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The Weather
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Snow Flurries
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PONTIAC PR
StSr-"
VOL. 124
NO. 284
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Pontiac Preio Photo
REWARD FOR SERVICE - Mrs. Willard Walls, 84, delivered The Pontiac Press in Davisburg for 29 years. Saturday she retired and, for her years of faithful service, received a $100 check from The Pontiac Press. Arlo McCully, circulation manager, presents her with the check.
Woman, 84, Retires as a Press Carrier
By JANICE KLOUSER
Eighty-four-year-old Mrs. Willard Walls has found the secret to eternal youth—a newspaper route.
“I really think that carrying papers has helped me stay young,” she said. “All my friends are lame but I’m	------^
not.
“It’s good to get out and walk although some people say 1 run instead of walk.”
Saturday she gave up what started out 29 years ago to be a temporary job — she retire as a Pontiac Press carrier.
“I really hated to quit,” she said. “I’m going to have to find something else to do, but I’d rather be outdoors.”
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The sprightly little woman who lives alone at 743 Broad, Davisburg, gave up her favorite pastime because of a lingering cold.
ERA ENDS
An era ends with her retirement, The same newspaper route has been in her family for 40 years.
Her two sons, Donald and Shirley, delivered the papers first, and she tocdc over, temporarily she thought, when they graduated from high sQhooi.
Every day without fail and in all kinds of weather, she delivered 63 papers to her neighbors. %e I disdained use of a carrier bag, preferring instead to ^ng the papers under her arm.
She will admit to having some trouble carrying recent papers made heavier by the increased number of pages.
116 PAGES
“One night there were 116 pages and I couldn’t even get my arms around them, let alone carry them,” she said.
Not even the snow and ice stayed her from her rounds.
“I didn’t mind it a bit,” she said. “I love to be outdoors.”
In later years, she employwi (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6)
In Today's Press
Modern Fireman Classes, training continue through career — PAGE C-4.
Judges Battle Bitter row between State Supreme Court Jus-tiqes — PA^E A-3.
Area*News ..........:A-4
Astrology .......   C-10
Bridge..............C-10
Crossword Puzzle ...1M3
Comics .............C-10
Editorials ..........A-6
Food Section ... C-2—C-3
Markets .............D-6
Obituaries ..........D-7
Sports ........D-1—D4
Tax Series ..........C-6
TTieaters ...........B-6
TV-Radto ^ograms D-13 Wlbwi, Earl ........D-18
Wmnen’s Pages B-1—B-5
Care of Ruby Is Questioned
Doctors Are Divicled on Treatment at Jail
DALLAS tUPI) - Jack Ruby received less than the best possible medical treatment in Dallas County Jail, one of his doctors admitted yesterday.
Two other doctors who treated the killer of President Kennedy’s assassin jail maintained that his treatment was more than adequate, however.
At the same time, it was ^sclosed Riat physiciil examinations and X rays taken in 1963 and 1964 had revealed no signs of cancer.
Ruby died Tuesday of a blood clot in his lung, an apparent result of the cancer.
Responding to the family’s charge that Ruby was neglected, Dr. Ei^ene Frenkel said, “In a way. Ruby’s situation in jail was like a man in the military — the medical care he would get might not be as thorough or sophisticated as with a private doctor.”
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Dr. Julian Mardock and Dr. John Callahan, the physicians who examined Ruby in jail, and Sheriff Bill Decker flatly denied that the prisoner was neglected.
‘FAIR-HAIRED’
Decker called him a “fairhaired prisoner” and said he got preferential medical treatment.
Dr. Mardock said he saw Ruby “almost every day. He was a famous patient, you know — precautions.”
Unarmed Missile Zips Over Cuba, Crashes in Sea
WASHINGTON (AP) - A runaway unarmed U. S. missile apparently zoomed over Cuba Wedn^ay after cannon fire and missiles from a pursuing
See Picture, Page, A-9
l|.S. jet plane and destruction^ signals frmn the gitumd failed to bring it down, says the Pentagon.
The 650-mile-an-hour Mace missile apparently dropped into the Caribbean-about 100 miles south of the southwest ^ast of Cuba, Air Force calculftWs reported.
The missile, modified into a target drone, was routinely launched fnmi Eglin Air Force Base, Fla., Wednesday’morning and head^ over the Gulf of Mexico for a test diase by F4 Phanbm jets.
f
Pratt Indicts Legislator
Pontiac Motor Romney Plans
1966 Sales Hit , t
Western Tour
Pontiac Motor Division sold more cars in 1966 than in any other year in the division’s history, Johii Z. DeLorean, divisional general manager, announced today.
A record total of 834,843 units were sold in the year, compared to 827,571 in 1965 which was the previous record.
Some 469,678 Pontiacs and 365,165 Tempests were sold in 1966.
“This is our fifth consecutive record year,” DeLorean pointed out. “And, as a result of these outstanding sales in 1966, We increased our lead over our nearest compeitor to nearly 235,000 units.” This is a 28,331 unit increase lead over 1%5-★ ★ ★
DeLorean also said that 66,-647 Pflntiacs and Tempests were sold last month. In the final 10 days of December a total of 21,187 cars were sold.
TOTAL SALE RECORD ,
The 1965 total sale record was a 20 per cent increase over the 1964 sales which reached 693,-716 units. A total of 514,853 Pon-tiaCs and 312,669 Tempests were sold in 1965.

Put in Motion
Panel Recommends Full Study, Architects
JOHN Z. DeLOREAN
DETROIT iffl r— George Romney, still uncommitted but testing the political winds, made plans today for a speaking tour of the West and a “long, hard look” at the 1968 GOP presidential nomination.
Meanwhile, another of the Michigan governor’s' top aides resigned a state post
to help Romney take that	-----------------
look and arrive at a decision.
Dr. Walter De 'Vries, who heads research and development for the governor’s office, will resign next week, Romney told a news conference yesterday.
“I expect to rely m him im-portantiy in taking a long, hard look at What I’m looking at,” Romney said, referring to the Republican presidential nomination.
Romney’s western swing will begin Feb. 18 in Juneau, capital of Alaska and wind up Feb. 22 in Albuquerque, N.M., an aide said.
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In between, other speeches are scheduled for Feb. 20 in Salt Lake City, Utah, Romney’s old hometown, and Feb. 21 at Pocatello, Idaho.
FUND-RAISERS All four are billed as Lincoln Day dinners, the annual GOP fund-raising gatherings and political chitchats.
De 'Vries is expected to conduct research into campaign issues, helping Romney formulate his position on national questions.
, The governor repeated at the news conference his statement that he has not decided whether to seek the presidential nomination of his party.
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Romney also turned aside questions about reports of a huge campaign fund aimed at financing a drive for the presidency when he decides to declare himself in the running.
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But he did say De Vries would be paid “by a private fund — by those who have indicated they are willing to help me organize to explore what I am exploring.”
Temperatures Will Skid
Snow flurries forecast for today will end-tonight leaving skies partly cloudy.
Temperatures are expected to toboggan to a low of near 6 tonight and climb into the 20s tomorrow. There’s a chance of snow late tomorrow and again Saturday.
w ★	★
Northeasterly morning winds at 6 to 12 miles per hour will become light and variable tonight.
A chilling 14 was the lowt recording at 8 a. m. today. The mercury registered 26 at 1 p. m.
Plans for a new Oakland County jail, long in the talking stage, were put into motion yesterday by th§ building and grounds committee of the County Board of Supervisors.
The committee recommended that the County Board of Auditors implement a full study of jail facility requirements and hire architects for the project.
Appropriation of funds for detailed planning of a jaU facility in the county service center will be asked of the supervisors’ ways and means committee wihen it meets Jan. 13.
A preliminary study of what a new jail in a fast growing county should be was undertaken about two months ago by Joseph Joachim, director of engineering for the county.
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The present jail at 104 Wayne is 46 y^ars old and generally considered obsolete by county ofpcials.
AGREES ON NEED Last February Daniel T. Murphy, chairman of the board of auditors, agreed with Sheriff Frank W. Irons that better jail facilities were needed and predicted that a new jail would be a future construction project.
Joachim said that a new jail facility was built in Ingham County three years ago for $1.8 million to house 230 prisoners.
Oakland County’s present jail has a 259-p r i s o n e r capacity which Irons terms inadequate because of the county’s projected growth.
In other action yesterday, the boundaries committee recon-mended that $20,000 be appropriated for a total master plan of the service center. This could be completed by the end of the year.
This recommendation also will (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1)
DEADLY COBRA — The new Huey Cobra helicopter to be used in Vietnam will have fangs as deadly as its namesake. Emersmi Electric Co. of St. Louis has developed a weapons system for the 200-mile-an-hour Cobra enabltog firing of 400 grenades a minute and up to 4,000 machine gun
AP Wirtpirato
rounds per minute at the same time. Two grenade launchers or two machine guns can be used ^ separately or in cwnbination. The current Cobra 'version cahies a single rapid-firing six-barrel machtoegun.	.
• BILL S. HUFFMAN
'■m.
PHIUP PRATT
Plane Crash in New Jersey Fatal to Nine
RED BANK, N.J, (AP) - A twin-engine air taxi crashed on takeoff from Red Bank Airport at 6:30 a.m. today and burst into flames, killing the pilot and all eight passengers aboard, acrording to police.
* ★ ★
The plane was owned by the Red Bank Air Taxi. Co., police said.
The taxi service takes passengers from the Red Bank Airport in Monmouth County to New York metropolitan airports.	I
The craft which crashed, police said, was headed toward Kennedy Airport.
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Police identified the pilot as Harry Bishop.
The twin-engine Beechcraft plane crashed in a light rain, with a ceiling of 1,500 feet, officials reported.
INVES-nCATION
George A. Van Epps, chief investigator for the Qvil Aeronautics Board, Eastern Region, left immediately by automobile for Red Bank to head an investigation of the crash.
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The company operates 14 round trips a day between Red Bank Airport and New York. The flight that crashed was reportedly the first of the day. A one-way trip takes 20 minutes.
Dem Is Facing a Contempt of Court Charge
^ Grand Jury^s Legality at Issue in Refusal to Answer Questions
, Democratic State Rep. Bill S. Huffman of Madison Heights was charged with contempt of court yesterday by Oakland County one-man grand juror Philip Pratt.
A former mayor and city councilman of Madison Heights, Huffman was charged after refusing to answer questions about«> alleged payoffs while he was a city official.
The 41-year-old legislator was reelected to his third term in the House ip November. He represents the 66th District.
The first question put to Huffman when he appeared before Pratt yesterday afternoon was: “During your years as a mayor and councilman of Madison Heigtits, did you accept any mondy to influence a vote on a zoning matter brought before the council?”
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Huffman declined to answer on the advice of his attorney, James Renfrew, that the grand jury proceedings are unconstitutional.
OTHER 4 QUESTIONS The other four questions dealt with the acceptance of bribes and any possible connection between Huffman and the Hazel Park Race Track.
The grand jury, Pratt’^ second since July 1965, was initiated last August to investigate alleged illegal activities surroundtog tile race track.
Huffman was arrested by State Police investigators after declining to answer the questions and was taken before Bloomfield Hills Justice of the Peace Jack Baldwin for arraignment before Judge William Beasley on Jan. 17 at 9 a.m. He was released on $500 personal bond.
FACES FINE
If convicted of contempt of I court, Huffman faces a $1,000 (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2)
“Boy! Am I tired. The electricity was off this morning and I had to brush my teeth the old way.”
Gov. Romney Will Keynote Lincoln Day Dinner in City
S'
/■
Gov. Romney will be the key-i»te speaker at the 78th annual Lincoln Day dinner at the Pontiac Elks Club next month.
It will be Romney’s first appearance at a county Lincoln Day program.
Congressman William S. Broomfield of the 18th District and Jack McDonald, Congress-man-blect from the 19th District, also are scheduled to address the 700 persons c x-pected to attend the Feb. 15 event.
Arno Hulet, president of the Oakland Oounty Lincoln Republican Club, the oldest in Michigan, has named county GOP Chairman Joseph Farnham as toastmaster.
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Dinner tickets are $4 a person' and can be purchased from any member of the club or at Oak-
r
GOV. ROMNEY
land County R^Uican quarters in BinningtUttn.
head-


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Asian
THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, JANUARY 5> 1967
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Senate Democratic leader Mike Mansifield’s suggestion that NMlh Vietadmese infiltration be controlled by a defetra line running Into Laos in pldce of the present U.S. bombings received mixed refuses in the Senate today.
Sen. ThMnas J. McIntyre, D-N.H., who talked with President Johnson about domestic problems and Vietnam yesterday, said the Mansfield proposal would mean “giving up one of the aces in the deck.”
“This doesn’t strike me as
a very good idea,” said McIntyre in an interview with UPI. “The one thing that seems to be hurting these people is the bombing of Nerth Vietnam.”
He added that the timing — just when there appeared to, be signs of what he called a “peace feeler” from Hanoi — also weighed against Mansfield’s proposition.
McIntyre’s “peace feeler’’ reference was to a New York, Times interview with North Vietnam Premier Pham Von
Dwig. Some observers interpreted Dong’$ views as a possible softening of Hanoi’s conditions for ending the war, but the State Department and the White House said they saw no apparent change in North Vietnam’s stand.
DEFENSE UNE Mclntrye also said he thought the defensive line stretching across Vietnam and into Laos that Mansfield envisions would require a prohibitively targe number of troops, on the order of 375,000.
But (he proposal won the ap^val of a leading Senate “Dove” on Vietnam policy, Sen. Vance Hartke, D-Ind.
“I think any type ot apiraach warrants every consideration and I would endorse Sen. Mansfield’s idea,” Hartke said in a separate interview.
He added that he believed U.S. officials have nbt done enough in following up what he described as earlier peace feelers from the Communist side.
Hartke, who is now finishing a book on Vietnam policy, said
he was also bothered over “whether the President has been fully apprised of what the pos sibilities are. Either there has been some intelligence the President was nbt given, or un-f(«*tunately it was misuiterpret-ed by the pe<^le h|andllng it,” he said.
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Mansfield said yesterday in putting forth his proposal that such a “defensive line” across the neck of Indochina would be a “better way to stop infiltration from the North than the present continual bombing.”
Answers Critic ' .1 .1'-Says Disputed Iretter
Was Internal Memo
Parking Rule Changes OK'd
The buildings and grounds | committee of the Oakland County Board of Supervisors yesterday ad(^ted a revised set of parking regulations for the county service center and designated the board of auditors as the enforcing agent.
One of the new parking rules specified that the auditors may establish parking fees. The rules all are subject to approval of the County Board of Supervisors.
Presently all parking in the service center is free. Construction work on the new east wing of the courthouse, however, has removed some parking area fw-merly used by both county employes and the public.
The new regulations also specify that vehicles in violation of the parking restrictions may be ticketed or impounded.
Plans for New County Jail Put in Motion
(Continued From Page One)
go to the ways and means committee next week.
A prior master plan was developed 10 years ago but the service center already has grown to file linaits of that plan, according to Joachim.
County engineers as well as consultants would participate in the development of the plan.
Finance Group to Hear Reports
Committee reconunendations and study progress reports are expected tonight at the 7:30 meeting of the Pontiac Finance Study Committee.
The select citizens committee headed by Robert Eldred, chairman, is studying municipal fiscal affairs. Both short-term and long-range rec(Hnmendati(»is are to be made to the City Commission for solving the city’s financial crisis.
NAB SUSPECT — A patrolman points his pistol while grabbing a wounded man moments after a holdup yesterday at a St. Paul, Minn., bar. The man was shot in the legs by police. A wad of currency lies on the
AP Wirtpholo
ground beneath the officer, a spent shotgun shell under the wounded man. A waitress, on the phone when bandits entered the bar, sounded the alarm.
Pratt Indicts Dem Legislator
(Continued From Page One)
fine or one one year in jail or both.
He is the second former Madison Heights city official charged with contempt by . Pratt. The other was Roman , Nowicki,
A Madison Heights druggist Emil Pavlovics also has been charged with contempt of court 'A ★ W
All are represented by Renfrew, and all have declined to 'answer on the same grounds that the proceedings are uncon stitutional.
There was some speculation in Lansing that GOP members of the House mi^ht seize the opportunity and attempt to refuse Huffman the right to take his seat Jan. 11 and thus turn a 55-55 party deadlock into a Re publican majority.
The Weather
Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Variable cloudiness and cold with a chance of occasional snow flurries today. High 22 to 28. Partly cloudy and cold tonight low 6 to 14. Friday: Increasing cloudiness with a chance of snow late Friday. Northerly winds 6 to 12 miles today, becoming light and variable tonight. Outlook for Saturday: Chance of snow.
Todcy In Pontile Lowest temperature preceding D
14		Highest temperature				.. 24	
At 1 a.m.; Wind Velocity 6	m.p.h.	Lowest temperature				15	
Direction; Northeast		AAean temperature				19.5	
Sun sets Thursday at 5;16 p.m.		Weather;	Mostly		sunny		
Sun rises Friday at 8;02 a.m.							
Moon sets Thursday at 1:15 p.m.		Wednesday's		Temperelura Chert			
Moon rises Friday at 3;58 a.m.		Alpena	31	17	Jacksonville	60	36
		Escanaba	19	14	Kansas City	44	24
Downtown Temperatures		Gr. Rapids	27	9	Los Angeles	75	5(
6 a.m.	 U 11 a.m		.. . 23	Houghton	22	10	Miami Beach	81	47
7 a.m	 U 12 m		. 25	Lansing	25	5	Milwaukee	30	27
8 a.m	 14 1 p.m		... 26	Marquette	26	19	New Orleans	53	37
9 a.m.	 16		Muskegon	26	11	New York	39	35
10 a.m	18		Pellston	27	4	Omaha	33	
				Traverse C.	25	7	Phoenix	66	31
One Year Ago In Pontiac		Albuquerque	43	15	Pittsburgh	35	15
Highest temperature	42	Atlanta	44	29	St. Louis	47	20
Lowest temperature 		23	Bismarck	29	0	Tampa	62	H
Mean temperature 		32.5	Boston	36	32	Salt Lake C.	40	29
Weather; bunny		Chicago	29	28	5. Francisco	54	47
				Cincinnati	34	29	S. S. Marie	27	16
Highest and Lowest Temperatures		Denver	54	30	Seattle	42	3:
This Dote In 74 Years		Detroit	25	10	Washington	46	31
S7 in 1939 -6	n 1884	Fort Worth	61	30			
Jobless Londoner Charged in Art Theft
N. Viet Junks, Barges Raked; 2 Planes Lost
SAIGON, South Vietnam (AP) — U. S. Navy pilots claimed a two-day score today of 188 North Vietnamese supply barges and junks destroyed or damaged and reported losing two carrier planes in their latest raids.
The Navy pilots reported hitting 77 more water craft during forays along the North Vietnamese coast Wednesday to add to 111 reported destroyed or damaged on the previous day.
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Other American planes showered Hanoi with 2.2-million psychological warfare	leaflets
Wednesday and scattered 2.6 million more on other areas of North Vietnam.
The leaflets dropped on toe North Vietnamese	capital
warned that if the Communists continue the war in the South, destruction will follow in the North, a U. S. spokesman said. The other leaflets cautioned the North Vietnamese people that their money would become worthless and less as tiie war went on.
The ground war in South Vietnam continued in a lull as it has all this week. Both the U. S. and South Vietnamese military commands reported only minor skirmishes.
LONDON (AP)-Michael Hall, 32, an unemployed Londem bachelor, was arraigned today on charges of stealing eight old masters worth $7 million from
Area Trustee Dies of Wound
Bloomfield Township Trustee Samuel J. Reeve died by a self-inflicted gunshot yesterday, ac-cordihg to Bloomfield Township police. He was proprietor of the Mobil Service Station at Telegraph and Long Lake.
Funeral service will be at 3 p.m. Monday at Bell Chapel of the William R. Hamilton Funeral Home, Birmingham. Burial will be in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy.
Mr. Reeve, '50, resided at 6425 Gulf Vjew, Bloontfield Township. He was a member of the township’s Board of Appeals.
A past president of the Btoom-field Lions Club, he was a member of Birmingham’s First Baptist Church and was active in Masonry.
Surviving are his wife, Cleo E.; two daughters, Mary and Deborah at home; two sons, David L. at home and Lt. Samuel J. Reeve Jr. with the U. S. Army; and two sisters.
the Dulwich Gallery. He denied the charges.
Police indicated they are look ing for two other men and a woman as suspects in history’s biggest art theft. All eight paint ings—three Rembrandts, three by Rubens, one Elsheimer and one Gerard Dou—were recovered and returned to the gallery Wednesday night. They were in good condition.
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The charge was filed against Hall after a long interrogation in which Detective Supt, Charles Hewett told the court that Hall admitted delivering three of the paintings to “a certain address in London.”
Hall denied complicity in the robbery. He told the court that when he admitted delivering the three paintings to a London address “I was tired, hungry and fairly cold.”
Showtri lilllil 40 Snow l'■.vy.1 flo.rin pi»1
boIrtoAnOiocloimloo Wol loOlcoloQ.* Conmll Unl F»,»c«n	r^i
NATIONAL WEATHER — Snow and snow flurries are forecast for the northern and southern Rockies, the northern New England area, file Appalachians and the Great Lakes ragkHi tonight. Colder temperatures are in store for the eastern third of the country and the northern portion of the Plains and Rockies.
Head Injuries Are Fatal to City Woman
Pontiac police today continued their investigation into the death of a city woman who died yesterday at Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital.
Mrs. Ora Boisseau, 67, of 58 Fairgrove died one week after being' iidfnitted to the hospital with head injuries, according to Detective August A. Martinez.
Investigators said an autopsy showed cause of death to be a cerebral hemorrhage.
A pathologist said a blow to the victim’s head could have been caused by either “a flat board” or flooring.
Hospital spokesman said Mrs Boisseau was in an “incoherent and stuporous” condition while at Pontiac Osteopathic.
Martinez said police were told the woman was found lying on the floor in a friend’s apartment in the same building as h^rs.
U.S. Toll Rises Despite Truce
128 Yanks Die, 634 Wounded in Week
SAIGON, South Vietnam (AP) — American casualties in the Vietnam war increased last week although the week included 48 hours of Christmas and New Year truce, U.S. officials reported today.
They said 128 U.S. servicemen were killed in action and 634 were wounded, compared with 105 killed and 574 wounded in the previous week.
The week for which casualties were announced today began at midnight Dec. 24 (Saigon time) and ended at midnight Dec. 31 The C^istmas truce began at' a.m. Dec. 24 and ended at '
а.	m. Dec. 26, and the New Year cease-fire extended from 7 a.m Dec. 31 until 7 a.m. Jan. 2.
South Vietnamese and Com munist casualties both decreased last week, according to announcements today.
The South Vietnamese military headquarters said 146 of its men were killed and 14 were missing, compared with 203 reported killed and 37 reported missing the previous week.
U.S. headquarters reported 882 of the enemy killed and 133 captured last week. Enemy casualties the week before were 1,004 killed and 175 captured.
The report rais^ the unoffi cial total of Americans killed in combat in the Vietnam war to
б,	644 and the wounded to 27 533. Of the Americans reported kUled, 4,770 died in 1966,
James M. McNeely, executive director of the Oakland County Commission on Economic 0^ portunity (OCCEO), today disputed two points in a criticism levied against him yesterday by against him yesterday by Charles \ J. Harrison Jr.
Harrison, a member of the commissicHi’s education committee, said that the committee Tuesday night unanimously adopted his motion critlsizing McNeely fw a letter McNeely sent last June to the Pontiac Board of Education.
“The letter, Harrison said, “indicated that there were no problems in conjunction with the Head Start project.”
McNeely said today that “the letter to the school board” referred to by Harrison actually was a memo to the OCfJEO.
•k -k -k
The minutes of Tuesday night’s education committee meeting also show that Harrison did not make the motion,” McNeely said. “CJharles Tucker did and Harrison seconded it.”
APPLICATIONS REJECTED Last fall, the city school board held off on Head Start, an education program for preschool-ers, because several applica-tiMis for federal fund grants by the school system were rejected.
Absence of a parents’ advisory committee for the program and lack of pupil integration in the ciasses were problems that halted federal funding. .
Harrison termed McNeely’s communication of last June as misleading because he said it indicated no problems.
' k k k Tuesday’s meeting of the education committee was termed successful by both Harrison and McNeely in respect to moving closer to activating the Head Start program.
Birmingham Area News
Resident Accepts Post as Aide to Congressman
BIRMINGHAM - Stephen F, Stodoneyer, 776 A r 1 i n g t o n, plans to quit his position as Republican administrative aslsist-ant in the State House of Rep-' resentatives to become an aide to Ann Arobr’s U.S. Rep.-elect Marvin L. Esch.
Stockmeyer, 25, worked as a field representative for the Republican State Centrd Committee until joining the House GOP staff two years ago.
He was on Gov. George Rom-
Draft Violation
WASHINGTON (AP) -- The FBI reported today its investigations led to conviction last year of 450 persons accused of violating military draft laws almost double the 2S2 convicted in 1965.
The greatest number of con victions in any previous year for which records were immediate ly available was in 1954 when 434 were found guilty. But this figure is for a fiscal year July through the following June and the 450 figure is for calendar 1966 — January through December.
-A-	( ★
In the FBI’s annual year-end report to the attorney general Director J. Edgar Hoover traced the increase in the num ber of draft law violations to the nation’s larger military c( mitment.
Other figures from the Justice Department showed that the number of draft law violations had remained relatively steady since 1962. In that year there were 234 convictions. In 1963 there were 251 and in 1964 there were 227.
State Fears Flood of Vehicle K^ys
LANSING (AP)-Law enforcement officials are worried that advertisements offering to sell Michigan residents master keys! for autos and trucks may lead to an increase in motor vehicle thefts and burglaries, Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley said Wednesday.
k k k
Kelley said an out-of-state firm is flooding the state with circulars offering master keys for Ford and Chrysler products at $4 each and General Motors products at $6 each.
ney’s staff during the 1962 campaign and coordinated the 1966 campaign of Republican candidates fear Congress and the State Legislature.
BIXX)MFIELD HILLS - The third annual pancake sujper at Kingswood Ikhool, Cranbrook will be held ^m 5:30 to 10:30 p.ro. Jan. 14.
Proceeds will go to benefit foreign exchange students under the American Field Service and Youth for Understanding programs.
Chairman Mrs. Howard Fitzgerald will be assisted by Mrs. Charles L. Wilson Jr., Mrs. Charles Gh^som and Mrs. Richard KeOey. Also assisting wfU be Bertha Seifert, Kingswood’s coorfflnator for all foreign exchange student activities.
During the evening there will be dancing in the gymnasium. Ski movies will be shown and pupils from Kingswood and Cranbrook schools will model the latest ski clothes.
Last year, 1,001 persons attended (he dinner. This year’s plans have been made to accommodate 1,200.
Waterford's Lone Dump Is Closed Down
Waterford Township is with^t a dump, indefinitely.
The community’s lone dump, a privately operated facility on Cooley Lake Road near Hospital Road, was shut down yesterday by the Oakland County Department of Health.
The county body ruled the dump was an impnqier operation and that file manager had not complied, as directed, with a recent state act governing refuse disposal properties.
The dump has been operating under an agreement between the owners and toWnship since 1960
k k k
A portion of the bulldozing and fill costs were paid for by the township. Last year, the township budgeted ^,000 for dump expenses.
E. R. Lawson, the township’s director of inspections, urges residents who have been using the dump to contact a garbage collection agency to pick up their refuse, rather than let it accumulate.
Service Slated Saturday for GM Pioneer
Service for a pioneer in automotive engineering, Ormond E. Hunt, will be at 11 a.m. Saturday from the Bell Chapel of the William R. Hamilton Co. in Birmingham.
Hunt, a leading developer of technical facilities for General Motors Corp., died Tuesday after a long illness. He was 83.
Surviving are his wife, Maude; three daughters, Mrs.
C. W. Graham Jr., Mrs. Virginia Berry and Mrs. James Goss; and one son. Eh-. Homer H. Hunt.
Also surviving are three sisters, Vera, Suzanne and Mrs. Agnes H. Parke; a brother, John; and 10 grandchildren. k k k
Hunt, of 1650 Rathmoor, Bloomfield Hills, was an executive vice president of GM at the time of his retrament in ^ptember 1949.
Frederick G. Donner, board chairman of GM, described Hunt’s contributions to the company and the automobile industry as “many and great.” k k k
“He was a pioneering leader in the industry during its tremendous early growth period and lias continued to maintain an active interest in its affairs as a , member of our board of directors.
We shall miss him as a friend and as a counselor.”
Cremation will follow the funeral service. Interment will be in Forest Hill Cemetery, Ann Arbor.
Memorial tributes may be made to the Chancellor’s Club of Oakland University, of which he was a member.
Woman Quits Press Route
continued From Page One)
boys to help her in the outlying areas, but steadfastly held on to her route in town.
LOVELY BOYS’
“They’ve ‘ all been lovely boys,” she said of her helpers, “Tliey used to stop in here to sing and have cookies. k k k
“I’ve tried to t^ll the boys that file papers come first before their other activities, so I hope they do a good job.”
Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St.
Remarkable
Bargains
FOR TODAY - FRIDAY - SATURDAY
2nd FLOOR SPECIALS
Ice-Fishiag.
Tip-Ups
At
Simms — Pay Only
89
Ea.
As shown — wood fitm» with non-freezing metal line reel end tip-up signal flag.
Hey Boys, Did You Get Money For Christmas? Weil, Buy Your Own
^AMT’ Slot-Car Racers
KD-Racer Kits Assembled
$2.99 group has the Lotus, Ford GT, Chevetfe, Lola 7, McKeej Chopafell ond McLaren Elva cars ... the $3.99 group has the 'Bandito' or 'Fanlum' and Super Stock cars. Come, see, buy and save at Simms.
Perforated All Metal
Trash Burner
osr
Take It Home For
As shown — completely perforated trash burner with cover and draft legs insures full burning of trash ond papers safely. Limit I.
60-Second Bonding - No Clamping
Thermogrip’ Electric Glue-Gun
$7.95
Value
599
No clamps, no cleonup... fast, eosy way to bond and seal . . . handy for repairs. Kit includes 7 sticks of thermo-grip. Limit 1 set.
Choice of 0‘HOR’ or <SHOPCRAFT’
3/8" Power Drills
With Geared Chuoke
io*»
Tak* It Home For
II Nerth 1
For po^^%rful rugged drilling, handles jobs requiring greater chuck copadty, greater torque and lower motor speeds. 2.0 amp motors, lightweight aluminum die<aU * housing.
‘-TOOLS 2nd Floor




THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JANUARY 5, 1967
Powell Claims OusfeKMove Is an Anti-Negro Conspiracy
WASHINGTON (AP) - Rep. Adam Clayton Powell charges the attempt to remove him as chairman (tf tlie House Education and Labor C(munittee is a political conspiracy aimed at U.S. Negroes.
From his island retreat in the Bahamas, the Harlem Democrat ism^ a statement Wednesday night blistering his attackers and promising an all-out fight to retain his chairmanship. ★ ★ ★
“A political conspiracy nf enormous dimensions has not only been mounted against Adam Clayton Powell, but against black political leadership, black people and black progress,” he siad.
Powell is due to return to the Capital this weekend. His fate could be largely sealed Monday when the Democrats caucus meets a day in advance of the opening of the 90th Congress.
Although Powell also faces a challenge to his being seated on Jan. 10, the question of his chairmanship should be settled in the Democratic caucus. Several members already have declared their intention to vote to block Powell’s reelection as chairman, including one of Powell’s New York (?olleagues, Democratic Rep. Jonathan B. Bingham,
Bingham said, however, he is not prepared to vote to ^ar Powell from his House seat. He attaOl^ the House seniority system under which he said two Mississippi Democrats, Reps. William M. Colmer and John Bell Williams, would attain im-pwtant committee chairmanships this session.
In his four-page statement, Powell ignored the seating challenge and called the fight over the chairmanship “the only issue in this strug^ie-”
As he has in dealing with pre* vious attacks on him, Powell used the fact of hb being a Negro as a chief w^pon against his critics.
GRAND RAPIDS (UPI) Municipal Judge Louis Simhau-ser was to rule today whether the mother of two young boys who perished in a Nov. 4 fire at tbdr suburban Wyoming home diould stand trial for man-
Mother
Mrs. Irene Ogg, 29, was charged with the death of the 5-year-old son, Williapi, after hjs body and that of his brother F^lh>, 4, were found behind a

Englishman Sends $0 Check for
BRIDLINGTON, England (AP) — Stanley Briggs opened this letter from Britain’s government-owned gas company: “Dear Sir:
“Settlement of the enclosed bill is long overdue. Unless H is settled within seven days your supply of gas wUl be cut off.”
In the i^fflce reserved for the sum owed was a zero.
BriMs wrote out a check to the gas board for nothing and sent it with this letter;
“Enclosed please find my cheque for the sum of no pounds, no shillings and no pence in settlement of my cur-
rent account. I trust that this will satisfy my debt and that my gas will not betiut off.”
The gas was not cut off. Instead Briggs received an apologetic letter from the gas board Wednesday which said:
“We found it was a human error in our computer system,”
“this was the first time we’ve made a mistake of this kind since 1958 and we deal with more than four million accounts a year on the computer.” cheque.”
“We appreciate your sense ol humor and are returning your said a spokesman for the board.
BUZZARD BEATER
Feed the full power of a Husky compact tractor to a rugged 32-inch snow caster and plow up a storm. No belts to slip or fool with. You can start, stqp, change direction of casting chute, raise or lower the snow caster without slowing down — without getting off the tractor. Controls within easy reach for safety, convenience and smooth operation. And when winter is over, Bolens Fast-Switch, matched-to-tractor attachments let you mow, till, seed, haul and more powerfun way. See both.
For Safety^s Sake
Buy SeaFs Tires
Sale! Supertred
6>50xl3 Tubeless Blackwall ALLSTATE Supertred, With Your Old Tire
the
U. S. DisclaimS| Medicare Oath
42-ineh Blade Plows through knee-deep snow for low-cost removal In summer it’s a grader-blade
WASHINGTON (UPI)-About 3.4 million persons not covered by Social Security will no longer have to sign an anti-Communist disclaimer to be eligible f o r | Medicare benefits.
The Justice Department conceded yesterday that the anti-Communist prdvisions of the the Medicare law is unconstitutional.
Solicitor General Thurgood Marshall notified the Supreme Court the government will not appeal a lower court ruling in Los Angeles barring enforcement of the provision.
The ruling, by a special three-judge federal court, was won by Mrs. Alda T. Reed, 65, of Los Angeles, in one of several chal-1 e n g e s being fought by the American Civil Liberties Union.
The section of the law in dispute requires the 3.4 million persons not covered by Social Security to sign an anti-Com-munist disclaimer when applying for Medicare benefits.
Plus 1.83 Federal Excise Tax 'Whitewalls S3 More Per Tire
ALLSTATE Supertred 36-Month Guarantee
Our Best 4-Ply Nylon Cord Tires
•	Extra wide tread, more rubber, much more mileage
•	Safety shoulders for easy steering, better control
•	Built for expressway sustained high speed travel
Tubeless BlackwaU ALLSTATE Supertred Tires in a Wide Range of sizes to fit most cars. P^ial list:	Sale Price with Old Tire	Plus Federal Excise Tax
7.00 or 7.35x14	, 22’*® ■	2.11
7.50 or 7.75x14	2425	2.20
8.00 or 8.25x14	26**	2.36
8.50 or 8.55x14	27«®	2.57
lluCy* /V A j# li/^	s
KING BROS. 1	1	JONG -flaar. m.
PONTIAC RO. at OPDYKE PONTIAC, MICH. Telephone FE 4-1622 and FE 4-9734	1	Pcwrucfio. \h

Sale! Giiar'dsman
6.50x13 Tubeless Blackwall ALLSTATE Guardsman With Your Old Tire
SEARS
Your EYEGLASSES can look fashionable too—
vidiii}; line on yonr lon.-cs. These invisible bifoiiils ^i\e eleiir, forlable .vision in near and far ranges villioul annoying .inin|i, blnr or distortion. Nou yon ran enjoy tlie extra comfort our contemporary eyewear creations brinji you. Come in or )ihone for an appointment.
Plus 1.83 Federal Excise Tax
"WhitewaUs S3 More Per Tire
ALLSTATE Guardsman 30-Month Gnarantee
Famous 4-Ply Rayon Cord Tires
Guaranteed against all failures for the life of the tread, no mileage or time limit. . . Plus 30<^mouth guai’antee against tire wearout.
Safety Shoulders. 4-Ply Rayon Cord. Extra Traction
Tubeless Black Guardsman Tires our most popular tire, available in most sizes. Partial list:	Sale Price •with Old Tire	Plus Federal Excise Tax
6.50x13	14*®	1,83
7.00/7.35x14	17*®	2.11
7.50/7.75x14	1««®	2.20
8.00/8.25x14		2,36
SEARS OPTICAL SERVICES
•	Optical repair or frames replaced while you wail
•	Eyes examined, jilasses filled and lenses duplicated l)v staff optomcirisis
•	Prescription sun ftlasscs are also available
SEARS OPTICAL DEPARTMENT Dr. H. Bronson, Optometrist
No Money Down
On Sears Easy Payment Plan
Pontiac
154 N. Saginaw Phone FE 5-4171
Store Hours: Monday, Thiysday, Friday Saturday 9 to 9; Tuesday, Wednesday 9 to 5:30
Sale! m-Way Special
6.00x13 Tubeless Blackwall ALLSTATE Hi-Way Special, With Your Old Tire
plus 1.61 Federal Excise Tax 'Whitewalls $3 More Per Tire
ALLSTATE Hi-Way Special 24-Month Guarantee Value-Packed 4-Ply Nylon Cord Tires
• Long mileage Dynatuf tread rubber for rugged wear
Traction slot tread design helps grip wet pavement
• Excellent tire for ordinary driving on all roads
	Tubeless BlackwaU Hi*way Special Tire in sizes to fit most cars:	Sale Pricb with Old Tire	Plus Federal Exeise Tax
	6.50x13	12*"	1.83
	7.00x14	1200 1	2.U
	7.50x14	14*"	2.20
	8.00x14	ler	2.36
lion ciiavantf'cd or voiir inonov bark"
Downtown Pontiac Plionr ! K .y-

'*	‘r’’ "'tt'	“'*
■. '#V‘; ■ i'',"-,	,•
This Bir
ByJfAMESE.WACm MEDIA, Pa. (AP) - For a guy who was just aUe to Idl a penguin from a pigeon, l%» been getting a libe^ adiration gbout birds. Also squirreto.
It’s likely to prove an <oqien-sive lesson, too — with me as the pigepn. (me extending into tt|e foreseeable toture.
It ail began as a femi|y project.
a ★	*
We bad notioed a
as Stricfly for the
emrd Aem wiifa a feeding rianpeto!
tion during the winter
There also wasllie bapti|tttobn>' Ipratfcof eaii bind!
fleeting
around for another tmurse.
And wouldn’t It be InDttnattrtoii our kltchoi table and wtoeb enn feathered friends gratefbUp our oftorings m ' ttie landscape? j |
A quidc insp(M|tton Of ,aMdIto nftele feeders — anfi tbPbr
Japanese beetles smd mi ahm'^oat psomptod a deeaioni tti
build one. This came tolAlOr to ; redwood and screws idi»
wtodow and filled with 49
ftst outside thajfe^ig lfke parents seeing their
Onad^t paaiE^ m^ mMAa, with narjc a hint ftoMly oat lUto: tofitoe 'drded Ihwitodhraitol tanked an
a neai% ttetb. ft eonpii|.4iaitos
'Illto nod cttqF ww the big^^ 0ie. a joyous moinmt it ttito wbent the wife, bceathltoa, raced;
about
astudly bad laitoedi (xiithe feed* was taking tmtative
dance of birds in our yard during the summer, tto itods must
be eating the beetle grubs, we	_
concluded, and decided to im- time. It was instiled on atoDimt, Wtotdbafctfaaae^bnpdto.handjlikaibefl^btdaritof'a eairiCTr
houis of Dbddp’i^ pecks at die seed.
first baiw togstiMr for the first ttow.
DARIBI6 JIUG08 A few more toavh fiefiotm 'cmne the next ^dqx,, fliaaaito'jiroBi IboiditiF at^'nic* SSr?)^fiito^ must be away
anytime someone unthinkingly approached thin^lJrix feet (rf the window. Eveiyiw rtodved to be more car^lid^
And then the iiordvgot around
upetidrs to report that a bird to the fratliered world--and to
FULL HOUSE — It got a UtUe crowded recently in the home.of Mr. and Mrs. B. J. Banner of Reservmr, Australia. Adding to the
holiday season were 11 colorful stockings all full of cocker spaniel pups.
Australians Tracking Jet Stream Flow
By SCIENCE SERVICE SYDNEY, Australia—The war against clear-air turbulence (CAT) has begun in Australia vdth Project Topcat.
Recently, a Boeing 727 jet traveling between Sydney and Brisbane ran into CAT at 27,000 feet near the Queensland border.
★ ★ ★
Ibe experienoe, was brief, but die turimleiioe was soch that the 77Tb aiiframe qnenthr had to be throughout.
Congressional Probings to Reach New Peaks ia 67
flights have already been made with specially equipped Canber ra bombers operating out of ihq RAAF’S Avalcm base, Victortor ★ ★ ★
will come as soon as Ctongress convenes January 10 and the House deludes uriiettier to let the Harlem dandy take his seat.
The House admtaiistratiim subcommittee has completed its investigatioD—which Powell boyeottod—and will submit iti rqmrt to the i n c 0 m i n g memberslifp.
The potentially most explosive investigation is the inquiry planned by S^n. Edward V. Long, D-Mo., on bugging by the FBI.
★ ★ *
Long, chairman of the Senate administrative procedures and pw»in<iBri for his Own use some i practices subcommittee, has set no date for hearings.
PAIR INVTTEp He has announced he will invite FBI Director Hoover and;
In Project Tcqicat, sampling i n c i’u d i n g a charge that he
streams and CAT c»rrid(H^.
They move at speeds of more than 100 miles per hour at heights of up to 50,000 feet. From Woomera, Jindivik robot target aircraft are also being used to track CAT,
★ ★ ★
There is another pronounced turbulence level at 55,000 feet.
WASHINGTON (UPI)-Promi-nent names in government and politics — Hoover, McNamara, Kennedy, Dodd, Powell,—promise to lift the drama of coi-gressional investigations to new peaks in 1967.
As Senate and House sleuths prepare for an unusually busy year, it is certain investigations will embroil:
★ * *
•	FBI Director J. Edgar Ifoover and Sen. Robert F. Ken-nwily, D-N.Y., in a first-ever look at “buggtog” by the FBI.
•	Sei. Tbomas J. Dodd, D-Conn., and his financial affairs.
$200,000 in campaign contributions.
★ ★
• Defense Secretaiy Robert S. Results so far indicate toatjjicNuiUtta and a new inquiry
Austrsdia has its own set of jto into the TFX plane, a controver-
sial multipurpose bomber.
★ ★ ★
• Rep. Adam Qayton Powell, D-N. Y., and his free-wheeling management of committee funds, his constant shuttling between Washington and the tropi cal splendors of the Caribbean ★ ★ ★
former Attorney General Kennedy to testii^.
★ ★ ★
In public feuding, Hoover charged that Kennedy authorized the electronic eavesdropping. Kennedy said be did not! know the FBI was bugging.
The U.S. has 12 million vend-An initial "decision on PowellW macdiines.
AT SIBLEY’S miracle mile
HHI-MNIAl
SHOE SALE
file squkrekt.fi a neighbor’s big tlto tord feeder looked
with birds off and landing every |milte. I bought five more p|^s of seed, this batch wtti) »kiir more big sunflower seeds-tkij Ihe l^ fiito
l.v d,
"^v*' ''it A ’/A	★	>1'*'’
That was ‘ Another mista^. The bhifreolored birds promipr bqgao pushing aside the resfto the seed to get at the big se^, knockiog smaller stodk all ofto the grouito and creattog a him. For some reason oto biw refused to eat much of the stoff on the ground, [deferring tha^’in the feeder.	-	" '
FOR MEN
^ FLORSHEIM
Selected Styles
M7” To <19” REGULAR $19.95 to $29.95
WINTHROP - SIBLEY HUSH PUPPIES^
Selected Styles
*8“ T. *10“
VALUESTO »I7.95
FOR WOMEN
RED CROSS and VITALITY
Selected Styles
$000 0 f^^iO
REGULAR $12.00 to $19.00 SANDLER. HUSH PUPPIES® MISS WONDERFUL, WINTER BOOTS
DUeontimmed Style*
$3.90 to $9.90
REGULAR $8 to $20
FLORSHEIM $14.90
Selected Style* Reg> $18 to $20
Sible/s semi-annual sale is famous all over the Pontiac area because of the wonderful values in famous brand shoes. Bring the entire family and save many dollars In this great event.
FOR GHILimEN ... SPECIAL GROUP
Mitt SANDLER	tfitO	tRM
YAMiANtANO NOW ^ f " '
HQ to^	Values	to $8.95
“HICHISArS URSEST FLORSHEIM DEALER”
USE YOUR SECURITY CHARGE QR MICHIGAN BANKARD
MIRACLF MILE SHOPPING CENTER
OPEN EVENINGS TIL 9
FE 84100 South Telegraph at pquare iMke Road

OmR ENDS SATURDAY!
Save ’2 on * ^ eveiy one |
of these ^
REGULARLY 9.99
799
CHARGE
y
ITl
Don’t wait—^'s ^tor ends Saturday! Com«-find all tfm o|rpiianc«t that every homemalcer needs aad wants... all at the same low 7.99! And Ihey’ne ^ Pennerest—top quality you can depend on! Buy for yourself—for gifts!
Steam and dry iron -	'
Select-O-Guide, 17 steam vents;'
Electric sHcing knife - pushbutton control, blade release.
Oven-broiler - tdc^f% guiob broi Is, warms and toasts.
Electric frypan - cooking chbrt, thermostat control.
Electric can opener - leaves smooth edge.	*
SPEQAL BUY!
Extib-big china table Iemmss at an
extro-^e prke!
Imagine! Delicate china lamps that look twice their pri(»... at a Pqnney-low 8.88! Striking lomps in modem, colonial and traditional styling. All have fabric over paper parchment shades, with coordinating trim, 3-way socketo, UL listed, firrished in moss green, tangerine crackle orbeige and while. Prom 3®” to 44f' talL Come take adva ntaige of our tpeded Itanifp buy!'
Quality carpet remnants qi terrilic savings ...
Top buye from famous mills! A great group of wool and nyloN piles. Senged *on all sides; in colors galore. Scatter severgl about yodr home. Hurry!
PENNEY'S MIRACLE
27"x45" to 27"x54" rixes

2 for *5
Store Hours ^ ^
9:30
'•5'. t
/I in’l vlAl i'liivSS, THURSDAY, JANUARY 5, 1967

rAPPUANbcca]
OPEN DAILY 9 <0 9

wrvi MILD •HAT MONEY SAVING fAtSS FOR 30 TEAM, OUT NOT ONE TO.EQUAL THIS 1M7 NEW YEARW EXTIIAY|iOANZAI
Drastic clearance price slashes-the greatest in our history! Everything priced to positively assure us of quickly reduolng Hteraiiy tnountains of merchandise! Everything slashed to al|- , soluteiy save you a bundle on any purchase! See what we have dene to Color TV prices! WE INTEND TO UNDERSELL and OUTSELL ALL COMPETITION. Coma in and see bow much more money
PHILCO 4-SP.AUTO. STEREO HI-FI S«li<|N
I T«AlmiigroutidMtKhabl« tpsak-—„.j^dl WfeAwn oataanaHe racord <hotlipr.	M(|lablA
ISMNOn.1fr ~
we will save you during this January Olearance
Prion F.O.I. doro
RCeWHlRlIJOL AUTO. DRYER
PHILCO^ORD
auto, dryer
Fully oirtooxHI* ***‘*'*‘
LM KTMB. SoHiMowo* dnw". tn*. y«»'» "»«“•
wtinUina *>*'•■	to
door.	1^* ■*<*««« ™
hotpoint DELUXE DRYER
• * .* IV 0,^.1 Two ootomotic yoor's moool»‘
BCA WHIRLPOOL 14-LB. 2-SPEEO
A Modi, 2 eytiM. Glont 14-
srasrr"---'-
daHation.
RCA whirlpool
WRINGER WASHER
bimilv iiio.ForeololB onim.l
lock. Prov. r.«*
PHILCO 2-SPEED 3-CYCLE WASHER
lid. 2 y«>'
„wiea.Proy.y«-"«“‘-
latnn.
^166
$148
ETROITJWEL
it» das range

H0TP0INT30” ELECTRIC RANGE
SUNRAYQAS
eye-level range
1-	’ Fully owtomotic
gsriwk^’ oppliene* llljfcftriiahi. cu«0B..
•ovingsl
Work M»M. Uft-“P •'^***
3*
Wa
M010 CU.
riqerator
2 CU. FT. COMPACT refrigerator
TOP BRAND FM«*ir
hold 282 LBS.
,k,rt ond drowor. ,|»M. Mogn.1 door
(-ytor warronty ono
Fraoior mc*'"’-
<;«.« wvor d».i0"-
'^‘".irtdb ”4''^
’,:bl.^ild control. Koomy door ■torae*-

12V*’ 2-DOOR all FROST FREE
J^JTfoII orldlfc cH.por.
WESTINQHOUSE
WithB«tt®mFr*MW
food.. Swkii-oilt wtaior aawioi. Dolu>«-
16-n. FROST-FREE witli Bottws PrMSW
-----iimnr leWf*^®**^
bottom IrooMT “
Glido-out .hokrw.
142 lb..
■»4	Dolu«*.	M, ^ M
^ foR •)<<•*>	Jb m AM Ml	V
*165

PHILCO-FORD 12» 2-OOOR
nORQE IS CU. FT. UPRIOUT FREEZER

TRANSISTOR QE AM-AM WALKIE-TALKIE TRANS. RADIO
WlroloH 2nwy communi- Poaotfal 10 trontiitora. cation. Ruggod. With bat- Battoiy Mnrar circuit. Eor-lorio. por poir.	phono jock. A.F.C.
SUNBIAM Etao. Alarm Clock.......
PROCTOR 4-tliea toastar........,$8.97
REOINA ElacMo bream ...........4IMT
ELECTRIC Blankat. Oaubla bad , . .$5.99
PROCTOR Staam-Dry Iren .........49.97
SUNBEAM Hair Dryar. MD-14 .... 410.49
SUNBEAM Parlabla hand mixar.....47-11
BE Staam-Dry Iren...............$7.31
BATHROOM Seala. Atiraetiva....  ,$1.74
PNILOO Gtran. poekat radio......$4.77
BE AM-FM Tram. Radio............$14.77
BEHERAL ELECTRIC ahow 'n' toll.. .$1444
DORMEYER OS CARHIDGE NANO MIXER TAPE RRQROBI
UghtwM^er eonpoctr 3‘	0 ewainisle^ IptsiMr plevp
•ipcBdls far biNtinjh wlup* lhMHMNe»«(MiiiMMlHiMw pinsr mixibt.	»to<H* Wttli asceinrien
$4973
BE AM-FMUbokradia ........... $17.77
SUNBEAli MtWbthawrb. No. 711.. .$11.11 SUNBEAM MM«» niBMiV No. 888 .. .$32.11
HOOVER Wauua wHH tM9a..........$26.88
WAUtE-TRUNR, par mnir ...... .$9.61
SUNBEAlHIMUiiFfyiian...........$11.11
PNILOO AhFM Trans, radio.......$13.86
SUNBEAMElae.knife.............$10.99	.
LADY EMPRE$S Hair Dryer.......$5.97	»KSu
WESTiNQHOUSE Toaster...........$1.99
IRONINQ PAD, Cover sot..........28c,
LAUNDRY Baakats..................2Sc
RCA ViaOR COLOR PRICE SAAASH
Danish modern. Ractanguiar liim tuba. Genuine* wraod veneers and toiidi. Automatic color clarifier. Simplified color tuning. "Rare-Earth" photphors tube. All channel UHF/VHF. 180 sg. in. picture area. Just $319 at Highland! Why pay a lot more elsewhere!
NDW DNLY
«3I9

PHILCO-FDRD WITH UHF/VHF
Lightwaieht with big aet gerform-qnc« fsaturai. Conv«fiient front controli. Sound-out-frent. AM aa-chonnel UHF/VHF tuning.
MOTDROLA WITH UHF/VHF
Brand n«w *^odat" mndal. U|>-front antonna. Front controls ond sound. Handle built-in oil side fop easy toting. Solid elate feeforee. 74 sq. In. plx
nCA VIQIOR WITH UHF/VHF
chann«l UHF7VHF tuning. Top front sound and conlreti. Built-in emtGitna oMuei eorryiitf hondfo.
area.
*87
ZENITH COLOR TV
OENERAL ElibTRIC UHF/VHF PORTABLE
A lemariMbfo ptk* for this b*g sereM ZENITH color t«t. 265 sq. in. picture area. Smart tobfo model cabinet/
TOP BRAND COLOR TV
Now 1967 medof. Roctongidor slim tubo. **Roro>Eorth‘* phosphors. -UHra-sItm docorolor cobt* net. UHF/VHF. 295 eq. in. pfo
MOTOROU COLOR TV
Gmuiiw Danlih wolnul vmtaie
and wiidk Rattan grille and goM
trim, aa- nctanevtartaba. OHF/ $579. Sava $102.
$290	$375	$477
Tndy portoblo. The "Adwenturor^ le slim ond light w^ht. Front controls and souinL UHF/VHF 74 sq. in. pix oroo.
WESTINGHOUSE WITH UHF/VHF
UltaMlIm «bin.t. UHF/VHF. S^id slofo powor for longer life. Handy fvoiit coaitreli. Front •pooker. Howdio ond ontenne.
NIOTQflOLA Wiffi: UHF/VHF
CMofoC rghia.t . . . (not li
oU
188
172 tg. in. fix ana.
. yri hn; lining cantnl..	timi IHI> b>nl.
Dlnpp.ntfgi> hondlt. All 82-choonot UMftVHF. S«lld riot. racUtiM. 17a aq. In. pixana.
INCREDIBLE OFFER! BUT TRUE!
For a limitecfcqjgpe only! You con get this Admiral persbnal portable for only
$117
WHEN YOU PURCHASE M
ADMIRAL
MOTOROLA STEREO COMBINATION
RCA VICTOR STEREO COMB.
WESTINGHOUSE STBRfiO COMB.
With comMnotion AM-NA radio. 4-spood outemotic chongor. Elegant furniture of wolnut
A roil-ofovnd stereo Hi-Fi. Combination with AM-fM, FAA-steree radio. Solid state. Contemporary styled woinirt foitsh.
CoNibieeSoev'Oteree HhFi with AM-Fbb rVMI alSMee radie. Beoutiful ContompDorary decerotorcobinet.
$127	$169 ^110
COLOR TV HOAAE THEATRE
^HIGHLAND'S LOW JANUARY SALE PRICES
Denith Modem. Genuine wdnuh vanaan and
IIS n	“"*• •»•«»
ni-M, AM-FM, FAA-itnreo radio. 8 ipnalnra. 295 iq. in. pix orea.
RCAViCTDR
CONSDLETV.
Wood console with scolpturodl legs. Ouolity RCA Victor New Vie-to top perfermonco chossie. Shorp pictures on oil UHF/VHF ohoonols. 2t2 eq. bu pix oroa.
COLOR TV COMBINATION
ZENITH
LOWBOYTV
Combining color TV, storeo Hi-Fi ond AM-FM rodio. Solid state A.F.C. UHF/VHF. Contemperery. 26Ssq.in.pixoroa.
All chcmtbol UHF/VHF. Spotlito> dial; ^wah-pull off-on velum* coRltol. Hondcnifted chlMuiied Prow. ywHr'o mndibi 28S iq/ io^
For Months We've Worked With Admiral to Develop and Bring You This Spectacular Offer!
We Urge You Not to Miss It!
FREE DELIVERY
$163	$447	^49
Italian Privinclal. Gnnuina pnean vennen and xolidx. Rectangvlor color TV, tolid xtata ttareo FM-AM, FM radio. Stnrao Hi-Fi with 8 tpeakert. 296 iq.ie. pix area.
FREE 90-DAY SERVICE CONTRACT
Also availebli in other furniture styles and finishes.
135. ?o1b.'‘tl!!S' «2Si ■
Si *dh«iy,
670 lb«. nnn.n toon.
light. Door lock. Intariof ngn,. Gllda-ovt ba.koH,
165 lb». Lib otriTia-*" baital. Powot •o.o*.
WB INTHIO TO UNMNeSILL JU9» OMTSUL AU COMPETITION
■lain eritpor. w»..r — -	Gllda-aW ba«kat».
•179 OW.JH*
THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. JANUARY 5. 1967
AT&T Report Provocative
MARKETS I
The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by th’m in wholesale package lots Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Friday.
Produce
Follows Vigorous Rally
Invasion Chief
Active Stock Mart Advances
FRUITS
Apples, Oelicious, bu...............
Apples, Delicious,	Red, bu.	A50
Apples, McIntosh, bu................3.25
Apples, Jonathan, bu.	3.50
Apples, Northern Spy, bu............3 00
Apples, Cider, a^jal. '	  2.75
vegetables
Beets, topped, bu................  $2.00
Cabbape, Curly, bu............. . 2.50
Cabbape, Red, bu. ,................. 3.00
Cabbage, Standard, bu.	2.75
Carrots, Cello Pk., 2 dz............ 1.70
Carrots, topped, bu.................2.00
Celery, Root, oz.	.............. 150
Horseradish, pk. bsk. .............. 3.00
Leeks, dz. bch ................. ... 2.50
Onions, dry, 50-lb. bag ............ 2.75
Parsley, root ...................... 2.00
Parsnips, Vz bu. ................... 2.00
Parsnips, Ceiio Pak.................2.00
Potatoes, 50 lbs....................1.75
Potatoes, 20 lbs.	..................75
Radishes, black, Vz	bu.............2.00
Squash, Acorn, bu................... 1.25
Squash,	Buttercup,	bu..............1.25
Squash,	Butternut,	bu..............1.25!
Squash,	Delicious,	bu..............1.25
Squash, Hubbard, bu.
Turnips. Topped
GREENS
Cabbage, bu.......................
LETTUCE AND GREENS
Celery Cabbage, dz.................. 1.75jAbboll Lab 1
I ABC Con
NEW YORK (AP)-The stock market advanced in active trading at the opening today.
The list was following through on the vigorous late rally of Wednesday which converted a loss into a sizable gain on average.
★ ★
Opening blocks included:
Chrysler, up Vi at 33% on 7,800 shares; American Telephone, up at 54% on 4,000,
and Bethlehem, up % at 31 on 2,600.
Joy Manufacturing opened on 10,200 shares, off % at 24%. GE GAINS
Boeing added % at 67 on 2,300 shares. General Electric .also gained %, rising to 89% on 2,200 shares.
General oMtors rose 1 to 69% on 10,200 shares.
Ford opened on 2,000 shares, up Vi at 41Vi.
United Air Lines advanced UA to 60 on 11,000 shares. UNCHANGED
Glen Alden was unchanged. Du Pont dropped Vd and Johns-Manville Vs.
Ling - Temco - Vought spurted 2% to 85 on 12,000 shares.
Wednesday the Associated Press Average of 60 Stocks rose 1.9 to 294.7.
Prices advanced on the American Stock Exchange.
The New York Stock Exchange
2.50
2.00'
Poultry and Eggs
DETROIT POULTRY DETROIT (AP)—Prices paid per pound tor No. T live poultry: Heavy type hens 19-20; roasters heavy type 24-25; broilers and fryers 3-4 lbs. Whites ISVj-l?; Barred
NEW YORK (AP) - New York Stock'
1.25: Exchange selected	morning	prices:	;
----	-	iGtA&P	T.20a
----A----	jGt Nor	Ry 3
Sales	NetiGt West FinI
(hds.) High	Low	Last	Chg.	GtWSug	T.dOa
3	45	45	45	.	Greyhnd	.90
5 17% 17% 17% -f- %'GrumAirc lb 5	38%	38%	38%	—	Vb	OulfMO	2.60a
1	16	16	16	.... Gulf Oil	2.20
17	52Vb	51%	51%	-f-	Va	GulfStaUt .80
55 ,31 30Va 3CP/4 + %
3	65%	M%	65%	4-	%
20 27% 273/i 27% + %'Ham Pap .90 12 8%	8	8	+ %iHeclaM 1.15e
56% 57	+ % Hertz 1.20
Rocks 23-24; ducklings 31.
DETROIT EGGS
ACF Ind 2.20 AdMillis .40b Address 1.40 Admiral ,50 Air Reduc 3 AicanAlum 1 Alleg Cp .20e AllegLud 2.20 Allied C 1.9Cb AlliedStr 1.32
I Allis Chal 1 Alcoa 1.60 : Amerada 3
dozen by first recelve'rs (including U.S.): [AmAirlin 1.50 Whites Grade A jumbo 45-47; extra large!Am Bosch .60 42V2-45V2; large 41-43V2; medium 34-37; i AmBdest 1.60 small 27-30; Browns Grade A jumbo!Am Can 2.20 41-42; medium 34-35''a.	lAmCyan 1.25
CHICAGO BUTER, EGGS	A Enka 1.30a
CHICAGO (AP) — Chicago Mercantile!aitiFPw 1.16
50 33"a 334a 33% + Vz 9 23	23	23
62Vz;
ing prices unchanged 92 A 65%; 90 B 63Vz; cars 90 B 65'/.; 89 C 63.
Eggs wreak; wholesale buying prices unchanged to 1 lower; 70 per cent or better (Jrade A Whites 37; mixed 37; mediums 33'/z; standards 33'/z; checks 32
CHICAGO POULTRY CHICAGO (API—(USDA)--Live poultry Wholesale buying prices unchanged; roast
Livestock
DETROIT LIVESTOCK DETROIT (AP) — (USDA)-Cattle 300;
950 to 1200 pound 25.50 - 26.25; mixed, good and	choice	25.00	-	25.50;	good 23.00 - I Atchison	1.60
J5.00,	lAtICLine	3a
Hogs 100; one and two 200 to 220 pound Atl Rich 2.80 barrows and gilts 20.75-21.25; others not!Atlas Corp tested.	jAvco Cp	1.20
Vealers 75; a few high choice apd Avne! .50b prime 30.00-33.00;	choice	35.00-30.00.	iAvon Pd	1.20
Sheep 300; a tew lots choice and prime:
90 to 1)0 pound wooled lambs 23.00-23.00; cull to good slaughter ewes 6.00-10.50.
Treasury Position
WASHINGTON (AP)-The cash position of the Treasury compared with corresponding date a year ago:
Dk. 29a 19M Dec. 29, 1965 Balance—
S 6,03X461,821.31 S 6,644,921,059.45 Deposits Fiscal year July 1—
69,700,270,068.04	57,919,479,841.82
Withdrawals Fiscal Year—
3,387,600,700.30	69,040,502,154.45
X-Total Debt-
330,140,670,369.58	322,468,868,247.33
Gold Assets—
13,159,098,546.27	13,734,049,402.77
X—Includes $266,204,729.26 debt not subject to statutory limit.
American Stock Exch.
NOON AMERICAN
NEW YORK (AP) - American Stock Exchange selected noon prices:
Sales	Net
(hds.) High Low Last Chg. 17 32	30% 31	-1%
20% 20% 20% + %
AerojetG .SOa AjaxMag .lOe ArkLGas 1.50 Asamera Oil AssdOM & G AtiasCorp wt Barnes Eng BrazllLtPw 1 Brit Pet .55e Campbi Chib Can So Pet Cdn Javelin Cinerama Ctrywide RIt Creole 2.60a Data Cont
.05r
1 40	40	40
10	3% 3 1-16	3%+1-16
20	9%	9%	9%
ils
EquityCp Fargo Oi Felmont Oil Flying Tiger Gen Plywd it Giant Yel .60 Goldfield Gt Bas Pet Gulf Am Cp Hycon Mfg Imper Oil 2a Kaiser Ind Mackey Airl McCrory wt MeadJohn .48 Molytxten NewPark Mn RIC Group Scurry Rain Sbd W Airlin Signal OiiA i Sperry R wt Statham inst Syntax Cp 40 Technicol .40 UnControl .20
5	53'4	5%	5% 	
76	3%	3Ve	3.'/4 	
1	1'/*	1%	1 »/4 ...
5	33%	32%	33'/a + F6
3	7%	7V2	7Va + Vb
11	3»%	3Vb	3’/b — %
122 11-16		2% 2 11-16-M6	
1	8%	8V4	8V4 - Vb
117	45%	43'x	43% —1%
51	9	8%	8% + '/4
30	7H	7%	77/8+1-16
2d	7H	2*4	2'/4 ... .
12	2<a	2'4	2'4 - V'B
6	6%	6^'b	6% - %
10	14' 8	13%	14% + %
1	52%	52%	52% — '4
154	9’b	91'j	9% + V4
7	9V?	9^8	9'/3 - V4
3	3''6	3%	3'8 + >B
18	23%	23%	23% - '4
63	61%	58%	59''b -2' 3
34	5	5^8	5% + '8
10	I'b	I's	I'b
39	18’*3	18'4	18'4 - 'B
5?	25'3	25%	25'4 - %
10	26^8	26'b	26'4 + Vb
220	V	8' 3	8^8 - '/2
2	23%	23%	23% .
157	71%	70	70% -Tb
,sn	8%	8	8 —
74	5		5
The	Associated		Press 1967
Calif Pack 1 CalumH 1.20 CampRL .45a (tamp Soup 1 CaroPLt 1.34 CarrierCp 2 CarterW .40a Case J1 CaterTr 1.20 CelaneseCp 2 Cenco Ins .30 Cent SW 1.50 Cerro 1.60b Cert-teed .80 CessnaA 1.40 Champ S 2.20 Ches Oh 4 ChiMil StP 1 Chi Rl Pac ChrlsCraft 1b Chrysler 2 CIT Fin 1.60 CitiesSvc 1.80 CocaCola 1.90 Colg Palm 1 CoinnRad .60 CBS 1.40b Col Gas 1.36 ComICre 1.80 ComSolv 1.20 Comw Ed 2 Comsat ConEdls 1.80 ConElecInd 1 ConNGas 1.60 ConPow 1.9Cb Contalnr 1.30 Coni Air .80 Cont Ins 3 Cont Oil 2.60 Corn Pd 1.70 CorGW 2.50a CoxBdeas , .50 CrouseHd .80 CrowCoi 1.87t Crown Cork CrownZe 2.20 Cruc StI 1.20 Curtis Pub Curtiss Wr 1
Dan Riv 1.20 DaycoCp 1.60 Deere 1.80a Delta Air 1 DenRGW 1.10 DetEdis 1.40 Det Steel .60 DiamAlk 1,20 Disney .40b iDist Seag 1
I ,	,	. i DomeMln .80
Stocks of Local Interest goug^Airc ^
Figures after decimal points are eighths'oraperC 1.20 Dressind 1.25
OVER THE COUNTER STOCKS Duke Pw 1.20 (Juotations from the NASD are repre. i	5-75e
seritative inter^lealer prices of APProx'- nvnamCo' 30 mately II a.m. Inter-dealer markets I ' change throughout the day. Prices do not include retail markup, markdown or EasI Air .15g commission.
Bid Asked! EatonYa 1.25
2.5	2.7 EG&G .20
R ,	9 fl! ElBondS 1.72
12 0 t2 4!EIP»S0NG 1 nxlEmcrEI 1.50 ‘5 otiEnd Johnson
19.2	19.5, ErieLack RR
17.6	18.3| gtnyicorp .60
12.3	U.OjEvansPd .60b
9.5	10.0 Eversharp
17.3	18.2
21.3	22.2
13.6	15.2
AMT Corp.
Associated Truck Boyne
Braun Engineering Citizens Utilities Class A Detrex Chemical Diamond Crystal Frank's Nursery Kelly Services Mohawk Rubber Co Monroe Auto Equipment North Central Airlines Units Satran Printing
scripto ..............
Wyandotte Chemical
MUTUAL FUNDS
FairCam .75e
5.3	5.6
• Hil
.30#
Affiliated Fund Chemical Fund Commonwealth Stock Dreyfus
Keystone Income K-l Keystone Growth K-2 Mass. Investors Growth Mass. Investors Trust Putnam Growth Talevlslon Electronics Wellington Fund . Windsor Fund
<1A nn.Faosteel Met 'r?!Fedders .70e ‘-^iFedDStr 1,70 23.3 23.2, Ferro Cp 1.20 Filtrol 2.80
8.70	9.391 FoodFair .90
5,82	6.361 FordMol 2.30
10.46 11.33! Fore Dair .50 15.07 16.37'FreepSul 1,25 10,78 11.78| FruehCp 1.70 8.69	9,47!
16.61 18.05 ceriAnilF .30
New York Stocks of Michigan Interest §en/y[j[i5 ? 50 Allied Sup .60	5	11'/»	H'/»	ll'/»	+	% GenMot 3.55e
Am Seat 1	2	177/8	17%	17'.8	-f	%	GenPrec	l.SO
Clark Eq 1	2	21'/4	21%	21'4	+	'/<	GPubSvc	,38g
Cont. Tel .52	9	26'3i	26	26''e	-	Va	G PubUI	1.50
Cop Rng ,50b	2	SO’/e	SO'/,	50"s	-	%	GTel El	1,28
Dene Cp 2.20	2	37%	37	37%	4-	'/z	Gen Tire	.80
(Sen AnMIne .30 35 20	19% 19’8 Ga Pacitic lb
OcneKO 1.40	1	25%	25%	25%—	% Gerber Pd 1
GlWden 1	14	2OV4	20	2OV4	-f	Vi;Gillette 1.20
Gf G WN I 25b 157 32Va 31% 31 Vj — l%iGlen Aid .70 Howard J	3	36%	35%	35%	—	%; Goodrich 2.40
^rvoma .30b	33	28Vj	28%	2 %	—	% | Goodyr 1.35
Wripl Corp 1	11	32Va	32	32	-	V2iGraceCo 1.30
Wtdtas 1	3	16%	18%	18>/4...siGranitCS 1.40
Wolv W.W. .50	7	14%	14%	14%	-	Va'GrantWT 1.10
Am Hosp .50 AmInvCo 1.10 Am iMFd .90 AMet Cl 1.90 Am Motors AmNGas 1.80 ■AOptic 1.35b ; Am Photoepy 'Am Smelt 3a
wnoiesare ouymg pncfs un(.iiari!|^tru> 'uas»i-,^I^	on
ers 23-25; special fed White Rock fryers Ifi	: Am Tob 1.80
'AmZinc 1.30a Ampex Corp Amphenol .70 Anaconda 5e Anken Chem ArmcoSt 3 Armour 1.60 ArmsCk 1.20a Assd DG 1.40
22% 22% + % 36	76	75%	75%	+	%
16	77%	77Vj	77Va	+	%
25 69% 69V4 69Vi .........
1	20%	20%	20^vb	+	Vi
5	85%	85Vj	85'/2	+	V2
7	47%	47%	473-i	+	'/0
197	30%	3OV4	3OV2	+	Vi
7	39	38%	38%
5	31%	31%	31%	+	%
1	17%	17%	17%	+	V«
5	80	79%	80	+	%
47% 47% + V2
3	16% 16% 16% — %
14	14%	14'/2	14%	+	%
31	43V2	43	43V2	+	'/4
26 7% 7V4	7% + %
28	3BVi	373/4	38V4	+	%
6	72	71%	72
4	6	6	6	..
60Vb -
6	60%	60Vb
6	18	173/4	18
65	54%	54%	54V?	+	'8
41	32%	32	32'i	+	V4
1
40
5 20	19% 20
81V2	81
10	123/4	12
29	49Vi	49
16	32	32	32
18	47V4	47 V4	47Vi + %
81'/2 + 3/4 12% -j-1 49»/4 + %
1 51
51
51
Kaiser Al 1
KayserRo
Kennecott
74 28V4 28'/8 2814 -f- V4	,
1	67	67%	67%	-f	% KernCLd 2.60
5	85'/.	85Vi	85'/.	-	'/.;Kerr Mc 1.40
48	2’/.	2:)4	2+.	| KimbClark 2
12	23H	23'/.	2351	+	'/a Koppers 1.40
6	17r/a	17%	W/s	+	^^Kresge 80
28	ei'.'z	81'.'.	81'/z	+	'^zlKroger 1.30
—B—
BabcokW 1.25 Balt GE 1.52 Beaunit .75 Beckman .50 Bel,I How .50 Bendix 1.40 Benguet BetiiStl 1.50a Boeing 1.20 BorgWar 2.20 BrIggsS 2.40a Brunswick BucyEr 1.60a Budd Co .60 Bullard 1 Bulova .60b Burl Ind 1.20 Burroughs 1
8	36	357i	35%	+	'/i
1	34'/a	34%	34%	+	%
11	135b	13'/.	135a	,
37	45'<4	45	45	+	54
27	54%	54SS	54%	-F	5i,
18	37	365/.	36/8	_	'/a
25 a
25'e	25/ti
139	32'-.	31',<	32'ei	-H'/i
45	675s	67	675a	+ %
3 385/4 38 3854 -F '/.
1	42	42	42	,,
18	7'z	7'/4	75b	+ '/4
11	255a,	245'.	255a	-Fl'/a
19	1 354	1 358	135/.	+	i/z
5	17	1654	17	-F	'h
2	22'4	22','.	22'/.	+	Vz
1	28'/4	28'/.	28'/.	-F	%
58	85%	8555	85'/b	+	'/a
_c—
8	27'/z	27'/.	27'/z	+	'/.
,21	325.	32'/z	3254	-F	54
2	1954	195/.	195/,	+	1/4
16 29	28% 29	+ '/z
1	43'/z	43'/z	43'/z	. .
3	765a	7655	765a	+	'k
5	1354	1354	1354	+	V.
6	20%	20''z	207'a	-F	7'a
15	3555	35'.4	35','.	-F	55
9'	495/a	49	4955	-F	%
5	36''z	36'/z	36'/z	+	'/z
6	45'/z	45','z	45'/z	—	'/z
32	39'/.	38	387'a	+	5/.
14	137'a	13'/z	13%	-F	5.
8	3S'/z	38'/.	38'/z	-F	5/.
4	36%	36%	36!'a	..
1	625,4	625/.	625/.*-	1,5
26	37''a	3755	375a	-F	'/4
10	19	187'e	18%	-F	'/z
5	22'/a	22	22'/a	-F	'/>
165	34	33t/z	3355	-F	55
220	29'/z	29'/.	29'/4	+	Vz
31	45	45	45	-	55
16	8B'4	BB'.'»	88'/.	-F	Vi
28	285'<	2B'/z	28'/z	-F	'4
45	58'/5	57	57'/z	-	'4
18	61'/4	6054	61'/.	-FI'/.
4	2655	26'/z	2655	-F	'/a
4	26'/a	26'/a	26'A	+	'/a
13 3955 39'/. ,3955 -F % 30	5055	50'/z	5055	.
12	43'/z	43'/.	43V.	-F	'/z
28	3255	3255	3255	—	Vt
16	3755	37'4	3755	......
10	29'/5	29'/a	29'/5	.......
5	495/4	49V.	495/.
9	27'/z	27'/z	27'/z	-F	'/a
10	77'/4	76'/z	77'/.	-FI'/.
1	80' b	80'/5	BO’.'s	-F	55
12	69	69	69	—	’/.
1	46'4	46'/.	46'/.	......
4 307'.'a 307'/5 307','b
2	3554	355/.	3554	-F	'.4
x3	IB'4	18'4	18'4	-F	'-'z
25	41''z	41'.	4U'z	-F	54
14 47''4 47	47”5 -F
4	45’,	4554	455-4	-F	55
16	225,	22"z	22','z	-F	'/.
R	l|5a	1!',	1155	-F	'5
—D—
6 20% 20% 7m +
2i
70U + ’ + 1V
7 24
25 119	118% 119
3 173/4 17% 17%
5 32% 32% 32%
22 12% 12 12 10 323A 32% 323/4 -f 33 793^
7 31’? 31'4 Ji 1	41V?	41’/2 41
37 46’/? 46	46
48 61% 61	61
20% 21
Occident ,80b OhioEdis 1.20 OlinMath 1.80 Otis Elev 2
•enk xni-iOutb Mar .80 79% +3%|Q^ens|,| i 35 3 ; lOxfrdPap .80
9 29'/? 29'
7 41
41
16 150% 149% 150
—E—
x64 81'4 80' z 80"z a-25 12675 128'/z 1285s -F 12 24'4 24"
30 49'/z 49 10 32	32
,,	.,,18	18'/, -F y4jp(,.|pD 3 40a
4	60'/z	60'/z	60'/z	-F	'/!!phi|a El	1.48
2	22'/.	22	22	, , I phil Rdg	1.20
^	1 PhilMorr 1.40
19	3355	33'/.	33'/.	-F	''xIphillPet	2.20a
36	25'/z	25	25	+	%>itneyB	1.20
5	1 755	1 7','b	17%	-F	Fa, pi,Pie,a	j oo
____p_____	! Pills Steel
'J?	' 'lB55 'l8% +''%!Proclei'' ci^'o
4	13%	13%	13%	+	i/i'Pullman	/.bu
6	54%	54Vli	54V?	—	Vi
5	26'/2	26V4	26%	+	^
7	42	41%	42	+	%
6	45%	45%	45%	+	y*
27	16'/i	15%	I6V4	4-	%
12	17	163/4	17	■+■	Vi
2 49'^'8 49^'s 49% + % 2 71’4 71V4 71V
33 41’
14%
30V? + Vi 14% -f Vt 41 Vj 4- % 24 19% 19% 19% 4- V2
37'/4 37V4 ......
25% 25% .........
-(1 —
4 22	22	77
85 20^4 38 49’'3 53 89%
20%	2OV2	4- %
49V4	49’/j	4- %
89V?	89%	+ ' 7
71%	72%	4-1 Vs
xl	59V?	59V3	59V?	— %
145	69%	69%	69%	4-1
9	61%	61	61%	4-	Va
4	5%	5%	5% 4- %
31 Vs
37 45% 47 32% 37 4l’i
45% 45% 4- ’'i 32'2 32% 4- %
IB 20% 20'/4
Safeway l.lO StJosLd 2.80 SL SanFran 2 StRegP 1.40b Senders .30 Schenley 1.40 Schering 1 Schick
SCM Cp .40b Scott Paper 1 Seeb AL 1.80 SearIGD 1.30 4- '/81 Sears Roe la
....!Seeburg .60
41	... Serve!
49	4- V3 Sharon StI 1
20% 4- % Shell Oil 1.90 21 .'ShellTra' .87e
Sales	Net
(hds.)	High	Low	Last	Chg.
29	28%	28%	28%	4- Va
55 Va	55	55Vj	+1
40
8% 8%
384b 38% 384b
22	17%	17%	17%	4*	%
23	'52'%	52V4	52%
1	64Vt	64%	64%	4-	1/2
15	581/2	581/2	58V?	4-	%
15	261/2	26’/2	26%	4-	%
HewPack Hoff Electron Holid Inn .50 Honeywl 1.10“ Hook Ch )A0 House Fin 1 Housf LP 1 Howmet Cp 1 HuntFds ,S0b Hupp Cp .T7f
IdahoPw 1.40 Imp Cp Am tngerRand 2 inland StI 2 InsNoAm 2.40 InterlkSt 1.80 IntBusM 4.40 Int Harv 1.80 Vjjlnt Nick 2.80
Inti Packers Int Pep 1.35 Int T&T 1.50 ITE Ckt lb
JohnMan 2-20 JohnsnJ 1.40a JonLogan .80 Jones L 2.70 Joy Mfg 1.25
5 311/2 31 Vi 311/4 ....
3	47%	47%	47%	—	Ve
21	40%	40%	40%	4-	Vi
20	50%	50	504b	4-	%
8	10%	l(P/i	103/i	4-	Vi
2	404b	40%	40%	4-	%
26	66	65%	66	-fl%
7	37	37	37	—	Vi
1	29%	29%	29%	—	Vb
15	48%	48Vs	48Vs	.
25	47%	471/2	47%	4*	%
TO	22%	22Vb	22%	.
8	3%	3%	3% «
4	33%	334b	334b	-	4b
6	54b	54a 54 b — Vb
15	384i	38%	38%	—	Vi
57	34%	33%	34Vi	4-1
1	85%	85%	85%	4-	1/2
13	27%	27V2	27%	4-	%
16	365% 365	365	....
28	35'/e	35	35Vs	4-	Vi
23	86	86	86	4-	Vi
10	8%	84b 8% 4- Vi
18	25%	254b	25%	...
77	74%	74%	74%	4-	4b
3	361/2	36'/2	36'/2	4-	'/•
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 .60a StdBrand 1.30 Std Kolls .50 StOilCal 2.50b StOilInd 1.70 StOilNJ 3.30e StdOllOh 2.40 St Packaging Stan War 1.50 StuffCh 1.60 SterlDrug .90 StevenJP 2.25 Studebak .25e Sun Oil lb Sunray 1.40a Swift Co 2
Tampa El .60 Teledyne Inc Tenneco 1.20 Texaco 2.60a TexETrn 1.05 Tex G Sul .40 Texasinst .60 Textron 1.20 Thlokol .35e Tim RB 1.80a TransWAir 1 Transamer 1 Transltron TrI Cont .92e TwnCen 1.20b
Sales	Nat
(hds.) High	Low	Last	Chg.
16	474b	46V2	47%	4-	%
10	62%	62	624b	4-	%
47	47%	47Vt	471/2	+1
54	51%	511/4	51%	4-	%
28	24	23%	24	4-	%
2	391/2	39%	391/2	4-	1/1
12	29%	28%	29%	-	Vb
12	32%	31%	31%	—	Vi
31	28	271/2	273/i	-	Vi
42	43%	43%	43%	4-	V2
13	17	16%	17	..
123	29’/2	29	29'/b	--	%
2 19
19
19
UMC Ind .60
7 47% 47% 47% - ’/s 1 1671/2 167’/2 167Va 4-1V2 3	404b	4048	40%	4-	%
92	504b	49%	50%	4-2%
134	24%	24'/b	24%	4-	Vi
—K—
3 41 Vi 404i 41% -j-%lun Carbide 2 1	30%	30%	30%	4-	Vi un Elec 1.20
5	38%	38%	38%	4-	'/b
3	60	59%	60	4-	%
5	824*	82%	82%	4-IV2
9	50	49%	50	4-	%
1	26%	26%	26%	4-	%
11	371/2	37	37 V2	+	%
7	22 Vi	22 Vi	22%	4-	Vb
Lear Sieg .70 LehPCem .60 Leh Val Ind Lehman 1.72g LOFGIs 2.80a LIggett&M 5 Littonin 1.54t Livingstn Oil LockhdA 2.20 Loews Theat LoneS Cem 1 LoneSGa 1.12 LongIsLt 1.08 Lorlllard 2.50 Lucky Str .80 Lukens StI 1
MackTr 1.59t MacyRH 1.60 Mad Fd 2.71e MagmaC 3.60 Magnavox .80 Marathn 2.40 Marquar .25g MartlnMar 1 MayDStr 1.60 Maytag 1.60a Mcuon Co .40 McKess 1.30 Melv Sh 1.25 MerckC 1.40a MGM 1 MIdSoUtll ,76 MlnerCh 1.30 MinnMM 1.20 MobilOil 1.80 Mohasco 1 Monsan 1.60b MontDUt 1.52 MontPow 1.56 MontWard 1 Morrell Motorola 1 MtSt TT 1.12
Nat Airlin .60 NatBisc 1.90 Nat Can .50b NatCash 1.20 NatDalry 1.40 Nat DIst 1.60 Nat Fuel 1.60 Nat GenI .20 Nat Gyps 2 N Lead 3.25e Nat Steel 2.50 Nat Tea .80 Nevada P .84 Newbery ,68t NEngEI 1.36 NYCent 3.12a Niag MP 1.10 NorflkWst 6a NA Avia 2.80 NorNGas 2.40 Nor Pac 2.60 NSta Pw 1.52 Northrop 1 Nwst Alrl .60 NWBan 1.90a Norton 1.50 Norwich 1.30
3	303/i 30% 20 41% 41%
4	69'/? 69Va 38 824b 82
5V»	5%
21 Vi 21% 4- % 94b	9% 4- ' 8
8'/? 4- 'b
62
41% — Vb
691/2 4- 3/i 82% 4- % 5% 4-
62
33	62’/2	,.
3	27Vi	27Vi	27Vi	4-	%
4	15	14%	15	+	Vi
9	191% 19% 19’/2 ..........
4	30%	3OV2	3OV2	...
5	42	413/i	42	4-	%
5	171/4	17Vi	17'/i	4-	Vi
36	34%	341/2	341/2	4-	Vi
—M—
25	33F8	33	33F1)	-Fl'/a
I	mi	F'«
10	22'/z	22'/z	t®-F	''a
1	53'/k	53'/ti	5®-F	Fa
56	38'/a	37V,	38^	-F	Fi
5	61%	61F8	6iz/a	-F	'/,
n	13F4	13Fk	13Fi	-F	'/a
23	21	20V,	20V4	—	Vi
X20	32'/a	32	32'/a	-F	Va
3	30'/4	29Va	30'/4	—	Vi
28	29V4	29'/z	29'/z
2	Z5'.'4	45'/4	45'/4	-F	''ll
8	35'/z	35'/z	35'/z	-F	V4
3	74'/a	74V4	74'/a	-	''ll
17	37F8	37Vli	37Fi	—	Fk
4	25V4	25'/z	25F4	-	'/k
10	27Fk	27	27'/t	.
26	79	78Fk	79	-F	Fk
104	45V4	45Fk	45V4	+	Fk
5	14’/k	14Fk	14Fk	-F	'/a
57	40’/4	40Fk	40'/z	—	'k
3	30'/z	30'/z	30'/z	-	'.'4
10	31'/k	31'/4	31'/4	—	''z
37	21V4	21	21'/4	-F	Vi
7	25Fk	25Fk	25Fk	-F	Vi
23	94	93	93'/4	-FI
3	2lFk 21Fk 21Fk ..........
—N—
11	87	87	87	-F	Vi
5	47V4	47»k	47V4	-F	Vz
4	23V4	23Fk	235k	-F	Fk
26	69'/4	68V4	69	-Fl
II	34'/a	33’/#	34'/k	-F	Vi
-.17	39F4	395k	39V4	-F	'h
1	28	28	28	—	'k
5	115k	11''k	11'^’	+	'<k
12	30'/k	29Z/8	30'/k	-F	Fk
9	56'/z	56'/k	56'/k	-F	5k
23	427'a	42V4	42z/b	-F	Fk
6	13'/4	13'/4	13'/4	....
x4	37’/z	37'/z	37'/z
5	I6''z	16'/4	16'/z	-F	Vt
10	27Fk	27Fk	27Fk
31	70'/k	69'/z	70'/4
17	22'a	22'/a	22'/k	+	Vt
10	98	98	98
20	49Vb	49	49Fb	-F	Vt
2	48V4	48V4	48Vi	—	'/k
x36	50	49'/a	50	-FI'A
11	33'/k	33'/k	33'/z	—	'/k
4	27Fi	275k	275k	....
29	115Va 114V4 115'k -F '/a
6	46V4	46'/z	46F1	-F	Vz
11	40	38V4	39V4	-Fl'/k
' 2	62	62	62	-F	Vt
—0—
14	42'k	41 Fa	42'/a	+	'/4
1	27J'4	27V4	27F'4	.
13	57V4	5754	57V4	—	'4
27	37’-k	37V4	37r/B	+
13	I6V4	1654	I6V4	-F	'/I
13	543/4	543,4	543,4	+	V,
UnCKal 1.20a Un Pac 1.80a Un Tank 2.30 UnitAirLin 1 UnitAIre 1.60 UnitCorp ,40e Un Fruit ,75e UGasCp 1.70 Unit MM 1.20 US Borax la USGypsm 3a US Ind .70 US Lines 2b USPlywd 1.40 US Rub 1.20 US Smelt lb US Steel 2.40 Unit Whelan UnivOPd 1.40 Uplohn 1.60
14	345k 34'/k 34'/k -F Fk
7 183/4 18Fk 185k	.
49 61 Vi 60'/z 60'/z -F Vi
28	4754	475k	47V4	-F	5k
no	63	6254	63	-F	Vt
4	67r/a	bV/t	iV/t	-F	Vt
4	95k	9'/z	95k	-F 'k
2	58'/4	57'/a	S8'/4	-F	V4
3	385k	385k	38Vk	-F	5k
15	39	38V4	39	+	Vt
3 40'/4 40	40'/4 -F Vi ,
37	37	36'/z	37	-FIV4 the car
6	49Va	493/4	4954	-F	Vi
13	27'/z	27i/k	27'/z	-F	Vi
74	48'/«	47Z/i	48Vi	-F	Vt
_T—
227	30	295k	295k	-F	Vi
48	86Va	84Vz	84Vz	—	'/z
45	21Vz	215k	21V!i	-F	'/a
43	69'/a	685k	68V4	—	Vz
5	1958	19Z/8	19'/a	—	'/a
90 1045k 103	103Vz	-F 5k
61 1023/4 10034 1023/4 -F13k 27	515k	51	SIFTs	-F	3/,
41	)7’/b	17	175k	-F	'/t
14	34	,	333,4	34	+	Va
31 745k 74	74'/a -F Vi
29	295k	29'/a	29'/4	-F	Fk
11 13'/4 13'/k 13'/4 .......
32	223/4	225k	225k	-F	'/a
6	34	33V4	333/4	-F	Fk
—u—
7	14	13Fk	14	-F	'/a
89	49Vk	49	49Fk	-F	Vt
13	265k	26'/a	265k	-F	'/z
x49	50Fk	50	50	-F	Vt
17	37'/z	37	37'4
5	56	55'/z	55'/z	-	34
132	60	595k	59V4	-Fl
no	83'/z	Bl'4	B2'/z	-F2'/e
Paid Informers Foiled Haitian Plan—Cuban
KEY WEST, Fla. (AP) - The leader of a commando strike force, Rolando Masferrer, says “paid informers” scotched his plan to invade Haiti and move against Fidel Castro from there He vows he’ll try again.
“They were United States in formers, not Castro agents,’ said Masferrer after his release Wednesday with 24 followers who had been arrested on charges of conspiring to export arms without license.
★ ★ ★
The battle-clad commandos appearing before U.S. Commis sioner William Albury, were freed on their own recog nizance, on bonds from $100 to $5,000. Arraignments were set for Jan. 25.
OniER CHARGES
But Masferrer still faced charges of violating immigration orders not to leave New York City, where he lives. As a U.S. marshal took him to Miami, members of his invasion army shouted insults and kicked
The former Cuban senator called “The Tiger” because under overthrown President Ful-gencia Batista he had a private army called “The Tigers,” said in an interview: “We would welcome the help of the IJnited States, which is the policeman of the hemisphere. The United States sends men — Cubans as well as Americans — to Vietnam, 10,000 miles away. They shouldn’t stop us from fighting communism 90 miles away.”
25
2 315
8% 8%
14% 15% +
31% -I-43
Vanad 1.40a Varlan Asso Vendo Co .50 VaEIPw 1.28
WarnPic .50a WarnLamb 1 WashWat 1.16 Westn AIrL 1 WnBanc 1.10 WnUntel 1.40 WestgEI 1.40 Weyerhr 1.40 Whirl Cp 1.60 Whife M 1.80 Wilson Co 7 WinnDix 1.44 Woolworth 1 Worthing 1.20
13	43
121	40	39V?	40	-H
22	47'/2	461'?	46'/?	— 'i*
187	40%	40%	40’/4	+ Va
2	12%	12%	12%	-I- 1/4
2	65%	65%	65%	-F %
46	66V4t	65%	66	+ Vs
_V—
18	33	325k	33	-F 5k
36	29'/k	29'4	29'/z	— Va
12	26'4	255k	26	-F Vz
5	48'/a	48'/a	48'/a	-F '/a
—w—
8	17'/a	16V»	16'/e
117	37'/z	37'/a	37'/a
8	22'/.	22'/.	22'/a
49	44'/z	44'-k	44'4	+ Fk
57	31	30V4	31
35	39'/?	38Fk	385k	-F '4
52	48V'k	47'/.	48	+ Vt
10	33'/.	335k	33'/.	-F 5k
14	32'/a	31'/k	32	...
21	41	405k	405a	— Vi
6	61'4	60’4	61'4	-Fl
18	33'4	32V,	33'4	-F Vt
no	20'/a	19'/a	20	-F V,
1	3254	32'4	32V4	-F '-k
—X—Y—Z—
Xerox Coro 1	87 209V4 208	208’/z -F2
YnStSht 1.80	44	285k	28Fk	28'/z	-F Vz
Zenith Rad la 83	51'4	50V4	50V4	-F '/a
Copyrighted by The Associated Press 1967
.Sales figures are unofficial.
“ Unless otherwise noted, rates of dividends In the foregoing table “'e disbursements based on the last quarterly or semi-annual declaration. Special or extra dividends or payments not designated as regular are identified Ih the following footnotes.
a—Also extra or extras. ^Annual rate plus stock dividend, c—Liquidating dividend, d—Declared or paid in 1967 plus stock dividend, e—Paid last year, f _ Payable In stock during 1967, estimated cash value on ex-dividend or ex-distribution date, g-Declared or paid so far this year h—Declared or p^d 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 '.4,,	meeting. r-Declared or paid In 1966 plus
69’/z 70'4 +15k	dividend.
Jailed Hoffa Will Plan for a Comeback'
2 18 —P-
PacG El 1.30 Pac Ltg 1.50 Pac Petrol PacT8.T 1.20 Pan Am .60 Panh EP 1.60 ■F '4|ParkeDav la Peab Coal 1 PennDixie -60 Penney 1.60a Pa RR 2.40a .ai,	Pohnzoil 1.40
49'/z -Fl'/kl PepsiCo 1.60' PfIzerC 1.20a
36
18
36'-4 -F '4
21	36'4
3	27'/a	275-4	17'/t
2	lO'/a	lOVa	lO'/a
10	225k	22Fk	22Fk
88	54H	54'/a	54'4	-F	Vt
1	34Vz	34'/z	34'/z	+	Fk
26'/» 26'/a 26'/a
4 41
115k
44 701/4 66 71 16 67V4 7 315/4
16	415/4
41	41
RCA .80b RalstonP wi Rayonier 1.40 Raytheon .80 Reich Ch .40 RepubStI 2.50 Revlon 1.30 Rexalt .30b Reyn Met .90 Reyn Tob 2 RheemM 1.20 Roan Sel .98e Rohr Cp .80 RoyCCola .72 RoyDot 1.79e RyderSys .60
115k	115k
54'/z	54'/z
53'/a	54	-F Vi
76	76	— Vi
70	70'4	-F Vi
7 0	705/4	-Fl'/z
67	67V4	-FIFk
31V4	315/4	-F '-k
klVa	413/4	-Fl'k
.	335k	335k	335k	- 5a
40	50'/z	505k	50'/z
7	48	475k	475k	-F '4
8	55','z	55'k	55'/z	-Fl'4
13	10'4	lO’/a	10'4	-F Fk
92 162'/a 161'4 161'/a -F15k 88	70Fk	69'/z	705a	-F ''z
2 453k 45Fk 455-
—R—
47 4454	44
1 23'4 23 49 3454 34 5)'4 50
4 12
m-
44’/z ,. 23'4 -F '/• 34Fk -F Vt 50'4 —I'-'z 12
68	42''4	41 Fk	41'/a	-F	'/?
74	48',a	4754	48'/z	-F15k
35	25'k	25'4	25'4	-	Vi
35	505a	49'/a	49'4	—	Fk
46	355/4	35'/z	355/4	-F	'4
2	23'/a	23'/a	23'/a
35	75a	7Vz	75k	-F Va
12	22'/a	225/4	22'/a	-F	'4
15	225/4	22Fk	225k	-F	Fk
98	3454	34'/z	34V4	-h	5k
2	17	16'/a	16’/a	-	Fk
—s—
37	25'4	24'k	25'i	+	5 k
9	39Fk	39'/4	395a	+	'4
6	38	375a	38	-F	'4
11	2t'/a	275k	275k	.,
9	57'/a	57'4	57'4	+ Vi
55	33'/z	33'k	33'4
20	55V4	55'/z	555k	+ Vi
4	7’k	75a	75e	-F	'4
84	56'/z	55'z	56'a	+	5a
18	27Va	271'z	2734	,
2	431a	43'k	43'k	-	'k
23	39' b	38','z	39'/a	-F	H
60	45'-z	45	4S'/4	-5	54
15	16	1554	15F4	-F	'4
1	75a	75k	75a	.
20	3354	33	335/4	-Fl'4
29	61'/a	605k	605/4	. .
2 4 21	205/4 21 -F 54
________ t-Paid In stock during
1966, estimated cash value on ex-dIvidend or ex-distribution date, z—Sales in full.	,
cld—Called. x-Ex dividend, v—Ex dividend and sales in full, x-dis—tx distribution. xr—Ex rights, xw—Without warrants. ww—With warrants, wd—When distributed. wi-When issued, nd—Next day delivery.
v|—in bankruptcy or receivership or being reorganized under the Bankruptcy Act, or securities assumed by such companies. fn—Foreign issue subiect to Interest equalization tax.
News in Brief
Ronald Price of Brighton reported to Waterford Township police yesterday the larceny of roller skating equipment valued at $140 from the Rolladium, 4475 M59.
Coin Show: First Federal Savings, 761 W. Huron, Sun., Jan. 8th, 10 to 6 P.M. Free admission.	—Adv.
HOLLYWOOD, Fla. (AP) -James R. Hoffa wouldn’t be able to run the Teamsters Union if he is sent to prison, associates say, but if he does go behind bars, he will be thinking of a comeback once he gets out.
Union sources speculate, if Hoffa is sent to jail, how he divides up the union’s power will determine whether ftere is a leadership struggle that may upset his plans.
■w ★	★
“The (union) constitution has clearly taken care of that,” Hoffa said in reply to questions about his successor as Teamsters’ president if he loses his final legal maneuvers to stay out of prison.
But other union officials are not so sure it will turn out the way Hoffa wants, with his Detroit friend, Frank Fitzsimmons, lined up to succeed him as chief of the world’s biggest union.
MUM IS WORD
Hoffa, finishing up plans for national trucking negotiations opening in Washington Jan. 17, is publicly keeping a tight rein on his feelings about the possibility of going to prison.
But “he was meaner than hell” in closed sessions with the Teamsters executive board here, one source said, attributing .the outburst to the tremendous pressures on Hoffa.
32 on Ship Saved
MANILA	(AP)—Thirty-two
crewmen of the stricken freighter Kwongshun were pulled from the stormy South China Sea today as their ship threatened to capsize.
WedmiiUy'i Ut divIMMt otclsrtd P«- Stk. o( Piy RiM riod Rtcord tbli STOCK
ECL IndusI ... (x)3pc	3-20	5-8
(x)—Subiect to stockholders epprovel. REGULAR
Alterman's Fds .125 Q M3 2-1
BOND AVERAGES Compiled by The Atkoclatid Press
Net change Noon Wed, 70.1	91.5
Prey. Day 70.1	91.5
Week Ago 70.5	91.6
Month Ago 71.0	90.9
Yeer Ago 79.4 101.2 1966-67 High 79.5 101.4 1966-67 Low 70.1	88.9
1965 High 83.7 102.5 1965 Low 79.3	99.9
J? 10 "iO 10	10
Rills Ind. Util. Fgn. L. Yd
81.9
81.9 81.8 eo.9 16.0 M.1 79.2
88.9 B6.4
-F.1
90.6
90.5
90.6
90.5
91.6 93.1
90.4 95.0
91.4
86.2
85.7
New GTW Exec Named
John W. Demco, Montreal, has been appointed vice president and general manager of the Grand Trunk Western Railroad.
He is succeeding Harry A. Sanders of 780 E. Square Lake Road, Bloomfield Township, who has retired.
Demco has served as vice president, transportation and DEMCO maintenance, of Canadian National Railways since 1962.
CUNNIFF
By JOHN CUNNIFF
AP Business News Analyst
NEW York - Ameruam Telephone hks just reported total revenue for the three months ending with November of, nearly $3.1 billion, which is a lot more revenue than a state the sizq of Texas collects in a year.
Com piarisons such as this constantly reopen or keep alive that old, old discussion of how big is too big, a question to which there is perhaps no sure answer.
★ ★ ★
American business is big. About 60 American Corporations have annual income of a billion dollars or more, and when the measuring stick is dropped to $500 million we can count about 150 companies. Is this too big?
There are some obvious examples in American history of laws broken through monopoly power, or of companies who used their size to corner a market.
EASY TO DISCERN
These, however, were rela-
tively easy to discern because specific antitrust regulations were violated.
How do you make a determination when laws are not clearly bnAen? For critical purposes, bigness is relative What is small now would have been large SO years ago. What is big in one hidustry is notjn another.
★ ' * ir
General Motors, for example is the largest manufactu^g co^ration in the world, with assets of more than $12 billion and income in the area of $2 billion a year,
Without a doubt a company of this size would dominate the textile or shoe industries. But the automotive industry is a business of big companies, perhaps a requirement of volume production. Ford, Chrysler and General Motors are among the top five companies in sales Standard Oil of New Jersey _and General Electric are the others REVIEWED U’TERATURE Chase Manhattan Bank reviewed recent literature and distilled these are the prevalent not necessarily proven-charges against big business:
•	It decides which products to make and then forces them on the public.
•	It dominates education by
New Car Sales Pass 8 Million Again in '66
DE'TROIT (AP) - New car sales in the U.S. in 1966 rose past the eight million mark for the second consecutive year but fell some 378,000 cars short of 1965’s record performance, reports showed Wednesday.
Preliminary sales figures from Ford, Chrysler, General Motors and American Motors showed 8,372,302 cars were sold in the U.S. market last year—
a year which had plenty of ups and downs in its sales chart.
★ ★ ★
Sales started fast, giving rise to talk of a 9-million car year, but they dipped in April and never fully rebounded. TTie furor over auto safety was blamed by some industry sources as responsible for the sales slowdown.
The sales fipres were well below the record 8,750,832 cars sold in calendar 1965. The eight million figure has been reached only twice in automotive history.
BRIGHTEST SPOT Chrysler Corp. provided the brightest page in the 1966 sales book when it set a new sales DETROIT (AP)—Final, offi- high, while the other three com-cial reports from auto compa-, panics trailed 1965 figures, nies confirmed today that 1966 Chrysler sold 1,398,440 new
Auto Makers' 2nd Best Year
was the second best year in history in the number of cars built-^ per cent below 1965.
The year’s output came to 8,598,929 cars despite November and December production cutbacks in the face of a slowdown in sales.
★	★	★
The 9,329,091	cars	built in 1965
exceeded 1966	production	by
730,000.
TTie auto industry, despite the fact that its long series of production and sales climbs were interrupted last year, still found 1966 only the second time production has topped the eight-million mark in a calendar year.
A	★	★
Production in 1955, one of the golden years of the auto business, finished in the No. 3 spot with production at 7,942,125 cars.
The production pace of all four U. S. auto companies was off in 1966 with American Motors showing the greatest percentage drop and General Motors the biggest decline in the number of cars.
cars in 1966. about two per cent higher than its previous top sales performance of 1,375,165 in 1965.
Six auto nameplates figured in new sales records in 1966, including Pontiac, Mustang, Dodge, Lincoln-Continental, Cadillac and the Chrysler line.
Chevrolet and Ford reported record truck sales for 1966.
STOCK AVERAGES Compiltd by THzt AtMCIbtdd PrMi 30 IS IS M Ind. Rtlls Util. Slocki Prev. Day ..... 417.1 159.9 152.1 294.7
W««k Ago 85.11 Modth Ago . 90.5 Year Ago ..
90.7	1966.67 High
83.7	196667 Low 94.3 1965 High .. 90.111965 Low ...
412.6 158.3 152.1 292.1 424.1 160.3 149.2 296.6 531.5 197.7 169.6 363.1 537.9 213.9 170.5 369.7 318.0 143.9 130.2 2».4
523.3	194.5 1 78.2 358.5
451.4	149.3 162.6 308.0
JFK Book Hearing Delay Is Expected
NEW YORK (UPI)-A hearing on Mrs. John F. Kennedy’s request for an injunction to block publication of William Manchester’s “The Death of a President” was scheduled in State Supreme Court today.
The hearing was expected to be postponed while efforts for an out-of-court settlement continue.
w ★	★
Lawyers for Mrs. Kennedy, Manchester, and Harper & Row met for 40 minutes yesterday with Justice Saul S. Streit to discuss “procedures.”
The judge said later that in case acompromiseisnot reached “certain technical procedures must be worked out before going to trial.
DOW-JONES AVERAGES STOCKS;
30	Industrials ............. 782.07-4.34
20	Railroads ............. 204.12-1.04
15	Utilities ............... 136.37+0.13
65	Slocks .................. 281.45-1.24
■ONOS: .
40	Bonds	........... 80.93.......
10	Higher	grade	rails . 72.12—0.20
10	S^nd	grade	reils . 80.89+0.09
10	Pubflc	ufllltles ....... 13.06+0.11
10 Industrlels .............. I7.65+0J12
Official Paraded by Red Guards
TOKYO (AP) - Red Guards paraded Tao Chu, Red China’s new propaganda chief, through the streets of Peking today and subjected him to a curbside kangaroo court, Japanese press reports said today.
The Japanese correspondents in Peking gave no details of the incident involving the man who rose to No. 4 in the party during the current purge. They used the word “hikimawasu,” which means led, pulled, marched, dragged or taken.
forcing schools to teach subjects that meet job requirements,
•	It governs toe labor market, forcing individuals to adapt skills and educations to its needs.
•	It magnifies unemployment problems b^y refusing to hire the unskilled and by failing to move into depressed areas.
Even if these accusations are accepted, could toe truth of them be established in regard to a specific company? Would it take a long, long investigation with inconclusive answers?
A long, long investigation is now under way of AT&T, which dominates its industry as perhaps no other company ’ in America dominates an area of enterprise.
WORLD’S LARGEST
AT&T is the world’s largest corporation, owning and operating 85 per cent of the nation^s telephones. It has assets well over $30 billion, employs 800,000 workers—despite automation— and has nearly three million shareholders.
AT&T is unique. It rules its industry but with far less freedom than can a manufacturing enterprise. It is regulated by the Federal Communications Commission and state utilities commissions. And, because of its unique role, must also accept considerable social responsibilities.
w ★	★
The FCC now is studying the entire cost, price and profit structure of AT&T, which feels it needs an 8 per cent return on its capital in order to fulfill its obligations to customers and stockholders.
In reporting net income for the three months ended Nov. 30 of $514,340,000, AT&T came close to the 8 per cent return it feels it needs. 'The rate of return for September, October and November was 7.9 per cent.
TOO HIGH?
Is this too high? The determination will be a difficult one. Some companies earn 20 per cent and 30 per cent on their capital. But what applies in one in(lustry may be irrelevant in another.
3 From Area Are Promoted
Robert A. Atkins, vice president of manufacturing for Burroughs Corp., Detroit, recently announced three appointments to his staff..
C. Dwight Brooks of 840 Shep-ardbush, Birmingham, was ap-, pointed' man-ager of pro-curement a dministration and auditing. He was previously acting director of purchasing.
Russell T. Stark of 21009 Robinwood, Farmington, was appointed manager of corporate procurement contracts.
He was formerly manager of procurement and services in the manufacturing and engineering division.
it ir it
Desmond B. Goodwin of 28048 Thiornybae, Farmington Township, was appointed manager of traffic. He was previously corporate general traffic manager.
BROOKS
SuccessfuNnvesting


I
^A
By ROGER E. SPEAR
Q) “In 1961, I purchased Thrifty Drug at 30 which, at its recent level of 16, has t^en making me depressed. I also own Long Island Lighting on which I have a good profit. Do you advise selling boto at current levels — the loss on one and toe capital gain on the other offsetting each other? I don't need cash, but I’m a worrier.” G. A.
A) If it is seriously disturbing you to the extent that your nervous system or your ability to sleep is affected, I would sell both issues and keep out of the stock market entirely. If — as we all do — you simply feel badly about your paper loss but can live with it, I would retain both stocks. You happened to buy Thrifty at a time of excessive over-evaluation — but it is a good issue with a sound
growth record, and now seems reasonably priced.
★ ★ *
Q) “I’m wondering il it is wise to buy a few shares of a stock at a time and therefore have to pay more brokerage fees, or wait until I hpve some money to buy in lots of 100?
I would like to buy 50 shares of Carlisle Corp.” N. S.
A) Odd lot trading is relatively expensive.. If you are interested in stable stocks and your funds build up quickly, you quickly, you would be wise to trade in 100-share units. In toe case of issues which have shown a strong rising trend, I wouldn’t wait. The delay might cost you more than the few extra dollars in commissions. Carlisle Corp.. for example, has shown strong technical action for several months. I like toe shares because of the sharp uptrend in earnings in recent years — which should continue.
(Copyright, 1967)

D—

^BP■L
...-—
TH». PONTIAC FRBSS. tBmSBAY. JANUARY 5, l»6r

'


WIIII.K €H AXTITIKS LAST! FMIOK SiVAIPLKS, I. 2. It and l-OF-A-KIAIK Ollil I.OTS. ■IKIUllASTIIATOilS . . . AI.L AT LOW, I.OW SALK l»l«H KS. ALI. AltK >IKI IIA:\TCAJLLY I^KIIKKCT.
CHECK THESE DOOR BUSTER SPECLiLS
ON SALE AT SBAKS WAmH0(JlSEr4SI SAeiNAWST.
Sale! 900-Coil Mattress
You’ll eqjoy the deep comfort of 900 super sensitive coils . . . while fluffy Dacron® polyester cushions you. White rayon damask cover. Qne^ Size Set, WCa (2S9.95 • •. 9177 King Size Set, Was 9349.95 • • 9257
Was $99.95
«58
Hollywood Bed Sale
Innerspring
mattreee, box Was 970.80
Sale! Recliner-Styled^ in a new
Three-Cycle Automatic
Tivin Size Mattreas or Box Spring
/I 788
headboard.	g
Mis-matched.
sculptured nisooe wood framing, w-tO“*“i>
tufted back. *97
Save!
Sale! Mattresses or Box Springs
Were 29.95 to 34.95
Swivel Rocker Was 989.95
Twin
Only
22
88
Were 39.95 to 49.95
FuH OQ88 or Twin
Were 59.95 to 79.95
Full 9Q88 or Twin iF
Floor tamplai, mIS • mateliod, slightly damaged, torn* era brand new. Hurry la for best taloctioni.
Automatic... washes, rinses and spin-dries without additional settings, takes a second. 3 cycles for all fabric care. 3 wash-rinse temperatures. 6-vane agitator gives thbrough wash action to clothes.
Sale Priced
139
Mo Money Down
Two-Temperature Dryer
Installed*	Installed*
Gas	Electric
Normal heat cycles plus “Air Only” for fluffing clothes, pillows. Top mounted lint screen. Save at Sears!
Other KenmoreWashera Priced as Low as 999
“Normal iiutaUa^oH oa Dotroit EJItett Co. tinoo or Ctmianeia Vamor Coo Co, Hat*. VenliaitExlra.
MANY OTHERS NOT LISTED
OTHER SALE-PRICED MODELS AVAILABLE
111 Fffllf/ Guarantt»i*d htj
4-Drawer Chest Bed,Headboard
Freezer Stores 770 Lbs.
Was
970
3788
Was
854.95
44««
Super-thin foam insolation ... takes up less space. Porcelain flnish interior total contact freezing, and cold controL Big 21 Cu. Ft. chest modeL
Sale Priced
14-Cu. Ft. Refrigerator
2-Speed, 6-Cycle Washer
199
All frostless in top and bottom sections. 105-lb. capacity top freezer. Spacemaster adjustable shelves. 2 half-width crispers. Hurry to Sears.
Sale Priced
Charming anthentic Quaker soling is perfect for your girls* room. White finish, blue trim. Plastic top.
Compact, easy to store. Fold-a-bed with 4-inch Serofoam mattress. Lightweight alpminnnt frame. Save!
17 Co. Ft. Chest Freezer Sale............ $179
15 Cu. Ft. Chest Freezer Sale.............9158
15 Cu. Ft. Freezer Upright ............ $168
219««
14 Cu. Ft. Frostless Refrigerator with OOC188 161-lb. Capacity Bottom Freezer .......
Other Coldspots with Top Freezer.............$169
Plus 5 wash-rinse temperatures . . . the right ones set automatically with one turn of the dial. Self-cleaning lint filter; bleach dispenser; infinite water level controL Super Roto-Swirl agitator. Kenmore quality.
Sale Priced
169
No Money Down
Other Kenmore Washers Priced as Low as 99 9 Auto. Washer with Sads-Saver............SlS'lf
30” Gas Classic
25” eye-level ^-| AQ oven u auto- ^ matic. Hi-lo burners.	Base Extra
30-m. Classic
Automatic set<
forget _oyen H57
Sale!
Gas Range.
89
Large Oven. Separate smokeless broile^r. Chromed haA-dies.
Base Extra
Electric 30” l^nge
*131
Set-and-forget cooking. Top
mounted controls. Drawer.
NEW KENMORE RANGES
30-inch gas classic with eye-level mren,	88®®
with bottom oven in base..
21988
Reverse Trap ‘Grade A’ ToOet
Modernize your bathroom now at sav- Was $21.95 ings. All grade “A” materiaL Smooth vitreous china. Gleaming white.
withbotUMp 30-inch Kenmore

ZIG-ZAG Portable
>48
Canister
Vacuum
Sale! IS-in. Portable TV
Sale Priced
*24
donble oven electric
o 19xl7”VitreonsChinaWash
Basin. Faucet extra. Was 99.95	........ ■
• Toilet Seat. Enamel Finish. White,	W ’t’f
Bine, Green, Pink or Beige. Was 92.89 ........J1
With a turn of the dial yon can lengthen or shorten your stitches. Has pnsh-bntton rpvene. With base only.
Cleans rugs, bare floors. Attachments.
Many Other Sewing Machines and Vacnnms on sale!
range
(18-in. Measured diagonal, 172-sq. in. vieiring area)
Sale Priced
*88
NoMtmeyDowii
AM/FM Console Stereo ..............«$88
Many Other TVs and StereM Sale Priced
Crisp viewing from powerful chassis irith 21.F. stages and automatic gain controL Front mounted S-in. speaker for static free FM sound. Telescoping VHF antenna, UHF antenna included. Luggage style cabinet.
All Items on Sale at Sears Warehon8e-481 N. Saginaw St. Tomorrow Noon ’til 9 P.M.-Hurry In-Save