilton, reviewing a lifetime spent in the area. “We used to go to the grocery store and sit down and swap lies by the hour. Today if you’re going downtown to sit down, it’s got to be in the barbershop or the bea-garden.” Hilton, alert and humorous is among those who have been transplated by Rochester’s urban renewal program. He now lives in Oakland T(nr€8hip. The’ family h«ne^ at i4D3 E. Third in Rwhester, builtland settled by Hilton’s father before the turn of the century, has finally passed out of the hands of the Hilton family. “I didn’t like the idea of moving at all — but they don’t give you much argument on it,” said Hiltcm ruefully. VERY PLEASED “And now I like it vety well — in fact, I like it better,” and he smiled as he surveyed the tidy four-room frame home on Cranberry Lake which he and his daughter, Mrs. Vary Hilton Jackman, have purchas^. • “I spent a lot of my boyhood Just two miles from here, and I nsed to flsh in Cranberry Lake. I’m gidng to do it again come summer,” he promised. “It was a good old neighborhood on Third Street,” he mused “but it’s not BO good anymore.” Mrs. Jadonan interposed that an uncle, Gordie Russell, had at one time lived next door in a 145-year-old home and “Gov. Cass lived there once.!’ M^ES OLD HOME ■ She volunteered that she missed the old h<»ne more than her father. “I’ve been gtdng in and ont of there all my life — first when it belonged to my grandfather and then when my parents moved there 34 years ago,” she said. Though Hilton’s hearing is deteriorating there’s obviously nothing wroig with his memory Regarding his state of health, he said, “I’m not one of them fellas that feel so bad — I’m just sort of wearing out slowly.” REMEMBERS PARTIES Hilton remonbers parties at the old St. James Hotel, recently t(»n down at the comer of West University and Main. Pontiac Pros! Photo Ira B. Hilton—Resettled By Urban Renewal Another gathering spot— the old Detroit house—burned at one time. “That was a good place,” he recalled, “and then there was a fellow named Parmer — ran a jewelry store and had a skat-i ing rink and dances out in back. Everybody had a good time there.” Fch* today’s ski enthusiasts Hilton has news that what they’re doing was done . 11. Planned as hi^ili^ts ot the day’s program mil be^a concert by the Alumni Cbonis, a Homecoming basketball game and the “Sweetheart” dinner. Nurseries' Staffs | to Hear Professor ROCHESTER — St. Paul’s Cooperative Nursery School and the Rochester Cooperative Nur say will meet jointly at 8 p.m Jfm. 31 at St. Paul’s Metfa^ist Church. Or. Edward Bantei, professiM' of educational psychology at Wayne State University, will dis cuss “Fostering Independence in die Preschool ^ild.” HOLLY—Voters will 6e faced with a blank ballot in the March 13 village election. The unusual ballot will be a paper one listing the six positions to be filled, but no names will be on it and all votes will be write-ins. This is caused by an election ruling made last year con- Contracts Let for Addition to Junior High WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP — Contracts totaling less than school officials had expected to pay were awarded last night for work on an addition to West Bloomfield Junipr High Schodl. ★ ★ ★ Schools Supt. Dr. Leif A. Hou-gen said the construction budget had been estimated at $858,000 but that the bids totaled $811,860. The general construction contract was awarded to Wallace Construction Co. of Highland Township for $494,543. Mechanical work will be done by William Adam Co., Detroit for $199,285 and the electrical contract went to Rogers Electric Service, Pontiac for $59,4 ★ ★ ★ A food service equipment contract was awarded to Gold Star Products of Detroit for $7,784 and a science equipment contract went to Imperial Equipment Co., Detroit for $26,816. Work is expected to ^gin in about two weeks with completion scheduled for next September. Money for the addition was included in a $7-million bond issue approved by voters last June. Permanent iJnit From 4 Communities The hipest death rate by fire is among persons 65 year? of age and older, says die Insurance Information Institute. FARMINGTON - A permanent study committee is to be formed to study the possible consolidation (rf four communities, the city of Farmington, Farmington Township and the villages of Wood Creek and Quakertown. At a recent meeting, the prestudy committee was dissolved and provision made for a permanent committee to consist of two members from each governmental body, and two each from the League of Women Vote's, the Board of Commerce and the Junior Chamber of Commerce. Dr. John Richardson, temporary chairman, Said that within the next 10 days facts on population trends, zoning and master plans will be gathered to present to representatives the Michigan State University Community Deyeloment and Services Department. * Once the MSU representatives summarize the information, a meeting i^ll be held to select a permanent chairman for the committee. ' \ * ■ * * \ The purpose of the study, according to Dr. Richardson, is to study the effects consolidation would have on the communities and to tell residents what unification would mean. He s aid the committee js neither endorsing nw opposing consolidation. Prairie dogs are really fat squirrels that live in “towns" and bark when they feel safe. The towns are a maze of burrows in which the dogs hide from enemies. cerning general law villages not organized under a home rule charter. The ruling states no other parties — other than those that appear on the ballot in the general election in November — are allowed on nonhome rule village ballots, according to Mabel Childs, deputy county clerk in charge of elections. ★ ★' ★ I This rule would also have af-| f e c t e d villages of Clarkston,; Lake Orion, Leonard and Orton-ville, except that due to lack of challengers, no primaries had been scheduled. ' FACES CHALLENGE Holly President Clarence Lester has been challenged by Alexander Russell, 132 Bevins, necessitating a primary, originally ^heduled for Feb. 13, but now canceled. Both had filed petitions under the Union party, which is no longer a legal group as far as the election is concerned. Lester said the 'confusion was a result of a misunderstaixling of the ruling sent out by the state. He said several villages in other counties were in the same position. ★ ★ ★ All the incumbents, including Lester, are seeking reelection. They are: Betty Oliver, clerk; H u 1 d a Anderson, treasurer; Grant H. Hulet, assessor; and trustees Aaron Ganshaw, James Greig and Richard Riddle. Phone Rate Cut LANSING (AP) - The State Public Service Commission lias authorized a $1,545 decrease in rates for customers of the Kale-va Telephone Co. in Manistee County. The rate reduction, effective with February billings, affects customers m Kaleva and Wellston. Audio-Visual Equipment Faculties to See Exhibits A program to acquaint the faculties of three school districts with up - to - date audio-vishal equipment has been undertaken by the Avondale Schools administration and the Avondale Education Association (AEA). ★ ★ Exhibits from about 10 different manufacturers will be on display in the Avondale Senior High School from 5 to 8 p.m. tomorrow. Dr. Horace Hartsell of Mich-gan State University will speak at 8 p.m. on new teaching media. The faculties of Rochester and Troy school districts have also been invited to attend. Particular enthusiasm was expressed by Charles Johnson Avondale assistant superintendent for instnicticHi and personnel, for video tape machines capable of instant replay. PLANNING ON EQUIPMENT He said the Avondale district is looking forward to the equipping of its new elementary instructional centers with such equipment. Miss Rose Bowman, AEA president, is chairman of her group’s participation in the program, the first, such joint effort in the district. PantWc PrM* WORTH INVESTIGATING —Charles Johnson, assistant superintendent for instruction and personnel for the Avondale School District, and Miss Rose Bowman, president of the Avondale- Education Association, combme efforts for an audio-visual exhibit slated tomorrow at the Avondale Senior Hi^ Sdiool. T tUu I Corner Saginaw and Huron FE 4-2511 End-of-Month CLEARANCE! ■ \ , Woite's Guarontees every item at Least Vs OFF! Each item is reduced a mii^tmum of Vs from the originol price it was in our stock. Be here early . . . Odd lots and broken sizes on some merchandise. \ No Phone Orders, COD's or Deliveries. WEDNESDAY ONLY — ALL SALES FINAL — OPEN TIL 5:30 DRESSES, SPORTSWEAR—Third Floor 12 Pr. Stretch Slacks/Side Zipper & Stirriups, Were 5.99 1.88 10 )un. and Misses’ 3 and 4 Pc. Slack Suits, Size 8-16, " 30-40 ....... ....................................19.90 40 Pr. Corduroy Slacks, Sizes 8 to 18, Were 3.99 .... 2.99 45 Pr. Wool Solid and Fancy Slacks, Sizes 8 to 18, Were 11.99 ............................................ 8.00 3 Lurex Jackets, Were 17.99 to 25.00 ................ 8.00 5 Lurex Skirts and Blouses, Were 12.99 to 17.99 .... 6.00 1 Pr. Corduroy Jamais, Was 7.99 ..................... 2.99 3 Pr. Khee Length Hose, Were 2.00.......................88 3 Famous Make jumpers. Were 17.99....................12.00 8 Famous Make Dyed to Match jackets. Were 17.99 to 19.99 ........................................... 12.00 46 Famous Make Dyed to Match Slipover Sweaters, Were 8.99- 9.99 ......................................... 4.99 20 Famous Make Dyed to Match Cardigans, Were 10.99- 12.99 ......................................... 6.99 42 Famous Make Dyed to Match Wool Skirts, Were 8.99- 9.99 ............................................. 4.99 38 Famous Make Dyed to Match Wool Skirts, Were 10.99- 12.99 ....................................... 6.99 58 Famous Make Dyed to Match Slipovers and Cardigans, Were 8-99-11.99 ....................... •. ........ 3.99 15 Famous Make Women’s Winter Coats, Were 69.99- 79.99 ...........;.................. ............50.00 12 Famous Make Women’s Winter Coats, Were 85.00- 89.99 ..................■ .......................57.00 10 Famous Make Misses’ Winter Coats, Were 39.99- 59.99 29.90 24 Dresses and Swirls in Misses’ and Half Sizes, Were 6.99- 12.00 ....................................... 2.00 26 Misses’ and Half Size Dresses,'Were 12.00 to 15.00 5.00 30 Misses’ and Half Size Dresses, Were 15.00 to 1 8 00 7.00 FASHION ACCESSORIES—Streef Floor 80 Wooden Necklaces, Were 2.00 ................. ........ 1.34 10 Wooden Earrings, Were 2.00 ........................... 1.34 34 Wooden Earrings, Were 1.00................................67 46 Novelty Necklaces, Were 1.00................... . .2 for 1.00 141 Novelty Earrings, Were 1.00.......................2 for 1.00 44 Novelty Necklaces, Were 2.00 ..............................99 49 Novelty Earrings, Were 2.00 . .99 3 Novelty Bracelets, Were 2.00...............................22 2 Novelty Pendants, Were 3.00 ........................... 1.34 2 Gold Necklaces, Were 3.00 ...............................1.34 3 Rhineston^ and Crystal Earrings, Were 3.00........... 1.34 2 Rhinest(X>e and Crystal Earrings, Were 4.00........... 1.79 2 Novelty Necklaces, Were 3.00 ..............................45 18 Novelty Earrings, Were 1.00 . .'. . .................... -.44 1 Figure Matic Girdle, Was 5.10......................... 3.40 2 Figure Matic Girdles, Were 4,30........................ 2,90 Famous Brand Women’s Hosiery (Textured), Were 1.65 ............................................... . .65 17 Pr. Famous Brand Embroidered Check Hose, Were 3.50................................................ . 2.00 Women's Famous Brand Hosiery, Were 1.25 to 2.00 1.00 13 Dear Foam Go-Go Boots, Were 6.00....................... 3.00 6 Dear Foam White Go-Go Boots, Were 7.00................. 3.50 Terry Slippers. Were 3.00, 4.00, and 5.00...........Vt OFF 2 Handbags, Were 6.00 ................................... 4.00 1 Handbag, Was 10.00...................................... 5.00 I Handbag, Was 12.00..................................... 6.00 1 Handbag, Was 3.00 ..................................... 1.00 2 Clutch Purses, Were 1.00 67 10 French (Wallets, Were 3.50 ............................. 2.14 1 Clutch Purse, Was 3.50.................................. 1.03 NOTIONS, COSMETICS—Streef Floor 22 Shaving Cream, Were 69c ....................................46 6 Shampoo, Were 1.00 . . .-r.v ............................ .66 2 Compacts, Were 75c....................................... .33 49 Aspirin, Were 39c............................................26 24 Tubes Toothpaste, Were 49c ............................... .33 21 Bottles Mouth Wash, Were 59c............................... .39 5 Bottles Mouth Wash, Were 39c............................... 26 6 Milk of Magnesia, Were 49c..................................09 10 Shampoo, Were 59c . ...................................... 39 25 Sunglasses, Were 1.99 ......................................89 24 Lupuid and Jell Ice-O-Derm Astringent, Were 1.50 . .99 17 jell Ice-O-Derm Astringent, Were 99c ■ •..................75 290 Sets’ of Soap, Were 1.25................................ .99 23 Windshield Covers, Were 1.98 ..................... 1.00 14 Decorator Pillows, Were 1.39 .......................... 1.00 1 Damaged Plastic Raincoat, Was 5.99...................... 2.66 2 Card Table Covers. Were 3.50............................. 2.00 5 Hair Roller Picks, Were 29c.................................19 I Spice Rack, Was 1.00' .............\ ......................67 1) Metal Shoe Trees, Were 1.00................................67 8 Roach Killer, Were 1.00 ................................. .67 15 Plastic Suit Bags, Were 2.99 .......................... 1.33 23 Wool Wash Soap, Were 89c .....................40 46 No Moth Closet Hangers, Were 2.59................... 1,87 12 Picture Album Refills, Were 1.00 . . ....................67 10 Puzzles, Were 3,50 ................................... 2.33 Assorted Candles, Were 1.00................................67 Air Freshners, Were 1.50 .............................. 1.00 Assorted Candles, Were 89c to 2.00 . . .59, .83 and 1.33 37 Pen Points, Were 50c .................... •............. .33 28 Pen Points, Were 85c........................................57 13 Men's Leather Gloves, Were to 9.00......................3.63 2) Men's White Dress Shirts, Were 4.00 ................... 1.11 8 Flannel Nite Shirts, Were 5.00..............................66 4 Men's Dress Shirts, Were 5.00........................... 3.33 5 Women’s Pajamas, Were 6.95.............................. 1.38 9 S. S. Sweatshirts, Were 6.0(T............,........... 1,78 1 Wool Knit Shirt, Was 1 1.00 ............................. 4.04 2 Caps, Were 2.95.............................................44 6 S. S. Knit Shirts, Were 5.00......................... 2.22 6 S. S. Knit Shirts, Were 6.00 . . 2.67 • 7 S. S. Knit Shirts. Were 7.00 • •............. ........ 3.11 3 S, S. Sport Shirts, Were 4.00 .......................... 2.60 19 Men’s Wool Dress Slacks, Wefe 25 00.....................11.11 FOUNDATIONS, LINGERIE—Second Floor 20 Shift Gowns, Were 6.00 ■ ............................... 2.67 5 Shift Gowns, Were 5.00 ................................... 2.22 5 Shift Gowns, Were 9.00 ................................... 4.00 4 Print Pajamas, Were 8.00................................. 3.56 18 Print Pajamas, Were 4,00................................. 1.78 1 Print Gown, Was 4.00.................................... 2.67 13 Nylon Gowns, and Pajamas, Were 8.00 ..................... 2.98 5 Gowns, and Pajamas, Were 4.99 ....... .................. 3.33 27 Terry Stretch Pajamas, Were 5.00 and 6.00............... 1.96 2 Terry Stretch Pajamas, Were 8.00.............••......... 2.63 21 Boys’ White Shirts, Were 3.00...............................60 11 Boys’ Slacks and jeans, Were 3.99 to 6.00............ 1.48 7 Boys' Sport Shirts, Were 6.00...............................81 22 Boys' Robes, Werd 6.00................................... 2.65 29 Boys' Corduroy Sport Shirts, Were 3.49 ......... 1.34 47 Boys' Gloves, Were 1.00......................................44 33 Boys' Sport Shirts, Were 1.79 to 2.99........................98 1 Diaper Pail, Was 3.99 .................................. 9 Car Seats, Were 3.98 to 4.98............................ 1.33 15 S. S. Polo Shirts, Were 1.75 to 2.19................ 1.17 4 S. S. Polo Shirts, Were 1.25 to 1.59......................84 210 Plastic Pants, Were 69c to 1.79...............................44 6 Crib Sheets, Were 1.98 ................................... 1.32 4 Undershirts, Were 1.29 to 2.00...............................86 2 Basket Liners, Were 2.99 ............................... 1.31 2 Boys’ Knit Shirts, Were 5.99 ........................... 4.00 28 Knit Bonnets, Were 1.98 ......................,.............84 19 Girls’ Unlined jackets. Were 2.99 .........................88 1 Girl’s Unlined jacket. Was 6.00 ...................... 2.45 12 Girls’ Unlined jackets. Were 3.99...................... 1.19 8 Polo Shirts, Were 2.25.......................................33 3 Slacks, Were 2.99 ...........................................66 1 Sun Suit. Was 4.50 ........................................ 2.00 1 Sun Suit. Was 2.99 .................................... , .66 1 Dress, Waij 3.99 ......................................... 1.78 19 Hats, Were 2.00..............................................33 48 Girls’ Purses, Were 1.19 to 1.39 .. ........................66 1 Jewelry Box, Was 7.00 .................................. 1.67 3 Skirts, Were 5.99 ......................................... 2.66 18 Size ■? to 14 Dresses, Were 6,00 .........................99 1 Skirt, Was 7.00 .............................. ......... 1.78 2 Sweaters, Were 6,00t . i-. .....................J"...... 3.00 2 Dresses, Were 4.99 . .................................... 1.34 10 Purses, Were lilO to 1.39 ......................... .66 1 Dress, Was 15.00 ....................................... 6.66 5 jumpers, Were 15.00 ................... ................ 5.78, 3 jumpers. Were 17.00 . 7.56 2 Pants, Were 13.00 ........................................ 5.78 1 Dress, Was 10.99 ....................................... 4.90 2 jackets, Were 20.00 .,.................................... 8.90 2 Dresses, Were 12.00....................................... 5.34 6 Skirts, Were 7.00 ....................................... 3.11 6 Skirts, Were 8.00 ........................................ 3.56 11 Jumpers, Were 7.99........................................ 3.31 4 jumpers. Were 11.00 ••................................... 4.90 1 jumper. Was 9.00'.......................................... 4.00 35 Pr. Children's Shoes. Were to 9.00............i.......... 3.44 20 Pr. Children’s Houseslippers, Were to 4.50............. 2.44 CURTAINS, DRAPERIES, ETC.—Fourth Floor 4 50% Down Pillows, Were 10.99 ......................... 5.50 12 Crushed Feather Pillows, Were 8,99 ................... 4.50 7 Burlap Drapes, 92 x 84, Were 9.97 .................... 3.34 11 Burlap Drapes, 140 x 84, Were 15.97 .................. 5.34 8 Lined Drapes, SW x 54, Were 8.49 ................ 1.82 3 Lined Drapes, SW x 72, Were 9 49 .............. 2.12 7 Lined Drapes, 1 'A x 36, Were 11.99................. 4.00 4 Lined Drapes, 1 'A x 72, Were 16,99................. 3.78 3 Lined D/apes, DW x 36, Were 14.99.................... 5.00 2 Lined Drapes, TW x 72, Were 30.99 ................. . .10.25 1 Lined Drape, TW x 63, Was 29.99 ....................... 6.62 8 Fiberglass Drapes, SW x 84, Were 8.99............... 3.00 8 Fiberglass Drapes, 1 Vi x 84, Were 15.99 ..............5.34 4 Fiberglass Drapes, DW x 84, Were 19.99............... 6.68 "3 Fiberglass Drapes, TW x 84, Were 30.99 ...............10.68 4 Antique Satin Flax, SW x 36, Were 4.99 2.50 2 Antique Satin Flax, SW x 63, Were 6,99 • •........ 3.50 3 Antique Safin Flax, SW x 84, Were 7,99............... 4.00 2 Antique Satin Flax, 1 Vi x 45, Were 1 1.49 ......... 6.00 1 Antique Satin Flax, 1 Vi x 84, Was 14,99............ 7.50 2 Antique Satin Flax, DW x 84, Were 18.99........... 9.50 1 Antique Satin Flax, SW x 54, Was 6.99............. 3.50 5 Antique Satin Flax, SW x 90, Were *7.99............ 4.00 1 Antique Satin Flax, TW x 45, Were 20.99 .......... 10.50 1 Antique Satin Flax, DW x 90, Were 15.99............ 8.00 2 Fiberglass Drapes, DW x 84, Were 22.99 ..............10.00 11 Lined Drapes, SW x 84, Were 9.99.................... . 5.00 6 Lined Drapes, 1 Vz x 84, Were 17.99.................. 8.00 6 Lined brape's, DW x 84, Were 22.99 .................II.00 9 Lined Drapes. 2Vi x 84 Were 29.99 ................,.14.00 1 Lined Drapes, TW x 84, Were 33.99 .....................17.00 12 Lined Drapes, Valance 3.29 . . i....................... I.OO 5 Throws, ^x72, Were 4.99 ............................. 2.00 3 Spreads, Were 55.00 ... 30.00 '7 Eyelet Curtains, 24", Were 3.49 ...................... 1,18 1 Eyelet,Curtains, 30", Were 3.99 ..................... 1.32 3 Eyelet’Curtains, 36", Were 4.49........................ 1.50 5 Eyelet Curtains, Tie Backs, Were 8.5?.................. 2.86 8 Eyelet Curtains, Vanity Skirt, Was 16.99 .............. 5.68 3 Twin Canopys, Were 16.99 ............................. 5.68 1 Eyelet Full Canopy, Was 17.99 ......................... 6.00 4 Eyelet Tie Backs, Were 9.59 ......................... 3.20 2 Twin Stripe Spreads, Were 14,99 ................. , . . 5.00 5 Twin Solid Spreads, Were 20.00 .......................10.00 6 Full Solid Spreads, Were 25.00 ...................... 12.50 2 Queen Solid Spreads, Were 33.00 .................. ,16.50 1 Dual Solid Spread, Was 37.00 ..........................18.50 . 1 5 SW X 84 Spreads, Were 8.00.......................... 4.00 10 Quilted Spreads, Were 9.88 ........................... 4.00 WOMEN'S WOMEN'S BOOTS SHOES Values tgftft to 15.00 “ 30 Prs. House Slippers, Were to 8.00 $2.88 50 Prs. Women's Odds and Ends Shoes, Were to 10.00 $1.00 & $2.00 FABRICS, LINENS—Fourth Floor 1 Pink Damask Set (64 x 104) , Was 17.00............... 8.50 2 Round Linen Sets, Were 13.00...................... 6.50 1 Linen Set (50 x 50), Was 6.00...................... 3.00 11 Place Mats, Were 40c.................................... 10 1 Linen Tablecloth (66 x 84), Was 9.99............... 5.00 16 Early American Vinyl Tablecloths (52 x 70), Were 2.99 ................................................. 1.50 12 Vinyl Tablecloths, Were 4.99 ........................ 2.50 20 Fringed Vinyl Tablecloths (60 x 78), Were 5.49 . . 1.50 1 Fringed Vinyl Tablecloth, (60 x 60), Wes 3.49 .... 1.00 2 Vinyl Tablecloths, (52 x ^2), Were 5.99.................3.00 7 Vinyl Tablecloths, (52 x 70), Were 8.99................ 4.50 5 Vinyl Tablecloths, (65" rd.l. Were 10.99............... 5.$0 1 1 Print Mixer Covers, Were 1.69............................10 2 60" Round Tablecloths, Slight Irregulars, Were 4,99 1.00 18 52 X 70 Tablecloths, Slight Irregulars, Were 3.99 . . 1.00 4 Vinyl Tablecloths (52 x 52). Were 1.99................ 1.00 4 Vinyl Tablecloths, (70" Rd.l, Were 6.99 .............. 3.50 2 Print Toaster Covers, Were 1.00...........................05 2 Print Linen Towels, Were 1.00............................05 3 Print Tablecloths (78" Rd.) Were 10.99 ................ 2.00 1 Print Tablecloth, (70 x,90), Was 8.99.................. 1.50 3 No Iron Tablecloths (52 x 52), Were 4.00............2.00 1 No Iron Tablecloth (67" Rd.), Was 10.00 .............. 5.00 3 No Iron Tablecloths, (60 x 90), Were 11.00 ..... 5.50 2 No Irorl Tablecloths (60 x 108), Were 13.00...........6.50 21 No Iron Napkins. Were 80c . ........................ . .40 8 Print Washcloths, Were 59c...............................30 10 3-Pr, Rug Sets, Were 2.97 . .......................... 1.50 HOUSEWARES, CHINA, ETC.—Lower Level 5 Bathroom Space Savers, Were 9.98 .................... 3.88 4 Rubbermaid Storage Turntables, Were 4.98..............2.22 1 Brass and Glass Hostess Cart, Was 34.95^.............22.00 6 Service for 8 Swedish Glasses, Were 7.99 3.22 1 West Bend 4 Cup Percolator, Was 8.95 . .......... 4.44 1 Coming 10" Elec. Fry Pan (Disc. Pattern), Was 27.95 ..............................................16.66 9 Marble and Wood Bathroom Access., Were 10.95 ,.. 5t44 5 Brass Fan'Shaped Mirrors, Were 5.98 .............. 3.22 8 Rubbermaid Vegetable Bins, Were 1.98................. .88 3 Toilet Bowl Brushes With Holder, Were 2.98........ 1.88 1 Pink Bathroom Shelf, Was 4.98......................1. 2.88 6 Flower Candle Centerpieces. Were 4.98............... 1.88 8 Boxes Tapered Candles (12 to a Box), Were 1.50 . . .66 2 Orange Ceramic Candy Jars, Were 6.98 ................ 2.88 1 Orange Ceramic Table Lighter, Was 5-50............... 1.88 1 Foliage Plant With Base, Was 10.98 .................. 3.44 Assorted Household Gadgets........................'/z OFF 2 Fireplace Logs, Were 17.98 ............... 6.88 1 Turbine Brush for Sunbeam Sweeper, Was 16.95 . . . 4.88 1 9-Tran^istor Ambassador AM/FM Radio, Was 14.50 9.66 3 8-Transistor G. E, Portable Radios, Were 18.50 .. . .12.22 5 Musical Birds in Cage, Were 7,98 .................... 1.88 2 7 Pc. Corning BOflet Server Sets, Were 30.00 . . . .19.44 6 Decorator Oil Lamps, Were 5.00 ....................... 2.22 Open Stock Dinnenvare..............................Vi OFF 3 Revereware 8 Cup Coffee Pots, Were 13.95............. 9.44 2 Large 28" x 42" Wall Mirrors, Were 12.98............ 7.88 3 Framed 24" x 30" Wall Mirrors, Were 6.99 ...... 2.88 2 G.E. Table Model Radios, Were 13.95................... 7.88 1 36” Range Hood, Was 39.87 ...........................22.00 16 Teflon Cookware Cleaners, Were 88c.......................44 3 Lavender Air Freshners, \Mere 89c.......................44 RUGS, TOYS, ETC.—Fifth Floor 1 Plastic Oval Braid Rug, Was 4.98 ...................... 2.88 1 Wood and Brass Floor Lamp, Was 19.95............; . . .10.88 1 Floor to Ceiling Pofe Lamp, Was 19.95..................13.33 1 Floor to Ceiling Pole Lamp, Was 11.00 . j.............. 5.88 1 9x12 Qval Braid Wool Blend Rug, Was 29.95 . ... • 19.66 16x9 Oval Braid Wool Blend Rug, Was 19.95 .... 13.22 7 24" X 48” Rayon Scatter Rugs, Were 66c....................22 1 Ladies' Hat%ox, Was 17.95.............................. 6.88 1 Ladies’ Train Case. Was 17.95.......................... 6.88 1 Ladies’ 21" Weekender, Was 24.95 ...................... 9.88 2 9 X 1 2 All Wool Oval Braid Rugs, Were 68.00 . . . .43.00 4 22" X 45" Nylon Rugs, Were 4.98 ..... j ... .;. 1.66 1 36" X 60" Nylon Rug, Was 9.00........................ 4.88 6 27" X 48" Nylon Carpet Rugs, Were 9.98 . . ....... 2.88 1 King Size Samsonite Table, Was 14.95................... 6.66 2 3’ X 5' Rayon Rugs, Were 19.95................:... 13.33 2 27" X 48" Rayon Rugs, Were 9.98.................. .. 6.44 1 24" X 36" Rayon Rug, /W^s 6.98 .................. 4.81 1 Boy’s 24" Bicycle, Was 29.95 .........................18.81' 1 Girl’s 26" Bicycle, Wes 29.95 ........................II.BS 5 Stanley Cup Hockey Games, Were 10.99............... 6.88 Lionel Train Accessories ........................75% OFF 1 Red 12” Tricycle, Was 17,77........................... 9.88 .1 All Steel Auto Pedal Car, Was 15.00 '. . . . ........8.88- Assorted Toys........ ..........V4 OFF* 1 Girl's Rite Hite Stove, Was 9.99 ................. . .. 5>88 THE PONTIAC PRESS 48 West Huron Street Pontiac, Michigan 48058 TUESDAY, JANUARY 24, 1967 Bnol* A. Misiut* OwtriDka of Um Board Howus H. ntassuit, U Frestdtat «nd Pnl;U«l>er nca nrtddeail •adOtdttor BAitr J. Bm Managing Editor JOSK A. Boar 'Becretary and Admtiiind Sliaotor BtCRAta U. Tmtwuui Treasurer and nnanca Officer . Aim Mooour drculatloa Manager O. MAMXAU JOMAir l«cal Advertising Manager Area ‘Eats Up’ Press Cook Schools Of the countless “Weeks” that are annually observed throughout the U.S.A., none has more local interest than the yearly Pontiac Press C6ok-ing School. Now in progress is the seventh such event sponsored by the newspaper. The capacity attendance at these culinary clinics> reflects their growing popularity iii the area __ and is proof positive that the art of,./ food preparation is a lively one arid has not degenerated, as wags have said, into an unimaginative routine of defrost, heat and serve. Conducted by Consumers Power Co. home economists, the week’s program embraces four evening and two afternoon sessions. A variety of prizes has been donated by local appliance establishments and markets, the drawing of which adds a touch of expectancy to the proceedings. ★ ★ ★ Incidentally, the cookiijg schools are by no means exclijsively feminine events. Over the yerars, men in growing numbers have attended the dem-onstratjohs to see what’s cooking. ★ ★ ★ .Those who relish cooking for the art it is will find informative and inspirational the facts of food now being revealed in the auditorium of the Pontiac Centi*al High School. ^Moybe We Sh^ld Sit Down And Chat!' Weather, Calendar Snafu Warms Our Hearts David Lawrence Says: What is so rare as a day in June? Well, a June day in January, that’s what. Like yesterday. Weather offers all sorts of recordsetting possibilities, but usually they bode discomfort for the populace — such as searing and prolonged temperatures in summer, frigid and ditto in winter. But when Old Sol smiles a record for warmth in midwinter, that, boys and girls, is something special in the record department. Yesterday, record watchers saw the mercury nudge 60 degrees at 2:45 p.m., breaking the record of 59 degrees set Jan. 23, 1909—and was it ever nice. Winter coats were as inappropriate as a two-piece bathing, suit in a beauty contest, the walking was delightful, kids and dogs were frisky, the gals more enticing thah ever, the winter colony of birds trilling, and spring flowers lifted tentative heads. ★ ★ ★ What was that grumpy, off-stage crack we heard?—that we still have two months of winter left and you know what can happen in February? Okay, Buster, okay. But neither you nor history can ever take yesterday away from us. . It was nice, man, nice. Grid Cost Too Heavy Penalty for D.C. School George Washington University in Washington, D.C., is expected to join the ranks of colleges that have given up intercollegiate football. Fordham, Georgetown and Catholic University, all of which sent teams to major boVrl games in the 1930s and 1940s, gave up the sport years ago. The reason in each case was substantially the same: college football is an expensive and often unprofitable enterprise. George Washington, for example, lost $254,000 on its football program last year. . George Washington has been unable to withstand competition for fans from Maryland, Navy, the Washington Redskins, the Baltimore Colts, and from televised games of these and other college and professional games. But even when a college foot-^ ball program consistently loses money, dropping the sport is not necessarily a good idea. Affluent alumni, remembering better days on the gridiron, are all too likely to express their displeasure by ignoring fund appeals. The football team is the only link many an old grad has to hi^ alma mater. ★ ★ ★ Students at Fordham, Georgetown and NYU have organized self-supporting football clubs in an effort to fill the autumn sports gap on those campuses. The quality of play is not to be confused with that of Notre Dam-e or Michigan State, and the crowds, while vociferous, are not exactly crowds. Still, both the spectators and the players — amateurs in the strict sense of the word—seem genuinely to enjoy themselves and to be unconcerned about who’s Number One. ★ ★ ★ . It could be that football is only 'T a game after all. Repuhlicam Getting Big Head By JAMES MARLOW AP News Analyst WASfflNGTON - The Republicans were a pretty quiet bunch in 1965, the year after their electicm disaster when the Democrats outnumbered them 295 to 140 in the House and 67 to 33 in the Senate. They were p r actically speech less and for want of ideas the Republican House leaders went arpund trying to pick outsiders’ brains. They set up task forces to give them a talking point. Gradually, they regained their speech but not tteir gusto until the 1966 elections in which they did better, particularly in the House where they picked up an additional 47 seats. They picked up three in tiie Sen-ate. They’re still the minority party — the Democrats out- MARLOW number them 248 to 187 in the House, 64 to 36 in the Senate — but you might not think so to listen to them now. ★ ★ ★ For example, the Republican House and Senate leaders — Rep. Gerald R. Ford and Sen. Everett H. Dirksen — have just tried to match President Johnson’s State of the Union message with one of their own. GOP MAJORITY? It was a very ambitious message and you might get the impression from listening to it, at least Ford’s part of it, that the Republicans were the ” majority party, now and were running Congress. They might very well be able to if they formed a coalition with the Southern Democrats — or could get the Southerners to form such“a coalition — although Ford pooh-poohed the thought of it. He said: “Cynics may call every Republican victory in this Congress a coalition. Let’s meet that ifeue head on, right LBJ Message Pkently Political Voice of the People: ‘CMngeinTaxCoUedion Mag Make Voters fiiink*' I take strong exception to the individual who recommended that all taxes be on a withholding basis. Let’s eliminate all withholding and at the end of the year when the taxpayer is separated from his money, aftpr he has becomes attached to it, Jib will reiiHy become interested in those he votes for and how they spend his money. ★ ★ ★ The present system is comparable to losing a stiUbom child. The other way it would[ be like losing one of the family. JAMES E. LEKANDER CLARKSTON Citizen Is Disgruntled by Delay in Traffic Does the Grand Trunk Railroad have any moral or legal right to tie up early morning traffic for over 11 minutes as it did this morning on Huron Street? DISGRUNTLED Reader Tells Permanent Cure for Disease 1 I read tiiat.a man dying of cancer in Los Angeles has been frozen, the theory being that if medical science comes up with a cure for cancer they will thaw the victim and possibly cure him. ★ ★ ★ God gives a permanent cure for cancer and any other fatal disease. He promises everlastmg life if you will accept His Son, Jesus Christ. I know of pdbple who today are better off because they were afflicted with cancer. 'They are in heaven because, knowing death was imminent, they became born-again Christians and died happy, ly Cobb, the famous ball player, was one of them. GLENN YUILLE 88 NEWBERRY LAWRENCE boom, though “By definition, coalition requires advance consultation and ultimate compromise of conviction to win a legislative victory.’’ FIRST COALITION At least that’s what he said, although a coalition doesn’t have to mean any such thing. And just about two weeks ago the Republicans and Southern Democrats formed their first coalition of the year, whether or not they consulted before-hand. It was the Republicans and Southern Democrats who, by teaming up on the crucial Vote, were able to prevent Rep. Adam Oayton Powell, the Harlem preacher and man-about-town, Irom taking his seat in the House. Not one Republican voted in Powell’s favor. ★ ★ ★ But, even with a coalition. Ford will have a tough time^ trying to translate into reality the various ideag he tossed off in his part of the Republican State of the Union message. WASHINGTON - President Johnson, in his budget mes-.sage to Congress, assumes on behalf of his a d m i nlstra-tion full re-s p onsibility for the economic condition of the country. Few presidents have been as pointedly political in claiming credit for a taking the precaution at the same time to blame inflationary trends and recessions on circumstances beyond their control. The President says: “The economic performance of the past three years did not just happen. It grew out of the ingenuity, hard work and imagination of all parts of American society. But the one element which provided a catalyst for all the rest was the imaginative and flexible use of federal fiscal policy.’* The fact is that the President is justifying as a “catalyst” the artificial stimulant introduced by the government itself. He declares: “In 1964, and again in 1965, tax reductions were enacted which gave a strong stimulus to the economy. Idle capacity came into (^ration, new capacity was built, and both the numbers and productivity of the nation’s work force rose sharply. ★ ★ ★ “In late 1965 and early 1966, however, as the economy rapidly approached full capacity operation, inflationary pressures began to develop. On two occasions, I proposed, and the Congress promptly enacted, tax changes aimed at dampening those pressures.” EVERY EFFORT The President argues that hfe has made every effort to postpone, stretch out or eliminate all but the most essential federal expenditures and that these actions “contributed to a welcome moderation of inflationary pressures in the latter part of 1966. “The economy, the budget, and the aims of our society would be jeopardized by either a larger tax in- ' crease or by large slashes in military or civilian programs.” Mr. Johnson says he welcomes careful scrutiny by Congress, of tbe spending" programs, and then si^ifi-cantly comments: \ ' “But it is my judgment thaV ^ajor cuts cannot be made without serious impairment to vital national objectives — in defense, in education, in health, in the rebuilding of our cities, and in the attack on poverty.” What this amounts to is a statement that the United States can afford guns and butter, top. \ It means that the President dpes not recommend the sacrifice of any domestic programs, and Ms administration has akeady committed itself to the spending of unprecedented suites of money. (CppyrigM; Ttt7, PubllAiMn ________Ntwtpipbt; Syndlciti) Bob Considine Says: Nationalist China Segs, but V.S. Isnt Listening taken by the same terrible disease. He was the mily witness at the Ruby trial who had a good word to say about the murderer of Lee Harvey Oswald. They had known each other as kids in Chicago, and Ruby became a hanger-on around Ross’s camp when Barney made it big in the fight game. Ruby worshipped the champ. He prob ably felt proud to emulate him even in the nature of his death. Says Township Needs Changes in Board Apparently Mr. Sanfoid learned the hard way that the West Bloomfield Tqwnship board had no use for a forward-thinking stmervisor. 'This may no longer be a rural community but until a couple of rural-minded board members are removed fr(Hn office it will continue to be run as such. ★ ★ ★ It is to the advantage of these members that the status quo is maintained. If tiiey their way we would have no police department and the fire department wonld continue to operate undermanned and lackiiig np-todate equipment. Maybe this will be a lesson to the lethargic voters of West Bloomfield. MRS. M. LadHANCE WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP Question and Answer Do we still have a board of .health? I nnderstood it’s against the law to have dogs or cats* in stores or places where fqod^is sold, served, packaged, Ctcri woilc in a store with a lunch counter and petqile scream fiieir heads off when wo ask them to take their dogs outside. I won’t buy in three super-maiteto, because I’ve seen peiqile wheeling their dc^s in the carts, a^ only tonight I saw a wontan with a dog in her arms at a lunch ciHmten' Do we have to carry our lunch to keep from eating affo^ animals and have dog hair in our food? V^Y UPSET AND HUNGRY STORE EMPLOYE REPLY The Oaklapd Counig Sanitary Code of 1966 says no live birds or animeUs shall be in any area used to conduct a food establishment operation, providing guide dogs (for the blind) are permitted in the dining area. Any violations should be reported to City Sanitarian Charles Cohen at Pontiac City Hall, FE 3-7131. NEW YORK - The Nationalist Chinese are on bended knee, pleading with Washington to help them throw a punch at reeling Mao Tse-tung. Ob-viopsly, we are paying no heed. Taipei’s Business and Financial Daily News mourns: CONSUIINE “If the Poznan strikers and the Budapest freedom fighters had been supported by tile free worU, the Iron Curtain in Europe would ------------------- have been torn down. Un- __ _ _ __ Dems Ponder Howto Hold Power “When Russian tanks rumbled to the Budapest radio station, keedom fighters warned the free world that ‘you will suffer from your selfishness and shortsightedness.’ The free world should bear this lesson in mind while watching the devel(^ments on mainland China today.” In Washington: Verbal Orchids Robert Sanders of”l83 Midway; Mth birthday. Mrs, PYed Kibbe of 163 S. Jessie; 84th birthday. Mrs. Teresa Holmes of Union Lake; 81st birthday. Alex Esperson of 2000 Woodward; 84th birthday. Seventy three per cent of those who served as guinea pigs in a recent CBS “national current events test” flunked. Only 28 per cent knew about how many men we have in Vietnam. Less than half knew that we drop more bombs on South Vietnam than on North. Less than a third knew how many seats the Republicans gained in the House of Representatives in the last election. A third thought the Constituent Assembly of South Vietnam was set up to draw up ternis for a settlement with North Vietniam. A half thought Medicare pays doctor bills, and a third thought Martin Luther King (not Stokely Carmichael) was the prime proponmit of Black Power. Nearly one ^ in every four identifi^ Sukarno as the top leader in Malaysia and in answer to the question “Who is the leader of the Chinese Communist party” responded “Oiiang Kai-shek,” Barney Ross died of cancer just after Jack Ruby, was By BRUCE BIOSSAT WASHINGTON (NEA) -Some influential Democrats fear their party soon may lose enough important ground to Republicans to endanger their nearly _ • four years of majority ascendancy. Says one: “While ipeo-ple in this party gossip over, what WilliamI Manchester’s] book saysl about Kenne-' dy-Johnson BIOSSAT relations, or try to count how many times Bob Kennedy applauded the President’s State of the Union message, big voter trends may be working against us.” A respected Democratic leader argnes, from close flrstiiand observatimt, that today most young Americans at or approaching voting age do not feel any strong tdenUty with the Democrats. “Uiey are hanging loose,” says this man. “They are watching and waiting. Many may turn out to be quite conservative. A good number seem to like Bobby Kennedy, but ttey aren’t all-out for him right now.” / ■k -k * - Some Democrats concede that formal Democratic youth organizations are far less effective as working political entities than are their GOP counterparts. 'They voice rqi^ concern over what they see as enterprising efforts by Republican National Chairman Ray Bliss to woo the young— and bend’ their groups away from “kookery.” Yet tMs is far from being the sole source of Democratic worry. As one party stalwart sees the future, the party also has to consider whether or not its time-tested appeals to minority groups and others at the lower end of the economic scale may yield not victory but defeat at the polls. k k k The argument is that the sharpy rising numbers of peiqile bi the U.S. middle class may be 'slowly fomting a new majorlfy whose fnnd-amental interests are quite different from those of the loose coalition of impoverished or hdf’inqtoymidied minorities whteh have k^t the Democrats on top mint of the time sfnee the early 1930s. Ironically, it is frirni some of the i^tional minorities, the once-tfyfritmuted Amerkmns, thal^aome of tiie loudest com-plabits are heard today about “doing too much too fast” in Great Society and other programs. k k k Anti-N^o backlash sentiment obviously plays a meas-^ urable role in this reaction, but it is far from the whole story. The wider aspect is feared to be the revolt of middle-class taxpayeYii against bigger and Mgger tax burdens imposed to assist Negro and other poor people. The more recent their ascent to middle-class status, the stronger are the resentments of some of these citizens against taxes and programs which they believe menace their precarious hold on the higher mngs of society. To some Democrats, the dilemma thus posed thi%atens to become acute. They cannot see the party abandoning its traditional and thus far successful postufe as the political ally of the disadvantaged. But, as (me of them observes, “the question here-aftm- has to be whether—in pursuing this course — the Democrats may not fmleit the support and synq>athy of the broad band of middle-class voters.” ★ * I ★ Uie conviction is deep in some party quarters that the long-range Democratic future hangs on what the party can do to woo the young and the enlarging middle class — and not at all on the latest back-stage gossip over Lyndon Johnson and Bobby Kennedy. Tiw AtPocMM Pr«n It mhim •xdulraly to At um It? nnMK “W* "»«'l loc.1 n«wTprtotodto Alt iwvnpaptr m wtll m ull AT itowt dUpMchw. Tht P^iae Pm* It delivtrtd bt sn'Sr W Oakland, GanttM, Lto-togtton, Mapunb, l inttr and Washtonaw ^ntlat IfTlli.00 a VMr> alsewhere In MIctilgan and *24.00 a year. All mall tub-STJPlIy* In advanot. ratoga hat btan paid at Aa Ad Mlehlgan. Member of ABC \ THB PONTIAC PtoSSS, tUESDAY, JAKtJARY 1967 5 Mctrei^atrolmen #o Be Hirec/; 73 on Force It W8t poiictttifiD’i In Waterford TownsMp last lUght. The Township Board autfaoN Izedf^ tot imtnedUtel steps be taken to hire five addition^ pa-trolmra, Apd IS membeis of the force were laestated awaMs for ontstaikiiagdiity. Amopg fiwse awarded .ivere Sgt. Merrille Finkle, edra received a certificatfe of bravo^ and two meritorious service citations; Detective Ridierd Fink-beiner, who was presented a citation for valor, and Detective Jerry St. Souver, who was the recipient of toavery and meritorious service citations. •k ★ ★ MAipg ' the presentafions were Supervisor Dorothy W. Olson and Police Chi^ William St^es. - After remarUBg on the ac-^ cnouifotfoB of nnckwed police complaints,,Trastee ert RifAmnd moved tor tiie additional men. Certificates of mertiorious service also were presented to Sgt. Alton Doud (four), Sgt. Raymond Wilhelm and Detective Sgt. David Putnam (three each), Patoolmen Daniel Coak-ley and Robert Reynolds (two each) and Lt. Frank Randolph, Deleave Sgt. EmeSt Mann and Patrolmen Elmer Bauer, Phillip Bowser and Joseidi Henson (one each). hired, the 'departmrat will have 27 members serving a lation of about 81,000. ‘ Stoke||i estimates it will foM about tharee months to isecure the rtc^ aid dvO Knkx Richmond and Treasurer James ScheU strmigly advocated the need for more policeman to upgrade the department and, subaequenUy, pr^e tmknship residents, with better pnttection. k * k “Crime waits for no (me,” said Richmond in pointing out the urgency for luring new men. OBUGATION TO PUBLIC . “I think we have an obligation to the public to protect them," he asserted. “If we have the funds, we should hire them." Said Schell: “Even five won’t come close to stafiing die police department adequately in comparison to the nationiil average (one policeman per 1,000 population). When the new patrolmen are amlnations. UNALLOCATED FUNDS * Last fall during budget hearings, Stokes request^ moire men.' He . was told tiam bp the would be considered when funds were available. At tte end of last year, the towu^ reaBzed |M,Mt in nnallocated funds. The salary for stmliag patrolmen is H,-074 per year. j,« ' * plete canltdence os to quality ond correctness of form. Weddin/i Annftuncemetu^ of'.'. . o Traditional Boouty O Clastic Distinction • Social Corroctnoss Pertonalixed wedding nopMnty metchei end coke boxes else evoileble 37 Year$ Serving Pontiac ESNirHiSigiiiiwSl Bargaining Pact Is Completed LANSING (AP) - The AFL-CIO American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employes said Monday it has completed a bargaining agreement with the State Mental Healfii Department covering 17 mental institutions. Unioa members will vote on ratification by Feb. 28. Hospital locals will negotiate supplemental agreements. ITiomas Fitzpatrick, federation area director, said the agreement speUs out rights of management and defines the union’s role of representing members in negcAiations on wages, hours and working con ditions. A /0/\ Closed Temporarily Because of Fire We OK evaluating our inventory— Natch for Onr Opening Announcement! We Are Open- For Paym^s and Alterathns Only, mmmpp^MauHiesi Ngwport a-Ooor HirdWR ■C- MOVING UP 'S CACHING (S' Meet the b^st car salesmen In Our Town-our customers They're talking Chrysler to all their friends. About its 383 cubic inch V-8. About the biggest brakes in the price class And about its price. Four Newports are now priced just a few dollars a month more than the most popular smaller cars, comparably equipped. Want to hear more? Then talk to us. AUmORUfD DEAtAM O CHRYSLER MOTORS COnraiUTION OAKLAND CHRYSLER.PLYMOUTH, ' " , ING... 724 Oakland Avenue Pentiec, Michigan KESSLER-HAHN CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH, INC. 6S73 Dixie Highwoy cni Xlerktfon, Micnigen McCOMB CHRYSLER.PLYMOUTH 1001 H. Mein St. . Rochciter, Michigan // THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 24, 19«7 Rio Flood Toll 150, May Go'Up to 500 RIO DE JANEIRO, BrazU (AP) — About 150 bodies have been recovered following disastrous floods around Rio de Janeiro, and one police estimate said as many as 500 may have died. With hundreds reported missing, rescue workers combed through mud and debris. No, exact casualty figures were available. ★ ★ ★ Torrential rains Sunday night fed the raging waters and set off landslides which swept one crowded bus off a highway into the swollen Paraiba River 33 miles west of Rio and buried another under mud and rodks. Fifty bodies were recovered. A c(Histruction camp in the same area was engulfed by a tributary of the Paraiba. At least 300 persons were reputed living in the area before the floods hit. ' ‘COVERED BY MUD’ Luiz Eduardo Braga, who escaped through a rear window of a bus before it was iHmied in a landslide, said: “I tried to convince the others to get out of the bus after I left It was fruitless. After I ran away from the bus the mud came down and covered it." A few miles away, Ataide de Oliveira lost his entire family as a hillside collapsed, spewing mud and rocks over his house. ★ ★ ★ 'luwentfOut through the roof with my small girl in my arms,” he said. "My wife and nfiy brothers-in-law were with FRIEND IN NEED—A small Vietnamese refugee girl, evicted from her home as the war engulfed her village, clings to an American soldier at a resettlement area on the northern outskirts of the It ing components. The compaiy said two groups of 1967 trucks are ta-volved — about 2^400 trucks which may have brake pipes which were Incwrectfy rot^ in assembly and anther 700 half-ton four-wheel-drive models ahich may have steering spindles made of an incorrect grade d steel it -k it Chevrdet said there has been no report of actual malfunction or failure in either case, but the vehicles are being recalled for inspectiem as a precautionary measure. The firm insisted that the in-ccH-rect brake pipe routing does not affect nor^ brake opera- ficoi. But malfunction in the rear sectira of the dual-brake system, it said, "could result in less effective front braking than has been designed for the vehicle." GRADE OF STEEL In the four-wheel-drive models, an outside supplier has reported to Chevrolet that some steering spindles may have been built from a grade of steel different from that specified. The auto company said: "Failure during operation, especially over rough roads, could result in loss of steering control" k it it However, it added, tests made by the supplier indicated that less than 1 per cent of the spindles shipped to Chevrolet were of the incorrect grade d steel I-Junior Editors Quiz on- TIME QUESTION: Why are there different kinds of time? ANSWER: Although flie earth is actually orbiting around the sun, the sun appears to be taking a path around the earth, rising in the east and sinking in the west. We use this apparent path of the sun to measure time. We call this solar time because apparent means visible. We can actually see the sun moving across the sky. We count our day as ended vdien we Imow the sun has crossed under the earth at midnight. . Tib wands simirie. But the sun, oMe tt keeps exact time from year to year, does not give os exact time day by day: Ae earth’s orbit b not exactly circular, making small variations in the iength of the days. Allowing for Uiis, astronomers take the average length of days over a year and work out average or mean time, which b what our clocks run on. Your particular time is reiated to your particular north-south line, or meridian. Since it woiild be very difficult for you to keep resetting your watch as you travel, four areas in the country are arranged as time zones, as you see in the drawing. Man Granted DETROIT (AP) - A 95-year-old man vdio was left penniless while hb diildren squabbled over hb $14,000 bank account was granted grocery num^ in court Monday. ★ ★ ★ Circuit Court Judge Howard Carroll (Hxlered the release of $40 a weric so that Rudol{A Rottman an^ hb daughter with whom he has lived for 24 years, Mrs. May Smitz, 50, of Warren, will be able to buy food while the case is in court.. ★ ★ ★ A suit filed two weeks ago by three of Rotbnan’s sons tied up his bank account and left him with 15 cente. Friends of Mrs. Smitz gave them money to buy food. JOINT ACCOUNTS The suit contends that Mrs! Smitz tricked her father into putting his money into joint ac-counb and that she has been taking and misusing the nfoney A bmik employe testified Monday that he hdd recommended joint accounte to Rottman and that he had full knowledge of what he was doing. ★ ★ ★ Mrs. Smitz’ attorney produced an affidavit friun the father asing to be left in peace with hb dau^ter. The attorney then ased for dismissal of the suit. The Rottnuin brothers countered by asing Probate Court to declare their father incompetent and to appoint a guardian for him. Utah Senator Hails Romney WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen Frank Moss, D-Utah, says the record of Gov. George Romney of Michigan in regard to Negroes is without blembh. k k k Moss made this comment Sunday night in a televised discussion of the relationship of the Mormon church to Negroes. ★ ★ ★ The leadership of the church has made it very clear. Moss said, that it believes in qvil righb and equal righb for all regardless of race, color w religion. Burning Permits LANSING (AP) - The Department of Conservation and township officials may issue burning permits, but a person wishing to bum on toest or grassl^s must meet the re-quiremenb of both, Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley ruled Moirii^r Dr. Ralfdi MacMuUan, director of the d^artment, had asked for clarification. Loyalty Plans Face National Eradication WASHINGTON (AP) In academic circles the Supreme Court’s junking of New York State’s teacher loyalty program will be considered a ringing declaration of academic freedom. Monday’s deebion undoubtedly will ring bells in IfiJo-al circles across the land. But so complete was then^^ court’s dbmembering of the program known as the Feinberg law it b questionable if any loyalty program of similar proportions anywhere in the country can now pass high court muster. New York State, said Justice William J. Brennan Jr. in the majority opinion, undoubtedly has a legitimate interest in protecting ib education system from subversion. FUNDAMENTAL UBERTTES’ But, he said. New York — and by inqilication all states — cannot carry out that purpose at the expense of fundamental personal liberties “when the end can be more narrowly achieved.” Nowhere did Brennan suggest how states could do thb and not violate First Amendmoit rights of freedom of assoebtion and freedom of belief. Thus states may find it wholly impossible to balance the Constitution with their interests in erecting a loyalty program for state employes. 'Ihey may never be able, as Justice Tom C. Clark said in dbsent, to “put the pieces together again." Maryland’s loyalty oath b still in the high court hopper and some clue may be forthcoming when the justices act later thb term. k k k In Maryland applicanb for state government jobs and candidates for public office must swear they are not attenqiting to overthrow the state ^von-ment “by force or vblence." Prospeeb for continuance of the Maryland program are now questionable. Monday’s 54 decision carries forward the Supreme Court trend of recent years of sb^ ping down state loyalty oaflis and state subversive investigations. DETROIT (AP)-Plans for a nationwide general strike by Negroes in support of Congressman Adam Claytoi Powell moved along today amid predictions by some Detroit Negro leaders that it would fail. Supporters expected an appearance by comedian Dick Gregory here tonight to boost plans for the Feb. 13 strike calling for Negroes to stay home from work, skip school and boycott stores. k k k Gregory, a militant dvil righb sp^esman, has been n^ed honorary chairman of the sponsoring United Strike (fommittee in Support of Powell. Powell, a Democrat who rep-resenb the Harlem cUsfrict of New York City, has been refused his seat in the U.S. House Auto Buildup Is Continuing DETROIT (AP) —A continuing buildup in new car inventories, despite production cutbacks, was reported Monday by the trade publication Automotive News. ^ It added that U.S. manufacturers, cttifronted with bgging sales and growing invoitories, “may be expected ttf teke another hard look at productiem programs with an eye to further cutbacks in the near future.” Curtailmenb already in force have pared output leveb to the lowest point in three years. Last week’s productiem was estimated at 165,082 passenger cars, cexnpared with 165,898 the previous week, and 199,081 in the same week a year ago. Last year was the industiy’s second best in production and sales. To last Saturday, 1967 U S. passenger car production totaled 476,^, compared with 586,-044 in the same qmn of 1966, and inventories rose an estimated 3.3 per cent in the first 15 days of the month. Automotive News estimated new car inventories at 1,351,100 Jan. 15, compared with 1,308,-519 at the start of the month. New cars in dealer hands at mid-memth reis-esented a 58-day supply, against a 45-day supjily on h^ a year ago on Jan. 15. DETROIT (AP) - Frederic G. Donner, chairman (tf General Motors Corp., yesterday predicted that “hard effective bargaining" would marie fob year’s contract negotiations between the United Auto Woikers Union and the Big Three auto makm. “Free ccfiective bargaining in our industry has dways beoj Sen. Fulbright Peace Plan Shocks Barry NEW YORK (AP) - Former Sen. Barry Goldwater says he was “shocked” by Sen. J. W, Fulbri^it’s pbn to end the Vietnam war by negofiations. Goldwater, referring to the ideas expressed by the Arkansas Democrat in Ms new book, “Arrogance of Power,” termed Fulbright’s plan “fooUshness" that ought to be halted “before people sbrt bking it seriously." ‘ ^ “I was shocked to see the chairman of our (Sjenate) Foreign Policy Committee blk about ending the war with negotiations," Goldwater''told a meeting of the Air Ftmce Association M(mday. •^Anyone who’s- been there recent knows thoo’s no chance of that. We’re not far enough along the military road in that'war to be dble to bring the enemy to the conference bbie," he said. Goldwater was making his first speech since returning from Vietnam. IN AGREEMENT President Johnson’s policy on the war is one that “I think all of us can agree with for the most part, if not. entirely,” he said. The Arizona Republican, defeated by Johnson in the 1964 election, said of foe President’s poiicy: “He’s doing just what I said I would do.” “We must extend and expand our bombing in foe North,” said Goldwater, specifying that targets in foe Huioi area should be bombed. “You’ve got to forget about thb civilian stuff," said Gold-water. “Whenever you drop bombs, you’re going to Mt civii-ians. It’s foolbh to pretend you’re not.” “i cqught hell when I said thb foe last time,” Goldwater continued, “but I still think that foe President must allow commanders in foe field to make their own judgmenb of what should be bomb^.” of Representatives pending an investigation of his alleged misuse of congressional fun^. Congressmen also voted to oust Powell as chairman of foe powerful House Education and Labor Committee. • DISAGREEMENT Powell supporters charge he was so treat^ because he b a Negro. Strike supporters predicted that 50 to 70 per cept of Detroit’s Negro population — more than 500,000 ^ would join foe boycott. But other Negro leaders disagreed. k k k “Less than 1 per cent will participate,” said the Rev. Fulton 0. Bradley, pastor of Tabernacle Baptist Church. “I am opposed to it. We don’t yet know everytiiing that’s involved in foe Powell case. “Some feel that there are racial undertones to Mr. Powell’s removal,” he added, “but tMs is a myth being perpetrated by the Powell sympathizers.” QUESTTONS IDEA Nelson Jack Edwards, a vice president, of the Detrrit branch of foe National As«Kiation to the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) and a member of foe United Auto Workers union’s executive board, said: “I question foe strike idea. I don’t think a citizen strike would have sufficient impact on Qingress to make it do what it would not ordinarily do anyway.” ★ ★ ★ But foe Rev. Albert B. Cleage Jr., a member of foe strike steering imnunittee and pastor of Central United Churqh of Christ, sUid the response from Negro leaders he has contacted has been encouraging. “We’ve found very few who refuse to participate,” he, said. “We are contacting biock clubs,'' little civic groups by mail and in person. Our committee is growing every day and now measures in the hundreds.” SUPPORT IN SERMONS The Rev. Mr. Cleage said foe day before foe proposed strike — Feb. 12 — has been desipated “Keep foe Faith Sunday.” He said ministers would be Eisked to support foe strike in sermons. He added that civil rights leaders hav^ been asked to take part in the boycott in such cities as New York, PhiladelpMa, Boston, San Francisco, and CM-cago. Wife Asks Exam in Man's Death MANISTEE (AP)-Mrs. Bfflie Day, 29, of Brethren demanded examination Monday at her arraignment on an open charge of murder in foe sboottaig deafo of her husband, Dorence Day, 52. Mrs. Day, held without bond, was arrested Saturday. Her husband died of a rifle bid-let wound, police said. have no illusions that this year’s negotiations will be any different,’’ Donner said in a qieecfa prepared for delivery befim foe Economic dub of Detroit. Decline in Waterford Fewer building permits were granted in Watford TownsMp in 1966 than in eadi of the preceding two years,, it was dis* closed last night ' Bargaining to Be Hard, Donner Says hard collective bargaining. I “But I am cmndnced," Donner added, “that agreements forged oat respoosflde free (Kdlective bargain^ between the two parties — who most live with and administer these agreements — offer our best hope for sound and enduring labor-management relations.” Current three-year contracts between* foe B i g Three auto makers — GM, Ford and Chrysler — and the United Auto Workers Union run out S^. 5. New ccmtract bargaining will begin a couple of months ahead it k k “A great source of strength as we prepare to negotiate pew agreements tMs year,” Donner said., “is the recognitiim on both sides of the bargaining table that continued advance in national iM-oductivity is esswitial to industrial progress. INNOVATIONS “The pressures of ridng costs for labor and many of the basic materials used by our industry are making ... innova-tiMis for improved efficiency and productivity an absolute necessity.” Growing world demand for motor vehicles, Donner said. Is expected to b<>ost annnal industry sales from a 1966 levd of 23 millimi units to near 32 million by 1975. This would, he continued, duplicate in foe next 10 years all the growth wMch foe industry experienced in its first 65 years. k k k While declaring “our current vriiictos are foe safest in history,” foe GM chairman said that “a significant advance in foe level of traffic safety in the United States will also require greatly expanded effmto to improve both drivers and their environment.” BASIC AGREEME GM “agrees with the basic objectives of foe 23 iMX>posed federal veMde safety standards prc^xjsed to 1968 model cars,” Donner said, but added he was cmifldent foe government’s final list to be announced J a n. 32 “will reflect an understanding of the realities of our industry in both foe migineering mid productive areas." All of foe Big Three have said they caimot meet in 1968 models all foe proposed safety standards, that additiimal lead time is needed to design changing and tooling. Some 1,211' buihting pemtits wme iniMd last year, according to an annual nib-mitted to foe^ThwnsMp board. In CM^aiiMiC 1,177 pomlts were apytoved In 1161’s lec-wd-ietting year yfoea the estimated cost of new construction, alterations and adcBtioiis totaled $U,Q31,I37. fri 1964, a total -800 addition to tiie Fe^ral department store on Dixie Hijfoway. Other permits issued last year by the building department conasted of 1,491 electrical, 1,446 beating, 1,029 jdumb-Mg, three sidewalk and two soil removing. k k k Altogether, 5,187 permits were granted. The department reedved 8,489 calls to make inspections. * k k k Also last year, 15 homes were condenmed and 25 buildings were demolished in foe town-sMp. Michigan Soldief Killed in Action WASHINGTON (AP) - The Defense Department Monday announced that Army Staff Sgt. BUly S. Davis, husband of Mrs. Eleanor M. Davis of PMcon-ning, Mich., has been killed in action in Vietnam. SPECIAL TREAT—Visitors to Oklahoma City’s Uncoln Park Zoo got a special treat Su^y vriien Frieda showed ho* latest offspring, a female that writhed io at about " , AP WMWlMt 150 pounds and stands 6 feet tall It’s Frieda’s second offspring at the zoo. A nmto, bom in 1965, now lives in Tbpeka, Kan. I X" r ■. ■ -I'* hi t THE PONTIAC **»*.-'» ' X *'*«*»'i ipifnAc .FB^sgfTuesday, January n, uer PwiHic Pms PMit DEADUNE APPROACHES—Setting up a guideline so Hiat (be Eomeo High School yearbook, the Juliet, will go to press on time are (frinn left) business manager Sharon Carleton of 58019 VanOyke and editor Chris Siristoff of ISteO 28 Mile, both of Washington Township. Wherefore Art Thou, Romeo's By EDD CHATFIELD The Romeo High School yearbook, the Juliet, will arrive in late May, or early June. Members of the staff are now editing photos and advertisements. More flian 458 sobscriptions have been sold. The Juliet will consist of 128 pages of photographs and local advertising. This year it will be covered in dark brown. Rochester Sets By KARIN HEADLEE Dancing under dimmed lights to the music of the Midnight Riders will be couples at the Rochester High School juniw prom, “A Haw»ening.’’ This Suixlay—best affair will be held Jan. 28 from 8:30-11:30 p.m. RHS students will take exams today, tomorrow, and Thursday on a half-day schedule. Friday will be a free day for students. Teachers will finish correcting exams and aver-ageing grades. The new semester will begin Mtmday. ★ ★ ★ Rochester’s Girls’ Athletic Association will play basketball Jan. 27. VARSITY PLAYERS Among the Varsity players are Jackie Bird, Pam Olin, Lisa Bird, Judy HiU. i'>"da Stachel and Judy Keefer. Otihers are Barb Shoemaker, Val Harden, Adelhaide Munchiando, Latrisha Littlejohn, Penny Hames, Pat Allured, Sharon Barkham and Jenny Baldwin. RHS monogrammed sweaters which were sold at the Student Council-sponsored sale, were distributed last week. In one month, 1,047 students traveled through the Rochester High Sdiool Ubrary. This number has doubled over last year. 8,719 BOOKS Of the 8,719 books in the library, 339 were added at a cost of $1,356. This is the approximate cost of going to. Enrope for rix weeks. With these added bo^, atadents can fulfill their love dt adventare, knowMIge, nndtravd. The senior play, “The Mad Woman of Chaillot,” has been '■ cast.. „„ ' ♦ A Written by the Froich author Jean Giraudoux, it deals with a plot to exterminate all ;tbe evil men in the world. ?, SKI CLUB 'Fhei Ski Club, under the di-recbon CMord Lilly, ' every Monday and Weiiesday at Mount Holly from 3-8 p.m. Bus transportation is available. * * A: Yearbook pictures of class emincilo and their spoiuon were taken this week. »' , ■ ■ - ■■ ■/ The staff is now under the direction of Earnest Maule, a business teacher, and Richard Hill, a creative writing teacher STAFF MEMBERS Staff membm-s number 13, six business managers and seven editors.: Business managers are Cindy Backenstose, Sharon Carlton, Mary Ann Page, Sherri F'oss, Sue May and Barbara Buzzell. Editors are Chris Christoff, Donna Quinn, Debbe CSiubb, L.inda Johnson, Jim Patti, Stanley Long and Sue Brasko. ★ W ★ The bjusiness managers will distribute^the Juliet. CHECKING COPY Editors are now in the process of checking copy and making layouts. ★ ★ ★ The Juliet is to be sent to the publisher in three secticms. The deadline fw the first was in Movembm', the second in January and the last in March. ★ ★ ★ Members of the staff do not have a scheduled time to meet. Meetings are called whenever necessary to discuss problems and othet business. Store Offers Design Prize at Cranbrook By BIOMIID BOSC^ The current news at Cranbrook School is in the field of art. Saks Fifth Avenue, a prmn-inent Detroit store, has tiered a prize of approximately $300 to the student who submits the most acceptable design for a mural in the new Saks Fifth Avenue store in Troy. The contest is divided into one category for present students and one for alumni. The mural will be executed by a profes-skmal artist. A recent aljiow at ilw Cnm-brook iDititnie of Art featured tte dwks M II MichigUB eer-aunists, in additiM to fee con-tiBuing show of Near-Eastern auid (Mental art Perhaps of, more interest was the modem art show. This contained a number of canvasses ixt oil and watercolors, including am “op" painting, a surrealistic oil tided “The Headless Horse Who Wants to Jump’’ by Yasuo Kuniyodii, and a cdlorful work by liiis Guglielmi called: “Ele-meids of a Street.’’ "Project ’67” was a special Section of this show. It contained works which onployed unusual techniques, some involved pamted “scu^ture” in plaster and wood, and even neon li^ts. ARnSHC PUMON This demonstrated a fusion of painting and sculpture into one art form. Of particular note were several works by Hsrland Sqod-S^ass, e^ially a large, flashing neon pole/^ called “$uiter P Model 879;’’ , Youth 5aliite;i Two Age Groups Are Eligible to Compete in Cdgers By JUDY FRANCIS ^ Even though baskedmll ^m-petition is focused mainly on boys, tile girls at Watcrfjwd Ket- t^ing High School are begteH ning to test their talent on the courts. . ; ball team for Kettering tids year are Patty Atkins, Debbie Baer; Sally Ballard, Sue Playing on the girls’ basket- Barling, Sharon Brill, Sue Ctel- ByCHRBSBLAKENEY Pontiac Central students are again siding in thdr oitries to the Salute to Youtii Contest sponged by the Pontiac Citizens’ Committee on Youth. This year’s program will be at Pontiac N(^em on A|Kil i from 7,to 8 P-tn. Two age groqai are eligible for competition -> 14- to IS-year elite and 16- to 18-year-idds. There aire It categMfeS: art and handiwork, ereative writing, business lidtiative, leadership, traffic safety, mask, scholarship, speech and athletics. Students may sulmut entries in two areas but may offiy be a winner in (»e. For each application the student must include the names and address of two peiqHe who know of his accompli^ents in that field. Entries must be received by Fd). 28. This year’s clothing drive was a huge success. The student body contributed 3,300 pounds of clottiing. These clothes are put to use in the Pontiac sdioiH system. The homeroom, taming in the largest amoniit of clothing was 327. This homeroom, sponsored by vocal music t^her Jnditii Wade, tamed in a total of 1,080 pounds! Three hundred Central s t u-dents attended the first of five ys they will see at Meadkvw Brook Theatre. The students were delighted with “The Caucasian Chalk Circle." A representative from an area radio station came to Central last Friday to listen to the A Cappella CSloir, Senior Boys’ Ensemble and junior Girls’ Ensemble. He has been visiting outstanding musical departments throi^out the Detrrit area. The A Cai^Ua Choir will perform tomwrow nig^ for the Chamber of (>onuneroe. Final exams will be ova* tomorrow and students will Mijoy a four-day holiday before returning to school Monday for tile beginning of the new semester. tins, Ctonnie Davis, Vonnie Frack and Cathy Frayer. Others are Pam (todoshian, Karen Godschalk, Diane GbL ick, Lynn Hammuid, Lana Huebei, Sally Himter, Missy McGrath, Sandy Tostie, Sue Rose, Rosemary Smiley and Taffy Wilson. Coach for this year’s team is Phyllis Huerstel, English teadi-er. Games are played Fridays after school, with upcoming games matching Kettering with Lake Orion, Pontiac Central, Rochester and Pontiac Northern'. Games already played have left a record of two wins and two losses for WKHS girls. Setting a whole new trend at Kettering this year wfll be the Student Council’s, “Basket Ball.’’ Tomorrow night’s activity will be held in the gym from 8 to 11. All profits from this activity will go toward the School to ’School Drive. This activity was created with the idea of honoring the basketball team and to give the students another special dance to remember. An election was held to choose a girl to reign over thi dance as “Miss Basketball.’’ Voting was done by secret ballot so Miss Basketball’s identity will be kept secret.until the evening of the dance. The Waterford Kettering band will present a winter band concert Saturday at 8:15 p.m. in the gym. Featured in the concert will be Tom Reinhart and Dan Johns as cornet soloists. Hie band will also play light and traditional marches. Directing the concert will be George Fetter. Recentiy, probteais from stndcats’ lack of good citizensh^, lack of uaity, poor attitudes and s|drit were discussed. Discussions were held in council, joint class bbard meetings, homerooms and finally in an all-school assembly last Tuesday. Kent Aeschliman, cbuncil president, presided over the assembly, bringing out the problems facing Kettering. A majority of solutions amounted to the fact that self-discipline, such as that used by Kettering students before, is the foundation to solving some of these problems. Jan. 28 interested students will attend a synchronized swimming program in Lansing. Seniors Get Board Okay iorD.C.Trip By KATHY KOUTJIAN North Farmington seniors are exultant, and now are nthusi-astically awaiting Easter vacation. For the first time in recent years Farmington’s school board has Mproved an out-of-state trip seniOTS. Washington, D.C., is our destination. Total cost will be paid in small deposits every two weeks. Train fare, food, and living accommodations an inclined in the price. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Wallis are ^ among the trip’s several chaperons.' March 30 is our departure date from Detroit, and we will return April 3. Senior Darby McGlinnen is the 1967 recdver of the Dau^tera of the A m e r i canJtevolutioD (DAR)"Award. This past week’s actirities •eemed to be geared toward leidors. Several took part ia tile Senlw Seigh Ride Satiir-day. Rice's Radio Club Sets Contact Goals By JOHNCRUITT The Radio. Club at Brother Rice^ High School ^pent the first half of the school ydair laying a solid foundation. 'A ■ ★ ★ . ' It has tiius far contacted 2t states and 28 countries' in fiu-five, Africa and South Ammica The goal la to caataet al 18 af flm stntea aad ao maay foreign coantoies as possible. Field Day hps been tentatively set for May 5. There are plans idr new events and wooden ltonners,'and hopes are hi^ lor more suitaUa weather this year than last. - / EXPERT ADVICE-Ralph Windeler of 5601 Hatchery, Waterford Kettering High School basketball player, gives a few pointers to members of toe school’s girls’ basketball team, Karen Godschalk (left) of 3997 Dill and Pontiac Proii Photo Rosemary Smiley of 2931 Silverstone. AD are residents of Waterford Township. Coaching this year’s team Is Phyllis Huerstel, English teacher. Semiformal on Jan. 27 Annual Dance Slated at Marian High By PATRICIA POUMEAR Marian’s aimual AU-SdiooI Board dance will be held Jan. 27,8:30-12:30 p.m. FTatoing li^ts, sUver dlsca, and bright coltws WiU adorn toe transformed gym. This semiforntal is open to sophomores and upperclassmen. Jimior Cathleen Dolqn, swial commissioner, is general diair-man, and I^tricia Mahmiey, faculty moderator. ik -A ★ Each class is re^nsiUe for (me aspect of iweparation. ARRANGEMENTS Senitff Barbara Beck is arrangements chairman. This in-riudes chaperones, tickets, souvenir booklets, checknmns and band. Juniors,, under OmlrmBn Jean SbMifliiiessy, are respour stole for decsnttoM. They will combine the traditional look wttii the “mod” in keeping with the title, "Carnaby Chaos.” Anne Marie Wise, Kathleen Digneit, Pamela Buening, SaDy Neumhier, and Cynthia Hodde wiU assist wito decorations. Maureoi Maher, sophomore, is head of the refreshifrento. it -k ir Nine freshmen ,c-gram fM- those members who wUl be going almoad this summer. A lecture or a motion picture on Florence wiD be shown soon, in lureparation for the coming tr^. Girls' Athletfo Association (GAA) are planning a soo-hop for'after toe wring vacation. Possible dates are April 8 or 15. Eighty-six of toe 140 Marian High S^ool Seniors who took the Michigan Compejtitive Sctool-arship Examinatim last November qualified for initial conrider-ati(« f(xr a state s(tiiolandiip. Ap^teants who are d^le devaiisfrate On dUllty anil deelire to (»mplete a college worse or attobk • degree. They most also shew flmmctal need. Sttiutiartitip ^ awards were granted. to 5,706 students last siH-ing. Winners are granted up to the maixmum of $800 a year. Residual awards are granted to studenta who presriitly have no financial need, but qualify for further consideration if a sipifi-rant financial change arises at home. Exams Near at Kingswood By CINDY GRISSOM Next week, Kingswood students will face the first poup of exams — midterms. The examii are two-hour tests emphasizing creative thinking rather than memorized answers. The responsibility for an or-derity procedure is shared with toe students throup the Exam Procedure Committee. The girls will have Friday off, the beginning of a long weekend. Boarders w||l return home or, if “home" is too far away, wiU visit a day-student. Classes resume on Monday. St. Lawrence Dance Has Heartfelt Theme By JAMES PAKLEDINAZ The junior class (rf St. Lawrence High School will welcome February and St. Valentine’s Day in style Thursday at a dance from 7 to 11 p. m. In tune with the time of the year, toe theme is “Here’s (Xir Heart.’’ Entertainment will be provided in taste and tune by toe Disciples (rf Sound, a local band. The dance is open to St. Lawrence students and their pests. k k k The next big event on the school agenda, though not so carefree, is semester exams. Starting yesterday, they wiU continue through Wednesday. COLLEGE STYLE A new poUcy wiU be foDowed this year wito exams being conduct^ “college-style.?* That is, studmitg need only attend (he classes that they have exams in. Otherwise they may do vrimt they please. The end of tbl semester is Jan. 30 and because this, Tbursday and Friday of this week WiU be free days. ★ k ■ kl- The Mustangs have another bye W Tuesday but wiU ipvet tte Muskrats (rf M(kint (Deifiens St. Louis on Friday. k k k The junior, varsity pme will start at 7 p. m. and toere will be n dance following the game wito entertainment provided by toe Disciples Of Sound. The yearbook staff will have meetings on Wednesday and Saturday. Junior Prom Dance Theme Idea Will Win Free Ticket By SUSAN OWEN Utica Hip School’s junior class chairmen and (rfficers met wito John Eichorn, faculty sponsor, to diseuss tentative plans for junior prom activities. Five pr(Hn committees, decorations, band, publicity, food and favors, selected at toe meeting, have begun preparations. As yet the theme hasn’t been chosen for the dance. Entries may stiU be submitted to toe officers. The person wito the vrinning entry will be awarded a free prom ticket. Presently, Feb. 11 is toe date set for this year’s J-Hop. Membership in the Ski (Dub is still open. Dues are accepted in the cafeteria between noon and 12:30 daily. The dub plans to make seven more trips this season including a trip to Boyne Mountain. Semester exams are scheduled for Jan. 24 and 25. The UHS Writen Onb consists of 12 mmnbers itiie want to write and read their way to a better understanding (rf Uterature. They plan to take a field trip to toe “Poison Apple” on Jefferson, in hope of hearing poetry read. Utica’s debating team earned some victories this season. In the StaTK^I^ague, Utica’s affirmatives, Doreen Abraham, junior; Cyndy Patterson, junior; and negatives Karyn Shim-kus, senior; and Gay Chrostek, senior, Were successful in dp-feating Romulus. Utica sccM-ed better in the lakeside League with three vic-lories. Mount (Demens was defeated by our negatives, WiUiam Martin, junior, and GaU PMl-lips, senior. Rpseville was also defeated by our negatives Gail PhiUips, senior, and Leonard Scensny, senior, and our affirmatives, Doreen Abraham and (3yndy Patterson. Ronald Wilde, debating coach, feels the class shows great pibmise for the second semestw and h(^>es to take honors in toe forensics finals. ’ PtMIM PrMt CM* HEART FVN--Publicizing St. Lawrence School’s Valentine dance, “Here’s Our Hehrt,” are Nand Dorris of 4209 Utica, Sterling Township, and Norman Zadczynski of 7231 Ryburn, Shelby Township. Ibe dance wttl be held , Tbursday from 7-11 p.'m. Entertainment will be prov^ * by the Disciples of Sound, a toeal baaiL « - k , ;«, ' " " A. . 'A -- ■ B-I WASHINGTON (AP) ~ Here hi a partiid text of President Johnson’s budget meuage to Congress today: This budget fer fiscal year 1968 refltets three basic considerations: —In Vietnam, as throughout the ebrki, we seek peace but will iBwide all the resources aeed^ to combat aggression. * ★ ★ —In our urgeit domestic i»o-grams, we wiU continue to press ahead, at a controlled and reasoned pace. —In oar domestic economy, we seek to achieve a seventh year of uninterrupted growth, adopting the tiscal measures needed to finance our expenditures responsibly, permit lower interest rates, and achieve a jnare balanced economy. OfiUGATTONS In the year ahead, defense expenditures will continue to rise as we carry out our obi tions in Vietnam. After a rigorous review of civilian programs and a. sharp paring of spending requests, a mi^est increase in (kanestic expend! hires will be required as we {Hess forward to meet our obligations at home. Under these circumstances, I am pn^)osing a temporary 6 per cent surcharge on b<^ corporate and ind^ual inccnne taxes. I also ask that individuals in the lower immme brackets be exempt from the surcharge. The tax should remain in effect for two years, or for such period as may be warranted by our unur Bual expenditures in Vietnam. wiU not hesitate to recommend an earlier eqtiration date, how-evo-, if tile fiscal requirements of our commitmoits in Vietnam pennit such action. In additfon I recommend legislatint to provide a further acceleratim of certain corporate tax payments. ★ ★ ★ With these new measures, and the expenditures I am proposing, the federal bud^t deficit, as measured in the natimial income accounts, will be $2.1 billion in fiscal year 1968, compared to $3.8 billion in fiscal year 1967. The nathmal income accountis budget is the measure developed and used for over three decades by economists and fis cal experts to judge the impact of the federal budget on the flow of inc(nne and |»i^uction in the economy. FEATURiiS Unlike the more traditional administrative budget, the national incxane budget: —Includes the Uurge expenditures and receipts of the f^eral government’s trust funds, but —Excludes federal loans and reccl^ from the sale of loans, since these are not recmiied as income or expoiditures in the accounts of business firms or individuals. ★ ★ ♦ I am emidiasizing the national Income accounts as a measure of federal fiscal activity because the traditional administrative budget is becoming an increasingly 1ms cmnplete and less reliaUe measure of the govmimmit’s activities and foeir economic impact. For example, trust fund-financed actixdties not reflected in the administrative budget, now approximate one-third of that budget. More specifically, the fiscal year 1968 administrative Imc^et excludes $48.1 billion of trust fund receipts and $44.5 billion of trust fund expenditures. JEOPARDIZED The ecommiy, the budget, and tiie aims of our society would be jeopardized l^ either a larger tax increase or by large slashes in military or civilian programs. I have reviewed tiiese pn^prams carefully. Waste and nqnessenttals have been cut out. Reducttons w postponements have bem made vdierever possible. 1%e bicreases that are pr(qitMed have been carefully selected on the basis of urgent national requirements. Hie Congress throu^ the ap-IHTc^lMiations process, will, of course^ sifoject these programs to a seanAing examination. I welcome that examination. But It is my Judgment that major cuts cannot be made without serious impairment to vital national objectives — in defense, In education, in health, in the rebuilding of our cities, and in the attack on poverty. " * ★ ★ Federal openditures, as measured hi the national income accoimts, will rise from $lSi.i billion in fiscal year 1967 to IUI.2 billion in 1968. That incrieaire is composed of four major demmts: billion for Vietiiam and ries in private indutery; and $2.6 billion for all otii^ programs Of the federal govou-mmt. SEES REFLECTHm Federal revemies will Increase more ra]tidly than ex- (he new Social Seoiritif legisla-id^oyments; in the event these tfon I am proposing; discussknis prove unsuccessful, —$1 bti^ for flie cost of mil- we will reconsider our d^oy itary md civilian pay increases, ment decision, to provide for to keep ahremti « rising sala-iactions that may be requhed at that time, iqmroximate^ $375-miDion has included in tiie 1968 budget for the production (rf Nike-X for such purposes as defense of our ofiensive weapon systems. —Maintain our decisive strategic superimdty by initiating ^itures, ^ ta procumn^t of the advance fiscal year 1967 to $167.1 billion pogeWon submarine-launched other national defense outlays; —$6^2 bilUm in ben^ts under file federal government’s Social fiecurity mid otiier trust funds, two thirds of which resuMs from m 1968, reflescQng both the grovrih in the ecoimmy and the effect of the tax legislation I am recommending. The fedmd deficit, as measured in the national inomie accounts will, foere-forie, decline between 1967 and 1968 from $3.8 billion to $2.1 billion. While the national income accounts budget is the most ap propriate measure of the overall economic impact of the federal budget, a discussion of individual federal programs is best carried out in terms of the more conventional administrative budget and the various federal trust funds. ★ ★ ★ Administrative budget expenditures will amount to $126.7 Inllion in 1967 and $135.0 billion in 1968. In these 2 years, revenues in the administrative budget are estimated to.,rise from $117.0 billim to $126.9 billion. As a result, the budget deficit will fall fnnn $9.7 billion in the current fiscal year to $8.1 billion in 1968. Administrative budget expenditures in fiscal year 1967 are $13.9 billion higher than the expenditures I estimated in my budget message a year ago. Nine billion six-hundred million dollars of the increase is ac-csiunted fw by the enlarged military i«t)gram. Another $3 billion r^ts from the impact of tight money rni the federal budget, and $1.3 billion from expenditure reestimates, as workloads increased in such programs as public assistance, Medicare, and the postal service. ON Reductions Potential further expenditures of $2.6 billion, from congressional additions to my 1967 author ization and ap]Ht>iHiation recommendations, were roughly offset by the budget reductions I institute,last fall. Of the $3 billion expenditure reductions, $2.6 billion will Occur in administrative budiiet programs and about $0.4 billion in the trust funds. fo 1968, defense outlays will account for $75.5 billion, ot 56 per cent of the total budget. Of the remaining expenditures, some $29.4 billim, w 22 per cent, are spent on programs under adiidi payments are fixed by law or are otherwise uncontrollable — interest on the public debt, veterans compensation and pensions, public assistance, federal general revenue conW-bution to Medicare, and the like. Another $15.3 billion or 11 per cent will be spent in 1968 to complete contrwris or obliga^ tiOns entered into in |x1or years — the purchase of mort^ges under earlier commitments, the completion of construction begun in 1966 or 1967, and so forth. ★ ★ ★ The^ remaining $14.9 billion, or 11 p^ cent of the budget, may be consMered as “cmitrollable” expenditures in 1968.- And even these include such indispensable programs as law enfix-cement, the collection of taxes and customs, the upkeep our national parks, and the operation of the nation’s air navigation facilities. EXPENDITURES Tlte highlights of tiie proposed government program for 1968 follow: Natioi^I Defense — Expenditures n^ssary to support military operations in Southeast Asia wifts'total $21.9 billion in 1968, about three-tenths of budget expenditures fm* national defense. A year ago, we were in the midst of a rapid buildup of bur forces in Vietnam. Rather than submit a budget to the Congress based on highly uncertain estimates, I requested funds sufficient to finance the conflict through fiscal year 1967. ^ the present time, the situation is different. While unforeseen events can upset the most, careful estimate, we are in a much better position to determine our future requirements in Vietnam. As a ccmsequence, my 1968 budget provides for those re^ quirements on a continuing basis, including the possibility of an extension of combat beyond the end of the fiscal year. ★ ★ ★ In 1968, we will: —Continue intensive development of Nike-X but take no action now to deploy an Anti-ballistic Missile d^aise; initiate discussions with tire Soviet Union on the limitation of ABM missile, improving our jnesent strat^c missiles, and further safeguarding our capacity to direct our forces in the evoit trf attack... WORLD AFFAIRS Based on a thorough review of our economic assistance objectives and iwograms, I will rec onunend new legislation and specific actions to: —Require more effective self-help measures by recipient countries as a conditten for U.S. aid; -i-Increase tiie amount of assistance for the key sectors of agriculture, health, and education; ★ ★ ★ —Su^iort regional arrange-mente and make greater use of multilateral channels through i^ch other nations cooperatively share the costs of ecli-nomic development; --Encourage greater participation by private enterprise in the development process; ad concentrate bur aid in those countries where successful do-vel(^ment is most probable. SPACE RESEARCH This budget provides for the initiation of an effective f(dlow on to the manned lunar landing We will explore the moon. We will learn to live in space fw months at a time. Our astronauts will conduct scientific and engineering experiments in space to enhance man’s mastery of that environment. The Surveyor and Orltiter Action must be taken now to -rReduce water pftilutkm Jn our lakes, riven, and estuaries —Insure an adequate tnQiply of pure water. V ' jk ★ Preseriie scoiic areas ir-r^laceaUe natural beauty -scenic rivers, the redw^s, north cascades in the state of Wadtingtim, and the- historic Potomac Valley, ^ —Fwestall the recalation of land prires in the acquisitfon of federal lands for recreational use. DESALTING PUNT I also recMnmoid legislaticm to enable the Department foe Interipr to participate with the Metropditan Water District of Southern California ^ind foe Atomic Energy CcNnmission in developing and ronstnictiitg large prototype power and desalting plant. We are currently considering foe construction of a prototype dvil supersonic traniqxirt. The allowanre for contingendes is adequate to cover foe po costs of this effort, should an affirmative decision be made to iwoceed. ★ ★ ★ l^iedal emifoasls wiU be placed on imfX’oved management and acquisition of modern facilities and equipment to increase the efficiency d our pos tal system, one of the largest business operations in foe world. To provide improvd services, to cover proposed pay increases for postal workers aiHl largely offset foe renpaining postal deficit, a postal rate in-cre^e is both necessary and desirable. As required’by law, I am proposing such an increase. The budget reflects pOO milliffli in postal revenues from this source. *nbon, have demonstrated dramatically the value of unmanned spacecraft in investigating other objects in the solar system. Accordingly, we are proceeding with the devdopment of the Voyager system for an unmanned landing on Mars in 1973. We will also continue other unmanned investigations nearer the earth. ★ ★ ★ In recant years, foe National Aeronautics and Space Adminis-tratiwi and the Atomic Energy Commission have jointly undertaken the development of nuclear rocket propulsion technology. We are now considering whether that effort should be expanded to the development of the rocket Itself. The overall budget totals allow for the possibility of proceeding if an affirmative decision is reached AGRICULTURE I have directed the Secretary of A^culture to take the lead in helping rural people achieve a quality of living comparable to other segments of our popula-timi. TV) this end, foe Department of Agriculture will wmk with state and federal agencies and with local groups to help rural communities make the best use of all existing governmental programs. In addition, legislation is needed to encourage establishment of pilot multi-county development districts. TV) assure modern and efficient electric and telephone services for rural people, legislation should be enacted promptly to provide new sources of private financing for rural electrification administration borrowers, while minimizing federal outlays. needed and will be jxbpDsed to: -Extend ifCedicare to db-ahled worii«rs. T-Eipaod eliUd health Krv; ioes^ bicltidiiig dental care. Reduce tiie menace of air pollution which is a threat to ttw health and safety of our cit-Izens. . lABOR-ilANPOWER % budget iwoposala prov^ increasM (^[ipcH^nity for the disadvantaged to paiticipate hi: and contribute inductively to our expanding economy. ■I am recommending funds for 280,000 trainees tmder the Manpower Development and Training Act, an increase of 39,-000 over the current year. ; W ★ " ★ -Ingrams under that act and (hose of the United States Bmidoyment Service will continue to emiriusize serving the severely disadvantaged. In addition, under pibgrams financed by the Office of Economic Op^rtunity, 3K,000 jobs and training will be made available for youths in foe Neighborhood Youth Ooops. All estimated $328 million will be provided for sd wm^ training programs, primarily for adults, with special «ni^sis on reaching the hardcore unemployed and underemployed in slum areas. HOUSING-CDMMUNITT TTie recently enacted program of rent su^ilements is an essoi-tial element in helping the needy obtap adequate houshig facilities and increasing ^ir IN AND OUT — This chart, based (m one ix-epared by the Bureau of the Budget, depicts where our dollars come from, and AWWIlWlWM where they go, to run the United States government 101* the fiscal year 1968, starting next July 1. projects, in photographing foe. freedom of choice as to where they can live. To carry on this important program, I am requesting foe full amount aufoor-ized fw rent supplements for 1968, and urge the Ckingress to act favorably on this request. To be effective, concerted at-ta^ on dty {woblems must be planned by the cities themselves. The new model cities program is now the primary incentive provided by the federal government to accomiriish this objective, fecial grants will be made to help trai^onn entire blighted areas into attractive and useful neighbtw-hoods. To receive these grants, cities must: * ★ w Develcp imaginative and comprehensive plans of action; and enlist federal, state, local, and private resources in a concert^ effort to bring thdr plans to fruition. Many cities are now planning their ixograms. It is essential that the funds I am requesting for these ^ledal grants be available in 1968 wfoen these cities are realty to begin foe task. ENCOURAGEMENT Under a new program enacted last year, further encouragement will be given to the planned develo[xnent of entire metropolitan areas. Suiqilemen-tary federal grants will be made under 10 federal aid programs those metropolitim areas which demonstrate that they are carrying out, throu^ joint planning’ efforts, all activities which affect metropolitan devri-opment. I urge enactment of the appropriations requested for this program. Additional measures ar^ OEO EFFORTS Poverty remains an ugly scar on the nation’s conscience. The war against it will be long, difficult, and costly. But we are making headway. The $2.1 billion of new ti(ml authcKrity^ncIuded id foe 1968 budget the Office of Economic Oppewtunity wiH enable us to mq>and pro^ranas which, help peoitie rite out df poverty. The inreease ot $448 million 6ver tbe 1967 levti will be used largely for community action programs, for training prdgranisk and for new Head Start foyi^-up eff(xl8. ONEDUCA’PION New obiigational authority fw education will total $5.2 billion in 1968, $622 million more than in 1967. These funds will be used to: -Assist the disadvantaged by increasing grants to improve elementary and secondary education for about 8% million less fortunate children from lew-income families and by ixovidiiig new grants for education of handicaj^ied children; -Encourage creative change through an increase of almost 80 per cent in grants for supplementary centers and other special projects designed to introduce l|)etter teaching and innovation in our educational {XP-grams. ★ ★ ★ -Widen higher educational opportunities Ity providing mwe than $1.1 billion in scholarships, loans, and part-time work fw students, a 22 per cent increase over 1967; and —Improve teacher training through additional funding and amendments intoviding for a mwe flexible use of legislative authority. LEGISLATION I will propose legislation to: -Extend and enlarge the Teachers Candiiig econwny. This program will require a measure of sacrifice as waU as continued work and re^Mircefulness. In the year ahead, defense expenditures will continue to rise as we carry out our obliga-titms in Vietnam. After a rigorous review of civilian programs and a sharp paring of spending requests, a mcidest increase in domestic expenditures will be required as we pr^ fwward to meet our (foli-gations at home. to foe permanent ceiling of $285 billion. . w ★ ★ j nie increase in tile 1967 deficit, coupled wifo the ti^tness of the current limit on the outstanding debt, make an immediate increase imperative, Wifooot*such an increase, management of debt (Rations and other fiscal p one institution headed by & single responsible offidal of Cabinet rank. I will, thwefwe, propose legislation to merge the Departments of Labw and Cwnmerce and foe functions of several related agencies into a nef. Department of Business and Labor. COOPERATTON At the national level, the federal government has a responsibility to examine and improve the grant-in-aid system, making it more flexible-and respcxisive to state and local fiscal realities. Last year, we began a new partnership in the health program through which numerous separate grant ixograms are being brought together. The inodel cities legislation ehacted last year will also help to integrate the wide range of fedwal aids available to communities. ★ it it In the coming year, we'will examine other areas of federal aid to determine whether additional categorical grants can be combined to form a more effective tool fw intergovernmental coloration. Fw many years — under IN BILLIONS OF DOLLARS ▼ 150 100 135.0 SPENDING CHANGING BUDGET INCOME 1967 1968 THE DEFICIT ISO too 50 M PROJECTION — This chart indicates changes in foe national budget from fiscal year 1967 to fiscal 1968, as indicated in Presi- Af WlraHMM dent Johnson’s message to Congress. His budget projects a deficit reduction horn $9.7. billion to $8.1 billion. In the 1968 budget I have sought to recommend increases only where these are vitally necessary to mdet the needs of a growing society. I have givai particular, but sejective, attention to programs deigned to bring iqto the mainstream of American life those to vriuxn opportunities are now denied. We cannot permit the defense of fre^om abroad to sidetrack tbe struggle fw individual growth and dignity at hwne. Trapped in foe declining cwi-ters of our cities are tiie poor and the victims of discrimination — who lack the resources to solve their problems w^iout outside help. This budget provides funds to meatithese neixis. Poverty remains an ugly scar on the Ration’s conscience. The war against it will be long, difficult and dostly. But we are making (leadway. In the past few years, the federal government has undertaken an unix'ecedented number of f o r w a r d-looking programs which promise to enrkfo tiie quality, the justice and the (qi> portunity of American society to an extent no one would have dared hope only a few short years ago; Our agenda must give high IH-iority to a stronger and more effective federal tystepoi of gov-emmeht in tfie United State^. Chrysler Buy Is Defended LONDON (UPI) - Lord Rootes of the now Chrysler Corp. - controlled Rootes auto group sa^s he has “the utmost ciHifidence’’ about the group’s future. “I believe that a very pnxnis ing and progressive chapter is now opening in the history of the group,” he said. Earlier tUs week, foe gov-erameat gave reluctant consent to Chrysler to buy control of the British group. Apparently replying to Technology Minister Anthony Wedgwood Benn, Rootes saM “it is entirety wrong to suggest that the Rootes Group Is broke.” it it -a He agreed it had suffered substantial losses and these were increased by the severe effects of foe government’s credit squeeze. He said Rootes still h«i very large resources but its problem was shortage of working capital arising from heavy investmenl. Student Code | GRAND RAPIDS (AP) - A uniform code of grooming and conduct fw high school stu-debts, drawn up by the city’s five public hi^ school prin-dpais will be preseitied to the board (^ educatitm 'Ihursday. The code is a product of a Jan. 9 reconunendatiim of a special citizens committee aniointed 1^ Dr. Jay Pylmah, stipwintendent schtols, after a controveny over the t^ing of moustaches at one hi^ sdiooL many administrations — particular aspects of foe overall budget presentation, or foe treatment of iiriividual accounts, have been questkxied on *6ine' ground or another. BUDGET CCWCEPT In foe light of these facts, I believe a thorough and (fojective review of budgetary concepts is warranted. I therefwe intend to seek advice on foe subject from a bipartisan group of informed individuals with a background in budgetary matters. It is my Itope that this group cm undertake a tiKxough review of the budget and recommmd an approach to budgetary presentation which will aa^ both ptibiic and congressional understanding of this vital document WASHINGTON (AP) - This BHICISI tsUe summarizes by agenclM IlM outlays, of $135,033,000,000 proposed today In President Johrtson's budoM mtaOaBe. The spending is compared with this fiscal year (iy57) and fiscal 19M artment of clinical research. tftll POOTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY. JAFUARt 21, 1067 Pontiac Praas PMtoi by E4 Vandarworp Judie Green of St. Joseph Street,/West Bloomfield Township, was the surprised winner of a gas incinerator from Consumers Power QO. With her is William Freshour, residential sales Supervisor of the compariy. M The‘ Umje^'tnan in this crowd of women waMnig for the doors to open at the first session Of The Pontiac Press Cooking School doesn’t look unhappy. Mrs. Farres Rosberg, Berkley Avenue, has a free Coke before finding her seat at the first session of The Pontiac Press Cooking School. Issue Covers More Than Apron —Your Action Was Thoughtless By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: My sister-in-law was one of 16 guests at my Thanksgiving dinner. As I sat down at the table I noticed that she was still j| wearing the aprffli she put' on to help me> with a few last minute things« in the kitchen. I quietly un-*'^ tied it and re-,, moved it from j her and hung it abBY in my apron closet. Well, she gave me a dirty look and hasn’t spoken to me since! It was a sit-down dinner and I felt that the apron would have detracted from the atmosphere of my dinner party. Apparently, she thought nothing of it. ^ich one of us is right? ‘ • ■ NOT SPEAKING DEAR NOT: YoUr sister-in-law may have absrait-mindedly come to the table wearing the apron. In any case, it would have been better had you “reminded her” (in a whisper) to take it off, instead of “quietly” removing the apron from her as you would from a thoughtless child. The issue here covers mdre than an apron. Apparently the relatimiShip between you and your sister-in-law wasn’t “so hot” to. bqdn with or so trivial an incidmit would not have touch^ (rff a cold war. w ★ ' A DEAR ABBY: In our neigh-boriiood there is a man in his late fifties or early sixties who stands on his front porch and out in front of his house talking to himself and using obscene language to no one in particular. i Last summer two little children were plajdng mi the sidewalk near his home, and he came out and threw a pan of water over diem. > I am no stuffed ihH but this man’s language is reaQy ob-aceae. I don’t mean ju^ ordt. nary swear words.. I don’t thbik diildren should be exposed to sadh language or bdiavimr. My husband and I have been wondering what to do about this if aiqdldng. Should tills man be conuntttedorlgMied? OFFENDED DEAR OFFENDED: He should certainly be reported to the local police, and whether he should be committed will be for the legal authorities to determine. T^e man is obviously disturbed. Far better to report him and find him harmless, than to ignore him and later learn that he was not. * ★ ★ DEAR ABBY: The letter in your column about those two teen-age gi^ls who went back to school ri^t after their mother died, and were criticized for it, is why I am writing. I am in show business. One evening after work I went to my apartment and found a telegram waiting for me. It brought the news that my mother had died. J didn’t sleep the rest of the night, but I went to work the next day. I not only had to sing and dance, I had lines to speak. No one knew until later. Just because there is a smile on your face does not mean there isn’t an ache in your hccirt. ■■ NO NAME, PLEASE w ★ ★ DEAR ABBY: Maybe you can tell me what’s wrong \ritii my husband. He sleeps in a room all by himself saying he could never sleep with anyone. Yet he came from a family of tO kids. They were poor as church mice and you can’t tell me HE ha^ a room all to himself. He says he’s not hungry at mealtime so I eat witii the kids. Then ten minutes after we finish MissJillson Repeats Vows iir, and Mrs. Thomas E- Till-son of Blodmfield Ifflls nnhounce the marriage ^ tiieir daughter, Jo Ann, to Daniel Dovjhing, son of the Emerson Downings of Mexico aty.. •k it a ■ The bride was graduated from Kingswood Sduml Oanixnok aiM has been attendhig Alnfa Cotif^. Her husband, a graduate M Cranbrodc B^ool is e student at ^ ,RminNe1aa'"Poly-technic Instifote, Ti^, N.Y. Ihe couple will r^e in Trey until «(mmer when they will be moving to Mexico City.' eating, he eats alone. He gets off wosk at 1:30 in the morning and stays up until 5 a.m. read-families do things together, why don’t ,we?” LONELY DEAR LONELY: Your biggest problem is not whatxtp tell the children, it is to esta^ lish communication between your husband and his family. You are ifot actually living to^ gather. You are living parallel lives. Why? He is either sick or selfish. Only his dqctor can tell you. DEAR ABBY: How important do you think clothes are? I am a 33-year-old woman who has been told many times tiut if I want to get a man I should pay more attention to the way I dress. I am average looking. Not too fat or too thin, but I’ve never been clothes-crazy. I’ve always dressed neatly and inconspicuously but I never did have much style. I think if a man is going to get interested in a woman, what she wears won’t make that much difference. I’d apiffeciate y«ir (pinion. ' :pLAIN JANE' DEAR JANE: In this day of competition, “packaging” is important. To quote my friend, Edith Head, winner of seven academy awards for costume designing, and still reigning queen of the fashim world: “All womoi look alike in tiie bathtub. “The only chande a woman gets to show her individuality is when she puts her 61otiies on.” I vote with Edith. h it k 'CONFIDENTIAL TO “IN TROUBLE IN SPARTANBURG, S. C.: 'Tell your parents at once, and urge the boy to tell bis. I proi^se you that together they Will woik out the best solution^ Your parents are your best friends bi timO of trouble. Do this today, IQds. Every day is important. , ★ ★ ★ Troubled? Write to Abby, care of The Pontiac Press. Fot a personal reply) inclose a stamped, self-addressed * envelope. k k k For AWjy’s booket, “How to Rave a Lovdy Wedding,” send $1.00 to Abby, care of The Pontiac Press. Catherine Kelly of Nevada Street won a wig from Donnell at The Pontiac Mall. There are two more wigs to be given away at other sessions this week. Calendar WEDNESDAY Women’s World Series, I 10 a.m., The Pontiac Mall, i “The Exciting Canned * ^ Food Story.’’ Program by Vincent 'Truex of Libby, / McNeil, Libby. Mrs. Clar- y ence Kremer will assist. ^ Pontiac chapter No. 7, | I American Association of | > Retired Persons, noon, I ' Pontiac Motor Union Hall. ^ r| Cooperative dinner social | f hour. I f Davis extension study | ^ group, 8 p.m., Fred Muel- | jler home on^rane Street.. | Mrs. Whitney Carnahan I and Mrs. Ray Freebury | will show slides on accl- j I dental poisoning. ' j I THURSDAY | I Fashion Your Figure I I Gubof Pontiac, 6:30 p.m., | I Adah Shelly Library. Box I ^ Social. ^ Roger Jones of Euclid Street, a senior at Pontiac Central High School, attended cooking school Monday night when his mother was unable to use her ticket. A former student in PCHS food services class, Roger hopes to go into the restaurant business some day. Subtract One —Remainder Is The Look' By LUCIE NOEL AP Fashion Writer • PARIS — The Paris spring and summer fashion collections opened today with Est-erel and Feraud both hiking thd hemline three to five inches above the knees. k k k Esterel delighted his audience by showing skinny narrow af-ghan («- rajah pants with couturier styled dresses. k k k The costume did double duty. First worn as a hostess outfit, the pants were discarded and the dress was paraded for town wear with small, brimmed ir4l-linery, gloves and handbag. ★ ★ * Rolled brimm^ bretons or tiny sailors had raffia straw bangs over brow and raffia bows at the nape of the neck. k k k These double-duty afghah trousered costumes were shown in floral prints or wool. ★ * ★ In the sports department, sensational leather pr vinyl jerkins and whipcord jodhpurs are set off by matching leather or vinyl riding boots with riding crops tuck^ into loops at sides. k k k Plaid wool shirts go with these amusing outfits. One was ' in pearly gray vinyl, another blue and the third orange leather with minute jockey caps completing the look. Britishers Keep Stiff Upper Lip LONDON (ffl — Haute Couture, that proud lady, has become the poor Cinderella of the London fashion scene. She carries on only with a stiff upper lip and the financial props provided by sister boutiques. English high fashion designers, oncq the top 12 who thought they could challenge Paris and Italy, this year have shrunk to less than a handful. Only four ^ring collections have been shown. HAR-TNELL At the elegant Bruton Street salons of Norman Hartnell, dressmaker to the queen, the English fashion press crowded in as usual. Foreign buyers were conspicuously absent, and nobody was surprised. i Hardy Amies, with pnrfitable men’s tailoring and style consultant tieups in America and Europe, and perhaps with a more flexible acceptance of the fashion revolution, hks undoubtedly the healthiest high fashion house in London. ★ ★ ★ Only Lachasse and Give joined Amies and Hartnell in showing collections. Three other houses, Mattli, Paterson and Michael, expect to show in February. Even 'the London fashimi press, usually chauvinistic in claims for their designers’ influence, last week was ready to say uncle. ★ ★ ★ “The London couture sc«ie as a whole has never looked gloomier,” the Evening Standard reported. The Daily Express spoke of “the problems that beset \ri)at remains of British couture,” and the Daily Sketch mourned “that ever-sfoinking group of dress-makeH.” AP WiraplwiM Jacques Esterel offered, at the open-ing of the Paris spring-summer showings, sports wear he termed “a little mad.” The ^designer ‘‘dresses” bikinis for beach wear with confjrelif^f^ trousered legs, leaving the frilly, or plain, or bicolor G-string triangles outside to achieve a bizarre effedt. The matching triangular hats are of linen. ^ Designer Louis Feraud presented a blue arid white horizontal-striped coat and matching miniskirt at the opening of the Paris spring-summer showing. Feraud, whose collection rnay be called a miniskirt line, favored stHpes all the way, from THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUEgDAX, JANUAJEty 24, 1967 Regular to $135 Fur Trimmed Coats *79 *89 n09t. *129 *139.. *189 Regular to $170 Regular to $325 Winter Coots Regular to ^165 *39 <• *89 Scads of SWEATERS SKIRTS-TOPS COORDINATES KNIT COSTUMES SUITS DRESSES WALKING SUITS mm At Pre-Inventory Prices Andrew Geller reg. to $34.00 16’° DeLiso Debs reg. to $29.00 1290 Caressa-Easton reg. to $ 18.00 10’° Town 8c Country Dress reg.lo $16.00 8’° Town 8( Country Casuals Capezios California Cobblers ^ I 5’0-6’® HURON ot mEGRAPH Honeymoon at Niagara The Robert David Fletchers (Gayle Ireiie Wilbome) left^or a Niagara honeymooiKafter recent vows in the CenO'al Methodist Qiurch and recqption in the CAI Building. Their parents are tiie Curtis Loosen to Store Never be guilty of putting your pressure cookw away with the lid on tif^t, Instead, when stMing afttf us^, put the cover on loosely up^e down. This helps to preserve the rubber ring on the top of the lid and keeps the kettle free of odoh of foods is«vioi|sly co(dcedinit. H. Wilbomes of Rowley Drive and the Neil Hetcheh of 91-ver Sands Mve. , Hr. ■' ,★ ★ , A four-tiered veil of silk it iusion conq>lem«ited the bride’s bouffant gown and tndn of udiite CSuoitilly lace over taffeta' A white orchid, centetad her slim-line cascade of ntaiatu|ie white <»uiu|(ta and ivy. jr- 7^' ■ v Witii Cheryl Wilborna, he/ sister’s honor xtteiutot, wore bridesmaids Ratr^ Greer and. Mrs. Dariene Moore. . Dn the vesqi^e side, .were best nup Dowlas Qal^tb, and the ush»8 Laiiy BAst, and Donal^ iPugless. X £ **a career fot yqk** LEARN A PROFESSIONAL SERVICE! Paramount Boantj School MODERN NEW FACILITIES 26 W, HURON Phonei FE 4*2352 Savings On China, Crystal, Cookware, Gifts and Famous Quality Furniture! SALE! Muknsih* Cookware For Delirioua Ovon Flavored Vitamin Retaining Fooda! Rea. 12.95 liiilBh Oven Rea. 11.95 Covered Skillet 9.99 8.99 CookwaVe cast oi thick as two silver dollars frOm a miracle ‘ Magnesiuni alloy. -Heat radiates froth all angles, maintains desired temperatures whep used with thermostat. Covers are vapor-tight. SALE! Copper Bottmu Revere Ware Best in Stainless Steel The I'AUourt Sam-ePun Reanlarly 7.95 7.20 8" Skillet Regularly 8.95 8:00 Long weariiRL decorative Revere Ware for cooking delicious foods — all pieces vapor seal to retain flavor and vitamins. Ideal for hanging — each piece has a hanger hook handle and lustrous copper bottom. SALE! For A Colonial Table Setting, (Combine “Fruit Sampler” Dinnerware hnd “Moon and Star” Glass Stemware. «Pcs. Fruit Sampler 835.00 Moon and Star Slamware, each . (axrepi ruby) $2.50 “Fruit Sampler” in hnige, granite-like grounds with a fruit pattern, service for 8 includes, 8 each: dinner-plates, ulads, bread/buners, caps and saucers, I vegetable dish and I platter. Rrar^netions of “Moon and Star” from the original old molds in blue, green, amethyst and topaa, goblets and sherbets, each 2.50. I In ruby red, each 3.50. RLOOMFIELD HILLS 4080 TELEGRAPH RD. At Loiir Lak« Rd.t 644*1^370 IfoR.a Tlmrc. andl fri. I'm ClUftdit Cry$taU ai Etkttn Atlen FuntUur*' PONTIAC 24 WEST HURON STREET In Domrtowa Famine* FE 4^1284 DnilyTIUSiSOPJI. Chi iWt anil Ethnk AIUh Furkitutf MRS. R. D.^LETCHER ---—Mirr ■■■—-—---—- PTAs WEDNESDAY Benjamin Franklin, 7:30 p.m. Mrs. Fred GMnei, PTA Council president will speak tm “What is the Role of the PTA?” TOURSDAY William Beaumont, 7:30 p.m. Father’s Night. T. Sgt. William Hines, father vice president, and a U.S.A.F. recruiting officer will present Air Force films. Glass May Crack Never hold fine glasswarg under running water, eit^r hot or cold. To do so rjtas cracking the glass (ArfufftionfMoO -r WOMEN 17-^5 E^RN MORE IN JUST 6 WEEK$^ LMrn IBM Kty PniMh BUPOIT TUITION nta AmruDE analysis DAY CLASSES _fkeJ imwESiMh^ Edneatiua, “C*M lU Suie BMrd Wnr** CJ. BtH INanl|itleil Vetemm EnlinliBHntfcwi Any U.S. Iwiwiigrntina Sniwi^. rADtomatioD lastityte-| 54 Schoeli Natienwid* I Downtown Datroit | IN Michigan Avc. N2-14M . I Fcmdoli 8raneh • I 22TM WnodwanI 842-I2M | I NAME.................I I aimmsccm * ADDRESS......... I aTY.......STATE......I iJHONC , Felt Rushed at Dinner ' by Waiter By ELIZABETH L POST Dear Mrs. Port: I would l^iate it if y u reu’ra vm ». pne* la ts and IS NMwetivrtF at ipOd department and drug storas. ARRIVALS, LTD., (aHCAOO. U.SA A- ARE YOU ON , A HIGH PROTEN DIET? Ther« are many excellent suppltments available In tablet, powder or liquid form including Blairs. ^ NATURAL HEALTH FOODS 8 Mt. Clemens St. FE 4-4601 are your diamonds hiding in an old'fathionod setting? LET LOU-MOR RE-MOUNT M-11 RINO snriNO $2iJo RING SIYTINO $1».2S MW-1 WEDDING RINO' SEHINO 1SJS Use Security Charge or Michigan Banicaid YouRraoetRTY FULLY INSURID RINGS MRS. H. E. WHITE JR. Miss Sly, Mr. White Take Vows Before u altar banked with white cyclamens, Janet Louise Sly and Harold Edmcmd White Jr;, Were wed recently in the Enunanuel Baptist Church, '■nie Ward E. Slys of West Huron Street and the senior Whites of Lorena Drive are parents of the couple who left for Traverse City and northern ski resorts. SILK ORGANZA Chantilly lace and Rne vertical tuckipg enhanced the bride’s Alfred Angelo gown apd train of white silk organza worn with Diw bow head-piece and illusion veil. Her all-white bouquet held orchids and carnations. ★ ★ With Linda Sly, her sister’s maid of honor, were the bride-maids, Katherine White, Sue Allen, Jane Her, Patricia Gid-cumb, Mrs. John Reisenberg-er and Marilyn White, junior maid. Jennifer Sly and Philip 'White were flower girl and ring-bearer. Dennis Catlin of Holland was best man. Ushers included Vern Roberts, Harold Nichols, Jack Bramblett, Steven White, Richard Wiite, and Tom Malone Jr. Among more than 400 guests at the church reception were the newlyweds’ grandparents, the senior Slys of Traverse Oty and the Harry Whites of Tampa, Fla.. Bloomfield Miracle Mile Nfar Cunninghain't 33S-93S1 BUY, SELL, TRADE - - - USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! Wallpaper Spcelal! Our Entire New Stock of Washable Wallpapers 29*.r ACME PAINT 3 N. Sagliiaw. FE 2-33M Open Fri. >tll > Show Room Speciols! Take Advantage of Our Low Prices on Display items •Our 42md Vumr' !nN-l40IDIxi«M(liwiy SRt-1 Op«n Fridoy Nights Till V THE POKTXAC FRgSS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 24, 1M7 PoU/s Pointers ^ \ ^ Fashion a Trellis^ DEAR POLLY Wire coat ngen make good, attractive trellises. T^tly fasten the oymr-the-rod wire of one to (he bottom of another hanger and oxilhnie tmUl the desired length is reached. Make the hangers stationary by running teavy cord, lengtiiwise, on each side of the hangers, locking the cwd around each hanger comer. Fasten the trellis by the top hanger hD^ over, a hoSB on the outside of Qm house or patio. -MRS.F.S.M. DEAR PtHXY-^ auwer to Botie-i problem coocem-ing dioe poUsh stain on her tile floor, I want to eaggnt that she try silver cream M die , stidns aad teen wash and wax as usual. I hava foond teat silver cream removes scuff marks left by boys’ heavy soles and heels, as well a& all oteer stafau on my tile floor.-MRS. L.M.T. Would certainly be worth a try. If such pdisb is used on one’s fine silver, the tile floor should be able to take it. — POLLY DEAR PWJLY — How does one remove adhesive-backed paper from metal Idtchea cabinet shelves? I want to replace it with vinyl adhesive. — MRS. H.E.C. DEAR POLLY — We have a large gate into our driveway. Every time we had to open it, the gate dragged and was hard to manage until father screwed and bolted a small tricycle wheel onto it. Ifow we just wheel it bp^. ^ MARY DEAR POLLY - H your tape minsnre b always on the loose,' wrap it anund four fingers when you finish sewing and tuck it into one of the little cases that plastic rain bonnets come in. * Keep a, small jar handy and drop into it any corks of all sizes. When the lid to the aspirin bottle, alcohol, astringent or whatever, is lost just plug in a cork. This is much better than trying to cover the top with foil tee cork is airtl(tei DANA DEAR POLLY - Our daughter has just started in first grade and, to make sure her fsce and hands are clean after she finishes eating her lunch, I always pit a wet paper towel, wrapp^ in aluminum fdl, in her lunch box. This proves very successful and is inexpensive.— The mW Styles! PERMANENTS $1050 BCIISOR HAIRCUniNG /Beauty Shop Biker Bldg., FE 34186 f. rif$ tou*t M OirOimm lm _ Big Demand for the Costs NEW YORK (UPI)"Unaccustomed as I am ; . " 'Diat iterase mid oteers similar are sharply increaring^ and tee end is not in S^t. \ * A ' An organization which pro-' vides ghmt writers for sphere far and wkle estimates teat 11,000 prepared and extemporaneous speeches are delivered daily in New Yoric alone. Ten years ago, the figure was put at 6,000. Withih the next decade, tee numbm* could reach 20,000. ★ ★ ★ The look at all those called on for speeches comes from S. J. Micheison, director of his own ghost writers servia, after a random sampling of hotel and motel associations, restaurants, conventicm and speakers’ bureaus, and chambers of commerce. ★ ★ ★ Micheison said women’s clubs, service clubs, association meetings, conventionf, business groups, breakfaste,, lunches and dinners require an almost inexhaustible supply of speakers. Add to the torrent of verbiage the Increasing number of foundations arri fund inising organizations. ronuGMALL Invites You and Your Family To Bo Wednesday NightoR ^ Enjoy Tender, Golden, Deep-FH^d COMPLETE CHICKEN DINNERS $|?0 ChUdrwn VnderlO CHOICEOF POTATOES OR VE6ETARLE dinner salad or DEssarr ROLLS AND RUTTER COFFEE, TEA OR MILK ,, SERVED EVERY WEDNESDAY NIGHT PONTIAC MALL CAFETERIA ONLY 4:30 l3 8 P.M. O^eumode "Buy a httar mjhn mi taa a>hat a Bffariaet it ataiti. “ TISSUE-SHEER Dress sheers of elegant loveliness with Miracle No-Bind Tops and reinforced Oi)ie free with every 7 galloW Ashland Gasoline Your Good Neighbor Ashland Oil Dealer will give you o\e 12ounce "Fire-King” casserole free with every seven galloi of Ashland Vitalized Gasoline you buy. These Dankh-style, milk-white casseroles are ideal for baking and serving pot pies, macaroni dishes, baked beans... as well as soups, oerc^ and desserts. And they’re oven-proo#-guarant^ by Good Housekeeping. As an added bonus, you can get the 1%-quart, matching covered casserole for only ^ with an oil change or lubrication at r^fular prices. Start your bake and serve casserole set now—at yoor nearby Ashland Oil Dealer displaying the "Free Casserole” sign. Put yourself in this picture How? it’s stmplol Just call pOO-0000 and Wicktt frattiod nmadollng staff will bo at your sorvico in tho privacy of youf bwn horns. At nb obtigatien to you, a compTolc accurate ostimato of your KITCHEN -- REOtEATION ROOM — AHIC —■ DORMER i privacy of youf romodoling prejoct; ROOM ADDITION — PORtH — 8ATHROOM J- GARAGE -f SIDING— ROOFING hiddon costs, you know iii advonco ovsry dytail and ciost.^ HEATING. No "Guostimates’’ or Yqur satiriacHbn assured by Amor-lea's largest modornbotion 6bn> tractor. i ' y ^|CKE£ incline improverheht service PLANNINGRCONSTRUCTION*riNANCING Baldwin and Holly Roadn 5 Mlloi SmiMi of GRAND BUNC, MICH. Call 13131 C94-9I04 * Eait Side of Route 53 2 Miles South of ROMEO, MICH. Coll 752-9191 ;HOURS:' Monday thru Fridoy 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.) Soturdoy—B A, M. to 4 f. M. &±L THE PONTIAC press, TUESDAY, JAKUAKY 24, 1967 GRAND RAPIDS (AP) -Forty years agi»« Partiiin Fi 5-4041 ^unyl Hurry! NOWIthruTHURS. MnnjufasiDi UEMinn mtoirHiui MMUIKE juMsiUffir gAmifiMHIipl earth in Oi© first of the Apollo space flights. ‘‘In a way I like to feel that everythUg Roger has done is like taking up ^ere I left Off,” the astnmaut’s fathor said today. With astronauts VM “Gas” Grissom and Edward White, Chaffee, who will be 32 one week b^ore the scheduled February 21 lift-off, will be part of the United State’s first three-man space flight. Hie mission is schooled to last 14 days. NAMED IN 'SS Chaffee was named to the astronaut program in October 1963. At that time he was the nation’s second youngest astronaut. Apollo I will be his first space flight. “Actually we heard about his appointment before he had a chance to call us,” his mothw said. “Naturally we were excited. It’s the kind of ihing he has always wanted to do and now he ha&'his chance.” “One of the things teat really amazes us is tee progress we have experienced,” tee elder Chaffee said. “In 1927 I was flying a Waco biplane after four hours of instruction. My grandmother, who loaned me the money to buy the plane, took her first airplane ride With me when she was 85 — and she crossed the prairie in a covered wagon with a rifle across her knees!” “And to think that the Wright brothers flew for the first time only 64 years ago!” he said. PAINITNG DISPLAYED Chaffee, a real estate broker, and his wife, a bdnk employe, live in a mies-tory frame house on the outskirts of Grand Rapids. Prwninently displayed on the living room waU is a portrait 43 01*16 nlOlHVAT lu.. s. u 1 BLMK N. TELEGRAPH RD. IIWIB CHILMEN UNDER 12 FREE TONY CURTIS j.’t WALT DISNEY s — preoenlt v _, m Mowm STAKE 175 TO MT. CLEMENS RD. J = Fh»» = ArainoERci; “^84,, ‘‘QiNUINELY FUNNY And SASSY/' I Sm/ I IRfiOIMi fUU. JHffHS mmiB( iBOX OFFICE OPENS 6:30 P.M-JiMiWifiMifiiiiifinffl WARMTH and HOSPirALiTY Planning a party soon? Th* feeling of hoipitolity radiates from every comer, pf Bedell's, and once you've dined there, you'll understand its evern increasing popularity. From your first sip of your cocktail to the lost bite of dessert, you'll find everything done in a manner designed to please you. Coll AAobel Goodwin for Reservations ... 334-4561 EJegoriilfDimng EDELt 2395 Woodward at Sq. Lk. Rd. 3344561 CURRENT ANNUAL RATE COMPOUNDED AND PAID OUARTERLY ... is to use Capitol's convenient pass-book savings plan ... especially designed for folks who want to save any amount, large or small, any time... and With your funds always conveniently available. Funds left in your account for 12 full months earn 4.84%. SEVENH-SIX YEAi^S OF UNINTERRUPTED DIVIDENDS INCORPORATED ItM • UNSIN6. MICHIGAN • MEMBER: FEDteAl HOME lOMI OANK SYSTEM 75 WEST HURpN STREET, ^NTIAC r THE PONTIAC P»E9S» TUESDAY, JANUARY 24, 1967 MARKETS 1967's first Cleqr-Cut Decline? The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by in wl^sale package lots Quotaf 'ns are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Friday. Produce FRUITS Apples. Delicious, bu............4.00 Apples, Delicious, Red, bu. ,....4.50 Apples, McIntosh, bu..............3iS Apples, Jonattian, bu. ......... l.n Apples, Nortliern Spy, bu........ 4M App es. Cider, 4;pel. ........... L75 VEORTABLES Beets, topped, bu. .........$2.00 Market Slides Sharply Lower Cabbaoe, Curly, Cabbage, ked, bu_ . ....... Cabbaoe, Standard, bu. , Carrots, Cello Pk., 2 di. Carrots, topped, bu........ Celery, Root, dz. ........ Horseradish, pk. bsk. . Leeks, dz. bchi,. . ■ Onions, dry,,,50-lb. bag Parsley, root Parsnips, w bu. 2.75 3.00 3.50 1.75 2.00 1.50 4.OO1 3.00 3.25 2.00 2.00 Parsnips, Cello Pak.................. 2.00 Potatoes, 50 lbs. ................... 1.75 Potatoes, 20 lbs...................... 75 Radishes, black, '/> bu. ............ 2.00 Rhubarb, hothouse, dz. bch.......... 1.50 Rhubarb, hgthouse, 5-lb. box ........ 1,00 Squash, Acorn, bu.................... I.5O Squash, Buttercup, bu................ 1.50 Squash, Butternut, bu................ 1.50 Squash, Delicious, bu................ 1.50 Squash, Hubbard, bu.................. 1.50 Turnips. Topped ..................... 2.50 Poultry and Eggs MTROIT POULTRY DETROIT (AP) — Prices paid per pound for No. 1 live poultry: heavy type young hens 19-20; roasters heavy type 24-25; broilers and fryers 3-4 lbs. Whites 18'A-20. DETROIT EGOS DETROIT (AP) - Egg prices paid per dozen by first receivers (Including US): Whites Grade A lumbo 40-43; extra large 35-38; large 34-36; medium 32-33; CHICAGO luTTER, EGOS CHICAGO (AP) - Chicago Mercantile Exchange — Butter steady: wholesale buying prices unchanged; 93 score AA 65%; 92 A 65%; 90 B 63'/4; 89 C 61'A ; cars 90 B 64) 89 C 62%. , , Eggs unsettled; wholesale buying prices NEW YORK (AP) stock market headed sharply lower in active trading early this aftenxxm in w^at could turn out to be its first clear-cut decline of 1967. M(»'e stodcs have advanced flijan declined on every trading day this year but on Jan. 16 all the popular averages declined. ★ ★ ★ Losers outnumbered gainers about 2-to-l this afternoon. The Dow Jones industrial av- The erage at noon was off 4.79 at Although Presiddtt Johnson’s latest tax rec(HnmendatiQns were r^arded as important background facfaNrs, the market action was regarded as chiefly tedhnical. , “A correction is long overdue,” said one market analyst at a leading brdoerage firm, “and we need a coirecUon-We’re glad to ^ee it happen.” Even so, early losses were being trimmed as trading moved into the afternoon. ★ ★ Prices declined in heavy trad- | ing on the American Stock Exchange. Si^tnm Devices lost about 3 and Xtra Inc. 2. Down about a point were Syntex, Dennison, Digital Equipment, LTV AerO^ce, Maxson Electronics, Microdot, National Video, Rollins Inc. and Simmonds Precision. Allied Controls rose nearly 3 and Bohack more than a point. U.i Bombers Pound DMZ Elsewhere, Air bnd Ground War Qtiiet LBJ Plan Controversial 1 The New York Stak Exchange NEW YORK (AP) ■ New York Slock Exchengi (elected noon prices: (Ms.) Htgti Lew Last Hhe- —A— 48 43 41W 41W —1% 5 20% 20% 20Vz ■ 3 31% 31% 31% 17 44% 43% 44 - % 11 16% 16% 16% 77 51% 51% 51%-% GenPree 1.50 92 32% 31% 32% - %|GPubSvc .38g 17 67'A 67 67 -t- % e PubUf 1.50 Abbott Lab 1 ABC Coh .80 Abex Cp 1.60 ACF Ind 2.20 AdMIMIs .40b Address 1.40 Admiral .50 Air Reduc 3 AlcanAlum 1 Alleg Cp .20e AllegLu 2.40b Alleg Pw 1.20 Allied C 1.90b AMIedStr 1.32 Allis Ckal 1 Alcoa 1.60 Amerada 3 AmAlrlln 1.50 Am Bosch .60 AmBdcst 1.60 Am Can 2.20 AmCrySug 1 GamSko 1.30 GAcce^ 1.20 GenAnllF .40 Genl^nam 1 Gep Elec 2.60 unchanged to 'A lower; 70 per cent or better Grade A Whites 32'A; mixed 3^; mediums 30; standards 30; checks 25%. CHICAGO POULTRY CHICAGO (AP)—(USDA)—Live poultry: wholesale buying pricta unchanged; roasters 23-25; special fed VWilte Rock fryers 18%-20%. Livtstock AEnke 1.30a AmFPw 1,16 AmHome 1.80 Am Hasp .50 Am MFd .90 AMet Cl 1.90 Am Motors AmNGas 1.80 AOptIc ).35b Am Photocpy Am Smelt 3a Am Std 1 Am T&T 2.20 DfTROIT LIVESTOCK AmZinf 1'ioS DETROIT (AP)-(USDA)- Cattta several loads and lots choice and high choice 950-1200 pound slaughter stee^lj^g** cor^„ 25.00-26.00; mixed good and choice 24.50-: .‘iTd’l'ow 2XM.50.* A^kS^CheS ®°Hogs 100; not enough sales to set “pj , 40 ‘"vMlers^'lOO; few head high choice I ASuand (31?°* prime 40.00-45.00; choice M.OO-^00. ' ' Sheep 500; choice and prime 90 to 110 As^ DO i.« pound wooled lambs 23.00-24.00; few Atchison 160 loads and lots choice 90 to 105 jV shorn lambs with No. 1 and 2 pelts 22.50- Atl Ricn 2,r 23.50; cull to good slaughter ewes 6.50-10.50. GTel El ).28 Gen Tire .80 Ga Pacific 1b Gerber Pd 1 Getty Oil .lOe Gillette 1.20 Glen Aid .70 Goodrich 2.M Goodyr 1.35 GraceCo 1.30 Granites 1.40 GrantWT 1.10 GtA8,P 1.30a Gt Nor Ry 3 Gt West FinI GtWSugTAOa GreenGnt .80 Greyhnd .90 GrumAIre lb GulfMO 2.60e Gulf Oil 2.20 Gi^ltStaUt .80 CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO (AP) - (USDA) - Hogs 7,000; butchers steady to 25 lower; most 1 2 200-220 lb 21 .do-21.50. Cattle 12,000) calves none; slaughter steers steady to 50 lower; prime MSO-1,325 lb slaughter deers 25.50-25.75. Sheep 1,000) slaughter lamb* steady to 25 lower; wooled slaughter ewes fairly active, steady. Atlas Corp Avco Cp 1.20 Avnet 50b Avon Pd 1.20 American Stock Exch. NEW YORK (AP) - American Stock Exchange selected noon prices: Sain (hds.) High Low Lest Chg. AerolelG .50a 1 31% 31% 31% ” 10% IOV4 10% ...... 40% 40’/4 40/4 3% 3/4 + % 4 I'A 1% 1'/J -I- % 21 34Vj 34V4 34V4 58 11% 10% 10% 37 3% 3% 3% 77 3% 31-16 3% 4 8z/t 8% 8% 53 58V4 57 215 9% 9V4 19 9'/4 9% — z/s 9% -t- % 9>/4 — % 51 2Vj 2% 2% • 15 3 2Z/S 2'% 27 VM 8% 6% 14 16% 16% 16VX 1 56V4 56V4 56'/4 + V4 2 IJ/4 1% 1% ■ ir/, liz/s — % 4% /% + 'A 27% 26% 26z/« 52 12 BabcokW 1.25 Balt GE 1.52 Beaunit .75 Beckman .50 BeechAr .80b Bell How .50 Bendix 1.40 Benguet BethStI 1.50a Bigelow S .80 Boeing 1.20 BoiseCasc .25 Borden 1.20 BorgWar 2.20 BriggsS 2.40a Brunswick BucyEr 1.60a Budd Co .80 Bullard I Bulova 60b Burl Ind 1.20 Burroughs 1 Cal FInanI Callt Pack 1 CaiumH 1.20 CampRL .4Sa Camp Soup 1 Can Dry 1 CdnPac 1.50a Canteen .80 CaroPLt 1.34 CerrIerCp 2 CarlerW ,60a Case Jl CaterTr 1.20 CefaneseCp 2 Cenco Int .30 Cent SW 1.60 Cerro 1.60b Cert-teed .80 CessnaA 1.40 Champ S 2.20 Ches Oh 4 ChlMII StP 1 jChPneu 1.80b ' ChrisCraft lb 3 4V2 4V2 4V2 95 70% 69% 70 • 5 51/4 5% 5'/4 -F % 49 15-16 15-16 10 21% 21'/4 21'/4 — V4 n ” B B ii!=%icoi ’fl ? % 1?%“% Cil Piet .83t P ’1% ’5% ’5%-%|ComlCre 1.80 Chrysler CIT Fin 1.60 CiliesSvc 1.80 CocaCola 1.90 Colg Palm 1 CollinRad ‘ UnCdntrol .20 57 sw 5^ ComSolv 1.20 Copyrighted by Trte Associated Press 196/^ ----------—-------------I Comsat [ConEdls 1.80 ... a ConElecInd 1 Stocks of Local Interest ConNGas 1.60 • u.k. I ConPnw Figures after decimal points are eighths| 130 I Cont Air .80 OVER THE COUNTER STOCKS > Cont Can 1.90 Quotations from the NASD | Cont Ins 3 sentative inler-dealer prices of *PP™*j Cont 0112.60 malely 11 a.m. Interdealer mof*'*!* change throughout the day. Ptl“* not include retail markup, markdown or commission OKI MM AMT Corp......................... Associated Truck '■* 16.0 Boyne ;?•“ Braun Engineering .............13.4 m.z Citizens Utilities Class A 20.4 21.0 Detrek Chemitel ............... Diamond Crystal .............. >6.5 I5.i Frank's Nursery ...............>J-* Kelly Services Control Data Cooper Ind 1 Corn Pd 1.70 CorGW 2.50a ..t.ui|CoxBdcas .50 Bid Asked crouseHd .80 CrowCol 1.87t Crown Cork CrownZe 2.20 Cruc StI 1.20 Cudahy Co Curtis Pub Curtiss Wr 1 23.6 26.2 Mohawk Rubber Co. ............ M.3 M.7 Monroe -Auto Equipment 16.7 I5.a North Central Airlines Units . .,8.7 9.2 Safran Printing >3.' >J-3 Scripk) . «-5 Wyandotte Chemical 27.5 28.2 MUTUAL PUNDS BM Asktd Affiliated Fund ............. 8.66 9.U Chemical Fund 19-60 ]7.W Commonwealth Stock .........'0-12 >>->> Dreyfus .................13.95 .16.57 Keystone Income K-1 9.08 9.91 Keystone Growth K-2 ' “ Mass. Investors Growth Mass. Investors Trust Putnam Growth Television Electronics Wellington Fund Windsor Fund Dan RIv 1.20 YCDCp 1.60 DaycoCp 1.60 Day PL 1.32 Deere 1.80a Delta Air 1 DenRGW 1.10 DetEdls 1.60 Det Steel .60 OiamAlk 1.20 Disney 60b DIst Uag 1 DomeMln .80 Doug Aire , ,, (Tow Chem 2 ivt 6B7'DraperC 1.20 urn ,i«’Dresslnd 1.25 !’•“ ;*"lDukePw 1.20 16.05 17.56U„pon, 575, 11.63 12.71 Dug Lt 1.60 9.65 10.30 DynamCp M 13.61 13.79! 17.79 19.34' 22 31% 31% 31% 17 IOV4 10 10 — 'A 16 63Vj 62% 62% - % 21 27 26% 27 + 'A 66 38% 38 38% ..... 8 25'A 25'A 25'A -i- 'A 65 267/s 26% 24% - % 26 87% 86Vj 87% + % 86 85% 86 86 -F Vt 89 78'% 76% 78'% -F Vt 6 26 23% 24 30 76% 76 76 -1 66 67% 67% 67'% — Vi 6 16% 16% 16% -F '% 100 31’% 31% 31'% - 'A 21 40% 40'A 60% — '% 7 33% 32'% 32% - '% 4 19% 19% 19% - % 30 87% 87% 87% -F % 120 51'% SOz/i 51% -F % 33 15% 15% 15% - 'A 13 67z% 67% 67% - % 75 VU 7% 7'A -F % 15 62 41% 41'% 10 73% 73% 73% -F ’% 71 6% 6% 6% — '% 21 64'% 63% 63% 19 19'% 19'% 19'% 265 581% 57% 57'% 38 34'% 33z% 34 3 23% 23% 23'% -F 'A 9 66'A 65'% 65'% -I'A 389 29'% 285/4 29'% 27 23% 22% 22% 69 89'% 88% 19 -F '% 18 16'A 14'% 16'A -F '% 21 565/4 55'% 55'/i 28 36'% 36 36 21 54'A 56 54 - % 97 34Z% 34'% 34% + '% I 51'% 51'% S1'% -F 'A X46 32 31'% 31% 3 72% 72 72 - 'A 41 89 88'A 89 -F 'A 65 2'% 2% 2% x74 255A 25% 25'% 106 22% 21% 21'% -F 'A 631 TTk 76 76'% 67 39'% 38'A 38'% - % 11 33% 33% 33% -F '% 32 14Z% 14'% 14% 75 54 53'% 54 -F*^ 34 34% 33% 36% — % 61 59'% 58% S9'% - % 34 38% 38% 38'% -L % 281 2’% 2% 2% — '% 71 35% 35% 35'A - '/i 1 22'A 22'A 22'A ..... 272 72'A 70% 72 —1 II 27'% 27'% 27'% 16 33 32'% 32'% - 'A 27 63 62% 62% 10 45% 45 65 -% 21 8% 8 19% 10% 19 .... 81 51% 58 M%-% 1 70’A 70'A 70'A 131 59 58Vi 58% — 'A 7 27% 26% 26% — 'A 60 63 62% 63 -F % 21 33Z% 33'% 33'% + % 23 35 36% 36'% -F % 23' 51 SO'% 51 — 'A 55 65% 65 65% -F % 7 61% 61'% 61% 50 57'A 54'/» 57'% -F '% 456 15'% 12% 16% -2'A 18 66'% 63'A 63% —1 2 19'% 19'% 19'% .. 5 46 63% 63% 36 71% 70'% 70'/* 36 39% 39'% 39% -FI 1 31'A 31'A 31'A — % 8 69'% 49 49 — % 88 53'% 52»A 53% - % 5 25'A 25 17 4% 4'% 2 34'/i 34'% 34'% -F 'A 4 17'% 17% 17%+'/* 5 81'% 81'% 81'/J + V> 32 7'% 7 ---------- ----------- :EastGF 1 lEKodak 1.60a STDCK AVERAGES _ . compiled by Tlw A.s«i..«., Pr»^ , „ Hid. Rails Oll1.5!lo72.5 1»4 311.9 ErieLack RR MonHiX* ..617J 140.8 li-f Year.A^...........53SJ 205.6 Ig.l 3M,6|gyensPd -OOb 196&67 High . 537.9 213.9 mJ 369,71 Evonheip 194442 Low ... 308.0 163.9 130.2 169,6| 1965 High .... 523.3 1964 178.2 358.51 162 96'A 92 93%—I'A 5 97% 97 97li + % S3 1-36 132'A 133% EatonVa 1.25 >M? 4. ss EG&G .20 61 55% 56 55% +.% 18 62% 62 62'% + '% 30 38% 38'A 38'A -r Vi 43 87'% 87'A 87'A —1 7 31% 31'% 31'% - '% 28 398'% 397 397 - '% 26 39Vi MVi 39 - % 66 40Z% 40'A 40% . 23 84% 86% 84'% — '% 1 9'% 9'% 9'% — '% 49 28'/* 27% 27'% — '% 66 81Vi 80 80'% — Vi 1 26 26 26 13 44'% 43% 43% —1% 8 55% 55% 55% + '% 25 184 182 183 +/'% ^ STS s:s-i(i 25 2tn 36'% 25'% — 'A —K— 49 46'% 44 64 - V% 7 30Vt 30Z% 30'% + Vi 1M 60'% 39’% 60 — Vi 6 66 43% 63’% — % 10 85% 86% 86% — % 26 55% 55>% S5'A-% 10 27'% 27% 27% — Vi 23 61% 61'% 61Vi — ’% xB 25Vi 26% 25 + Vi Polaroid .60 ProcterG 2M Pubikind .361 Pullmen 2.80 RCA .80b RalstonP .60 Raynier 1.60b Raytheon .00 Reading Co Reich Ch .40b RepubStI 2.50 Revlon 1.30 Rexall .30b Reyn Met .90 Reyn Tob 2 RheemM 1.40 Roan Sel .9Be Rohr Cp .80 RoyCCola .72 RoyDut I.Tte RydirSys .40 egP 1.40b Sanders .30 Schenley 1.40 Schering 1 Schick SCM Cp .40b Scott Paper 1 SearIGD 1.30 Sears Roe la Seeburg .60 Servel Sharon Sti I Shell Dll 1.90 ShellTra .B7e SherwnWm 2 Sinclair 2.40 SingerCo 2.20 SmithK 1.80a SoPRSug .15g SouCalE 1.25 South Co 1.02 SouNGas 1.30 SouthPac 1.50 South Ry 2.80 Spartan Ind Sperry Rand SquareD .60s StdBrand 1.30 Std Kolls .50 StOIICal 2.50b StdDilInd 1.90 StDilNJ 3.30e StdDIIDh 2.40 St Packaging StanWar 1.50 StauffCh 1.60 SterlDrug .90 StevenJP 2.25 Studebak .25e Sun Dir 1b Sunray 1.40a Swift Co 2 Tampa El .60 Tetedyne Inc Tenneco 1.20 Texaco 2.60a TexETrn 1.05 Tex G Sul .40 Texaslnst .60 TexPLd .35e Textron 1.20 ThMkol .35t TWewet Oil TImRB 1.80a TrensWAIr 1 Transamer 1 Transltron TrI Cont .92e TwnCen 1.20b SAIGON, South Vietnam (AP) — U.S. B52s rained bo^s in the middle of the demilitarized zone today while the air ijvar in North Vietoain and the ground war in the south quieted down. The B52s made two other raids during the day, both in Tay Ninh Province northwest of Saigon near the Cambodian border. ★ ★ ★ In the Iron Triangle, also north (rf Saigon, Brig. Gen. Richard T. Knowles, 51, of Columbus, Ga., commander of the U.S. 196th Light Infantry Brigade, escaped imhurt when his helicopter was hit by Vtetcong ground fire Monday for the sec ond time in five weeks. A soldier aboard the helicopter was wounded. The chopper made a forced By JOHN CUNNIFF AP Bnainess News Analyst' NEW YORK-President Johnson’s proposals fix' an mcorne tax Surcharge and greater Social Security assessments and benefits are txound to Kt off political.argu- ments now and philosophical debates f(«rever. The two p-o-posals are fine-1 ]y intertwined. If the President receives his entire Social Security package it might necessitate a tax increase. Bigger payouts would mean toe Social Security fund would have less money to mvest in government securities. The government needs that money. CUNNIFF 44'A 43% 43% — Vi 109 54 54% ' 55'A -'% 120 28V% 27'/j 27'% - % 49 57% 56% 57% + 'A 60 37’% 37'% 37% - '% 9 28 27% 28 + '% 411 9% 9'% 9% +■ % 9 24 25'A 25% - 'A 29 24% 26'% 24'% — % 80 34’% 34% 34% - 1% 17 17% 17 17'A 227 66 64Z% 45'% 67 28'% 28'A 28% + % 24 62’%' 62'A 62'% - % 66 68'A 67% 67% 34 ITZ/. 171% 17% - '% 7 7% 7% 7% - '% — % But a tax increase , on top of added costs for higher Social Security benefits would be intolerable to many people. One or the other, perhaps, but not both. CUT IN TWO Johnson’s Social Security package could be cut in two, thus lessening the need for a tax mcrease. But that would put the onus on> the cutters as having deprived the elderly of greater benefits. Social Security seems always to have been mixed up in such affairs. As it now stands. Social Security has tremendous back ing from most elements of American life. Congress included, but it has been and may always be controversial. ★ ★ ★ ' size* of Social Security — tlfl alone — can provoke disputes. Johnson’s proposals 127 184% 186VA I84'A -1 26 78% 78 78 4 7% 7'A 7'A 25 50'% 69’% 50 ^ % —R— 111 66'% 66'% 66% 36 26% Z6'A 26% + »*> or semi-annual declaration. extra dividends or W""’’’?,, noted es reguier ere Identified In the «lK*"ir extras. b-Annual re^ plus $to« dividend. c-LIquIdatlraj divided d—Declared or paid In 1967 plus stock dividend. o-Pald last year. f - Payable in stock during 1967, estimated cash value distribution date. »-DfelerW or paUjo far this year, h—Declared or paM after stock dividend or split up. k--Declared or paid this year, an aceumuletlve Issue with dividends In arrears, n—New Issue, p—Paid this year, dividend otijlted, deferred or no action taken at lest dividend meeting, r—Declared or paid In 1964 plus stock dIvIderKl. t—Paid In s ‘“ 1964/ estimated cash value on or ex-distribution date. Sales in full. WASHINGTON (AP) - The Senate votes today on whether to take up a proposed change in rules making it easier to halt filibusters. Senators advocating a tougher antifilibuster rule are pessimistic about getting the two-thirds approval necessary to shut off debate on the motion to consider their proposal. A cloture, or debate-closing, petition was filed last week by 21 Democrats and 10 Republicans after the Senate rejected 61 to 37 a move to bypass the two-thirds rule and cut off debate by majority vote. ★ ★ ★ The two-thirds rule is the rule under attabk. Some senators want to make it possible for three-fifths of the senators voting to choke off filibusters. Others want a majority of the Senate to be able to halt unliinited debate after 20 session days. JhloEdls 1.20 * 28'A ^* OlInMelh 1.80 /H 66 63% Otis Elev 2 / 35 63% 63 Outb Mar .80/ 216 19% 19 33% 33% 33% —1 29 19'A 19 19% . 16 42V* 41% 62'A + 'A 6 26% 26% 26% - % 26 9 9 'A%9 84 9% 9 9% . .. a mi 3T 37 -% n ^ w* ?Q* + % 18% 11% + % 1965 Low 451,6 «93 142:6 3«^|F;jrt*m FansWel Met BONO AVERAGES ^ _ Cempllad » The AnecUlad Pren 2f 1* 1* > ReHf iiM. um. Net Change ^ +.1 Noon Tues. 71.4 96i6 |6.3 Prey. Day 71.6 96.6\ 86.2 Week Ago Month Ago 70.6 71.6 93.6 91.6 Year Ago 79.5 100.8 1966-67 High 79.5 101.6 1966-67 Low 70.1 88.9 1945 High '83.7 1 02.5 1945 Low 79.3 99.9 88A FedDStr 1.78 Flltrol 2.80 Fimlna 1.60 „„ FirstChrt .511 08.61 Flinfkote 1 88.2! Fla PLt 1.66 85.81 FMC Cp .75 90.6|FoodFelr .90 90.71 EordMot 2.60 n.7lForeOeir .50 96JiFrewSul 125 90.1 FruftCP 1.70 20 1»% 167% 158% -M*_____ 66 18 >17% 10 + % PennDIxle .48 iS 8?? f6%-«?‘w-’^ I -/» 66 S7 12 67% 67% 61W- 18 20% 20% 29% ■ 26 20 19% 19% - % 13 75 75 M -> 71 33% 33%/ 33% % 11 16% 16/ 10% — % 129 67 M 66% + % ' 13 22'A 21% 21% r- % 23 61 /60% 60'A + % 69 30 ^ l»*A 19% -*- % Pe PwLt.1.60 Pa RR 2.40e Pennzoll 120 PepsiCo I.M Pf^rC 1.30a PhelpD 3.40a Phlla El 1.48 PhjlRdg 1.t0 PhilMorr 1.60 PhlllPet 2.20a PitneyB 120 PItPlete 2.60 Pitta Steel 43% — % 19'A + 'A 58% SB'A 58'A + 'A 69 20% I9’A 19’A - % —P— 32 35% 35'A 35% - % 7 27% 27% 27% - 'A 6S 11% 11% II'A - 'A 25 26% 16% 26% + % 4$ 17% U 17'A + t* Xl37 42% SI 62% + 0* 13 34 33%„S3% 120 S0% »%‘'a8% - % 9 61% 41V* 61% 57 14% 14% 14% .;- % XT 57% 56% 56% -I 19 vM% 35% 3S% + % 30 S9% 50% 59 - % 2 0% g% 03% cM-2>lled. x-Ex 2lvldend.y-Ex dividend end sales In full, x-dis-l^ dlstribu--68% - % flon. xr-Ex rights. xw--V'«thou» '«»'-28'A - 'A,rants ww-WIth warrants. w^When dls-43’A — % tributed. wl—When Issued, nd—Next day News in Brief Eighteen stereo tapes valued t $126 and a $13 pair of ice skates were reported stolen yesterday from the car of Raymond Butler, 47, of 2276 Old Salem, parked in a lot at South - - Boulevard and Tex. Police shid being ''reoigenized~und~er th« B^'u^Ylentry was apparently made by Act, or securities assumed hv,*u':h eom-, ./ ki- j f Denies. fn-ForeIgn Issue subject to In- breaking the right front Vent {Treat egu.llz.tlon tax. window. Tile tiheft $20 in change during a break-in at Ken and Tbny’s Pimitiac. Lake Gulf, 1597 Williams Lake, Waterford Township, was reported to township poli^ yesterday. Treasury Position WASHINGTON (AP) — The cash po> sitlon of the Treasury compered with cor- 10, i«* Balance— - „ 5,207,170JI97jU S 5,108,562,069.25 69 rt% 8^ 81 + %: Deposits FItoel Year July 1— 76 71% 77% 78%-% 77,528,676,391.61 42,289,365,003.12 ”■ Withdrawals Fiscal Year— 92,369235,172.56 76,932,6)9,363.38 ’*~^***M^KL306J02.66 323,811,102,152.59 Gold Assets— 13,l5S,23a2gJ6 13,734,066,017.66 Auto Sales Dip Is Continuing DETROIT (AP) - Automobile sales figures for the second 10 days in January, showed a continued slump today from last year’s sales. General MotfH's Corp. reported sates of 120,181 passenger cars and commercial vehicles during the January ll-M period. Chry sler Corp. said its sales for the 10 days totaled 33,631 units. During the same period last year, GM sold 145,666 units, and Chrysler had sates totaling 40,-345. CJirysler said its 10-day sales figures represent a daily rate of 3,737, up three per cent over the daily rate of 3,632 for the January 1-10 period. During the first 20 days in January, GM sold 218,472 cars, compared with 269,3M in the similar period last year. Chrysler reported sates totaling 59,-058 units for the first two-thirds of this month, as opposed to 71, 804 units in the same period in 1966. Ford Motor Co. has not re teased its statistics. District Caucus Republicans in the 62nd legislative District (Pontiac) will hold a caucus at 8 p.m. tonight in the supervisors’ auditorium at the county courthouse to select a slate of delegates for the state convention in Detroit next month. The slate will be considered at the 19th Congressional District convention at the Walled Lake High School Jan. 31. DOW-JONES AVERAGES STOCKS 30 Industrials ...... 20 Ralls ....... O62.03-6.7O 226.94-OJt 130.93-0.77 303.64-120 M Stocks ............ BONDS 60 Bonds ................... 03.66+0.01 10 Higher grade rails ...... 10 Second grade rails m.61—0.07 10 Public utilities /VJs.T6+0,I3 10 Industrials ........ 09.30—0.03 16 72% 15 32’A 32'/* 32% 79 >6«% 6$'A 46 20 sm 31% 33% 55 M% 53 53% 27 66% %% 66'i* + '/* 0 51% S% 50% 15 no* 11% 11% Lodga Calendar laclMtas1m2«,W.» doM net to stetwterv • Hmli. TueedaY's 1st DlvHSw^ |g*J*iay Rato riad Racard a*M STOCK Ariz Bancorp 3 pc .. REGULAR Ladies National League Social Lcor»”'^di»trny ;; jis g - wUl meet Wed., 7:30 p.m. at lMToT :?o § 45 W. Beverley. —Adv. § 1-30 2-20 3-3 33 1-1 2-20 24» 2-tO later. DETROIT (AP) - Fire Majr^ shal Bernard F. DeCoster has reported at least four fire law violations in Detroit’s gigantic Coho Hall to Mayor Jerome P. Cavanagh. ★ ★ ★ DeCoster confirmed today he had made the report after a floor-by-floor inspection of the big exhibition center. He listed violations as: —Lack of so-called “panic hardware” on about 10 per cent of the doors. —Failure to install self-closing deuces (m overhead steel doors te the storage section. —Use of one large exhibit hall for storage of trade show materials witoout the protection of an automatic Crinkling system. —Lade of a sprinkler system in a third floor sign shop ahd storage room. The so-called “panic hardware” are bars or other devices that by pushing from inside will open locked doors Successtuhmestmg By ROGER E. SPEAR Q) “Some time ago we purchased 100 shares of Morri-son-Knudson at 31. it has declined steadily to 231^. We are not pressed for funds bnt are in retirement and cannot afford a loss. Should we hold or sell?” LB. A) The answer to your question depends entirely on your investment objective. Morrison-Knudson is a worldwide general contractor — building roads, bridges and manufacturing facilities. Share earnings have been very little changed oVer the paist decade and dividend payments 01*6 below the 1960 level. The st^ is ilot suitable for growth. If that is your aim, you ^ould look dses^we. I do not believe that price recovery will come quickly in this type of issue and if that element is important to you I’m afraid you wiU be disappointed., 1 regard Mo#ison-Knuds«i as a stock of good quality, rffer-ing a relatively'hi^ yield on « dividend that seems secure. If income during retirement is mmm your objective, I would hold the stock and (iisregard market fluctuations. ★ ★ ★ Q) “We are in our seventies and have $20,069 in savings; home - and income property worth $30,000 free and clear; $100 a week salary. Would yon advise selling our real estate and investing in bonds?” W.B. A) I don’t believe I would. In your circumstances, you should buy only corporate bopds of good quality, carrying a fairly high coupon and offering call protection for several years ahead. Bond prices lurve been moving higher, and issues such as I have described no longer yield six per cent or more. I think you weald now do wdl to get a 5.5 per cent return. I doid)t if it would pay you to sell y«|r home and reinvest. If your come pn^rty is weB situated and (dfers you a r^tl^k equivalent to present bond yields — as it [urobably cte^ —-1 wouM hold it as a very good loog-term hedge agtonst inflation., (Copyri^ nm ^ : THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 24, 1967 Whafs Going On in Red China—2 (EDITOR’S NOTE—For years many Westerners have pictured^ Mao Tsi-tung as a sort of mono lithk monarch who bent China to his will. An AP specialist in Communist affairs traces Mao’s story in this second of five articles.) By WnUAM L. RYAN AP Special Correspmident Qiina is a land of calamity. For at least 2,000 years, its people have been the victims of disasters, natural and manmade. Today it is undergoing a violent convulsion. Yet another man-made disaster may be just around the csorner. The current upheaval with its^ titanic power struggle dates* back at least a decade. ★ ★ * Behind the political troubles lay the ancient economic ernes, aggravated now by reckless totalitarian measures which desperately sought cures. An attempt was made a decade ago to turn China’s nation of teeming millions into one which a French observer once described as a “nation of blue ants.” It failed, miserably, and tiie fuse of today's great political explosion began sputtering even then. It is difficult for a Westerner to understand the how and why of what is going on in China today in the wild confusion (rf a great proletarian cultural revolution” launched last sunimer by Mao Tse-tung, chairnyin the Chinese C«nmunist party, and his chief ally, Defense Minister Lin Piao. But the ^‘cultural revolution’’ was just one more stop in the developing upheaval which now has reached a new and critical stage. BASIS OF TROUBLE At the basis of China’s troubles are backwardness and empty bellies — this despite the fact that Red China has achieved five atomic explosions and produced a nuclear-tipped missile. China can produce for war. It has difficulty producing ft>r peace. ★ ★ ★ For at least 2,000 yearsV^teed-ing China’s peculation has been a major problem. Even as long ago as that, the balance of na- AP WlrtphM* FUSE FOR TROUBLE-Ibia scene is typical of those In many of Red China’s commutes where, some observers say, the roots of China's present-day trouble originated. Many of those who oppose Mao Tse-tung and the Red Guards say cure-all ideas, such as the communes, for China’s ills are reddess and desperate. hire was upset and China ever since has been subject to floods, droughts and famines, tormented by eroded soil and ferocious rivers, condemned to plagues and pests. China is slightly larger in area than the United States, but much of its land is poorly suited to agriculture. Only a tenth of it can be cultivated, and less than half of that is good farmland. 'Ibis must feed a population of 750 million, growing at a current annual rate of 15 million. To feed them, a half-billion peasants labw mostly in the ancient ways pf Uieir forebears. If there were a similarly large proportion of U.S. farmers, 160 million Americans would be in agriculture. LOST CHANCE China may have had a chance with Sun Yat-sen’s 1911 revolution against the Manchu dynasty, but the agent for destruction of that revolution was the Rung Chang Tang — Chinese Communist party — created by agents of Moscow’s Communist International, including a man named Nguyen Than, later known as Ho Chi Minh of North Vietnam. Mao was at the founding meeting in Changhai in 1921. When he reached a position of authority, he purged Soviet elements from the party and it went over to insurrection which continued on into revolution with Chu Teh as the organizer of Mao’s 4th army. Thday Chu at 80, is pilloried by Mao’s “great proletarian cultural rev olution” as a traitor to commu nism. ★ * ★ Mao had many clashes with Joseph StaMn’s Soviet party and nurtured his revolution out of Moscow,’s reach. He tpolc advan tage of the Japanese occupation of northern Manchuria and then of the Japanese-Chinese war to sabotage Chiang Kai-shek’s Kuomintang forces. WAR THEORY The theory of “People’s war” was born. Chu Teh, master of guerrilla warfare laid it down. It often is credited to Mao: “When the enemy advances, we retreat. When the enemy halts and encamps, we harass him. When the enemy seeks to avoid battle, we attack. When the enemy retreats, we pursue.” Today’s war in Vietnam is a ‘people’s war” by the Mao definition, patterned on the.Chinese Conununist revolution, and a test case for the whole theory. Mao’s revolution almost lost., He saved it by his famed “long march” to escape Chiang’s troops—an arduous forced march of 8,000 miles winding through mountains, deserts, swamps. Often Mao’s men lacked food. Many thousands died. But the remnants holed up in 10,000 caves around Yenan in the bleak northwest and Mao established headquarters. The Japanese attack on China, and then World War II gave Mao’s Communist forces a new lease on life. ★ ★ ★ Eight unbroken 7ears of war left China prostrate and exhausted. The ultimate result was a Communist victory over the mainland by Oct. 1,1949. SEVERAL CONCLUSIONS Mao and his party went through several convulsions thereafter and China’s people continued to suffer hardship. Mao took note of discontent and sought measures to deal with it —in a typically Communist way. I He announced in 1957 that “contradictions amrmg the people” in a state like Q>mmunist China were possible. Evidently he had in mind the frightening lesson of Hungary’s 1958 revolution. He wanted to know who his opponents were. So he an nounc^ a program: “Let a hundred flowers blOom, let a thousand schools of thought contend.” ★ ★ ★ The flowers bloomed in a wave of criticism. Mao reversed gears and cracked down oir those who peradtted the flowers to blown, "rhey were purged. But this was only the begiiming of Mao’s troubles. The current convulsion in China may trace directly to early 1958. It was then that Mao’s Politburo held a iheeting at Pwtai-no communes in agricultural communities.” This was Mao’s great leap forward,” by which he expect^ to transform China's backward economy. OPPOSITION Opposition became evident by the end of the year at the eighth Communist party congress at Wuchang. This congress passed resolutions to “check excesses” of the “great leap forward.” The leap envisaged not only a new regimentation for agricultural productiwi, but a big advance in steel production by the device of back yard smelters. In 1958, about 60 million men and women in towns and cities were dragooned into this steel production effort. ★ h ir By the end of that year 98 per cent of all farms were on the “people’s commune” system, a total of almost 125 million families. Those who objected that this was a desperately reckless attempt, to cure (Jjhina’s ills were branded “right-wing opportunists.” The objectors included many who today are judged to be among Mao’s chirf opponents in the surging upheaval which is callwl “the great proletarian cultural revolution.” OBJECT OF BCORN nie “great leap” became the object (rf scorn and ridicule bom the Soviet Communist party. Nikita S. Khrushchev was outraged at the presumption of the Qiinese pleaders and Mao, who assumed that there was a shortcut to cominunisln which had not been laid down by the Soviet prototype. So the “great leap” itself was one of the contributing factors not only to today’s wnvulsion, but to the dew> split in world communism whiqh developed sWiftly after 1958. * ★ ★ It proved to be a great leap backward. China was in more ecwiohiic distress than ever. Mao faced rising discontent and insistent demands to reverse his Can a young giri college graduate from the Middle West find happiness in THe Peace Corps? course. (N*Xt! TM euAunI rtveliitlan.) Ancient Grave Is Discovered VIENNA (UPI) - A Celtic grave, probably dating back to the third or second century B.C., was dug up at Nymburg in Bohemia, the Czechoslovakian news agency CTK reported yesterday. The grave contained two bronze anklets and parts of a skeleton, the agency added. Read the facts, then writo .. . The Peace Corps Washington, D. C. 20525 □ Please send me information, □ Please send me an application. Name_________________________- Address. City____ State. .Zip Code. Published as a public service in cooperation with The Advertising Council and th« International Newspaper Advertising ExecutiVN. THE PONTIAC PRESS NEED HELP? USE PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED ADS. LOW IN COST. FAST IN ACTION. PHONE 332-8181. What a Beautiful Dijference! Brighten Up Your Car With a New Vinyl Roof. .. LOOKS EXACTLY LIKE ORIGINAL EQUIPMENT INTRODUCTORY Value OFFER INSTANT CREDIT! Regardless of the make or model of your car, this new vinyl top refinish will add new beauty to your automobile. Convertible rear window and zippers replaced as well as complete duto trim, door panels, arm rests, kick pads, carpeting, headliners and original upholstering repaired at a truly moderate cost. FREE INSURANCE ESTIMATES. QUALITY WORKMANSHIP AND MATERIALS. BILL KELLEYS Scot Cover TiltphonB ;FE 2-B33S 756 Oakland Ave. CORNER KINNEY STREET Just One Block North o^ Oakland Chrysler Sales A Smart way TO PASS THE BUCK M PsrsoMi Ckedts Mrs FREE % X 1 at Pontiac State If You Keep a Minimum and Continuous Balance of *300 WRITE AS MANY CHECKS AS YCU WISH ... MAKE AS MANY DEPOSITS AS YOU LIKE . .. RECEIVE A MONTHLY STATEMENT OF YOUR ACCOUNT FREE OF ALL SERVICE CHARGES. . Ponttao State Bank MAIN OFFICE SAGINAW at UWRENCE - OPEN DAILY O JLM. Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation With Deposits Now insured to $15,000 hy t -D 12 coNVNNiiiiT ernces ■V' /• -s ...____u THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY. JANUARY 24, 1967 baMAny ife.'v, I Coach Strack Terms Loss 'Comedy' Tilt Wolverines Handed 4th Big Ten Defeat at Iowa City IOWA OTY (AP)—What Jfich-igan coach Dave Strode termed "a comedy of errdfs” all but ended the Wolverines’ hopes for a fourth strai^t Big Ten basketball title Monday night. The Iowa Hawkeyes jumped to an 18-point lead and staggered to a 91-81 victory over toe Wolverines . ★ ★ ★ The loss was Michigan's fcHirth in five conference games, with nine left to play. Iowa is VL in Ten play. “Carelessness!” said Strack In the locker room. “It was a comedy of errors at times. Both teams made a lot of mistakes but we made toe most and it cost us.’’ The Wolverines, -who upset highly rated Michigan State 81-59 Saturday, fell into a cold shooting streak and a wobbly defense in falling behind S5-ti at the half. “We didn’t play nearly as well as we did against State,” said Strack. "We didn’t get into the game until the second half.” ZONE PRESS The Wolverines beld Iowa’s high-scoring Sam ’Wiliams, a native Detroiter, to points in the first half. But be wound up with 20 points aus Michigan switched its defense from a zone to a zone press. “We used a zone in the first half and it worked well against Williams for awbile,” ! Strack. "But this Iowa team has as good a chance as anyone to fte Big Ten.” ★ * ★ Iowa held a 62-46 lead with 17:15 to play early in toe seo ond half but Mlchigstn rallied to cut the margin to 79-75 with 6:57 to go. The Hawkeyes scored five strai^it points to make It 84-75 but a pair of foul shots by Michigan’s Dennis Bankey and a layrup by Jim Pitts cut the Iowa margin to 84-79 with 4:21 to play. Then the Hawkses reeled seven straight points to put the game out of reach. Iowa coach Ralpb Miller said after going over the statistics of his team’s first 12 games, he decided to use a half-court pressing defense against Michigan. WORKED WELL “This wwked i»retty well,,end I: think I’ll try it again dometime,” he said. “Our defense is still poor but we improved some toni^t.” MID-AIR SCRAMBLE—-Michigan guard Dennis Bankey (32) tries h layup but gets trouble from Iowa center Huston Breedlove knock^ the ball from Bankey’s hands on the play and Iowa who went on to defeat the Wolverines, 91-81. PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. (AP) — Jack Nicklaui^ fishing home on a string erf birdies wt&e Arnold Palmer collapsed, has added toe Bing Crosby Golf Touma-mmt chan^i(xiship to his ever growing list of titles. He now heads for toe Los Angeles Open starting Thursday. ★ ★ ★ With five birdies on the final seven holes despite a cold, biting wind over the tough Pebble Beach course, Nicklsws scored a 31 over the last nine holes. He passed Palmer and Bill Casper and won with a 72- hole score of 284, four under par, on a final round 68. Head and head all three battled toe final day. Three times they were in a three-way tie for toe lead and the situation changed on 14 of toe 18 holes Palmer bombed himself out Stewart Sullivan Dill Pitta Bankey Maxay McClain MaundrI MICnieAN IOWA OAT 112^2 24 Jones 2 1-5 5 Williama 4 2-2 10 BreeOlva I 2-3 18 Chspmn .4 44 12 Psricins 0 0-10 Norman 0 0-0 0 0 r ,7 1-1.15 t Ml 20 0 2-4 ■ 8 8-t 24 .8 4-5 16 0 04) ■ 4 66 14 B17-21 81 Tetals 112616 t1 41 »-ll H 16-11 Dill, Sullivan. 26, loVfa 20. Totah Mcliibii laiwa . Pouled wt-Mlchl0an. Total foulM#lchlgan At^ndance 10,661. Repeat Ring Result NEW YORK (AP) r- Middleweight champion Emile Griffith apparentiy h^ ended his series-trito Joey Archer on a second straight close decision and now it may be toe turn of Italy’s Nino Benvenuti. After the- 28-year-old Griffith had scraped out his narrow but unanimous 15-round decision at Madisewi Square Garden M<»-day night matchmaker Teddy Brenner said that Benvenuti, the European 160-pound champion had agreed to terms for a March 22 title fight at the Garden. Braivenutl, toe former world junior middleweight king and beaten only once in his career, was an interested spectator of the return Griffith-Archer fight. Grif^ received $75,000 arid Archer about $25,000 on his 15 per cent of the gross gate of $127,119 paid by 14,838 customers and toe television receipts. SHORT BIGHT As in the first fight last July 13, there were no knockdowns Griffith came close to scoring Me in toe second npuj when be clipped Archer with a short right; to toe jaw and the challenger’s right knee dipped to toe canvas. Ptoferee Art Mercante didn’t count, thus ruling it was not a knockdown. Griffith claimed it was knodolown but Archer said, sl^l^ied. I came right back at him if you remdmber.” It was in toat same secemd round that Archer suffered deep, purplish bruise under his right eye. Good comer work kept it from breaking open. Outside of the second, the big round was the eighth, won by Griffith as he kept the pressure on for toe full three minutes. The champ ened up with left jabs followed by left hooks to the head and body and solid ri^ts to the head. “I was not at my best but I thought I won clearly,” said Grlffito. “The more pressure I put on him toe more he ran.” •k -k -k "I thought I won it decisive- ly,” said Archer, who relied on his snapping left jabs, occasional rights, and dancing feet. “I thought I won at least nine rounds. I don’t know what I’ve got to do to win a decision in the Garden. That’s three now, one with Joe Gonzalez and two with Griffith.” Referee Art Mercante and judge Joe Dran each scored it 8-6-1 in rounds for Griffith. Judge Joe Eppy had Griffith ahead, 8-7. wito two shots out (tf bounds and a 9 on No. 14. THREE STRAIGHT First Casper led, then Palmer and finally on the 13th hole, Nicklaus dropped toe second of three straight birds to go into a lead he kept to win the $16,000 top prize in the $104,500 tournament. Casper collected $9,600 for 74 — 2^ and Palmer $6,000 for 75-291. “I’ve started this year shooting better golf earlier because I played more late fall tournaments,” Nicklaus explained. He has won four of the last five events he has played — the Sahara, the Canada Ctip and the PGA team championships, both paired with Palmer, and now the CJrosby. * ★ ★ Casper held a stroke lead at the start. At the end of nine holes he had a 37, Palmer had a 36 to tie him and Nicklaus stood just one stroke back with a 37. At the 10th hole. Palmer and Nicklaus shot par. Casper went into a trap and Amie took the lead by a stroke. Casper pulled even with Palmer at the 11th by dropping a 12-foot birdie putt. Nicklaus remained one stroke back. Then as the winds whipped, his rally startdl in an unusual manner. Nicklaus’ tee shot on the 205-yard 12th went six feet past the green, and 25 feet from the hole. TAPPED rr “I took a putter and just tapped it, and the ball went into the hole,” Nicklaus related, still a little amazed at that stroke of fate. Casper, playing with Jack, hit into the woods and went over par, losing two strokes to Nicklaus. Mike Souchak, who didn’t qualify for individual pro com-^tition in toe final rmind because of a 228, one above toe cut-off, collected $2,700 by teaming wito his brother Frank for toe best-ball title with a ^-under-par 259. REAP REWARDS-Mike Souchak (left) and brother Frank (center) pose as the winners of the pro-am division of the (Jrosby tournament with Jack Nicklaus the over-all tournament champion. Nicklaus had a 72- AP Wtraphoto hole total of 284 five shots ahead of Billy Casper. Mike was recently named pro at Oakland Hills Country Qub. Frank plays out of Oakmont, Pa. UCLA Continues Torrid Pace on College Front By toe Associated Press It looks as though nothing will stop UClA’s torrid basketball team except, maybe, somO cold weather. The tiq>-ranked Bruins make their firk appearance of the season away from toe West Coast this wedeend when they meet Illinois Friday and Loyola of Illinois Saturday, both games to Chicago Stadium. i k k k Illinris has won eight games and lost four vtoile Loyola is 7-6 Each figures to {vovide stremgr er resistance thm the Bruins’ of^noits of last we^ Pimt-laM and toe University California at Santa Barbara. UCLA trampled Portland 122-57 and UC at Stota Barbara 119-75. The Br^s aro unanimous Captains, Mikemen Move Up in Poll Waterford Kettering and Pontiac St. Michael moved up in their respective classes of this week’s Associated Press prep basketball ratings. The Captains, who slipped past North Farmington and whipped L’Anse Creuse, jumped from ninth to seventh in Class A. This is the loftiest rating ever reached by Kettering. The Mikemen are seventh in Class D after being tied fw eighth a week ago. Both Kettering and St. Michael are undefeated. Willow Run grabbed the top spot in Class B and Ewen jumped into first in Class D. Muskegon Heights held first place in Class A and L’Anse remained atop Class C. Both are undefeated. Class A remained the same choices for first place in The Associated Press’ major college poll fw'toe second straight week today. They collected all 39 votes for toe top position in the balloting by a national panel of sports writers and broadcast- ffS. MOVED UP ' North Carolina advanced to second place while Houston held toe Ho. 3 spot and Louisville slipped two notches to fourth. Princeton held fifth place. North Carolina, Houston and Princeton were not scheduled last week. Louisville dropped its sec(«id gaipe of toe year, 59-58 to Cincinnati, after scoring its 15th victory, 66-50 over Dayton. Texas Western, Kansas, Western Kentucky, Vanderbilt and Providence round out toe first 10. Jack Nicklaus, $16,00 ... 69-73-7668-204 Billy Casper, $9,600 ... 72-7669-76-289 Arnold Palmar, $6,000 767667-75-291 Bill Parker, $3,493 .... 7672-70-76-293 Jack Burke Jr., $3,493 ... 767-7676-293 Bob Rosburfl, $3493 .... 72-7672-76-293 Frank Board, $2,040 .... 72-767672-294 Gardner Dickinson, $2,040 76767672-294 Wes Ellis, $2040 ........ 767671-76-294 Al Gelbtrgsr, $2,040 ... 7677-71-76-294 Dave Hill, $2JM0 ......... 76867671-294 Howie Jobllson, $2,040 .. 767672-73—294 Bob McCalllstar, $2,040 .. 7671-7676-294 Doug Sanders, $2,040 .. 7678-72-71-294 Rex Baxter, $1,280 ..... 72-767672-295 Chuck Courtney, $1,280 ... 71-767673—295 Lou Graham, $1,200 ...... 76767676-295 Tommy Jacobs, $1280 .*. 76ri-7676r2?5 Art Wall Jr., $,200 . 767676^-^5 George Knudson, $J,040 76767673-296 George Archard, $714 — 73-7672-77—297 Jim Colbert, $714 ....... 767674-2-»; butch Harrison, $714 ...... 767671-5- ........... I, $714 The top ten, with first piscs votes In parentheses, season records through Set. Jan. 21 and total points on a 169-67-65-6 62-1 basis; 1. UCLA (39) ................. 14-0 390 2. North Carolina ............ 12-1 279 3. Houston ,................. 14 1 269 4. Louisville ................. 162 255 5. Princeton .................. 161 233 6. Texas Western ............. l2-2 206 7. Kansas .................. . 12-3 93 8. Western Kentucky ........... 161 9. Vanderbilt ................. 162 10. Providence ............:u.. 11-3 NBA Standings Eastern Divislan Won Lest Pet. Behind Philadelphia .. 46 4 .920 10 Boston 34 12 .739 New York .... 25 % .490 2V/i 19 25 .437 24 Baltimora . . 12 40 .231 35 Waatem DIvMan San Francisco . 31 18 .633 St. Louts Chicago Detroit 21 28 .429 10 71 18 32 30 .407 .375 12’/i Lot Angeles . 18 31 .36/ 13 Manday's Results Philadelphia 112, St. Louis 105 Today's Oapiat Bolton at Philadelphia Detroit at Chicago bBICsm Be Baltimore at'San Francisco Wadnaadayt Oamat $t. Louis at Chicago Boston at Datrolt Balttmehl *at Loa Angelas New York at Cincinnati Scoring leadart; HEAD PUNCH—Middlewei^t du|inpion Emile Griffith landA a left to tiw tatead of challenger Joey Ardher'ln the opening round of their diampiontoip fight in New Y(nrk last night Ar^’s counter is abort of toe mark. Cfriffith took a unanimous decision. 1. Barry, S.F. ... 2. Rob'tson, CIn. 3. Ch'b'lain, Pha. 4. West, L.A....... 5. Baylor, L.A. O PO FT TP AVO. 46 604 461 1669 36.3 42 433 404 1268 30.2 49 463 246 1172 23.9 40 394 373 1161 29J) 39 41$ 253 1003 27.$ Ted Makalena, $714 ...... 767672*77- Dave Marad, $714 .:...... Steve Oppermann, $714 .. 71-767675—297 Jerry Pittman, $714a..... John Polt, $714 ........ 74-7671-76—297 Dave Stockton, $714 ..... 72-7671-7^2W Dudley Wysong, $h4 ...... 74-7671-76-W7 Bob (igalby, $520 ....... Dick Ldtl, $520 ......... 767672-77-298 Steve Reid, $520 ........ Rocky Thompson, $520 ... 76767675—290 Julius Boros, $396 ...... Gay Brewer, $936 ........ Bill Collins, $396 ...... Mike Fetchick, $396 ..... Dean Refram, $396 ....... Hugh Royer, $396 ........ Steve Spray, $396 ....... Frank Boynton, $229 ..... Joe Campbell, $229 ...... 73-7671-80—300 DAla Dou'5asl,*$229 ..... ”1-7677-77-300 Bob Duden, $229 ...... Billy Farrell, $229 ..... 7681-6677—300 Charles Coody, $84 ...... 7677-7675-30 Bobby Ford, $84 ......... ZJ'ZI'Zt'Tt^l John Loti, $84 .......... Tom Nleports, $84 ....... Bart Yancey, $84 ........ 71-767681—301 Rec Leaders in Township Defeat Foes Waterford Township’s recreation men’s basketball results last night Were indicative of the “haves meeting the have nots’ in Continental League action. Defending champion Buckner Finance retained its share of first place with a 77-58 romp piast HiUcrest Nazarene despite 30 points by toe loser’s Ci^s Cooper. Jerry Paul hit 22 for Buckner. Chetolah Grocery stayed tied wito Buckner’s by ing away from Ryeson’s Market in toe late going (w a 59-44 win. Dick DeWeese hit 28 poiirts Ross Ludwlck 20 and two other teammates were in twin figures as Glenn’s Auto Sales kept within one game of the leaders by trimming Mattingly Insurance 77-50. Veterans Get Wings Rolling through the top five places, with Hamtramck, Saginaw, Dietroit Norhtwestem and Birmingham Groves — all are undefeated — holding their positions. ★ ★ ★ In Class B, Willow Run edged undefeated South Haven to move from second to first. CLASS A TMm, rMord Pan pis. 1. ~ Muskegon Haights (160) /4 2. Hamtramck (160) 73 3. Saginaw (60) 61 4. Detroit Northwastam (7-0) 5. Birmingham Groves (10-0) 6. Detroit Pershing (0-0) 7. Waterford Kettering (M) 8. (tie) Niles (61) (tie) Warren FItigerald (160) 10. Flint Central (61) 43 16 Others, In order: Wyandotte, Lansing Everett, Detroit Cathplle Central. Grand Rapids Central, Detroit Eastern, Harper Woods Notre Dame, Escanab^ Mount Clemens, Kalamazoo Central, Livonia Bentley, Detroit Southwaatem, Clarkston. NEW YORK (AP) - It Uxk awhile but Detroit’s old pros have finally started the Red ings roiling towards a National Hockey League playoff berth ★ ★ ★ Norm Ullman, Gordie Howe and Alex Delvecchio, who have a total of 46 NHL seasons be hind them, have lifted the Wings to within two points of fourth place Montreal Detroit swept three games last week while the defending champi(Hi Canadiens tied one and lost another. CLASS E Taam, racerd 1. Willow Run (61) 2. South H8van(60) 3. Maryavllla (KFO) 4. Caro (11-0) 5. Charlotte (9-0) «. (tie) AlUon (7-1) $. Grand Ra^dt East Christian (B-3) 25 9. Grand Rwda Kanowa Hllla (7-1) 1$ 10. Marina eny (11-1) 17 Olhart, In ardari Portland, #archmant. Royal Oak Shrina, Daarbom DIvIna Child, lihpaming. CLASS e Taam, racard PaU Pis. 1. L'Anta (96) 7$ 2. Latlla (160) 70 3. ChaiiavDix (60) 42 4. AAount Plaaiant Sacrad Haart (9-0) 5. Muslwgan Christian (61) 37 6. Oatrolf St. HadWIg (M) 28 7. Brooklyn (62) 27 8. BloomitHidala (61) 26 9. Capse (61) 25 Datrolt Visitation (61) Others, In order: Flint Holy Radoamer, MIddlavllle, Quincy, Datrolt St. Paul, Wakefield, Houghton, Datrolt Country Day. ‘ Scoring leaders: O A PtS. 1. MIkIta, Chi............... 19 39 50 2. Ullman, Daf. ............... 16 27 43 3. Wharram, Chi.................20 21 41 4. B. Hull, Chi.............. ..28 12 40 5. Rousseau, Mtl............... 11 27 38 6. Howa, Oat. ............... 14 23 37 7. Goyatte, N.Y................. 4 32 36 8. Gilbert, N.Y. .............. 23 11 34 9. Pllola, Chi......!.......... 4 26 30 10. Delvecchio, Det............. 9 21 30 CLASS D Taami iweerd 1. Ewan (8-0) 2. Flint St. Matthew (60) 3. Fowler (61) 4. Trout Creek (7-1) 5. Adrian -Catholic (7-1) 6. St. Joseph Catholic (7-1) 7. Pontiac .St. Michael (KM)) 8. Peck (60) 9. Vesteburg (9-0) i 10. Trenary (160) DflWii msm Cards Pick Musial General Manager ST. LOUIS (AP) — Stan Musial, who is toe third general manager of the St. Louis Cardinals in four years, feels the National League club is in good shape for the 1967 baseball campaign. The 46-year-old Musial, who played 22 years with the Cardinals, became general manager Monday succeeding Robert Howsam, who resigned Sunday to accept a similar post with the dneinnati Reds. Howsam replaced Bing De-vine as general manager during the 1964 season. “We have a good,, well balanced ball club,” Musial said after his sele^on was announced. “We plan no maj()r player changes or trades at ihis time,” he added. Thaw Curtails Skiing The spring-like thaw has curtailed ski activity at all the resorts in Southeast Michigan. Should cold weather return quickly enough, sufficient base may remain to enable ihost of the lodges to resume skiing by the weekend. 804 North Pony 93 North Tolograph Phone 334-9041 Phone 335-2444 Every Sunrise Everywhere I WEEK'S SPECIALI^^^^a^®^ '1 GLAZED iBmUTS reg. 84c doz. m. m This Week*$ Added Feature: OLD FASHIONED HAND CUT Fried Cakes Dawn’s Famous Old Fashioned Glased or Plain Fried Cakes... Perfect with Your Mondng Coffeolt On the Way to Work Or Home From a Party You'll Enjoy Dawn's Famous Flavor Brewed Coffee Danji DomTS C-1 THE IK>yTTAC i^SS. TUESDAY, JANUABY 84, 1967 LMiia* Classic leaguer Marie go Pontiac Sales has opened a m Iab/I In I>Ka ASnarttw Reynolds was responsible for a six-point lead in the Airway considerable amount of the ten-Lams Tuesday Clas^c. Last . thunder heard at H u r o Bowl last Thursday. n week, Ed Gignw: ndled 232~2S&— _______________. 66(1 and Guido Uffate J66-627 After a 211-215 start, she really, to lead th<| individual scoring, chaflenged the pins for a 241 Keith hit a M3 aad wind-up and a 667 series for Bill Crawford 621. ^tartan Airconditioi^, tiie sec-best actual series reported f<^ local woman this seam jerry Dui^el h^ 216- AtpeeA cc w hioh. lakm («i •rebate Noma Conleyjhad 2oa_g24: Dave Eby posted 208-7*"^ Pr„m ” 214—626: and “Mo” Moine 202- Htttir 235-630, 210-87, Mary Foster hit 201 572 for Huron Bowl Lounge, Betty Lucas bowled 212-576 for AlbM’s Coiffures and Virginia AUldL S VAIUUUV9 aiiu TUguaua Millar 8(il—567 for Johnson’s As- gwne. I^alt Paving ★ w „ „ „ Friday night at Howe’s Lanes, In men’s classic action, Kee- the Senior Men’s Classic lis^ a 246-237-680 high score by Clarence Stapleton. Ed Solecki had 230—623, Bill Jolm had 638, Denny Leake 621, Ray Conley 227—630, Jay Carroll a 236 and barry Lucas a 234. Thh h I Httl< wi-«M ii|ir li Dm tel aArwIMni GO KING EDWARD Amtr/ct’t L»rg»st Stiling Cigtr leauHM '•PIOUl SNO-CAPS 4 FULL PLY 2-’17S FRK MMNTINg T2il9“ -lnk**tt-«WBMNBl II Jl UMt ItlrtMl F«41Wi Jl to 41 OPEN DAILY SAT. 1-6 UNITED TIRE SERVICE 1007 Baldwin Ave. ^ Mm. From Downtown Pnntiat Highlanders Off Target Hii^and Lakes Campus was outscored 88-27 front the field Monday night and dn^)ped a tNl 8 vwlict to Alpena Cwranunity Cdlege’s cagers. The Highlanders of Oakland Conununity College made less fiian 30 per cent of the field goal tries in' dropi^ng their fourth Garrett Gohl tipped the SOOigtraight deci^m and seventh in Classic Thursday by hitting 236- 11 starts Mtoidw*» CtotoM McMtall Rwmt ■y TM AiMCtotod Prtu EAST American UnWersHy 76, Uaf«y«lto 6) Virginia Tach 77, pm 60 j SOUTH Florida 63, Oiorgia 61 Tannessae H, Kanlucky SO, two over times Florida State II, Jacksonville 70 IM tOWL wadnasiay Paatlae *Aitor • Intor4>lfict AAao high series - Charles Messw, 205-236-617. HIGH GAMES - Bob Gojr^ 206-266 (62S); Andy Heimbrlng, W7; Tom Miouel, 2*3; WillUm McKee, 221,' Jim Elliott, 216; Lee Mansfield, Bill Carter and Charles McMahon, 212 eacb. Wadntsday Hap Cato high SERIES - Jenny Sonoenliwo, mO. team points - Fidler's, 55; Lei Drugs and Cooley Soft Water, 53 Tom'e Meat Market, 50; F.S. Ward, 69/a. Tuesday Heusa Men high series - Ray Kaferski, 230^ 606. HIGH GAMES - Tom Stilwell, Ml Fred Stewart, 226; Hank Hopkins, 223; Lee Farley, 216. _ _ , Saturday Ins A, Outers . HIGH GAMES AND SERIES — ArchW . , Anderson, 256-213-641; Joe Foster, 212; ciSlOn. Lucille Myers, 510; Millie Anderson, 506. airway LANES Wednesday Mixed Odubtos HIGH GAMES AND SERIES — Tom Clifton, 311-223-635. ^ Wddntsday FVst wonwn HIGHvISERIES - Marie Reynolds, 545: Barb Pickett, 200-545. HIGH GAMES -Jean Whetstone, 206 (546); Doris Bou-card, 202 (535). HURON BOWL WddntMey Mitt "A" Mtn HIGH SERIES — Dwayne Neremor, Stroh's Beer, 213-2)2-632. HIGH GAMES — Jactb Lehmann, Stroh's, 26S; Armand Giglio, Stroh's, 236, Tuesday Haase Ladies HIGH SERIES - Marge Linds, 200-SSO. high GAME — Helen L. Smith, 206-567. ALL-SPARE GAME - Doris ShosOers, 165. Ftorkta State 61, Jacksonville 70 gtatc and Tennessee were , »uuw scored rimoas sSttwrIf* Missis ippi ^ia*'*NSS5witsrn poised to join idle Vanderbilt siteU6 . d 05 ll Pruitt 11 ^2 16 Fremlln 0 2-4 a Olandtr 3 6-7 12 Adsit 3 ^3 0 Platt 2-2 4 Grotti II 10-13 n 6.M 13| 4 04 I, 0 0-11 Melkis'kz 2 04 4 Hepinstoll 0 0-1 Tetoto a 14.21 H Telato I7t4.M«:6| HALPTIMR fCORl I ANtona CC 46, HIgMaed Ukat a ' Danver MIOWRST Iowa 01, Mlchiflon 61 _ Ohio Stale 82, Pgrdue 72 Toledo 100, Evansville 00 Eau Claire 01, River Fells 75 Oshkoali 84, Lacrosse 10 Parsons 05, Hofthwood M Platleville 81, Stevens Point M SOUTHWEST New AAexico Slate 67, West Tsksi Stole FAR WEST 115, Oklahoma City 5th Cage Wins Posted by Unbeaten Rec Teams The Perry Drugs and Amigos’ aub recreation quintets each posted win No. 5 without a loss last night as the city men’s leagues had three hoop twinbills. The American League leading drugmen pulled away from the pesky Oxford Merchants in the final period to take a 63-51 de- The Amigo Celts stayed one game behind by outdistancing Booth Homes in the final half for a 73-54 verdict. The AL next Rochester 'Y' Tankers Win Over Pontiac contenders will tangle Monday^ The Amigos’ Club combine, meanwhile, upped its National League margin to a full game by humbling Highland Lakes, 78-36, while runner-up Acker Construction was idle. 'They, also, will collide next Monday. The Packers’ hopes remained alive with a 69-54 victory over McDonald’s Drive-In, leaving the winners Pk games behind the Amigos. Local 653 dumped Auburn Hills, 81-58, and the Unbeatables gained a gift victory from the All Stars, who couldn't field a team at game time. BALANCE WEST SIDE LANES Thuriday St. Michaul't Muii high SERIES - Paul RgdrigiMZ, 227 Rochester boys took Perry Drugs had five players in twin figures to offset the 19-point effort of Oxford’s Jerry Wagner. Larry Blackburn tallied two of 17 for Booth Homes but, the 3H SERIES - Paul Ruorlguei, 227- .... . Dnn HIGH GAMES — Jtrry Purna, 246; three divisioHs io defeating ron-—ou, F,y Garfiuy, 212; R»Y (jac YMCA swimmers Saturday I at Oakland University pool, 89- Norman, 216 Giroux, 211. HOWE'S LANES , Thursday ktarning Man 131. HIGH GAMES - Don Hickman, 225;| Rochester tankers won the IDuke Dean and Oal Darling, 223 aach; . , . ... ■ nq -nrl t)io Lyle Douglas, 213; Ted Moore and Dick I midget dlVlSion, 42-?2 and the Huff, 212 each; Paul Barnum, 211; Tom — — rn ft ...u:u Dnn. Willwerth, 203-201. iSSuBLE HELL0^i ’The Pontiac Parks and Recreation Department’s physical fitness finals last week for the city’s fifth and sixth grade boys had eight schools represented among the winners. * * * CAU THIS HUMBER for care-free, trouble-free home heeting service. WATERFORD Fuel & Supply 4943 Airport Rd. At Woterferd Depot Fitness Finals Picks Winners Prep Division, 59-14, while Pon tiac scored a 43-30 triumph in the Junior Division. The newly, formed YMCA girls’ team also challenged the boys’ team but lost 149-89 in the Uiree divisions. Gail Bard, Beth Blaylock, Jane Irwin ^ Clare Stickney were the leading swimmers for the girls’ team. Webster School had four boys finish in first place, Wilson had three, Bethune and Herrington two apiece while Emerson, Al-cott, Marl Twain and McConnell had one each. Emerson’s win was in the platoon exercise in which eight boys represent the school. The results: ELEA4ENTARY PHYSICAL FITHBSI City RdCTNtton Flnalt ROPE CLIMBr-Flttti Grade; MIkr Con-toy, Harrington, 7.6 lacoods; Sixth Grade; Danny Luenberger, Webster, 6:6. midget division Rechesicr 42, Pontiec 32 Medley Relay - Dauw, Jim Dauw, LaVIre), 1.13.2 _ Fraastyle — Brooks (R). Markliam (PI, *’^ndtvl(to*al Medley — Jim Dauw (P), ^ Buttertl'y -^jeft Dauvr (P), Brown (R), '^Freeslyto’’ -*Sawhlll (R), Irwin (P), ^^BtSSr^e’' -^Markham (P), Johan-ntstn (R), Viiana (R), :'V-4 Breaststroke — Zink (R), Knudsan (Rl, Jorgenson (P), ;21.0 Fitoastvto Relay - RtKhestor Brooks, Johannasan, Kmtosen, SawhIII), 1.03.5 Celts had Cy Green and John Hunt matching that. Amigos’ Club and three team- 16 by Craig Rodgers. the pointmaking with 22 and Dan McCo'skey Mt 18, but Local 653 from Sandy Snow. Vio^ fjvFA nloTrATW 1*1 *l/TaiKlA firV- ___ had five players in double figures led by Ken Karns’ 18. WWW Cecil Jones’ 24 markers for The Packers was the night's highest individual total. Tonight there is an International doubl^ header at Lincoln JHS. PREP DIVISION Rochautor 5», Panttac 14 Medley Relay — Rochesler (Sentord, Hock. Featharsfone, Scheigej), 2:49.1 FrMstyla — Hardenburg (P), Zink (R) Lynn (P), :I3.6 Individual Madley — f^eatharstone (R), Carl (R), 1:23.2 ^ Buttortty — JacquaS (R), :32.8 Fraastyto — Johnson (R). Hock (R), Dlrkto (P). :36.3 ' Baeksiroka - Sanford (R), Hutton (P), swan (R), -.414 ^ ^ Freestyle — Kares (R). Hardenburg anny Luenberger, Webster, 6:6. ' jpj PULL UPS-Fifth Gra^i ‘ eTaartsIrokt - Foxiaa (R). Cork (R) Bethune, 9: Sixth Grade. a Darnell/ Alcott SIT UPS—Fifth Grade: Mark Robinson^ Bethune. 106; Sixth Grade: Jett Bell, Webster. 72. . _ PUSH UPS—Fifth Gradt: Pttor Ra-mlrei, Harrington, 37; Sixth Grade: Gary McCarrick, Wilson, 3$. standing broad jump—Fifth Grade; John Manning, Mark Twain, 6-9; Sixth Grade: Tim Banycky, Webster, 7-2W. HOP, STEP and JUMP—Fifth Grade; Shellto Branon, MKonnall. 21-9: Sixth Grade: Robb Wator&JNabstor, 24-9. CRAB RACE-FlIHlMJI^toda; Dornel Hamilton, Wilson, 6.4 sSeondij Wxlh (3rade: Robert Holt, Wilion, 6.6 sS^MS. PLATOON EXERCISES—Emerson War-ry Campbell, Robert Turner, Andy (iau-thiar. Jim Shaw, Bill York, Stovt Ltal, Ellwood Holmoulst. Nan Tillman). Freestyle Relay — Rochester (Karas. Zink, Foxiae, Jacques), 2:00.3 When In Doubt See Hanoute And Ask for George Harold thd (ritiMily SaUs Manager at Al Honoofa'a. Gearg* hot badii with Al (toM 6 aueedtsful years tailing Chaviolats and Buicks. Ha knowa tha isutinais and that# two outatanding GM cars inaida and out. And ha knows how to put you in tha bast cacfor your nooda and yPur gockatbook. Far a groat buy on a groat car go to Hanouto’a and ask for Goorgo. Al Hanoute's Ghevrolet-Buick, Inc. '209 W. Potk Wvd., Lai* Orion, MY 2-241 JUNIOR DIVISION Pontiac (43, Rochester 30 50 Freestyle — Hardenburg (P), Karas (R), Weston (P), :26.9 too Individual Medley — Klann (P), Ashmead (P). Karas (R), 1:06.5 50 Butterfly — Featherstone (Rl. Mark ham (P), :29.3 100 Freestyle — RykowskI (P), Hardenburg (P), Grittls (R), 1:00.0 50 Backstroke — Merkhem (P), M. Virena (R), C. Vlltna (R), :34.1 200 Freestyto — Featherstone (R), RykowskI (P), Eller (P), 2:06.6 50 Breaststroke — Klann (P), SawhIII (R), :34.2 300 Fraastyto Relay — Rochesler (VI-zene, SewhiM, Griffis. VIzene), 3:03.4 OU Trackman Wins 3 Events There was a triple and two double winners in the quadtan-gular indoor track meet held yesterday at Oakland University- Alien Cotter of OU warf the high and low hurdles winner, going 5.8 in the 45-yard lows and he won high jump in 5-7; John Hiller of Wayne State won the mile in 4:35 and the two-mile run in 9:49 and Al Gleton of Michigan Lutheran was the 45-yard da^ winner in 5.3 and 440 run in 8.5. Kentucky Loses Again By the Associated Press Adolph Rupp. "But t thought we Alabama may not be No, I but pl*yud a fhte deftoistve game. If because of the Crimson Tide, we’d/had sh« our average, we MrAaalwl luMatJh lindHiW ^11 ff neither is Mississippi State. State and Tennessee were poiseu to lOUl loie ymiuciuui ac ----« i the top of the Southeastern Con- « PO™‘ to the ^ r -L . 4«o*a «Wbf*l6l84M d«Mjl **«a4 t«dhM4MaBd« but only the Volunteers made it and then ^st barely. ★ ★ ★ m J.J 6- 13 and Miller’s 12 Fieri- Tennessee needed two over- . times to squeeze past Kentucky “ 5^ hut Alabama of the night was’ turned In by Mississippi State’s ambitionsSteve Mix. with a 91-74 threshing. That left Vandy and Tennessee on top with 6-1 records with State now a full game behind at 5-2. Florida, 7-3, kept pace with the leaders by nipping Georgia 63-61. Alabama'got balanced scoring from ’Tom Jones, Gary Elliot, Mike Nordholz and Guy Turner in its romp over Mlssissipjri State. Jones and Elliot scored 17 each and Nordholz and Turner had 16 apiece for the Tidet which is 9-5 over-all but rally 2-4 in the SEC. HIGH SCORES State, 11-2 over-all, got 21 points from Dave Williams, who was high man in the game. l^entucky hung on gamely against Tennessee, forcing the game into two extra periods before finally bowing. Tom Hen-driz dropped in two free throws with four seconds left in the second overtime for the yictory. “We’re suppos^ to be the worst defensive team in the country,” said Kentucky Coach Wings Spank Farm Skaters HAMILTON, Ont. (AP) - TTie Detroit Red Wings trounced would have all ri^t.” Dave Miller scored Flraida’s on to beat Georgia. Jim Youngblood led the losers with 21 points while Neal Walk’s The top shooting performancei Toledo sophomore Stm kOx, who hit on 15 18 field goal .attempts, leading the Rockete to a 100-90 victory over Evansville. L4)OK-■» AT IT': THIS WAY! ' Would you sell your home end contents for the emcunt of insorence you now carry? If the , Answer Is en emphatic "NO, of toutw net!" then you ere not carrying enough protection. Let's talk it over. Kenneth G. INSURANCE 188 EHxabitli Lake W. Ph. Fi Com*r of Mvmiy St.; 6 ®lockf East of Pontiac Moil NE^b HELP? USE PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED ADS. LOW IN COST. FAST IN ACTION. 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Hamilton’s lone goal came Regular Detroit goalie Roger Crozier acted as poach while Hank Bassen minded the Wing r ■ It adds eefeW — wont eonduet nghtnlng or elecMcIty. won t aup-poitflreT Miiiiii (,'«// Anytime.. a It Installe easOy. quickly over your present aldiswalrel ■tsgsasiiaijgfiiftjs FE 8-9251 BIRD FBEt ESniWTfS WBaW (No obiigatMii) 323 N. PeRfr PONTIAC L ♦Mot a paint, not a vonoir, not a coatinc: Just 100% solid, lasting vinyl Cranes Mat Victors Cranbrook won its 4th wres-tline match of the season by defeating Avondale, 43-11 last night. It was Avon’s 4th defeat without a win. CRANBROOK 43, AVONDALE II 95 pounds — Brodie (C) by fortolt: 103 — Don Rcttollo (C) pinned Klvsri, 3:10; 112 — R. Davis (A) dec Hebei, 4-0; 120 — Safrert (Cl pinned Drake, 1:08; 127 — Leone (C) pinned Roe, 3:57; 133 - M. Roitollo (C) pinned Smith, 3:13; 136 — Sampson (C) by tofteit; 145 — Donehud (C) pinned Miller, 3:44; 154 - Zynts (C) pinned B. Davis, 3:27; <65 — Soulweber (A) dec Ensroth, 13-7; ISO — Harris (C) dec Archer, 8-0; heevy-welghl — Nolan (A) pinned Issitt, 1:32. Ron Wardie set an OU record in the half mile in 2:03.9. The other school in the meet was Auburn Hills CC. OU will compete Friday in the Michigan Federation Meet at A^n Ar^r. NHL Standings W L T PtI.GF UA Chicago .......... 23 11 6 53 143 100 New York ......... 20 14 7 47 1)6,100 Toronto .......... 17 15 8 43 106 114 Montreal ......... 16 17 5 37 96 95 Detroit 16 2 3 3 35 125 131 Boston 11 23 7 29 103 141 Monday's Results No games scheduled. Teday's OemaS No games scheduled. WedneiMy't Osmei Montreal el Toronto Boston al New York Intemettonal Hockey Leeiue Monday's Results No games scheduled. Today's Gamut Des Moines at Toledo Wednesday's Osmti Dayton at port Wayne • • SAPETY. bUR AAAJOR CONCERN THE SUM TOTAL OF BUICK OLIVER BUICK 210 Orchar^kt Ave. at Williams OgtnJMon^Tutgj^ Chevy-Vans come with 90" or 108" wheelbases, 1/2- or 3/4-ton ratings, 209-cu.-ft. or 256UTH (D) ♦ 982 ¥AKQ843 .__,¥107 ♦ Q9 Eut-West vulnorable Wut Nortli But Sonik ^ 1¥ Bui 2* Pan 2¥ Bus 2^ Pan 3¥ Bus 44 Pass 4¥ Bsss 5¥ Pass 6¥ Pass Pass Pau Opening lead—fK , By OSWALD and JAMES JACOBY If you look at the North-South cards you want to be in a heart or club slam. The club slam is a cinch against a 3-2 break unless the defense can get a quick ruff but the play at hearts is a lot-'better because that slam can be made if the clubs break four-one. Eight North-South pairs in the American team trials only got as far as four hearts. Somehow or other the combinatiw of 11 and 12 high card points did not suggest going any further with these cards. Mike Lawrence and Lew Stansby of San Francisco, the youngest pair in dw ev«t, got to the heart slam 'witt the bidding riiown b the box. Lew considered that his jack-small of hearts was pretty good suH»rt after Mike bid hearts the fourb time and Mike went on to six on the basis of his solid trumps and queen of the first suit bid by his partner. Mike ruffed the diamcmd lead m dummy, cashed dummy’s jack trunqis, altered his hand with the queen of dubs and drew the adverse trumps. Then he started on dummy’s ebbs. The bad break kept him from clalmbg all 13 tricks but he did discaid his last diamond on the king of clubs. He ruffed a club to set up the bst two d this suit for potential spade disedrds and led a spade toward dummy. Marshall Miles of San Bernardino, California, sitting West played low. He bad nothi^ else to do but Lawrence knew that he would have made the same play of a low spade even if he held the ace. You don’t^ worry about giving tieclarer an over-trick, at a sbm contract. You go au out to beat him if you can. ^ H Lawrence thought awhile, ben he thou^t 8(Hne~mm« and rose with dummy’s Mng. It was a mighty unbrtunaty decision because it meant a loss of ten Intemaiional Match Pomts instead of an equivalent gain. RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) Thou bait not steal, says the Bible. Yet Raleigh bookstores repot be Bible is the book most dten stolen, year after year. The Baptist bob store suspects many of be Bibles it takes hack for credit are bose stolen from be store. The longest book b be Bible is the Book of Psalms. imcouLOHeoo ^tUAVUNG? TOAT'5 irWA'&fi^sy-HE. ^ SlMavSATDOWNONlTl THE BERRYS THE BETTER HALF WEMT VWENWEJ THE WERE GOING TOGETHER? TUEYDONTAAAKE AWTIQUE^TODAV, UKETMEYUSEPTO! By Carl Grubert WHY DONT YOU PRETEND WE'RE NOT MARRIED '' “ CALL ME FOR A LIKE YOU USED I TRIED THAT ONE DAY\.. HAPPENED.^ V NOTHING.'WITH THREE KIDS^ IN THE HOUSE.....ALL I GOTr WAS THE BUSY SIGNAL/r THE BORN LOSER Sansom “Aren’t you almost finished? . . . You’d look silly if your husband staived to deab in a supermarket because you wouldn’t stop buying food.’’ JACOBY Q—The bidding has been: BERRY’S WORLD—By Jim Berry West North East Sonb 1 ♦ Dble Pass 2 ♦ Pass 3 ♦ Pass ? You, South, hold: ♦AQ76S ¥43 ♦K8S2 ♦TS What do you do now? A—Bid four spades. Your Jump to two spades was very sound. TODAY’S Question Instead of bidding three spades your partner has jumped to lour spades. What do you do now? Answer Tomorrow T. I ^ ^ A' i V Astrologieal Forecast 1 U Sy SYDNEY OMARR For WoOmtOoy "Th* wist mm controls his dostiny . . . Astrology points tho way." ARIES (Mar. 31 - Apr. 19): Impatlonce could cause error. Know this and taka time to ba correct. One who urges cau tion be discarded Is not well intormed If some around you appear Irritable. . remain calm! TAURUS (Apr. 20 - May 20): Added Information causes you to change opinion. Be ready to switch plans. Don't be caught short, with guard down. Very good tor experimenting. Versatility necessary for success. GEMINI (May 21 - June 20): Fiscal affairs dominate attention. But you gain knowledge wbidh con be turned into profit. Know this — be enthusiastic, Others observe your attitude. Exude good will. CANCER (June 21 - July 22): Emphasize personal Interests. Cycle Is high. Your appearance, attitude may be of paramount Importance. Stress originality, Independence. Take chance on abilities. LEO (July 23 - Aug. 22): Consolidate forces. Obtain needed privacy. Concentrate on tasks at hand. Avoid spreading efforts too thin. Be a showman ... but avoid superficial canQluslons, action VIRGO (Aug. 23 - Sept. 22): You tend to make claims which may not be fac. fuel. Could lead to extravagance. Know this — take conservative course. Friends • appreciate YOU ... not a distorted Image. LIBRA (Sept. 23 - Oct. 22): Business affairs command attention. Your Intuition provides valuable ibsight. Aspirations now closer to fulfillment. Key Is being receptive to suggestions. SCORPIO (Oct. 23 - Nov. 21): Plan future programs. Step out of routihe. . -Into progress. That's keynote of dev-your ability to afivance. Catch up on correspondence, Keep communication lines ‘^"sAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 - Dec. 21) Concentrate on payments, collections, fulfillment of obllgafions. Get prachcel matters out of way early. Be realistic concerning MONEY. Later mete or partner may reveal surprise. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 - Jan. 19): If ypu depend upon you determined watchful aye on belongings. Permit others to know of your hopes, desires. Very likely that you gain allies today. Young individual expresses fine idea. LIstanI ★ ★ ★ If WEDNESDAY IS YOUR BIRTHDAY .you have fine sense of justice, honesty. Would make good legal adviser, teacher. ★ ★ W GENERAL TENDENCIES: Cycle high for LEO, VIRGO. Special word to AQUARIUS: If you adhert to principles you come out on top. (Copyright 19t7, Cenerel Features Corp.) ALLEY OOP By V. T. Hamlin AU. THE WAY' \OU NAMED IT, BOY... WE ARE THE NEANDERTHALS CAPTAIN EASY By Leslie Turner' HE HAD ALREADY CHECKED ANOTHER . 8Afi, WHICH WE'VE MANASED TO 1967 by NEA, Ine. “Ah, Mr. Baker—I’ll bet you want to get away from it all like Adam Clayton Powell!’’ BOARDING HOUSE slowed. Best today to be self-reliant. Put Ideas to work. Find out where you sfaml —and why. Special offer appears forth- "AQukRIUS (Jan. 20 - Feb. 10): ^me may try to Involve you In difficulties. Remain aloof from problems not your own. Otherwise others take advantape of Births The following is a list of recent Pontiac area births as recorded at the Oakland County Clerk’s Office (by name of father): Wllho E. Paulson, 2370 Maplecrest David L. Carlock, 3B« Motorway Charles W. Harvey, Clarkston Leeman Miracle, 530 Camemn Richard R. Riley. Drayton Plains . Gary L. Scott, 1640 Beechland Vincent A. TrzeinskI, 2511 Patrick Hen ry THIS TIWE lU guard IT MY DEARl mAX A RIT , AT MV PLACEi THEN L'LL DRIVE you TO POAAPANOlJ EEK & MEEK By Howie Schneider DEMTISWIWTHE UWITED states IS FAR SUPERIOR 1D THAT OF AWV CITHER WATIOW! it:? A TRIBUTE TD OUR RROFESS/OW THM WRB KUOUJKJ ALL flVER THE ILORLD...^ FOR HAVIUS CREATEP... C 1M7 It NIA hb TJ4. bft UJL M Off. 24 NANCY WHAT HAPPENED To') SLUGGO? ---------^ OUT OUR WAY Thomas H. Brazier, Drayton Plains William M. Donovan, 192 Beach William L. Harris, 6183 Jonquil William J. Wampfler, 281 Oakland Donald H. Audet, 3080 Grant William G. Gann, Waterford James 0. Griffith, 727 East Tennyson John M. Thurston, 2227 OverrIdge Forrest D. Kropp, 208 West Rutgers Ernest T. Hammock, <72 Elm (Twins) Dale J. Harvey, 1<98 Naneywood Theordore J. Herr, 1248 Parkway Roderick E. Hoover, 435 Irwin Arthur Howland Jr., Farmington Jon A. Jackson', Milford Richard J. Detmer, Milford Dennis G. Kenny, 46 Sanderson Alex A. King, Rochester Richard, R. Shagena, Oxford rxuvcM w. rwifo*/ » Edward R. Anderson, Utfea Paul A. West, Rochester Samuel G. Oswald, Rochester Frank K. Tippett, 340 Oakland Marvin L. Cannady, Keego Harbor Gregory L. Harris, 156 6ai Daniel B. Hepner, Drayton „ I,.-,,.,...,_______ Pallns* Jacob W. HIghfleld, 217 Parkdale Larry J. Holcomb, Lake Orion Jack D. Hooper, Drayton Plains Jack E. Klippstein, Drayton Plains Victor Moniarez, Rochester Richard L. Seidell, Rochester nufiiian w. .ainc*/ s.»iw».w.. . .-.• — David \L. Young, 2799 Shimmons Joseph E. Douville, 247 Scott Lake, Bobbie G, Dunlgan, 43 North Tasmania Pablo A. Flores, 141 West Cornell Zack H. Fox, 1304 Pontiac Ttell Theodore C. Gobi, 56 AAatthWOT James E. Harrington, 730 Scottwood UQIflC» b.. I awi 1 •Sfgp.»r..» -- Douglas A. MIckens, 3388 Chalice “ ivld ■ ------------ --------- David Ej NIcolav, WIxom Frank A. Rivard. Orchard Lake Lloyd A. Stead, 4020 Squirrel James Carthon Jr., 495 Central Ralph W. Chiltick, 24 Stephens James A. Comparoni, 2624 James Eugene W. Gentges, 2389 Silver Douglas L. Green, Clarkston Lowell K. Greer, 454 Auburn Richard P. Haines, Lake Orion , Jonathan C. Harbaugh Jr.., 220 West PI*" . , John G. Johnson, Drayton Plains Juen A. Reyes, 205 North Csss Bruce W. Thompson, .................. 3761 Gaines- boroug., Cl^ L. Tippett, 150 5t»rr JOTn M. Vanderpool, 170 Whittemore William’Walker, 439 Orchard Lake \ G O THERE WAS A JET BOOM JUST AS HE WAS WALKING BY L/- By Erni^ Bushmiller 1 m£ % BUSHMILLS TIGER By Bud Blake 'goirr STAi?n mg HIM OM SOMemiMG ELSE? DONALD DUCK By Walt Disney THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY^ JANUARY $4, 1967 Deaths in Pontiac, Nearby Area^ Joseph A. Folk Joseph A. FuJk, 61, of 30 McKinley died Saturday. His body is at the D. E. Pursley Funeral Home. Mr. Fulk, was a retired employe of GMC Truck & Coach Division. Surviving are his mother, Mrs. Ava Fulk of Junction City, Kan.; three sons, Vernon E. of Pontiac, Jack R. of Newport, R.I., and Jinunie A. of Ses^ttle, Wash; and 27 grandchildren. Also surviving are four daughters, Mrs. James Kyte of Pontiac, Mrs. Paul Moore of Waterford Township, Mrs. Burton Winters of Duluth, Minn., and Mrs. Wayne Gage of Holly: six brothers: and five sisters. Maxwell H. Graham Service for Maxwell H. Graham, 74, of 1456 Rosedale, Sylvan Lake, will be 10 a.m. tomorrow at the C. J. Godhardt Funeral Hdme with burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mr. Graham died Saturday. Arianna C. Lloyd Prayers for Arianna, C. Lloyd, infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Gary Lloyd of 151 S. Telegraph, will be offered at 10 a.m. tomorrow in Huntoon Funeral Home with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery. Arianna W|is dead at birth Saturday. Surviving are her parents; a sister, Desiree at home; and grandparents Mr. and Mrs. John Godoshian and Mr. and Mrs. L. G. Lloyd, all of Pontiac. Mrs. Charles H. Mclnally Service for Mrs. Charles H. (Gertrude J.) Mclnally, 72, of 4980 Clinton, Waterford Township. will be 2 p.m. Thursday at C. J. Godhardt Funersd Home, Keego Harbor, with burial at Ottawa Park Cemetery. Gary, Ind., Mrs. Louis J. La-join of Valparasio, Ind., Mrs. Stella Lezos of L<®i Angeles, Calif., and Mrs. K. D. Weid-man of Pleasant Hill, Calif. Also surviving are three sons, Harry of Fullerton, Calif., and Thomas and Vasilios, both of Pontiac; 15 grandchildren; and a brother. The family suggests any memorials be made to Ithe St. George Greek Church. William J. Robare Requiem Mass for William J. Robare, 58, of 97 Peach will be 10 a.m. Thursday in St. Vincent de Paul Catholic Church with burial in Mount Hope Cemetery. The Rosary will be recited at 8 p.m. today in Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home. Mr. Robare, a retired employe of Pontiac Motor Division, died yesterday. He was a member of St. Vincent de Paul Church. Surviving are his wife, Eva; a daughter, Mrs. John J. Neil of Pontiac; two sons, Marvin J. with the U.S- Air Force and Melvin J. of Pontiac; a grandson; and two sisters. Mrs. John Dufty BIRMINGHAM - Service for Mrs. John (Isabel) Duffty, 77, of 883 Knox will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at the Manley Bailey Funeral Home. Burial will be in Roseland Park Cemetery, Berkley. Mrs. Duffty died yesterday. She was a fnember of the AAUW, Birmingham W o m e n’s Qub, Michigan Education Association, National Retired Teachers Association and the Presbyterian Women’s Association. She was a former teacher and principal in the Birmingham schools. Surviving is her husband. Mrs. Douglas Eckert Jr. of Auburn Heights, Sgt. Alfred G. with the U.S. Army in Fort Bragg, N.C., and Stanley W. (rf Metamora; her mother, Mrs. Cornelia Wright of Troy; two sisters; one brother; and seven grandchildren. Charles F. Graham TROY — Service for former resident Charles F. Graham,, 74, of 52436 Ihla, Shelby Township,! will be 11 a.m. Thursday at Price Funeral Home. Burial will be in Oak view Cemetery, Royal Oak. Mr. Graham, a machine repairman for Ford Motor Co., Dearborn, died yesterday. He was a past board member of Log Cabin School, Troy Township. , Surviving are his wife. Pearl; a daughter, Mrs. Edward Devlin of Sarnia, Ont.; two sons, Robert C. of Southfield and Jack of West Bloomfield Township; a sister; and two grandchildren COEDS’ BANDWAGON - These West Virginia college students, protesting alleged shortcomings in Ohio’s food stamp program, show some of the items they collected for hard-pressed Cleveland residents. Thfe stu- dents stopped at the governor’s mansion in Columbus, but Gov. James A. Rhodes was away, so the coeds, from Wheeling College, went on to Cleveland. ORION TOWNSHIP - Service for Mrs. Douglas (Dorothy Mrs. Mclnally died yesterdayJjy, ) Eckert, 58, of 4527 Home-Survivmg besides her husband I „ .. are a daughter. Mrs. Ferdinand ^ « Tiefenback of Waterford Township; a brother, Winford Hamlin ,pf West Bloomfield township; and two grandchildren. Arthur W. Peake Service for Arthur W. Peake, 78, of 383 California will be 1 p.m. ’Ihursday at Macedonia Baptist Church with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery by Frank Carruthers Funeral Home. Mr. Peake, a member of Macedonia Church, died Sunday. He was a school patrol guard at Paddock and Willard and a aember of Knights of Pythias iiccess Lodge No. 10. Surviving are his wife, Mary; thriee children, Walter Peake of Mulberry Groves, 111., and Jamte L. Peake and Joeann Austitt both of Poktiac; five grandcmldren; 17 great-grand-childrem and three brothers. Mrs. Pa\ios Protopappas Service \for Mrs. Panos (Alexandra P.) Protopappas, 75, of 229 Elm will be 1:30 p.m. tomorrow at St. George Greek Orthodox Church with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery. A Trisa-gion service will be at 8 p.m. today in Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home. Mrs. Protopappas, a •'member of St. George Greek Church, died yesterday. She was a member of the Philotohos Sodety. Surviving are four daup^rs, Mrs. Sam Demetriou of feast Price Funeral Home, Troy, with burial in Oaklawn Cemetery, Algonac. Mrs. Eckert died yesterday. Surviving are three daughters. Mrs. William Hyde LAPEER - Service for Mrs William (Mamie) Hyde, 77, of 734 Oregon will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at Muir Brothers' Funeral Home. Burial will be in Farmers Creek Cemetery, Lapeer Township. Mrs. Hyde died yesterday. She was a member of the Maine Re-bekah Lodge 319, Lapeer and Esther Rebekah Lodge, Detroit; past president of the Ladies Aux-iliary Canton 5 of the Riverside Lodge of Detroit; and a member of VFW Ladies Auxiliary Hart Post 4139, and the Woman’s Relief Corps. Surviving is a brother, Ellsworth Fenner of Metamora. Mrs. George Minto BIRMINGHAM — Service for Mrs. George (Maude) Minto, 93, of 647 N. Woodward was to be 1 p.m. today at Bell Chapel of the William R. Hamilton Co. Burial was to be in Woodlawn Cemetery, Detroit. Mrs. Minto died Friday. She was a member of the Women’s City Club of Detroit and the First Baptist Church of Detroit, Southfield. Surviving are a son, Wilton of ADVfRTItCMENT FOR BIOS NOTiCf. On or boloro Fobruiry_1J»i. IMJV ^ addroiMd to ttw Pontiac Town-iMp tOM Opdyka Read, Pontiac, MIeWson, adll Oa racoivad for Boot In-surOnea tor the automottva ooMpmant of Pontiac Totmthip. A list of the oqoip-ment and eovaraoa dda^ njay talnsd from fho Township Clarit, »Ms are to be opehad at 1:00 jO'cMCk the night of Fabruary t3th, 1W7 at tha Township Hall. Tha Board raaarvaa tha rW a|^ spy or all Wda. GRETA V. BLOCK Clark January 24, 2S and to, 1M7 NOTICE OF HEARING PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that tha City Cooncil la considering an“[„'?;^^^^ ^ retired assistant chief engineer ^ of GMC ’Truck and Coach Division. He had been with the company 35 years. Services will be 11 a.m. Thursday at Bell Chapel of the William R. Hamilton Co., Birmingham. Burial will 1^ in Greenwood Cemetery. Mr. Allen was also active in the development of the Birmingham YMCA. He was a member of Birmingham’s First Methodist Church, a life member of the Society of Automotive Engineers Mrs. George Pankey of Orion Birmingham; a sister, Mrs. Wil-j Cl ^00 Ic Township, Mrs. Gerald Richard Uam Moore of Milan; three, t • IJ JIUlvIl of Mesick and Mrs. Albert Schroeder of Shelby Township; three sons, Douglas J. of Romeo, Robert E. of Richmond and Alvin L, of Oxnard, Calif.; a brother; a sister; and 28 grandchildren. Mrs. James F. Galford TROY — Service for Mrs. James F. (Mary) Galford, 62, of 1131 Birchwood will be 1 p.m. Friday at Price Funeral Home. Burial will be in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery. Mrs. Galford died yesterday. She was a member of Stone Baptist Church, Avon Township. Surviving besides her h u s-band are three sons, James F. grandchildren; and seven greatgrandchildren. Memorial t r i b u t e s can be made to the First Baptisti Church, 21200 Southfield, South-! field. Edward J. Kulman TROY — Service for Edward J. Kulman, 73, of 3415 Kilmer will be 2:30 p!m. Thursday at Trinity Evangelical Lutheran Church, Clawson. Burial will be in Oakview Cemetery, Royal Oak by Price Funeral Home. Surviving are a son, Manley J. of Magnolia Springs, Ala.; a sister; six grandchildren; and two great-grandchildren. the area. |and of the American Ordinance A spokesman for the Metro- Association, a member of the politan fund stressed that t h e, Engineering So(:iety of Detroit mass transit study was prelim-pnd of the Senior Men’s Club I r J M J I inary and does not represent the of Birniingham. 3t I OX 900 nouncisof the fund. ★ ★ # CONSENSUS NECESSARY’ Surviving are his wife. Char- three daughters, Mrs. SAMUEL FELICE Market Owner Service Set Samuel Felice, owner of the Waterford Maricet, 5939 Ander-sonville, Waterfort Township, died yesterday mbming. He was 69. Requiem Mass will be 10 a.m. Thursday at Our Lady of the Lakes Catholic Church with burial in Mount Hope Cemetery. The Ptosary will be recited at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Don-elson-Johns Funeral Honje. An Elks Lodge of Sorrow will be conducted at 7:30 p.m. today in the funeral home. Surviving are his wife, Rose; a son Michael of Waterford Township; a daughter, Mrs. Paul Bonfiglio of Pontiac; a grandchild; and a sister. Death Notices The Fox and Hounds Inn, 1560; The study suggested that a N. Woodward, Bloomfield Hills, i governmental units in the Detroit metropolitan area would be necessary for a suc- suffered about $1,500 loss when its safe was broken into Sunday night, police said today. The safe was found broken cessful mass transit project -R it ir Agreement would be needed. open at the bohom and looted;the study said, on the type of yesterday morning. j transit system desired, whether An audit of losses is contin-|it should be publicly or private- uing, pojice said. On Fund Unit Law, Bishop Get Posts Two state representatives from Oakland. County were named yesterday to the 13-member House Appropriations Committee. They are Arthur J. Law, D-Pontiac, and Donald E. Bishop, * i skit to Recall Olden Days An original skit, “The Good Old Days,” will be presented to the Troy Historical Society at their meeting tomorrow, at Troy High School on Livernois and Big Beaver, Troy. The skit will be performed by Mr. Lorraine Halsey, program chairman. Also on the agenda is adoption of the bylaws, a report on “Save the Caswell House” and a report from the cemetery c-ommittee. lotte S. John E. Wilson of Geneva, Switzerland, Mrs. William Rieker of Birmingham and Mrs. John Tit-mus of Oscoda; three sisters; and eight grandchildren. Memorial tributes may sent to the Memorial Fund the First Methodist Church Birmingham. School Break-Ins Reported in Troy ly owned and operated and whether some type of regional authority should be established to direct the project. it * it The study also suggested that a p u b 1 i c vote might be necessary to faciUtate financing a Troy police are investigating transit system. , two school break-ins that -------------- icurred over the weekend. Ten thousand trees on New York City streets died last year many victims of the drought and conditions of urban life. A street tree usually lives 40 to 50 years compared with more than 100 for a tree in the country. The fall potato production for 1966 is estimated at 201.2 million hundredweight, or about 6 percent below a year ago. A school under construction at 4510 Forsyth was looted Sunday and tools valued at about $360 taken. Poljce said the building was also vandalized and numerous small fires started with an acytelene torch. Troy High School, 3179 Livernois, was also broken into, but nothing has been found missing, police said. SPINNING THE THREAD of human understanding Spaiks-Griffiiil FUNERAL HOME ^ FE 8-9288 / Ouistaiidillg in Pimtiac for Service and Facilities 46 Williams St. LAW BISHC^P I R-Avon Township. I House Speaker Robert W. Waldron, R-Grosse Pointe, made the appointments to the committee, formerly known as the ways and means committee. Bishop, who was elected to his first term in November to represent the 63rd District, said the largest concern of the area will be education. ★ ★ ★ “Since I represent the district encompassing Oakland University,” said Bishop, “I am fillly aware of the ever-increasing needs which owill be required by these institutions. It is my hope that we will be able to give them assistance.” it it it Rep. Amell Engstrom, FI-Traverse City, was named chairman of the committee, comprised of eight Republicans and five Democrats. Rep. Cyril H. Root, R-Kalamazoo, was appointed committee vice chairman. HO GREETS CLERGY-Ho Chi Minh (right), president of North Vietnam, greets clergymen in Hanoi during their recent visit. The clergymen are (from left) Rabbi Abraham L. Feinberg of Toronto. Rew. A. J. Muste of New York City and the Right Rev. AP Wirtphottt Ambrose Reeves of Chichester, England. Rabbi Feinberg yesterday told of Ho’s offer to meet with PresidenUJohnson. He sunpised that the offer contained expected North Vietnam preconditions. purchaser designates in the proposal, Such Bank or Trust Company must be a member ot the Federal Reser;ve System, or of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, and must have an unimpaired capital and surplus of not less than the aggregate principal amount ot Notes designated In the proposal or proposals submitted by tha purchaser; provided, however, that such unimpaired capital and surplus need not exceed One Million Dollars. The Notes will provide that they are not valid until after such Bank or Trust Company has signed the agreement, appearing on each Note, to act as paying agent. The Notes will be transmitted to such Bank or Trust Company for delivery to the purchaser upon receipt and disbursement by such Bank or Trust Company of the purchase price thereof in accordance with Instructions from the Local Public Agency. After taking delivery of the Notes, the pur^ chaser shell obtain the signature of s«ch Bank or Trust Company upon the Notes as aforesaid. All fees or charges, if any, of such Bank or Trust Company shall be paid by such purchaser. SAID NOTES will be special obligations of the Local Public Agency and will be secured by a requisition agreement between the Local Public Agency and the United States of America under the terms of which agreement the United States of America agrees to lend the Local Public Agency prior to the maturity of said Notes an amount sufficient to pay the principal and interest ot all said Notes and agrees to cause so much of the proceeds of such loan as shall be sufficient to pay the principal of and Interest upon any of said Notes to b* Jeposited at the respective Bank or Trust Company at whith said* Notes are payable for the benefit ot the holder or holders thereof. Under the proceedings authorizing said Notes, the proceeds of such loan payment will be irrevocably pledged first to the payment, at maturity, of the principal of and Interest on said Notes. THE VALIDITY of the Notes and said requisition agreement shall be subject to approval by attorneys' designated by the purchaser In the Proposal. Complete certified transcripts of proceedings, including organization transcript as required, evidencing the validity of tha Notes and of said requisition agreement will be furnished such attorneys af least 5 days prior to the date of the Notes. The fees or charges ot the attorneys shall be paid by tha purchaser. ALL PROPOSALS tor the purchase ot any of said Notes shall be submitted In a form approved by tha Local Public Agency and shall be enclosed In a seaM ^nvelopCt addressed to tho Local Public Agency, which should be marked on the outside ''Proposal tor Preliminary Loan Notes.''" Copies ot such form ot proposal may be obtained from the Local Public Agency at the address indicated above. Proposals may be submitted subject to completion pursuant to telegraphic Instructions or proposals may be submitted In their entirety by telegram. Telegraphic Instructions or proposals must be received by the Local Public Agency at or belore the time above specified for the opening ot proposals. A telegraphic proposal should Identify and be made pursuant to the Notice ot Sale, identity the Notes, and specify the principal amount. Interest rate, premium, denominations, name ot said attorneys, end place ot payment of the Notes covered by the proposal. In view of certain statutory and policy limitations, no award of the Notes will be made at an interest rate per annum which is not less than Four end One-Eighth per centum (414%) PROPOSALS may be (or all or any part of tha Notes, and separate proposals will be required tor each part of said Notes tor which a separate interest rate Is bid. The interest rate specified tor each part ot said Notes shall be a multiple of one-hundredth (1/100) ot one per cent ore). Seld Notes will be awarded at the lowest Interest rate or rates ottered In the proposals, without reference to premium; provided, however, that, as among proposals specifying the same lowest rate, award will be made on the basis of the highest premium per dollar principal amount of Notes specified in such proposals. No,, bid tor loss than $50,000 principal amount of said Notes or for less than par and accrued Interest (which Interest shall be computed on a 340-day basis) will ba entertained, and the Local Public Agency reserves the right to award to any bidder ell or any part ot the Notes which such bidder offers to purchase In his proposel, upon the basis of such proposal; provided, that It less than $50,000 principal amount of Notes Is to be awarded to any bidder, such bidder will be relieved ot the obligation lo purchase such Notes upon written notice to the Local Public Agency within two days atto.' notification of such proposed award. If only a part ot tha Notes bid for in a proposal are awarded by the Local Public Agency, the premium, If any, offered in such proposal shall be prorated, and said Notes will be Issued In denominations In tha order of the lowest denominations specified In such proposal; provided that one Note may be Issued In a smaller denomination than Is otherwise specified. The further right Is reserved to relgct any or all proposals. SECTION 102(g) of the Housing Act ot 1949, as amended (42 U.5.C. 1452), provides as follows: "Obligations, IndUding Interest thereon. Issued by local public agendas for projects assisted pursuant to this title, and Income derived by such agencies from such projects, shall ba exempt from all taxation now or hereafter Imposed by the united stales." In the event that prior to the dellverv ot any of the Notes to the successful bidder therefor the income received by private holders from obligations of'- the same type and character shell be taxable by the terms of any Federal Income t< law hereafter enacted, the successi bidder may, at his election, ba relieved of his obligations under the contract to purchase said Notes. CITY OF- PONTIAC By OLGA BARKELEY City Clerl January 24, 1941 BECK, HARVEY J.,- January 23, 1967; 325 West Commerce Street, Miltord; age 49; beloved husband of Everil Beck; dear tether of Mrs. Thomas Sanders; also survived by three sisters, four brothers, and two grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, January 25, at 1 p.m. at RIchardson-BIrd Funeral Home, Milford, with the Rev. Milton Walls officiating. Interment In Oakland Hills Memorial Gardens, Novi. Mr. Beck wlH lie In state at the funeral home, FELICE, SAMUEL; January 23, 1967; 5939 Andersonville Road, Waterford; age 69; beloved husband of Rose Felice; dear father of Michael Felice and Mrs. Paul Bon-figlio; dear brother of Mrs. Louise Occhluto; also survived by one grandson. Recitation of the Rosary will be Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. at Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Lodge ot Sorrow will ba conducted by B.P.O.E. No. 810 today January 24, at 7:30 p.m. at the funeral home. Funeral service will be held Thursday, Jenuary 26, at 10 a.m. at Our Lady ot the Lakes Church. Interment In Mount Hope Cemetery. Mr. Felice will He In state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 end 7 to 9 p.m.) _______________________ FULK, JOSEPH A.; January 2), 1947; 30 McKinley Drive; age 4); beloved son ot Mrs. Ava Fulk; dear father of Mrs. James (Juanita) Kyte, Mrs. Paul (VIrgla Lee) AAoore, AArs. Burton (Delores) Winters, Mrs. Wayne (Geynell) Gage, Vernon E., Jick R. and Jimmie A. Fulk; also survived by six brothers, five sisters and 27 grandchildren. Funeral arrangements are pending at the D. E. Pursley Funeral Home where Mr. fu|k will He In state after 7 p.m. Tuesday. (Suggested vtsHing hours 9:30 a.m. to 9:30 p.m.) GRAHAM, MAXWELL H.; January 21, 1947; 1454 Rosadala, Sylvan Lake; age 74; dear brother ot Mrs. Gladys Howery, Mrs. Bernie Howery, end Rex Graham. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, January 25, at 10 ajn. at C. J. Godhardt Funeral Home. Interment In Perry Mount. Park Cemetery. Mr. Graham will He In state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9 p.m.) LLOYD, ARIANNA CHAMBREE; January 21, 1947; 151 South Telegraph; beloved Infant daughter of Gary and Ruth Lloyd; beloved granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. L. Lloyd and Mr. and Mrs. John Godoshian; dear sister of Desiree Chimene Lloyd. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, January 25, at 10 a.m. at Huntoon Funeral Home. Interment In Oak Hill Cemetery. Baby Lloyd will He In state at the funeral home after 7 p.m. today. t__________________________ MclNALLY, GERTRUDE J.; January 23, 1967; 4980 Clinton Drive, Independence Township; age 72; beloved wife ot Charles H. Mclnally; dear mother of Mrs, Ferdinand (Fern W.) Tiefenback; dear sister of Winford Hamlin; dear grandmother of Jane and Jerry Tiefenback. Funeral service will be held Thursday, January 24, at 2 p.m. at C. J. Godhardt Funeral Home, Keego Harbor. Interment In Ottawa Park Cemetery. Mrs. Mclnally will Ha In state at the funeral home (Suggested visiting hours 3 to S and 7 to 9 p.m.)_____ PEAKE, ARTHUR W.; January 22, 1947; 383 California Street; age 78; beloved husband of Mary E. Peake; dear father of James L. and Walter Peake, Sr. and Joeann Austin; dear brother of Virginia, • Will and. Rev. L. Peake. Funeral service will be held Thursday, January 24, at 1 p.m. at Macedonia Baptist Church. Interment In Oak Hill Cemetery. Mr. Peake will He In state at the Frank Carruthers Funeral Home after 7 p.m. Wednesday.________________________ PROTOPAPPAS, ALEXANDRA P“; January 23, 1947; 229 Elm Street; age' 75; dear mother of Mrs. Sam Demetriou, Mrs. Louis J. Lajcin, Mrs. Stella Lezos, Mrs. K. D. Weldman, Thomas, VasIHOs, and Harry Protopappas; dear sister of Gust Pappas; also survived by 15 grandchildren. T risaglon service will be held Tuesday, at 8 p.m. at the Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, January 25, at 1:30 p.m. at St. George Dreek Orthodox Church with Rev. Fr. Gus Tsom-panas officiating. Interment In Oak HIM Cenrietery. Mrs. Protopappas will He In state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9 p.m.) The family suggests memorial contributions may be made to the St. George Greek Orthodox Church building fund._____________________________ ROBARE, WILLIAM J.; January 23, 1947; 97 Peach Street; .,pgt 58; beloved husband of Eva I. Robare; dear father of Marvin J. and Melvin J. Robare, and Mrs. John (Marlene) J. Nell; dear brother of Mrs. Ed. Deluzio and Mrs. Fred Gould; also survlve(!l by one grand--son. RecHatlon of the Rosary will be Tuesday at 8 p.m. at tha Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home. Funeral service will be held Thursday, January 24,-at 10 a.m. at St. Vincent da Paul Catholic Church. Interment In Mount Hope Cemetery. Mr. Robare will He In state at the toneral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9 p.m.)________________ SNEED, RAYAAOND CARL; January 22, 1947; $527 Eldridge, Waterford; age 47; beloved husband of Helen Snead; beloved son of Mrs. Ora Cardwell Sneed; dear father of Mrt. Judy Campbell, Connie, Roger, Ray E. and Gary Sneed; dear brother of Mrs. Ann Lewis, J. D. and Fred Sneed; also survived by three grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, January 25, at 1:30 p.tn. at Huntoon Funeral Home. Interment in Crescent Hills Cemetery. Mr. Sneed will He In state at tha funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9 p.m.) THE POfflA^ PRESS,•‘TUlSDAY. JANWIrIT^ 1967 c-r FAST E S U L T S Dial 332-8181 Pontiac Press Want Ads FOR FAST ACTION NOTICl TO AOVERTIIERS ADS RECEIVED EY I FJM. WILL EE PUELISHED THE FOLLOWINO DAY. AH wrors shouM bt r*> portad Immediately, or no later than the day following publication. If no notification of such error is made by that time. It will be assumed the ad Is correct. The Press assumes no responsibility for errors other than to cancel the charges for that portion of the first Insertion ot the adve'rtlsembht which has been rendered valueless through the error. The deadline for cancellation of transient Want Ads is 9 a.m, the day of publlcation-'ifler the first Insertion. When cancellations are made be sura to get your "KILL NUMBER." No ad-lustments will be given without It. Closing time tor advertisements containing type sizes larger than regular agate type is 12 o'clock noon the day previous to publication. CASH WANT AO RATES (when cash accompanies order) Lines 1-Day 3-Days ♦■Days 2 $2.00 $2.46 $3.84 3 2.00 » 3.60 5.58 4 2.44 4.68 ♦.96 5 3.05 5.40 8.40 6 3.66 6.48 10.08 7 4.27 7.56 11.76 8 4.88 8.64 13.44 9 5.49 9.72 15.12 10 6.10 10.80 16.80 An additional charge of 50 cents will be made for use of Pontiac Press Box numbers. The Pontiac Press FROM I A.M. TO 5 P.M. Help Wanted Mole 1 MAN ETC. , . SEE AO UNDER Business Opportunities. 4 WELL DRESSED MEN TO Deliver advertising material. SIS per evening. Car necessary. 42S-254B. p5o“ CdOK Evening shift. Experienced In fry. No Sundays or holidays. Bedell’s DRAFTING TRAINEE Age 20-25, HMh School or College INTERNATIONAL PERSONNA 1000' W. Huon 334-4071 $435 FEE PAID FINANCE TRAINEE 21-28 no exp. nec. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 1080 W. Huron 334-4971 $400-1470 SNIPPING CL,iRK TRAINEE Age 21-30, High School Grad. klTCDUATinUlSI DEDCrMJMC $450 TRAINEE DRAFTSMAN 18-25, high school or College drafting. Mr. Moreen. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 6 1iti|i Wanted Male Fachinist ASSEMBLER CARPENTERS AND CARPENTER helpers, Pontiac area. 887-5747. CAREER OPPORTUNITY Nation wide consumer finance com- Sany has opening for roan In rap-lly expanding company. Need a man interested In advancement to management position. Salaried position with regular Increases, major mralcal insurance program wholly paid profit sharing, two weeks paid vacation with end of first year. Phone for interview. AETNA FINANCE COMPANY A. Hirsch 333-7923 6 ritlp Wanted Male 6 Help Wanted Female 7 Help Wanted Female 7iHe^ Wuoted Female' WANTED: COAL TRUCK DRIVERS with or without own pickup trucks — Apply In person, 351 S. Paddock. YOUNG man to Work in clean- ers. Will train. Apply 10-12 a.m. 1flB5 Long Lk. Rd. and Telegraph. CAREER OPPORTUNITY FOR CHILD WELFARE WORKER I ■ ' $8500 to 88300 CONTINUOUS EXAMINATIONS IMMEDIATE OPENINGS - Juvenile Division, Oakland County Probate Court. Minimum requirements EXPERIENCED ALMON WHITFIELD FOREMAN CONDECO AUTOMATION INC. NOVI RD. AAACHINE AND FIXTURE INSPECTOR GIRL TO LIVE IN home than wages, children. FE ^9091. HOUSEKEEPER. LIVE-IN. GOOD pay and bonus. No cooking and washing. 428-9685 YOUNG MAN 18-25 to assist me in my business. Starting salary 8124.50 per week. Chance for advancement to right man. Call Mr. Woodshire, 338-0359,1 9 a.m. - 2 p.m.________________ YOUNG MEN i 18-28 Trained for" fast opening manager lobs with annual earnings of 825,-000 on common place. Guidance and training In sales, advertising,! promotion and credit. Immediate! appointments. Phone Personnel ’ Mgr., from 9:30 to 1:30 p.m. Salary: Hold 1 week, paid $145 net Phone Personnel Mgr., from 9:30 to 1:30 p.m. 338-3218 HOME AND WAGES companion to eldei 2-8096 alt. 3 p.m. RNs - FULL OR PART TIME, lljWAITRESS - NIGHTS, GOOfc PAY, tri 1880 S. Woodward B'ham. 842-8268 entrance examination; Bache-1 DETROIT BROACH 8. MACHINE COi housework. FE 2-3504. Help Wanted Female 1 LADY TO LIVE IN, DO LIGHT' HOUSEKEEPER IF YOU have had some Experience BOOKKEEPING and would like the Additional Challenge of being trained as an OPTICAL ASSISTANT and----- Would Like to Work in the beautiful PONTIAC MALL Then call--- Pontiac Mall Optical Center 682-1113 to 7^ Charge nurse* 3-11; ER nurse, 12 iTbon to 8 p.m. Weekend and rinfl? uif.oifif’*’ ** WCJMAhrNEBDrNi^HOME. CAR! of 2 children. Small salary Inclod-SALESLAOIES - SHOES ad. MA 5-3416 after 6 p.m. «no 'busl;^;»'’/t“leistanTdli'WOW........FOR COWir-ANb er ® PtelSSm wofking co“dftions fn, a'S^i^ToT our new store. Paid vacation and' 07Yfi»«n«rt. ther benefits. Stapp's Shoe Store, 719 W. Huron. ___^_________ ..... Huron. Please call Mr. WOMAN OR MOTHER WifH ONE -MO dooi nf,Qre for horn* than wages, some wages. Call be- fore 11 a.m„ 673-9088.______^ WOMAN TO WORK COUNTER. Evenings. Ono-Hour Martinizing. Miracle Mile. Apply between a-5 ooia for interview. 332-4221. STENO' TYPISTS Immediate temporary assignr ments are now available near your home if you type or take shorthand. Experience necessary. Apply today and become a highly paid Kelly Girl Employee. KELLY SERVICES Kelly Girl Division I 125 N. Saginaw 338-0338: Equal Opportunity Employer j WOMAN. PART-TIME; FOR TYP-ing in our- office. Write Post Of-^fice Box ^32, Ponttac giving full particulars. SALESLADIES Experienced In Better Ready to wear. Full time and part time. $550 ffLUSCAR SALES TRAINEE 21-30, 2 years college INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 1080 W. Huron 334-4971 ; lor's Degree, from an accredited Rochester College or University with a major in sociology, psychology or social work or a combination of minors in these fields. Experience in social work helpful but not essential. Outstanding fringe benefit program in addition to salary including all hos-... pitalizafion, retirement program, tied COLLEGE GRADS, AGE 21-30 in with social security, life in- No exD necessarv jsurance, minimum of 2 weeks paid INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL hil5Irt°haiw' 1080 W Huron 334-4971! imbursamant, anniployaas blood bank. $7,200 FEE PAID $10,000 up CHEMIST An equal opportunity employer_ MAINTENANCE MACHINIST FOR SMALL PROGRESSIVE COMPANY TOP PAY WITH VACATION AND OTHER BENEFITS G. & W. ENGINEERING INC. 2501 WILLIAMS DR. — PONTIAC MEN FOR SERVICE STATION attendants, wrecker driving, and mechanics. Must be at least 25 years of age. No other need apply. Shell Station. Woodward $450 EXECUTIVE SECRETARY ^or advertising agency, 20-30, fee paid, type 60, shorthand 80. Mrs. Piland. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 1880 S. Woodward, B'ham. 642-8268 5-YEAR-OLD; child, 5-day wk. 7:45 to 5:10 p.m. $40 wk. 626-8194, aft. 5:30 p.m. YOUNG WOMEN 18-28 Young single women for planned-public contact work. Neat appearance a must. Good training, friendly working conditions. Congenial coworkers. Salary: Hold 1 week •— paid $435 mo. Phone Personnel Mgr. from 9:30 to 1:30 p.m. 338-3218 $425 - $500 BOOKKEEPER iFor additional Information or appli- !cation^-^®'’oa^ia"nd®®Tounty '’cISrt and long Lk. rd. Bloomfield Hills., 1060 W. Huron General ledger to full charge, exp., no age limit. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 334-4971 Age open. Must hava chemistry^200 N. Telegraph Rd., Pon- In Memoriom 2 IN LOVING MEMORY OF MY husband, John F. Turnbull, who passed away 10 years ago today, January 24, 1957. The year may change from ; year to year. And friends from day to day. But never will the one I love. From my memory pass away. Sadly missed by his wife, Marjorie. degree and experience In electro-chemistry, electroplating, anodizing' or related. Client will beat cur-; rent salary if qualified. Mr. Mor-j INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 1 1880 S. Woodward, B'ham 642-8268: Cutter Grinder Operotor No. 13 B&S Tool Grinder Univ. Milling Mach. Op. External Grinder Hand MAN TO DO DELIVERY OF AP-; piiances and deliver, install and! service of water softeners. Must! be over 25, have mechanical abili-| ty and able to supply references. _ FE 4-3573 for app^tritent. _ ' m'an 'over 36”wh6'LIK¥s FIG-i uring and wants steady office! work. Retirees considered. Send KEY PUNCH OPERATOR ACCOUNTANT necessary. $5,000 plus PERSONNEL CONSULTANT 35-50, responsible business b a c k-ground. Base rate plus incentive plan. Attractive Birmingham office. Mr. Moreen. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL ALERT YOUNG MAN FOR TRUCK .. wiiiiuci iiuiiu work. Ketirees considered. Send 1880 S. Woodward, B'ham. 642-8268 driving and warehouse work, 673- Experienced on cutting tools. 588-5333 complete resume wttb pay ‘^form- BEAUTICIANS- DO 1246 or 674-2613. ____ DRY CLEANING ROUTE DrWer,i you need a place to work? Have 1200 N. TELEGRAPH ■ outstanding opportunity. Send re- a following? Rent a booth unit. |-A’nv’7^b“rAVibT"c'"Tn“rAoe"[:r>D sume to Pontiac Press Box No. MAN, 45 TO 50 YEARS OLD, FOR Inquire; Tony's Beauty Shop. Ask ^ 18. day porter. Steady employment. for Carl. 333-7186. Apply Big Boy Drive-ln. 2490 Dixie Hwy. STARTING RATE $4000 TO $4400 -pending on amount of experience.; Merit increases to $5200. Immedi-' i ate position in rapidly expagding high SCHOOL GRADUATE WITH centralized data processing cWmtr. SOME BUSINESS SCHOOL TRAIN-Liberal governmental fringe bene-jTYPING AND GENERAL OFFICE fits. Key punch training neces- yyoRK sary. Experience desirable -but not SWITCHBOARD OPERATOR Able, to work any shift, holidays, weekends. Prefer experienced wid- g. ■ ... * j u e ow or divorcee without small chil- HClp WfillT6u IVl. Or r, dren. Must be right handed, at least 5' 4" fall. Starting rate $1.80 per hr. Contact Personnel Dept. Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital. 338-7271 ext. 263. Full-time, Assume full responsibll- ----------; ~ " ity for accounting dept. ~.aII 646^8629_____^ a.m.-5 p.m. AGGRESSIVE SALESPERSON to sell Baldwin pi-anos and organs. Sales and keyboard experience desirable. Draw’ plus commission, paid vacation .and company benefits. SEE MGR. AT SMILEY BROS. MUSIC CO. 119 NO. SAGINAW FE 4-4721. TYPIST APPLY: OAKLAND-COUNTY Personnel Office COURT HOUSE AFTER 6 P.M. Laid off or neerf^additional money? Working 3 to 4 hrs. per evening. with a guarantee. Phone Mr. Mil- DISPATCHER. MUST BE HIGH ler, FE 4-9867 4 to 7 p.m. graduate Experience pre Announcements ;automobile mechanics, help- ! ers, clerical, parts men, night or day work. Keego Pontiac Sales. i (^-3400.____________ _ ___ ATTENTIO'N BARBERSr 6b YOU ferr^, but not necessary. Must^^N OVER 40 TO WORK WITH have military obligation fulfilled.; service dept. Contact Paul at Raft Age 21-34. Typing required. Apply^ Wood Prooucts. 339 E. S. Blvd. Interstate Sys- a(\aNAGEMENT TRAINEES AND assistant managers. A unique op- ACTIVE WOMAN — 22 TO 35 Exceptional earnings introducing leading household product direct necessary. Pontiac Laundry 540 S. Telegraph. tern. wan a shop of vour ‘own’ AM MAKERS WITH PROGRESSIVE utilities furnished, including" air-, experience, steady work in conditioning. Call 333-7186. Ask fori stampihg plant with exc. Carl working conditions. Fisher Corp., RbcH¥s'- ANNOUNCING ANOTHER { DEBT AID INC. office, 718 Rlker _ Building, branch of Detroit's well a known Debt Ala, 4nc. to serve the ter area has openings for 3 part DRAFTSMAN — ELECTRICAL AND Pontiac Community. time men. Guaranteed earninas of n>echanical — experienced. Gemco portunity to grow with one ot the largest men's and boys' wear ATTPArfTv¥ discount chains in the country. We are in the niidst of a vast expansion program In Detroit and o«t of state. There will be de- Ishlttl to homes. Professional training at LAUNDRY HELP, EXPERIENCE company expense. No previous business experience required. Full time or part time. Call Mrs. Wixom at 674-2233 between 9:30 a.m. and 4:00 p.m._________ TYPIST GET OUT OF DEBT - AVOIDS GARNISHMENTS, BANKRUPTCY j REPOSSESSIONS, BAD CREDIT; AND HARASSMENT. I We have helped and saved thou-i sands of people with credit prob-j lems. Let us consolidate your debts; with one tow payment you can at>| ford. No limit as tc arhount owedi and number of creditors. For those that redllie, "YOU CAN'T BORROW: YOURSELF OUT OF DEBT." Crooks A PART-TIME JOB It you are tree 7-10 p.m., neat appearing, age 25-45, and have a car, you may be able to quality for a part-time job that would enable you to earn $50 per week and still retain your full time lob. Call 674-2233 9:30 a.m. to 8:00 P.m.______________________ Home appointment arranged anytime ACCOUNTANT FOR COST A N CD AT NO CHARGE general office work in industrial, Hours 9-7 Mon. thru FrI, Sat. 9-5' Plant, advancement opportunity.; FE 2-0181 ! Send complete resume to Pontiac (BONDED AND LICENSED) i Press Box 38.___________________ REFER- DRAFTSMAN With experience in piping layouts, ability to read architectural and _____________________ structural plans^ preferred. Long- TO WORK IN STABLE AND partments available'to all trainees, in, the next 6 to 12 mos. maximum. Many fringe benefits to those who qualify. Ages 21 to 55. Apply Pontiac K-Mart Mens' Wear Department. Mr. Middleton, Mgr. GAL FOR and switchboard work, some exp. needed. $280. Call Marge Parker, 234-247U Snelling and Snejling. ___ ALERT YOUNG WOMEN 18-26 to work evenings hours In Pontiac area. Salary ot $112.50 per week. Call Mr. Collins, 338-0359, 9 a.m.-2 p.m. M. C. MFG., CO. 118 Indianwood Rd. Lake Orion' 692-2711 An Equal Opportunity Employer TYPIST ! For Personnel & Insurance Dept.' PONTIAC, Immediate opening. Excellent fringe benefits. school age children. Feb. 2-28. ARTCO INC. Must drive, and have references. 3020 Indianwood Lake Orion Square Lake-Adams Rd: area. ■y„ccV’.;,aV.VEF; eii. . timc 646-6274 WAITRESS WANTED. FULL TIME.; 6 day week. Apply Machus Bakery,, 160 W. Maple. I wanted" WOMAN FOR OFFICE work. Some knowledge of typingi and bookkeeping essential. Steady employment. Apply In person at; Connolly's Jewelers. 16 W. Huron; St. From 9-12 a.m. j LADIES Would you like to be a block distrubtor? No door to door, no investment. Fuller Brush Co. OR 3-8565. MEDICAL SECRETARY WAITRESS WANTED, FULL TIME employment. Apply In person only. Franks Restaurant, Keego Harbor. WAITRESS, NIGHTS, NO SUNDAYS or holidays. Apply Pete's Lunch, j 195 Orchard Lake. ; Days—nights—full time—part time Name your own hours Hospital medical records dept, or_______________ comparable experience essential. WAITRESSES WANTED. FULL AND CHILDREN'S SUPERVISOR $5400 TO $6300 CONTINUOUS EXAMS. Men and women to supervise the activities of children. Requires an individual in excellent health and habits. Must have ability to counsel, control and instruct children. Minimum entrance requirements; Applicant must be high school graduate, 25 years of age or over, have a Michigan Operators license, be a resident of Oakland County. Some experience supervising the activities of children helpful but not necessary. Apply in person to Personnel Div., Oakland County Court House, 1200 N, Telegraph _R(1, Pontiac. _____ Wanted term program Rate commensurate with experience. Call Mr. Hunter, Bass Construction Co., Birmingham, Mich., 642-7215. help exercise hofses. 626-2821^ ________________________________'BARTENDER, NIGHTS, HALL FOR RENT — RECEPTIONS, ences required. Apply in person, ................... _ lodges or church, OR 3-5202. i Cooley Lanes, 7875 t^oley Lake EVENING WORK Rd. LOSE WEIGHT SAFELY WITH Dex-A-Dlet Tablets. Only 98 cents BOY OVER 18 TO WORK IN BAK-, ery. Apply, 432 Orchard Lake Ave.' ; f%l' at Simms Qros. Drugs. Zip Code Directories Send $1 plus 15 cents postage. Diredorles — 163 Oakland Ave., Pontiac. 46058. BUS BOY WANTED, F*DLL TIME employment. Apply in person only. Franks Restaurant, Keego Harbor, BOX REPLIES I At 10 a.m. today there} were replies at The | I Press Office in the foi-j I lowing boxes: | I 22, 32, 42, 46, 49, 55« ! 60, 61, 63, 66, 67, 73, 83, 96, 105 CAREER OPPORTUNITY FINANCE MANAGER (TRAINEE) Due to its rapid expansion on NURSE AIDES AM shifts. Training program on a year-around basis. Good working conditions. Experienced and inexperienced. Apply in person any weekday from 9:30 to 11:00 a.m. Seminole Hills Nursing Home, 532 Orchard Lake Ave., PojTtiac. ___ NEEDED "at ONCE! FULL-TIME marine mechanic. Experienced .u. ambitious alert young men pontirr^FE^8%2 ^ lA/alton, ot the Clarkston-Waterford area, = --.....- no exp. necessary, will train, must NO LIMIT ON INCOME. PART be married and presently employed lime. Approx. $3 an hr. Guar- - Ages 21-34, $200 a month. Call anteed salary. Responsible married Mr. Davis, 625-2750 from 3 to 7 men. Call 332-8670 5-7 p.m. p.m. Draftsman-Estimator ^ Architectural—diversified duties in-| eluding drafting, expediting and; take off work. Good opportunity; with a small but fast expanding company. Birmingham, Mich. area. Call 564-6092. Knowledge of Blue Shield Claims form processing necessary. Birm-' ingham Management service needs you. Salary Open Fringe Benefits Advancement opportunities Call 646-8629__ 9_a.m^-5_p.m. NEAT, DE"PEN0AB"LE WAITRESS for night shift. Call or apply in person. Mitch's tavern, 4000 Cass-EliZ. 682-1616. - PRECISION PARTS AND HEATi EXPERIENCED LATHE OPERA- treat inspectors. These jobs offer, tor for engine lathe, top rates, excellent wages with exceptionally, new plant, ideal working condi-i good employe benefits. Apply Per-; tions. Apply 30231 Stephenson Hwy., sonnet Office, Beaver Precision Madison Heights. See Mr. Balent., Products, Inc., 651 N. Rochester consumer finance field, one of the EX’^^n¥ed~MAC"hTne" 0PE"R-| Rd., Clawson, Mich. An Equal country's leading financial lnstltu-| atORS. Lathes, mills and screw' Opporturnty Employer_________ tions requires two trainees. The machine. Steady, overtime and PROCESS AND STANDARDS ENGI-; A PART TIME JOB, 4 HOURS PER day, choice of hours, top earning for right girl. Must be dependable and have a pleasant telephone voice. Call Mrs. Wixom, 674-2233, from 9-4. _ _ "“assistant MANAGER ^ young saleslacfy, experienced In selling coats, suits, and dresses and willing to assume some \i" or part time help. Lady to se Beeline Fashions, no collecting or delivering. Call GR 6-2792 or GR 6-3645._ _ I NIGHT SHIFf~""WATTRESs7 MA R-; I rted and over 21, no Sundays. ' FE 4-5760. _ WOMEN who want to be sue- night " CASHIER, HOURS ' 2-8;30, cesstui and earn good money in, salary, call for appointment, Jax their spare time. Money back guar- j‘-( ^^Cin OF M/omCin son after 2 p.m. the Rotunda Cnun-; — - ‘ ■ for s'ponsibilityT Dpening i" our Dray- NEEITED IMMEDJATELY, F U L_^L ton Plains store. OR 4-1300. JULIET Apply Miss_E^on AVON CALLING WE NEED STENOGRAPHERS SECRETARIES PROFITABLE TEMPORARY WORK ASSIGNMENTS AVAILABLE NOW — Pontiac area. Call MANPOWER 332-8386 WAITRESSES COUNTER GIRLS E'er evening work in fine family type restaurant. WE OFFER; 1. Complete training program 2. Above average earnings 3. Paid vacations, health and life insurance Meals and uniforms furnished successful applicants will be, benefits. Hawk Tool trained In all phases of the finance 625-5381, Clarkston business with promotion to Posi-, ^-^o“rcTir"cr»'~cDv~rr)iVi^ tion of Increased responsibility on EXPERIENCED FRY COOK, a merit basis. Preference will be wages, fringe benefits. Steak given to applicants with previous Egn. Co., TOP , ,... .. ____ .5. Steak Egg, 5395 Dixie Hwy., Waterford tmln loan°7x';^:Hence"'Goo'll''start: _ Apply_b*tween, U,4_p I I ^ r* i V V ^ J j Funeral Directors ing salary, plus liberal employee benefits Company car furnished, rpust have a good driving record. For interview appointment, Call Mr. Paupard or Mr. Straman, Universal CIT Credit Corp. 71 S. Telegraph Rd. 333-7961. Evenings Part-Time 3 rrer, needed irr mediated tor p-rt lir.'e evening work Musi be neat, rrature, rrarried and have neer. Salary and .bonus, growth opportunity. Send confidential inquiries to Ponfia^Pr^s Box 63. _ PORTER Retail store, good working conditions, fringe benefits, no Sundays. A. L. DAMMAN CO, Bto.jmfip'd Piaza leiegrapn at Mapie MA 6-3010 5n VJu OLDER WOMAN TO ASSIST WORK- 5. Pleasant working conditions and FoT^^TeryieT"c/ll^E l(;^39't, hoPsehol.d duties, full ,|ne clientele in, Waterford area. 673-1273 before 12 noon. ____________ _____ PART TIME help", DAYS AND ^®^:6112._ WOMAN for" GENERAL SEWING RESPONSIBLE WOMAN FOR on men's and ladles' garments, child care, live in or own trans-, Steady lob, gewd pay. Apply Fox MATURE YOUNG LADY for office work, some typing and phone work. Interviews January 17 from 3 to 7 p.m. at 4713 Dixie Highway. Ask for Mr. Korby. HOWARD JOHNSON'S TELEGRAPH AT MAPLE RD. Birmingham portation. FE 4-3483. Dry Cleaners, 719 W. Huron. MOTOR ROUTE IN Birmingham Area at Once Apply to Mr. Stier PONTIAC PRESS CIRCULATION DEPT. •w A N T A D S 332 COATS Hun toon FUNERAL HOME Serving Pontiac for 50 ye«jrE 79 Oakland Ave, ff . 01P9 DONELSONJOHNS' Funeral Home __ "Designed for Funerals"___ SPARKS-GRIFFIN ' FUNERAL HOME "Thoughtful Service" FE 8-9288 CUSTODIAN - UNION LAKE AREA EXPERIENCED AUTOMO church. State experience, hours_de- vacation, plus many benefits. See Dell Wankell. SHELTON Pdntiac-Buick, 855 S. Rochester Rd., __Rochester._____ FITTERS^ Experienced only for . toot room fabricating shop, excellent fringe benefits, 50 hr. wk. Artec, Inc.. 3020Jndianwood^ Lake Orion, Mich. EXP'fRlENC'ED FRY COOK. $120 starting salary. Fringe benefits. Steak N' Egg. 5395 Dixie Hwy. Waterford. Apply between 11-4 p.m. Corrections OFFICER . MALE ^ ONLY BABY SITTER TO LIVE IN. 5 ! days a wk. FE 2-4180 BABY S’ITTER/ 2 ' SMALL BOYS 2 ar.c' r yrs,. light housework, 5 oays, 7 30 to ,5 30 P.m., $25. weekly. Call 332-3420. good worjs record. Call 674-2233. PART TIME NEED 2 MEN FOR BABY SITTER, DAYS," 8:30 TO 5 9:30 a.m. to 8:00 p.m. evening work. 21-40 yrs. old. $200 p.m., 5 days. 1 child — FE 4-2509. guarantee. Call Mr. Erskine 4-7 $15. Vicinity of Pontiac Airport, bile polisher for large new car PJp- 335-8024. ........ ______________________________ dealer. Guaranteed salary, paidp i_ANT MAINTENANCE EN- BABY SITTER — HOUSEKEEPER. gineer, complete supervision. Bach- Live in. 2 school children. Week-, elors degree, $10,000, call Don ends off, OR 3-1102, OR 3-3239. | McLean 3J4-2471, Snelling and Snell- bEAUtV OPERATOR WANtED. B. ihg. _ _ ^ _ ■ Jeans Beauty Shop, 2407 Elizabeth “ “PHARMACIST BTrafE^EXPERIENCED Union Lake Drugs, top salary for borne, Commerce Lake. 363- right man. Must be aggressive. 2474 after 6 0 m Must be able to handle fast store,-------------- Qidck mviCE Aluminum Bldg. Items Dressmaking, Tailoring MUST 0€ aoie lo nanoir Ta»i siuie, ——cTTcumkic Kjpcrtc fringe benefits. EM 3-4134 nr EL BEELINE ^ASmON^^ jop comLALUMINUM SIDING INSTALLED ALTERATIONS ALL TYPES. KNIT 3-AA91 women TUN or pari Tirne. 'op tom "Superior" - yoytr i«*th«r -i-ZiDi Kaiser dealer. FE 4-3177 Architecturol Drawing Real Estate Salesmen Voorhees-Siple Cemetery Lots 4-A GRAVES, $80 Most cemeteries PONTIAC PRESS BOX 3 Personals 4B ANYONE WHO WITNESSED THE accident between '64 Pontiac and a '62 Mercury nn Tho corner of Huron and Johnson at 7:30 A.M. on Mon., Jan 9th, please get In touch with me. 335-8341. i attention WALTER BEATTY, please contact Raft Wood Products. FE 4-9995. GET OU1 OF DEBT ON A PLANNED BUDGET PROGRAM YOU CAN AFFORD i TAILORED TO YOUR INCOMF,, I SEE MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELORS 702 Pohtiac State Bank Bldg. ! ____FE 8-0456 _________I ANY GIRL OR WOMAN NEEDING a friendly adviser, phone FE 2-5122 before 5 p.m., oi if no answer, call FE 2-8734. Confidential. salary $2.80 p^r creases to $3.08 at the end of three years. All Michigan Civil Service benefits including Soda! Security, retirement, annual and sick leaves, contributory hospital and life insurances, longevity bonus after six years. Department furnishes one meal per day. Must be 21 years of age or over and a high school graduate. VIson at least 20-100 In each eye without glasses corrected to 20-30 in each eye. Negative criminal record. Special test to fill vacancies at Camp Pontiac, Camp Brighton and Camp Waterloo wil be given at the State Prison of Southern Michigan, 4000 Cooper Street, Jackson on Wednesday. January 25, 1967, at 9 a.m. Aplications available at Employment Security offices or camp offices or can be obtained at time of exam. CANYdUTErL? If you can't, we will teach you. FULL OR PART TIME, complete real estate training. Pontiac's fastest growing company. Private interviews January 24, 1 to 5 p.m, at 4713 Dixie Highway, ask for Mr. Foley. Raof Truss manufacturing Ploot needs men interested _________ in full time work. 2 shifts. (GENERAL MACHINE WORK, SOME r rt«ctriirtinn pynpri-' experience required. Bernal inc., ^ 0 n S T F U C T I 0 0 experience helpful. 357-5577. 3-6621 or deliveries. Phone 852-4131 BABY~SlfTER WANTED >OR 2 Due to the expansion and expected small children, 673-0024.__________ extra traffic at the Mall - we BABY SITTER, NIGHTS. LIVE IN now have openings tor additional or out, baby-sit in your home or salesmen For information call Mr. ou^. _Judah Lake sub. FE_ 5-6867. Vonoerharr 682-5800. MAID. ’Wll' tTm VON REALTY _ _ . OR 4-1444.____________ BUS DRIVER, EXPERIENCED FOR Roeper City anc Country School, year around job. Cafl^l 4-6511. BOOKKEEPER, SHARP G/St/MUST have some exp. Light typing and shorthand helpful* $350. Call Angie Rook, 334-2471, Snelling and Snell- Driver's School ANY KIND OF DESIGN drafting work. 363-6508;^__________ 1450 Souter, Troy. GM RESEARCH LABORATORIES Ing. JR. DESIGNER in our If you can, we will show you how to earn more money with your ability. Men needed now! This is not seasonal selling. Call Mr Korby at Challenging opportunity Plant Enigneering Dept. .u. young man with approximately 2 years of mechanical drafting experience In facilities work. Prefer Individual with some college level engineering training and interested in continuing education. For more information write or call: Personnel Dept. Research Laboratories GM TECHNICAL CENTER 12 Mile and Mound Rds. Warren, Michigan 539-5000, Ext. 2554 or 2555 ... , . „ .... - BABY SITTER, DAYS, MAY LIVE: Michigan Building Corapon- m, oxtord area, 620-3753.__________ pntc innn npckpr RH baby sitter, live IN, MORE enTS, IUUU U e C K e r «□., fa, home than wages. 335-2944. V/alled Lake. baby sitter 3 hours a ^day. -----TaTtr—mni irTnia‘i-------Mature woman. Ret. required. Own SALES—INDUSTRIAL transportation. OR 3-02T^__ We train inexperienced. Substantial|'^bY isiTTER, LIVE IN PRE-Income — repeat sales. Local pro-! ferred. 1 child welcome, Clarks-tected territory. ton area. 625-3886, anytime. Auto Repair JIM AND RUSS Auto Repair .utomatic Transmission , Specialist Any 6-cyl, engine $150 8-cyl, rebuilt $269 Jim and Russ Auto Repair j 2528 Elizabeth Lake Rd. 334-0184 FREE HOME PICKUP FE 8-9444. Dual controlled cars. Approved Auto Driving School Dry Woll Service DRY WALL New, remodel and repair work. Call MY 3-7?91 Euvestroughing AAA ALUMINUM GUTTERS MiS GUTTER CO. COMPLETE eavestrouahing service free esti* mates. 675-6866. Call Collect Mr. C. Wlllman, 313-278-4800, Wed. 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. Thurs., 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.____________ OR R 4?36L F"or ronfldS ,^1' _An^al OpporJunjty Employer HAVE A "WIG PARTY" — BY THE "House of Wigs" for 1 person or more. FE 8-6216. LADIES-CALL AN ELECTROLY-SIS CENTER FOR REMOVAL OF FACIAL HAIR. OR 3-2895. CHILD CARE TRAINEE $5596 per year To care for mentally handicapped children. Most positions located at Wayne County Training School near Northville. Promotional opportunities. Must be U.S. citizen, age 20 to 50, have completed ON AND AFTER THIS DATE, JAN.I loth school grade or equivolent. 21, 1967, I will not be responsible for any debts contracted by anyj Apply Wayne County Civil Service other than myself. Ralph E. Tros- OLD FASHIONED HORSE DRAWN sleigh rides are exciting Winter fun. Includes Spaghetti Dinner or Hot Dog meal and club rooms. Childrens party Includes farm tour. Groups of 20 or more call for reservation. 628-1611. UPLAND HILLS FARM GRILL MAN Day shift. Night shift. Part time.: Good wages and all benefits. Pi?' Bov Restaurant. Telegraph am;' Huron^__________ _____________ GUARDS Full and part time, immediate! city and suburban job openi^s. Mount Clemens. Utica and BABY SITTER, AFTERNOONS, prefer live in, vie. Pontiac Airport. 673-2364, oft. 5. SALESMAN BAKERY SALESWOMAN FULL- Retall store, good working condl- !L?^','V!,, aaP'! TtlV tions, fringe benefits, no Sunday. : 124 14 Ml. Birmingham. Ml 4j114. A I DAAAMAN fO barmaid, also waitress, ap- A. L. UAIVWVIAN LU. ; p, person, Avon Bar. 3982 Au-i Bloomfield Plaza ' pum Rd., near Adams Rd. j Tejegrapt^T^pJe ... MA 6-3010 i^-^-JricrMOodTirFOR" REN SERVICE for further Information write P.O. REPRESENTATIVE Box 522, Ppnijjf' ______ With mechanical aptitude to be BEAUTICIANS* FULL OR PA^ trained for responsible position, time. .. Electrical Service BOYER ELECTRIC CO. Residential & Commercial 332-4336 mission. Call Noli of Birmingham, 647-6566. _ _ ^ ■ “BEAUTY OPERATOR $90 guaranteed per week, plus commission. GoocL^ors. Steady. Andre Beauty Saro^ll N. Sagi-p.m.. The Singer Co.-' naw. FE 5-9257. Pontiac Mall Shopping Center —i baFy^SITTEr'AND HOUSEK 4or$ over 25, Ref. 674-2880. previous experience not required Salary and incentive commission. Car and expense supplied. Insurance retirement and Stock purchase plan. - Full time , steady Brick & Block Service BRICK, BLOCK, STONE, CEMENT work, fireplaces specialty. 335-4470. , Building Modernization 2-CAR GARAGES, 20'X20', $875. WE are local builders and build any size. Cement work. Free estimates. Pedy-Built Garage Co. OR 3-5619. 27~YEAR"S SUCCESS. BIG BEAR L: Construction Co. FE 3-78M.___i ATTENTION Which will you have? An old bath and kitchen or a sparkling new bath and kitchen. Call LaPratt R. G SNYDER, FLOOR LAYING and see. Also remodeling and gen- sanding and Mnishing. FE 5-0592. eral. < _ JOHN TAYLOR, FLOOR LAYING. LaPratt Construction Co. I Sanding and finishing. 332-6975 FE 2:2500 C^PENTRY AND REMdOELING J-B255 COMPLETE "modERnTzAT'id ditions, etc. Earl Kline, Bldr. OR 3-1926 Days. OR 3-3IB2 Eves. I Fencing : PONTIAC FENCE CO. i 5932 Dixie Hwy.__ OR 3-6595 Floor Sanding CARl L. BILLS SR., NEW AND Old floor Bonding. FE 2-5789, Floor Tiling _____ . _ 682-0350. mingham 'Puludj^. Bonded Guard 5 ^ p p ^ ^ ^ qrindeRS FOR'cleanING LADY'FOR 2ND FLOOR Services. 441 West Grand Boule- tna with wnrUno ---- vard, Detroit* LO 8-4152. 10-4 p m i IOd at. top rates with exc. working ________ ______________ ____conditions In modern stamping INSURANCE INVESTIGATOR] plant. Must have experience. Fish-needed. Experience preferred. Wtllj er Corp., 1625 W. Maple, Troy* consider trainee. We pay toP; Mich of office bldg, in Birmingham dur^ ing eve. hours, after 5 p.m. About 15 hrs. per wk, ^ appointment COMPLETE REMODELING ■. Service Quality work since 1945 Now is the best time to plan or remodel—prices are lowest! Additions—recreation rooms attic rooms—aluminum storm windows—siding and trim. 4-0738 for W N. Saginaw G&M FE 2-1211 Free estimates Terms CUSTOM FLOOR COVERING noleum, formica, tile. 741 N. Perry. FE 2-4090.____________________ Heating Service FURNACE REPAIR Day or night, all makes, space Restaurants BIG BOY DRIVE-IN, DIXIE AT Silver Lake—Telegraph at Huron. ^Rental Equipmeiit BROWNIES HARDWARE ' FLOOR SANDERS - POLISHERS WALLPAPER STEAMERS RUG CLEANER - POWER SAWS 952 Joslyn __________FE *6105 Roofer A-1 NEW, REROOF — REPAIRS >-Call Jack. Sava the lack. 338-6115. OR 3-9590. SPECIALIZE IN HOT TAR ROOF-Ing. L. J. Price. FE 2-1036. Snow Plowing Tree Trimming Service "DALBY & SONS" Lakes Tree Co., Trimming Stump and Tree Removals Fireplace Wood — Plantlnsf^ 673-2130 625-3800 Trucking HAULING AND RUBBISH. NAME your price. Any time. FE 8-0095. heaters Sdlno m^ MOVING, TRASH HAULED wtl^erV Hea.'lnt'68^7°222° > reasonable. FE 4-1353. “hlSriJSfTsjTOOL DESIGNER. GROWTH Opportunity, salary and bonus, fine location Send confidential Inquiries to Pontiac Press Box 63. Income Tax Service PERSONAL OR BUSINESS L. A. SILVIS, 673-1932 per, 279 W. Yale, Pontiac, Mich. WEDDING PHOTOGRAPHY ^f\ Professional Color. Free brochure 1 avatlable. 338-9079 anytime. j WILL THE PERSON WHO RECENT-; iy acquired a gold 22 carat bone! china coffee pot, get in touch with . Sheila Hughs — Ft 4-2278. Lost and Found 5 $10 REWARD FOR RETURN OF Acetylene tank, gauge and torch. I Lost Mon. vicinity ot Bagley and 1 Wesson^ Call FE 2-2744 atter 6 p.m. I Cost: springer' SPANIEL PUP/ j reward. OR 3-8798.___________ LOST7"CHiHUAHUA," ANSWERS TO Teek, Black with gray on nose, j 'Last seen in Twin Lks. area. i ,363-9765._ _____ , _____________ f5uND:“d5g WITH COOlT COUN-! ty WIinois ' license. Identify, FE 5-9290! I THE 1964 CIVIL niGHTS :vLAW PROHIBITS, WITH;;.: certain exceptions, !.:-:discriminatioh be-:;; i:;: CAUSE OF sex. since >: some OCCUPATIONS ARE';.;. ;v CONSIDERED MORE AT-;:; TRACTIVE TO PERSONS of one sex than the OTHER, ADVERTISE-MENTS ARE PLACED UNDER THE MALE OR FEMALE COLUMNS FOR CONVENIENCE OF READ- ERS. SUCH listings are NOT INTENDED TO EX-CLUDE PERSONS OF EITHER SEX. it Commission, 628 City-County Bulld-Ing, Detroit 26, Michigan; 965-2750, Want Ads Bring Advertisers and Prospects Together JUST CALL 332-8181 ance package as fringe benefits. Pay car depreciation plus expenses - Work out of Pontiac office. Working Oakland County and Northern Detroit Suburbs. • No TURRET LATHE OPERATORS typing, must have own car. Send 6 p.m. to midnight, able to mike resume to P.O. Box 91 f, Pontiac. INSPECTORS OF PRECISION PART and heat-treat inspectors. These; lobs offer excellent wages with ex-| Janitorial Service >Tibd r'lDiC CONCRETE POURED BASEMENTS lUKd (jIKLj and footings, garages, breezeways. No experience necessary, will train: misc. carpentry work. FE 4-6162. - Full time. Day or-evening shifts: DO YOURSELF A FAVOR. GET - Paid hospitalization, insurance.i estimate on any home im- M AND M JANITORIAL SERVICE vacation and pension plan. Apply, provement at Big Bear Construe- — FE 8-1760._____________________________ Ellas Bros. Big Boy. 20 S. Teia-| Winter prices now in eftecl. Lumber LIGHT HAULING, BASEMENTS, garages cleaned. 674-1242. FE 5J804 LIpHT HAULING AND" MOVING OF __any kind, reasonable. FE 5-7643^ lTgHT and heavy TRUCKING, rubbish, fill dirt, grading and gravel and front-end loading. FE 2-0603. Truck Rental graph at Huron. DIE SETTER DISHWASHER. FULL TIME. DAYj Exp. or willing to learn i shift. No Sundays or Holidays. 585 Thread grinder operator, Exp. or Oakland Ave._ '________ willing to learn. DEPEND^LE WOMAN 5 DAYS ALSO FE 3'7B33. , , , TALBOTT LUMBER VOrpentry Glass service, wood or aluminum. Vi-Ton Pickups *...“"'"also e^er^or.!),!::^^ Roch4te'r'“Rd^''aawlo,l'’M *'**’ f*^'i d|^-S5Xble----EXMSrENCEDl kitten rnrb^"thrMm? my speciaF ’P^ear/'c'al,"arr1/m”" INSURANCE AGENT mon labor .. m„xt have own Please call arrer o p. OVER 21 YEARS OLD Trucks to Rent _________ experienced; woman, thorough cleaner, capable laundress, 2 days, must have own __________________ iCome in or phone EMPLOYERS! _transporfaJionJ35J925^_____ Phif^Klito'^sx^^ TEMPORARY SERVICE. IeXPERTENCED WAITRESS WANT-, ens, free estimates. Phil Klie, «5Z- Moving and Storage Collecting and selling on esta^ Clawson 585-1970 lished debit. $100 a week fluar^ 548-7070 anteed while training. Group g Center Line 755-9220 hospitalization and life ms. 17^:27320 Grand River, Redford 533-9330 pendable car necessary. Paid va- p.y daily cations. Potential earnings < I t $ * ^7,7,,-year $8,000. Call 33BL1650 lor ap- TOOL pointment between 8:30 to 11:30 ’^,~ musl apply In person, good 1337._______________________________ salary, no Sun. Clark's Restau- c'arpEN TR Y, NEW AND REPAIR Pointing and Decorating I'/j-Ton Stak« TRUCKS - TRACTORS i AND EQUIPMENT Dump Trucks — Semi-Trailers Pontiac Farm- ahu . Industrial Tractor Co. 825 S. WOODWARD FE 4-0461 FE 4-1442 Open Dally Including Sunday rajiL_t300 N. Perry. fountaTnsale SORRY, NO STUDENTS Free estimates. 335-9981. Water Softeners Mon., Wed., and Friday. kitchen Helpers Wanted Full and part time openings. Apply in person. The Rotunda Country Inn. 3230 Pine Lake, Rd., Orchard Lake, DESIGNER TO DESIGN;! layout add detail fixtures, gauges,! cutting tools, equipment and ma-| nrox*kicMT llinDk' chine components of any degree olj PfcRIvlANtNl WUKIx complexity. Requires shop math In- VARIETY OF HOURS AVAILABLE A-1 PAINTING AND ________________ PAPER HANGING [ INTERIOR > I N I 5 H, KITCHENS, | THOMPSON _ FE 4-83641 ~ ^ experience -'3^,, painting, PLASTER REPAIR. , ^ALES AND RENTALS _ _______ ________ — - - 10 per cent discount to Mar l.'Free'^utUgan Water Condt. _ 334-9944 MASTER CRAFTSMAN. BEAUTI-| estimates. 682-0620. ful carpentry. Rec roorn5,Ci,bine^^^^ QUALITY PAINTING. REASON-custom framing, f‘|;\|shjng. Pnci|, 628-1670. Classified Department THE PONTIAC PRESS LARGE VOLUME STANDARD OIL Service Center, Birmingham, h»$ openings tor full time or part time driveway salesmen and gasoline attendants. Full time 7 a.m.-5 p.m., part time 7 a.m. to 12 noon; 5 p.m. to 10 p.m. Exc. starting pay, fringe laenetits. Call Mi 7-0700._ MACHINIST Manufacturer ot precision parts located In Walled Lake has Immediate openings tor experienced machinist In the following clesslti-cations: MILLING GRINDING TURNING This is steady employment with good wages and fully paid fringe benefits. ‘ VALCOMATIC PRODUCTS 2750 W. Maple Rd. Equal Opportunity Employer eluding trigonometry. This job offers excellent wages with excep-j tionally good employe benefits. Apply Personnel Office, Beaver Precision Products, Inc. 651 N. Rochester Rd., Clawson, Mich. An equal opportunity employer. j tv TECHNICIAN I Top wages, paid Insurance, retirement plan, SWEET'S RADIO & APPLIANCE 422 W; Huron 334-5677 WANTED MATURE STEADY MAN for position ot responsibility. Retail hardware experience helpful. Ability to ■ lead others essential. Call Mel Hemmd at M. V. Poole Hardware — FE 8-9618. NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY UNIFORMS FURNISHED EMPLOYEE'S DISCOUNTS 250 N. WOODWARD BIRMINGHAM 1213 W. 14 MILE (near' CROOKS) CLAWSON 6596 TELEGRAPH (NEAR MAPLE) BLOOMFIELD SHOPPING CENTER FRED SANDERS work can't be beat. 33^-9430._ Cement Work ALL TYPES OF CEMENT WORK* block work. OR 4-3267. , ' ^A^NT FLOORS FOR PARTICU-lar people Bert Comhiins FE 8r0245 Cement and Block Work Guinn's Construction Co. FE 4-7677 Eves. FE 5-9122 Piano Tuning^ PIANO TUNING AND REPAIRING Oscar Schmidt __pE 2-5217 Plastering Ser^ce A-1 PLASTERING, NEW AND RE-palr, FE 8-2702. Woll Cleaners BLOOMFIELD. WALL CLEANERS. Wallk cleaned. Re^s. Satisfaction guaranteed. Insured. FE 2-1631, 1 Wadding inYitatioi»^ WEDDIftG INVITATIONS 12-hour service — UL 2-3234 Press Want Ads Give Fast' Results. Ph. 332*81 B1 < AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY V. nwiv -..-,______.EJV^OYER_________ 2333 S. Telegraph.I GIRL' FOR GENERAL OFFICE : work. Must be able to type. Ap-i ;; ply to Mr. Hill, Keego Pontiac' j! Sales, Keego Harbor. >: NURSES WELDER-$12,500 We train.^ou to sell. Income quoted is^lfpical. Local protected territor#' Highest quality rods. Call collect Mr C. Wlllman, 313-278-4800, Wed. 11 a.m. to It p.m. Thurs. 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. ___ WANTED: MEN TO WORK IN service station, prefer age 50-65, Clark Super 100 Station, Keego Harbor. 662-9888. 'GENERAL DUTY bed, teaching hospital; all services available; $530 monthly to start, with Increases to $625 monthly In 3 years; shift differential; fuliv; paid, family Blue Cross; life In-, surance: liberal sick leave and| vacation policies; write Director ot Nursing Service, Hurley Hospital," Flint, Michigan. V ii$T Y8«t mem THE POXTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 24, 1967 Wp M. BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED RH Weo. wltn potitivt Uctort - p.% AB n«g. I] Wanted Reol Estota 36 I7.» tIO IIJ O Neg. ., , - 0€TR0IT BLOOD SERVJtE In Pontine FE *■«« 1342 Wide Track Or., W. Mon. thru FrI., » a.m.-4 p.m. We«). 1 p.m.-7 p.m. ____ helV polio Patients. lTve in. Coupla or Children welcome. 424-1972. $100,000 Apartiiwnts, Uafurnished 38 HOURS Unusual 1:30 to 9:30 Monday to Friday. Saturday 9:30 to 2:30 Salary,: Hold 1 week, paid S145 net Will train you In personnel and personnel management. Pirst 3 days — 10 a m, to 1:30 p m. — voluntarily. Call 9:30 a m. to 1:30 p.m. Monday 3-7088 FOR LEASE-SPACIOUS NEW 1 and 2 bedroom apartments For equities and land contracts, m Walled Lake area. Ready DonT iosc tttat home. Smallest Immpdifitii OimiDflfirVii possible discount. c«n 682*1820. Ask immeaiaTB occupancy^* for Ted Mccuno^l^sr^^ Completely carpeted, ho| 5143 cass-Eiiiabeih Rd.__Water heating, ceramic tile A* L CASH 10 MINUTES. both Gos utilitii^s Doid. even If behind in payments or un. “am. uus umiiHSS [Juiu. der forecMsure. Agent. 527.4WI- Completely SOUndprOOf. CASH FOR YOUR LOT ^ phone 363-7000 Sale Housm 4? CARNIVAL B.V Dick Turner Sale Hovmi' 9-5, Mon.-Sat. Anywhere In Oakland County — Lake or suburban area. Our building company is building now — we must have over 300 lots for 1967 building program. ALSO highest $$$$ for your house if you , wish to sell or you may trade through our 4 office organization. Or if you wish to relocate within 50 miles we can help you. C. SCHUETT 673-7102 ’ TM-MlI^ASK FOR MR. GAFFNEY 5280 Dixie Hwy. north of Walton ppen Y to 4 p.m. Saturday and Nl^b^E^AMRTMENT COM- T CASH_ j Sunday^ call _atter 4 p.m. Mon, LAKE OAKLAND MAhlOR APTS. 3610 W. Walton Blvd, p.m. Monday thru 2-BEDROOM, LARGE CARPETED living room. g« heat, SO x ISO ft. 1st, close to lake. Reasonable down payment. TOM REAGAN REAL ESTATE 22S1 N. Opdyke 332-0156 plex needs couple as managers,: Write Pontiac Press Box 32._ full; JT-RAY TECHNICIAN FOR time work In radiologist's omte ... In Rochester. Regular hours, salary 3B7 Sales Help, Male-Female 8-A CAREER IN REAL ESTATE Instruction Class now forming for a class In real estate. Opening fo rseveral salespeople both male and female who are interested in making money. Bonus plan and many advantages in one of the fastest growing offices. Both existing and new homes. Call FE 8-7161 ask for Jack Ralph. BATEMAN REALTY DIRECT seIl1ng7full or'paRt time. Call 10 a.m.-l p.m. or 6 p.m,-10 p.m. 674-3314___ “ AAANAGER For Oakland County office. Must have 6 months' active successful real estate experience. Phone Mr. Cross at FE 3-7088 for per-' sonal interview. C. SCHUETT 5^0 Dfxie Hwy, N. of Walton OAKLAND HiTlS MEMORIAL GAR-dens needs 3 consultants, we can train for bronze memorial and burial estates. Must have car, call lor appointmenL Fj^ 9-2785. _ _____ Rewarding and very' Uucra- tive employment, men and women, preferably over 25, must have car. Reply Pontiac Pox No. 57. 11 CASH 48 HOURS LAND CONTRACTS-HOMES EQUITIES WRIGHT FE 2-9141 HAVE CASH BUYER WHO NEEDS A 3-BEDROOM HOME. CALL AGENT AT 674-1649. thru FrI. 673-6102 and anytime __________ luxury"! AND”2 bedroom Voorhees_near J’elegrap^ FE 8-2^4 ROOMY single' BEDROOMS j apartment for lease Feb. 1st, High-I land Rd. near Airport. OR 3-9272 or OR 3-1232._____________________ I Rent Houses, Furnished 39 J. C. Hayden Realtcr ROOM HOUSE. .LAKE ORION.: Completely furn. iHcluding utilities. $25 per wk. Dep. requIrecL 693-6693. ; We^ neejJ listings, equities bought come, 692-5502._________________ ROOMS, PARTLY MODERN,’ partly furnished, near Pontiac Mo-, tor, couple only. FE 4-4625. LOTS-WANTED IN PONTIAC Immediate closing. REAL VALUB realty, 626*9575. , X,yr~ ,-ir-akl ,a • ----—^KEEGO — CASS LAKE, CLEAN, 2 MY CLIENT NEEDS A 3-BEOROOM bedrooms, gas heat, all utilities furnished, no pets, adults only. Dep. req. Inquire 2168 Willow Beach. home on the West Side ot Pontiac - Will pay up to $17,500. Call Don Reich at O'Neil Realty — OR 4-2222 or FE 4-8576. RAY O'NEIL REALTY, INC. 3520 Pontiac Lake Road OR 4-2222 or FE 4-8576 .....f >iou»es, Uni.unished 40 2 BEDROOMS,. EXCELLENT CON-I dition, gas heat, will lease, 2 I months rent plus deposit required. - - - - --- ' Post Office Box 3034. Spot CASH 2 'bedrooms, SI25''MdNf^ FOR YOUR EQUITY, jVA, FHA, Posit. FE 8-90JI. _ OR OTHER. FOR QUICK ACTION.3 . BEDROOM HOME ON ROB-CAU NOW. HAGSTROM REAL-I Inwood. $35 week, security deposit, TOR, OR 4-0358 OR EVENINGS avail. Feb, 4. 474-3276. 682-0435 We Need Listings Buyers Galore J. A. TAYLOk AGENCY 3-BEDROOM, BASEMENT, GAS , heat, $125 per mo. plus $125 de-I posit. FE 4-W87. _ . 'sBE'd'ROOM, FULL BASEMENT,! oil heat, no drinkers, $100 deposit. ! SlOO per mo. 682-6933. Rent Rooms 42 CLEAN l^'OOM FOR A LADY, 118 Ml. Clemens — FE 5-8466, Work Wanted Mole ■ „I Peal Estate—Insurance—Building A-1 CARPENTER, . WORK OF ALL 7732 Highland Rd. (M59) OR 4-0306 _________________________ kinds. 674-1074. ! Evenings Call EM 3-9937 1 LARGE ROOM IN PRIVATE CARWNfER7"lT-YEArs7E ~~ . 0" Apartments, Furnished 37 2:r-66^f6'r-employed-w13man CARPENTRY, 36 YEARS j only, win consider I child, cook*. Repairs, remodeling, kitchens, spe-il LARGE ROOM $25 PE,R WEEK,i ing, washer, dryer. FE 5-9665-_ j clalty. Reasonable 673-5728. ; 2 SINGLES, I DOUBLE, OFF BALD-j C«.BM«ola Iig:win, men only. FE 5-3549 beforei work Wanted remoie ll \ room, $15 week, $25 deposit, 3 or FE 8-4253 aft. 6. Mr. Keehn,j • ^j no pets. FE 8-3832. manager. . 1 A-1 IRONINGS DONE IN MY, ^ GENTLEMAN, NON-SMOKER IbUSINESS MAN. SHOWER, WEST; home. OR 3-1021. 1-day^er^lc^. ; FE 4.2753 After 4. \ side, FE 2-3517. 1 HRS. iABY-SIT IN MY HOME. «< a day, 4 days a wk. 334-6864 TraIWd TYPIST WOULD typing to do at home. Will pick up and deliver. 335-0610.______i fYPING OR BOOKKEEPING DONE in my own home. 682-3779. WmHING and IRONINGS. PICK up and deliver. 335-6414. WOULD LIKI HOUSEWORK, 1 OR/ 2 days week. 334-8184. VOUNG LADY, 24, WHIYE. PRAC-’ tical Nurses Training, typing Write Pontiac Press Box 14. _ I GENTLEMAN, NON-SMOKER FE 4-2753 After 4, 2'rooms, p'RIVATC 'men only.'CLE'‘aN ROO’M, ROCHESTER AREA, ___ . 123 Dwight St. , call after 7 p.m, UL 2-4983 or LIKE . onriA/ic “rr'FaNT T “ PFosnM FE 5-7669. _ ____ ROOMS CLEAN, 1 PERSON___________________ only. In Ponhac^«3;8394. CLEAN SLEEPING ROOMS — 350 ROOMS, PONTIAC, $40 DEPOSIT,' W^Hjmonj-_FE 4-5641. $20. wkly - 852-1975. CLOSE TO PONTIAC MOTORS - Kitchen privileges. FE 4-1940 or ROOMS AND BATH, UPPER, dep , $20 wk. FE 4-8612. ......... '2-'RbbM EFFrciENCY' Y PERSON '^4?i^'wi^rpnt*raP^' WEEK, $ only, nr. Pontiac Motor, clean, - - quiet. FE 4-4625. :GENTLEMEN. CLOSE TO TOWN. :2‘-R00M''STUDIO AP"'ARTMENT, 'Nbi— cooking. FE 5-3585. 234 Mechanic. GENTLEMAN: SLEEP ROOM AND ____________ |, Dnn.Vc~liMr." "naTu—.inn“rsc ' adloining living room. Bath, show- milding Service-Suppliei 13 nuttUSi rL!"!' 3-ROOM APARTMENTS it ad^^c ci cppiKir^ pnOM 1 OR B&M MODERNIZERS REMODEL-j 334-0679 iDnnU«r”»S9 4059 ing, repairs, attics, and rec. rooms.', .Cn ^ATH nM'TAxir i Also interior decorator, after ‘ ^ Adu?tf *10003 DWeHwv °MS2?46^' ^ pm FE 4-5065. ______ 'Tel-Huron area. FE 2-7941 Credit Advisors 16-A DEBT AID, INC., 711 RIKEP BLDG. FE 2-0181. See announcements._ bresimaklng & Taflering 17 SEWING, LADIES, MEN'SALTER-atlons. FE 2-1436._ Income Tox Sorvict come, $30 per week, $75 dep. quire at 273 Baldwin Ave. Call 338-4054, i Adults, 10003 Dixie Hwy., 625-2546 3 ROOMS AND BATH, CHILD WEL-'L6vETY~RbbM' FOR 2 WOMEN ,-,n .. Alpine. Home privileges. Mea|s by arrangement. Also 1 single room. ROOMS, PRIVATE, PREFER EM ..........________ middle-aged adults only. FE 4-46ei.iMrDDLE AGE PERSON WITH ROOMS AND BATH, ’aDUlYsI sone kitchen privileges, no drink-only, no pels, $3750 per week. $1001 Ing or smoking^J38-27J7. dep. Inquire at Hollerbacks Autci ^icE LARGE, CLEAN SLEEPING Parts, 273 Baldwin Ave. , mnm. no drinkers, qentlemen, 255 19/ ROOMS AND BATH, UTTLlTlES>j State, 332-3382. _______________ _ couple only. 119 Murphy bet. 5 p.m. MirF vVEST SIDE FOR PROFES- IIP WITH on WITHOUT AP-iBAEHELOR, 3-ROOM, CARPETE'D,! slonal or business lady. FE 2-9002 ‘’poinM.^OpeS^Venlni^^^^^^^^ Sat. nvain floor, private, real nice. 33^ I Located on Cass Lk. Rd. next to! _i?76^-------------------- NICE ROOM, LAKE OAKLAND Post Office. E. Dunn. 682-7581. 'BACHELOR APARTMENT, $30 OR 3-7539__________ r HOUR AVERAGE TIME SPENT! Pleosaot’ Quiet surroun(^gs.|pROFESSIONAL OR BUSINESS on tong form Uemliedi; to b^^ Parkway Motel. ME 4-9107, Hofy. T men. 563 W. Huron. FE 3-7111. you maximum savings. Average j BACHELOR BASEMENt APARY-! ROOM AND OR BOARD, I35'/i fee, $5, in your home slightly high- ment and sleeping room. Close to Oakland Ave; FE 4-1654 er. E. Dunn and C. M. Bradley,' bus. and Yellow Cab. FE 4-4825. ,.*vrMF:rF“7ir . phone 673-5457, 682-7581,.. _ .. BACllELbRr''l>RIVATE, " QUIEY,^^cupan?y, $35 per^^eek ' M^^^ sert $5 LONG FORM PREPARED. ; north end, nice FE 2-4376. , ice, TV, telephone. 789 South Wood EXPERIENCED_____________l^£333?jEpp|(-|gNcv APARTMENT FOR 1 ward. ______ _ ___ _ LONG FORM PREPARED AND adult, close In. 332-7332.____ SLEEPING ROOM FOR, YOUNG typed. Ynur home $6, My office $5. poR LEASE - NEW 'STUDIO rnan. FE 4-5928. None higher except businesses. George Lyle. FE 8-0252. Moviwg awd Trucking_________22 LIGHT HAULING, MOVING Basements cleaned — Odd lobi. Driveway gravel—Reas, rate. 674-29« light TRUCklNG7Y4 TON TRUCK. 332-1582. Please ask for John Carter. ^ _ SNYDER BROTHERS Moving and storage, hourly or flat rates. Plano experts. FE <-49« „ Pointing and Decorating 23 A LADY INTERIOR DECORATOR. Papering. FE 8-6214.______ i BEDROOMS - 54 ACRE -dersonville Rd. Part basement, low tax area. Will sell or trade equity for place closer in. 363-6703. $1,000 DOWN — 3 bedrooms — Lake privileges, aluminum siding and brick, land contract. Call 363-7700. 3-BEDROOM — St. Pat's area -basement, low down payment, I becut pit, teheed yard.- 363-5477. 3-BEDROOM — Rambling ranch, IVi-car garage, tamily room, extra large lot, West Bloomfield area, pleasant Lake privileges. Full price: $10,000 on land contract or 19,500 cash. Dial EM 3-6703. STYLE LIVING — with extra apartments to help make payments, big house and big barn, SOO'xSOO' of land. $31,900. Terms. EM 3-7700. NORTH BALDWIN area — 4 bed rooms, full bd’sement. Cyclone fenced and garaw. $2,000 down or will trade equity for house on West Side ol Pontlaci Call EM 3-5477. $11,700 FULL PRICE - $2,000. down, like new, gas heat, woods on : sides. For personal Inspection call 363-6703. BUNGALOW With 24'xl2' basement, car-and-half garage. 8 fenced lots and lake privileges. See and make offer by calling 363-5477. $8,500 — 2 bedrooms. Walled Lake schools, walking distance to Super Market, $1,000 down. EM 3-6703. COMMERCIAL — Cement block building in Commerce-frame dwelling also on lot. $15,900, terms takes all. Call EM 3-5477. PONTIAC LA,KE front — 2 bed robms, large utility room, fenced lot boat dock, runabout and motor, $13,500 full price. Land contract. EM 3- 6703. 7750 Cooley ^4:H-R|ArESTATE“' $1,000 DOWN — City — clean as a pin — in tact iusi decorated, 5-room bungalow, toll basement, near plants, shopping and bus line, back yard fenced. Price: $11,500 (payments less than rent). 5844 Dixit Hwy. OR 4-29296 After 5 p.m. FE 8-4236 OR 3-0455________________ 673-2391 4-BEDROOM COLONIAL Watkins Hills, new. 2V2 baths, 23' paneled family room with fireplace, large living room and formal dining room. New carpeting and draperies in living room, dining room, and family room, carpeted stairs and hallway, kitchen with built-in oven, range and dishwash er, breakfast areai laundry room on 1st floor. Paneled partitioning in basement, thermo pane windows throughout, auto, water softener fenced back yard ^00 sq. ft brick patio, professionally land scaped. Shown by appointment on iy- $37,500 By Owner 674-1318 4- BEDROOM" TRI - ■ LEVEL,"' FIRE place, carpeted, drapes, IVa baths 3-car garage, on large lot in OX' ford. 628-2013. A. Sanders, rep H Wilson. <49 WILL BUH.O. Brick trl-lqv(l, 1 bgtit-lht. thbiwo windows wmi morblo Mlli, corpetji $16,«0. coll MY 3-2121 or FE MW3. ^ J‘,- V OPEN SUNDAY 12-5 LAWRENCE W. GAYLORD 2 Wost Flint Stroet Lake Orion. Michigan MY 2-282) or FE B9693 5-ROOM, 1'/,-STORY BLOCK HOUSE. Full basement, 1-car garage. 1.6 acres. By owners. 1-474-1776 or 682-1125 er 682-0114. JS9_GAGE_ST^ _ " S'BEDRWm” LAKE ORION" 150x180 let, chain link fenced, paved sireets, needs some finish ing. Only $16,900 as is or will complete for $19,950 — terms. STATEWIDE REAL ESTATE 2661 S. Lapeer Rd., Lake Orion ' 33^0000 'Tooms"and 'bath: close" I Land contract. Call after 5, 31 4333. LEASE - NEW ________________, __________________ apartment In Walled Lake area, SLEEPING ROOM, DAY WORKERS ready for immediate occupancy.! Gentlemen, $12 wk. 334-6840, Completely furnished and carpeted, s—~—ui:*L hot water baseboard heating, ce- KeOIIIS Wlln Beoro *»0 ramie tile bath. Gas utilities paid.l I ri vyear lease, $120 per month. 363- i OR 2 RETIREES, HOME COOKEDj _7000, 9 to 5, Mon.-Sat, | meals, FE 4-8491. | LARGE ROOMY APARYMENY BEAUY"rFUr“ROOAAS. EXCELLENT Close-In for, 2 adults, 1st floor,; meals. Lunches packed. FE 5-7959. private entrance. FE 5-5643. _ i -------- ----- LUXURY 2-BEDROOM APMTvi ment at grade level, completely AMn' n riluTD^ND LAUN- carpeted, air conditioned, hot wa- ROOM AND B O A R D and l«uin ter heating, ceramic tile bath, gas “7' dr Ink! i utilities paid. Lbcated near Inter- er's. and Pontiac Motors, no drink-. section ol Haggerty and Pontiac ------------------- -J, Trail, $175 per mo. Security depos-,D..6 Office SeOCe 47: it required. Phone 363-7000. Mon.-Sat., 9 to 5. 6-ROOM, 3 BEDROOMS, FULL basement, garage, lot 100x150, 5 fruit trees. Crescent Lake privi-leges^ $l:W00^682-6958' 21 FT. LIVING ROOM, VESTIBULE entrance, IVi baths, 3 large bedrooms, large kitchen. Built on your lot for only. $12,060. ART DANIELS. Model open da'Ily. 7200 E. 15 Mile, 536-0333, HU 3-2000, JA 1-7880. 45i""KENILw6RTH. 3 BEDROOMS', aluminum siding, large lot. immediate possession. $1500 down. Information, 332-2^,_ $7950 / ON YOUR LOT. 3 bedro^ ranch, lull basement, alum, sid/tg. olumb-ing complete. You dp' the finishing, no money dn. / EXCELLENT PAINTING Mornings, OR 3-5488 MODERN FURNISHED APART-ment in Lake Orion. MY 3-6525 all. 5 p.m. nT£e c6uple7~s"mall""child, welcome. 338-2343, SQ. FT. OF AIR CONDITIONED building in the Fontainbleau Plaza. Ideal tor office er small business. OR 4-2222. I Ray O'Neil, Realtor 3520 Pontiac Lk. Rd. PAINT, PAPERING _ _ Yupper. OR 3-7061 ____ _ _ PAINtYng, AND DECORAYiNG, VACANcTes "c6MING'~UP”"sb6N,'"l free estimates. FE 2-8284 after and 2 bedroom apartments. Se- __________...jccrc., 6 p.m,______ curily dep. required. $160 to $185 OFFICE WITH LARGE G^AGE, PAINTING AND p'A P E'R I N G.7 mo. Cali FE 8-2221. ideal Inr storage. FE 4-0M4/---- You're next. Orvel Gidcumb, 673- SMALL APARTMENT, HWY. .5/ THREE BUSINESS 0496. ___________ Suitable for elderly, couple. Mil- rent or lease. Starting at $65 QUALITY WORK ASSURED. PAINT-, , ford, 685-2044. i ^ ing; papering, wall washing. 673-'SEE THIS BEFORE YOU RENT. aV ^E 8 7161 ^ ^ I 2872. __ Couple only. $30 per wk. All utill- ' ..j Insurance 26 “*P ' Sole Heuses 49; YOUNG-BILF HOMES REALLY MEANy BETTER-BUILT Russell Ybung 334-3830 53'/yW. Huron _ " ALL BRICK 2-bedroonYt>uh9*tow, full basement, exceptiprially clean, natural fireplace, .country kitchen. /WEST BLOOMFIELD / $14,900 $X500 down. Immediate possession / Appointment only / EARL A. GILFORD, Realty FE 8-8tl6 __ a“very nice cape cod Brand new. Nice area, $1500 dov^n. GILFORD REALTY FE 8-8116 ings up to 15 per stead Associates, F Elizabeth Lake Rd. cent. Hemp- = 4-8284, 185 ] and 2 BEDROOM LUXURY apartments. Security dep, required after 6;30 p.m. 1-BEDROOM home — VACANT.I HOMEOWNERS, POLICIES AT SAV- Apartments, Unfurnished 38 !l®*^,„r'^'’,!',sh';"^7^’“\,s*’a'’lle.°TE' 2 3417. . _____■ '•BED'ROOM home. YEAR- Wanted Children te Beard 23: CHILDREN TO ROOM AND BOARD TTe " lull time. MY 3-6415. 5 8585 Bloomliald - shaded lot -- *T^. , ■ , - ,• ri - a aw* ^ . I garage — gas heat immediate WOelted HoUSffhold GoOQS 29 2 bedrooms, dixie highway, ^ssession. $6,950 cash or bank . ____............ terms. 1 PIECE OR HOUSEFUL? PIANOS. 2-BEDROOM, ADULTS ONLY, NO «- ! M t Lippard FE 5-7932 j '90 a mo. Oak Grove apart- 3-BEDROOM SUMMER home on Big Fifhls, 44 Prall St. Apply to: Lake west-of Clarkston - Open. ALL HOUSEHOLDS - SPOT CASH' caretaker. , , beam ceiling - fireplace - fenced r~^H°"Fo'p FrrR"lYrfriR'E"~AND'"A> ROOMS, SMALL APARTMENT, *" middle age couple preferred, heat son's^*FE 4 788^1 /furnished._No_peto. 332-1142. ^ 3 ROOMS AND BATH. ADULTS 3-BEDROOM farm-style home on 2 only. 2595 Auburn. acres - near Pontiac Lake - ga- ROOMS, BATH, PRIVATE. NEAR rage — lake privileges — horses downtown. Inquire 2335 Dixie Hwy. allowed. $13,950 — $5,600 down 10 r~ RObM"f'~AND~¥AYH7~PR'l VATE, near downtown. Heal and utilities. Inquire 2335 Dixie Hwy. Economy Wanted Miscelloneeus 30'. ............. _ 625-2615 8665 Dixie itwy., ciarkston - -- ------ ... - —-----..-15 ROOMS AND BATH, $100 DEP., || no answer, 625-5015 or 625-3l» HEAR OUR PRICE BEFORE YOU take so little for your furniture , or appliances and what have you. We'll auction It or buy It. B & b Auction *089 Dixie OR 3-2717 shaded lot - Sandy beach — furnished — Immediate possession. $12,900 — Terms. existing contract, Underwood Real Estate BUDGET PLEASER Monthly payment only $68 Includes everything in this sparkling 3 bedroom ranch. Carpeted IMng room and hall, dining area has rear door to summer patio, large 100x145' lot. $3850 down and take over land contract. Full price $13,-950. HAGSTROM/Realtor MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE, 4900 W. Huron OR 4-0358 0^ 2^6229 BARGAIN NEAR POTIAC MALL 5 room bungalow r- 2 bedrooms -T paneled family room -- newly redecorated inside and out — carpeted living room and bedrooms. Automatic heat — nothing down-closing costs only to qualified buy- WEAVER Rochester-Utica Area 3 • BEDROOM BRICK Bl - LEVEL. 1500 sq. ft., built in 1961. Bullt-lns, fireplace, 1V4 baths, attached 2-car garage. Home in Ideal location. Asking only $22,500 with Immediate possestion. Terms. MILTON WEAVER, Inc., Realtor In the Village of Rochester 118 W. University_551-8141 Waterford Sal# Hoosas 19 Saif Heutes ‘No, I don’t have enough to pay off the balance on my old coat. I had to use the money to make a down payment on a new one!” Sale Heuses 49 Sole Houses 49 CLARKSTON SCHOOLS Bus pick-up from this 3-bedrdom brick ranch near Sa.shabaw LAKE FRONT Easy clean tile floors — spills; mop up fast — kiddies play sate! in fenced yard, paved streets,! community water, storm sewers, i $13,900 total - $100 and costs' moves in — $77.35 mo. plus tax and ins. Hagstrom Relaltor —I MLS ~ DELINQUENT MORT-' GAGE COUNSELING SERVICE -4900 W. Huron — OR 4-0358 Ori eves. OR 3-6229. _ I Crestbrook Pd. Quodievet, featuring 2 baths, 3 spa- cious bedrooms, large wardrobe closets. Carpeted 25' living room with fireplace, also family room with fireplace. Large kitchen with custom-built Marsh cabinets - built-in oven and range. Gas hot water heat. Approx. I'^a-acre lot. CALL FOR APPOINTMENT. SMITH & WIDEMAN REALTORS 334-4526 MODEL OPEN| EyEs^c^A^L^^^-l^it DAILY 1-6 NEW CONSTRUCTION IF YOU WOULD PREFER a new home we have 2 three bedroom brick ranch homes under construction now.. You can have possession on 30-45 days. THIS ONE FEATURES a walk-out basement. Both homes have 2 car garages and paved drJves. Exchange your home for t of these. Priced under $19,000. WATERFORD REALTY 4540 Dixie Hwy. ' 673-1273 Multiple Listing Service Brown Realtor and Builder Since 1939 LOVELY CUSTOM BRICK RANCHER: large carpeted living room with slate vestibule. Beautiful kitchen with built-ins, rodmy dining area, beautiful tamily room with ceramic tiled floors and full wall fireplace. 3 large bedrooms, 2 ceramic tiled baths, attached 2-car garage with automatic opener. All this plus a beautifully landscaped lot with swimming pool, complete with filtering system. Located in one of the area's nicest subdivisions. $32,900. Les Brown, Realtor 509 Elizabeth Lake Rd. (Across from the Mall) FE 2-4810 or FE 4-3564_ Frushbur Nicer Than New - If , what you'll Miy «*ter seeing this remerkably well-kepi 3-bedroom randi. All brick end with such special features: as IW ca-, ramie baths, Built-In snack table in the kitchen, built-in oven and range - cedar closets, heated breezeway and 2-car attoched garage. There Is also a beautiful recreation room, patio, carpeting and drapes, fenced yard end Is locafed lust minutes from the Mall. $22,500 - your home equity could serve as down payment. ^ Immediate Possession This brand new rancher with i rooms, 3 bedrooms, 174 baths, specious living room with split-rock fireplace, beautiful IS' kitchen with bUilt-Ins, 1500 sq. ft. In all. Trade in that (too small home of yours) on this dandy located on Williams Lake, with privileges. JACK FRUSHOUR, Realtor 5730 Williems Lake Rd. MLS 674-2245 49 VON V IS FOR VON V IS FOR VALUE V IS FOR THE VERY Happy retirement life you will en* joy When you purchase this lovely contemporary brick and aluminum ranch on Big Lake. It's small but neat as a pin. The cozy recreation room In the basement is paneled and the floor Is tiled. A brick fireplace In the living room. The stove, refrigerator and boat dock are included. There are aluminum storms, screens and doors. It's quality built throughout. Only 600. We're waiting for your call. VON REALTY GEORGE VGNDERHARR, Realtor In the Mall MLS Room 110 682-5802 or 682-5800 Val-U-Way SPEGIAL Beautiful 4-bedrqom bilevel located bnty 5 minutes from Oakland Uhf varsity. Features bath and hall, spacious kitchen and dining area, large 2-car garage. Priced at $20,-100 with $1,000 down plus closing costs. It's vacant and we have the key at —. R. J. (DICK) VALUET REALTOR FE 4-3531 Pontiac's FHA Appointed Property Management and I Sales Broker KINZLER LAKE FRONT BRICK Spacious 6*room, ranch with heated glass porch and patio. Built in 1956. New gas furnace. To Include new carpeting, boat dock and playground equipment. In Vz-acre site. Framed with big trees, and gentle slope to sand beach. Priced with or without furniture. Only 10 per cent down plus costs. ON MG 1C mortgage. PIONEER HIGHLANDS At Sylvan Lake and off Voorheis Rd. Convenient to everything. A sharp 3-bedroom home with family kitchen, recreation.room, shop and patio. Carpeting and draperies. New IVj-car garage. $18,950, $2,500 down to new mortgage. JOHN KINZLER, Realtor :5219 Dixie Hwy. 674-2235 Across from Packers Store Multiple Listing Service Dpen 9-8 3 bedroom, family room and 2 car garage priced at only $15,490 plus lot. Located in new sub with paved streets, curb, gutter, sidewalks and city water. Drive out M59 to Crescent Lake Road turn right to Crestbrook street and model. DON GIROUX REAL ESTATE 4511 Highland Road (M59) 673-7837 COPPER, 35c AND UP; BRASS; 1 radiators; starters and generators, 5-ROOM LOWER WITH BASEMENT.; 75c ea. C. Dixson, OR 3-5849. : $135 mo. plus deposit. Couple Of"fTcE FILES, DESKS," MA-: Chines, drafting equipment, etc. _ ---- OR 3-97^. _J _____________ _ 84 FLORENCE 3-BEDROOM APART- WANTED, ANTIQ'^UES Af4D OUAL-1 ... .. ity furniture. Call Holly 637-5193. i APARTMENT HUNTING? ------------ WE HAVE ONE AND TWO BED- Wonted te Rent 32' room apartments with j THESE ADVANTAGES: ’ Kf-'Sc..,........... "eS''',x"man!.ger''"of' dTcilanlng Ski'ReVrt minutes away establishment, ?all for Mr. Thomas ' ^ » v Roberts at 332-1822 or 651-5744, Country living atmosphere- away I'RANSFERR^D OM engineer siovp and rpfrigerator tprnished n% ' with oa- utilities 1 except p»^c-t V icity needs 3-bedroom home vyith ’ga-raie by J8n. 30. Ref. available. Call area code 317-643-5516 Ander- BEDROOM—$135 ............ TWO BEDROOM-$160, 33 Adults Only (Willing to make excep-; tions for a family. j sA,««*^.A.r\8*A. xrt cuADC one child over 12 years of age. WORKING MAN Call now for Interview: 625-4680 or ..... ’ 625*2001. son, Indiana. Share Living Qrorters and, expenses with 2 men. 673-3008. Wanted Real Estate 1 TO 50 HOMES, LOTS, ACREAGE PARCELS, FARMS, BUSINESS PROPERTIES, AND LAND CONTRACTS WARREN STOUT, Rtoltor 1450 N. Opdyke Rd. FE 5-8165 Urgently need tor immediate ,Sate! Pontiac . Dally 'til 8 multiple LISTING SERVICE i 36'AMERICAN HERITAGE APART-I ments. Including utilities and carj ; ports. 1 and 2 bedrooms from' $145 month. Phone 673-6927. __ ' EMBASSY APARTMENTS Now Renting All modern and beautilu-ly dec-: orated See them now. Luxurious two-bedroom Ambassador Suite, $165, Embassy West 5379 Highland Rd. Waterford >BEDROOM HOME NEEDED IMMEDIATELY, CASH FOR YOUR EQUITY. -GALL WENT AT 674-1698. 674-0569 eL'lZABETH"LAKESHORE APTS -Adults, no pets. Private beach, boat jlock. 5375 Cooley Lake Rd. FIREPLACE, CARPETED."2-BED-room, iVj baths, new stove, re .Irigerator, washer and dryer. In dividual utility rooms, children and pets welcome. 363-79 02. "2-BEDROOM RANCH i On large lot, garage, base- j ment, on blacktop street. $9,-750. Terms. FLATTLEY REALTY , , ) Commerc* _ 36^6981 3 Lovely-Brand New Water Front 3: ond 4-Bedroom Homes 'W AS low as $3,195 Do^n New 90 per cent Financing To those who qualify LOT INCLUDED Quality Names by ■ROSS Lakeland Estates On Dixie Hwy., lust past Walton Blvd.-Williams Lake Rd. Intersec-tion Will Build Your Lot — or Ours 0*gj&n Daily 1-v p.m. Except Fridiy Ross Homes, Inc. OR 3-8021 - FE . 4-0591 WRIGHT REALTY CO. 382 Oakland Ave.____FE 2-9141 BLOOMFIELD tWP. 3-bedroom ranch, 1-year-old, IVjTry baths, full basement, 2-car garage. $20,900. WENT WIND HAVEN | Estate type, iSVz rolling acres, 5 miles from 1-75. $7750. FRANK MAROTTA AND ASSOC. 3195 Union Lake Rd, 363-7000 9-5, 887-4553 RENTING $78 Mo. Excluding taxas and insuranca ONLY $10 Deposit WITH APPLICATION j 3-BEDROOM HOME 1 GAS HEAT I LARGE DINING AREA WILL ACCEPT ALL APPLICA-TIONS FROM ANY WORKERS, WIDOWS OR DIVORCEES. PEOPLE WITH CREDIT PROBLEM 3 / AND RETIREES ARE OKAY yyiTH US. OPEN bAiLY AND SAT. AND SUN. OR COME TO 290 KENNETT NEAR BALDWIN REAL VALUE REALTY for Immediate Action Cali FE S-3676 626-9575 F7r S1 IN V ALU E OF "f""| N E "hOM E S Evenings after 7;30 Li 2-7327 ; WESrOWN REALTY I 8-2763 afternoons _ _ I FdR~SALE:'"7"ROOM HOUSE WITHi extra lot. In Oxford. Call 628-1263; evenings. _ : _______' HAYDEN' New Homes—10 Per Cent Dn. 3 bedroom, trMevel finished family! room, V/i car garage $13,750 plus lot. bedroom ranch with full base-' ment, 2 car garage, alum, siding.! $15,200 plus lot. ; 3 bedroom brick trl-level, 1'/j baths, I 2 car garage, loads of closet and storage. $17,750 plus lot. TRADES ACCEPTED j. C. HAYDEN Realtor 363-6604 ,,10735 Highland Rd, (M-59) HAR0JL6'^R. franks; Realty WHY RENT? This 4 room frame home with 2 bedrooms, full bath, oil heat, electric hot water, close to shopping etc. can be purchased with $500, $65 a month on land contract. Full price $6500. Everett Cummings, Realtor 2583 UNION LAKE ROAD EM 3-3208 363-7181 HIITER NEAR OPDYKE -- Excellent 2-bedroom end hath, gas heat, alum, sitting $11,500. terms. ELIZABETH LAKE ESTATES - 3-bedronm and bath, oak floors, brick front. $11,900, terms. WE BUILD -- 3-bedroom ranchers with oak floors, vanity in bath, lull basements, gas heat. $11,550 on your lot. To see the model call B. C. HIITER, realtor, 3792 Eliz. Lake Rd., FE 2-0179, after B p.m. FE 2-3573. LAZENBY TRADE IN Your present house on this excellent home with full basement.xcar and half garage, 2 large bedrooms, family style kitchen, heated breezeway, glassed-in, screened-in rear porch. All this on an enormous nicely landscaped lot. Priced tor fast sale. Call for appointment. ROY LAZENBY, Realtor 4626 W. WALTON - OR 4-0301 (I Btock E. of Dlx^ Hwy.) _ LAKEFRONf ESTATE Lovely ranch home located at end of peninsula on Oxbow Lake includes approx. 1 acre of land with over 30' of lake frontage.! Home features 3 bedrooms, fam-| ily room, 2 fireplaces, IVa baths.| Approx. 2,000 sq. ft. of living area.| Priced far below duplication at; $31,500, terms to suit. Call’ OR' 4-0306. SUBURBAN BUNGALOW This 3 bedroom home has been completely remodeled Inside and out. Includes carpeting throughout, breakfast bar in kitchen, covered patio, 3 car garage, fenced yard with extra lot. Located near Walled Lake with privileges. Full price $15,950. $1,600 down on land contract. Call OR 4-0306. J. A. TAYLOR AGENCY Real Estate — Insurance — Bulding 7732 Highland Rd. (M59) OR 4-0306 Eves. EM 3-9937 or EM 3-7546 GLES NEAR AUBURN HEIGHTS — 5-room home with 13 x 25 ft. living roonn. Natural brick fireplace, 3 bedrooms. Clean 13 x 25 ft. living room. Natural brick fireplace, 3 bedrooms. Clean 13 x 15 ft. kitchen. Indirect lighting » y e r double sink. 1 car garage $9,800 full price. Only $1,000 down. Requirements, good credit. CRESCENT LAKE ESTATES - 5-room home, neat and clean. Two 12 X 12 bedrooms, carpeted living room, entrance closet, forced air heat. Aluminum storms. tOO x-140 foot lot. Lake privileges. Price $10,450. HURON GARDENS — Small home, ideal tor young or elderly couple. 3 piece bath, oil heat, basement, 50 ft. lot, price $6,500. GILES REALTY CO. 221 Baldwin Ave, _FE 5-6175 RHODES SUBURBAN HOME. White Lake Twp. 4 bedrooms, nice living room, wall-to-wall carpet, walls paneled, large kitchen, small basement/rtoil heat, corner lot, lake privileges. Only $13,500, to qualified'FGIs hothing down. LAKE ORION. Nice large tl-room lake-front home, 3 bedrooms, 2 large living rooms, family room, 2 fireplaces, I'/j baths, gas heat. $28,000, $8,000 down, balance land contract. HERE'S 2 RENT BEATERS. 3-bedroom homes near Fisher Body, Ideal for the young couple who want to egt ahead. Call- today tor details. INDIANWOOD SHORES' NO. 3 -Large well restricted homesites in a prestige area, blacktop streets and gas. Only 20 per cent down, balance land contract. Select your choice homesite today. ALBERT J. RHODES, BROKER FE 8-2306 258 W. Walton FE 5-6712 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE SCHRAM JUDITH LAKE ESTATES 3-bedroom ranch with bay window, living room 11.2 x 16', kitchen 10 X 17.7", carpeting to match decore In each room, full basement, g^s heat, fenced in rear yard, payments $85.60 per month including taxes end Insurance. HERRINGTON HILLS 6-room brick ranch full Insulated lor comfort and economy, carport and garage, .beautifully landscaped, wall to Wall carpeting, large family sized kitchen, full price $14,500, cash tq mortgage NEAR WATKINS LAKE Cute 2 bedroom home. 2 car garage. Large shaded lot. Only $8950, $950 down. We trade. Elwood Realty 682-2410. ___ ^NEW FINANCING 10% DOWN Will move you Into your new "BEAUTY-RITE" home at HUNTOON shore: and WcSTRIOGE of WATERFORD 9 Models Visit our models at Huntoon Shores West on M*59 - Right on Airport Rd, IVa miles, open dally and Sunday 2 to 6 AND Westridge of Waterford North on Dixie (U.S.10) to Our Lady of Lakes Church, open Sunday 2 to 6. Ray O'Neil, Realtor 3520 Pontiac Lk. Rd. OR 4-2222 PERRY PARK Comfy older 2-bedrodm home, tiled fleors, gas heal, close to schools and shopping, ideal home for older couple, or starter home, full price $8,950 with lust closing costs down to Gl. List With SCHRAM and Call the Van 1111 Joslyn Ave. FE 5-9471 Beauty Rite Homes The Finest Custom Homes 673-171^ CASS LAKE WOODS SUBDIVISION , I A lovely subdivision with plenty ol trees, lake privileges with sandy beach, dock tor your boat, 3 bedroom ranch home, large living room and kitchen. 16x22 fool tamily room with fireplace, l^i car garage. 1500 sq. ft. of living area. Full price $19,500. HAVE A BIG FAMILY? this one on for size. A 4 bedroom real sharp home with full basement, large lot where the kids can play. Dh yes, a garage and school district Is within walking distance. Purchase this one with 10 oer cent down, terms arranged thru: 'YORK OPEN SUNDAY 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. OR 4 0363 OR 4-0363 4713 Dixie Hwy.. Drayton_l^ins_ IN ROCHESTER" North Hill — Lovely 3 bedroom brick ranch with full basement and 2 car qarage. Has carpeting and drapes. Dishwasher. Stove i and hood. Loads ol cupboards. Fenced yard and patio. For quick i sale. $19,500. Call 651-8503 lor ap i polnimeni. SHEPARD'S REAL ESTATE^ KENT^ A. JOHNSON & SON, Realtors 1704 S Telegraph Rd. FE 4-2533 CLARKSTON GARREN'' Extra sharp 3-bodroom all brick rancher. Attractively decorated, well carpeted Hying room, dining ell end master bedroom, I’/j baths and large utility room. Well landscaped 100' ft. lot, community water and blacktop streets. Full price $17,500. / Sislock & ((ent, Inc. 1309 Pontiac State Bank Bldg, 338-9294 338-9295 Established In 1916 LAKE PRIVILEGES — 5 rooms and bath, gas heat. Only I block to lake, a safe bathing beach, nice trees. Has carport and tool storage space. Only $8,950. Floyd Kent Inc., Realtor 2200 Dixie Hwy. at Teleqraph FE 2-0123 or^FE_ 2-1984 Live "Where You Play Brand new redwood contemporary home, lake privileges on Pleasant Lake. Waterford Twp. 3-t>edroom, beamed ceilings, fireplace, stqve and refrigerator, gas heat. Beautiful corner lot with picturesque view of countryside yet minutes from shopping centers. LANGOON-DYER, INC., 682-0340 or 549-3220. NO MONEY DOWN Ranch or tri-level shell on your lot, exterior complete. FLATTLEY REALTY 620 Commerce Rd. Call. 363-6981 P ION E E R 'a-BEb- room brick veneer rancher with garage, baserhent,' carpeting drapes, Lk. Privileges. Near shopping, schools. Take over land contract. By appointment only. 338' 0908. RO’CHESTER ARE A SHARP 2 'BED-room story and Va, large kitchen, full basement, gas heat, only $13,900. Nix Realty, 651-0221 or J52-5375, SMALL FARM Over 1 acre high scenic cornqr lot with trees, 429' road frontage. Zoned to kbep farm animals. Full price, $2,000 with $850 down and $15 per mo.. Including Interest Located 22 miles north of Pontiac CLARENCE C. RIDGEWAY REALTOR 288 W. Walton 338-4084 Multiple Listing Service SYLVAN LAKE Truly a winner. A custom ranch with wet plaster, attached garage, finished basement, big lot, excellent location and excellent ' bank terms thru: YORK Open Sunday 11 a.m. to 5 p.m OR ’ 4-0363 OR 4-0363 4713 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plains DORRIS A PRIVATE kingdom for the young executive on the way up! Look Into this beautiful 3-bedroom brick ranch home located In prestige plus Oakwood Manor. This area has all comparable homes on Little Silver Lake, Pontiac School System. A spacious dream kitchen with all the latest built-ins. Luxurious main bath with ceramic tile plus half-bath, elegant living room with massive fireplace, full basement, over-size attached garage and solid cement drive, SSt.TOO. OWNER WANTS A DEAL THIS WEEK on this extremely eye-appealing aluminum sided Cape Cod on very nice corner lot in Silver Crest subdivision. Will consider selling on land contract to good buyer. 5 spacious rooms in all with IVa baths, full basement, oak floors and a 1 car garage. Pontiac Northern School District. Full year of taxes $148. Lake privileges available on Silver Lake. $14,900. DORRIS & SON, REALTORS 2536 Dixie Hwy. 674-0324 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE CLARK IRWIN 37 W. NEW YORK 2-bedroom bungalow. Carpeted living room and dining room. Handy kitchen. Enclosed rear porch. Full basement, gas heat, 1 car garage. Priced $10,250. Approximately $3,-200 down, $75 a month. 3-BEDROOM BRICK HOME Large ceramic tile bath. Plus half bath off master bedroom. Carpeted living room and dining ell. Farm size kitchen with dishwasher. Basement divided for recreation room and the full size pool fable with stay. Attached 2-car garage is finished Inside. This nicely landscaped home overlooks Oakland Lake. Priced at $20,500. Terms or trade. Use your equity In your present home as down payment. Call us today. GEORGE IRWIN, REALTOR MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE 298 V^Wa^n_______FE 3-7883 Val-U-Way ORION TWP. 5 room alum, sided ranch home. 80 ft. lot, gas heat, 3 bedrooms, large kitchen Full price only $12,-500 on FHA teems. YOUR DREAM HOME - 3-bedroom . brick ranch, full basement with uuccT C|nF recreation room. You'll love the kitchen with the bullt-ini and the Formica black walnut custom-built cupboards. The extra large first floor. Family living room designed tor entertaining. 2 baths — attached garage and patio. Lake privileges on a good lake In a popular area $27,500 — $7,000 down. Will trade. TRADE IN SALE January Is TRADER TED'S "MAKE A TRADE MONTH" -Trade the equity, In ynur HOME, LOT, ACREAGE., CABIN, TRAILER OR WHAT HAVE YOU ON one ot our many fine homes. Most likely you'll NOT NEED ANY CASH. APARTMENT HOUSE Trade the equity In yoi*r small 1-famlly rental and triple ,your money each month. 3 units on North Oakland Ave. Separate entrances, kitchens and baths. Plenty Of parking close to downtown and shops. Commercial frontage. Collect 3 rents for the price of one. $16,950 Stiould be $18,950. Just a little handy man's work and you'll have one of the finest homes In Cass Lake Woods. 3 bedrooms, full basement all brick ranch. Many fine features. Only $3,000 down on land contract. Don't wait tor the painter to up the price on this fine home. TED'S McCullough realty 5460 Highland Rd. (M59) MLS CALL THE /tCTIDN LINE 674-2239 FE 5-8183 NORTH END Two bedrooms all on one floor. Hardwood floors, tile bath, full basement, auto heat. Fenced rear yard. Just decorated. Only $700 down payment. \ WEST SUBURBAN Two-story three-bedroom home overlooking Crescent Lake. One bedroom down. Gas heat, lust decorated. Easy farms. Vacant. DRAYTON AREA Three-bedroom ranch with large utillfv room. Kitchen with plenty of dining area. Tile bath, auto heat, lust decorated. Large fenced lot. Paved street. Terms and vacant. Story-and-one-half brick, two bedrooms down, gas heat, ca^etlng, tile bath, priced to sell. Its vacant. Eves. Call Mr. Castell FE 2-7273 NICHOLIE & HARGER CO. 53 W. Huron St. ________ TRADE OR SELL, HOME, BUSINESS AND INCOME. Six-room modern lower tloqr for owner, plus 2 4-twdroom-and-bath apart-\ments. Double enclosed porch, basement. Fair 4-car garage — Lot ST'xasO". Zoned Commercial. Near Oakland University. $25,000. SYLVAN LAKE CANAL LOTS - 2 lots on clean canal. 100' frontage. $3,500. $1,500 down, $20 mo. WISHING WILL NOT SELL IT — Quick action will. Call us for a price on your home. No obligation. Wa also buy equities. CLARK REAL ESTATE 1362 W. HURON ,ST. FE 3-7888 Multiple Listing Service STOUTS Best Buys Tociay SUDDENLY, IT'S 1848- Beautifully remodeled 10 room, 2 story "Farm Home" with ap-: proximately 6 acres of land. Oil hot wafer heat and electric hot water. New all purpose room off main home. Large barn andj tool shed. Rock garden and loads; of fruit. Close to Oakland Unl-j versify. Only $6,000 down will handle. 1 NEAR LINCOLN JR. HIGH IrOCHESTER-UTICA AREA 3 bedroom ranch type home, oak floors, utility room, gas furnace, dining area, built-in oven and range. $600 down. Sturdily Built 3 bedroom home on ' 5 rolling acres, nice kitchen, living room, large bath, 1 bedroom down. : up, also fruit trees on property. Priced at $10,000 cash. C. PANGLIS INC., REALTOR OPEN 7 bAYS A WEEK 630 M-15 Drtonville CALL COLLECT NA 7-2615 TUCKER RfeALTY CO. Pontiac State Bank - 334-1545 WATERFORD TWP. Just completed — 3-bedroom model home. Across from canal on Pleasant Lake. Oak floors, gas heat, close to school. LANGDON-DYER, INC. 682-0340 or 549-3220. WHY RENT? When you can purchase this lovely 3-bedroom home with a farm styled kitchen, gas heat, big lot. Low FHA terms, bf sure to call today- YORK OPEN SUNDAY 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. OR 4-0363 OR 4-0363 4713 Dixie Hwy., Drayton.Plains 2 FAMILY 7 rooms down, 6 up. Separate entrances, gas furnace, mixed area. Presently rented at 1170 per mo. Only 1550 down to new FHA mort* gage. R. J. (DICK) VALUET REALTOR FE 4-3531 Pontiac's FHA Appointed Property Management and Sale? Broker 345 Oakland Ave. Open 9-7 _After hours 335*07Q5 or FE 4-6687 IRWIN................. LAKE FRONT G.l. A home and vacation spot In one. You can an|oy this spacious three-bedroom ranch home on Pontiac Lake. Seven large rooms, glassed-in porch. No need to feel crowded here. Bast ol all It Is already approved at $16,900. Sea today and judge tor yourself. WATERFORD AREA Very attractive three-bedroom brick ranch home. Some of the many features are: Ito ceramic tile baths, kitchen has dining area combined with fireplace and built-in barbecue, dishwasher and built-in oven and range. Thermopane glass throughout. Carpeting and drapes. Two-car garage. Dwner must sell. Reduced price for quick sale. $24,900. JOHN K. IRWIN & SONS Realtors 313 W. Huron — Since 1925 Buying or Salting Call FE 5-9444 Evenings call FE 5-4844 Very neat 2 bedroom ranch home with oak floors, dry wall, 3 piece bath, large utility with oil heat, ^ car garage, huge lOOx-150 lot. Only $11,500 with terms. LAKE FR0NT- Wlth country atmosphere, large 7 room bl-level home with laml-ly room, 14x22 living room, gas fired hot water heat, attached 2 car garage, other extras. Priced to sell on land contract with $5,000 down. Quick possession. Warren Stout, Realtar 1450 N. Opdyke Rd. FE 5-8165 Multiple Listing Service Dally 'tlf " ANNETT CASS LK. PRIVILEGES ' Cut stone ranch home In Im-maculate condition. Carpeted living room, large bedroom, modern kitchen, att. 2-car garage. 3 nicely landscaped lots — Ideal for retired couple. Terms. BRICK & FRAME RANCH Sylv6n Lake privileges. 3 Ige. bedrooms, 1’/a baths, studio celling in living room, fireplace, family room, built-m grill, dining room, utility room, gas heat and central air conditioning. Nicely landscaped lot, 2-car att. garage. $34,500, terms. STATE ST. BRICK 15 rooms suilablo tor doctor's clinic, engineer's olfico or most any business,. 38'x45 heated garage part of house. First and second floor all large rooms. Center and side entrances, front and / rear stairs. Idea! layout for remodeling. 4 lavatories and bath. Huge basement, new gas steam boiler. Adjoining parking area has 19,602 sq. ft. Terms. 260 FT. COMM'L COR. Frontage on 6-lane highway \ between Lake Orion and Oxford, over 400' depth, near new golf course and factory. Good location for motel, multiple housing, car sales, gas station, etc. Good 4-bedroom home. $39,500. Terms. CLARKSTON AREA 25 acres high rolling land. Ideal spot for country home Very scenic, frontage on 2 roads, easily divided into 2 or 3 parcels. $22,000. Terms. WE WILL TRADE REALTORS 28 E. HURON ST. Office Open Eves, and Sundays 1-4 338-0466 \ CASH . For Your Equity 2- 3- or 4-B»droom Hom»» v Immedlit* Action Call McCullough Raalty 674-2239 SafoNfiMM ♦t thh Ihiaw THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY. JANUARY 24, 1967 C—T AARON BAUGHEY REALTOR 2-unit Income in good rtnttl tru cloM to but and ttoret. s roomt, btth and botamam with new gai furnaces on each tide. Large rocmt — plastered walls. New roof. Jutt 111,«M on land contract. north of WALTON, Sharp aluminum sided 44iedroomt- Living and dining, rooms newly carpeted. Newly decorated. Full basement, gat heat. I-car garage and 2 lots. Only tlt,9M with mortgage. CANAL Front. Ranch home tea-turlng carpeting, hood and vent fan, tiled bath, 2-car garage. Setting on 3 tots. Just 112,300 fpr a fast sale. FE 2-0262 670 W. HURON OPEN 2 TO » STRUBLE LAKE AREA Newly carpeted, large living room, family sited kitchen with snackbar divider, 2 good sited bedrooms, plus utility room, 1 Vi car garage on nicely landscaped lot Good fishing close by. Can be pur-chased on a land contract. WATERFORD TWP. 2-bedroom rancher only 10 years old, carpeted living room, dining and entry, oak floors, gas heat, plenty of closet space, situated on a large M x 130' lot. Full price 311,400 terms. MILO STRUBLE Realtor ' MLS FE 84025 FE 2-6936 H iiliF-ACT>w|i 4 Bedroom Brick W. Seven Mile Rd. ,*n schools, bus at Noithland and Downtown; •"<* drapes, fire-plaM, dining room. 2 bedirooms down, 2 up, m baths, full base- oarage. Priced •r S19,?00. Cill now. 3 Bedroom Home With Five Acres located In Waterford Township near Pontiac Airport; clean, coty ^Itory frame home with one bMroom down, 2 up, full bath, dining room, automatic heat and hot water. ig-x24’ garage, a^ prMlmately 300 small evergreen trees. Priced at $1»,000, let us show you today. NICHOLIE-HUDSON Associates, Inc. 49 Mt. CleinenB St. v FE 5-1201 after 6 p.m. FE 5-0198 S4jBiwtoe«e OppertwiiHei SB TIZZY 14 VAWNT LOTS Near LongsMlPw Sdiool. WUI>«dB for land oonlracl, house or wtiad have you. BREWER REAL ESTATE _ william B. MrltchelL Salas Mgr. »4 RIker Bldg. FE 4-3111 highland area 31 vacant acres, zoned commercial, good building sites. CouW His divided. Terms. VA 3W. HOWELL Town & Country, Inc. PHONE: 313485-1585 HI-HILLVILU6E New thodel homes started, plans at our office. Select let now, will buiW.from our plans or yours. UDD'S OF PONTIAC FE 5-y2»2, 3M5 Lapeer Rd. (M-24) KEE60 HARBOR 2 good building lots, KWrW. 31000. JACK LOVELAND 2100 Cass Lake Rd. _______^-1253 LOTS - EXCELLENT CLARXSTON area, land contract. AAA S-234S. KAMPSEN "IT'S TRADING TIME" BEAUTIFUL 120 ACRES lust 30 miles from Pontiac. Along with the acreage Is a well-kept seven-room house with a barn and other out-bulldings. Priced St seO.OOO with 320,000 down on a land contract. Wa will take your old house in trade as the down paynsent or arrange easy terms. SYLVAN VILLAGE The home you have been welting for. In the place you wanted It to be. Privileges on beautiful Sylvan Lake are part of this dandy three-badroom ranch home. From the neatly carpeted family room to the finished recreation room In the basement this is truly fine home. Take time to see its other features. Priced at $23,950 with 33,400 down plus mortgage costs. We will take your present ^me in trade. CUSTOM BUILT RANCHER ARRO CASH FOR EQUITY—LAND CONTRACT ATTENTION GIs. Closing costs only 2-bedroom home, hardwood floors, gas heat, aluminum awnings, walking distance to Fisher Body, bus and shopping. Call for appointment. FHA TERMS On this spotless 3-bedroom home, wall-to-wall carpeting 1 bedroom with beautiful paneling, full basement with tiled floor. Gas heat. In very nice neighborhood with privileges on EHzabeth Lake. Total price: $17,- Ted McCullough Sr., Realtor PHONE 682-2211 5143 Cass-Elizabeth Road JLPJNdajl Y_!:»! r e alTo&' LOTS Lake lots — wooded lots — golf course lets. We have tots of all kinds priced from 33000. Terms available. Dan Mattingly CALL 'TIL 7 P.M. FE 5-9497 or FE 2-2444 COIN UUNDRY . 30 washers, 12 dryers. No compete Man. A ogoutiful setup ottered by eriginst owner due 1e proven Illness. Let us Niow you this money-maker today. 315,000 down incl. real estate. Warcien Realty MUST SELL DUE TO ILLNESS 4 unit motel with Ihdng quarters bn Houghton Lake. Small equity plus lake over payments. OR 3-174T after 2 p-m, _________ NORTHERN MOTEL 12 modem uidtt phis home In northern MIcMgan malor city. A gdid-en opportunity to bivest. live and play m the tafautaus northland. Total prica lust 344.300 with terms. Warden Realty PARTY STORE Well aquippM. The best of clieiv tele — Ckiod gross. Ideal family store. Exc. business opportunity in a growing location. Call us today. RESTAURANT Good neighborhood business, eludes all modem equipment — Priced at a steal, S1.30g down and $75 a month. Call for an appointment. GEORGE IRWIN, REALTOR MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE 298 W. Walton FE 3-7883 SCHRAM^ ACREAGE Beautiful building site containing' 5 acres, partly wqoded, lust 5 minutes from expressway exit, full price $12,500 with easy terms, 3 ACRES ' PARTRIDGE “IS THE BIRD TO'^EE" ICE CREAM Old-fashion ice cream party store. National franchise will train you for this interesting and profita-bla istore before your grand opening. Your investment of $4,000 _ , „ ...» . down holds a tremendous future Solt HWSdIIOM GOMS for you. — By Kat« Osann Ftr Sah MiscoRMiMvs 67jMnk L«tiEM 71iui D..-CTTFF With 3 spacious bedrooms, large would like to trade toward a better down. CONTRACT, $9,200. $8,300 BALANCE formal living room, kitchen de- home should appreciate the tender ~ J Pays $65 per mo vine with built-in features, 12'x-care that has been given this loyely MANY OTHER INTERESTING PAR-' "'“s and Insurance. $6,800 holes, fancy stitches, etc, 5-year -------mimi rnY pnhDLE Quarante? still in affett. May be BPS house painf No. 218, $6.95 gal. ^KC APRicOT purchased for only $3.98 rTTonthly. BPS ranch house white No. 748.; ^ Richman Bros. Sewing Center, $5.95 gal. .If!.L------------------------------- 335-9283. $39.60 CASH. Cook-Dunn ^lum. roof paint, $5.50 CIKirCD o<*l Oil base Interior. $4.00 gal. _______________________ JllNUtK Misc latex paint, 50 cents a qt. aKC GERMAN SHEPHERDS, 8 ZIG ZAG 1025 Oakland_______________FE 4-4595 weeks, for sate, $75, dogs tx>arded. RAISED RANCH CHEST drawer vanity, an 8' antique r^ fractory table and chairs. 5-1907. 17' family room, gas heat, IV2 3-bedroom all brick ranch home — ■■ Full, paneled basement has 3 natural gas wall lights; shades of New Orleans! 2V2-car garage with extra wide driveway, fenced landscaped yard. Lake privileges on one of our finer lakes. Owner moving from area and priced his property right; only $20,500, payments $108 per mo. to Include 4'^2 per cent interest, taxes and insurance; Let's look. *' No. 1-40 baths, full bath in ceramic. 2Va-car attached garage, home is frame and brick and in immaculate condition, don't wait too tong, to see this cttolce offering in an area of custom homes, only $21,-950 and assume an existing mortgage no costs. ACRE Avon Twp. 651-6090. ^wing machine. Cabinet model, automatic "Dial Model" makes blind hems, designs, buttonholes, etc. Repossessed. Pay off $53 cash or payments of $6 PER MO. Guar- C. PANGUS INC., REALTOR OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 630 M-15 CALL COLLECT NA 7-2815 9x12 Linoleum Rugs $3.89 anteed LAND CONTRACT BALAfl« $4300'Solid Vinyl Tile 7c ea. UNIVERSAL CO. at 6'/z per cent, at S45 per mo. i Vinyl Asbestos file 7c ea THE SALVATION ARMY RED SHIELD STORE 118 W. LAWRENCE ST. Everything to meet your needs Clothing, Furniture, Appliances Poodles groomed, 852-2489. 1MII sell for $3800. 682-3373 LAND CONTRACT BUYERS! Ortonville WANTED. PLEASE CALL FE 8-8I16[ FOR INFORMATION. GILFORD! REALTY. j Inlaid tile 9x9' 7c ea Floor Shop-2255 Elizabeth Lake ... „ . , “Across From the Mall" AMERICAN ESKIMO MALE DOG, ____________________________2 yrs. old, reg. papers, MY 3-1495. FE A npne ''$25.M» W. BEAUTIFUL^COLUE puppies. TuiirKicEmF--------- usId lumber BORDER COLLIE PUP, MALE, $25 TWIN NfctDLt lit. 334-8563. Sole Farms 56 Wonted Contracts-Mtg. 60-A 37'/2 ACRES - EXCELLENT 4 BED-room Dutch colonial with field stone front, nice kitchen with built- LOON LAKE Privileges offered with this quality built 3-bedroom ranch with at- A NEARLY NEW HOME ment, family rSom^viith fireplace fii-s' ti'ne offered. Owners are bUlld-: 'Pi '^IreolaM'^'r?'^ on first floor aas heat, trmal win-"ifl ® lake-front home 50 some living "room, with fireplace, 17 dows 1',5 baths built-in features Ibuyer will find comfort and master bedroom, US baths, plus D?otessional^ decoSted this better-lhan-new 3-bed-, shower in basement, 3-car garage you in mind If vou doubt this Toom brick rancher in Watkins Hills,' with tool shop. A good value at 1450 N. Opdyke Rd. you in mino. it you ooubi tnis, homes where the $38,900. Carr gan Qua ty Homas, ! Onen Foes 'i bring your own builder with you J'®* ^ homes wnere ine . .ui. u. ,l,iiilneiohbars are conoenial and friendly, me. at LE 3-JI65 or azv-iwis.__________ 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS Urgently needed. See us befori you deal WARREN STOUT, Reoltor 15'/! CUBIC FOOT DELUXE KELVINATOR REFRIGERATOR. Has 160 lb. bottom freezer. A repo. Originally $310, now $198. $5 down, $2 per week model zig-zag with walnut cabi- skids, etc. Call 887-4191. s"ons *'ffew paV^nTs iTTTLTrrifRlULEC“irw^ monmiy ™ Call M3, heavy duty. $125. 335-9364. 2622 for appointment. CERTI-iWASHED WIPING RAGS, 19 CENT FIED SEWING. lb. , 25 lb. boxes to 300 lb. bales Like new, suitable for sheeting,_____________________________________________ Siding, flooring, fencing, making BRITTANY POPS, 9 WEEKS OLD. Holly Haven Breeding. Permanonf shots. AKC, wormed. 244-5454. FRETTER'S WAREHOUSE.O_UTLET «»'« Blvo. Supply 500 S. Blvd. E 422 W. Huron 334-56771________ Dachshund Stud Service A-1 AKC reg, Miniatures amt small standards; Beebes. 482-2255. ISO S. Telegraph FE 3-7051 and Inspect this home. He will “'•® have to tell you that quality Is evi- •* '$ 1'"'”*®“'*'® ^?®,'?)®"' dent throughout. Why not call for »" "i® »*T '» *h® "'''."9 an appointment novv, the owner I'O®"' sleP-saver kitchen w^ ro^U^i'ss*'^ou'"h'avV%nX';»^l?-s a'n'd'* 2-cir%rarTu'lly^n: home Is vacant. Open Eves, 'til 8 p.m. 0" ELECTRIC RANGE, CLOCK, ,,,.^7,^= 4., storage. $25. FE 2-2783. WASHER _AND DRYER SET, $85; VTi”,, .TXST-;—. refrigerator with top freezer, $49; 1966 MODEL AUTO ZIG-ZAG Maytag wringer washer, $45; G. ”■ .'Sewing machine and cabinet, lust Harris, FE 5-2766. a"®'" dial for button holes, patterns, blind hems, etc., full 60 month FE 3-7081 FREE DOG TO GOOD HOME. 673-9229. WANTED TO BUY GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPPIES OR 4-3304 Leaded glass lamps or leaded glass /ytlXED BRITTANY AND COCKER lamp shades. FE 4-9096, Spaniel puppies, $5. FE ^3428. WANTED - ACREAGE Has several clients for good farms or acreage, also small acreage with good homes. | $100,000 WILLIAMS LAKE Privileges afforded you when you purchase fhis lovely 5-room ranch with l’/3llectkms. No ?8 2 Commercial building In Oxford.! F[0YD KENT REALTOR ■ rented. Will sell both or divide.ivcm, Go^ location, only $13,900 each ^2.^ N. Saginaw FE 5-6105 with $3,000 down, land contract. auctions pursuant TO CIRCUIT Court Order. holes, etc. with fashion plates. '*41 BUICK SPECIAL. 37,000 AC- settle estate. 1845 Lakeland Dr., REGISTERED MALE POODLE Guaranteed. Pay $34.00 balance '“at ml. Mint condition. $1500. 651- Sylvan Village. 682-7812. ' silver-gray; stud service tor pup cash or terms. For appointment 3794.______________^______ at rAiiArucD/r of litter. OR 3-7870.__ call 363-2422. CERTIFIED SEW- Al (zALLAbHcK b SMALL AKC POODLES 'NG HhFi, TV»Rudloi a* «3bo54 66 HUM^HRItS REALTY QUICK CASH FOR LAND CON-tracts- Clark Real Estate. FE 3-7888, res. FE 4-4813$ Mr. Clark. No. Monty to Loan 32 COMMERCIAL 26'X70; PANELED (Licensed Money Lender) 61 "Buzz” BATEMAN ‘ I 5 acres, approved for 48-unit mul-INVESTOR I tiple dwelling, $39,500. Terms. FULL PRICE, $2,000 CASH: Investor] AL PAULY or handy man, a 6-room, 3-bedroom, Dixie, rear modern bath and basement cottage. Qp 3.3800 Eves OR 3-1708 building — new in 1962 ^ on Dixie: Hwy. — 4-roocn home Included. $27,000 — $8,000 down. Underwood Real Estate RAY O'NEIL REALTOR,. INC. 3520 Pontiac Lake Road OR 4-2222 MLS FE 2-623^9 625-2615 8665 Dixie Hwy., Clarkston 50 •P"*®'; ‘?350r5_or_625-^25 ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD WATERFORD TOWNSHIP LOANS TO $1,000 AND^FIN?SH®E^''|:ROm‘-$4m'^‘-^® >=EW^L6'-J3EA«, *99« ^ n registered, world famous blood llto 0p^9-6 FROM $488. i Wed., Jan. 25-10 a.m. |3' USED TV 2907 N. Dort, Flint IWalton TV, FE 2-2257 Over 100 dining, patio and break- 515 E. Walton, corner-of Josiyn LESLIE ORGAN SPEAKERS FROM fast sets, recreation 8, living lurn-:)»5» WALNUT SYLVANIA TV. ishings Inc. 30 chairs, 135 lemp$,i c,r condition Like new FE SHOP US BEFORE YOU BY 120 pictures, beds, appliances, dec-i ^wi MONEY DOWN ......... orativ- ---- ----- ■'— --------- than price. 693-6664 aft. 4 p.m. STUD SERVICE, COLLIE. AKC - TrI. 332-1835. v,,.tlve Hems plus office furniture _ otninx u and business machines. Terms *29 cash. Deposit required for admit-;'**5 Y?J®**3'-*,lOMBINATION TV tance i — AM-FM radio console. Best ot- Perkins Sales 8. Service fer. Inquire 3341 Lester, Highland. Phone 435-9400 Swartz Creek COLOR TV BARGAINS, LITTLE Joe's Bargain House. FE 2-4842 TO PAY. MANY MONTH TOY FOX TERRIER, MALE WITH oapers. 482-0504. _____________________________________ lo consolidate bills Into one monthly payment. Quick service with courteous experienced counselors. ANTIQUE BIRDSEYE MAPLE BED-room, $45; oak stand, $5; mahogany coffee table $5; elec, stove, $20; studio couch. 1249 Hamlin, Rochester. OL 1-4481. DISCOUNT PRICES! Clearance Sale All G.E. and Phileo portable TV's OPEN DAILY 9 P.M., SAT. 5:30 P.M. GALLAGHER'S MUSIC South of Orchard Lake Rd. 1710 S. Telegraph FE 4-0566 Pel Supplies—Service 79-A PICKUP TRUCK CAMPERS Over 30 Oltferqnt modala-On display at all timas BILL COLLER Camping Suppllts On AA-21, Lapaer, Mich. PICKUP COVERS, 8245 UP. ID'S" cabcovers, 81,295 and up. T 8, R CAMPER MFG. CO.' 1180 Auburn Rd. 8524334 PIONEER CAMPER SALES BARTH TRAILERS I. CAMPERS TRAVEL QUEEN CAMPERS MERIT FIBERGLASS COVERS (S"-27"45" eovart) ALSO OVERLAND I, COLEMAN 3091 West Huron FE 33989 SPORTCRAFT PICKUP SLEEPERS. 4140 FOlty, Watafton 4737843 SALE Year End Claseaut, New 17' Yuton Dalta a-e ........11895 ID' Driftwood Campar .......11095 17' Baa Lina a< .......... S1895 14' Frolic S-C .........-....$1195 Looking tor a good usad traitart Our antlra rental flaat 1$ now on Mia. Jacobson Trailer Soles 5490 Wllliatin Lk. Rd. OR 35981 TRAVR TRAILERS YOUR DEALER FOR Layton Corsair Robinwood 20 NEW AND USED TRAILERS IN STOCK NEW SERVICE DEPT. Ellsworth Trailer Sales 4577 Dixie Hwy. 425-4400 WOLVERINE TRUCK CAMPERS and sleepers. New and used, $395 up. Also rantali. Jacks, Intercoms, \ telescoping, bumpers, ladders, racks. Lowry Camper Sales, 1325 S. Hospital Road, Union Lake. EM 3-3481. Spare tire carriers. Mobile Homes 89 city conveniences on Colorado St. In the city. Needs some work, a good rental Investment. NO. 28 OLDER FAMILY HOME GOOO CITY LCXATION, convenient to Fisher Body end Pontiac Motors. 3 bedrooms, warm dry basement, gas heat and newer 2-car garage plus fenced rear yard. 19,750 to veteran with NO DOWN PAYMENT or BIG discount for cash sale. Owners are jHiiiding new home. NO, 68 OLD-FASHIONED FINANCING: Old-fashloned 4 per cent interest and NO MORTGAGE COSTS to first qualified buyer with $3,000. Suburban rancher with 2-car oarage, lake privileges, extra sharp and real nice. Owners have' purchased larger home and bargain-priced at $11,950 tor quick tale. "Null said - CALL TODAY! ' NO, 66 SPORTSMAN PARADISE! 13-ACRE ESTATE near Lake Orion. 3bedroom home plus an additlonat small dwelling. Beautiful wooded area with creek and trout pond. Priced at $36,500 with $6,500 down. This won't last long wi today's market so better buzz Bateman fMOWI MODEL HOMES Open Daily 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. SPRING Is luat around the corner. Now is the time to think about building that new home. Your choice ot colonial, ranchar or trl-level) our plan or yours, lust as you have dreamed about. Several new homes already built and ready for occupancy. YOU CAN TRADE Ww present home equity. OPEN DAILY 6:30 to 6:30 p.m. tor your convenience. A price to *it every pocket- Lakfl Property 51 COMMERCE-WOLVERINE LAKES-Private beaches, fish, swim. Lots, $995, $10 per mo. Bloch Bros. 623- Credit life insurance available —'APARTMENT SIZE REFRIGERA* ____________ ______ _____ Stop in or phone FE 5-8121 excellent condition, $29, 30" Only 10 years ole), 30'x80' cement HOME & AUTO LOAN CO- i 327«' '’*"*'*' block building, steel truss, large , ^ - r« c« ee Tusai 1 ■ ------- door at rear off 20' alley. Perfect ^ Sat e i APARTMENT condition, high ceiling. New list- -* ajgt'T- ------ LOANS TO must go. No money down, 1 year UKES. $21 AND- $26.1 to pay. Town and Country TV, 4644 W. Walton Blvd. 674-0151. STORY A CLARK ORGANS $585 and up MORRIS MUSIC ' •jctioR Sslet 2 months free in 6ur Modern Parks ing. $25,500. Terms. M-59 - HIGHLAND ROAD Corner 5-lana highway, good building, 955 sq. ft., paved parking, lot 110'x260‘. „ ; AUBURN HEIGHTS , AUTOMATIC WASHER, $35: DRY-SI,000 ; er. $45; 21" TV, $45; gas stove. Usually on «r$t visit. Quick, frland-i *35; all Items good condition. G. ly, helpful. j Harris. FE 32744. BEIGE ELECTRIC NATIONAL NC 270 60-4 METER 34 S. Telegraph Rd. FE 2-0567 AM CW. SSB Receiver $105. Halli- __________Across Irom Tel-Huron_______ crafter HT-18 8(310 meter. YFO cONN TENOR SAXOPHONE AND transmitter, $21.95. GE 4-meter 2- electric guitar 482-n ti- Excailimt condition. Raraiv used, complete, 149.50 and up. Pearson's Furniture. 210 E. Pike Plastic Wall tile 1c ea.i Excellent condition. Rarely used. iCeillnQ^ tltaj— wall panelino, cheap.; $90 firm. 335-^45. 7ile. FE 39957. 1075 W, Huron NICE 120 BASS ACCORDION °Duncan PhWe**6 K^^aw^afleT"* THEaTER TYPE SEATS. GOOD] case - OR 3-4315.__ ' UVestOCfc Duncan pnyte 6 pc. 451 47» after, condition. 335-4047, eve. 482-0589, tcTrtocv . n adv Gowards Garage Liquidation 107 Main — In Bancroft Wrecker, equipment, fixtures, parts, outboard motor' equipment. Old auto parts and manuals. Perkins Sales Service Swartz Creek Phone 435-9400 AMERICA'S ONLY \ 83 5 p.m. Rochester. 2 calves. 685-1656, Milford. 1960 OLDSMOBILE CONVERTIBLE._________________________„________ .-,-xnAit-n condition, new/^ top, sell or DINING TABLE, 4 .CHJf^RS, BUF CHOICE COMMERCIAL CORNER motorcycle. 363-7984. ; fet, modern driftwood walnut, new----;—_____________________ —rBTir'XWTrTTTr 5 primp HERFPfiRnq wii i SEi i c. A. WEBSTER, REALTOR Si'M«"'’Xent 'to gtr '^RDTSiR'^aErNT-TRAOE *«1?,:USED PIANOS AND ORGANS C,"'„T^oner.lo°"“V^'H"e4l^rd STOREY 8. CLARK CONSOLE, 275 (JALL^ OIL^DRUM, FREE j "mi 492-2291 628-2515 -WALTER'S LAKE PRIVILEGES New 2000 sq. ft split foyer all brick home — 2Vi baths — large! oak paneled family room — 2 naturar fireplaces — gas heat-fabulous kitchen — 1 acw lot — Everything you ever wanted In quality and extras In this 1967 dramatic model home. 625-1886—SYLVAN-334-8222 Ideal for shopping center, auto trailer or sell. FE dealer or many other Uses. Call for ^^ils. " Lett—Atraag* 54 1966 HOW Da 1 SCRAMBLES, V200 miles, will n-ade for tqual valUe oni CC U CMITU Uanlfnr ' or iell lor $425. FE 34442. FE 3-7848 EVES. 333-7302 -"gP _________________ WILL TRADE 1959 CUSHMAN EA-gle In very good cbndition for compect car. 4fr5242' ‘-Lnto5!!“owle'?:°EM^'i9531. 473-1 to Walton, right to Big Bateman Sign, left to models. TRANSFERRED? NATIONWIDE REFERRAL SERVICE will locste your new home, tor you. No charge: call for details, BATEMAN FE 8-7161 a:-OL 1-8518 REALTOR-MLS 377 S. Telegraph 730 S. Rochester WALTON BOULEVARD 120-ft. Commercial frontage, new 30z28' block bldg. l4x2(P office building. Hot spot for most any type business. $24,500. Terms. CLARENCE C. RIDGEWAY Realtor 228 W. Walton 338-4084 Multiple Listing Service 1 RANCH MINK COAT. BEAUTIFUL Butinett Oppartunniet 59 gfeair*'' Will trade 1938 ford sedan, good running condition for small contoact car or ?. FE 2-4950, or 682-5242. Sale Qetbing 64 10 acres for PRIVACY. PLEA.i 1 e_i^Ti------CTj”*------j' sure, investment. FE 2-2144. L.i ^ q|^ Sm HeUtelield Geedi Smith. ______'1_____________-----! In gexMt health, with some exp. 65 lOlTTciTES’N'ETkR’O^ORD-iSSO or rn«hanlca1 ability and $1700 ' ROUND OAK TABLE WITH 2 acre, nice—428-3015. investment lo become SO-SO full leaves, FE 8-8831. , (iHOICE BUILblNbl.O'r; (fiTY of! time partner with license oil end 1 BASSETT BEDROOM sDlTf, Pontiac, only $500 down on land' "" ’*...................... DANISH modern, SOFA, 2 CHAIRS] 5“L. '”;'®r*'Irom $49.00; Grands from halters. OS 8-2253 - 4 lamps, exc. condition. 482-3142: J’®™*' » *J“; $149.00; Organs Irom $249. AffiSTTu-SScTc after 6:30 p.m. ! Refrigerator, oil heater, stove and .rARABIAN. WFLS ----------------------' , many misc Items. 887-5592. IWTopO BTU GAS FIRED BOILER, neW. only 1 "lettk' 8|199. 4. X. Thompson ■ 7005 MS9 -W factory second living ROOMS add bedrooma, \$44 and'$*9. l Used Maytag washers $4?. ' Good refrigerators $48. Gas or electric stoves $15 up. Used furniture ot all kinds at ber-gein prices, easy terms. LITTLE JOE'S TRADE-IN DEPARTMENT. Baldwin at Walton. FE 2-4B42. HOUSEHOLD SPECIAL. AUTOMATIC HANDSAW FILEI^ -circular saw grinder, lawnmower sharpeoar with lapping machine. All are ready to make you money. FE M889 after 6 p.m.___ ANCHOR FENCES NO MONEY DOWN FE 5-7471 $20 A MONTH BUYS 3 ROOMS OFIbqlENS TRACTOR MODEL 250, 42 FURNITURE - Cot^sts Of: _ mower, like new l$25. 451-3005. *■ ll"^ ^'Sito“2 UbtefT CAFlTENiA TABLESTTfORMICA c^S?elITbirTrtbi2 tomp^^ *’<»-'-* that.fold In, _used, in (1) 9'xl2' rug Included. 7-plece bedroom suite with double __ , dresser, chest, full size bed with Grinnell's Downtown 27 S. Saginaw Home ol the Pontiac Hammond __________Organ Society.______________ WURLITZER AND THOMAS ORGANS AND PIANOS INSTRUCTIONS AND INSTRUMENTS JACK HAGAN MUSIC 449 Elizabeth Lake Rd. 332-0500 1192 Cooley Lake Rd. 343-5500 Music lauani 71-A contract. TOM REAGAN REAL ESTATE 2251 N. Opdyke gas hieeting man. Have licensei 25 years exp., some stocks, truck end all equipment to perform, better than $10,000 clear tor each, maybe rralized in tirst year. Call 482-5433. bookcase headboards complete with nighi stands, triple dresser and chest of drawers, 1 glass top dinette table. 4 chairs. All In good condition. 482-1553 evenings, or FE T7644 days. . Innerspring mottress end matching CUSTOM CABINETS — COUNTER box spring and 2 vanity lamps. { tops and vanities. S-piece dinette set with 4 chrome ’ Visit our Display Room chairs and fable. All for 8399. Your D 8. J CABINET SHOP ACCORDION, GUITAR LESSONS, good condition. Price $19.95. 1 Seles-Servlce PulaneckI OR 3-5594 BLVD. SUPPLY 500 S. Blvd. E.;0„y^ LESSONS — PROFESSION-al drummer would like 10 students. For private |e$sans. (beginners preferred) Openings available Immediately. 332-7190. credit Is oobd at Wyman's. WYMAN FURNITURE CO. 17 E. HURON FE S1S0I 924 W. Huron 10 W. PIKE DRAFTING BOARDS AND TABLES, 4' end 7'. Forbes, 4500 Dixit, FE T2I50I Drayton. OR 3-9747. GUITAR LESSONS, BEGINNING end advanced. Pontiac Music end Sound. 3334143.____ PIANO AND ORGAN LESSONT" EXPERT TEACHERS SMILEY BROS. FE 4-4721 Now At \ TOWN & COUNTRY MOBILE HOME SALES ^ See The Fine Display Of 1967 Mobile Homes PLUS Take advantage of the gigantic savings m our year-end clearance sale. You'll be amazed at the quality and price. Don't be late . . . Buy Now! PARK ^PACF AVAILABLE HOR^s boaTdbdTI^^ take advantage of our rates. 673-2058. j FR^E STORAGE. -----------------------------For the location nearest you, stop in or phone: DIXIE HIGHWAY 2-YR.-OLD FILLY, MOSTLY WELCH] sorrel, very small. Sell or trada tor ] hemes ana cart or^. NA 7-3428. 1 MODERN NEW STABLES. BOARD-1 ers. Reas. 428-2271. AT TELEGRAPH 334-6694 PIGS, ALL SIZES, BRED SOWS,' 812 Hi $75. FE 44412. OR 84| M59 AT CRANBERRY LAKE 674-3320 hoy—Grain—FbmI ALFALFA HAY, 1ST AND 2ND cutting, 1,0og bales each. Top quality. 1500 bales good wheel straw. 451-6145. DETROITER-KROFF Fx..." ; '* *'®e, 2 or 3 bedroom, as tow as COW AND HOME HAY, WE D&Jisggg, rngny used at bargain liver. Al's Landscaping. 801 Scott, hrirts Lk Rd. FE 4435$ or FE 4-3441^ BOB HUTCHINSON, INC. 4301 DIxiq Hwy. (US10) Drayton Plains, Mich. OR J-12B Opan Daily tin 9 p.m. Sat, and Sun. 5"p.m. EXTRA GOOD HORSE AND COW hay, will deliver. 427-3239. HAY FOR SALE. CALL 42B-23I3 HAY AND STRAW. HILLSON l,AWNloON'T RENT, BUY. 100^00' MO-and Garden. 7417 HIgliland. | bile tat. Near ' Pontiac. $39 mo. “ Bloch Bros. 423-1333, FE 44509. Open JEves., antTSundays. e/i""" 8 It January Clearance Sale trxir ns Ltm AS UA9S SEE OUR COMPLEtE LINE OP 12' WIDE IN 5 DECORS. WE HAVE 4 ONLY. DEMOS AT A GIANT SAVINGS. WE WILL NOT BE KNOWINGLY UNDERSOLD. FREE DELIVERY UP TO 300 MILES. FREE SETUP WITH AVAILABLE PARKING. PARKWOOD - HOLLYPARK Open 9 to 9 — 7 days a week MIDLAND TRAILER SALES 1257 Dixie HwY. - , 338-0772 Worried Con • Trocln 101 ATTENTION MUST SELL mo Parkwood, 00 * 12, .4-bed-room furnished, on lot. Call after 5:30 P.m. 332-0719.___________ MUST SELL 12'x60' 1966. ALA^OST new carpeting. 673-6232..________ MARLETiES «T^' tong, 12' to 20' wide. Early American, Traditional or modern decor. Space available in 4 Star Park, no extra charge. Also see the famous light weight Winnebago Trailer. OXFORD TRAILER SALES OPEN 94, CLOSED SUNDAYS ^ mile south of Lake Orion on M24 MY 2-0721 ** Rent Trailer Space 90 TRAILER SPACE AVAILABLE PpNTIAC MOBILE HOME PARK VILLAGE GREEN MOBIL ESTATE, new and different, 2285 Brown Rd. Near 1-75 and M-24. FE 2-5295. EXECUTIVES We Buy Sharp Late Model Pontiacs and Tempests $ Top Dollar $ AUDETTE Pontiac Inc. MORE Tires-Aoto-Track 92 4 VW TIRES AND WHEELS, S20 225 E. Pike St. _______ 4 NEW TIRES, 710X15 ON PONTIAC wheels. $20. FE 5-35l6^j______________________ FIVE 800X16.5 PLY — LIKE NEW FE 2-7372 WANTED! TRUCK OPERATORS Who need good used tires — large selection — Many sizes — Guaranteed. $10 UP ......... BUDGET TERMS MANY MONTHS TO PAY Goodyear Service Store Phone: FE 5-6123 MONEY Paid For Sharp Cars I need hundreds of sharp cars to fill out-state orders, and to stock w.,w. my lot, that Is a full city ^>ocl( W44 FORD HEAVY-DUTY VAtil Ctean, f|,050. JEROAAE FORD -Rochester's Ford Draler. OL 1-97H-: CHfevV W-TON PICKUP. 4109 fhllas, After 3 P.M, 624-5M6. 1967 GMC i-Ton Pickup HeaterL defrosters, backup lights, seat belts, 2-speed wipers, washers, padded dosh and visor, traffic hazard lights, directional signals, inside rear-view mirror. $1828 including oil taxes PONTIAC'S ONLY EXCLUSIVE TRUCK DEALER GMC Factory Branch Oakland at Cass FE 5-9485 DID YOU KNOW The New Low Price of a 1967 GMC Pickup Is only $1789.00 THE POXTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 24, 196T SlriARMADUKE New 0nd Used 2ND CAR headquarters is cars In stock -■ all times . 850 to MOD aaarvel motors 251 Oakland IN. of Baldwlnl FE 8-4079 By Anderson and Leemini; REPOSSESSION 1963 BUICK LeSabre 2-door Hardtop, aWomalic, power, bronze finish, $1333. with No Money Down, Only $12.80 weekly. Call Mr. Cash at 338-4528, Sartan. 1964 BUICK 2 DOOR HARDTOP. Only $1488. Full price. V-8, automatic, radio, heater, power steering, power brakes. Ebony black with buckskin interior. ONE IN A MILLIONI! MB down and $54.64 per month. "It only takes a minute" to Get "A BETTER DEAL" at: John McAuliffe FPrd 630 Oakland Ave._________FE 5-4101 lEROME MOTOR SALES 1980 Wide Trock O' Auto Service 93 SERVICE IS OUR BUSINESS Ail Makes All Models GUARANTEED WORK . . . collision work . . . . . . electrical work . . . Call Carl Reynolds, service manager for appointment. DOWNEY Oldsmobile, Inc. 550 Oakland Ave. FE 2-8101 in size. GALE McANNALLY'S Auto Sales 1304 Baldwin FE 8-4525 Across from Pontiac State _, STOP" -HERE LAST We pay_^more_ for sharp, late mod- SPECIAL $1875 FULL PRICE New 1967 Jeep Universal ROSE RAMBLER-JEEP EAA 3-4155 or EM 3-4156 1966 Cadillac Calais Coupe. Caribbean aqua with matching aqua Interior, power windows, signal seeking radio; and tinted glass. Save ASK FOR NORM DANIELSON WILSON Cadillac Ml 4-1930 528 N. Main' 1959 CADILLAC, GO'OD CONDITISn 674-3354 "Authorized GMC Factory Outlet"_________________________ . Rochester OL 1-9761,1966 CADILLAC SEDAN DeVILLE, - icp^ wPvA/ TfSp AND s N o w •' Marlin blue, black vinyl top, air ' grn$ard3al7o..'Hr^^^^ DON'S USED CARS Small Ad—3ig Lot 50 CARS TO CHOOSE FROM We buy or will adjust your pay' ments to less expensive car. - '677 M-24, Lk. Orion BEEN BANKRUPT? NEED A CAR With as low as $5 down? Try King Plan Financing. Call Mr Stark, 338-4068.____________________ 1961 FORD 2 DOOR 8 CYLINDER automatic with radio, heater, full price S295 at igMChevT^mike SAVOIE ROCHESTEk DODGE "Always a fine selection of New and Used Trucks . . NEW '67 DODGE PICKUP $1958. Taxes Included 651-6100 el cars. Corvettes needed M6cM MOTOR SALES Now at our new location 1150 Oakland at Viaduct 338-9261 "Top Dollar" That's what we pay for I960 thru 1965 Immaculate Cars! Stop In—See Mr. Gilmer Spartan Dodge Very clean. Cair H. J. Stowe, Ml Corryall ----------------------- 19-passenger model with 8-cyllnder en- 1 nPP * dine, automatic transmission, ra- iybb UQQliiQC I dio, heater, power brakes, power Sedan DcVllle. Autumn gold with matching gold interior, white leatehr top, automatic climate control, air conditioning, full power, twilight sentinel, tinted glass, and signal seeking radio. Save ASK FOR NORM DANIELSON CHEVROLET 1104 5. Woodward Birmingham M! 4-2735 — Ml 4-7889 Nei^ii^ UiedjCart ^_ 19651-BIRD ’ Landeau > ' Has powar brakes and ppwer ifear-Ing, autgmatic transmission, power windows, real nice. BEATTIE "Your FORD DEALER Since 1930" On Dixie In Waterford at the double stoplight OR 3-1291 106 houghten OLDS new 1967 OLDSMOBILE 1965 MUSTANG ^CYLINDER 3-speed stick, good condition, $1300. OR 3-9056. 1965 MUSTANG. 6 - CYLINDER. Stick, Radio and Heater. JEROME FORD, Rochester's Ford Dealer, OL 1-9711. 1965 MUSTANG - THE CAR that Started It all and lust the nicest one we've seen lately. Tuxedo black finish, red buckets, 289 V8, power steering and factory warranty. Only $149 down. SPARTAN DODGE, 855 Oakland Ave. FE 8-4528. 1965 FORD 4 DOOR HARDTOP LTD 8000 actual miles. If you really want to get spotted, lust feast your eyes on this little plum. Close your eyes and picture this — V-8 automatic, radio, heater, power steering, power brakes, midnight blue with matching blue silk Interior, and plush carpets almost knee deep. $1888. to the first come, first served. "It only takes a minute" to Gel "A BETTER DEAL" at: • John McAuliffe Ford 630 Oakland Ave., FE ^4101 1965T-BIRD Landeau with full power, automatic transmission, radio and heater and whitewall tires. Full price 1061 New end Uted Cars ' 106 1964 PONTIAC LsAAANS, STICK, take over psymentjs. 330-6281 after 4 p.m. "1964 p6NT|AC CATALINA. $1095. - . K'U S.T.AS n - ' T944 GTO 2 DR. HARDTOP TRI-Dower, 4 speed, alsMTiinuin wheels, radio, hesler, for oasiy $1495. VILLAGE RAMBLER. 6M 5. Woodward. Ml 63900. "88" 4-DOOR SEDAN $2,437.00 Sole Price 50,000 Mile or 5 Year Factory Warronty. Full Factory Equipment. OL 1-9761 Rochester Kessler-Hahn Dakland, County's Fastest Growing Chrysler-Plymouth * Dealer Dn Dixie (near M15) Clarkslon MA 5-2635 1959 PLYMOUTH 2-DOOR STICK Full price, $49. RELIABLE MO TORS. 250 OAKLAND, FE 8-9742. 1964 PLYMOUTH 4-DOOR, EXTRA Clean, $750. JEROME FORD, Rochester's Ford Dealer, OL_1-9711. PLYJIAOUTH BELVEDERE 1965 ddor, with 6-cyl. stick shift. Bargain at only $895, OAKLAND CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH, 335-9436. $2395, only $79 down and $16.92 im7 PLYMOUTH 2-DOOR HARD mndltlon. $1450. E E JfU PONTIAC COMVERTIBLE -”ean, ell power, SI .400. FE 4-5354 aft.4p.in. loeTPONTIAC TEMf»eST CUSTOM station wegon, 30.000 ml., 4 new tires, redio, heater, tinted glass, power brakes, exc. condition. Ml 4-3044 (ir 6B2-0670. liOESfABLISHeD CREDIT? Drive a new or used car from Keego Pontiac Sales . .Call Mr. Clay at 6B2-7300. ________ THE NEW AUDETTE PONTIAC NOW SERVING Troy-Ponllac—BIrnre2naham Area 850 Made, across froerrs Bert Airport Tom GRAND PRITx sharp $2195 1965 Catalina 4-door hardtop with air. Special at only $1895 KEEGO PONTIAC SALES 3080 Orchard Lake Rd. M2-730O ---SHORT ON DDWH PAYMENT Drive i new or used car from Keego Pontiac Sales. Call Mr. Clay at 682-7300.________. ___ lW"CAmlNA"BL.ACK 2 PLUS t power steering, a o t o., console bucket seats, reverb, exc. condition. 51600.335-6610- IwrPONTiAC BDNNIEVILLE 2-pR. hardtop, double power, radio, vinyl mt., 10,0(Bml. 693-A4T3._ weekly payments. Motorcyclei 95 20 Per Cent Off on all Bridgestone cycles From 50 cc to 175 cc PAUL A. YOUNG, INC. Drayton Plains OR 4-0411 Dixie Hwy. at Loon Lake Open Dally 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. 1954" HARLEY DAVIDSON MODEL 74. Real good condition, been overhauled. Saddle beg windshield, helmet. $450. FE 2-2071. 2965 BSA 650, IMPERIAL CYCLE Works, 1743 Auburn Rd., Rochester. 1966 HONDA, 305, SCRAMBLER. 12'S Rea. after 3 p.m 1966W HONDA I6KC SCRAMBLER. Exc. condition, $^. OL 1-1642 1967 HONDAS TRIUMPH, BSA, NORTON Matchless, DucattI, Moto-GuzzI All models and colors Special Winter prices Easy terms — Buy now and save ANDERSON SALES 8. SERVICE 144S 5. Telegraph_________PE_^7102 SUZUKI CYCLES S0CC-25OCC. RUPP Minibikat as low as SI39.95. Take M59 to W. Highland. Right on Hickory Ridge Rd. to Demode Rd Left and follow signs to DAWSON'S SALES AT TIPSICO LAKE Phone AAAIn ^2179. SCHREW SNOW CYCLE CAN MAKE YOUR CYCLE A YEAR ROUND VEHICLE. TUKO SALES, INC. 172 E. AUBURN - ROCHESTER UL 2-5363 Boats — Accessories 97 FOR WINTER FUN WE HAVE THE new T-BIrd anow-m o b I I a Kar's Boats and Motors, Lake Orton. MY 3-1400. Open week-ends only. Boat Show NOW AT Lake & Sea Marina , CHRIS-CRAFT - OWENS 8LICKCRAFT - EVINRUDE MANY MODELS ON DISPLAY Woodward at S. Blvd. FE 4-9587 We would like to buy late model GM Cars or will accept trade-downs. Stop by today. FISCHER BUICK 544 S. WOODWARD 647-5600 Wreckers Heavy DOTy One Ton 1961-1962 GMCs Complete — Ready to go! From $1650 John McAuliffe Ford TRUCK DEPT. 277 West Montcalm FE 5-4101________ Auto Insurance Marine 104' AUTO i INSURANCE ; FOR ANY^JNE DON NICHOLIE 53’^ W. Huron St. Room 9 FE 2-9194 or FE 4-0581 WILSON Cadillac 4-1930 T lTR- 1966 CADILLAC SEDAN, quoise, air-conditioned, best offer. Call after 5:30 p.m. 626-4618. 1966 Cadillac Coupe DeVille. Autumn rusl, matching rust interior automatic climate control, air conditioning, full power, 6 way seats, tinted glass, and signal seeking radio. Save ASK FOR NORM DANIELSON WILSON Cadillac Ml 4-1930 steering, on and off the road, heavy-duty tires, red and white. Only — $1,095 HOMER HIGHT Motors, Inc. •' On M24 in Oxford, Mich. ____OA 8-2528____ WAGONS!! 1964 CHEVY Wagon 4-door V8, automatic, power steering, brakes, heater, radio, white-walls. Only — $1,548 1962 FORD HARDTOP 2-DOOR, 1 very nice. 333-7542, Riggins, dealer. i HAROLD TURNER 1962 FORD COUNTRY SEDAN STA-lion wagon, V-8 automatic, power steering, power brakes, beautiful all around family car. Only $777 full price. "It only takes a minute" to Get "A BETTER DEAL" at: John McAuliffe Ford , 630 Oakland Ave. FE 5-4101 FORD, INC. top. V-8 auto. 335-1294. 1958 PONTIAC, TRANSPORTATION | only, $125, 674-3537. 1960 PONTIAC CATALINA 2-DOOR, $375, FE 5-3881. SHOP THE "GOODWILL USED CAR" LOT for GENUINE VALUES. PONTIAC RETAIL STORE 65 Mt. Clemens St. (AT WIDE TRACK) FE 3-7954 1961 PONTIAC, FULL POWER, nice. $450. EM 3-2879 1965 T-BIRD LANDAU AUTOMATIC radjo, heater, power steering, j ,,40 W. Wide Track 19m"CATALINA'CONVERTIBLE - white, black top, FE S-7B53. _ 1966'BONNEVfLLE CONVERTIBLE, JUST RECEIVED FROM OAKLAND f wW. 5; eves. 623-0562.____________ IWTToNTIAC CATALINA CON-verllble, while, blue top, double power, 16,000 miles. $2395. FE 4-9587, County, 4 1962 ,Pontiacs, 2-doors, all In excellent condition. Can be purchased with no down payment. ??iLUCKY AUTO brakes, windows, factory air con-iec i.ionA ditioning, exotic pink with a white' ----------------- the Ford Motors 50,000 mile or ..wn5 yodr ocw Car warraoty. 1965 FORD LTD 2-DOOR Qpjy tai433j OLIVER BUICK^^ FE 2-9165 "Your FORD DEALER Since 1930" On Dixie in Waterford at the double stoplight OR 3-1291 1961 TBIRD HARDTOP WITH FULL POWER, AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION. RADIO AND HEATER AND WHITEWALL TIRES, FULL PRICE $795, Assume weekly payments of $7.92. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7500. ■ \ solid transportation. Only $288 full price. "It only takes a minute" to Get "A BETTER DEAL" at: John McAuliffe Ford 630 Oakland Ave. FE 5-4101 1966 COMET CAPRI 2-DOOR Hardtop, with 390 V0, lots of power, Crulse-O-Matic and factory Warranty. Full prica $1697. Spartan Dodge Inc., 855 Oakland Ave. FE 8-4526. It's All Your Fault... You Wonderful People have been buying so many '67 PONTIACS and TEMPESTS we're loaded with Late Model Trade-lns-with miles of smiles left for you to enjoy! ALSO THE GREATEST DEALS EVER ON NEW 1967 PONTIAC'S ' RUSS JOHNSON M24 Lake Orion 693-6266 YOUNG TIGER 1966 GTO 2-Door Hardtop. Equipped with all extras, Tiger paws with lots of claws. Including tri-power. JUNGLE CRUISER This 1964 PONTIAC Catalina Wagon Is |u$t riBbf for that trip over thosa lungle trails equipped with standard transmission. SMALL SAFARI 1964 PONTIAC Tempest Wagon. Just right for smell, weekly hunting trips for fresh meet supplies for the tribe. I963V5 FORD FALCON 2 DOOR hardtop new mustang motor, lots of extr^as. as Is $758. 674-2605 alter 6-s r963Vj>6RD GALAXIE^ 500, 2-DOOR hardtop, white with red Interior, I sharp, low mileage, $850. FE 2-1 6264 after 5. | 1962 OLDS 88 4 DOOR HARDTOP, double power, auto. $600. FE 5-2964 1964 FORD 2-DOOR WITH v-8 ENGINE, AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, RADIO AND HEATER, WHITE-WALL TIRES. FULL PRICE $895, ABSOLUTELY N 0 MONEY DOWN, Assume weekly payments of $8.92. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7500. 1964 T BIRD MATADOR RED WITH white vinyl bucket seats. Radio, heater, automatic, power steering, power brakes, power windows, a total of 4 to select from and as low as $1788 lull price. "It only takes a minute" fo Get "A BETTER DEAL" at; John McAuliffe Ford 630 Oakland Ave. FE 5*4101 SUBURBAN OLDS HOME OF Quality One-Owner Birmingham Trades AT LOWEST PRICES S. Woodward 674*5111 1964 OLDS, DYNAMIC 88 CONVERT* Ible. A real nice car, $1,197 full price. Can be purchased with small down payment. LUCKY AUTO 1965 FORD. COUNTRY SQUIRE 9-passanger wagon. 8 - cylinder, automatic, Power steering, power brakes, like new. $2,858. JEROME FORD, Rochester's Ford Dealer, OL 1-9711. . 1964 OLDS Hardtop with full power, automatic tramsmisslon, radio and heater and whitewall tires. Full price $1395, only $49 down and $11.92 weekly payments. HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 46l S WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM Ml 4-7580 NO BEARERS NEEDED If you buy this 1963 RAMBLER Classic 4 Door Sedan. This little animal runs with very lltlla nourishment. YOU SHOOT on out to Russ Johnson's In Lake Orion and» look at all his other 40 or more line select used ceri RUSS JOHNSON 89M24 Lake Orion Open 9 till 9 — Monday Thru Friday 693-6266 ■THiS POOTlAC PRESS. TUESDAY. JANUARY 84, 1967 •tjj' U-u ' ^ * I*.. •*®**®"**'***^ in *^I*e«lvmn art wbi«et to chang* without no^ Chaiwwlt a-.WJlK-TV, 4-^WWJ-TV, 7-WXYZ-TV. »~Ciaw.TV. SO-.WKMV1V. 30-Wm TONIGHT f:M (2) (4) News V (7) Movie: “Tlje, Story of Ruth’’ (W60) , V (SO) Suptfman (SO) Friendly Giant 6:15 (56) Chiklren’s Hour 6:36 (2) (4) News (9) TwiH^t Zone (SO) FUntstones (SO) What’s New 7:00 (2) Truth or Consequences (4) Weekend (9) Dakotas (SO) McHale’s Navy (SO) Spectrum 7:30 (2) Daktari (4) Girl from U.N.C.L.E. (7) Conibat! (50) Alfred Hitchcock (SO) ElUot Norton 8:00 (9) Bill Anderson (50) Perry jMason (56) N.E.T. Journal 8:30 (2) ReiiBkelton U) Occasional Wife (7) Invaders 9:00 (4) Movie: “That Certain Feeling’’ (1956) Bob Hope Eva Marie Saint, George Sanders (9) (^ntine Durgens (50) Movie: “Ai-ch of Triumph’’ (1948) Ingrid Berg man, Charles Boyer (56) N:E.T Rayhouse “V i c 10 r i a Regina: Autumn’’ 9:30 (2) Petticoat Junction (7) Peyton Place 10:00 (2) Esss^ on Women'" (7) Fugitive. (9) Newsmagasine 10:30 (2) No Place on Earth ' (9) Public Eye 11:00 (2) C4) (7) (9),News (SO) Alfred Hitdjcock 11:30 (2) Movie: “The Actress’’ (1953) Spencer Tracy, Jean Smmons, Teresa Wright (4) Johnny Carson (7) Movie: ‘"The Unguarded Mdment’’ (1956) EsQier Williams, John Saxon, George Nader (9) Movie: “The Atomic Kid’’ (1954) Mickey Roon ey, Robert Strauss 1:00 (4) Beat the Champ (9) Window on the World 1:15 (7) News 1:30 (2) (4) News (7) Wanted — Dead or Alive TOMORROW MORNING 6:25 (2) On the Farm Scene 6:20 (2) News 6:30 (2) U of M Television (7) Three Stooges TV Features The Roles of Women SPECTRUM, 7:00 p.m. (56) “To Sleep to Dream.’’ Dream research is discussed. Perchance 'RED %ELTON„8:30 p.m. (2) Guests Eve Arden and Marilyn Michaels join Red and the regulars in an hour of songs, dances and sketches. I ESSAY ON WOMEN, 11:09 p.m. (2) PVoducw Andrew Rooney focuses on the increasing dissi^isfac-tion of women with dieiripositioni'in the %orW. Narration by Harry Reasoner: NO PLACE ON EARTH, 10:30 p.m. (2) A mood piece on the fabled Okefenokee Swamp, presented in a series of interviews wiUi conservationists and “swanqt rats’’ Who have spent most of their lives in and around the swamp. 7:00 (2) Woodrow the Woodsman (4) Today (7) Morning Show 7:55 (9) Mwgan’s Merry-(3o-. l^und 8:60 (2) Captain Kangaroo (9) Romper Room 8:30 (7) Movie; “Stara in My Crown’’(1950) Joel Mc-Crea, Ellen Drew, Dean Stockwell, Lewis Stone 9:00 (2) Merv Griffin (4) Living (9) Bonnie Prudden Show |:05 (56) All-Aboard for Reading 9:25 (56) Of Cabbages and Kings 9:30 (9) People in Conflict 9:50 (56) Children’s Hour 9:55 .(4) News 10:60 (4) Reach for the Stars (9) National Schools (50) Yoga for Health. 10:05 (56) Reason and Read 10:20 (56) Science Is Discovery 10:25 (4) News 10:30 (2) Beverly Hillbillies (4) Concentration (7) Girl Talk (9) (kitario Schools (50) Peter Gunn 10:35 ( 56) Children’s Hour 10:50 ( 56) Let’s Speak Spanish I 11:00 (2) Andy Griffith (4) Pat Boone (7) Supermarket Sweep (9) Butternut Square (50) Dickory Doc 11:05 (56) Interlude 11:25 (9) Tales Of the River Bank 11:30 (2) Didc Van Dyke (4) Hollywood ^uares (7) Dating Game (9) Friendly Giant 11:45 (9) Chez Helene 11:50 (M) Modem Math for Parents San Juan's Entertainmenf Scales From Good fo Bad WILSON ByEARLWttSON SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico—In the booming world of show bus! ness down here in the Swingin’ South, you can get angels and devils all in one fast evening. ^ Peggy Lee will have to represent the good. Before she does her show, she lines up her musicians behind the curtain, kisses each one on fhe forehead, and taps each one on both shoulders and the chest in something like a religious gesture. The curtain rises and the kisser and the kissed do their show. Afterward, Peggy and, the musicians hold a nightiy ritual with a Buddhist fiavw which Is much discussed. Outsiders who’re let in ■ on it admit they don’t quite taiow what’s going on. Peggy sleeps till 3 p.m. daily after this night of fervor. Then there’s Jackie Kannon at the Ameri- • , cana Port-O-Call Lounge is probably the most remarkable caie show of the Sexy Sixties—so far. ,. , . t “An evening of social decadence’’ is Jackies term for the material he flings out—material that is almost as frank in ite content as some of the sex discussions on British TV. A chua s voice on a record brings Jackie Kannon to the audience much differently than Peggy Lee comes out. The child’s voice introduces “my dirty daddy. “The Sultan of Insulf’-as he’s been called, is more a com mentator on the times than an insulter. • ; “Is that your wife with you, sir, or a tax deduction, ne asks a ringsider. ★ ★ ★ He pays his disrespects to LBJ, Ladybird and George Hamaton equaUy. He tells us that Hubert H. Hnnaphrey was here . . . “Minnesota Fats,’’ he calls him, and m “** Man of the Year selection, he also chooses the Vice President, saying that he taught us “how a man can retire while he’s stai on the job.’’ THE MIDNIGHT EARL IN N. Y. . . . Milton Berle cashed a $l50 check at Danny’s-the spcmiing money he’s allowed each week by his business manager . . . Jane Morgan had to qilit a Montreal cafe shnt, fly back to N/^ I_____1.:^. t dLli... airip Attended the dress re- AFTERNOON POSTAL POST-Eva Leit^* haeus^, 41, is West Germany's first post office mistress. She is boss over 346 men in her Berlin job. - Variety IVMniBiM -nickMiM • **nr UuMiei tiM----- awwmd ' lacmit^ioB 126tt«dy MAMcu worai UBdlbto iMtitodIc UCimmi’t "v" IS ftantidiw Biois J7MuenUM asait UBittar vatdi MOrMkpertleo arsatii it Son StPriiidMily 410H«iiUvt 0 -tSAMllt 44 ItMt fluid 46Kxlit 47Shr«d 4tSeotUdnU« MPytiitf lamratui 82Titl«r --------'jj/legal Parkers Find NY Is Undiplomatic u SiS^feoBb. - fann) 34 Bum UPmiw MPridiUNMii (w.> SSAmeriMU ' huiaoriit (ISSO-IKO) 37 Blow wtti ivw band DOWN BtFUainina nropar ntma 31 Aaritonn fual iZItonn water 33 Blackbird of cuckoo family ^ ■ •Mand Intbo Habrldas 7 Ravel tFamalc Mint (ab.) SVifitOT IQ Fleat of irmad ihipa foot 3 Curly letvad Wb^ (pl.| 2Turnt aiido 3 Gaudy 11 Sturdy foe covarfogi 22 Allotment 23H«oic ’ 25Naptuiw,for innance 31 Soutbam itete (ab.) . 34 Sanctified female 35 Neater 37 Wild an 38 Cry out ahrilly 39 Stroke,in blUiardi 40 Be fiUed with dcflre 41 Scorch 42 Drove! 4fi Implore ornamentation 28 Dyoituff (var.) 48 Pear curiouily 4Radacton (ab.) SQSymbOl for pr IT 12:90 (2) News (4) Jeopardy (7) Donna Reed (9) Take 30 12:25 (2) News 12:30 (2) Smeh for Tomorrow (4) Eye Guess (7) Father Enows Best (9) Communicate (50) Movie: “Centennial Summer’’ (1946) Jeanne Crain, Cornel Wilde, Linda Darnell 12:35 (56) Let’s Speak-Spanish I 12:45 (2) Guiding Light 12:50 (56) All-Aboard for Reading 12:55 (4) News 1:00 (2) Love of Life (4) Match Game (7) Ben Casey (9) Movie: “Those Red heads from Seattle” (1953) Rhonda Fleming, Gene Barry 1:10 (56) Children’s Hour 1:25 (2) News (4) Doctor’s House Call (56) Reason and Read 1:30 (2) As the World Turns (4) Let’s Make a Deal 1:40 (56) Art Lesson 1:55 (4) News (56) Of Cabbages and Kings 2:00 (2) Password (4) Days of Our Lives (7) Newlywed Game 2:20 (56) Numerically So 2:30 (2) House Party (4) Doctors (7) Dream Girl (50) Love That Bob 2:45 (56) Interlude 2:55 (7) News 3:00 (2) ToTell the ’IVuth (4) Another World (7) General Hospital (50) Topper 3:25 (2) (9) News 3:30 (2) Edge of Night (4) You Don’t Say ! (7) Nurses (9) Swini^n’ Time (50) Johnny Ginger 4:00 (2) Secret Storm (4) Bozo the Clown (7) Dark Shadows (56) Managers in Action 4:30 (2) Mike Douglas (7) Where the AOtion Is (9) Fun House (56) Let’s Lip-Read 4:55 (4) Eliot’s Almanac 5:00 (4) GeOTge Pierrot (7) News (50) Alvin (56 )„ German Playhouse 5:30 (7) News (9) Chqrenne (50) Ut^e Rascals (56) What’s New 5:55 (4) Carol Duvall A-Blasf Slated r 5 r" 15 SOBraiUiui macaw 8 no |ii „ IT ir BURLINGTON, Vt. (AP) Today’s doctors are usually too busy to attend refresher courses so the University of Vermont College of Medicine is bringing flie courses to them. ■A ★ ★ The college has initated two-pronged program to keep Vermont’s 480 physicians up to date on advances in their flelds. •k ★ ★ One part of the program C(m-sists of a series of early morning television programs. The second is a combination of seminars and symposiums conducted by a rotating team of two physicians, a nurse and various technicians. They use an airplane in reaching eveiy part of the state. ★ ★ ★ Dr. Welsh said he hopes the Vermont program will lead to a New England-wide effort. NEW YORK (AP) - Mid- 5T BT A Red Cross bloodmoblle will be outside the Elks Temple, 114 Orchard Lake, from 2 to 8 p.m. Monday. To save time, donors are urged to make appointments through the Red Cross at 118 Franklin Blvd. Woman Mute in Knifing Death DETROIT (AP) - Mrs. Mae Anderson, 42, stood mute Mon day at her arraignment on second degree murder charge in the stabbing death of her rooming house manager during an argument Sunday. Recorder’s Judge Robert DeMascio entered a plea of innocent and set examination for Feb. 6. The body of the victim, George Balke, had been stabbed 52 times, police said. Mrs. Anderson is held in Wayne County jail. w 55 5T 55“ 28 Monday Site Setj Speedy Cure forBloodmobi!e|,jPQy^j^ slow Readers Blood donors must be between 18 and 59. Parental consent is necessary if between 18 and 21 and not married or in the armed services. GoldwaterTalks in State Today MIDLAND (UPI) - Former presidential candidate Barry, Goidwater will make his first iiiajor address since returning from Vietnam today. It -k -k The speech, billed as off-the record, will be made to a noon meeting of the Executive 100 club. It will be closed to the press but a news conference will be held at 2:30 p.m. WASHINGTON (AP) -The Atomic Energy Commission says it will set off an underground atomic explosion to see how such blasts may be used for excavation. Pinnae Priu Pint* RECORD SET — Pontiac Central High School seniors Sharman Bessells (left), of 157 E. Iroquois and Linda Kreps of 2256 Garland, Sylvan Lake, bask in tiie springlike temperatures that invaded the area yesterday. Tiie 59-degree high set in 1909 was bested as the mercury, reached a balmy 60. -bronchitfs ... A Bobby Kennedy aide hearsal of “MacBird,” which satirizes current political f^rra. The Bobby Morses, who have fliree dai^hters, "“V * nckor hASil. fill fltt V. S&V6 hCF fl boy 7.'. ji^me Mansfield’s pew beau, an att’y, gave her a h^e diamond ring and a foreign sports cBr . . . wood, filming “The Fox” in Toronto, flew to N.Y, to have her hair done, flew back the same day. WISH I’D SAH) THAT: Vinnie Haggerty **®f looking girl: “She couldn’t Win a beauty contest in Boys Town. EARL’SIpEARLS: Frank Tarloff,^adap^g his “A Guide for the Married Man,” into a movie, said, I enjoyed collaborating with someone whose work I »“*"^®-. _ Burgess Meredith, directing the Broadway ptey Of I^ve Remembered;’’ has barred the cist from rehearsals. “Nobocly,” he announced, “will bark louiier than the director!” That’s earl, iwother. * / (tiii Milt syitekil*. ii«-> RatJio Programs- Manhattan has become a "never never” parking land, an4 even Lewis Carroll’s Alii», if she had been able to wangle diplomatic plates, would have had to send the White Rabbit to retrieve her towed-away vehicle from some far-off conqxwnd. .E was diplomacy no, tow-away yes, as Mayor John V Lindsay’s no-exception program began Monday, with police removing all autos ip the area between 34th to 66th streets and toe East and Hudson rivers. * ★ ★ By midnight Monday night, police announced pickups of 10 DPL — diplomatic — five FC — foreign consul — and three NYP — New York Press — cars in the restricted zone. Complaints from toe United Nations were numerous, but Lindsay stood fast. TO BE extended Traffic Commissioner Henry Barnes said toe program would be extended tpday to cars belonging to doctors, dentists, and handicapped persons, who have enjoyed impiunity from parking summons. After protests by the Automobile Club of New York and the Disabled American Veterans, Lindsay announced a two-day trial plan by which a handicapped driver who cannot find a garage or parking lot near his job should drive to the nearest police precinct. A patrolman will pSrk his car, and he will be delivered to work by radio car, At the day’s end, the process would be reversed. k k k Among cars towed away Monday were DPL license plate cars from the Soviet Union, Ecuador, Turk^, Mauretania, Syria, Nigeria, Kuwait, and three still unidentified couh-tries. ' k k'\ r The FC cars were fn«n West Germany, Ghana, Korea, Panama, and one unidentifled nation. k k k Mayor Lindsay decided to go by subway Mo^ay from City Hall to midtown. On the crowded' subway traip, a woman who recognized him, asked; “What’s the matter, Mr. Mayor? Did they tow your car away?” [NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY WINTER TIRES! TUBELESS BUCK 7.00x14 7.35x14 7.75x14 CITY TIRE Ml North Hm Sherriff-Gosb Co. Pttntiac'i OMait Roofing and Siding Company I Frta Estimates 332-5231 By Science Service BERKELEY, Calif.-A speedy cure for the mumbles, whtepers swallows of slow readers was announced here by a team of University of California psychologists. k k k The technique is a simple one, consisting of an electrical device placed over throat muscles to pick up and amplify subvocal activity. Mumbles and swallows are then played through earphones. A swallow, for instance becomes a burst of static in the reader’s ears. Apparently, once the reader-hears himself, he is able to end the habit of conscious control. Every college student who took the cure l<«t his lutoit Ip one session, reported Berkeley researchers Dr. Curtis D. Har-dyck. Dr. Lewis F. Petrinovich, and Delbert W. Ellsworth. k k k This was surprising, they admitted, since long-standing habits are not usually extinguished so quickly and easily. The subvocal habit is particularly pernl-dous in that it tends to limit reading rates to words per minute — actually, toe rate for speech. • AtCOA AIUMIMOM SIDIW • AlUMlfW^V^ • DORMERS • ALUMINUM STORM WINDOW • fOUNDATIONS • MURAL STONE • GUTTERS y,, • PLASTERING • fUWfACES • OAR^S • ROOTING AND SIDING* HOUSE RASING • PORCHES AND ADDITIONS • WTCHEW • 8ATHROOMS REMODELED • PORCH RAILS • TILE FLOORS Guoroitfeed! 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WARDS SIGNATURE® BRAND APPLIANCES Built and tested to meet rigid quality standards. a« SAVE ON 15 CUeFTe DELUXE FREEZERS e UPRIGHT holds525 tos. e Handy roll-out bosket e 4 fost-freeze shelves e Gasket seals in cold air e CHEST holds 525 lbs. e 2 dividers; I basket • Gosket seob in cold oir e Lock plus interior light “T Th0 Weatlwr U.S. WtMkir ■•KM Rata Mixed With Snow THE PONTIAC PRE VOL. lU ~ NO. 300 ★ ★ ★ ★ THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUAJ^Y 24, 1967 —30 PAGES. ^ LBJ WASHINGTON W - President Jdinson called on the nation today for "a~ measure of sacrifice” — higher taxes, higher postal rates, higher paycheck deductions — to help finance history’s biggest budget. Along with a $135-bi11ion spending blueprint for fiscal 1968, ^ year startin next July 1, the President sent4'a hands-off warning to Congress members who are grumbling loudly at rising deficits. Billion The spending loomed much larger, and tte deficit smaller, in two lesfrdamiliar bod- Text Summary, Page B-2 get yardsticks mentioned by Johnson. The ca^ budget, “adds up to (172.4 billion; the “national income accounts” show $167.1 City fo Consider Pay, '67 Budget Administrative salary boosts totaling more than $5,000 and a revised 1967 budget of $9.7 million will be considered tonight by the City Commission. Incorporating a deficit of $538,205, the revised budget reflects wage adjustments granted last month to mu-___________ nicipal employes, an in- Probe Legality Before Judges Contempt of Court Coses Tied to Ruling Legal argument regarding the constitutionality of Michigan’s one-man grand jury were heard yesterday by three Oakland County Circuit Court judges, but it will be at least two weeks before they rule on the question. ★ ★ ★ The constituti(Miality of the ju- lenged ,on five points by Royal Oak attorney James Renfrew. Beirirew is aidihig that the Judges dismiss contempt of court charges brought against four of his clients by Oakland County grand juror Philip Pratt. The case has been assigned to tile three judges. Those charged for refusing to answer questions by Pratt are Emil Pavolovics, a druggist in Madison Heights, and three former Madiscm Heights city councilmen, Roman Nowkki, Ross Skinner and Bill S. Huffman, now a state representative from the 66th District. ★ ★ ★ C h a r 1 e s J. Porter, special state assistant attorney general assigned to the grand jury, argued in behalf of the grand jury constitutionality. ‘TOO BROAD’ Renfrew contends, among other things, that tiie scope of the grand jury is too broad and not specific; that impartiality may be ncxiexistent since the grand juror is from the same circuit as the judges who will eventually hear the case; that there is no separation of judicial and executive powers; and finally that it violates a U.S. Su-(Continued on Page A-2, Col. 6) In Today's Press Waterford Five more policemen to be hired; 13 on force get awards — PAGE A-7. Rochester Elderly pioneer reminisces — PAGE A-4. JFK Book President’s life hung in balance for 5 seconds, says author—PAGE C-10. Area News .:.... A-4-T-A-5 Astrology ..........C-3 Bridge .............C-3 Crosswwd Puzzle ... C-9 Comics ........ —C-3 Editorials :........A-6 High School ........B-1 ’htaiiiets .........B-7 Obituaries ..........C4 Sports .......... C-1—C-2 Theaters ...........B-6 TV-Radio Programs . C-fl Wilson, Earl C-9 Women’s Pages B-3—B-5 creased bus subsidy and the purchase of 14 new police patrol cars. The budget also reflects the pending transfer of Pontiac Municipal Airport to Oakland County, which is to be made retroactive to Jan. 1, the beginning of theiiscal year. Action tonight will be to set a date fw a public hearing on the pri^iosed 1967 expenditures. The commission has already held one public hearing on a proposed budget totaling $9.2 million, but this budget was made obsolete by the airport transfer and the wage hikes. ★ ★ ★ Most of tbeproposed increased expenditures come in the new $8,024,539 gmieral fund, vdiich is the fund that pays most of the municipal payii^. ADOPTED PREVIOUSLY The revised $9.7-million budget is the first deficit budget in Pontiac in four years, although deficit bidgets had been (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 8) billion with a deficit of only $2.1 billion. Both include Social Security and other trust fund payments along with the regular budget jqipropriations on which Con-gi^ acts. DEEP CUTS Deep budget cuts could cause a remsion instead of the expected seventh successive year of record prosperity, Johnson’s annual budget message said. He Md Capitid HiU: “The economy, the budget, and the aims of our society would be Jeopardized by dltfaer a larger tax tacrease than tiie {wo-posed 6^per cent income tax surcharge, or by lai^e slash-.es in mtiitary or civiUam programs. “I have reviewed these programs carefully. Waste and nonessentials have been cut out,” he said. The budget bears vbat John- son called “The deep imprint” of Vietnam. FOR VIETNAM Acknowledging that the war is beginning to pinch, Johnson asked $19.9 biUion for Vietnam alone in this year’s expanded $67-billion Defense Department budget and $22.4 bMon in the $72.3-billion Defense Department budget for fiscal 1968. Ihe “sacrifice” asked by Johnson includes the 6 per cent surcharge on corporation and most personal income proposed in his State of the Union address — and widely criticized in Congress — as well as a further speedup in corpiwation tax payments and more “user taxes” on trans-pmtation. , Successive stepups in Social Security taxes in 1968 and 1967 would be required to pay for the benefit increases Johnson proposed to Congress yesterday. Counterattack on Rowdyism at PCH Slated Negro community leaders and Pontiac school officials last night laid plans for a counterattack on rowdyism at Pontiac Central High School. Discipline problems at the school, which came to a head after a Jan. 13 basketball game, were discussed during a two-hour session at the school district administraticm building. As a result of the bicident following the home game with Flint Northern, tonight’s game with Saginaw High School was rescheduled for 3:30 pjn. This was the first such move in Central’s history. No deter-miniation yet has been made about the school’s two remaining home games. ★ ★ ★ Police estimated that as many as 300 persons gathered at the comer of Huron and Franklin after the Jan. 13 game and pelted officers with snowballs. School officials maintain that only 100 persons, several of them nonstudents, actually were involved in the fraly. ’There is agreement that most involved were Negroes. The session last night, the first large-scale meeting conducted by John F. Perdue in his role as school-conununity and human relations director of the district, was attended by some 10 persons identified as Negro community leaders. STUDENT INSTIGATORS Among the 20 others present were Schools Supt. Dr. Dana P. Whitmer, Police Chief William K. Hanger, members of the Pon-iac School District Citizens Committee on Human Relations and school administrators. While noting that much of (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 7) 60DegreesTop 1909 Record “It Might As WeU Be Spring” could have been the theme song in the Pontiac areas as temperatures zoomed to 60, yesterday, highest since 1909 vriien 59 was recorded. But don’t put away your red flannels yet. The weatherman says colder weatiier is on the way with a forecast of mostly cloudy and cooler this aftenioon and tonight. Occasional rain may be ex-, pected late today. It will continue through ton^t, b«»ming mixed with or changing to snow or snow flurries tomorrow. Temperatures will fall into the 30s tonight. ★ ★ ★ In downtown Pontiac the low prior to 8 a.m. was 43. ’The mercury had moved to 46 by 1 p.m. Antimissile Plans Hinge on Talks WASHINGTON (AP) - President JobBssm iHSed Congress today for standby money for a possible start tif Nike X production in case agremient isn’K reached on a U.S.-Soviet antimissile ban. In his message accompanying a $72.3-]^Illion Defense Department budget ballooned $5.4 billion above this year’s partly by mounting Vietnam war costs, the President confirmed that he has decided against deploying an antimissile system pen^g ban talks with the Soviets. But “if tiiese discussions prove unsuccessful,” Johnson said, “our dejdi^ent decision will be reccmsidered. “To provide for actiwis that may be required at that time, approximately $375 million has bran induded for the i»roduction of Nike X for such purposes as defense of our offensive weapon systems.” Ihe administration said late last year tiie Siwlets are de-ptoying a limited antimissile to knock out approaching missiles. INITIAL EFFORT This is the first time the administraticm has sought Nike X iwoduction fui^. Last year. Secretary of Defense Rob^ S. McNamara refused to spend more than $150 million in unrequested money appropriated by Congress to finance Nike X preproducticm activities. Cost estimates for a complete U.S. antimisstie system range to $40 billion. The Prwident unveiled a spending prc^al including ^1.9 bi^n to suj^iwt Southeast Asia operations in fiscal 1968, and said he will said Congress a $12.3 billion request to supplement the currait budget. The supplemental would mean about $9.4 bfllicm In expenditures by next June 30. NUC3LEAR FORCES Additicmal billions are provided to strengthen nuclear and conventional forces with such items as new multiple-warhead Poseidon missiles for Polaris submarines; impitnred, land-bas^ h^teman missiles equipped with decoy devices desig^ to fool enemy defenses and the start on a third atomic-powered aircraft carrier. The bndf^t provides for a uniformed strength cd 3.46 millicMi men and women, up 135,000 above the current force. The President said his program wiil provide “for the full replenishment of munitions, supplies and materiels consumed in Southeast Asia at currently projected rates even if the conflict extends beyond the end of the fiscal year.” Full House at Cooking School Pmfltc PK*t WM* COME TO LEARN-Young homemakers turn out for The Pontiac Press Cooking Sdhool. At last ni^t’s opeidng sesrion Mrs. Kennetii GQboe (left), of 3905 Lotus Drive, Waterford Township, takes tickets from Mrs. Harold Geariiart (center), 33 Gingell, and Mrs. William C3iapa, 561 Granada. Johnson’s revised budget for 1967 shows a $9.7 billimi federal deficit, the second biggest since World War H. It was exceeded in “peacetime” only by President Dwight D. Eisenhower’s $12.4 billion of red ink in 1959. COMPARISON Comparisons in billions of the revised 1967 bu^t and the proposed 1968 budget. Spending $126.7 and $135,503; receipts $117 and $126.9; deficit $9.7 and $8.1. Laird Says Viet Outlay Out-of-Date WASHINGTON (ffi-Rep. Melvin R. Laird of Wisconsin, chairman of the House Republican Conference, charged today that President Johnson’s budget for the Vietnam war “is already out of date.” “If you take the current spending level in Vietnam and project it for 12 months,” be said in a prepared statement, “you will see that the estimate is already out of date.” Johason proposed in his budget today UUion for the military in Southeast Asia during fiscal 1968. He said the current year’s effort would would cost $19.9 billion ~ some of which has not yet been appropriated. Reaction to Johnson’s over-ail budget was not surprising. Some Republicans called for cuts, some liberal Democrats said domestic spending was too low and some membra of spending committees said thqy’d take hard looks before voting. * ★ ★ “We can cut the $135 billion budget by $5 billion without bur^ aiqrbodty,” said Sen. Milton R. Young, BrNJD., senior Republican on the Senate Appropriations Committee. “If we don’t,” he said, “we’re going to have more inflation and more t^t money.” ‘CUT EVERYTHING’ Chairman George H. Mahm, D-Tex., of the House ^ropria-tions Committee said, “When we are in an inflationary period and the budget is in the red, it is especially imperative that we take a critical look at all phases of the budget and cut everything as much as we safely can.” The Pontiac Press eighth annual cooking school opened last ni^t with a capacity crowd in Pontiac Central Hi^ School auditorium. Barbara Zimmerman, assisted by Harriet Canncm, presented a two-hour food demonstration. Both women are home economists at Consumers Power Co. in Pcmtiac. Before the program and during intermissiim, Robert LU-leyman idayed organ music. Ushers were members of the county extension clnbs who have given this service for seven years. Grand prizes awarded last night were a gas incinerator from Consumers Power Co. that went to Judie Green, 2383 St. Josejdi, West Bioomfield Township, and a wig from Donnell of the Pontiac Mail, won by Cath-I erine Kelly, 592 Nevada. • Stage crews from Poqtiac Central man the backstage area where a complete, but primitive kitchen area is set up. Mrs. Roy Overbaugb, 2179 Av- THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 24, 1967 LANSING (UPI) - State budget experts sffe wrestling with $1.6 billion in money requests from Michigan’s 19 state agencies in an effort to arrive at a figure everybody can live with and on. If current estimates are right, and Gov. Romney does indeed present a general budget of about $1.2 billion to the Legislature Feb. 2, som^ $400 million in requests will end up on the cutting floor. The Legislature has the last word and can add and sab< tract at wiQ. The upshot is that Michigan is sure to have its first billion-dollar budget for general operating purposes. The state is cu^ rently operating on a budget Of $974.5 million. U. S. Pay Law Will Up Costs in Hospitals EAST LANSING (AP) - A Lansing hospital administrator estimated Monday that new federal wage and hour require ments going into effect Feb. 1 will add $15,000 to his hospital’s overtime bills in 1967. But John Krismer, associate director of St. Lawrence Hospi tal, urged Michigan hospitals to go beyond the new requirements in efforts to make hospital jobs more attractive and ease the shortage of health workers. , ★ ★ Krismer told a hospital administrators’ conference on the new wage - hour standards that some hospitals expect their overtime costs to jump by as much as $80,000 a year. He said, though, that good management techniques could cut the amount of overtinae needed, improve employe morale and reduce turnover. ATTITUDES IMPROVE Krismer said his hospital reorganized schedules in several departments and found attitudes improved and turnover dropped. Biggest problems in observ ing the standards, he said, would come from costs, paperwork and interpretation of some of the new rules. But, he indicated, going beyond the requirements would prevent constant policing the government. ★ Robert Friel of the Detroit office of the U.S. Department of Labor told the 300 administrators at the conference they should have no problem wift minimum wage requirements, since Michigan’s minimum wage already is $1.25, compared with toe federal government’s $1. But he warned them that when computing overtime, they must count not only hours that the employe is required to work, but also llours the employe is permitted to work. Money Trouble $60 Million Congress Vote May Be Mirage NEW ORLEANS, La. (AP) -Republicans learnt today that the $69-million pot of gold Congress voted to pay for future presidential campaigns may be a mirage that could leave both parties financially stranded in 1968. Fred C. Scribner Jr., its general counsel, predicted in a report prepar^ for the Republican National Oonunittee’s closing session that the income tax checkoff Congress apfwoved It also means that to pay the biUs, toe Legislature will be asked to approve toe state’s Rrst income tax rates ^ probaWy 3 per cent on personal income, 5 per cent on Corporate income and 8 per cent on financial institution mcome. NOSPEC^ICS Though the govoiux' ha$ not specifically said he will call fag symbolic of the $2,098,391 bonanza distributed today. 'Military Chiefs Vow Help to Regain Power for Mao’ TOKYO (AP) - Red China’s official news agency said today that the nation’s military commanders have vowed to help Mao Tse-tung seize “party, state, financial and other power from the persons in authority who are taking the capitalist road.” It was a rare admission that County Director Again Will Head State Planners SKRUBB George N. Skrubb, Oakland County Planning Commission director has been reelected president of the Michigan Chap-^i ter of the Amer-ican Institute of ^ Planners. Skrubb of 1900 Graefield, Birmingham, will serve a new one-year term. Reelected treasurer of toe Michigan^ Chapter yvas Jay W.| Eldridge, associate planner for Vilican-Leman of South-field. Other Oakland County planners elected to office at the meetmg in Ann Arbor were Roti-ald J. Garke, planning director for Southfield, and Jacob Drik-er, president of Dirker and Associates, Bloomfield Township. ★ ★ * Both were named to the three-member executive committee with Georgq Honzatko, chairman of Wayne State University’s urban planning department. such broad power had slipped from Mao’s hands ★ Japanese correspondents ' in Peking quoted wall posters as saying the army had gone into action over the weekend to crush an uprising in toe Peking suburb of Fangshan. Wall posters also reported clashes in Tientsin, 100 miles southeast of Peking, and in Paoting, 80 miles southwest of the capital. Red Guard wall bulletins said army troops moved into Fangshan and seized control of the Communist party’s county headquarters and the Security Bureau. The bulletins said a ‘handful of counterrevolutionary elements” had “arrested several himdred revolutionaries and subjected them to fascist torture.” PLEDGES REPORTED Mao’s New China News Agency reported pledges of support from “commanders and fighters of the three services of the Chinese People’s Liberation Army” in Kunming, Lanchow, Shenyang, "Canton, Foochow, Nanking, Wuhan, Peking, Cheng-tu, Tainan, Tibe4, Sinkiang and Inner Mongolia. It did pot mention Kiangsi, the southeast province ^here Mao’s opponents reportedly have formed an army of workers and peasants. it it it Another NCNA dispatch related a series of seizures by pro-Mao forces and thereby revealed toat at one time ot another his opponents controlled wide sectors of toade and fl-nance, Peking publishing houses, a Tientsin jute mill, a Shenyang (Mukden) rollinjg mill, an automobile spare parte plant in Sian, the Shensi provincial department of communications and the Wuhan light industrial dies and molds plant. Half of toe employe savings is invested in U.S. government bonds and half in GM common stock. All dividends are reinvested in GM . common stock and all interest received is reinvested in government bonds. The savings program has two objectives. First, it encourages employes to put aside a portion of their inpome in a systematic manner for future contingencies and secondary, it increases toe number of employes owning General Motors stock. CONTRIBUTION Under the savings-stock pur-cahse program. General Motors contributes $1 for each $2 of employe savings. Nationally, 53,000 salaried employes chose to receive their assets from the 1961 class and $78.4 million in common stocks, government bonds and cash was distributed to them today. An additional 16,700 salaried workers are leaving their assets in trust under the other option of the program. The amount to their credit has a current market value at $35.4-million. Today’s distribution includes 787,000 shares of GM stock with a market value of $59 million in bonds valued at $16.8 million and $2.6 million in cash. As a result of the distribution, an additional 16,300 employes became GM shareholders. Probe Legality Before Judges (Continued From Page One) preme Court ruling which permits a person to remain silent “If a perspn can’t be ques tioned by a p o 1 i c e m a n, he shouldn’t be questioned by judge who is acting as an investigator,” said Renfrew. The three judges who are to decide the issue are Clark J Adams, Robert L: Templin and William R. Beasley. Cash, Guns Taken in Pontiac Burglary A burglar took $200 in cash and two guns with a total value of $140 in a breaking and entering reported to city police late yesterday. Jeffrey Ferrier, 25, of 460 Harper told police four $50 bills a $75 shotgun and a $65 rifle were taken. Investigators said entry was possibly made through an unlocked door. ; (Continued From Page One) toe trouble at school activities is caused by nonstudents, school officials said toat perhaps 10 or 12 students also are perennial instigators. Among these are seven who had been suspended from school earlier and whose suspensions will continue for toe new semester which begins Monday. The names of the problem teen-agers and their parents will be submitted to Negro leaders, who are planning a mass community meeting wi toe problem. DISCUSSION OF PROBLEM Meanwhile school officials agreed to ccaisider and follow h r 0 u g h on suggestions made last night. They were urged to confront toe entire student body directly in a candid discussion of the problem. Albert Shaw, Jefferson Community School director, said good students have disassociated themselves with the problem. it it it “If they could be activated, they could be used to create discipline and respect for au-thOTity,” he said. Clarence Barnes, Pontiac Area Urban League executive director, said toat as long as three years ago some 50 of Central’s “top students” petitioned for a human relations group at the school. The Student CooncU reportedly has become active in this area. “Some of Us have been very vocal in telling the administration there is an acute problem at Pontiac Central,” said Charles M. Tudter Jr., former president of the Oakland County NAACP diapter. “Making public statements does not erase toe gnawing proMem,” he said. Asking for the names of toe “h a r d - core troublemakers,” Tucker also suggested that the Michigan (3vil Rights Commission be asked “to make a thorough, unbiased ahalysis of toe situation at Pontiac Cehtral to submit to the administration.” Hunter as toe one suggested by toe state, toe Birmin^am-Btoomfield Chamber of Commerce, according to a spcdces-man, still opposes any alteratimi ol toe major toor-oni^are. Preliminary estimates prt pared by toe city engineering depar^ent f or connecting Browi^ to Park from Mpple to Hamiltcm indicate that the project w<^ cost between $212,000 and $3(i0,000, depending on what plan would be agreeable to cmtunissioners. * ★ ★ The cost includes land acquisition, and the removal of the McCallum and Dean Building wliich fronts on Maple. BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP -Low bidder on $200,000 in bonds for water main construction at last night’s township board meeting was Claik, Dodge and Co. The bid was for an average interest rate of 3.7388. The'money will be used to build the Bloomfield Heights subdivision main at an estimated cost of $170,000 and the Concord Green subdivision main at $33,000. A petition for construction of a $31,000 sewer for Colonial Estates, Lahser Road, was accepted with a hearing date to be set later. City to Weigh Pay, Budget (Continued From Page One) adopted previously when the city has a surplus from prior years. The more than half-mOlion-dollar deficit proposed for 1967 is to be paid by an existing surplus ^ nearly identical amount. The administrative salary boosts, pr(^)osed for those officials appointed by the commis-sicHi, total $4,926. In additim, the commission is expected to consider wage hikes for Pontiac’s two Municipal Court judges. ★ it it Salary increases for these latter positions have not jret been determined, but will be by the time of tonight’s meeting. COMPARE SALARIES In announcing the proposed salary adjustments for commission appointees. Mayor William H. Taylor Jr. said salaries in other cities were considered. City Manager Joseph A. barren is slated to receive the biggest increase — $1,500 for an annual salary of $^,000. A $1,1% hike is preyed for toe city clerk, giving that position a salary of $10,000. The finance director is to receive a hike of $597 for a salary of $14,000, while the assistant city manager is to receive $1,143 fw $12,500. it it it The city attorney is to be raised $500 for an annual salary of $18,000. Pontiac Told to Act Now on Bias or Face Violence Racial discrimination in Pontiac could lead to violence, community leaders were told yesterday, unless they take toe opportunity now to do something about it. The warning came from two officials of toe ^Michigan Qvil Rights Commission (MCRC) speaking at a luncheon to focus attention on the opening of a new regional office in Pontiac. I^e office is located at* 84 Auburn at Wide Track Drive. Mrs. Frank W. Wiley, one of eight state civU rights commissioners, said Pontiac can either set a good or bad ex-am^lCj to dpping with ^e problems of civil rights. , ★ ★ ★ “Gvil rights is a serious problem to the state,” she said. We come to Pontiac to offer a hand of assistance.” THREE COUNTIES The Gvil Rij^its Commission center in P(«tiac will serve toe three counties of Oakland, Macomb and St. Gair. Mrs. Wiley said toat “potential vtoieuce” exists hi Pontiac, and emitoasized, “It is, in the community that the problem arises, and it is in toe community that the problem is solved.” Wilma Ray, director of the new regional office, one of 13 in toe state, explained toe respon-siblity of toe commission to insure that discriminati(Hi and segregation do not exist in the state. “We are committed to working ourselves out of business by helping to create a climate of equality of opportunity which will negate discrimination and segregation. $t is in the latter area that toe majority of our efforts will be focused.” Miss Ray said, “It should not be difficult to understand that toe closer minority groups come to full equality, the angrier they become at the remaining disparities and inequities.” She explained that the CRC office opened in Pontiac “because fears and prejudices cannot be used as a rationalization by some of the citizens to usurp toe ri^ts of others. “We are here because de facto segregati(m exists in education and housing, because dis-crtminatimi is talking place in enaployment and to a lesser ex?-tent in public accommodations,” she said. t / THE PONTIAC PBESS, TUESDAY. JANUARY 24, 1967 .# LBJ Plan Contro MARKETS The following are top i^iceS covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by tb'tm in wholesale package lots Quotat' 'ns are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Miu'kets as of Friday. Produce FRUITS Apples, Delicious, bu..............AM Apples, Delicious, Red. bu. .. 4.S(l Apples, McIntosh, bu............3JS Apples, Jonathan, bu..............3.M Apples, Northern Spy, bu......., . 4JM Apples, Cider, 4.gal. .....:. 2.75 VEGETABLES Down In Xctivie Trading Market Ends Long Advance NEW YORK (AP)-The stock market headed lower in active trading at the caning today. Stocks showed losses of frac^ Uons to a point or so after rising almost without interruption since the year began. ' , . * * * Many issues were unchanged, however, and the decline was c“.*gSB?^iy?'b«. •;;;::::::::;:::;^Slstubbom’. fl»?«ii!4,bur;:.\\:..;;;;ISi toeing fell i% to 7i% on Carrots, Cello Ak. 2 dr........ Shares and United Air Celery, Ro5^d : iisoiLines dropped iVs to 67% on Horseradish, pk. bsk................ 4.00, i caa charge teeks, dz. bch.......................3.oo'^ww snares. Onions, dry, 50-lb. bag ............. 3.25 ----------------------------------------- Parsley, root 2JMj Parsnips, 'h bu. .................. 2.W)] Parsnips, Cello Pak..................2.001 Potatoes, 50 lbs.................... 1.7fi Potatoes, 20 lbs. .................... .75 Radishes, black, V, bu................2.00 Rhubarb, hothouse, dz. bch........1.50 Rhubarb, hothouse, 5-lb. box ...... 1.00 Squash, Acorn, bu.....................1.50 Squash, Buttercup, bu................1.50 Squash, Butternut, bu............... 1.50 Squash, Delicious, bu................. 1.50 Squash, Hubbard, bu. :......,........ 1.50 Turnips. Topped ...................... 2.50 Eattm, Yale & Tbwn was off % at 28% on a huge exchange distributiem of 100,000 shares. Polaroid lost % at 186% on 1,600 shares. Opmiing Mocks included: U-S. Steel, off % at 43y* on 3,000 shares; Chrysler, off % at 36% on 6,000, and American Telephone, unchanged at 58% on 6,600. ★ ★ ★ Du Pont declined % to 151 (xi 1,600; General Motors, Pennsylvania Railroad and General Electric also lost fractions. Unchanged were many issues, including Bethlehem, Aunerican Can, ConsoUdated Edisrni and WesUnghduse Electric. ★ ★ ★ Mtxiday the Associated Press Average of 60 Stocks rose .3 to 314.7. ★ ★ ★ Prices were narrowly mixed on the American Stock Exchange. U. S. Bombers Pound DMZ Elsewhere, Air and Ground War Quiet The New York Stock Exchange NEW YORK (AP) - New York Stock Exchange selected morning prices: Net Abbott Lab 1 ABC Con .80 Abex Cp 1.50 ACF Ind 2.20 AdMIllls .40b Poultry and Eggs DETROIT POULTRY DETROIT (AP)—Prices paid per pound for No. I live poultry: Roasters heavy type 24-25; broilers and fryers 3-4 lbs. Whites 18’/2-20; turkeys heavy type young hens 30. DETROIT EGGS DETROIT (AP)—Egg prices paid per dozen by first receivers (Including U.S.): Whites Grade A Jumbo 40-43; extra large 35'.^-39; large 34V2-37; medium 33- Seiet Olds.) High Law Last Chg. —A— 8 43 4275 42r/> .. 2 2055 2055 2055 — W 3 3155 3155 3155 ... 44V5 4355 43Yx CHICAGO BUTTER, EGGS CHICAGO (AP) — Chicago Mercantile Exchange—Butter steady; wholesale buying prices unchanged; 93 score AA 5555; 92 A 6555; 90 B U'A; 89 C 6IV4; cars 90 B 64; 89 C tVA Admiral .50 Air Reduc 3 AlcanAlum 1 Alleg Cp -20e AllegLu 2.40b Alleg Pw 1.20 Allied C 1.90b AlliedStr 1.32 Allis Chal 1 Alcoa 1.60 Amerada 3 AmAirlin 1.50 Am Bosch .60 AmBdesf 1.60 Am Can 2.20 AmCrySug 1 Gen Fds 2.20 GenMot 4.55e GenPrec 1.50 GPubSvc .38g G PubUt 1.50 CTel El 1.28 Gen Tire .80 Pacific lb , 1655 1655 1655 -F 'A Gerber Pd 1 38 5155 51'A 51'5—155! Getty Oil .lOe 47 3255 3155 31% - 55, Gillette 1.20 + 'A Glen Aid .70 10 67'A 67 15 31Vj 3155 3155 — 55 6 10'A 10'/i 10'/5 — '5 Eggs mixed; wholesale buying prices ^hiCyan l.a ',5 lower to ’A higher; 60 per cent or P ’/i-P better grade A whites 32'5; mixed 32V4,-|AEnka 1.3(to mediums 30; standards 30; checks 26. AmHome 1.80 Am Hosp .50 CHICAGO POULTRY CHICAGO (AP) — (USDA) — Live poultry: wholesale buying prices changed roasters 23-25; special fed V Rock fryers 18'/j-20'/5. • White Livestock 37 3855 38'5 38'5 ......... 7 25'/4 25'/4 25V4 + Vt 21 2455 2455 2455 — 'A 3 86Vj 86V2 86'/5 - 'A 37 8555 8455 8455 -H 24 7855 775. 7755 -t- 'A 2 2355 2355 23% — 'A 5 76% 76% ................ 20 4755 4755 3 1655 16'A 49 315. 31V2 315. - 'A 8 4055 4055 4055 - 55 2 3355 3355 3355 -F 'A 10 8755 8755 8755 + V5 76% ■ 4m 16IA Am MFd AMet Cl 1.90 Am Motors AmNGas 1.80 AOptic 1.35b Am Photoepy Am Smelt 3a Am Std 1 Am T8.T 2.20 Am Tob 1.80 DETROIT LIVESTOCK AmZInc 1.40a DETROIT (AP)—USDA)—Cattle 1,600. AMP Inc .60 Slaughter steers high choice and primelAmpex Corp 1000-12M pound 26.25-26,50; slaughter Amphenol .70 heifers couple Ibads and lots choice Anaconda 5e 750-950 pounds 24.00-24.50 1 lead high Anken Chem choice 25,00; cows utility 17.00-18.00. ArmcoSt 3 Hogs 500. Barrows and gilts steady 1 Armour 1.60 to 50 cents lower, sows steady a fewjArmsCk 1.20a one and two 200 to 220 pound barrows! Ashland Oil 1 and gilts 21.00 to 21.25. lAssdDG 1.40 Vealers 150. High choice and prime I Atchison 1.60 40.00 to 44.00 a few head at 45.00. jAtICLine 3a Sheep 1200. Slaughter lambs andlAti Rich 2.80 ewes steady, choice and prime 90 to Atlas Corp 44 51 5055 5055 Halllburt 1.70 Ham Pap .90 Harris Int 1 HeclaM 1.15e Hercinc 1,J0e HewPack .20 Holid Inn .50 Homestk 1.60 Honeywl 1.10 Hook Ch 1.40 Houst LP 1 Howmet Cp 1 HuntFds 50b 23'/2 23% -F '/jlHupp Cp .17t 655 -F 'A Goodrich 2.40 Goodyr 1.35 GraceCo 1.30 Granites 1.40 GrantWT 1.10 GtAGP 1.30a Gt Nor Ry 3 Gt West FinI GtWSug 1.60a GreenGnt .80 Greyhnd .90 GrumAlrc lb Gulf Oil 2.20 GulfStaUt .80 ■ 55; 2 23% 7 66'A 66 137 29'A 29V. 29'A 22 2355 23 23'A 22 89V. 89 89V. 6 14'A 14'A 14'A 10 56% 56 56 6 36A — % 31 68 67 67 -1 28 555 5% 5% . x20 33 32% 33 3? 4755 4755 4755 - 'A 5 3455 34% 3.55 44 4555 4555 45% -F % 10 2855 2855 2855 - 55 8 515. Sm 51% -F % 30 45% 4455 4455 - 55 8 11 1055 10V. . 7 6455 64% 6455 — /b ,VA 4% + % 87 ?7'/« 77% 27% ‘/I 6 4H 4>/2 4% + '/. 48 71% 71 71% + Vt 10 5% 5'/4 5«/4 3 TV2 V/2 V/2 + % ?9 21% 21% — % 103 3V/n 31 31% + >/2 73 77V% 27V2 27^4 + % 113 6 9% 9% 9% + 'A 75% 25'A 25'A + % 535 85% 83'/j 84'/a + % 24 11% 11% im^ 98 5V2 5V2 5'/2 The Associated Press 1967 40% 40'A 40'A 2 20% 20% 20% 7 27'A 27% 27'% — 'A 1 54% 54% 54% — % 69 267% 26’A 267% I 447% 447% 447% 8 81'A 81% 81% -F 'A 15 15% 15%................ 7 24 24 ^ 35 37 36Vs 37 29 55'A 54% 55 II s4 qyyxv v 10:30 STOX Cert-teed .80 CessnaA 1.40 Champ S 2.20 15% - 14 + — 43Va 43Vk 43V4 — % W/9 46Va 467% — Vk CIT Fin 1.60 CitiesSvc 1.80 CocaCola 1.90 Colg Palm 1 CollinRad .60 CBS 1.40b Col Gas 1.44 Col Piet -83f ComICre 1.80 ComSolv 1.20 Comw Ed 2 Comsat Con Edfs 1.80 ConElecInd l ConFood 1.40 ConNGas 1.60 ConPow 1.90b Containr 1.30 Cont Air .80 Cont Can 1.90 OViER THE COUNTER STOCKS i Cont Ins 3 Quotations from the NASD are ^epre- Cont 0,1 2.60 sentative inter-dealer prices of «PPr<» 19% 19% — % 11 75 75 n --1 24 33% 33% 33% -F % 7 16'A 16'A 16% — % 63 47 46% 46% -F 'A n 22% 22 22 - % M 41 40% 40% -F % 28 30 29% 29% - % —G*“ 4 25% 25% 25% -F % 68 23% 22% 22% - % 79 521A 52 » - % 41 M% M% H%-% IdahoPw 1.40 Ideal Cem 1 IllCenInd 2.40 Imp Cp Am IngerRand 2 Inland StI 2 InsNoAm 2.40 InterlkSt 1.80 IntBusM 4.40 IntHarv 1.80 Int Miner 1 Int Nick 2.80 Inti Packers Int Pap 1.35 Int T&T 1.50 ITE Ckt 1b 34V, 34V, 34'A + 'A 17 V, 17% 17 V, -F % 81'A 81 Vi 81% + A 14 7'A 7 7 7 42% 42'A 42'A - 'A 13 38% 38’A 38'A - % 3 87% 87% 87V, - -m I 31% 31% 31% -F % 14 398 397% 398 -F 9 39% 38% 38% — % 23 40V. 40'A 40'A 16 86V. 86% 86V. - 'A Texaco 2.60a 1 9'A 9'A 9'/. - 'AiTexETrn 1.05 32 28'A 27% 27% - 'A 1 Tex G Sul ,40 22 8I'A 80% 80*A — 'A Texasinst .60 4 44'A 44 44 -1% TexP Ld ,35e T Textron 1.20 SoM Nat (hds.) Htab Low Lost Hbg. RoyCColO .72 28 26% 26'% 26'/, — % RoyDut 1.79e 61 34% 34% 34% - % RyderSys .60 15 17% 17 17 - 'A StJosLd 2.80 SL SanFran 2 StRegP l.40b Sanders .30 Schenley 1.40 Schering 1 Schick SCMCp .40b Scott Paper I SeerIGD 1.30 Sears Roe 1e Seeburg .60 Servel Sharon StI 1 Shell Oil 1.90 ShellTra .87e SherwnWm 2 Sinclair 2.40 SingerCo 2.20 SmithK I.BOa SoPRSug ,15g SouCalE 1.25 South Co 1.02 SouNGas 1.30 SouthPac 1.50 South Ry 2.80 Spartan Ind Sperry Rpnd SquareD .60a StdBrand 1.30 Std Kolls .50 StOIICal 2.50b StdOIIInd 1.90 StOIINJ 3.30e StdOilOh 2,40 St Packaging StahWar 1 50 » StautfCh 1.60 SterlDrug .90 StevenJP 2.25 Studebak .25a Sun Oil 1b Sunray 1.40a Swift Co 2 iVM' ' ' I M *^11^ Be* Tax Argumenfs Loom Tampa El .60 Teledyne Inc Tenneco JohnMan 2.20 1 55H 55H 55V» JonLogan .80 2 40% 40% 40% - % Jones L 2.70 5 56% 56% - Va s4 qyyxu v 1I;M STOX 4 u v Joy Mfg 1.25 6 26% 26^A 26% -K Kaiser Al 1 KayserRo .60 Kennecqtt 2 KemCLd 2.60 Kerr Me 1.40 KImbClark 2 Koppers 1.40 Kresge .80 Kroger 1.30 Lear Sleg .70 LehPCem .60 Leh Val Ind Lehman 1.72g LOFGIs 2,80a LIbbMcN .49t LIggett&M 5 Litton In 1.54t Llvlngstn Oil LockbdA 2.20 Loews Theat LoneS Cem 1 LoneSGa 1.12 MackTr 1.59t MacyRH 1.60 Mad Fd 1.93g MagmaC 3 60 Magnavox .80 Marathn 2.40 Marquar .25g MartinMar 1 MayDStr 1.60 Maytag 1.60a McDon Co .40 McKess 1.N Mead Cp 1.90 Melv Sh 1.60 MerckC 1.40a MerrChap la MGM lb MinerCh 1.30 MinnMM 1.20 MobllOII 1.80 Mohasco 1 Monsan 1.60b AAontDUt 1.52 AtontPow 1.56 Montward 1 Morrell Motorola 1 MtSt TT 1.12 Nat Airlln .60 Nat Bisc 1.90 Nat Can 50b NatCash 1,20 NatDairy 1.40 Nat Dist 1.60 Nat Fuel 1.60 Nat GenI .20 40 50 e 35% _M- 22 37 101 Nat Steel 2.50 Nevada P .84 Newbery .681 NEngEI 1.36 NYCent 3.12a NiagMP 1.10 NortlkWst 6a NA Avia 2.80 Nor Pac 2.60 Occident .80b OhioEdls 1.20 OlInMalh 1.80 Otis Elev 2 Outb Mar .80 Owenslll 1.35 OxfrdPap .80 30 26% 26'A 26'. - % 17 43'A 43 43 - 'A 5 40 39V. 39V. - 'A 56 30V. 30 30V. -I'A 19 67'/, 66% 67 - % 20 36'A 35V. 35’'. - % 43 56'A 55% 5^V. - % 6 8'A 8’A 8A 69% 69% -F % 22 53% 52 52% -I'A 31 51V. 51% 51%-% 13 28'A 28'A 28% . 21 41 40V. 41 50 29% 29% 29% 25 32% 32'A 32% -F % 37 32% 32 32 - % 7 47% 47'A 4m — 'A 21 17% 17% 17% -F 'A 245 30'A 29V. 29V. — % 47 22V. 22'A 22>A - 'A 36 35 34% 35 . 14 23'A 22% 22% - % 27 61'A 61'A 61%i -'A 76 53% 53 53 — % 119 64V. 64% 64% - 'A 1 63'A 63'A 63'A — % 38 11'A 11 11 — 'A 2 62% 62% 62% - % 4 40% 40'A 4'A — % 35 42'A 42'A 42% — 'A 36 47'A 46'A 46'/, — V. 175 51'A 50'A 51'A -F % 15 53'A 52% 52% - 'A 38 29'A 28V. 28V. - 'A 9 47'A 47 47 — '/, _T_ 20 29% 29'A 29'A — % 78 107'/, 106 V, 107 -1'/, 44 22'A 22'A 22% — 25 74'/, 74'A 74% — 'A <0 19V., 19% 19% — 'A 62 116'A 115% 116 -1 41 nO'A 108% 109 -I'A 2 IS 14V. 14V. — 'A 12 55% 55% 55% — 'A 41 II'A 17% 17% — 'A 5 73'A 73'/. 73'A 12 39 38% 38% — 'A 100 81'A 79% 79% —I'A 75 34'A 33% 34 -F 'A 57 14% 14% 14% — 'A 67 24V. 24% 247A -F % 17 35 34'/. 35 -F 'A —V— 15 16V, 16'A 16'A — % 82 53% 53'/. 53'A - 'A 18 27% 27 27% -F 'A 16 50% 49% 49’A — 'A 26 40'A 40 40'A — 'A 3 61'A 61'A 61'A + 'A 70 67% 66V. 66V. —1% 26 87 86>A 87 — % 23 9% 9'A 9'A 26 31'A 30% 30'A — 'A 6 53V. 53% 53% — 'A 18 26 25% 26 -F 'A 2 26'A 26 26 - % 18 63'A 62% 62% - 'A 45 11% 17% II — 'A 6 34% 34% 34% 72 45'A 45 45'A ... 10 45 45 45 34 42% 42'A 42'A — % 119 61'A 58V. 59'A — % 61 43'/, 43'A 43% - 'A 4 17'A 12% 12% 6 67'A 66% 66>A -1% 51 66% 65’A 6S'A -F % 20 34% 34% 34% — 'A 115 33% 32'A 33'A - % 65 31'A 31'A 31% -F 'A 25 46'A 46'A 46'A -F % __w— 16 18 im 17'A + % 9 40'A 40 40 — 'A 7 24 23V. 24 -F 'A 52 46% 45% 45'A - 'A 12 32'A 32 32 .... 21 40% 40'A 40'A — 'A 52 49'A 49'A 49% — 'A 7 36'A 36% 36'A - 'A 17 37% 37 37 — '/. 17 44'A 44% 44% -F 'A 1 59 59 59 —% 14 33% 33'A 33% -F % 47 22'A 22'A 22V, — 'A 36 36'A 35% 35% — % X—Y—Z— ___________ , 70 225 224 224% 46V. 46'A 6'A 'AlYngstSht 1.10 15 31% 31 31 - % 32% 32% 32% ‘zenIthRad la 105 58'A SPA 57 %-1 34'A 34% 24'A -F 1A Copyrighted by The Associated Press 1967 Sales figures are unofficial. Unless otherwise noted, rates of dividends in the foregoing table are annual disbursements based on the lest quarterly or semi-annual declaration. Special or extra dividends or payments not designated as regular are Identified In the following toomotes. a—Also extra or extras, b—Annual rate plus stock dividend, c—Liquidating dividend d—Declared or paid In 1967 plus stock dividend, e—Paid last year, t — Payable In stock during 1967, estimated cash value on ex-dIvIdend or ex-dlstrlbutlon date, g—Declared or paid so far this year, h—Declared or paid after stock dividend or split up. k—Declared or paid this year, an accumulative Issue with dividends in arrears, n—New Issue, p—Paid this year, dividend omitted, deferred or no action taken at last dividend meeting, r—Declared or paid In 1966 plus stock dividend, t—Paid In stock during 1966, estimated cash value on ex-dIvIdend or ex-dlstrlbutlon date, z—Sales In full. cld-4:alled. x—Ex dividend, y—Ex dIVF dend and sales In iull. x-dls—Ex distribution. xr—Ex rights, xw—Without warrants. ww—With warrants, wd—When distributed. wl—When Issued, nd—Next day delivery. v|—In bankruptcy or receivership oi* being reorganized under the Bankruptcy Act, or securities assumed by such com-^nles. fn—Foreign Issue sublect to In. 23 46'A 46% 46'A 7 30Vs 30V. 30V. -F 'A 16 401A 40 40'A 4 64 64 64 - 'A 5 15% 85% 85% 6 55'A 55'A 55'A - % 8 27'A 27% 27% - 'A 4 41% 41% 41% -F 'A x5 25'A 24% 25% -f 'A —Ir— 72 26V. 26'A 26% -F 'A 3 10'A lOV. 10% 14 " ■" 11 33'A 33 8 48'A 48 9 10% 10% 3 74'A 74'A 33 84% 84 20 )% 33 48 - 'A 1v% F 'A /4'A - 'A 84% - % - V. 20'A 20'A 29% 29% 49% '9'A -F 'A 35% 35% 36'A 37 42'A 42'A 4Z'A ....... 22'A 22'A ZJ'A 57% 57% 57% - % 10 63'A 63'A 63V, 10 14'A 14'A 14'A 31 21'A 21'A 21'A -F 'A 28 35% 35% 35% - % 1 31'A 31V. 31'A - % 93 34V. 34% j4'A - % 4 49% 69% 49% -F % 42 44'A 44% <4'A -F 'A 5 39V. 39'A 39% - 'A 39 77'A 76% 76’4 -FI'A 5 24'A 24'A 24'A 35 36'A 35'A 15'A - % 17 32% 32'A 32'A 47 81% 81% - 'A 65 ,41 47% 47% - 'A 29 17% 17% 1 F% —'A I eXrox Corp 1 81 ..................................... Thiokol Tidewat Oil Tim RB 1.80a TransWAIr 1 Transamer I Transltron TrI Cont ,92e TwnCen 1.20b UMC Ind .60 Un Carbide 2 Un Elec 1.20 Unocal 1.20a Un Pac 1.80a UnTank 2.30 UnItAIrLIn 1 UnItAIre 1.60 UnItCorp .40e Un Prut 75e UGasCp 1.70 Unit MM 1.20 US Borax la USGypsm 3a US Ind .70 US Lines 2b USPlywd 1.40 USPIyChp wl US Rub 1.20 US Smelt 1b US Steel 2.40 Unit Whelan UnivOPd 1.40 UPlohn 1.60 Vanad 1.40a Varlan Asso Vendo Co .50 VaEIPw 1.28 SAIGON, South VietnamiAP) — U.S. B52s rained bombs in the middle of the demilitarized zone today while the air war in North Vietnam and the ground war in the south quieted down. The B52s made two other raids during the day, both in Tay Ninh Province northwest of Saigon near the Cambodian border. ★ ★ ★ In the Iron Triangle, also north of Saigon, Brig. Gen. Richard T. Knowies, 51, of Columbus, Ga., commander of the U.S. 196th Light Infantry Brigade, escaped unhurt when his helicopter was hit by Vietcong ground fire Monday for the second time in five weeks. A soldier aboard the helicopter was wounded. The chopper made a forced landing after it was hit by automatic weapons fire 200 feet off the ground over the Ho Bo Woods, 25 miles northwest of Saigon. Knowles also escaped injury Dec. 19 when his helicopter was hit eight times by enemy ground fire. MISSIONS DOWNED Bad weather closed in over North Vietnam again and U.S. pilots were limited to 42 missions Monday, the first time after a week teat the missions fell below 50. One plane, an Air Force F4C Phantom jet, was shot down by Communist ground fire and the two-man crew is missing, U.S. heademarters announced. It was the 466th announced U.S. plane loss over the north. ★ ★ ★ Among the raids, Navy fliers from the carrier Kitty Hawk attacked the Tanh Hoa railroad yard 80 miles south of Ha noi and reported a large second-acy explosion. Air Force pilots reported cutting up highways in four places in the western part of North Vietnam near Dien Bien Phu and the Mu Gia Pass. Both the U.S. and South Vietnamese military commands re ported only minor ground action in South Vietnam. Operation Cedar Falls in the Iron Triangle continued 20 to 30 miles north of Saigon. U.S, forces reported seven more Vietcong killed bringing their total to 678 since the drive started Jan. 8. By JOHN CUNNIFF AP BvsInesR Nevrs Analyst NEW YOftK-President Johnson’s proposals for an in(»me tax surcharge and greater Social Security assessm^ts and benefits are bound to set off political jffgu-ments how and philosophical debates f(»ever. The two proposals are finely intertwined. If the President receives his entire Social Security package it might necessitate a tax increase. Bigger payouts Would mean the Social Security fund would have less CUNNIFF But a tax increase on top of added costs for higher S()dal Security benefits would be intolerable to many people. One or the other, perhaps, but not both. CUT IN TWO Johnson’s Social Security package could be cut in two, thus lessening the need for a tax increase. But that would put the onus on the cutters as having deprived the elderly of greater benefits. Social Security seems always to have been mixed up in such affairs. As it now stands. Social Security has tremendous backing from most elements of American life. Congress included, but it has been and may al wavs be controversial. money to invest in government The size of Social Security securities. The governmentjthat alone — can provoke needs that money. disputes. Johnson’s proposals A-Bomb, Land Policy Oil Industry Revolution Seen BABSON PARK, Mass. -Rapidly developing nuclear techniques may combine with long-delayed leasing of the federal government’s vast shale oil re- Bombing Jars Italy Welcome for Red Leader 'e$tn AIrL 1 WnBanc 1.10 WnUnTel 1.40 WestgEI 1.40 Weyerhr ..40 Whirl Cp 1.60 White M 1.80 WllsonCo 2.55 WlnnDIx 1.44 Woolworth 1 Worthing 1.20 26 24 12 29% 39% 25'A - % 36 t04'A 102'A ll/2'A -3% 2 23V, 23'A :3% -F 'A __N— 4 86'A 86 86 13 49% 49'A 49% 6 25'A 25 25'A + 'A 16 77'A 77% 77'A 15 36 35% 35% - '/■ 12 41 40'A 40'A - 'A 5 29% 29% 79% — % 4 11% 11% 11% — 'A 8 34% 34'A 34'A - 'A 5 62'A 61% 61'A - % 8 45% 45# 45'A -F 'A 2 38% 38% 38% - % 2 18'A 18'A 13'A 12 28'A 23'A 28% + 'A 42 74'A 74'A 76',, -1 31 22% 22% 12% — 'A 8 108'A 108 108 - 'A 21 49% 49 49 — % ______ 6 55% 55% 55% - % >4 ayyxv v 18tH STOX S wVYL North?* 1 19 29'A 29% -F % 43 48'A 48% 41% - 'A 11 2B'A 28'A 2B'A 10 64 64 64 — 'A 15 43% 43% 43% - % 84 19'A 19 19 9 58'A 58'A 58'A + 'A 24 20% 20 20 - 'A _P_ PacGEI 1.30 6 11% 11% 11% - 'A 24 24% 24'A 24'A 32 17'A 17 17 - 'A x102 61% 61 61% n 34 33% 34 -F % 109 30% 29% 30 — 9 41'A 41'A 41'A 14'A 14% ■■■■ Pac Ltg 1.50 Pac Petrol PacT&T 1,20 Pan A Sul .60 Pan Am .60 Panh EP 1.60 ParkeDav la Peab Coel 1 PennDIxle .60 Penney 1.60a Pa PwLt 1.48 Pa RR 2.40a Pennzoll 1.40 PepsiCo 1(60 PfIzerC I.Wa Phelp D 3.^6 Phlla El 1.48 PhlIRdg 120 PhllMorr 1.40 PhlllPet 2.20a PitneyB 1.20 PltPlate 2.60 Pitta Staal Poiaroid .40 RCA .lOb RalstonP .60 Raynler 1.40b Raythaon .80 Rel*Ch .40b RepubStI 2.50 Revlon 1.30 Rexall .30b Reyn Met .90 Reyn Tob 2 RheemM 1.40 Roan Set .98a Rohr Cp .80 equalization tax. Senate Near Filibuster Rule Cloture Vote WASHINGTON (AP) - The Senate votes today on whether to take up a proposed change in rules making it easier to halt filibusters. Senators advocating a tougher antifilibuster rule are pessimistic about getting the two-thirds approval necessary to shut off debate on the motion to c()nsider their proposal. ★ ★ ★ .A cloture, or debate-closing, petition was filed last week by 21 Democrats and 10 Republicans after the Senate rejected 61 to 37 a move to bypass the two-thirds rule and cut off debate by majority vote. ♦ ★ ★ The two-thirds rule is the rule under attack. Some senators want to make it possible for three-fifths of the senators voting to choke off filibusters. Others want a majority of the Senate to be able to halt unlimited debate after 20 session days. -2% 13 57% 56'A 56'A — % 19 35'A 35'A 35'A -F 'A 23 59% 58'A 58'A —1 2 83'A 83'A B3'A — 'A 33 II'A 10''« 80% -F 'A 54 78% 7»'A 78'A.- 'A 10 72% 72 72 -1 14 32’A 32'A 32% — 'A 68 46% 45'A 46 — % 19 33% 33'A 33% 36 53'A S3 S3 - 'A 25 46'A 46'A 46V, -F % 6 58% S>% 58% 15 11'A 11% 11% 10 116'A 16MA 164% 23 71% 71 76 4 7% 71A 7% 17 50VA 56 50 - % —R— 19 46% 46% 46% V- % 34 24% 34% 2x'A -F % x6 33% 32V, «'A - % 12 51% 51 ' I - 'A X48 15ZA 15A 11 44'A 44 44 - 'A 176 56 54% 55’. i - % 15 26'A 27'A 27% - % 43 57% 56% S6% - % 52 ST'A 37% 37% 6 21 27% 27% - % 350 9% 9% 9% -F % I 26 23% 25% - % Treasury Position sitlon o( the Treaeury compared with corresponding date a year ago; Jan. 19, IM7 Jan. 19, 1966 Balance— 5,307,170,097.44 $ 5,106,543,069.35 Deposits Fiscal Year. July 1— 77,536A74,39t.6S 63.289.345,003 12 .Withdrawals Fiscal Year— 92,369,S35,m.54 76,933,419.363.38 X—Total Debt— 329,720,306,802.44 323,811,102,152.59 Gold Assets-^ 13,158,230,237.74 13,734,046,617.66 (X) - Includes 6266,20334.71 debt net sublect to slelut^ limit. OOW-JONE6 AVERAGES STOCKS 30 Indus ................. I49.7I-F2A2 20 Ralls ................... 227J6-F6.72 15 Uttls ...................... 1293-03 66 Stocks .. ............... 305.42+0.72 RONDS 40 Bonds ................... 13.43+0.03 10 Higher grade rellv ....... 74.76-0.02 10 Second grade reitt ...... 64.60+0.00 10 Public utilities ........ as. 8-0.02, 10 industrials 19.28+0.071 News in Brief Eighteen stereo tapes valued at $126 and a $13 pair of ice skates were reported stolen yesterday from the car of Raymond Butler, 47, of 2276 Old Salem, parked in a lot at South Boulevard and Tex. Police said entry was apparently made by breaking the right front vent window. The tiieft of $20 in change during a break-in at Ken and ’Tony’s Pwitiac Lake Gulf, 1507 Williams Lake, Waterford ’Township, was reported to township police yesteriiay. MMduy's 1st DivMutids Dtclkrtd Pt- Stk. of Puy-. Rult rind Rtcurd ubis INCREASED Anheuser-Busch ,M 2A 3-9 MacDonuW, EF .15 2-21 3-15 UnIMd FruH .,.....25 . 2-3 3-1 Lodge Calendar Ladies National League Social — will meet Wed., 7:30 p.m. at 45 W. Beverley. —Adv, ROME (AP) — Italy prepared a deluxe welcome today for Soviet President Nikolai Podgor-ny, but the friendship theme was jarred by the bombing of the Italian Communist party’s Rome headquarters. ★ R ★ Heading the welcoming party to greet Podgorny on his arrival from Moscow by plane were Italian President Giuseppe Sar-agat, Premier Aldo More and Foreign Minister Amintore Fan. fani. ★ ★ ★ A powerful dynamite charge Monday night destroyed five rooms in a wing of the party building two blocks from the route Podgorny was to take into downtown Rome. No one was hurt. CHARGES Italian Communist leaders charged that “fascist and reac tionary’’ elements were trying to “disturb the atmosphere” for Podgorny’s arrival. ★ R , Ik- Soviet and Italian flags flew side l^y side in welcome for the first Communist chief of state to visit Italy. On Jan. 30, after his six-day state visit, Podgorny will be received by Pope Paul VI at the Vatican, the highest ranking Communist ever to en ter the Holy See. Except for minor opposition on the far right, the visit has been accepted as an advanta geous development for Italy. serves in the West to revolutionize the oil and natural gas industries, predicts Oil Statistics Co., an affiliate of Spear & Staff, Inc., investment advisers. “Nuclear fracturing — the use of underground atomic explosions to release vast, heretofore inaccessible deposits of natural gas and shale oil — could not only double recoverable natural gas reserves in the United States but unlock our multibillion dollar Rocky Mountain shale reserves,” said S. E. Gil-dersleeve, vice president of Oil Statistics Co. Auto Sales Dip Is Continuing DETROIT (AP) - Aut(OTO-bile sales figures for the second 10 days in January showed a continued slump today from last year’s sales. * * ★ General Moten's Corp. reported sales of 120,181 passenger cars and commercial vehicles during the January 11-20 period. Chry sler C(x-p. said its sales for the 10 days totaled 33,631 units. ★ ★ ★ During the same period last year, GM sold 145,666 units, and Chrysler had sales totaling 40,-345. Chrysler said its 10-day sales figures represent a daily rate of 3,737, up three per cent over the daily rate of 3,632 for the January 1-10 period. ★ A ★ During the Qrst 20 days in January, GM sold 218,472 cars, compart with 269,3M in the similar period last year. Chrysler reported sales totaling' 59,-058 units for the first two-^rds of this month, as opposed to 71,-604 units in the same period in 1966. ★ ★ ★ Ford Motor Co. has not rfr leased its statistics. “’This would give its four times more crude oil than the entire world supply conventional petroleum at a price fully competitive in both foreign and domestic markets, expediting oil recovery by 40 years.” Oil shale deposits under about 16,000 square miles of land in Colorado, Utah and Wyoming are 72 pm* cent government-owned. Government experts estimate ffiat they contton more than 1,000 billion barrels of crude oil — about five times the known domestic crude reserves. ★ ★ ★ The Oil Statistics Co. spokesman said the world’s first use of an atomic bomb for peaceful industrial purposes — Project Gasbuggy, scheduled for next July in natural gas fields of the El Paso Natural Gas Co. at New Mexico’s San Juan Basin - won’t be commercially profitable. AREN’T LARGE ENOUGH “Reserves in place at this particular -site aren’t large enough to cover the $4.7 million cost of the experiment. But that’s not important. it it if “If successful as nuclear enthusiasts are confident it will be, El Paso’s test, besides giv ing the nation’s nuclear business a sharp boost, could yield untold benefits to America’s petroleum industry, the public and the government by providing the key to unlock vast multi-bil lion dollar oil and gas fields now lying idle.” call for maximum assessments of $390 in 1969, and that’s 13 times the original levy made in 1937.. The assessment for 1968 of $343 wasn’t scheduled under the present setup to take effect until after 1972. It’s a big jump. If passed, a lot of people will feel the pinch. They’ll want help., ARGUMENT This will resurrect an old argument, one that trips more tempers than most issues. That is, whether or not to draw on general revenue funds to help pay the cost of Social Security. This seems innocent enough. It isn’t. It symbolizes in one issue a basic difference between some liberals and some conservatives and, perhaps by an I emotional extension, the difference between welfarism and capitalism. ★ ★ ★ Those who criticize Social Security because they think it is a potentially cancerous growth on free enterprise argue that if funds are obtained from general revenues, then paycHits constitute a dole rather than insurance. This, they argue, is the guaranteed wage they have come to fear. These critics argue that Social Security should be self-supporting, that its assessments and payments should be scheduled in such a way that the fund would pay its way and be independent of other tax issues. BENEFITS STILL LOW Even with the big increases in assessments that President Johnson is seeking, the payout to recipients for the present would still be far below the level that permits a minimum of creature comforts. The minimum benefit for a couple with 25 years of coverage would be raised to $150 and that for a single person to $100. Few recipients could live on this. ★ ★ -R The pressure for use of general revenue funds is thus an already potent one, and the issue is bound to be faced sooner or later. by Ford Cifed WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Ford Motor Co. was named today as a winner of a distinguished service to conservation award by the National Wildlife Federation. Ford was cited for outstanding conservation practices in use of its vast land holdings, plants and other uses of natural resources. * ★ -R The federation said the company pioneered in (development of taconite ore processing in Michigan and Minnesota, revitalizing these low grade ore regions. It also has bmn an industrial leader in efforts to eliminate air and water pollution. Of the company’s 55 plants, the citation said, 35 per cent have independent waste treatment facilities outside the plant, another 35 per cent have treatment facilities inside the plant or in conjunction with an outside lagoon. The rest can discharge harmless waters directly into municipal sewers. Successfuhlnvesting« By ROGER E. SPEAR Q) “Some time ago we purchased 100 shares of Moiri-son-Knndson at 31. It has declined steadily to 23W. We are not pressed for funds but are in retirement and cannot afford a loss. Should we h(dd or sell?” I. B. A) The answer to your question depends entirely (m your investment objective. Morrison-Knudson is a worldwide general contractor — building roads, bridges and manufacturing facilities. Share earnings have been very little changed over the past decade and' dividend payments are below th^ 1960 level. The stock is not suitable for growth. If that is your aim, you should look elsewhere. I do not believe that price recovery will come quickly in this type of issue and if that element is important to you I’m afraid you will be disappointed. I regard Morrison-Knudson as stock of good quality, offering a relatively high yield on a dividend that seems secure. If income during retirement is Si*!;!; your objective, I would hold the stock and clisregard market fluctuations. * R R R Q) “We are in our seventies and have $20,000 in savings; honM and income property worth $30,000 free and clear; $100 a week salary. Would you advise selling our real estate and investing in bonds?” W.B. A) I don’t believe I would. In your circumstances, you should buy only corporate bonds of good quality, carrying a fairly high coupon and offering call protection for several years ahead. Bond prices havq been moving higher, and issues such as I have described no longer yield six per cent (h* more. I think you would now do well to get a 5.5 per emit return. I doubt if it would pay you to sell your home and reinvest. If your Income property is well situated and offers you a return, equiya-lent to present bond yields — as it probably does — 1 would hold it as a very good longterm hedge against inflation. (Otpyright, 1967) THg PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUABY 24, 1067 \ NEW YORK (AP) - “Five terrible secwids” may have spelled the difference between life or death for President John F. Komedy after he was first • UNDERWOOD • ROYAL • SMITH-CORONA • ADLER % REMINGTON • CARLTON from $3995 FREE Typewriter Table MIDWEST TYPEWRITER MART 8S N. Saginaw $t. Naxl to Simms wounded, William Manchester suggests iii his book, “Deadi of 'a President.” ★ ★ ★ This is the estimated elapsed time between the first and second bullets that struck Kennedy Referring to the Secret Serv ice agents riding in the front seat of the presidential car in that awful moment, Manchester wrote: “They were in a position to take evasive action after the first shot, but for five terrible seconds, they were immobilized.” NOT FATAL The first bullet, piercing Kennedy’s neck and throat, was not fatd, the author wrote. But the second inflicted a massive wound on the right side of his skull, sealing his fate. The second installment of Look magazine’s four-part serialization of Manchester’s book, due on the newsstands Wednesday, relates the events of the day of the assassination, Nov. 22, 1963. ★ ★ ★ When the first shot cracked, Manchester wrote, “the White House detail was confused.” Agents thought the sound came from a firecracker, or a police motorcycle backfire. Agent Roy Kellerman, in the front seat, teought he heard the President say, “My God, I’m hit,” and tum^ to look at him. Agent William R. Greer, the drivo*, also glanced backward. ‘NEITHER REACTEIP “Neither had yet reacted to the crisis,” Manchester wrote. Kennedy was clutching his throat but he was not grimacing. Manchester described his expressi(m as “quizzical.” Mrs. Kennedy had often seen that explosion. Like the others in the car, she seamed imaware that her husband had been wounded. (. ■k if it Thai the second bull^ struck him. Man±ester wrote — “Now in a gesture of infinite grace, he rai^ his right hand as though to brush back his tousled chestnut hair. But the motion faltered. The hand fell back limply. He had been reaching for the top of his head. But it wasn’t there any more.” INTO REAR SEAT At about that same instant, Agent Rufus Youngblood vaulted into the rear seat of Vice President Johnson’s car, snapped, “get down,” and covered Johnson’s body with his own. The lead cars in the motorcade, accelerating powerfully then raced toward Parkland Hospital in Dallas, vyhere, Man Chester wrote, they were to find confusion compounded. ★ ★ ★ In this section of his book. Manchester leaves no doubt that he believes Lee Harvey Oswald killed Kennedy and h^ no ac complices in any organized con spiracy. The author thus agrees with the findings of the Warren commission. It says Oswald acted alone. NUMEROUS BOOKS Critics of the Warren report, however, have advanced the theory in numerous books some of them lucrative — that the bullets came from two directions, not just the Texas School Book Depository Building, where Oswald worked. Manchester pictures Oswald as a “chronic faUure,” scorned and more or less rejected by his Russian wife, Marina. Mt-nesses testified before the War- These keys turn on 21 different Oldsmobiles ...all priced under $2,920! lit -it ib'> / // 0(%J ■a /r'>A ' hs and X raya,” Manriibter wrote. The eridence is “ovenriielming,” he says, that toe first bullet stn^ Kennedy in toe Iowa- neck, exited from his throat, and then struck Gov, John B. Connally Jr. of Texas, atoo was riding in toe jump seat in firont of Kennedy. k k k tW second installment also repwts: 1. Kennedy, perhsqis In a flash of prescience, talked about being assassinated oa toe morning ^ toe day be died. He told Mrs. Kennedy an assassin in toe crowd at Fwt Worth toe previous night easily could have shot him. He pantomimed for her toe actions of the imaginary killer. He spoke “casually,” Manchester wrote, and Mrs. Kennedy took his remarks in that spirit. COMPLETE DISAGREEMENT 2. Kenneth O’Donnell, special aide to Kennedy, disagrees completely with President Johnson in their memories of the circumstances through which Johnson boarded the presiden tial airplane, instead of the vice presidential aircraft, after the assassination. Johnson recalls that O’Donnell “twice urged” him to take Air Force One, the presidential plane, for the flight to Washington. k k k Manchester says O’Donnell calls this version “absolutely, totally and unequivocably wrong.” He quotes O’Donnell as adding, ‘“The President and I had no conversation regarding Air Force One. If we had known that he was going on Air Force One, we would have taken Air Force Two. One plane was just like another.” 3. Kennedy had come to Texas to patch'up a political feud involving Sen. Ralph Yarborough, Gov. Connally and Johnson, Manchester wrote. On the previous day, Yarborough had twice refused to ride in Johnson’s car. BECAME ANGRY Kennedy became angry when he saw headlines in Texas newspapers, ‘Tarborough snubs LBJ’^’ and “President’s Visit Seen Widening State Democratic Split.” k k k ’The President telephoned O’Donnell and Lawrence O’Brien, another special aide, and told them Yarborough must ride with Johnson in the Dallas Motorcade. He grated, “Get him in the car.” k k k The morning newspapers on Nov. 22 also published an advertisement, bordered in black. It had been placed, Manchester wrote, by “an organization styling itself as "The American Fact-Finding Committee’ — a load cdwdinator c| ton John Bird! Society.” k k k [ The advertisement, addressed to Kennedy, “hinted strongly that he bad reached a secret agreement with toe U.S. Communist parfy.” Manchester stdd that toe. President Vead it and remarked to his wife that they were about to enter “nut country.” Church Benefits CHICAGO (AP) - The Methodist Church reports a record three millim persons received benefits in 1986 toton the 28 health and welfare agencies affiliated with the Church. The agencies include 79 hospitals, ISl homes for the aged, S3 agencies for youi^ people and two businesswomen’s homes. JFKs Life Hung in Balance for 5 Seconds-^Author Doctors quit smqkfng CHICAGO — According to a recent sbrvey, 52% of American doctors do not smoke. Aitany quit recently dud, according to the AntUTobacco Center of America, to the conclusive evidence linking cigarettes end lung cancer. Many doctors gave up smoking without straining their will power thanks to a new tablet which helps to progressively eliminate the need for nicotine and, as a result, the desire to smoke. Less than 2% of the 150,000 people who tried this tablet reported they still smoke! Smokers interested In receiving information (free) about this new tablet are Invited to cbntact directly the Anti-tobacco Center of America, Dept. 740-D, 306 Fifth Avenue, New York 1, New York. It is sufficient to send your name and address. Just a postcard will do. No wonder most people Jet Delta to Florida! Delta has the most Jets from Detroit... 6 thru-Jets to Miami alone! Also the most Jet services to Tampa. See Your Travel Agent or Call Delta Staff home bp campNce Let mailman pap pout irills. 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