V 1 i The Weather U. S. W«»lh»r turou Forunt Snow Flurries (MtMIt P«g« 2) Home Edition VOL,135 —v NO. 282 ★ ★ ★ ★* PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, JANUARY 2, 1008 Mi PAGES ASSOCIATED PRESS XwMUO UNITED PRESS INTERNATI 10c AP WirephoTo FIERY DERAILMENT — Chemical explosions and fires were, set off in several cars of a derailed Pennsylvania Railroad freight train near Dunreith, Ind., last night, forcing Brain Hemorrhage Kills Donor 3rd Heart Swap Successful CAPE TOWN, South Africa UP — Dr. Christian N. Barnard and a team of surgeons performed another successful heart transplant today, replacing the damaged heart of a 58-year-old Cape Town dentist with that of a man who collapsed and died from a brain hemorrhage. • k k ★ Groote Schuur Hospital announced the transplant took more than five hours and termed it successful. They said the patient’s condition was satisfactory. Barnard'performed the world’s first human heart transplant Dec. $ on Louis Washkansky, 53, who lived 18 days with the new heart before dying of pneumonia. The hospital said Dr. Philip Blaiberg, a man “desperately ill’’ with a damaged heart, received the heart of Clive Haupt, 24, who' collapsed on a nearby beach and died in the hospital. Haupt was a mulatto — a man of mixed race — but this apparently posed no problems for Barnard(in racially seg- regated South Africa. Finding a donor for Blaiberg was difficult because of his rare B-positive blood type. ^ 5-HOUR OPERATION The hospital said the operation began at 11 a.m. and was completed aboiit 4 p.m. The historic transplant in which Washkansky received the healthy heart of a 25-year-old woman who died in a traffic accident also took five hours. Blaiberg has been waiting three weeks for the operation and did not reconsider when Washkansky died. Haupt was on Fish Hoek Beach yesterday with his wife of three months when he collapsed with a-brain hemorrhage. When he was taken to a hospital and, his blood typed, Groote Schuur Hospital was notified. ★ ★ ★ Barnard’s surgical team spent several hours studying the transplant possibilities before proceeding. “SECOND TRANSPLANT A few days after Washkansky’s his- GOP Strategists Propose Drive for Control of Senate WASHINGTON UP - The odds are heavily against it, but there’s a possibility Republicans could win control of the Senate in the 1968 elections. Some party strategists argue this should become a priority GOP goal- In Today's Press Weather Watch Bitter cold moves into the East — PAGE C-8. Quest for Peace World settles down to problems of 1968 - PAGE B-10. Job-Bias Victory NAACP feels pact symbolizes failure of voluntary compliance policy -- PAGE B-5. The Republicans need 15 additional seats to gain a Senate majority for the first time since 1954. A GOP victory of that magnitude is improbable. But one Republican professional contends the party could do it by putting some of its biggest names into Senate races next year. k k ★ For example, this party official said, the GOP would have to persuade ,such men as former Pennsylvania Gov. William W. Scranton to run for the Senate. Scranton has said he will not seek public office again. Washington - based Republicans believe he could capture the Senate seat now held by Democrat Joseph S. Clark. POTENT CANDIDATE In Ohio, the official said, Gov. James A. Rhodes would be a potent candidate for the Senate seat of Democrat Frank J. Lausche. Oregon’s Gov. Tom McCall could seek the post held by Sen. Wayne Morse, another Democrat, the official said, even though that might cost the GOP control of a state house. . Yemeni Attacking SAN’A, Yemen UP — Eight thousand Yemeni Republican troops, backed by the Yemeni air force, were reported today to have struck at Royalist forces entrenched 40 miles southwest of San’a along the road to Yemen’s second largest city, Tai’zz. From Our News Wires DUNREITH, Ind. Fire triggered by the collision of two freight trains and "fed by gasoline, crude oil and ammonia, today burned out of control. The 236 residents of Dunreith already had been forced to fide their homes in near zero-degree cold. Dangers of additional explosions and deadly chemical fumes left firemen helpless against the holocaust which apparently had burned nearly half of the town. t Three firemen and a policeman suffered minor injuries. Officials ordered firefighters and police out of the town when there was danger that two 12,000-gallon ammonia tanks would rupture in an atmosphere already heavy with flammable and toxic chemicals. ,, A new danger arose When cattle were . found dead along a creek just south of' Dunreith. Authorities said they feared the creek, which runs south through the town, might be carrying a deadly cyanide from.one of the wrecked train cars. Special foam equipment sept from Wrght-Patterson Air Force Base in Day-ton, Ohio, was held back by authorities. They feared the foam might bring an adverse reaction with leaking chemicals. Meanwhile, chemical warfare specialists from Wright-Patterson and Ft. Benjamin Harrison at Indianapolis checked to see what could be used to out the fires. ★ * ★ The Butterfield Canning Co. plant and a "service station were destroyed by flames, which also spread to several houses. Some were empty migrant worker dwellings, officials said. SPECTACULAR COLLISION The collision of eastbound and westbound Pennsylvania Railroad trains last night set off the blaze and explosions. It was spectacular but caused no loss Of life, W. R. Sheets of Zionsville, brakeman of the westbound train, said be believed a rail broke under the 75tb car of the 98-car train. Flames broke out almost immediately, he said. Despite heat from the burning wreck- age, crewmen were able to separate the front portion of the westbound train and move it out of town. . Hr * * Authorities said until the fire was,put out, there was no way of getting humans through the toxic smoke to ascertain damage. Observers on the scene said that when the wind shifted slightly four badly ,damaged houses could be seen. Patrols of state police sent north from Dunreith to alert rural families of the smoke and chemical danger drifting their way found empty houses. Antilooter patrols, were established. At least one state trooper was overcome by the fumes. Traffic was rerouted from busy U.S. 40' which parallels the Pennsylvania main line through Dunreith. SEEN 40 MILES AWAY The explosion and ball of flame that erupted at the height of the holocaust lighted a milewide area “like daylight” and could be seen or felt as far as Indianapolis, 40 miles to the west. evacuation of the eastern Indiana community of 236. Special chemical fire-fighting equipment was used to put out the blazes that burned through the night. i ■ pjy Pontiac Man toric transplant, a team, of surgeons in Brooklyn, N. Y., made the second heart transplant. Dr. Adrian Kantrowitz used the heart of a dead infant to replace that of a dying infant, but the baby lived just 6* 'v SAN ANTONIO, Tex. UP - President Johnson says the administration is carefully evaluating reports that North Vietnam might enter into peace discussions if the United States were unconditionally to stop bombing that country. Johnson said yesterday at the LBJ Ranch that he was familiar with newspaper reports quoting North Vietnamese Foreign Minister Nguyen Duy Trinh' to that effect. Hanoi Radio broadcast a statement yesterday saying North Vietnam “will talk” when the United States has “un- conditionally stopped Its bombing and all other acts of war” against the North.' “We are evaluating them," Johnson said of the reports. k k k Johnson spent considerable time talking about his program to curtail the U. S. dollar drain1 in 1968. FOCUS ON BUDGET A” The President focused his attention today on budget work and the Department of Health, Education and Welfare. ,1^ He had until midnight tonight to slgp„ the new Social Security law that Would boost benefits and Social Security taxes. On the passenger list today of the Washington-LBJ Ranch jet plane shuttle were the names of HEW Secretary John Gardner, Budget Director Charles Schultze and presidential assistant Douglass Cater. The Social Security measure will mean bigger benefit checks beginning in March for 24 million persons. The minimum retirement pay will go from $44 to $55 a month, the maximum from $142 to $160.50. A Deadline for the first-baby-of-the-year contest is 5 p.m. today. The first baby born ip 1968 will receive a multitude of gifts! ★ ★ ★ Any baby born to married parents living north of '14 Mile Road in Oakland County after midnight Dee. 31 is eligible. Entries must be made through the family doctor. They should be sent to the Pontiac Area Chamber Af Commerce, Riker Building. The doctor's statement must include the exact time and date of birth, sex, weight, name of baby and the name and address of parents. k k k Gifts include a $25^ savings bond, a $25 savings account, two cases of Carnation Milk, three pair of baby shoes, a diamond baby ring, a sweater, a bonnet, booties, and a silver cup. BABY SCALES Other gifts are baby scales, a baby blanket, a high chair, $5 gift certifi- cate, $10 gift certificate, new tire,* free car wash and polish, three dinners* for two at area restaurants, slippers for mother, a ham, two cleaning certificates, two floral arrangement?, and flvu gallons of milk. \ /fi TIIE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, J&N0ARY 2. 1908 Birmingham Area News SAIGON (AP) — U.S. officials |“repeatedly intruded# into the today tailed the allies’ New,atrspace” of several provinces. Year cease-fire “the bloodiest of!American headquarters ac-all” Vietnam war truce acknowledged that it had recontempts after a Vietcong force naissance planes i^the air over of 2,500 men broke the stand-! the North, but said no attacks down and smashed into anwere launched. American outpost, killing 23 in-; * * * fantrymen and wounding 153. On the basis of incomplete The guerrillas’ 9th Division, I communiques, the truce-break- augmented by North Viet.iing grourtd-f.ghting as vicious augiiiciucu * 140 as that of normal operations, namese ^jcost the allies 72 killed and 337 men m it virgin Moun wounded—27 Americans and 451 haps 500 men camp Vietnamese soldiers killed ta^, about 62 m les n^thwest of :and ^ Americans and ]32 Cambodian border, U S. officers^ Vietnamese wounded, ggjfj ; This compared with 14 Ameri- + * * cans and five South Vietnamese The Communist thrust, spokes- killed and 27 U.S. troops and Officers on the scene said the Red troopers were from the veteran 271st ahd 272nd Regiments —both units of the 9th Division which hit nearby Loc Ninh last October. At that time U.S. commanders claimed the units were eliminated aS fighting forces Within minutes of the initial] border at a suspected infiltra-J Red assault, however, U.SjtiOn route about 10 miles aboyW flareships were overhead to the battlefield. • p light the battlefield and slash j * * * the Red jump-off pointy with quick-firing miniguns. Fighter bomber pilots were scrambled --Cambodian from Bien Hoa Air base near Sihanouk Denial Still Seems Ndt Complete Proposal Is Revised on Boat, Trailer Storage PHNOM PENH, Cambodia Prince Norodom Sihan- While the Tay Ninh battle was by far the most spectacular during the truce period, other viola-. t The U.S. base camp » wasSaigon and 28 jets successively tions were^ reported up and * } - manned by parts of a battalion!raked the attacking Vietcong down South Vietnam. They'™* that he was of the US. 25th Division plus battalions. Tanged from Red infanty as-!"01 u a three batteries of 105mm how-, •• * * * |saults to the abduction of a Communist High-flying B52 bombers also Montagnard official jn the cen-IDoaia in pursult 01 communist forces permis-I sion, even tacitly, to enter Cam- BIRMINGHAM — A revised will be considered at the City 4mehdment to the City code;Commission meeting tonight dealing with storage of house | at 8. U-ailefs, boats and boat trailers Previously submitted to the commission Nov. 20, the proposal has been reworked to include provisions for exceptions. itzers—a defending force of per- were called in to strike near the'tral highlands. men said, gave the allies sec ; seven South Vietnamese wound- ond thoughts about a 48-hour ?d during the 48-hour l967 New . . Irii/ m Tho IQAfl flOlll*f>C truce that has been accepted in the Year’s truce. The 1968 figuresi Lunar inv°lved 168 shooting incidents,4 10 fewer than last year. principle for Tet| New Year Jan. 30. The regimental-sized Red at- COMMUNIST DEAD tack force was pursued into the: Communist dead over the our jungles of Ware Zone C. A half-dozen lesser engagements flared in the nearby jungles of rent cease-fire were put at 546. Calculations were complicated because the Vietcong’s an- Tay Ninh Province during the nounced three-day truce ended night. at 1 a.m., five hours before the BOMBING RESUMES allied stand-down. While American headquarters tried to assemble an accurate U.S. ★ ★ ★ officials said the fierce picture of the collapse 7of the raid 9n tbe ^.S. 25th Infantry cease-fire from field Reports, Div's>™ camp in the jungles U.S. warplanes resumed their bombing of North Vietnam with the end of the allied 36-hour truce at 6 a m. Saigon time today. fj Hanoi, meanwhile, accused just above the old Michelin rubber plantation town of Dau Tjgng came one hour dnd 20”' mjnutes before the Red truce expired. It began with a hail of Red the United States of raiding j mortars and Russian-model many “populated areas” during the truce. It did not elaborate on what constituted “raids”, say rockets and was qujckly followed by Communist troopers streaming out of the jungle with ing only that U.S. aircraft had |submachine guns blazing. REMOVING FALLEN COMRADES — Leathernecks from the 5th U.S. Marines carry bodies of fallen comrades to waiting evacuation helicopters through ankle-deep mud of a rice paddy near Hoi An, about 25 AP Wirephoto forces. But he still seemed to leave the door ajar. In a statement, the prince referred to what he had said last week, indicating that he wpuld not immediately oppose U.S. “hot pursuit-’ if it was in sparsely inhabited areas of Cambodia. • ■ ★ ★ The new statement said, “I will'never let any foreigner occupy the least square meter of our territory without doing everything possible, and even impossible, to drive him out of our Cambodia. “But in case of partial occupation of our territory, we must first use protests and political and diplomatic means to make tlje adversary withdraw. It is, only after exhausting these! peaceful means that we would go to war.” RADIO INTERVIEW Ih a radio interview carried] Monday by the French radio] station Europe No. 1. Sihanouk said his government “wouldj onlv. protest against bdth sides" GARDNER ACKLEY LBJ Names Top Aide as As presently worded, the amendment would not affect parking, and storage of vehicles which have not changed ownership after its passage, or which were stored prior to passage. Also excepted from the amendment would be owners physically unable to comply, with the ordinance due to size of lot, building location, or other factors. , The exceptions were made in lieu of establishment of an appeals procedure, w h i c h had been suggested by the commission. „ NOT IN FRONT Under the proposed ordinance, trailers and boats may not be stored at the front of a residential zone district, and may not be stored beside a house between the front and back of I district for .more miles south of Da Nang. The Marines came under heavy Vietcong fire when they landed in the area by helicopter. Both sides took heavy casualties. . . than 30 days. Envoy to Italy • The commission will also / • ! consider interim parking provi- . sions during the construction of it asamsi uuui siuca WASHINGTON (AP) — Presi- new parking structure at if U.- S. and Vietcong forces dent J.oh"fonJ"S MerriU ^ Piercc’ were to> clash in uninhabited1 re- Jer f0Cpkand a man ^Cit# M a na ge r Robert S. gions of Cambodia from across .. his ..most Kdnnrng has suggested notify- Last Month of Year Was Wet and Chilly LBJ Takes Aim U.S. Heads for War With China—Morse Johnson calls one of his “most tne soutn Vietnamese tronuer. | , , friends”-to ing Pikers with flyers attacnea “We would not risk the lives ;^ed and “ to windshields during the week df our troops in a fight which “ the next U S‘ ambassador ^ ^fore closing the Lot 1, and would be limited to Vietnamese, a y. • N Year’s Daviencouraging parking in the Lot infiltrated in Cambodia without! J* *2”* 1!» antctSre on North Woodward oor knowledge and American^™"™ «* «J?" *» Cot at Brownell and on Pontiac area residents received a variety of weather conditions in December including a white Christmas. There were a few snow flurries during the month with one-half inch on Dec. 24. Oh Christmas Day, the weatherman dropped three inches of fresh snow. Snow shovels had a workout again on Dec. 31 when another two inches of snow arrived bringing the total accumulation for the month to six inches. Sixteen inches of snow and 1.30 inches of rain were recorded last December. There were nine sunny and two partly sunny days during the month. Six days were sunny and partly sunny a year ago. Much of the month was dant and dreary. Heavy rains fell on Oakland County in the early hours of Dec. 21 causing flooding conditions, and mud on dirt and gravel roads. An estimated one inch of rain fell during the day. TORNADO WATCH A tornado watch was issued the night of Dec. 21 but no twister was sighted. The rain changed to snow flurries as winter arrived Dec. 22 with temperatures falling 40 degrees to a bone-chilling 17. * S~ Imposes Controls on Investments Abroad DETROIT (AP) - U.S: Sen. Hot Seat," syndicated by Khi-er.^^^to^ X Wayne Morse, D-Ore said Mon-| Broadcasting and originating in teers : ^ ^ miUtary pres. year who would come to pull out,”he said m the interview. ^ a^ounced stringent Kenning also proposed chang- onvommpnt controls over Dri in8 the 12-hour limit on 25 B“t'atio S-ndVlmb^aPcouMivate overseas investments and meters in ^ 7- at MerrHl and penetration in Cambodia could! measures aimed at slash- Henrietta- totWohours- lead to a “general conflict and balance of' nav- If these measures, are not suf- he would ask Red China, North def|(;|t $3 bi|lion PthL' ficient. Kenning said, parking restrictions on Pierce, Hennet- day night the United States is .Detroit on WKBD-TV Morsel^ became intolerable ta, Chester'and Frank could be The headed for a war with Red]was reported resting at home China which cannot be won with Monday night after being strick-either conventional or nuclear en with influenza in Washington! weapons. -last week. j “We can knock out her,bases] America cannot control the] and destroy her cities and kill:world militarily, hje said. He millions of people. But if she! said if war with China did come, comes into the war, she comes!that America would have three] in with her horrors on t h e]million troops in China within' WASHINGTON (AP) -Johnson administration’s declared war on the widening gap1 in the balance of payments would press every American into the defense of the dollar—if Congress goes along. President J°hns°n Peggedi ground, and we’ll have to meet three years higher taxes as the keystone of;^ . _ . with Ampr. From VP Bid' , ’, . iher on the ground with Amer- New Year’s program he' de-L„„„ OQiH , The shaping of these actions ^oved' gg needed are matters m which Ackley, as • chairman of the President’s. ------------------------ Council of Economic Advisers] has been deeply involved. The President citejd Ackley’s long interest in It;aly—a country in which the 52-year-old economist once studied as a Fulbright scholar—as his reason for tap-] ping him for the post. Fire Destroys Pontiac Home Morse said, “No president has] NEw yORK (AP) — James o« vi?ai* vir-rirnAW A fire at a Pontiac home early ... .lf. , . ican troops,” Morse said. the right to send a single Amer-! ... nf 2#-YEAR VETEBAN this mornirig did an estimated scribed as firm and decisive. , , Morse .an outspoken foe of iCan boy to his death on a bat- p- Boyd’ f?rmer asslstant of; In Rome, Ackley will replace $10,000 damage and took fire-It incorporates the ffrSt manaa- president Johnson's. Vietnam tleground in the war that is un-'Sen. Thomas J. Dodd, DConn.,]Ambassador G. Frederick Rein-jmen nearly three hours to ex- tory controls in history on commented in a taped declared.” He added: 1 American investment abroad ” - Rain or drizzle with fog and a little sleet ruled for 13 days. Total rainfall was 2.90 inches. Last year’s recording was 1.30 inches. Normal precipitation for December is 2.60 inches. ★ ★ ★ Ten inches of light snow is equal to one inch of rain. Temperatures were mild during most of the month. The mercury rose to 60 on Dec. 21 then plunged to five below zero in the early hours of Dec. 31, I and an appeal to Americans to I travel only in this hemisphere if ipdsslble. 1 ■k ★ ★ r The investment controls wei*e ! imposed under existing law. | Government officials held oiit possibility of \ further restrictions such as a tax on 'Americans going overseas or limits on the amount of money they may take with them, Offi- interview on the “Lou Gordon S. Viets Bar Bureau Chief says in a magazine article that hardt, a 30-year Foreign Service!tinguish. ill re- The blaze at 215 Ferry broke out sometime before 4 a.m., Johnson did not when a night watchman several candidate to succeed blocks away saw flames break- mmmtjmumix: The Weather ‘I am shocked at how we can]Dodd told him during the 1964 veteran, who has been walk out ort all our moral ideals, Democratic National Conven- cen -in connection with the way we’re Lon that he would ..have run a Although orosecuting the w«u\ «,We*d bet- , „ ., , n3me 3 c ter win it, because, don’t forget mile from the party s nomina' Ackley in the $30.000-a-yearjing through the roof of the one-that only'defeated nations are! tioii for vice president. chairmanship, Washington spec-, story frame dwelling and called tried, and if we should lose it Boyd says in an article in the ulation placed the name of Ar-the fire department, fire of-the verdict of the world would jJnn. 13 issue of the Saturday jhur M. Okun high on the list of ficials said. r j. * l make the Nuremburg trials in-[Evening Post that Dodd made jjossibilities. Fire Marshal ■ Charles Metz lOr W©W^SW(3©lClsignificant.”' jtee remark after President] okun was named to the damage to the building, | Morse accused Secretary 0f Johnson had selected Hubert H- three-man council to fill the va- owned by Reedie Anthony of 304 ™ cni,th State Dean Rusk of feeding thejBbmPhrey asuh‘s [unn,ng mat«; cancy created when Ackley was Rapid and occupied by Willie h American public “nonsense.” senat°r had been reported promoted to the chairmanship pjn|(er, was total. Asked if he felt Rusk should re-Mer consideration for second;in November, 1964 ] . ; . sien Morse renlied- “He should spot on the ticketl '* President Kennedy appointed rinkerwasnot atnome attne sign, morse repueu. ne suuuiu ★ * ★ _ ”L,r in time of the fire, officials said, have been fired three years _ . , , Ackley a council member in, « Henrv H Fowler secretary of,cau ag0 ” Boyd, whose allegations of 1902. At the time he was chair- It was not possible to »de- _ ..... *----i----told him to leave the country „ .J misconduct by Dodd led eventii-j man of the University of Michi-'termine the value of contents Kennedy D - N V is making !a,,y to censure of Dodd by Ve gan’s economics department destroyed, he said, in not SAIGON (AP) cials said this must be worked I Vietnamese government has re-out with Congress. ] fused to renew the visa of News- ‘DAMAGING TO NATION’ ’ week magazine’s Saigon bureau chief, Everett Martin, and the Treasury, said Americans 1 .... . should realize that travelWlthin seven days. » i abroad is damaging to the cdun- The South Vietnamese govern- ment has been at odds with Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report try. The entire program “a mistake in judgment Nmem nas ZZJZ condemning publicly the John- H I......| ____ is' de-^tMartm for mon s son administration’s foreign pol- PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Cloudy with occasional light j d to slash^ dollar drain Newsweek articles critical of jcy ,f Kennedy were to ^ the snow or snow flurries likely through tonight. Not so cold today. by bjj||on r includes an ef- South Vietnamese army High 18 to 24, Low tonight 8 to 15. Wednesday! Partly cloudy and]|gd [q government spending colder with a chance of snow flurries. Winds southerly at 8 to 16jabroad by 5509 million this year 0 miles heenminff nnrtheriv rinrino the niohl ThnrcHnv’c nnllnnb-__i - _______:___________7- .. S Senate on June 23, 1967, quotes and director of the Social Four vehicles, under the com the senator, a former FBI science Research Council. 1 mand of Assistant Chief Lee Nye agent, as saying at 1964 Demo-! Ambassador Reinhardt, 56, responded to the alarm and Icratic convention time: !has held ^iis cprrent post for the were at the scene until about I Democratic presidential nomin-j “There are only two jobs that past six years and has been con-7 a^m It would be the first expulsion gtion jd0rse said “I think he’d1 would leave the Senate for.isidered overdue for reassign-j Metz, who said his office will MHHII_____________________________________________|_________ i ti ^ c of .an American newsman from have a chance, still, to ^BI director and the head of the ment. Before his arrival in Italy continue its investigation of the miles becoming northerly during the night. Thursday’s outlook:landman^xDansion of exDorts to^outk Vietnam ?ince 1962’ wb*n take that nomination — if it’sSCentral Intelligence Agency,ihe served succesively as U:gfire today, tentatively blamed ___i__u n________________L.Limi,. s_ __ ___i __ m. 1° a / T . thp latp PrpsiHpnt Npo Din .. * .• ■ --------0---------a -------o----—rt—------------j ---------- ciiiu dii cAfJdiiaiuu ui ca^ui ta iu » . PrdciH^nt Non Din iivhhumwvii « •• fair and cold. Precipitation probabilities in per cent are: Today! increase the trade surplus by at laie on the foreign policy issue.” a nn a___ aa ; ^ Tiipm pynp pH .InmpQ Hnhinsnn 50, tonight 70, tomorrow 40. Today in Pontiac Lowest temperature preceding 8 a.m.: At 8 a.m.: Wind Velocity 8 m.p.h. Direction: Southerly % Sun sets Tuesday at 5:13 p.m. Sun risas Wednesday at 8:02 a m. Moon Sets Tuesday at 8:01 p.m. Moon rises Wednesday at 10:50 a.m. Monday In' Pontiac Downtown Tomporaturos 7 a.m. 8 a.m/ 9 a.m. 10 a.m. 12 il2 m. 1 p.m. 2 p.m. Ono Year Ago in Pontiac Highest temperature Lowest temperature Mean temperature ............... Weather—Partly sunny Highest and Lowest Temperatures * This Dale in tj Year’s 62 in 1876 18 In 1 (At xcorded downtown) Highest temperature ^4 Lowest temperature 5 Mean temperature 4.5 Weather~Sunny Monday's Temperatures Alpena 12 8 Detroit 10 2 Escanaba 8 -6 Duluth 3 19 Flint 11 7 Fort Worth 44 42 G. Rapids 13 10 Jacksonville 77 55 Houghton 2 -6 Kansas City 23 20 Houghton Lk. 9 1 Los Angeles 60 51 Jackson 10 5 Miami Beach 79 72 Lansing 11 6 Milwaukee 13 9 Marquette 5 -1 New Orleans 51 47 Muskegon 11 10 New York 32 9 Oscoda 11 6 Omaha 18 14 Pellston 10 5 Phoenix 57 32 Traverse C. 12 8 Plttsourgh 18 1 Albuquerque 41 22 St. Louis 19 15 Atlanta 40 36 T ampa 77 62 Bismarck 6 21 S. Lake City 40 29 Boston 32 2 S. Ste. Marie 3 5 Chicago 17 12 Seattle 47 32 Cincinnati 15 4' Washington 37 8 Diem expelled James Robinson of the National Broadcasting — ... ». Co. and Francois Sully of News-: In outlining the program Mon- . ly at a Johnson City, Tex., I least that much and I may very well wind up.in ambassador to Vietnam and the the blaze on an oil-fired space-one place or the other.” United Arab Republic. heater. 4 5 news conference, the President Martin can appeal the deci- revealed the dollar drain this sion to the minister of the interi- J year would reach $3.5 billion to or, whose ministry declined to $4 billion—highest in seven renew the visa. Ford Announces Price Increases in 1968 Models ,OU Fees Cut for Part-Timers Johnson also listed Martin, who has been in$et- _ .. , nam for nearly two years, reen- DETROIT (UPI) — The Fordi 5lghe-ritered South Vietnam last Nov. Motor Co. announced price in-28 after a short vacation. He creases ® $32 per car came back without a visa, a l°day* similar to those an-normal practice for Americans nounced last week by the other returning from a short stay out U S' aato makers, of the country, and applied for a All four auto companies said | U.S el, big-and a :ted in For some 700 Oakland University part-time students who began registration today for winter semester, the new year started out on a pleasant note. They found that course fees had been reduced. Preliminary reaction to the j plan from Congress seemed cheery with Chairman William* Proxmire, D-Wis., of the Seh-; ate-House Economic Committee, calling it “exactly the kind I of decisive and comprehensive i action the situation called for.’’1 reentry visa. Woodward Due fbr Road Repairs 100 Take Dip in Cold Pacific prices were increased to cover shoulder harnesses, which be-‘ came standard equipment for] front seats of cars built after Jan. 1. Oakland University followed Michigan State University’s lead in putting a new part-time fee schedule into effect until next fall. semester, and $175 for graduates, $5 less than last semester. • 5 to 6 credits—$141 for undergraduates and graduates, $39 less than last semester. • 3 to 4 credits—$102 for both undergraduates and graduates, the same as fall semester. • 1 to 2 credits—$49 fojr undergrads, compared to $102 last semester, and $49 for grads, unchanged. AP Wlrtpholo NATIONAL WEATHER—Snow and snow, flurries are forecast tonight over a large portion qf the Northern and Central sections of the country. Rain is expected in the Southeast with showers due over the Southwestern portion of the nation. Milder temperatures are predicted in the At-lantlc slates and the deep South. j. The State Highway Department has assigned a survey, to gather data for the resurfacing and repair of 1.7 miles of Woodward from South Boulevard in Pontiqc to Square Lake Road in Bloomfield Township. The survey is expected to be Ford said suggested retail prices of Ford, Falcon, Fair-lane, Mustang and Thunderbird cars increased $23.18; prices of Mercury, Montego and Cougar FRANCISCO (AP) cars, $23; and prices of Lincoln than 100 persons joined! Continental, $32.40. General Motors Corp. and American Motors Corp. led off the price announcements Thursday. Gltf said its car Air and water temperatures prices would increase by $23, i registered the same—42 de- $26 and $32, with the bigger in- * gre.es, creases for more expensive I It's cold.” said Scott Butler, cars. American Motors an-! ^*ve never mjssed one,” said nounced an increase of $23 per MSU trustees, who also govern OU, reduced MSU undergraduate resident part-time fees for this winter, spring and sum,-mer terms by $17 for seven to nine credits over two weeks ago. Nonresident undergraduate and graduate fees arc unchanged, according to Swanson. SAN More the Olympit Club’s 75th annual j New Year's Day swim in the i Pacific The trustees, however, had Oakland University officials wondering whether OU would also reduce its fees since they did not specifically call fof a new schedule at Oakland. > coriipletcd Jtn April. No date Otto Wallflsch, 81, who made his [car. Friday. Chrysler said Its |has been set for taking bids on first plunge in 1905 and was en- prices would go up by $25 per] ! the project. joying No. 63. icar. v ] NEW SCHEDULE OU Business Director Robert W. Swanson came up with a new Oakland schedule just Friday. Here is the new schedule for Michigan resident undergraduates and graduates. • 7 to 9 credits—$165 per semester for undergraduates, compared to $180 fall Michigan State now charges a total of $297 for'those taking seven.\tov nine credits during a September-through-spring school year while OU charges $330: ★ * . Swanson explained that the two schools fees do not compare exactly because they have different course multiples. Most MSU courses ire in multiples of three—3, 6, 9, 12 Credits—while OU has multiples of four. Next fall MSU and OU will return to essentially this past fall's schedule with provisions for reductions based on ability to pay. Then, seven to nine credits at OU would cost a maximum of about $174 with reductions op family income to a minimum of about $123, Swanson s^jd. / I / i hm;h Some 90 courses, ranging in perintendent of community, length from six to 10 weeks, are school services, being offered during the winter! Registration for the classes term by the Department of will take place from 1 p.m. to class for moi school children ir pre- that 36 separate classes will be and mo.sj pf them will remain in offered daring the winter term.BishcgEJwtil they have learned This class, according to Ydh* mans, is an opportunity for tp Commuhity School Services of P m- next Monday through mother and Child to express themselves with various art media, including fmRer painting, the Waterford Township SchoolUb„77 nj ( i , ■ terford Township High School, T. . , HIS Crescent Lake. The classes will begin the „ ' week of Jan. 15, according to Registration for limited ctass-Donald Yourpans, assistant su-es and Bishop sewing must be -— ---------_a----* completed in person. , ■ I ■ ★ . 4 if •'’1* 4 ! For all other classes, partici- 2 Polls Pants can regisie1, *n person or Besides the continuation of the to;Mjpr their own two-piece suit [Bishop II through VI classes,jpjftishop Vfe” Youmans said, beginning courses and spM^bmnienting oh the entire pro- cialty: classes in double kip shifts, Siaek!j and advan^^W u T ? FLZZ Tn, lings are wing offered, chalk, charcoal and water col- 6 2$', Assess Nixon,, Rockefeller by mail. MAILING ADDRESS ) Checks or money orders * ★ ★ Still another new course the art field is decoupage, an art form which rapidly is becoming very popular. CUT AND PASTE Various prints or designs are cut and pasted to purses, pic-, , Jture, plaques, lamps, furniture should be mailed to Waterfordjor any other pergonal or house- ; Community S c h o o is, 3835 W. Loid item. . * Walton, Drayton Plains, Mich. No art talent is needed.for vrvoi.- tnDT, 48020- this approach to new decorative NEW. YORK (UPI) — One . , , Yniimans poll of Republican party leaders) T*,e c,as®es ®Pe“t®resi’J shows former Vice President [dents of the Waterford Town- ’ Richard M. If ikon most likely to jshiP School District and the Two new classes have been get the 1968 GOP presidential!surrounding area. [added in furniture refinishing, nomination, but a separate poll! Several new courses havel ★ ★ ★ shows Gov. Nelson Rockefeller been added for the winter term, They are chair caning, the art of New York would be the [Youmans noted. !of reseating chairs with cane, stronger candidate against Pres4 ★ * * !reed or rush in any of the tra- ident Johnson. s. f Irfcluded is an adult crafts [aitionaL methods; and furniture A poll by Newsweek Magazine!class in which the instructor,is j upholstering, showed Nixon has a command-;prepared to work with any ip- j SPEED READING ing lead-among potential dele-)dividual on any craft project off d reading js another of the gates to the Republican Nation- the student s choice. [new* classes. It is designed to al Convention next August ini ANOTHER NEW COURSE j help the student increase his Miami. The magazine said that jhfs could include copper tool- j reading rate and, at the same if the convention were held to-;. Qr enameling metai spin- time, retain or improve his day, Nixon would get 561 v°ies>|njng archery equipment comprehension of the material, only 106 short of the 667 needed ^roug)1 ]amination, wood carv-for the nomination. ^ ing and plastic forming. The other poll, by the New 'ram, Youmans said: “As more and more people] realize the opportunities offered in their schools, our program' | “Our Btohop'ii|||fl^]^'''teach-:continues to grow. From a small) jn ers is one of t|e fastest and beginning four years ago, we; Jnjbest trained in The country,” have approached the point) said Youmans. ) where it is no longer unique for "About ,150 women will begin someone to participate in these their Bishops training this term classes. York Times, indicated party leaders and observers in the 50 states with 378 electoral votes, compared with 100 for Johnson and 60 for former Gov. George C. Wallace of Alabama, who is campaigning as a third party candidate. The Newsweek survey of delegates put Rockefeller in second place behind Nixon with 363 potential delegate votes. Gov. Ronald Reagan of California had 201 and Gov. George Romney of Michigan, the only declared GOP candidate, had 89. There were Ilf undecided votes among governors, state chairman and leading spokesmen polled in all 50 states. ★ ★ ★ The Times said its survey showed that in a two-man race Nixon would edge Johnson by “a relatively narrow margin,” 271 electoral votes to 267. But with Wallace in the race, Johnson would get 301 votes to 210 for Nixon and 27 „ for Wallace. The newspaper said! Wallace was the “chief imponderable” in assessing next) November’s election. • / . Both publications said their surveys were based on current conditions and on how potential delegates feel now. - Neither made any attempt to consider possible shifts in issues during the seven months remaining before the national conventions. “Bishop sewing is still our single most popular program,” Another new course is an art said Youmans, who informed Starts Today at SIMMS once-a-year SIMMS Big JANUARY CLEARANCE Of PHOTOGRAPHIC NEEDS It's that time of year agdin — when we take our 1- and 2-of-a-kind models and take 30% to 50% off the regular prices: / All brand new, though -some are demos, all carry new guarantees. HurrS*^-these specials all this week only. KODAK 404 INSTAMAT1C Electric-Eye Camera; Set $59.95 Value • Now MALLORY DURACELL Alkaline Battery It Here ways FRESH MallorY VII Sizes For Toys Cameras, Radios and Flashlights Electric-eye Jnstant loading Camera gives !you perfect exposures ^plus automatic film advance. Flash-cube lets you shoot 4 flash shots without changing • bulb. Complete color camera set. SIMMSil linaw —Camera Dept., Main F.loor r Hard of Hearing? remarkable new invention helps restore your ability to hear more clearly 'Splash Day' Gets a Cool Reception CORPUS CHRISTI, Tex. (AP) — A crowd of some 400 gathered on Padre Island Monday for the 14th annual “splash day” observance, which is supposed to demonstrate for all to see that the climate is mild "in the Corpus Christi area. Nine young ladies in bathing suits shivered their way through a beauty pageant. Then Mayor Jack Blackmon led a dozen swimmers for a dip in the surf in 53-degree weather. ★ ★ ★ The dip was a quick one, and [ the swimmers had hlue lips and chattering teeth as they headed I for the dressing rooms. 14CA W During World War I, Russia! once had # peak strength of! 54 cavalry divisions, according jt to the Encyclopaedia Britan? nica. If you have a hearing problem, y. ° uH.1 1 want to know all about an important new device developed by a Texas inventor. This new idea is not only surprisingly uncomplicated—it is amazingly inexpensive. Yet it is so remarkable, a patent, has been applied for. It may do much more than merely help you hear. It may help you hear more clearly—even, in crowded noisy rooms or out in the open! Called NORMEAR (Pat. Pending), this scientific invention is now being offered exclusively in combination with the Beltone Andante hearing "aid. You’ll be thrilled with Andante’s small —amazed it’s’so spicuous. FREE HEARING TEST Even if you’ve been told a hearing aid won’t help ...or that efficient hearing aids must be large and bulky to, give you the help you metd . . . you 1 owe it to yourself to investigate Normear and the Beltone Andante. Bring in this ad, or call today. Have a FREE electronic hearing test, using the precision Beltone audiometer. You may have your FREE test in our office, or in the privacy of ypur own home. No cost. Naturally, no obligation. 42»» Big Features At A Small Price! BELL & HOWELL Auto-Loading Super 8 Projector With Forward, Still and Reverse Projections #346 Model $84.95 Value Takes the new Super 8 film — automatically-threads "Thru the film gate, safety .ratchet sprockets. FT.6 lens, bright lamp, 400 ft. reel capacity. Rugged die-cast construction. Get it on Instant Credit with a major credit card or $1 holds. K0WA ‘SER’ Single-Lens Reflex 35mm Electric-Eye Camera HEARING AID CENTER , Earl Glaspie Certified Hearing, Aid Audioligiit Huron St. Opposite Pon. Gen. Free Parking 334-7711 Hospital „ * , as BESS as^^s 9| OAKLAND COMMUNITY COLLEGE COMMUNITY SERVICES Div., Office of Cultural Affairs Announces THE RENAISSANCE QUARTET IN CONCERT Lute Tenor Viola da gamba Recorder - Tuesday, Jan. 9 8M PH. Bloomfield Mills Mover High School All Tickets (Long Lake Road, Just-West of Telegraph)^ «3LO0 for Reservation Interchangeable Lena $164.00 Value Electric-eye .camera with teU-fimer camera with 50mnv f2 lens, and Fine ™ " CDS meter, split-image rangefinder Penta prism reflex focusing and removable lens, shutter speeds to 1/500 seconds. $1 holds-or charge it on a major credit card. $15 case only $5.00. TENSOR Mini-Lite Hi-lntensity Lamp $5.00 value — non-transformer type lamp with hi-in-tensity, bulb for close work. Ideal for sewing, reading and hobby work projects. Limit 1 per customer. 033 REALT0NE ‘Jade’ M TRANSISTOR Radio Powerful AM station getter 1 per customer while 40 remain in st^t k. REALTONE 12-TR. World-Wide 4-Band Radio FM-AM-SW-MW Simms Bros.-98 N. Saginaw St.-Downtown Pontiac OPEN TONITE 'til Weds. Hours-. 9am to 5:30pm W P.M< 9 ilue — get FM and AM stations , plus short wave bands and marine bands; Complete, ready to use. Get it on a credit card. Model 243b. II North Saginaw Street SIMMS!*., TOMTE MEDNESMY Only these are such tremendous bargains, we must limit the sale today 'til 9pm and tomorrow 9am. to 5:30pm. { All items subject to stock on hand at time of adv. and we reserve the right to limit quantities.. Pontiac's Bargain-King Store Twin Pack of 5's—SCHICK Stainless Razoir Blades Double Edge World’s Largest Seller Jergens Lotion ioVa Ounces $1,58 volqe twin pack — • total of -40 stainless steel J' blades for fast, smooth, more comfortable shaving, c Limit 2 deals. — DRUGS Main Floor * $1.00 value — world famous Jergens aft purpose lotion in generous 1 OVi-ounce size. With pump dispenser, too. Limit 2. -COSMETICS Main Floor Smooth ‘Bankers Choice’ Box of 50 CIGARS $3 Seller Your Favorite Brands CIGARETTES Smooth smoking 6c sellers. Full box of 50— give yourself a smoking treat at a low price. Tax included, too. Limit 2 boxes. —TOBACCO Main Floor, Plus Salta Tax Choice of regular, king size and filter brands. 100M or 101 sizes not included at this low price. Limit 2 cartons. 1 -TOBACCO Main Floor Recharge Your Toy, Flashlight, Radio Batteries With ‘Fedtro’ Battery Re-Charger $5.75 value — don't throw away weak batteries — give 'em fresh life with a charge - up. For C, © sizes plus 9 - volt transistor batteries. Complete with built-in tester. -SUNDRY Main Floor 099 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • %• • • «►'• •••••••• • • • **- v- . > . The New REMINGTON Selectra 300 Electric Razor with Dial-A-Shave The dial adjusts the thin, sharp shaving heads to the right position for your skin and beard. Dial trim for side-burn trimmer. Dial clean for instdnt cleaning. —SUNDRY Main Floor vm ALL METAL ‘Porta-File’ Chests Marbleized Finish Wood Toilet Seats LOCK & KEY All metal portable filing chest to hold important papers. Index dividers to keep papers in order. Holds 800 documents. Limit 1 chest. -HARDWARE 2nd Floor Choice of marbleized green color or Mother-of • Pearl blue color. Complete with standqrd fittings for regulation toilet bowls. Limit 1 per customer. -HARDWARE 2nd Floor Special! Irregulars of $3.9B Values Ladies’ Better Slacks 99 0 Choice of better quality slacks in a wide assortment of fabrics including: corduroys, twills, wash V wear cottons, western jeans, ' etc. Selection of colors and styles in plains or prints. All sizes 8 to 44. -CLOTHINGMain Floor A Very Special Purchase! American Made Ladies’ 1st Quality SHOES Group of FLAT Styles Loafer style suedes, patents, suedes, etc.. In a variety of colors. All leather uppers. Your choice at one price. All sizes. Work and Dress/Heels Iqw and mod heels lor casual and work, spike heel* ior droit. Wide variety ol colon land styloi. leather uppers, tome tuedet. Sizes start at 4 and up to 12 in some styles. Widths include B to AAAA. — SHOES Basement Level 98 North ^ Saginaw SIMMS.®*.., 3 Floort of Better Bargain! Board to Name New Supervisor SPRINGFIELD TOWNSHIP - A new supervisor, replacing Buell E. Starr who resigned recently due to Illness, will be appointed by the Township Board at 7:30 p.itt. tomorrow at the Davisburg Town Halt ★ * ★ head-on collision in Garden City yesterday morning. WHITE LAKE TWP. Three 18-year-olds; Calvin Forsee of Grosse Pointe, Doyle Mitchell of Highland Township and Roger Stenger, also of Highland Township, killed Sunday in a two-car collision, in White Lake Township. Melvin Cole, 25, and his 24-year-old wife., Elizabeth, of Swartz Creek, and 29-year-old Wendell Hatt of Flint, killed in a head-on collision on M78 outside Flint early yesterday. Edward Pretzlaff, 56, and his wife Evelyn, 47, when their car collided with a pickup truck on ice-slicked -M17 Sunday night. Bert Iliff Jr., 28, of Brighton, and An- Farmers Wary of Non returnable Bottle LANSING UO — The tractor rumbles over a broken jbottle, gashing'One 600-pound tire. It May’ be out of commission for a week as the owner puts up $250 for a new tire. That same bottle could cost a marketer hundreds of dollars in produce hr be dangerous to children, adults or farm livestock. For these reasons, the Michigan Farm Bureau is considering joining a state senator in efforts to outlaw the nonre-turnable bottle in Michigan. “We really Jiave a problem with bottles along the highway next to farm fields,’’ says Dale Sherwin, legislative counsel for Ihe Farm bureau. “We must get people con-c.ined.” ★ ★ * Behind Sherwin’s statements are "facts like these:. • A 2-to-3-inc,h gash in a tractor tire costs a farmersome $50 and at least one day tq repair. Replacement of the huge tire could total $250 and waste a week of precious time while repairs are completed. • One food processor recently returned 10 carloads of dry edible beans to a Michigan marketing exchange because of glass found in the produce. “Companies use an electric eye to sort out bad beans,’’ Sherwin explains, “but they have no magnetism to pull out glass.” • Another processer found nearly all of a glass beverage bottle in a carload of wheat, tried to reconstruct the bottle but missed a couple of pieces and returned the entire carload— from 2,000 to 3,500 bushels. • An estimated 1 to 2 per cent of the state’s $100-plus mil- lion bean and wheat crops were lost in 1967 because of broken glass. j. 1 Sherwin says the Farm Bureau has been working for some time—to no avail—to have the nonreturnable bottle banned, in Michigan and now will ask district organizations to consider supporting the petition drive announced last week by Sen. Roger E. Craig, D-Dearborn. Craig wants to collect 200,000 signatures asking for a vote in the 1968 general election on a proposal to outlaw nonreturn-able bottles. ★' ★ ★ * The senator plans to introduce legislation to this effect, in the State Senate shprtly after the 1968 regular session convenes Jan. 10. / ProjFrom County State Weekend Road Toll Hits 27 State legislators from Oakland County will be urged to back a'bill banning use of nonreturnable bottles in Michigan. The move was adopted as a policy by1 a joint meeting of the County Road Commission and the board of supervisors’ road committee. Their resolution urges the supervisors’ legislative committee to contact the legislators with the proposal and a meeting is to be arranged sometime this week. The move follows one by State Sen. Roger Craig, D-Dearborn, who announced last week he will try to collect 200,000 signatures to place the issue on the ballot. County officials agreed with Craig’s contention that the no-deposit bottles are expensive to pick up. Unlike a can, the bottles don’t rust away, but persist as litter along highways. By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Twenty-seven people lost their lives on Michigan roads during the New Year’s holiday period, including nine who were killed in three triple fatal accidents and four more who were killed in double. fatalities. . The, Associated Press count started 6 p.m. Friday and ended last midnight. Last year’s New Year’s toll was 26. Ten of the fatalities occurred after the start of the New Year. Last year’s toll amounted to 2,075, more than 200 fewer than the 1966 total of 2,296 killed on the state’s highways. ★ .★ ★ The victims: Vida Gray, 17, of Inkster; Chester Johnson, 20, of Garden City; and Bruno P. Wolons, 29, of Westland, killed in a thony J. Galloway, 22, of Flint, in a head-on collision Saturday oh U.S. 23 in Fenton after Iliff allegedly entered the wrong expressway ramp and drove some 11 miles in the wrong direction. HIT TREE Gregory Oswoski, 20, of Lake City, when he lost control of his car and hit a tree on M66 north of Lake City Monday. John Stephenson, 48, of Ferndale, in a two-car collision at a Detroit intersection yesterday morning. Harry D, Ryther, 48, of Frederick, whose car hit a tree along old U.S. 27 just north of M93 in Crawford County’s Frederick Township Sunday. ★ ★ . * . Molly Silverstein, 73, of Detroit, struck Huron Valley Pares $11,000 off School Cost j Some1 $11,000 has been shaved off general construction contracts for the proposed third elementary school in the Huron Valley School District.. The board recently approved deletions amounting to $8,293 from the general contract and $3,600 from the electrical contract, bringing the total price to $1,-116,111. The pared costs are still $26,000 aboye the original estimate, according to school board officials. The school, to be ready for use in January 1969, is to be built in Milford’s Atlantic Subdivision between Atlantic and Noble Streets. - . Board members discussed sharing to the extent of $3,500 the cost of putting ji water main down Hill Street to serve the school. Remainder of the cost would be absorbed by the village. JUNIOR HIGH PLANS - Schematic drawings for renovation and addition to the existing Highland Junior High School were approved. The drawings were presented by Richard Prince, Kalamazoo architect. A bid by administrators for recognition of their Huron Valley Administrators Asociation for purposes of bargaining was tabled until the Jan. 22 meeting. Raises for auxiliary supervisor personnel amounting to as much as $400 a year and fringe benefits were approved. Probe of New Year's Party Melee Reveals a Third Stabbing Victim WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP -Police investigation of a fight at a New Year’s Eve party here has revealed a third stabbing victim who remains unknown. ★ ★ Since the "melee at about 3:30 a.m. New Year’s Day, township police have Troy Commission Expected to Set. Date for Tax Vote TROY — The City Commission tonight is expected to get a definite date for the vote on a half-mill tax increase. The increase, expected to provide about $70,000 of revenue, will be used for a new library at the civic center. Previously, the commission established a tentative date of Feb. 19 for the vote, provided^ a city primary is scheduled for the same day. However, another rrilllage election — for schools — has been proposed, and the commission will consider at its 7:30 meeting tonight the possibility of holding both elections the same day, with or without a primary. ★ ★ ★ Supporters of both millages have suffered setbacks in recent months. The library tax hike was defeatedApril 3; and voters twice rejected jufi increase for schools, on June 12 and Sept. 11. Litter Pickup Price $1,967 a Day in State LANSING OB — It cost the state $1,967 a day in 1967 to pick up tons of rubbish scattered along Michigan’s highways, the State Highway Commission said yesterday. , questioned some 15 witnesses and are continuing their investigation .today. Still In serious condition at Botsford Hospital is Randall Ryan, 19, of 21355 Farmington, Farmington, with stab wounds in the back and a possible collapsed lung. His brother, Thomas, 21, of the same address, was treated and released for stab wounds in the back and the back of his headi ★ ★ ★ Another man at the party at $551 Drake was reportedly beaten and also remains unidentified, said township police. This victim was injured when he supposedly tried to dance with another man’s wife, said police. But the police are not sure what started the fight which ended in the’ stabbings.' ATTACKED BY 7 The Ryan brothers, home on leave ..from the Army, were attacked by seven men in the parking lot after they arrived, at the party at the Drake Road home of Mr. and Mrs. Gary Barr, according to police. Thomas reportedly went into the house for a few minutes, and when he came out he s£w five men beating Randall, police said. The unknown stabbing victim was also in the parking lot and holding his face, said police. it it ir Township patrolmen Richard Lam-phier and Tliomas Burke were summoned to the scene at 3:35 a m. New Year’s Day by a telephone call from Mrs. ^Thomas Ryan. TROUBLE EXPECTED Lamphier said that the pqlice had expected trouble at the party and that witnesses reported several small fights before the stabbing. There was evidence of a large fight both inside and outside the home when the police arrived, said Lamphier. He estimated that about 60 persons between the ages of 19 and 29 were at the party. Most of the guests were from Farmington and Walled Lake, Lamphier added. ★ ★ ★ - Guests questioned said they saw the seven assailants leave the scene in one car before the police arrived. The seven had a knife and possibly two shotguns, said witnesses. POLICE ASSIST Assisting township police at the scene were police from Novi, Bloomfield Township and Walled Lake and the Oakland CoUnty Sheriff’s Department. ★ ★ ★ The home is behind a meeting place for an assembly of churches of which Barr is caretaker. Meeting Rescheduled by Pine Knob PTA INDEPENDENCE TOWNSHIP ^ The regular January meeting of the Pine Knob PTA has been changed from Jan. 8 to Jan. 15. ★ ★ ★ "Communication Between School and Home" is the program topic. Geoijge W. Barrie, administrative assistant in charge of elementary education for the Clarkston Community .Schools, will speak. it it ir An ppen house will precede the regular business meeting at 7:30 p.m. EAGLE SCOUT - Gary Jakubos, 14, of 4230 S. Oak, Metamora, is the first member of Metamora Boy Scout Troop No. 132 to attain the rank of Eagle Scout in 10 years. The son of Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd H. Jakubos, he is a member of William (t wills’ .troop. Henrik E. Stafseth, acting state higii. way director, said the commission spent nearly $718,000 during the year to clean up along the 9,200 miles of state high-, way. .* * * ★ This, he said, is about three times the anfepnt spent six years ago. Starr was appointed to the position last April to fill the unexpired term of retiring veteran Supervisor John L. Carey, 77. Starr was retired works manager of Pontiac Motor Division, a former, township trustee and president of the Holly School Board. The retiring supervisor lives at 12810 E. Holly. ★ ★ ★ Remaining members of the Township Board are David H. Field, clerk; Margaret R. Samuel, treasurer; and Gary W. Duncan and E. L. Rundell, trustees. REFINING TECHNIQUES — Mrs. Joseph Seddon (left), 3515 Lorena, Waterford Township, and MrsrWarren Kennison, 1807 Melbourne, Birmingham, practice cardiopulmonary resuscitation during a class sponsored by the Oakland County unit of the Michigan Heart Association. Mrs. Seddon is practicing mouth-to-mouth breathing, while Mrs. Kennison is doing heart massage. The gauges near the head of the mannequin indicate when the technique is being properly done. Classes are held in William Beaumont Hospital, Royal Oak, and Providence Hospital, Southfield. by a car Saturday on Detroit’s Northwest side, i a—— STRUCK BY CAR Francis Bowles,* 76, of rural Belding, who died Saturday of injuries suffered Friday night when he was struck by a car as he was getting out of a car parked near his Kent County home. Helen A. Roberts, 63, of Kalamazoo, after her car collided with an oncoming auto on M43 Saturday four miles west of Kalamazoo. 'Alice D. McNeal, 56, of Hudson, killed in a two-car crash Saturday on „M34 about four miles east of Hillsdale. ★ ★ ★ Jack Norman Hubbard, 22!, of Union Lake, struck by a car Friday night as he crossed M59 in Oakland County’s Waterford Township to get help for his stalled car. 3-CAR SMASHUP Cyril Munn, 72, of Plymouth, whose car was involved in a three-car smash-up Friday night on 1-75 in Saginaw County. Ivan Alvcrd, 82, of Montague, a passenger in a pickup truck which overturned Friday night in Oceana County’s Grant Township. Tyler Kelley, 19, of Caro, when an-, other car hit hi§. stalled car yesterday In Ellington Township, Tuscola County. ★ ★ * Sherry Ann Knight, 17, of Highland, killed by a hit-and-run driver as she walked on Milford Road in Highland Township early yesterday. LOST CONTROL Thomas L. Fitzenrider, 23, of Defiance, Ohio, when he lost control of his car on M99 Sunday, crashed through a guard rail and hit a large sign. Robert Lee Grimes, 18, of Lambert-ville, killed 15 feet north for the Michi-gan-Ohio border in Monroe County when his car went off the road Sunday night and struck a • utility pole in Whiteford Township. 2 Parks Offer Winter Sports in Abundance A variety of winter sports are available at Stopey Creek Metropolitan Park in Washington Township* and Kensington Metropolitan Park near Milford. Kensington offers tobogganing, skating, sledding, ice fishing, hiking, and picture taking. Huron-Clinton Metropolitan Authority spokesmen report catches of bluegills and crappies are taken by the hundreds of fishermen who fish on Kent Lake. Skating is provided on the same lake in front of the boat rental building from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. daily. The building has a heated lounge with a fireplace, restrooms, and food service through vending machines. It is open^rom 10 ^a.m. to 10 p.m. on Saturday and'Sunday and from 2 p.m. to 10 p.m. Monday through Friday. ★ ★ ★ Five toboggah tracks and a separate area for sledding are open daily from 8 a.m. to 10:30 p.m. weather conditions permitting. FACILITIES At Stoney Creek Metropolitan Park, there is ice fishing, ice skating, sledding and hiking. Panfish, bass and pike inhabit Stoney Creek Lake, but it is not open to fishermen north of 28 Mile Road. Because the lake has been lowered six feet for shoreline construction of a new launching ramp and grading of East-wood Beach, a future swimming site, the area regularly used for ice skating will not be open. It is expected that ice skating will be available at the new boat launching area in the southwest section of the park, depending upon- lake level and weather conditions- — —.................. ★ ★ ★ Three sledding areas are provided. These are /Oakgrove and West branch picnic areas and on the high hills near the park or Cooperative Nurseries in Rochester Schedule ■ > Social Worker Address ROCHESTER — G. Dennis Brown, a psychiatric social worker, will address members of St. Paul’s Cooperative Nursery and Rochester Cooperative Nursery at 8 p.m. Jan. 11 at St. Paul’s Methodist Church. His topic will be “Aggression in Children’s Play.” - ♦ * ★ Brown has worked in child guidance and mental health* for 15 years. He is chief psychiatric social worker of the Genesee Cdunty Mental Health Association and has worked with deaf children in the Flint Child Guidance Clinic. Program information may be obtained from Mrs. James McAlpine, director of the Rochester Cooperative Nursery. Road Commission Reelects Chairman Frazer Stamen has been reelected to his second one-year term as chairman of the County Road Commission. ■ Stamen, 63, of ■ Wixom, is now serving his fifth I year of a five-year term on the com-m'ss'on He was reelected at a joint session of the commission U and the County ■L Board of Super-visors Roads Com-STAMEN mittee. Stamen is a former supervisor of Novi Township. TROy NEWCOMER — Newly completed at 2891 Industrial How, Troy, is this plant of Edon;,Industrial Products Co., a 'Quaker of automation controls and mei^try systems for in- dustrial processing. The company, owned by Edward T. Kan-tarian of Royal Oakland Donald F. Staub of Bloomfield Htyls, was formerly locatM in Royal Oak. About 60 Children Are Given Clothing by Clarkston G[oup V CLARKSTON - About 60 childrep in the Clarkston-Waterford Township-Pon-tiac area were outfitted with clothing for Christmas through the efforts of the Clarkston Area Youth Assistance Committee. WWW New clotheh were provided by the Senior Child Study Club and by Mr. and Mrs. E. D. Rummins of the assistance committee. The American Legion Post also offered help, according to Mrs. Marie C. Brendle of the committee. WWW Planned for the coming year is a student youth code, a Clarkston youth di-, rectory and a recreation program. May Aid Try to Outlaw It THE PONTIAC PRESS TUESDAY, JANUARY 2, 1968 A——4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, 3AN 2, 1968 fsffas A—-A Deaths in Pontiac, Mrs. Ula Bell Service for Mrs. Ula Bell, 64, of 692 Bagley will be 8 p.m. tpday in, New Hope Baptist William A.5onnenbora!hom* and Wayne L. In the ° Army, and grandparents Mrs, Service, for William A.! Son-nenbefg, 79, of 1478 Rosedale, Sylvan Lake, will be 2 p.m Church;' JHer bodywill be tak-J Thursday at Sparks-Griffin' en to Mount Pieplant, Tenn., for burial by the Davjs-Cobb Funeral Home, Mrs. Bell, a member of New Hope Church, died Saturday. Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Vera Jackson of Pontiac; a foster son, Staff Sgt.1 Walter G. Ford with the Air Force; and two sisters. Andrew W. Dabney , ‘ Service for Andrew W. Dabney, 66, of 383 Luther will be 1 p,m. Friday in’ Macedonia Baptist Church with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery by the Frank Carruthers Funeral Home. Mr. Dabney, owner of Never Sleep Shoe Shine Shop, died Sunday. He was*a member of Macedonia Church. Surviving is his wife, Elia, Chapel with burial in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Mr. Sonnenberg died yesterday. He was a member of St. Trinity JLutheran Church. * > Surviving are his wife, Elsie; two sons, Edwin L“ of Pontiac and William A. Jr. of California; two daughters, Mrs. Adeline VanVleck of Cleveland, Q h i o, and Mrs. Evelyn Palmer of Chicago, III; three grandchildren; Six great-grandchildren; and a sister. Agnes Kazan of Detroit and Mr. and . Mrs. Dearborn Robert E. Millard Camera Equipment Town Finally Found in Avon Twp. to Get Doctor Pontiac State Police are at-!-- DARRINGTON, Wash. President Washington witnessed the beginning o f airborne transport in America, when Jean Pierre Blanchard sailed off from Germantown in a hydrogen-inflated balloon which crossed the Delaware. Alas, neither was a world-first. Russians took the first space walk, and the famed 18th century aeronaut had earlier crossed the English Channel by balloon from his native France. ★ ★ * Our second national election was coming up in 1792, and when GW announced plans the previous year for a tour of the Southern states, critics interpreted this as a political maneuver to run for reelection, much as LBJ’s critics are charging today. But there the similarity must sadly end. Not only did Washington run again — he was elected unanimoush;. (Distributed by King Features Syndicate) WASHINGTON — Lots of things have been said or written about Lyndori Johnson and the kind of president he is, and undoubtedly public opinion will be affected to some extent in t h e election year 1968 by the “i m a g e” of the chief executive which has been portrayed by the press and by I TV commenta- LAWRENCE tors in the last five years. There is one thing, however, about Mr. Johnson’s course in the White House which has not been presented objectively to the public. He'must be appraised in relation to the background of his career prior to becoming vice president. He is the first man in this century to reach the White House after having spent 24 years in Congress-12 consecutive years in the. House of Representatives and 12 more in the United States Senate. During six of those latter years, he was the majority leader of the Senate and dealt constantly on legislative matters with a president from the opposite political party. Unquestionably this unique experience had an influence in shaping Mr. Johnson’s tactics when, as president of the United States, he himself was confronted with deep divisions in both parties. •*> * * ★ Rarely has a president prior to Mr. Johnson been “elected previously to a leadership .position by his party in Congress. POLITICAL STRATEGY Mr. Johnson’s political strategy in the presidency is very much like that which legislative leaders in Congress have from time to time found it expedient to practice in trying to reconcile differences of opinion not only inside but outside their party. The customary method is to endeavor to compromise or find some common denominator on which there can be agreement. Highly controversial sections of proposed laws are left for favorable action at a later time. Lyndon Johnson’s tenure in the presidency has often been marked by his attempts to follow a “consensus” — an effort to do what the people generally would like at the moment rather than what may prove best for the country in the long run. * * ★ The politician is more inclined to think of public opinion in the few months ahead as election day approaches either for Congress or the presidency: Mr. Johnson is often referred* to as a master politician, but craftiness is not easy to abolish when dealing with 535 politicians in Congress who have the power to pass the laws and furnish the funds that a president needs in order to perforfh his duties. Lyndon Johnson is the natural p r o d u c t of a congressional environment. Taxpayer Confused by Increase in Taxes In April I was told at the Waterford Township Hall that my property valuation would be increased. This increase would lower the state equalization factor. This in turn would lower the tax rate. I’m confused. My taxes increased over 10 per cent. It would be a good time to have the IVi mill tax vote again. Maybe some of the 2,000, who voted fbr it may change their mind. FRANK HARALABAKOS 1393 N. CASS LAKE RD. Bob Considine Says: My Crystal Ball Sees Johnson Winning in ’68 Resident Is Concerned About City Streets In the past two or three years we have had some bad snowstorms. Since the City can’t afford to plow City streets or residential sections, what’s going to happen this winter when your mailman, garbage truck and milkman can’t get through? DON W. SHAVER 102 E. BROOKLYN Verbal Orchids Mr. and Mrs. John Pohlnian of 1544 Eason;' 63rd Wedding anniversary. Mr. and Mrs. Frank P. Wilson of Farmington, formerly of Orchard Lake ; 56th wedding anniversary. . NEW YORK - Here are my exclusive predictions for 1968: President Johnson will make some dramatic announcement regarding the war in Vietnam not long before the national conventions and win the nomination so over-w h e lining-ly that there will be no effort by party elders,to talk him into CONSIDINE dumping Hubert Humphrey for Bobby Kennedy, idbl of American youth, The Republicans will decide that 1972 looks like a better year to shoot their full broadside, and so will give Richard Nixon the nomination as 1) a reward for all the spadework he did in the 1966 congressional and gubernatorial races, and 2) in the hope that he will do as well as he did when he ran against Jack Kennedy. Dick will ask Charles. Percy to be his running mate. Former President Eisenhower will campaign for him quite industriously; former Sen. Barry Goldwater and Bill Miller will not — in order to help him. Both Govs. Rockefeller and Romney will support the ticket this time, for a change. Gov. Ronald Reagan will make some impressive speeches. But their-work will be in vain because George Wallace of Alabama will be in the race in the strange role of fighting against LBJ by attracting Southern Republican votes to his cause instead o£ Nixon’s. ★ ★ ★ Sen. Eugene McCarthy, after a loud splash or two in the primaries, will slide from view after a paper-hat demonstration at the Democratic convention. A PROBABLE LOSS Harold Stassen will lose, it is believed. A form of truce having settled, oveF-Vietnam, men will be marching home at the time of the conventions. Some of the heavy war costs will be funnelled into domestic programs. Rats will desert sinking tenements by the millions. Raqal strife, will cool Os tne sham of the professional black power activists becomes more apparent to the Negro population, and as belter trained and more intelligently selected policemen, N at i o n a 1 a Guardsmen and state troop- ers are sent against snipers, arsonists and looters. Arthur Ashe will become the* first Negro male to wiA at Wimbledon, and Rap Brown will call him an Uncle Tom, for shaking hands with the queen. Charles de Gaulle will have a change of heart, allow Britain to enter the Common Market, and then ascend from Mt. Blanc. Question and Answer Does one- have to pay State income tax qp a longevity check, starting Oct. 1, 1966, up to Oct. 1, 1967? WONDERING REPLY The Michigan Department of Revenue tells us it is subject to a 2.6 per cent tax if you received it after Oct. 1, 1967. If it were received before that date, it would not be subject to the new income tax. In Washington: Dilemmas Dismay Americans BIOSSAT By BRUCE BIOSSAT WASHINGTON (NEA)-As they did in. 1967, the American people in 1968 are likely to draw a very mixed portrait o f t h e m -selves. There will be more affluence than ever, more people moving about doing things their parents never could afford or find the time to do, more youngsters in school and among them more bright ones, more people with an abiding sense that social justice and peace ought to prevail in this -nation and world. ★ ★ ★ At the same time, there will be more “social” violence related to issues like race and war, more rationalizations of such violence and of disrespect for law as “democracy at wofle,” incredibly more crime in street and home, more frustration and more feeling of being engulfed by the impersonal bigness of the modern “establishment,” more bureaucratic bungling^by both government an d business, less really effective and constructive countereffort despite noisier and noisier protest, more anguished cries for great leadership to take us out of it all. ★ ★ ★ Historians, gazing In future years at what niay seem an impressionistic American self-portrait. with good and bad standing side by side like dots of pare color,/ could do worse' than name the picture the Age of Disillusion. . ’ The disillusion is real. It does not grip all Americans. Far from it. But it affects them all, The nation’s seeming inability to escape war is a crucial part of it. We are in our fourth major war in half a century, and the third for those whose lives go back only to 1940. Nearly half the years since that date, we have been involved somewhere in heavy armed conflict. Looking at the scarred and bloodied record, men here and elsewhere can have only diminished confidence in their capacity, indeed , in the capacity of humanity generally, to settle their differences rationally — without resort to force. There was a time when Americans could find comfort in turning their eyes from the almost dhbroken panorama of foreign battlefields to the secure, undamaged marvels of their own industrial society— symbolized in soaring build-' ings, burgeoning suburbs, a flood of shiny products. ★ ★ ★ That time has gone. For four summers running, racial strife has torn apart the great cities which were the supposed monuments of American achievement at home. Today the cities hdver on the brink & unmanageable chaos — nearly destitute financially, terrified by rampant crime, choked with humj»f> and ve- Ttw Aizoclatad Prat* It «ntHM exclusively to the use tar repubtl-cation of ell local newt printed In Ihle newspaper a* well ee ell AP neyve dispatches. The Pontiac Press It delivered by carrier tar SO cents a week; where mailed In Oakland. Genesee, Livingston, Macomb, i Lapeer end Washtenaw Counties It Is 111.00 e year; elsewhere In -Michloen and all other places In the United states 124.00 a year. All mail subscriptions payable In advance. Postsoe has been paid at Ihe 2nd classT rate at Pontiac. Michigan. Member of ABC. « hicular traffic, blanketed by pollution. They are the seeding places of potential revolt. In his newspaper and on his television set, the American daily learns of his country’s troubled involvement abroad. When he steps ^putside his house, he walks into the very thick of its troubles at home. Disillusion is compounded by the promises of politics. Beginning with the sweeping New* Deal assaults upon the Great Depression of the 1930s, this nation became conditioned fb the idea that it could legislate solutions to even its most critical problems! ★ ★ ★ Because the dramatic attacks changed a despairing country’s mood for the better, surprisingly little, attention was paid at the time to the fundamental fact that the problem of massive Unemployment was not solved by New Deal proposals but by our participation in World War II. ' The romantic attachment to "packaged solutions” which developed in that era has persisted for decades. Probably the notion always was an illusion. But its existence has made the plunge into disillusion steeper and more shat-- tering for many who want problems waved away with a wand and are stunned at Ute gathering force of racial struggle, ungovernable urbanization, crime and the population explosion. Swapped by troubles, many Americans are seriously downcast at the dawning reality that quick, glittering answers hold no hope. And they are badly torn over what, In their saddened awareness, they can do ^bout it. THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 2, 1968 mannfactniei's clearance STRIDE RITE SHOES "* 2 * f I , for boys and gizls r 6.98 * 9.98 5 ‘ g*'1 L \ A. GW* Wide T-Strap in black patent leather: 6 to 8, 6.98; 81/2 to 12» 7.98; 121/j to 3; 8.98; 4 to 8,.9.98. Red patent leather is also available in same sizes except 4 to 8. B. Girl's Sabot Strap for school and dress in smooth leather—black or navy: 12/2 to 3, 8.98; 4i/2 to 8, 9.98. r v+/ ' . - Vfv •- in all sorts < your casual C. Girl's Pilgrim Pump in plack patent leather: 121/2 to 3; 8.98; 4^ to 8, 9.98. D. Boy's casual slip-on available in black only. 12i/j to 3» 8.98; 3Vi to 9, 8*98* Not alL sizes available in ail styles ^ manufacturer's clearance CHILDREN'S OUTERWEAR ..1 "J nv-'N C A 0.00 falVivO Shown here are just two styles from Hudson’s BABES' & TODDLERS OUTERWEAR large assortment of fine outerwear from many of Babe Pramsuits, M-L.. 8.98 Sc 12-98 the nation’s leading manufacturers ... known for Toddler Snowsuittf 2.4.10.98 Sr 14.98 ,,rl, | quality children’s wear. Shop early while styles «nd colon u« plentiful, jrouTI enjoy »»«>*»• .. BOyS- OUTERWEAR 6(KSWfttif'' GIRLS'OUTERWEAR" Snowsuits, 4 7...........".8» mmmmnamKBKM*: Girl's winter coats 24.98 to 29.98 Jackets, 4-7...........9.88 Sc 11.88 mi—Girl’s Jackets, 7-14......................... 9.98 Suburban Coats, 4-7....P..11.88 Girl’s Snow Tl|hu, 7-14 .. . 3.88 3 pc. Coat Sets, 4-7.....17.88 ' Girl's Snowsuits, 4-6X .... 10.98 and 12.98 2 pc. Coat Sets, 4-7 .. 11.88 & 17.88 trDSO nsr ’ ■ mmm mm 111 ^ Shop late Tuesday at Hudson's Pontiac, Northland, Eastland, and Westland open till 9:0Q; Downtown Petroit till 8:30. « T, - ‘ r~s’ - / ' ■ , - , *'■ ' iflj * E W‘ 1' ,/ » THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 2, 1068 (JoM Corner* Saginaw and Huron Downtown Pontiac, FE 4-2511 Fourth Floor, Ext; 55 t±r BEULEAIR .... Found In Fine Stores Coast-to-Coasf Exclusive at, Waite's in Eastern. Michigan QUALITY VERIFIED BY UNITED STATES TESTING CO., INC. "GRANADA" Fringed Blend Rug Old world elegance in this tapestry-type 7.00 21x36 ‘ nylon and polyester blend rug of two-tone $099 colors. Machine washable and dryable. ^ Assorted colors for your decorating choice. J8.00 36x54 Charge It. ^12" 12.00 27x48 $799 Dacron Reg. 5.00 $ O Twin Flat ' vJ 99 PADS1 Reg. 6.00 $499 Full Flat Reg. 6.00 $/j 9? Reg. 7.00 $ C 99 Twin Fitted I Full Fitted vl/ Pads are filled with 100% Dacron Polyester. Machine washable and dryable. Flat have plastic bands and fitted have elastic skirts. . Elegantly fringed rugs made of DUPONT Ibl nylon. A deep plush pile — a smart shape — a Saf-T-Sofr waffle back — a hand-knitted fringe-machine washable, pnd dryable. Sparking colors to choase from. SYMPHONY" Nylon Rug 7.00 24x36 7.00 Conf. $399 $399 7.00 27" Rd. 9.00 27x48 $399 $499 Rugs.... Fifth Floor Super-soft Vision rugs made of 50% DuPont nylon and 50% viscose. Hand knotted opulent fringe. g qq r,7x4g Double coated latex back. Vivid colors to make your selection from. *4”” LUXURIA" Vision Rugs 6.00 21x36 6.00 27". Rd. $299 $2 6.00 Contour $299 'JUBILEE" Nylon Rugs, It's (Imply Wnderful . . . cloudlike softness Saf-T-Soft waffle bock, machine washable and dry-able. Made of DuPont 101 in a luxurious plushfinish. Bound edges. Avolloble in soft pastels or vivid shimmering colors. 24" ltd. 2W3«-ln. Contour $1*9 *$299 $2’9 27x48.In. 24x42-ln. lids ♦499v »3„ 99c 'SNOWHITE" FOAM RUBBER PILLOWS ^ Extra Plump Lovely white print on colored background. Wonderful for many years of sleeping comfort. Charge Yours at Waite's. Reg. 6.00 0 $799 / for / Flat or Filled 'RIBBONETTE" FOAM RUBBER PILLOW I^ King Size Solid latex foam rubber with tiny oir vents to keep you [cool. ,Zip off covers for easy cleaning. Choose yours in multi-color Jicks. Charge Yours at Waite's. Reg. 7.00 2*9” "PRINCESS ROSE" 100% DACRON PILLOW Large 21x27-inch size 100% DuPont Dacron® 88 Polyester. Ideal for many years of sleeping comfort. Print Pink or Blue. Reg. 4.99 2 J6" 'FLORENTINE'' 100% DACRON® PILLOW ^ Jumbo 22x28-inch size - Jumbo pillow is filled with fluffy snow white DuPont Dac-\ ron® 88 Polyester. Completely washable. Choose from Blue or Pink Tick. Charge Yours at Waite's. Reg. 5.99 ea. 2 „ *8” BELLEAH? PERCALE SHEETS Reg. 3.00 Twin $039 Flat or Fitted 21* Reg. 3.40 F$l $069 Flat or Fitted JL ' Waite's exclusive fine quality Belleair percale sheets with a hi count finish for many years of comfort. Matching Pillowcases .................... 1.70 pr. Belleair Wondercale No-Iron' Reg. 3.99 Twin , Reg. 4.99 Full Flat or Fitted Reg. 2.59 Pillowcases 50% Kodel, 50% cotton blend sheets with the bpilt-in luxury of No-Ironing Ever Needed. Charge It. QUEEN SIZE NO-IRON .... Reg. 6.99............................$5.99 KING SIZE NO-IRON .. .... Reg. 8.99.........................$7.99 BELLEAIR Sold in Fine Stores Coast to.Cbast ROSE ARBOR TOWELS Bath . Hand Reg. 2.30 Reg. 1.40 Washcloth Reg. 60c „ BELLEAIR SOLID COLOR TE&RY TOWELS From tender to torrid In this quality terry you love. Choose from a wide range of eye-catching colors. Charge It. Our own Belleair jacquard 1st. quality in pink, blue gold and green. 100% cotton terry reverses for a different look. Charge Yours at Waite's, Reg. 2.30 Both Towel Reg. 1.40 Hand Towel Reg. 60c W. Cloth Belleair "Classic" NO-IRON TABLECLOTH $6’9 Reg. 8.00 52x70 Reg. 11.00 $Q99 67" Round —_ Q Reg. 13.00 67x90 Oval Reg. 15.00 67x104 Oblong *10" *12" 89c Reg. 1.00 Napkins 65% Dacron® Poly-ester/35% cotton blend laynderf In a machine and is specially treated to wash out stains. Never ironing. 100% nylon trim. Truly a tablecloth of in white, gold, avocado, red. F v Legalize Vows In a Simple Civil Ceremony By ELIZABETH L. POST Dear Mrs. Post: I have been divorced three years and now intend to remarry my husband. We were married in the Catholic church so we are still considered married. But by civil law we are not. Where do we stand, and what is the right procedure? '' , : * Since we were married by the church we do not wish to get remarried in church until our 25th anniversary, which will be in two years. Is it terrible to consider being mafried after being divorced? — Mrs. S.M. ★ ★ * Dear Mrs. M.: Since the church considers you still married, there is no reason to go through the religious ceremony again. You must, of course, have another civil ceremony. Do that quietly and privately, and then on your 25th anniversary, have a religious ceremony renewing your marriage vows. kkk- There is nothing terrible about remarrying a husband of some 20 years. On the contrary, the terrible thing is that you spent three years in separation. Make up the wasted time as fast as you can. ' LEFT OUT Dear Mrs. Post: Through my sister-in-law and brother we met a married couple who are very dear friends of theirs. We had been entertained by them and recently had them to dinner with their children. My brother and sister-in-law are deeply hurt that we did not include them, tod. Are we in the wrong? — Bertha Black, T ' kkk Dear Mrs. Black: Your brother and sister-in-law are being hyper-sensitive. They should bq pleased that you liked their friends well enough to want to know them better. UNIFORMS Dear Mrs. Post: Our daughter’s formal prom is coming up shortly and some of the girls’ escorts are now in the service. Would it be proper for the boys to wear their service uniforms, or is a tuxedo definitely required? *s EdnaS. .. ■A* ★ Dear Mrs. S.: Those boys who are proud of their military service and wish to wear their uniforms may do so. No costume is more handsome and eyecatching than a military man’s dress uniform, and I’m sure the boys’ dates won’t fail to notice it! BROTHER Dear Mrs. Post: My sister-in-law is getting married next month. My father-in-law must walk with a cape. He feels this will hamper the bride in walking down the aisle. He has asked my husband, who '.is the oldest in the family, to take his place. Please tell us what the correct procedure would be?—Mrs. M. M-■ ★ * Dear Mrs. M.: In this case, it would be perfectly proper for your husband to escort his sister down the aisle. Your father-in-law could either follow your mother-in-law and her escorting usher, or join her in the front pew from a side {entrance. If the marriage cermony includes the question “Who gives this woman. . .?” your father-in-law should say from the pew, “I do.” Pontiac Pros* Photo Today's Woman By YOLANDA BENAVIDES If Mrs. William C. Webster (Betty) of Sylvan Lake seems like a perpetual motion machine, it’s not surprising. The mother*of eight boys and one girl,, she spends regular hours each week at .Pontiac General Hospital as a Lady in Pink volunteer. - * . S * Betty Webster found her job at the hospital, where she has been working since the latter part of the summer, through the Oakland County Volunteer Bureau. Ag a member of the diversional therapy group, you’ll find she makes the rounds to patients once a week, equipped with a cart full of ready-to-assemble crafts for those recuperating. “You might say this is MY kind of therapy,” says Mrs. Webster. " “It’s the most self-satisfying kind of job I know. If I’m doing something for someone else, then I’m really getting something out of it.” BONUS SIDE Aside from the personal pleasure of helping others, she feels the people one works with as a volunteer makei the job twice as rewarding. “These women (pink Ladies) donate more than their time; they donate their hearts,” she said. In essence, she says, a Lady in Pink, whether she visits, works at nursing stations, or takes crafts around to patients, is saving time and leg work for the nurses. t, . . '• .. j|$p Readers Tell Abby Their Thoughts on As a Lady in Pink volunteer at Pontiac General Hospital, Mrs. William C. Webster of Sylvan Lake frequently spends a few hours at home cutting out patterns for recuperating patients to assemble. Mrs. Webster works faith the diversional therapy group. Not Too Busy to Be a Volunteer “If we weren’t so, short of help, we could go around almost every day,” she added. Although the Pink Ladies make the rounds to all age groups, Mrs. Webster admits a preference for the older set,, starting with the teen-ager. AVOIDS SMALI* FRY \ “I stay away from pediatrics because I have my own at home,” she chuckled, “or at least the semblance of a junior boys’ club.” * * * When you consider the fact that she has eight boys from kindergarten age to college, the idea of starting a boys’ club doesn’t sound so impossible. Her only daughter is married. The Webster home is- a popular haven for all the boys’ friends. “You get to know just about all there is to sports, around this household, particularly hockey,” she said, “as we have two junior league players here.” “You can be sure that raising eight boys keeps.,me pretty busy,” she smiled. As a matter of fact, she went on to explain, if you’re, not careful, you can drown yourself in your family, never allowing time for anything or anyone else. •k k ★ —. But one of the best examples can be taught outside the home, she continued, by simply doing something for others. “After all, what better way is there to teach your children than by showing them that you follow what you preach?” By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: A woman ‘ signed "TEDDY’S MOTHER” expressed some doubts and fears because her son wanted to take ballet lessohs. Hk, Why? I have four sons. The youngest takes bal-let, but his three older | brothers favor sports. (I make sure the sports-minded boys doh’t ridi-||j cule their brother be-P1 cause of his interest in {_ dancing.) ABBY As for ballet being for sissies, I’d like to see a sissy lift a 130-pound ballerina with one hand and hold her over his head. And all those strenuous leaps, turns and jumps take m u s c 1 e-control, coordination and strength the finest athlete would envy. Ballet does more for a boy’s body than football. Seeing my son dance is a much prettier sight than seeing him carried off a football field on a stretcher, bleeding, with a smashed jaw and a broken leg. Thank you, MOTHER OF FOUR , ★ ★ k DEAR ABBY: l was outraged when I read the letter in your column from the mother who was afraid that her son wouldn’t be “all man” just because he expressed a desire to take- ballet dancing. That mother seemed ashamed because her son didn’t choose to follow in the footsteps of his father who was a “five handicap” in golf. That mother should realize how much masculinity and discipline goes into becoming a professional ballet dancer. He must be as fit as an Olympic champion and possess the grace and rhythm of an artist. I think that any boy who is fortunate enough to show signs of talent in the dance should be encouraged in it —and not made to feel guilty or lacking in manhood. ; SARATOGA SPRINGS, N.Y. k k k DEAR ABBY: This is' for TEDDY’S MOTHER: Let your son take "ballet. The heck with the he-man junk. There is nothing wrong with a boy taking ballet lessons. In fact, originally ballet was danced only by men. BALLET FAN ★ ' ★ ★ DEAR ABBY: A friendly tip to “TEDDY’S MOTHER:” If you are concerned about your son’s masculinity, it might help if you quit calling him “TEDDY,” and start calling him “TED.” FRED’S (NOT “FREDDY’S”) MOTHER k k ^ . k DEAR ABBY: So TEDDY’S father will “die” if his son studies. ballet? Well, I’d rattier have a clean-cut hardworking ballet dancer for a son than a bearded, pot-smoking, unwashed protesting high school drop-out. SEEN SOME kkk DEAR ABBY: Pelase tell TEDDY’S mother, who feared she’d neyer have any grandchildren because .her only son wanted to take ballet, that she needn’t worry. I’ve worked with many male -ballet dancers who could produce more grandchildren than that woman could handle. . f : MELBA ★ ★ k DEAR ABBY: Would you believe that before my son became a Golden Gloves boxing champion he was advised to take ballet lessons to improve his footwork? He took them, too. And when he was kidded about it, he laughed harder than anybody because he knew that he , was as much a man as the manliest, CHAMP’S MOTHER kkk'. DEAR ABBY: In reply to “SUNK, who told her husband that after 18 years of marriage, his lovemaking did nothing in rsal Has New Faces With the addition of four new members to the John Fernald Company of the Meadow Book Theatre, casting is now. completed for the American professional premiere Jan. 19 of “And People All Around.” The provocative, new civil rights play by George Sklar is in its second week of rehearsals at Meadow Brook. Codirectors are John Broome and George Guidall. ^ kkk Three of the new faces are seasoned professional actors, and one is an 18-year old Oakland University coed who will be making her theatrical debut in the production. Three are Negroes. , k k k . Beverly Atkinson and Frank Wilson each will perform two roles in the show. Both are in the six-member Chorus, which functions much as does the chorus in classical Greek drama: ★ ★ ★ In addition, Miss Atkinson will play the wife of a civil rights organizer and Wilson will portray a convict.' . kkk A total of 29 roles will be played by 15 actors in the highly cinematic play. 1 FILMS : A model of; the cinematic setting under construction for the American professional premiere of r,And People All Around” at the/ Meadow> Brook Theatre. The various platforms on the Central re-volve, and the revolve itself, represent various interior and exterior locations during the fast-moving.production. The 33-foot by 28-foot set makes one complete revolution during the course of the production. It is moved by the chorus without interrupting the flow of action. ‘ Me in/-I direct from co-starring ty/ the not yet released motion picture “Between Us,” shot on location in Madrid, Spain. * * * She is known to American audiences for her appearances in the films “A Man Called Adam” and “The Pawnbroker,” for her appearances on several television series, and for numerous off-Broadway stage roles. k k k Wilson, who understudied for Godfrey Cambridge in “How To Be A Jewish Mother” on Broadway, appeared in the motian pictures “Love of Ivy," “The Incident” and “A Man Called Adam” and has appeared on the television series “N.Y.P.D.” and “Hawk.” ★ ★ ★ He has appeared in a variety of roles off-Brdadway, and played the lead in “Othello” with the Tempo Players in Chicago. . , k k k Philadelphian Henry Thomas joins the Fernald Company to play Dorrance R. Medford, Supreme Wizard of the White Redeemers in the Sklar drama. ★ ★ . ★ A playwright by avocation, Thomas has taught acting, worked in television prpduction, w r 111 e n advertising, and worked as an artist. HeHcomes to Meadow Brook from the Hartford (Conn.) Stage Co., where he has acted for the past three seasons. LOCAL ACTRESS Making her acting debut as a member of the Chorus in “And People All Abound” will be Patricia Carson, of Pontiac, a freshman at Oakland University. k k k ' , Meadow Brook Theatre is currently presenting the Victorian slapstick farce “Charley’s Aunt,” which continues through Jan. 14. ^§*§Sgj| Lessons for S, Boys! i X. 'vgll-:- era, when no “decent” woman was posed to enjoy sex/ Only men tier*1 fppl lowed to have sexual appetites, and § for her, and she’d been putting on an act all along. Then she wrote, “It wasn’t.ex-actly the truth. I only said it to hurt him.” \ I am willing to bet it WAS the truth. Or very close-to it. The husband’s reaction was typical. Instead of being genuinely sorry to learn that his wife had been getting no sexual satisfaction from their marriage, and seeking ways to correct it, what did he do? He punished her by being cool, distant, and silent. . * k ^k k Why can’t a man realize that this is a legitimate complaint — a cry of a faithful wife who wants her marriage to last? Frigidity is the result of the Victorian The engagement of Linda Elaine Bragen to Spec. 4 David L. Hackett, USA, is announced by her parents, the Carlyle^ E. Bra-gens of Auburn Road, Pontiac Township. Miss Bragen is a senior at Henry Ford Hospital School of Nursing in Detroit. Her fiance, the son of the David W. Hacketts of Ruby Street in Avon Township, is currently stationed in Weis-baden, Germany. women were around for the purpose of satisfying them. Now we know that thrf* physical needs of women are the same * as men, and they are equally entitled to * fulfillment. & * ★ ★ A husband who really loves his wife ! will move heaven and earth to Rod out | why his lovemdking does nothing for her. There are doctors to consult and books to read to correct the problem. Married ! couples who keep such secrets from f each other grow apart and become strangers. kkk Can you guess, Dear Abby, how many women are in the same boat with! “SUNK” but go on in silence, “pretending” because they hesitate to rock the boat of security!' MARRIED AND SATISFIED k -q ★ DEAR MARRIED: I have yet to see statistics that I would accept, knowing that people are more apt to he about their personal sex lives than tell the truth. But judging from my mail, I would say there are more women in “SUNK’S” boat than in yours. ★ ★ ★ i CONFIDENTIAL TO C! B. S. (R.N.): I am well aware that every doctor has treated women "who imagine that he is taking more than a professional interest. In them. It’s usually only wishful thinking. Such women should take a man along when they go to the doctor’s office. Td protect the doctor! k k k Problems? Write to Abby, care of The Pontipe press, Dept. E-600, P.O. Box I 9, Pontiac, Mich. For a personal reply, inclose a stamped, self-addressed en-, velope. k k k.. iP’or Abby’s new booklet “What Teen- * Agers Want to Know,” send $1.00 to Abby, care of The Pontiac Press, Dept. E-600, P.O. Box 9, Pontiac, Mich. Unique Wood Crafts Are to Be Featured at Exhibit A major design exhibition entitled “Living With Wood” will be open for public viewing in the Galleries of the Cranbrook Academy of Art beginning next Tuesday. kkk Prepared and sponsored by the Swedish Institute for Cultural Relations, the show surveys the effect that Sweden’s abundant forests have had on her architecture, design and crafts. It consists of 35 free-standing photomurals mounted on curved wood panels and about 170 objects of daily use such as furniture,, craft items, household utensils and toys. < ’ kkk The pieces represent every kind of woodworking in current use in Sweden: Lapp birch items originating above the Arctic Circle; industrially produced furniture by famous designers like Carl Malmsten and Bruno Mathsson and sculptural experiments in wood. DESIGN, DETAIL The photographic panels, concentrating on architectural design and detail, complement the objects by showing them in usq both in the painted timber cottages of earlier days and in modern wood architecture. kkk The collection is on a nationwide tour circulated by the .Smithsonian Institution. " An invitational preview and reception will be held Sunday from 5-7 p.m., ..sponsored jointly by the Women’s Committee for the Cranbrook Academy of Art and the Detroit Swedish Council^ Chairman for the affair is Mrs. Charles E. Letts Jr. Assisting her are Mrs. John Quay, Mrs. Robert S. Swan- son, Mrs. Robert Raisch and Mrs. Robert Sandoe. Committee members from the Council Ore Mesdames: Ata Berber, LeRoy W. f Dahlberg, Edward Johansson and Gun- * nar Karlstrom, all of Birmingham or Bloomfield Hills. Also representing this group are Mrs. Marvin R. Anderson of Grosse Pointe and Mrs. John B. Olson of Detroit. The buffet table decor will be in the Swedish national colors, yellow and blue. Cranbrook Academy of Art Galleries are open Tuesdays through Sundays from 1 to 5 p.m., except major holidays. . There js an admission. Calendar TODAY Iota No chapter, Beta Sigma Phi, 7:30 p.m., Clarkston home of Mrs. Thomas Hawke. Hostess and Mrs. Janies Talley will present a program. • Past Noble Grand Club of Welcome Rebekah lodge No. 248, 6:30 p.m., home of Mrs. Orion Hefttnger of South Edith Street. Cooperative dinner. WEDNESDAY Fashionette Club of Pontiac, 7 p.m., Main Library. Any w°hiah wishing to lose weight may attend. Woman’s World Series, 10 a.m., The Pontiac Mall, “Color Comes Calling” by Mrs. Irene Stuart of Michigan Bell Telephone Company. “Living with Wood’>, an exhibition of contemporary and traditional design in Sweden, will open in Cranbrook Academy of Art Galleries Jan. 9 and remain up through Feb. 4. The, exhibition shows the many ways wood influences daily life in Sweden from their build* ings to their furniture, tools and utensils, toys and games, musical instruments and sporting equipment. ■ i»l FLOOR flRf MODELS AND UmI demonstrators SAVE UP TO $50 OFF REGULAR PRICE WHEN NEW Join the great “Save-in” on floor model and demonstrator sewing machines at SINGER now, including the Touch & Sew * sewing j machines by SINGER. COME EARLY FOR BEST BUYS Hurry in! The ‘early bird' gets best choice of a wide variety of sewing machines: desk models and consoles in modem, contemporary and traditional styles! Plus Portables. Now SIN6ER* sowing machines start at $69.95. Floor model and demonstrator sowing machines carry the same guarantee as new SINGER sewing machines! IliflSI SEWING IWMi MACHINES PORTABLES *m%95 CONSOLES fmn’19.95 ZIG-ZAGS fnm $29.95 Those sewing machines were taken as trade-ins during the Christmas season. Now, to clear them out, we'll lower prices. AH are in perfect working condition! SINCE!* SCW t SIC GUARAHm With every used sewing machine goes the SINGER guarantee of money back if not satisfiad with purchase, or full credit toward the purchase of a new SINGER sewing machine, within 90 days!, A credit plan doolgoad to fit every budget ' DOWNTOWN PONTIAC IM North Seeieew Phene J3J-7m PONTIAC MALL SHOPPING CENTEN Phone Ml-MM « For address of store nearest you, see white pages of phone book under SINGER COMPANY. SINGER • A TrWMuwk of THE SINCE. COMPANY IIII1 Prepare Nqw for a Career ENROLL TODAY! Emily Bloss, Owner Zota Jaynes, Manager Juanita Jaynes, Instructor Ora Randall, Promotion I W. HURON ST, PONTIAC Phone FE 4-2352 or Come In THE PQNTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 2, 1968 Carpeting Cuts Effects of Noise COLLEGE STATION, Tex. (UPI) -*• Carpeting in the kitchen is more than a status syra-It can also be a nerye sav-Texas A&M reports. Carpeting soaks up kitchen noises that come with everyday work and automation. Noises are softeiied and nervous tension is eased. * row Old ? tJoSCPHME lOMUAAt Laura McGruder Weds ROCHESTER Presents Our g.. ^ BEST BARGAINS EVER IN 500 PAIRS OF ODD SIZES AND STYLES SALE PRICED AT' - BABY SHOES - ASSORTED STYLES VALUES TO $10.00 HUNDREDS OF OTHER FAMOUS MAKE SHOES ON SALE AT $499 $599 4mT and kJ pr. SpjAOQ ■ \ 8 ^OUTFIT THE CHILDREN NOW ... AT SAVINGS OF UP TO STAFFS Shoes — Rochester (Home of Stride-Rite Shoes) 418 Main Street Ph. 651-1610 Q. I am too short, and I hate My bust measures 32 it. I am barely five feet tall. | and my waist 24 inches and hips Is there any exercise or any 34 inches. My , friends tell me, food that will make me taller?,that I would have a nice figure A. There is no special food,if my bust w^re larger. Is this that will add to height. This is true? ! have become veryself- an inherited characteristic. How-congous about my small bust. ever, exercises which stretch! 81,1 ®n*U boned. ‘ the spine and improve posture | A- 00 ?°J he self-conscious can help. If your posture is notify more. You are allowed a what it should be, corrective. difference of two inches between measures can add an Inch or;the bust and the hips although tw0 the ideal has been to have the Straighten your spine all the.** “d bust measurement the “ ? sr ss £* when you do this? •k k good facial exercise? If you were going to choose just one which is good generally for facial contour, what would it be? A. This one., Apply cream to the face. Open the jaws halfway. Pull the lips back from the; teeth as far as you can, corners of the mouth up. Now purse the lips. Continue pulling the lips away from the teeth and pursing the lips. « ★ ★ ★ Q. I am 17 years old, fiye feet three and weigh 116 pounds. MRS. T. S. THRASHER Vows, for Thrashers A reception in the church parlors honored newlyweds, the Thomas Stewart Thrashers (Cathy Ann Wilson), following Saturday vows in First Baptist Church. k k k Their parents are Mrs. Catherine Carpenter of Chamber-lain Street, Albert Wilson of Miami, Fla., and the senior Edwin Thrashers of East Boulevard Nftrth. Venise lace accented the bride’s nylon gown fashioned in Empire style with detachable train. Her headpiece was petal shaped with seed pearls and crystals, She carried miniature white carnations surrounding a white orchid. Juanita Law was maid of honor with bridesmaids, Peggy Carpenter, the bride’s sister, and Susan Kitson of Detroit. The bridegroom’s brother, Edwin, stood as best man with ushers, Alex Brown, Donald Stone, Paul Jeffrey and Michael Madison. The newlyweds are honeymooning in Maryland. Show Vitamin C Non-Effective in Cold Therapy NEW YORK (UPI) — One new scientific report holds that large doses of vitamin C will not prevent or shorten the course of the common: cold. People who have been getting adequate intake of the vitamin are not benefitted by additional doses. The report comes from “Nutrition Reviews”, a monthly publication of the non-profit Nutrition Foundation that supports research and education in food fields. k k k It reports that a series of tests' with volunteers revealed that contrary to common belief, massive doses of C will not stop a cold, reduce its severity or alter the length of time it takes to run its course. dome and Meat SHERON EATON All-Around Stylist Co/iita- Hair Fashions (Noxt to Frank’* Nursery In the Tower Mall on M-59) at Airport Read Quality Service with a Smile! , Appointments Not Alwiay* Nocossary OR 3-3998 The First General Baptist Church was the setting lor Saturday vdws exchanged by Laura Marie McGruder and. Larry .Brooks'Alexander. , j§f§| Their parents are Mr. and Mrs. Claude C. McGruder of LaSalle" Street and the John Alxanders of Oliver Street. The bridal ensemble was a floor length Bombazine g6wn worn with an illusion t veil capped by a jeweled petal cluster. Miss McGruder carried white miniature carnations wjth a white orchid. Anne McHugh was maid of honor with bridesmaids Beverly . Gardner and Helen Steward. Cheryl Alexander acted as flow- MRS. L. B. ALEXANDER "-ObL On the esquire side were Louis Petrusha as best man with ushers Fred Alexander and David Petrusha. John Alex* adder was his brother's- ring-bearer. The newlyweds are honeymooning in Qhio. i.' Feathers | for Flower Making . V: ! Plastic Flowers : and Foliage' r '*> New Cake Pans 'iforHomi CLEG’S for Home Baku* :* HANDCRAFT $ SHOP $ 366 Oakland Ava. FE 8-3361 $ muscles. If you would like to increase your bust measurement, you* Q. Will you please give me ajCan do so b£ building up the chest muscles. Q. I am very much'involved] in social activities and am continually embarrassed by under-! arm perspiration. This is ruining my clothes and my personality. What can I do? I use a deo-| dorant. A. Use shields in your dresses, suits and blouses (when you can.) This will protect your clothes. Also, I wonder if you] are using a product which is an anti-perspirant as well as a deodorant. ^ A deodorant simply takes care of the odor of perspiration. It does not slow the flow. Nervousness can cause excessive pers-piration. Check this angle. 31st January Clearance SALE! SUBSTMTML PRICEREDUCTIONS ON QUALITY FURNISHINGS FOR EVERY ROOM FAMILY OWNED AND OPERATED FOR OVER 31 YEARS AT THE SAME LOCATION YOU ALWAYS GET MORE FOR YOUR MONEY AT MILLER’S FURNITURE 144 Oakland Ave. Convenient Term*-SO day ataa MM at oath OPEN DULY lilt TO UN MON. aad FRI. EVENINGS TU • free Perking Let Off Clark Street Invites You and Your Family To Be Wednesday Nighters Enjoy Tender, Goldeny Deep-Fried COMPLETE CHICKEN DINNERS PONTIAC MALL Only 20 Children VnderlO CHOICE QF POTATOES OR VEGETABLE DINNER SALAD OR DESSERT ROLLS AND BUtTER COFFEE, TEA OR MILK SERVED EVERY WEDNESDAY NIGHT PONTIAC MALL CAFETERIA ONLY 4:30 to 8 P.M. SPECIAL COUPON Goof At All 3 STORES Executive Shirt Service Hats Blocked and Cleaned All Types Of Leather And Suede Work Alterations and repaira. Dry Cleaning Special Tubs., Wad., Than., Jan 2-3-4th 3 DATS OMIT Clip And Brine With ION Qood thru Jan, 4th COUPON He Limit I I J • Suits* Coats I and Dresses Count at 1 Garment ANY 3 GARMENTS S498 I I With Coupon | ONE HOUR MARTINIZING Miracle Mile S.C. Phono: 332-1822 Open Daily * SaiMy U/tgrtt Cfmm (formerly One Hr. Valot) TEL-HUR0N S.C. Phono 335-7934 HQpan Daily: One Hour Martinizing Elizabeth Lake S.C. 3197 Elizabeth Lake Rd. HOURS: (At All Store«)-7:30 A.M.-7.00 P.M. Phono 332-0BS4 Open Daily: TIIE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 2, 1908 The engagement of their daughter, Sharon Marie Rose, to Charles L.Cycan was announced by the Preston Roses of Pleasant Lake at a family dinner party on Christmas day. He is the son of the Milton Cycans of Watkins Lake Road. midsummer wedding is planned by Deborah Sue Skrine and , Pvt.'David John Lyons, USA. Parents of the engaged couple are the Wendell Skrihes of Oxford and Mr. and Mrs. Thomas H. Lyons of Cheltingham Street, Rev. and Mrs. D. Little fair of /Uto announce the engagement and forthcoming spring wedding of their daughter, Candi, to James H. Mair. He is the son of Hugh Mair of Chippewa Road and the late Mrs. Mair. the bride-elect is a junior at , Eastern Michigan University, her fiance’s alma mater. Reading Habits Are Formulated in Early Years LOUISVILLE, KY. (AP )-A child’s most important habit—a love of reading and books—is formulated by the time he is 2 years old, believes Mrs.'* Lesley Frost Ballantine, daughter of the late poet, Robert Frost. ★ * ★ Speaking before a‘ local woman’s club, Mrs. Ballantine suggested that parents should read aloud to their children from the time they are tiny tots, and should continue reading sessions as a family activity. * * * The New York City resident recalled that some of her fondest memories as a child are of evenings by the fire in her pa-tive New Hampshire, listening as her parents read aloud. An early April wedding is planned by Christine Vergis and Earl D. Spring Jr. The bride elect is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Vergis of Royal Oak. Her fiance, a junior at Midwestern Baptist College, is the son of ithe senior Earl D. Springs of Miller Street. Taffeta, Lace Highlight Saturday Bridal Ensemble Newsprint Wrap When you are packing that picnic lunch, don’t forget that newspapers make wonderful insulation for keeping hot foods hot or cold ones Cold for short periods of time. Always use several layers of newspapers wrapped tightly about trays of ice cubes or a hot dish. A floor length gown of white lape taffeta was chosen by Saturday bride, the former Bonnie Irene Davis, as she repeated vows with £p. 4 Michael M. King, USA, son of the Melville Kings of Lakeview Drive, Independence Township. SHOULDER VEIL Completing her ensemble was a crown of matching fabric that held a shoulder illusion veil. She carried a cascade of red roses and white carnations. ★ ★ ★ Mrs. Wes Schaar was her sister’s matron of honor. They are the daughters of the Alburn Davises of Churchill Raod, Pontiac Township. ★ " ★ . ★ * Bridesmaids were Suzane Byers and Janet King. Leta King and Walter Dixon were flower girl and ring bearer. MRS. DONALD J. BRUCE Woman Receives Man of the Year Tobacco Award SYRACUSE, N. Y. W) - When Mrs. June Mele, who has been maffiager of the Smoke Shop in a local store for 30 years, was named "Man of the Year” re-cently.jby the tobacco industry, The traditional award of a pair of cuff links wasn’t appropriate. Instead, the Retail Tobacco Dealers of America, at their' annual convention, presented j their only female member with a gold bracelet. . it • it ★ Mrs. Mele studied tobacco blending at Indiana University and now mixes special blends for 350 regular customers, each 1 ATCHISON, Kan. UP) - In or- catalogued in her mind along der to pick dates for a ..'school with his tobacco formula prof-dance, students at the all-male erence. St. Benedict’s College here de-F7 _ “ , ' ""■r.OT"Ljl,i'.. cided to use computers to select Speak Evening Vows Saturday evening vows and were Michelle Moore and Vicki reception in 0 a kl and Avenue and Sherri Menard. Presbyterian Church united Su- John Menard was best man san Louise Moore and Airman with ushers, James Moore and 1-C Donald James Bruce. j Frederick and William Zlem. * *V * jThe bridegroom’s parents a r.e A full chapel train framed the Robert J. Bruces of Union the white sheath Empire-waist-j Lake. . ed gown pf the bride who com-] The couple MI honeymoon in pleted her ensemble with a!Oregon where Airman Bruce cluster headpiece holding a silk1 is stationed at Baker AFB. illusion veil. ! , —---------------- Her flowers were white roses1 _ , . . and Stephanotis. OES to Meet it -k a Mrs. Thomas McKinnon was! Members of Areme chapter, matron of honor for the daugh-I Order of Eastern Star will meet ter of the Richarcj I, Moores of j Wednesday fit 8 p.m. in the Oakland Avenue. Bridesmaids Roosevelt Temple. BUY, SELL, TRADE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ■ USE ADS! Twin Sister Is His Dote .partners from among the girls; at nearby Mount St. Scholastica, j an all-women’s college. I Both the boys and the girls filled out cards which were “matched” as to likes and dislikes by the computer. I Mike Flaton, a 19-year-old St. Louis youth, was surprised .when his date, picked as one .having similar interests, showed jup for the dance. It was his Twin sister, Sue Flaton. Scissor Haircutting Carl Suggests You look os boouliful every day as you did on Now Year's Evo. See us regularly. Coma >n or Call Beauty Shop Riker Bldg., FE 3-7186 Free Parking on Courthouse-Lot MRS. MICHAEL M. KING] Glove-Stretchers Insert the old-fashioned kind of wooden clothespin in the fin- Larry Evon stood as best man with ushers Thomas Byers and, | H ,. Jerry King. !gers of gloves after washingi ■it it it them, and,the gloves will hold| Following vowsffin the Auburn]their shape while drying. The] Heights United Presbyterian I fingers will be nice and smooth Church, the couple was fetedjfor they will dry without at a reception in Auburn wrinkles. Heights Bpys’ Club before leaving on a northern honeymoon. Aimt's PONTIAC and ROCHESTER January Clearance Winter Coat? : Regular to $85 ..... $49 » WALLPAPER BAHRAIN CENTER 1028 W. Huron 338-8888 OFFICE WORKERS! N SALESBIRLS! CLERKS! nplSTS! your next job can be more rewarding! Choose a secretarial career aai your days nil bo filled with ORjoyable interesting duties, contact wNh •uiting people, plus a glamorous fntnra ahead. MAKES IT SO EASY! Speedwriting shorthand Is the modem shorthand. It uses the abe’a you already know. No symbols. No machines. You loam quickly and easily—In a natural, relaxed way...In only a fraction of the tima symbol shorthand requires. ?*• Discover how Speedwriting shorthand can help you towand an In* foresting, exciting business career. Free Lifetime Placement Servfca. NEW CLASS BEGINS JAN. 22 * 18 W. I ,aWrence FE 3-7028 fihm's Famous fashion name fall and winter dress shoes, casual and sport shoes during' our sale . . . selection of this season's styles, colors and leathers. , 4ANDREW GELLER, now $18.90 DELHSO D>EBS, now $14.90 CARESSA, now $12.90 ADORES, now $12.90 TOWN & COUNTRY, now $9.90* ^ FIRST EDITION, how $9.90 CAPEZIO, now $9.90 . Casuals By CAPEZIO, CALIFORNIA COBBLERS, COVER GIRL, TRAMPEZE, TOWN & COUNTRY i Now *690 and $7*° HURON M TELEGRAPH iegular to $210 . .. $79 »$15C Fur Trimmed Coats Regular to $200.. *99 • *169 Regular to $350.. *119 ■ *279 t> FUR CLEARANCE Coats - Jackets - Stoles - Minks - Broadtails Regular to $2750 *299 . *2299 Casual and Dressy Dresses Regular to $26 ... *10 - *19 Regular to $50 ... .... *21 » *31 Regular to $125 ... .... *34-*69 , SPORTSWEAR | Skirts - Sweaters-1 / Slacks - Tops - Jackets 1 / Vs,o n - OFF , CONTINENTAL ROOM Knit Suits - Dresses - Costumes Ys uo V2 OFF Cdr Coats Regular to $55 $39 - *44 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 2/1808 Social Security-—-1 Revisions Expand System (EDITOR’S NOTE — This is the first of a series analyzing the changes currently being maMe in the tSocial Security and Medicare regulations.) By BRUCE BlOSSAT NEA Publications WASHINGTON — The "mammoth “social benefit’’ enterprise caljed Social Security has grown from slender beginnings in 1937 to a level where, in 11968, it expects to pay out $25.2 billion to some 23.8 million Americans. Nearly one in eight draw monthly benefits. The outlay will rise *anfl go to more and more people ^as the years pass. In late 1967, Congress enacted into law revisions of the 31-year-old system which will provide “ for largest total benefit increases to the elderly and protection, and make it easier count — not doing, enough toj Government specialists for those who elect to buy the j combat poverty. Supplemental (doctor hill) insurance to handie their doctor bills. These matters also will be more fully treated farther on in the series. * ★ ★ The Social Security system has a lot of critics today, as it has always had. The most common are those who argue that it is not a very good insurance program. PROGRAM BLEND • (Actually it has been from the outset a blend of an insurance plan with citizen tax contributions and a straight assistance program.) Because Social Security payments lift many Americans | mate, nevertheless, that others in the system’s history. The total will shoot up a record $2.9 billion in 1968, and then rise in 1969 to a point $3.6 billion above where the, outgo would have been under the prior law. ★ . ★ . ★ ___________ The average increase in bene-' fits is in the range of 13 per cent, but a worker around 50 who can expect to contribute j many more years of taxes toj the system can look ahead to benefiHncreases up to 21-6 peri cent, and a worker 25 to 27 j may ultimately get benefits 30 per cent higher. BASIC PROTECTION J Later articles in this series j will discuss in some detail the changes made in basic Social Security protection — benefits covering retirement, survivors and disability. The new law also modified Social Security’s important Medicare offshot to enlarge and improve hospital insurance above poverty levels and we jaixJn.afl ere of “poverty fighting,” the system is being at- tacked nowadays on a new esti-11967 Social Security benefit in-the'creases may take another million people above the poverty level. Had the U.S. Senate’s more liberal provisions gained the day, the-figure might have been two million. ★ * Even without the changes, if it is figured that Social Security keeps more than 5.6 million' aged poor folk out of real poverty. MAJOR INCOME „ Of the nearly one in every eight Americans who draw monthly Social Security benefits, just shprt of 17 million are 65 and over. About half of these people have no other regular income, and for most by far, their benefits'are their major income source. But since younger retirees, survivors and disabled persons represent 7 million of the total of beneficiaries, and many chil- dren are included, the program, has “youth aspects”) often overlooked but deserving fuller examination in later articles. As recent as 1950, only /about a fourth of the Americans 65 and over, were protected under Social Security. Today 85 per cent are so covered, and other federal programs bring the percentage to 90. Coverage, obviously, is not far short of universal. ★ ★ ★ Of course none of this is the [gift of providence. It has .to be paid for — by you, the Social Security taxpayer; by your employer in matching payments; and by the government. Higher benefits are going to cost more, so taxes are going to rise. And that is another story still to be told here. WHEN INSURANCE COUNTS COUNT ON Preferred Special Protaction fdr NON-DRINKERS HEMPSTEAD, BARRETT and ASSOC. Main Office 185 Elizabeth Lk. Rd. Pontiac. Michigan Phone FE 4-4724 Branch Office 99 Peninsula Lakeville, Michigan Phone OA 1-3494 (NEXT: One in Four to Feel the Bite.) GOOD HEALTH AT LOW COST! typical coet, •—»■ — H - —— car In opoO shape another few months, another few thousand miles. But a drug prescribed by your doctor cost about S3 . . . can be tplng you. or someone In ... good shape tor years That's why wa say . . . TODAY’S PRESCRIPTON II THE BIOOEST BARBAIN IN HI8T0RT PLAZA PHARMACY Your Family Pharmacy Jerry and Jeanno Duntmora, RPH 3584 Pontiao Lk- Rd.t Pontiac, Mich. Phone 111-1217 Hour* A Day Service' FREE DELIVERY Nanay Ordara Itsuad Ira mature Sundert Candy Tea Nay Pay All Utility Bills at Plsia Pharmacy > King's.Speech in Greek Press ATHENS UP! - King Con-stantihe’s New Year’s message to tye Greek nation was published today for the first time in the Greek press. It was not broadcast over the state-controlled radio. All afternoon newspapers carried the brief message in full on orders from the censor. The king said in the statement; “We hope we will be among you soon.” ★ ★ ★ . i No morning papers published today but it was expected they would carry the king’s message Wednesday. The Greek royal family fled the country Dec. 14 after an unsuccessful attempt to oust the ruling junta. They have been living in exile in Rome since. The government said they can return any time they want. ★ dr ★ .A spokesman for the National Broadcasting Institute said the royal message might be broadcast later today. Mayor From Hat PORTSMOUTH, Ohio (AP) —| The six Portsmouth City coun-; cilmen were deadlocked 3-3I Monday night between Merte Odle and another member whenj they tried to pick a mayor at an organizational meeting. Thenj they derided to put all six coun-cilmen’s names in a hat. Odle, { mayor the last two years, won.! MEMO . . "NO NEED TO RUN AROUND” 1 looking oil over. . . We Have All The Major Brand Typewriters Our Priett Arc Fair MIDWEST TYPEWRITER MART II N. Saginaw St. Next to Simms pays at ft enneui lA/AVC CIOC5T m I A I ITV ™ ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY SPECIAL BUY! V$xv^§; \ Boys1 blue denim jeans » in regulars and slims 1.77 :harge iti Authentic western style all cotton blue jeans of heavyweight 13% oz. denim. These jeans can really take it! They're Sanforized too, to keep their fit. In regular and slim proportioned sizes, 6-16. SPECIAL TV & STEREO CLEARANCE Magnificent Cabinet Styling Tht DUMAS Model GJ-749 23* diog., 295 sq. in. picture RCA VICTOR hkw iu«; COLOR TV AUTOMATIC FINE TUNING IAFT) When you’re first in Color TV, there's got to ,be a reason. Like Automatic Fine Tuning that locks in the picture signal. And new RCA tube with 38% brighter highlights this year. You get thesis—and more—from RCA Victor. Clearance Priced Ithe most trusted name IN ELECTRONICS VWCciXfek RUCTItONlCS INC. EASY TERMS! Miracle Mile Shopping Center FreeS Personal Checking Accounts Available at All 12 Offices of Pontiac State Bank Pontiac State Bank Main Office Saginaw at Lawrence—Open 9 A.M. Daily \ 12 Convenient Offices Member Federal Deposit Inturance Corporation , LOU-MOR now features Accutron* by Bulova. It is not a watch. It is the most accurate timepiece in the world. Accutron’s tuning fork replaces the outdated9 balance wheel that's found in all watches. Stop by so we can tell you more. Starting with the right time of day. v TRADE-INS c„m S-flOC ACCEPTED From IZO • Free Engraving a Wa Service What We Sell! • You Need Not Be 21 1 To Open A Charge 4-WAY PAY Lay-A-Wzy, Sacurity Charge Lou-Mor Charge, Mich. Bankard SAVE TIME ... SAVE MONEY at MIRACLE MILE EC0N-0-WASH FE 5-0725 BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING THE' PONTIAC PHESS. TLE8UAV,, JANUARY 2, 1008 mi 3 BJUJUULSJUUIJUIJLO land County Since 1931 All Credit Terms Oil Burner Service OIL COMPANY TELEPHONE 332-9181 Has NEW YOtUC (AP) - An agreement reached in, Columbus, Ohio, guaranteeing 140 jobs for Negroea on Ohio State University construction projects looks like a clear-cut victory for the National Association for the Advancement of Colored Peo-* pie. & But to the NAACP staff members who negotiated it, the pact symbolizes! the end Of once-bright hopes that federal and state governments would vigorously enforce antidiscrimination statutes and shows that 'pressure must be applied unrelentingly against unions and builders, # I ^ ★ “It’s an indication of the failure of voluntary compliance,” said Herbert Hill, national labor director for the NAACP. “There is a federal executive order issued by President Johnson forbidding discrimination in all federally financed construction. The U.S. Division of Contract Compliance is a dead letter. They have never enforced this. They depend instead on voluntary compliance.” FUNDS HELP Up In Washington,.the head of the division, Owen Kiley, replied that federal funds for the Ohio State projects had been held up since last MfljL, y I That was when U.S. District Judge Joseph P. Kinneary ruled in a suit brought by the NAACP that government funds may not be used on projects where there is racial discrimination in hiring. The judge also held, that the state had primary responsibility for requiring that such work forces be integrated, and it was under his order that agreement was reached' last Thursday, more than six months later. Until last month, according to Dr. David McConnell, a university biochemist who headed the NAACP negotiating team as labor chairman of the Columbus branch, title university had made no attempt to implement the decision. McConnell, who is white, said negotiations were arranged only after he gained admittance to a Washington meeting of Health Education and Welfare: Department officials last Dec. 1 by threatening “to hold a press conference in, the hall if they didn’t admit me.” At that meeting, he said, “We got some of the primitive facts established. Namely, we held HEW as well as the state of Ohio responsible. Then HEW told the university they wouldn’t' let $6 million in matching funds go unless they settled their peace with the NAACP. dr ♦ ' h “It was really a squeeze play between the federal government and the NAACP, and the federal government ran scared because it’s an election year. We threatened to name them in a suit before the same court on the same issue covering the entire state of Ohio. ” Director Kiley of the HEW’s Division of Contract Compliance confirmed the meeting with McConnell, but said that when the NAACP representative asked to be admitted, he was invited to attend and fully express his views. And, said Kiley, the decision to withhold federal funds for the Ohio' State projects was made last May, not at the December meeting. ‘FINALLY JELLED’ In Columbus, the university's equal employment opportunity officer, Stephen Lance, disputed McConnell’s allegation that the school hadn’t tried to implement the court order. “I would object to the words ‘up attempt’ and would say that the attempts b$ing made finally jelled after that (Washington) meeting," Lance said. He said university officials began negotiating with contractors immediately after the court decision “to get their commitments to hire minority workers.” To Hill the Ohio State agreement means (pore pressure, .not less, on government-financed construction projects. He named Newark, N.J., and San Francis-do-Oakland as the next two major targets. Both areas, he said, plan huge construction programs and have “volatile Negro ghetto areas with very high rates of Negro unemployment.” “We have exhausted all reasonable efforts to diScuss these matters with the building trades unions,” said Hill, “Therefore there is no choice but to move to cut off public binds,.. a / a * “Exactly one year ago, after four years of picketing and mass demonstrations against the building trades of northern New Jersey, the five Iron Workers locals signed an agreement with the New Jersey Civil Eights Commission. “Now, exactly one year later, not a single Negro has been admitted.” William Jennings Bryan, in 1806, at the age of 36, was the youngest candidate ever nominated for the U.S. presidency. the classic DARBY by :j A masterpiece of urban-suburban elegance, the "Darby" briefcoat in fine wool will be your constant companion from the time the ledves begin to flyl Full alpaca lining, deep, luxurious notched.lapel alpaca collar, tailored with Stratojac’s exclusive, patented Front and Center construction for finest fit and drape. 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We Welcome Michigan Bankard or Security Charge TELEPHONE 334-5992 Remember the Day .. . in Pictures COLONIAL HICKORY PANELING 4x8 Panels Only $098 CRICKET STOOLS lad n LASSie MIRACLE MILE CLEARANCE Only $j| 25 WICKES BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE Open Nightly 'til 9 r! Phone 332-9173 (Emnttrg Squirt #ljop WATCH FOR OUR BIG CLEARANCE SALE AD IN TOMORROW’S PAPER Bloomfield Miracle Mile Shopping Center JOUR ENTIRE StOCK GIRLS- BOYS • Bettor Coats • Pram Suits • Coat Sots • Snow Suits •Jackets • Boys’ Corduroy Pants and Shirts SAVE UP TO 1 i rr ll"”, Ik w ■ Special Group Of UP TO • GIRLS' BETTER DRESSES Vz • SLACK SUITS OFF! MICHIGAN BANKARD • SECURITY HONORED Open Til 9 P.M. FE 4-4786 Telegraph And Squere Lake Roads AMPLE FREE PARKING CENTER-TELEGRAPH AT SQUARE LAKE RD. Chinese Plot Saigon Counterfeiters, Fake U. S. Bills Seized SAIGON (AP) - South Vietnamese national police said today they had arrested several Chinese counterfeiters and seized $250*000 in fake U.S. $5 bills, thereby fbiling what they called a Red Chinese attempt to destroy the economies of South Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos. Police said the counterfeiters were . Bed Chinese spies who planned to trade the U.S. bills on the black market to buy equipment to counterfeit the currencies of South Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia. ; Police reported they closed in on the counterfeiters last Thursday in Cholon, the Chinese section of Saigon, and seized a printing press, paper {and ink and complete and incomplete $5 bills. The counterfeiters’ printing plates also were seized, they said. Several persons, including gome who tried to escape, were arrested, officials added,'but police declined to disclose their names, saying the investigation was continuing. A police statement said, "In the present'ease, there undoubtedly will be death sentences given to the Chinese counterfeiters.1’ . Police said they had been investigating for five months “an important clandestine economic and financial organization led directly by Communist authorities on the Chinese mainland, whose purpose was to counterfeit various mopies in order to subvert the economies of many countries in Southeast Asia, and especially the economy of South Vietnam” They said the counterfeit U.S. bills were to be put into the black market by a Chinese named “Dailthe Giol”—the great world—who would get South Vietnamese piasters in return to “buy needed modern machines for printing counterfeit bills to subvert the monetary base Of the countries the Communist Chinese want to invade in the near future.” The Communists "planned to immediately destroy the Republic of (South) Vietnam's economy by printing and throwing into the market about 30 billion piasters”—$200 million, police said. LOOKING For a Place To RELAX? Slow Down and Stop In at the Likriy Cocktail Lounge In the Heart of Doarqipn Pontiac 85 N. Saginaw 3 THE PONTIAC PRESS; TUESDAY,.JANUARY 2, 1968 raining with the M-1..M ______ . . . sharpshooter, Stevens receives advice from a determined drill instructor. Since he was 18 years old and a graduate of San Ramon High School in Danville, California, Jack W. Stevens wanted to join the Marine Corps. As the years slipped by, hje majored in retailing at Diablo Valley College, Concord, Calif., continuing his basketball and baseball activities to keep in shape. He married a nearby Sacramento girl, moved to McKeesport, Pennsylvania and kept up his attempts to become a Marine. His problem, as taken to State Supreme Court Justice Samuel Weiss, in Pittsburgh, for advice, was his 6-foot, 11 ] 2-inch frame, too big for military requirements. Judge Weiss, with the cooperation of Pittsburgh’s U.S. Representative, James G. Fulton (R-Penn.), reviewed the case thoroughly. One month later, in June, 1967, by Congressional action , the 252-poilnd, 25-year-old giant Was assigned to the Marine Corps Recruit Depot at Parris Island, S.C., the biggest and one of the oldest recruits. He encountered problems immediately. His long stride had to be adjusted to the 30-inch step required in close-order drill, his large frame had to adapt itself to the small, but normal, bunk at the barracks and his uniforms had to be cut to his size. The drill instructors, at the same time, were making «4heir own adjustments to the big trainee. Convenient boxes or crates for close-up direction, an upturned head for plainer things. When graduation day arrived two months later, Stevens was standing tall in more ways than one. Now assigned to Basic Infantry Training at Camp Lejune, N.C., he will later go to the Naval Air Station, Memphis, Tenn., for aviation training, a beginning finally for what he hopes will be a 20-year career as a United States Marine. Graduation day,'and Marine Jack W. Stevens presents an “Eyes Right!” Standing tall, Stevens has his helmet adjusted by one of his drill instructors, Sgt. J. L Coach. Sgt. J. L. Coach contemplates his trainee from below. The new Marine waits for clothing Issue, while a clerk looks and wonders. The canteen seems mighty small to the big trainee THis Week's PICTURE SHO W-AP Ntmf natures THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 2, 1908 Jim LaVergne Owner Jt Manager Ted McCullough Jr. Owner McCullough Realty Elbert Whitaker, Jr. President Karen's Carpet Norman Pattison President Bill Riggs Manager Goodyear Service Store LaVergne's Hair Fashions Connolly's Jewelers In attending Hair Shows and Seminar* in the past few months, I have noticed that the trend h now toward the more exciting, curlier look, and permanent waving. Also, there is a great demand for services on Wigs and hairpieces which has opened up a whole new field in the beauty industry. So, with the automobile contracts settled, I believe 1968 will be a most rewarding year for people working in custom services and sales. "Sales on existing homes in the greater Pphtiae area should increase right from ihe start of 1968 and carry on through the year. The home mortgage situation remains bright fat the coming year. The great demand for homes will make the. building business boom, thereby creating more existing homes from people trading up. The population explosion alone demands that real estate to be good for several years to come. .Karen’s optimistic prediction for the overall economy „jn 1967 was no exageralion. Although' our area experienced the worst tints in our country’s history and the threat of auto strikes prevailed, the economy and Karen’s Carpets were able to make this the most prosperous year in history. We can now only predict for 1968 an even more productive year. The recent auto settlements should stabilize this economy and credit should become looser enabling everyone to enjoy a prosperous 1968. ’J- With the coming of 1968, we at Goodyear are most optimistic toward continued growth and progress. Our faith in Downtown Pontiac has been highly rewarding in 1967, We have enjoyed a year of unmatched progress and thig measure of past accomplishments shines with the promise of a future filled with continuing successes. We are meat optimiatla and enthn. aiaatle about 1968 and the fetors of Pontiac. The positive action we have taken in baying end remodeling the building on the Northwest corner of Seginew and Hnren is proof of our optimism. My attitude is also reflected in the expansion of Connolly's Jewelers, e new and larger location with the most modern end op4o* date facilities to best Steve the Pontiae anal -Watch the 1 Pontiac Press for our announcement advertisement January S which will tell of even Anther expansion of Connolly’s National Building in Downtown Pontiac. ft 5 . Victor L. DeMino President' FMlai^ Foods, Inc. Calvin Ritter > (hotter Leon Blanchura Builder President O’Noil Realty Company Beauty-Rite Homos, Inc. With din settlement of major labor contracts throughout ottr country, the economic situation will grow and become more round than ever before. Michigan, with the basic strength of die automobile industry, will remain a leader In this growth. Significantly, as speeiglista in the field of fond distribution, we at Fidler’s Foods, Ine. predict this country will continue to remain the world’s best fed With the greatest,*ssortment and the finest quality of fond available anywhere in the world. We welcome 1968 with great expectations. We believe it is certain that building costs'for new construction will increase substantially due to the increased cost of land, labor and materials and to expect a reversal of this trend is wishful thinking. Interest rates, are high, but financing is available for good, mortgages. We canot help but be optimistic about 1968 and are going ahead with 38 new homes now under construction, and anticipate another 100 to be completed by early spring. We expect 1968 to be greater. The 1968 prices on staple food item* will be slightly higher due to the rising cost of food processing. However, the prices on fresh fruits and proance are expected to remain the same. The determining factor here is supply and demand. I feel ■ prices will hold close to those of 1967 due to agriculture’s contribution of automated machinery. In abort,, we’re expecting a good year in 1968. Our |>lans for 1968 include a 24 building—8 unit apartment complex' being sold to small investors pins. SO new homes in the Hnntoon Lake area. Ours, as well at bar customers happiness with the Gold Medallion concept of all electric living, which fills today’s apartment dweller and home owners requirements for uniform heating-humidity control as well as' summer coolness has led us to design the above unit,around this modern concept of all eleetrie living. All electric living is the new, low cost modern way. "It seems to me, that anyone planning on buying a used home, building a new home or makluga real estate investment. in the near future, should not hbsitsts to aet now, for We, in this general area, certainly are in the path of progress and with the gradual loosening of mortgage credit, the population increase, the expansion of major indnatriea, and the forces of inflation, Beal Estate values and construction costs, will reach hew highs in the coming years.** ; ■ PHp. Aaron D. Baughey William A* Fox Andy Anderson Tom Bateman President Bateman Realty Company We anticipate an even more fantastic year in 1968 than we had in 1967 when we opened two new offices — one in Union Lake and one in the Ox* ford-Orionjjrea. Oar expansion plans call for at least two more offices and we would be most displeased if we didn't have at least a 25% gain in business in 1968. Toni Associate Fox Dry Cleaners William A. Fox, partner with brother Kenneth R. Fox, are certain that along with continuous industrial expansion the significant growth of new households and subdivisions within our area are a criteria for even more prosperity in i960. "More than just att optimistic opinion on our parts, all published statistics tend to confirm our predictions for a great new yearinl968.” t AM Owngr-Manager Spencer Floor Covering Unless unforeseen circumstances arise, the coming year of 1968 should prove basically sound economy Wise- The trend over the past few years has been definitely on the upgrade and should level off somewhat in the future. The future.of the business world in general rests with the younger generation. I would like to see every young man and woman take advantage of the many opportunities offered them In 1966. 0. V. Owner Anderson Sales A Service 1968 looks like another fine year for tho motorcycle industry. Increased pnblie acceptance of cycles, coupled with a greater amount of leisure time enjoyed by most people, contribute to the growing number of the “young at heart." With the bright prospects foi* another fine year at our local GM plants, wc expect unparalleled prosperity for the Pontiao Area. Our greatest wish is for-an end to the war in Viet Nam so our many friends can return home and help ns enjoy this year. -Aiuij Andmto Owner William Miller, Realty • “A Creel ’68” is a certainty upon examination of markets amhtrends. Considering that over 50% of the population are under 25 ySara of age, the approximate 10% increase enjoyed in new building starts during 1967 over 1966 will be even neater for 1968. The 2 ear family la being replaced with the, 2 home family. Mora than 2 million families f, maintain soma kind of 2nd home s and about 150,000 2nd homaa are sold annually. This figure la axpeetad to reach 200,000 a year by 1970. Oar Immediate area it batter, conaldar* ably than the national scope end with the recent signing of the unprecedented ante company contracts, we will realise price increases, increase Of interest rales and, an Isswsq la -W. business. Especially in lh# always .itSl I.........FI. •table rad estate field,, Aom V, Uoujjkag / / / THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 2, 1968 WEST 4>J8 VKJ1097 4 3 ♦ K 10 2 *5 NORTH 2 AXQ ¥2 ♦ Q97 5 . + KJ9842 g f# / EAST | ■ 44 ' ¥ Q869 ♦ A863 * Q 10 6 3 SOUTH (D) A A10978532 ¥ A ♦ J 4 *A7 North-South vulnerable Weit North East South 1A :¥ 4 A S¥ 6A Pass Pass Pass Opening lead—♦ 2 , By OSWALD AND JAMES JACOBY The most sensational defensive play of 1967 was ntade by ■ Ira Rubin in Ian Internation-lal Match Point ■ tourney for the Ispingold Cup. jThe bidding is (just about as I interesting as I the defense. JACOBY The three heart bid by Phil Feldesman who sat West was one of those preemptive jump overcalls designed to jam the opponents’ bidding. Ira’s jump to five hearts jwas a continuation of. the jam' ming process, whereupon I South decided to do a little jamming of his own and jumped to six spades. He dfdn’t know ] if he would be able to make if He rather hoped that EJast and j West would be stampeded into a seven heart save. Unfortunately for North and South, Phil and Ira use a bon vention we have named the un double. It applies in this situa tion. With no defense at all Phil would double six spades With the king of diamonds as potential defense he chpse to pass. Thus, when it came to Ira he was pretty sure that he could set six spades, -tout be couldn’t d o u b 1 e. His double also would be showing no defense. ★ ★ ★ Phil opened the deuce of dia monds. Ira won with the a?e while South dropped the jack Then Ira proceeded to think for' five minutes. At the end of that time he led back the three of clubs! This gave South a chance for a five minute huddle of his own. He had given up all hope when the diamond was opened Now he might bring home the impossible contract. He let the club ride around to "dummy’s jack, drew one trump and led a club back to his ace. Phil trumped and cashed the king of diamonds for a two trick set. We are not going to commit ourselves as to whether we would have made Ira’s lead. He had reconstructed South’s hand exactly, and gained 100 points, but somehow or other %e might have takeh life easy and returned the diamond. V*CHRD Sensed Q—The bidding has been: West North East South . IA /, . Pas* Pass Dble Pass Pass ? You, South, hold: A2 ¥J4 +K10 95 4 3 A7 5 4 3 What db you do? A—Bid two diamond*. It is worth while to try to find a better spot. TODAY’S QUESTION Instead of passing, East bids two hearts. What do you do now? ROBIN MALONE By Bot> Lubber* By Carl Grubert "I HA/E TO SHOVEL OUT TO’ THE STREET AND WHEN I By SYDNUY OMARR For wodnoodoy "Tho wIm man eontroli hi, destiny Astrology points tho way. ARIES (Mar. 21fApr. If): Haavy occom an social whirl You land to bo Inv Mails art concerned 'rlend, . may create minor listen. TAURUS (Apr. 20-May 20): Strong activity In earner area of chart. You where Aggressive trie____ p___1 crisis. Strive for understanding. Walt and come,, new opportunities present them, •elves. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Travel emphasised. So Is gain through reading, special study. Friend makes profitable suggestion. Psy heed. Experiment. Get In touch with distant one. Clear com munlcation lines. CANCER (June 21-July 22): Ambition and nacassary funds could coincide. Meant you gat a favorable break. Dgors apan. Be aggressive, inspire confidence. Be a positive self-starter. Stand tall. LEO. (July 23-Aug. 22): Changa In iaintstlc situation Indicated. Accent also on marriage, partnerships, . legal contracts. Status quo becomes .( thing of the past. Changa In kaVnote of day. Reassure family member. VIRGO (Aug. 23-sept. 22): Work, health, co-operation from, mate, partner spottfahM. You gain more If you perfect techniques. This requires Cooperation of key people. Lot others know you ap-. predate efforts. LIBRA (Sept- 23-Oct. 22): Excitement stressed In relationship with one close Mon. Emotions rim to you. New spark Ignites pioneer . . ___ ... connection site sax. SCORPIO (Oct. 22-Nov. 21): Conflict at homt could mar day's harmony. Finish project. Get rid of burden which Daily Almanac By United Press International Today is Tuesday, Jan. 2, the second day of 1968 with 364 to follow. The moon is between its new phase and first quarter./ The morning star is Venus. The evenjng stars are Mars, Saturn and Jupiter. Born on Jan. 2, 1727, was British Gen. James Wolfe, tha hero of Quebec. On this day in history: V In 1882, 'fashion writers reported that a noted Parisian designer said the flair for spring would be “stuffed birds worn on the left shoulder.” In 1905, Soviet forces landed at Port Arthur, Manchuria, surrendered to the Japanese, and ended the last major military engagement in the Russo-Japanese war. In 1959, Moscow radio announced a rocket had been launched toward the moon. This Ohio Baby Came Too Early ZANESVILLE, Ohio (AP) -Muskingum County’s first baby of the new year was born early Monday morning in a station wagon—in eight-below-zero temperatures and nine miles from a hospital. * * * And for the parents, Mr, and Mrs. John Reese of Cumberland, it was their 16th child. Reese delivered the baby, a 6-pound, 5-ounce boy, by herself as Reese continued driving to Bethesda Hospital here. The boy was named Glendon Dale. He and his mother were report-, ed doing well. Owners Fuming PLYMOUTH, N. C. ifl — A fire prompted owners of an auto parts store to schedule a fire sale but it had to be postponed when a second blaze broke out on the eve of the sale. She Ends Job on Cuba MIAMI, Fla. (AP) - An at|al Airlines flight 901 - the, tractive French-born U.S. clti-,freedom flight that carries 90 zen who flew to Cuba twice a Cuban exiles on each trip from day for four months but never Veradero to Miami Interna-saw more than the airport at'tionsl Airport.1 V ^ Veradero has ended her nerve-' * '^4 racking job. Beatrice del Perugia was a stewardess on Nation- Tllft FONtlAC PRESS. TUESDAY, JANUARY 2, 1968 • -y’ ■ B—9 TJEZk KEEGO i WINNER OF 6 ACADEMY AWARDS! DAVID LEANS I FILM > DOCTOR ZHIVAGO M MNAVtSMN' m MtlNOCOWN TMHSMT 0KN TUI FIATUII SlM Ml. ONLY ★ * ' * The flights have brought about 10,000 Cubans here since they began with two hops eacjb weekday. The flights, have been i suspended this week until Wednesday because of the anniversary celebration- in Cuba of the formation of Fidel Castro’s government nine years ago today. Miss del Perugia got the assignment because she speaks four languages. She was a student of Russian and government at the University of Miami. She said she .plans to marry in June and hopes to use her speech skills to becomes translator. In a letter to her successor, iss del Perugia advised that the short hop is no milk run. ‘UKE ZOMBIES’ ) . f ' “For - FE 4-0526 write court poetry. > t^ry writer/ His detective sto-* * * ries are intellectual thrillers “I wouldn’t be able to write more than blood-and-thunderj court poetry,” the 63-year-ofd epics. They include titles such termed “the worst poem of the laureate once said. ,“I’m not dis-las “Minutes of Murder” and! year-“The Buried Day.” TO PAY A BILL Day-Lewis « started writing mysteries years ago to pay a $240 bill to patch a leaky roof. The Blake mysteries sold so well that he was able to retire as a schoolmaster and; living on mystery earnings, turn to his loyal to the royal family,, but I couldn’t write that sort of thing. You can only write things that move one.” p * Things that have moved Day-Lewis have been Sir Francis Chichester’s round-the-world solo sail, (he landslide disaster at the Welsh ivllage of Aberfan and last year’s wreck of the oil I fjr^t love: Poetry, tanker Torrey .Canyon. The; * * poem about the ill-fated tanker! _ . .... Was set to music. , The new poet laureate said his main influences were Robert Jayson9s 419!? Dixie flwy. Drayton Plains Phone 67&7900 NOW . . . Wednesday through Saturday The JERRY LIBBY Trio COCKTAILS • LUNCHES DINNER DANCING ★ k k Sources report Day-Lewis still intends to dodge topics that don’t move him, although his post requires him to write on state occasions. Frost, Thomas Hardy, W.H. Auden, and W.B. Yeats. Critics place them in the same poetic school with Auden and Stephen Spender. #— k k MASEFIELD’S SUCCESSOR Not all the Day-LeWis poetry Prime Minister Harold Wilson!acclaimed, named Dav-Lewis Monday to 0f h,s latest collect,on of i**™’ fill the post left vacant bv the death last May of John Masefield at the age of 91. Wilson named Day-Lewis over Robert Graves —w h o m Day-Lewis called “the best poet in the country “—and over Jqhn Bet je-1 man, William Plomer and Ed-.j mund Blunden. ■k k k It Day-Lewis never pens a line of court verse, however, he will be in good company. Robert Bridges, Masefield’s predecessor, never wrote any state-occasion verse. ★ ★ k Other celebrated English poets who have held the post were William Wordsworth Robert Southey and Alfred Tenny- RHIMES DELICATESSEN AT NYE DAIRY Featuring Our Famous Kosher Corned Beef SPECIAL LUNCHEON EVERYDAY 1 Breakfast - Duma. Complata Carry-Out Service 515 Oaklond Free Forking FI 5-4061 FREE COFFEE FOR OUR PATRONS 12 NORTH SAGINAW IN DOWNTOWN PONTIAC MATINEES DAILY OPEN 11:45 A.M. 1 Show Starts 12:00 Noon , Continuous—334-4436 FOR MATURE ADULTS - ENDS TUESDAY _‘inr~ • iniinri ca«p«s “THE GOLDEN GIRLS” ■J LAST TIMES TONITE at ItM F.M. Only HURON JUUE ANDREWS MAX VON SYD0W RICHARD HARRIS “HAMZ&H” PANAVISKIN* COLOR by Oeliwe DRIVE-IN THEATER 2S3S DIXIE HIGHWAY (U.S. 10) 1 t ILOCE N. TELEGRAPH R0. chilpacn unotn 12 f»tt DRIVE-IN THEATER SO. TELEGRAPH AT $0. LAKE RD. 1 MILE W. WOODWARD DRIVE-IN THEATER 0PDYKE RD. AT WALTON BLVD. 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It’s a beautiful movie and perfect from top to bottom with lots pf mod action!” —Judith Crist, NBC TV “TO SIR, WITH LOVE* IS ENTERTAINMENT OF THE WARMEST SORT, SO RIGHT THAT YOU WOULD STAND UP AND CHEER!” —Archer Winsten, New York Post “SIDNEY PQITIER purposeful and warm, moving and humorous!”, —Wende Hale, New York Daily News “PICTURE OF THE MONTH!” —Seventeen Magazine “Sidney Poitier just perfect...this film . will enthrall you!” —Cosmopolitan Magazine WED., SAT., SUN/ at 1:00-3:00-5:00-7:00-9:00 THUR., FRI., MON., TUES. 0:00 ■COLUMBIA PICTURES' Presents SlDIET pOITIER JAMES CLAVELL'S production br To Sib, WITH LOVE' JUDY TO’ CHRISTIAN ROBERTS - SU2Y KENDALL*THE “MINDBENDERS”^ .n.,^crn«iULUM ” PRICES—THIS ENGAGEMENT ONLY ADULTS NI0HTS It SUN. $1.50-Well., Sat., Mat. $1.00 Children IJtider / 2 '• HCMiUlU SING "TO SM. WITH 10W OH THE EPIC RECOKOS SINGU »N0 ON INC FONTANA AEC0N0S ONICINAl SOUND TRACK ALBUM A10M.WITH THt MNOOf NOCKS' "OfF AM IUNNMG'' AN0 "IT'S CITIIN6 haaha k. tw nir COMING WED., Jan. 10th—“THE BIBLE” 1 B mm THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 2, 1908 n Special iiews for owners of paid-up* John Hancock Weekly Premium Life Insurance John Hancock has made a basic change in one of its oldest life insurance plans protecting families all across the United States. This change is another example of our continuing attention to the insurance needs of the families and businesses that count on their John Hancock man for the finest in life insurance service. ^ •if you! weekly premium policy is paid-up — that is, no further premiums are required as of December 31, J967 — your benefits resulting from death or dismemberment may have been increased from 'five to as much as twenty percent, depending on when you purchased your policy. Your policy cash value may have increased too. (These increases apply only to'" policies issued prior to 1962, and wiU-he included in benefit payments made after December 31, 1967. If you own. a paid-up weekly premium policy purchased prior to 1957, see your local John Hancock District Agent for all the details^ Or write us at the address below. You may be surprised how Special this news will be. j'Jfyancca czo~ — JASURANCM World Settles Down to '68 Problems . m. ■ „ -•••■ • ' • " , By Hie Associated Press Brushing aside the bright confetti and streamers' of New Year’s celebrations, the world again tackles its besetting problems and renews its quest for an easing of North Viq|namesejtions in the battle to reduce a terms for peace talks. The U.S, State Department said the statement was under study. * ★ ★ In the South, a Vietcong guer- mounting gap in the U.S. bal ance of payments. TOURISM EXPENDITURES v Among them, he appealed to Americans to see 0ie Americas i Council credited both the bad second—arid saveiweather and good drivingfor a miles'iKirtheiMt of Sai-;*5°° million in tourism expendi-]deathi toll below advance esti- where more than 270,000 persons jammed each mile of the 5'.5-mile parade route. As the holiday weekend came to a close the National Safety rain caused hazardous driving conditions in parts of Arkansas Louisiana and Mississippi. Below - zero temperatures throughout most of the Midwest may have kept, some drivers at home. The cold weather was spreSding eastward, ,] . , j Jt was below zero in Clarks- —----...-■/%----------* burg, Mass. The wind was blow- »■ .......a ing and snow falling but siXf/ FINGER'S N the elusive grail of peace. /. Ufa a(taCk killed 26 American On the advent of 1968, states- infantrymen and wounded 1111 men, church leaders* and ordi-jabovit 50 miles northeast of Sai-,------ „------ - , - nary men around the world gon A U.S. spokesmag said the|tures by limiting their travel to - 1 ■ * * spoke of the urgentneed for attack before the end of the the Western Hemisphere for two| ^ total reached 355 ^ the Berkshire County residents car peuce. But few, if y, ■^ceas^fme made^ that luH^the years jperiod from 6 p.m. Friday to ried out a plan to camp out ov- sure,lt ^0Uj bloodiest of all such truce at- M t Americans, however J midnight Monday. Earlier the 'emight to greet the new year, months ahead. ^ + -tempts during the war |wefe less concerned Mondayjcouncil had predicted that 460 to| * * * Pope Paul VI in Vatican Da>“V<¥ «-» 1> «* die Jl? led Roman Catholics in prayers'n0Unced hiS ^rJT^^Ianceof payments than the fate'accidents. S |dogs and champagnf. The six, for Deace At the same time Hnews conference flve new ac~ of their favorite football team. A new snowstorm belted the who had camped out together H - 1 1 it was a day of record cold,'northern Rockies and freezing,last summer, set up their tents, of THE MALL Custom Picture Framing warned that “new terrible ob-J jstacles,” especially in Vietnam,! [arise to complicate that ques-! jtion. 1 “The world,” he said, “feels a' great temptation to relegate' -peace among other utopias as aj great idea, worthy of being in-| (ap> Pilot Buzzes, snow and freezing rain around the country, a good day for staying indoors, catching col-Shoots at Homes lege gridiron heroes on televi-jsion and eating snacks instead GARDEN GROVE, Calif .f . livineMOvingest New Years parties bee7pianning itforTlong tim^ BUY. SELL. TRADE - uie leisure ot a living ... fprrV Ilia- ^ u »» danittap t A Going Party SEATTLE (AP) portable gas stoves and portable record players in Clarksburg State Park. “It was kind of chilly, but we On* nf thp enjoyed it,” said Mrs. James 01 McClelland Monday, “We’d Police are looking for ** aboard the ferry, Ilia-;,* „ n ihPv eav huzzed two room chair. the. Cotton Bowl, --------— eluded among the finest ener- Uot who ^ buzzed two The party, complete with gies motivating history but-blocks in residential area and Sugar Bow , Rose Bowl and Or- • J ’ ** fated always„.to rema 1 n fired three shots at houses No. ange Bowl could be enjoyed noisemakers, paper natg, - USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT AD! mvtv/lLMur* I BERKELEY STREET • ROST ON • MASSACHUSETTS • 01I1T , „ . „ .fired three shots fallacl0US- I body was hit. NO PREDICTION | Residents reported hearing At the LBJ Ranch in Texas three shots Monday and seeing President Johnson spoke of his a yeH°w light plane. Officers hope “that we can make ad-sa*^ two roofs were hit, appar-vances toward peace” but said ently by 38-caliber bullets. he could not predict peace for the new year. In an exchange of -New Year greetings; the Presi-i dent and Japanese Prime Minis-1 Iter Eisaku Sato pledged to work I tor peace in 1968. 'From Hanoi came ' a radio j broadcast for Foreign Minister' Nguyen Duy Trinh that experts said might possibly represent from ehrly afternoon into the candelabra, food, drink and[ evening. [tape-recorded music, was held1 The games were preceded by by fight commuters who sit to-the traditional pageants and pa- gether throughout the year on rades including the Tournament the 35-minute trip from Bain-of Roses in Pasadena, Califs bridge Island. AW Wircphoto KEEPING READY — A Marine mortar man adjusts his 81mm rounds of ammunition on the lip of a sandbagged bunker to keep them within easy reach. The leatherneck is stationed at Con Thien, just below the Demilitarized Zone in South Vietnam. 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Stop in or call for full information. 4 Annual rate compounded and paid quarterly Or, if you prefer the convenience of regular Passbook Savings, you can save any amount, large or small, any time ... no worry about maturity dates, minimum amounts or withdrawals. And, with Capitols quarterly compounding, your A Q A 07 funds actually earn^cwv-effective rate of law** /O INCORPORATED 1190 • LANSING, MICHIGAN • MEMBER: FEDERAL HOME LOAN BANK SYSTEM CAPITOL SAVINGS & LOAN 75 WEST HURON ST. PONTIAC Office* in Laming, Detroit, Lathrup Village, Okemos, St. John> and Grand Ledge Greeks Ban Americans on' Atlanti' WOODS HOLE, Mass. (AP) — Americans who helped discover an ancient island city they think may be part of the legendary lost continent of Atlantis are banned from further excavation there, the leader of the American group says. Members of a Greek-Ameri-can expedition reported last July that the city, found under volcanic ash on the island of Thera in the Aegean Sea southeast of Greece, may have been the inspiration for the Atlantis legend in the writings of the philosopher Plato. Dr. James W. Mavor Jr. of the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute said Monday Greek authorities issued the ban shortly after he publicized the findings. He said the*ban was not disclosed earlier because the American group “had been trying to smooth it over.” He said “a trivial incident” that involved “personality and professional jealousy” apparently led to the ban, although the nationalistic spirit of the new military regime in Greece also may have played a part. Mavor said accounts of the findings “emphasized the Amer icans and neglected” Prof. Spy-ridon Matinatos of the University of Athens, director of the Greek Archeologist Service^ who supervised the excavating. Mavor said this apparently angered Marinatosv who “summarily cut off our future participation in the excavation.” Greek archeologists later refused an American foundation’s offer and technical and substantial financial assistance, he said. He declined to name the foundation. ^ Tiy Our lutciout Fudge ^ and Thin FtoRiit Brittla 4642 Elizabeth Lak* Rd. How Opan 10 ft 7 — Clotod Sundoy Boginning Jan. 1 $ — Opon 9 to 6 Monday thrv Saturday-Clotod Sunday k Call 312-2509 - 002-5640 j PAULI JEWELERS Is MOVING To A New LOCATION And Will Be Closed All Day Wednesday And Thursday January 3rd and 4th To Prepare For A Sale In The PONTIAC PRESS Next F ridayFor Details! FPED KfGUUU. CO. JEWELERS 28 West Huron Pontiac / PHOftE FE 2-7257 hhuhh.m.........................................................................................imnimm 1 s I TOUCHDOWN AHEAD - All-America halfback, 0. J. Simpson (32) of Southern California threads his way through the Indiana defense (left) and dives into the end zon^ (right) AP wireahota for six points against the Hoosiers in the Rose Bowl yesterday. Simpson scored twice in sparking the Trojans’ 14-3 victory. THE PONTIAC PRESS ✓ TUESDAY, JANUARY 2, 1968 C—1 'Bama Falls to Texas A&M —-------— ■ ■ ^ Pupil Turns Tables on Teacher DALLAS, Tex. UP> — “The big plays won for us again,” said Coach Gene Stallings of Texas A&M as he reviewed his team’s 20-16 triumph over Alabama' in the Cotton Bowl Monday. Yes, big plays and Alabama mistakes —the kind of mistakes that led Paul “Bear” Bryant, coach of Alabama, to contend long ago that the defense can outscore the offense. ★ a a Trouble was that the pupil was beating the teacher with his own philosophy —Alabama was making the mistakes and the Aggie defense was cashing in on them. v Bryant, who coached Stallings at Tex- as A&M, then took the young man with hint to Alabama as hia assistant, lamented over his team’s mistakes, but not too long. Rather, he spent his time telling Stallings ' how proud he was that he could bring Texas A&M out of a four-game losing streak to the Southwest Conference championship, then victory in. the Cotton Bowl to run his winning string to seven. Bryant came across the field and carried Stallings around like a .football team often does a winning coach. Stallings couldn't help himself — the Bear outweighs him by about 75 pounds. “He sure is strong isn’t he?” mused Stallings when Bryant finally' let him down. Alabama lost two fumbles, had three passes interceptedand got short kicking to set up Aggie scores. The Aggies, on the other hand were outgained both on the ground and in the air but offset that by using the breaks* It was a familiar pattern — the Aggies played like that in the glittering stretch drive that became the greatest comeback in Southwest' Conference history. Noting that the Aggies had intercepted .27 passes and recovered a dozen fumbles, Bryant said before the Cotton Bowl game that the main thing he feared was the A&M defense. His trepidation was justified. There were many angles to the “fanr ily squabble” that broke out op the Cotton Bowl’s soggy turf — it was called -that because of the striking resemblance of the two teams, the almost father-son relationship of the two coaches and the fact that Stallings had recruited some players for Bryant at Alabama. At .A it" i But Stallings, when he came to Te?as A&M as head c o a c h, brought Curley Hallman of Northport, Ala., which is near Tuscaloosa, the home of the University of Alabama. Hallman intercepted two Alabama passes, one of them stopping the last effort of the Crimson Tide. The other set the Aggies up for a score but they couldn’t take .advantage of it. Aggie quarterback Edd Hargett, named outstanding back of the game, passed’ for two touchdowns and his third down throw for 10 yards kept the third Aggie drive moving. However, the big man of this surge was Wendell Housley, who carried for 33 yards in two runs to get the winning touchdown. AC Wlrephoto BEGINNING OF END - LSU’s Glenn Smith (26) dives into the end zone for a two yard touchdown, the first after Wyoming took a 13-0 lead in the Sugar Bowl. Linebacker Jim House (46) tries to stop the TD, but LSU overcame the deficit and defeated the Cowboys, 20-13. Ken Stabler, the southpaw passing star of Alabama, didn’t throw for any touchdowns but he kept the Aggies in a stew throughout with his dangerous flinging of the pigskin. He ran for both Alabama touchdowhs. But he had three passes intercepted Pnd that contributed mightily to the Aggie cause. , ' Alabama scored first, driving 80 yards with Stabler making the last three. A&M tiecj it up late in the first period after Tommy Maxwell intercepted a Stabler pass. Hargett pitched to Larry Stegent for 13 yards and the score. REGAINED LEAD Beating Unbeatens Is Habit for LSU's Sugar Champions NEW ORLEANS (AP) - Mowing Town undefeated teams in bowl games is.noth-ing new for Louisiana State’s football team and its burly head coach, Charlie McClendon. But no one expected an unheralded substitute halfback named Smith to be the. Star this time. The Tigers’ 20-13 comeback victory over unbeaten, untied Wyoming in Monday’s' Sugar Bowl made it the third tiPie in six years that L§U has snapped winning streaks of their opponents in postseason classics. % ★ . ★ a ,/t LSU’s triumph may have established McClendon as the prime candidate for the athletic director’s post at His school. The LSU board of supervisors is slated to name a new athletic director early this year. GIVES NEW LIFE Hero of the Tiger victory on the soggy Sugar Bowl turf waS sophomore second- string halfback Glenn Smith, who came off the bench late in the third period to breathe new life into LSU’s faltering offense. “Anybody could have done It,” said Smith, who ran for 74 yards and caught a key pass for 39 yards. “I was Just lucky it happened to be me.” The 185-pound, 5-foot-lI-, New Orleans native was voted the game’s outstanding player. (Continued on Page C-2, Col. 6) Sugar Bawl LSU Wye. Rushing yardage Passing yardage Passes 151 147 ... 91 239 .... 4-20-4 14-24-0 y Yards panallfad 25 45 LSU ................. « ( ; i*_l« Wyoming ...................a u a *-13 Wyo—Toscano 1 run (DePoysttr kick) Wyo—FG OePoyster 24 Wyo—FG DePoyster 41 LSU—Smith I run (Hurd kick) LSU—Morel I pas, from Stokley (kick failed) LSU—Moral M pass from Stokaly (Hurd kick) Attendance 71.943. Alabama took the lead opening the second period when Steve David kicked a 36-yard field goal. The Aggies, however, went ahead 13-10; with only 21 seconds left in the half as Hargett passed seven yards to Maxwell. • - A&M clinched the victory midway of the third period with a two-yard drive set up by a short Davis kick. It was Housley who crashed the Alabama line like a truck to get the touchdown that gave the Aggies a victory. AAA It squared things for a loss the other time' they had appeared in the Cotton Bowl. That was 1942. Alabama won 29-21 then. a Alabama catne back to drive 83 yards for a touchdown, made on Stabler’s seven-yard run. . Cotton Bowl First downs Alabama Taxes ABM 14 13 Rushing yardage 135 114 Passing yardaga ’ 179 143 Return yardage , 130 Passes ) 6-25-3 1 <11-22-0 Punts * 10-41 Fumbles lost 2 Penalties 37 83, Alabama .73 4 B—14 Texas AAM 7 4 7 0—20 Ala—Stabler 3 run {David kick) ABM—Stagent 13 pas, from Hargett (Rlgg, kick) Ala.—FG oavli 34 A4.M—Maxwell 7 pal, from Hargett (kick tailed) Attendance 75,504. PASADENA, Calif, iff)'-* Southern California's 6. J. Simpson achieved his dream of playing in the Rose Bowl and turned it into a nightmare for the Hoos-' iers of Indiana. The All-America halfback scored both touchdowns as the Trojans captured the 54th annual classic 14-3 and cemented their hold on the national collegiate football championship. ’ Simpson gained 128 yards net in 25 carriqs as the speedy workhorse of the Trojan attack. “Southern California, with Simpson, is the national champion,” declared Coach John Pont of Indiana. “You could give Simpson to some of the other teams ke played and then they’d be the best.” O. J. turns his athletic talents to the running track orr Friday night in an in- / Sports Swami Must Eat Crow! Hmmmrph! As our friend Major Hoople would say.. . . Blah! Never underestimate the luck of a woman. So our Swami Spears eats crow today, and we bow to Seeress Wilson as Champion of the bowl prognosticators. We bet you, Howard Heldenbrand, our Swami can play golf better than your Seeress! .. Oh, well, as they say in sports, “Wait till next year.” Hope you enjoy your steak, and your Rose Bowl piqk. Indiana, Ho! Ho! The results: Seeress Wilson (3-2-1) Swami Spears RM-l) Indiana ... 3 SOUTHERN CAL .. ...14 LSU ... 20 ... 28 r- a 1 Wyoming .13 OKLAHOMA Tennessee ...24 TEXAS EL PASO .. ...14 Mississippi ... 7 Florida State ...17 Penn State ...17 ‘Texas A&M ....... ... 20 ‘Alabama ... 16 ‘Both picked Alabama. AF wiraphoto TEACHER HOISTS PUPIL — Alabama coach Paul (Bear) Bryant helps lift Texas A&M coach Gene Stallings after A&M defeated Alabama in the Cotton Bowl in Dallas yesterday, 20-16. Stallings at one time played football under Bryant. door meet in hia San Francisco hometown but declared he plans to return to football and wpn’t try for the U.S. Olympic team. - * ♦ “He’ll get better,” was the pronouncement from USC Coach John McKay, who termed himself well pleased with his club’s performance against the Big Ten representative*. Southern California scored on their first series of plays, driving 84 yards in 13 plays as Simpson gained 38 in six carries, including the final two. A fumble cost USC another first-half touchdown as Dan Scott lost the ball in the end zone. In the third period, Simpson gained 28 yards in four carries on a 45-yard touchdown advance. He burst the final eight as Ron Yary and Dennis Borne opened the hole for him. * _ Indiana’s only points came on a 27 yard second-quarter field goal by Dave Kor-nowa. McKay revealed the strategy for keeping Indiana from keying too much on Simpson, the 209-pound junior who runs the 100-yard dash in 9.4 seconds. “We started passing on first down to get the linebackers out of there and give the ball to Scott more than usual,” the coach said. Scott contributed 85 yards in 18 carries as Simpson would swing wide as a decoy. The Trojan coach also ternjed the defensive effort one of the best for this season as the winners contained quarterback Harry Gonso and halfback John Eisenbarger much of the afternoon. MISS CHANCES Pont added, “We feel bad that we missed a couple of scoring opportunities and spent most of the rest of the game in bad field position. You just don’t drive 75 or 80 yards for a touchdown against a team like Southern Cal.” ★ A * Indiana had its forward wail stunting, but Simpson declared, “Our linemen picked those stunts right up.” McKay explained a frequency of penalties and apparent mistakes When he pointed out the, club was minus five regulars including the two starting guards --one out on a knee injury and the other ineligible, ■ 1 “I thought our team played real well and I was tickled with the 14-3 score,” the coach assserted. “But I knew as I walked off the field that most people „ wouldn’t be.” Simpson also was. tickled. .Ite paid before the 1967 season started that ms dream was to play in the Rose Bowl. On this New Year’s Day, his family was among the 102,946 who watched him win honors as the game’s outstanding performer. ' Rosa Bawl . . \ Firs! dawn .............. Rushing yardage ............... Passing yardage ............... Return yardage ...,;........... Passes .......... Punts ............... Fumbles lost . ........ Yards < pennalized ............ 102 2-0-1 4-41 Indiana Southern cal USC—Simpson 2 run (Aldrldga kick) IND—FG Kornowa 27 USC—Simpson S run (Aldrldga kick) Attandanca 102,994. f *- I *-14 Tennessee Victimized, 26-24 Oklahoma Wins Orange Bowl Squeaker MIAMI (AP) — Oklahoma's quick-striking Sooners, a team built out of adversity, could claim the nation’s No. 2 college football ranking today after a wild and dramatic 26-24 victory over Tennessee ip the Orange Bowl. But 34-year-Old Coach Chuck Fairbanks, who took the helm at Oklahoma when Jim Mackenzie died suddenly during spring practice, was claiming nothing except heavenly protection. ,.A it < A “The Good Lord was looking after us,” said Fairbanks, dripping wet after being dunked into a shower in the tumultuous dressing room of the Sooners. Quarterback Bob Warpiack stunned second-ranked Tennessee with a brilliant running and passing performance that moved No. 3 Oklahoma into a 19-0 halftime lead. But the Big Eight champions had to hang on grimly against the resurging Volunteers in the second half. They got to Warmack for two interceptions that narrowed the margin to 19-14 in just two minutes, 10 seconds of the third period. And the game was in doubt until Tennessee’s soccer-style field goal kicker, Karl Kremser; narrowly missed from 43 yai;ds out with 14 seconds left. Running and passing for 188 yards, Warmack scored a touchdown on a seven-yard run, threw 20 yards to Eddie Hinton for another, and led a -74-yard drive ending with a one-yard scoring lunge by* Steve Owens. “That first half was my greatest of the season,” Warmack said, “but that (Continued on Page C-2, Col. 6) Orange Bowl First downs .................... Rushing yardago .............. Passes ....’.................... Passing yardago ................ Return yardago ................. Punts .......................... Fumbles lost.................... Yards penalized ................ 9-18-2 12-24*3 Oklahoma......................7 12 t 7—24 Tennessee ....................0 0 14 IB—24 Okla—Warmack 7 run (Vachon kick) Okla—Hinton 20 pass from Warmack (kick failed) Okla—Owens 1 run (run failed) Tenn—Glover 34 interception (Kremser kick) Tenn—Fulton 5 run (Kremser kick) Tenn—FG Kremser 24 Okla—Stephenson 25 Interception (Vachon kick) Tenn—Warren 1 run (Kremser kick) Attendance 77,993. MAKING TRACKS — Oklahoma quarterback Bob War-’ af wtrepnete mack (11) reels off 38 yards in the first period of the Orange Albert Dorsey (26). Oklahoma won the game last night in Bowl game against Tennessee. Giving chase i$ Tennessee’s Miami, 26-24. THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 2, 1968 \ BID.......... OfHoliday F-A-T! Get Back hi Shape At Holiday Health Spa! | At any ag«, you need regular,, daily exercise to help you keep the trim, confident look of pys^cess. You can get it^AT. HOLIDAY HEALTH! per visit membarship basis JOIN TODAY FOR CALL T&E HOLIDAY SPA NEAREST YOU NOW OR DROP BY TODAY . . . VISITORS WELCOME irs FUN TO KEEP FIT! i^OOK GREAT and FEEL GREAT WAKE-UP AND LIVE! REGARDLESS OF YOUR AGE! eliminate the "middle" LOSE - GAIN - RE-PROPORTION THE SPA (HYDRA-SWIRL POOL) AREA: EXCLUSIVE Direct from Europe ond Palm Springs. Relax in special seats while ■. hot whirling mineral water explodes against you to give the very finest in Modern Hydrotherapy. Stimulates entire muscular and circulatory system. Offers relief from arthritis, rheumatism, bursitis, aches pnd pains. , OPEN It 1, It DAILY 3432 HIGHLAND - New Location Phono 334-1591 UCLA, Houston 1-2 in By the Associated Press {Collected 36 (jjst place votes and The old year tournaments and36? ^"Isandthe^garsia-O got the other No. 1 vote and 320 points as they strengthened their clique at the top with tournament victories. • ‘ the new year Associated Pr(ess poll brought a revamping of college basketball’s Top Ten and its unbeaten today except at the top where, year, out, year in, Houston remain 1-2. Wolverines on Road; Big Ten Roughed Up in Holiday Activity The voting is done by sports writers and sportscasters UCLA and She overpowering Bruins, 8-0, throughout die’ country on' a ba' ! sis of 10 points for first place, nine for second, etc. Catholic Five Back in Action By the Associated Press Indiana and Michigan attempt to regain some lost conference. prestige tonight before the Big Ten turns to the ing round of its basketball campaign Saturday. Indiana will be at Detroit and Michigan invades Houston in a final pair of preconference warmups. All ten teams will be in action Saturday with Iowa at The Bruins topped Northwestern, Michigan at Wis-104-75 in thf? title iconsin, Michigan State at Illi- UCLA won its own Los Angeles Classic for the sixth straight time Saturday after routs over Minnesota, St. Louis and Wyoming for 42 consecutive triumphs. Wyoming r., D . . | p.. .'gaihe. Houston, less impressive, nois, Minnesota at Indiana and UTy rarocmai '° —« ~,J j / --way tive who intercepted,two passes, each given to Florida and Georgia Tech last year. When Oklahoma and Tennessee met in the Orange Bowl in 1939 and the decision went the other way, with Tennessee winning 17-0, the teams each got $25,000. Under the contracts, the schools divide 75 per cent of the game receipts, television and program money. snow. The biathlon, an old European event combining crosscountry skiing and rifle shooting, became part of the Winter Olympics in 1950. * ★ ★ The top finishers Monday were: Bill Spencer, Salt Lake City, Utah, 36:15; John Ehrens-beck, Old Forge, N.Y., 37:24; to the Senior Bowl have played,the old spread formation in in other postseason games,[a&M’s 20-16 victory over Ala-many in other all-star games,! bama in the Cotton Bowl. QUICK EXIT others with their teams in vari-1 But he said his team was Later, Bryant ous bowls.' They represent 43 ready for the surprise. schools. ‘[I sure didn’t expect Coach[qUieted when he walked in.j All-American linebacker BMyjCyf*rman fiOYPT Birant to use the spread form-Bryant went ^ j ^ to Hobbs said, “I’ve never played, ?don P^yer shaking hands. Then he|in a game in which two teams started for the door and said: I as rnuch respect forf each “Let me out of here, I’ve seen other. Quarterback Kenny Sta-all the Aggies I want to seel” jbler was the best faker I’ve ever seen. ★ ★ * In 34 years, not counting the) John Isokangas. New York, 1968 edition, the Orange Bowl I NY., 37:42; Myron Gallagher, But for every player practicing, there’s likely to be at least one person watching. Last year, for example, more than 60 professional scoots showed up to take a look at potential pro players. The interest is obvious. More safe side we practiced against it this week,” Stallings said. 4 A 1t The end of the game saw Alabama’s headmaster carrying the opposing coach, Stallings, down the field. Bryant and shouted, “This is the guyjCommittee has paid teams $7,.!Flint, Mich., 37:46; Johanthon Alabama didn’t want.” 1559,211.19.' visited tlie, Hallman replied, “I don’t --------------------------- ,Ralph Wakley, Salt Lake City, A&M dressing room, which want t0 g0 back now.” ^ _ l38^43 , ' ***■ Bj ! Twenty Americans are trying for the team and four Canadians have joined in the Trials. Monday’s tryouts were held on a 7.5-kilometer course, shooting at five targets at 150 meters. Each man had eight rounds of ammunition to hit the five targets. The dressing room broke out in shouts and cheers. Stallings said he Retains Title BERLIN (UPI) - Karl Mild-enberger retained his Euopean heavyweight boxing champion- f “We just wanted this one neveF real bad for the coach. Welship with a 12-round decision than 200 former Senior Bowl ®”™ “e I,e*a- 8*ve squad members were active in Stallings a hug and a pat and' e a e J?e( * * were iready for that spread.”|over West German countryman professional football this year ran°ff- ipiay ng or ryant that he stallings said he was so happy [Gerhard Zech Saturday night, and 30 of the 54 players from Stallings turned around and some day would beat 'the °ld wjm the victory that “I’m It was Mildenberger’s first fight last year's Senior Bowl teams4f?rinned and said, “He’s a good master. [not even going to grade thelsince he lost to Argentinian Os- made pro teams their rookie strong scamp,4isn’t he?” “I was too busy fighting for! films. I may look at them later,{world elimination last Septem- year. In the tuhnel going to the'my life,” he said. ithough.” Iber. Bermuda in Soccer Win HAMILTON, Bermuda (AP) — The JJermuda Football Association beat the Winnipeg All-Stars 5-1 in a soccer match Monday. I TflE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 2, 1068 CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP)—If vision, Don White as winner .of anyone ever asks you the ques- the stock car division, Mel Ken-Dot1 “what makes Johnny run," yon in midgets and Greg Weld or “why auto racing," the stock in sprints. V'-riSf answer could be k simple word In NASCAR, Richard Petty —“money." ' won the Grand National stock Year end reports have been released by the nation’s two major sanctioning "todies for professional drivers, the United States Auto dub and the National Association for Stock Car Auto Racing. W ... it ' ★. They show these two organisations distributed $5,394,620 for *1,171 races during 1967, an increase of $500,679 in purse money over the previous year. Of the total, USAC sponsored 134 events with purses totaling $2,-273,516. NASCAR sanctioned 1,-027 events for Grand National, modified, sportsmen and drag cars with purses totaling $3,-121,104.20. -Well over half of USAC’s total —$1,536,965 — was paid In its exotic championship (Indianapolis cars) division, where 21 events were run. NASCAR paid $1,225,549 to its elite Grand National drivers, or an averag&of $25,011.22 for 49 races. BIG JUMP NASCAR prize money showed an increase of $198,0)3 oyer 1966, while USAC paid out $302,666 more. USAC drivers distributed $108,330 in championship point fund money at the end of the season, NASCAR $179,667. USAC crowned A. J. Foyt as the champion in its big,car di- title, Pete Hamilton the sportsman championship, Carl Bergh-man the modified title, and Scott Cain the West Coast late model crown. Baetem Otvlilwi i \ WwiL sit Pet. ••hind Philadelphia .... 30 * .749 — Boston a....... 25 10 .714 3 Detroit ..........21 IV .525 9'A Cincinnati ...... id , 20 .444 Balthnono ........ 14 21 .400 New York ...... 15 24 .305 Western Division St. Louis ....... 20 11 .710 San Francisco ..20 14 .447 Los Angalaa .... 22 17 .544 Chicago ........ 13 27 .325 San Diege 11 30 .240 Seattle .......... 11 32 .254 12'/i 15 Vi Chicago 10V, Baltimore 103 St. Louis 115, Seattle V4 Today's Oames Baltimore vs. Detroit at New York Cincinnati at New York Boston at Chicago Los Angeles at Sen Francisco Wednesday's Games Chicago at Baltimore New York at. Philadelphia ■astern Division Wen Last Pet. Behind Minnesota 24. 10 .7BS — Pittsburgh ...... 24 12 .447 t Indiana ........ 21 IV .553 5 New Jersey .... 15 22 .405 1014 Kentucky ....... 12 22 .353 12 Western Division New Orleans 7?. 25 11 .404 — Denver .......... 20 17 .541 SV4 Dellas ........ IS 15 .500 7 Oakland ,...... 13 22 .371 UV4 Houston ........ 12 22 .353 12 Anaheim ....... 13 24 .351 12W Indiana at Denver Minnesota at Dallas New Jersey at New Orleans Kentucky .at Pittsburgh Wednesday's Games Indiana at Anaheim Denver- at Houston Kentucky at New Jersey ; at Richmond, NASCAR has issued a tentative schedule of 46 Grand National events for 1968, with purse money set at a minimum of $1,-409,500. The schedule gets under way with the Motor Trend 500 at Riverside, Calif., Jan. 21. The 1968 season also will include at least 10 races with prize money in excess of $100,-000 for NASCAR’s new grand touring division for small sports sedans. More events will be added. The™*tentative schedule includes 250 milers at Charlotte, Darlington, Daytona Beach and Atlanta, with 150 milers at ROckipgham and Bristol. LONGER SLATE 'USAC has extended its championship circuit schedule for 1968 to include 24 events and purse money in excess of $2 million. In addition, USAC will run 14 events for late model stocks, 15 for midgets and 32 for sprint cars. Total prize money should1 top $3 million. The biggest purse in NASCAR will be paid at Daytona Beach! for the 500 mile Grand National! AFL Champs Await Packers - ' : J®f* ':'' AP Wlreehote DROPPING SIX POINTS - Indiana end Hal Gage (81) drops a bullet-like pass just inside the end zone that would have given the Hoosiers six points in their game against Southern Cal in the Rose Bowl yesterday. All-America linebacker Adrian Young isn’t dose enough to halt the pass. Tossing the pass was sophomore quarterback Harry Gonso. By the Associated Press The Oakland Raiders went to work on. their Super Bowl preparations today but the elmo-tionally-drained Green Bay Packers tpok another day off to regain their composure after their dramatic triumph over Dalian. ; . * I really couldn’t celebrate New Year’s," Packer -tackle Ron Kostelnik said. “I was completely drained.” h it h The Packers gained the National Football League charifpi< onship for the third straight year Saturday with a breathless 21-17 victory over Dallas in -13 degree weather at Green Bay, Bart:. Starr struggling one yard for the winning touchdown with just 13 seconds remaining. Oakland, playing at home, overwhelmed Houston 40-7 for Uie Raiders’ first American Football League title. They’ll play the Packers in the Super Bowl in Miami, Fla., Jan. 14. RATED BEST “The Packers are rated as the best," said Oakland quarterback Daryle Lamonica, who passed for two touchdowns and against the Packers," said center Jim Otto. “We know how to play, we’re younger than the Packers and we can hit with the best of them." * The Packers Wefe much more subdued in their ’comments about their rivals. “They’re a good football Pete Banaszak—116 yards—pro-Z . $jj vided the ground game. Green Bay built up a 144 lead* on two Starr touchdown passes-Before Dallas rallied, for 17# points, the go-ahead touchdown! coming in the fourth quarter on* a 50-yard option pass from Dan * ran for another in the rout of Houston.; ■ \ ’ JTj $$$' “And we hope, if we can beat them, that people will consider us the best. “I feel we certainly can score on Green Bay. There’s no doubt about that. The whole thing is a| “They’re a good football Reeves to Lance Rentzel, matter of execution and it goes j team,” said Zeke Bratkowski, “We just went to sleep on that,# both ways." the veteran backup man to one," Packer Coach Vince Lorn- * •k it t (StarT. “They’ve won 11 games bardi said. “If we get the execution, we,in a row.” | But Starr, who had been* can beat them," said running OPTION PASS j dumped eight times for 76 yards f back Hewritt Dixon, who ripped ^ against Houston!1081 £ the fierce Dallas rush, ' Hqpstons defenses for 144 wasn’t through. Playing against; yards, including a 69-yard iwas a laugnter, tne Kaiaers tlme ^ Packers 78 * touchdown run. running up a 30-0 edge and; yards in the winning drive, bull-! “We'Ve got a good chance coasting" in. Lamonica hit on jing the last yard himself behind’ touchdown passes of 18 and 121 the blocking of Jerry Kramer. * yards, the first after a fake field: “What they did in the last two' goal attempt, George Blandajminutes—that’s what the Pack-; kicked field goals of 37, 40, 42|ers are all about,” Lombardi; and 36 yards, while Dixon and j said. * t- Chicago Wins, 109-103 Bulls Halt Late Bullet Uprising By the Associated Press The' Chicago Bulls built up a _ML ... , , ___ .whopping, 20-point lead in the Feb. 25. Closed-circuit TV mon-Uj,jr(j quarter, but had to stage a ey will boost the payout to bet-Uast minute revival to stand off ter than $200,000. The purse for Baltimore 109-103 in a National the World 600 at Charlotte in Basketball Association game June should top $150,000 for the {Monday night, first time. Charlotte also willj jn the only other NBA game, pay more than $100,000 for its the St. Louis Hawks over-October 500, and Darlington has| whelmed the Seattle SuperSon-set a purse in excess of $100,000 ics 115-94 on the West Coast, for its Southern 500 on Labor] Dallas beat New Jersey 122- Day. Chicago ............ ll 10 « 45 no 99 Boston ............. 19 11 4 42 127 99 Toronto ............ 17 12 4 40 104 71 Detroit ............ 14 13 4 30 117 104 New York ........... 14 13 4 30 99 93 Montreal ........... 14 14 I 34 91 05 West Division Philadelphia ....... 17 12 5 39 IS 71 Los Angeles .......... 14 17 3 35 53 111 Pittsburgh ......... 13 17 5 31. 04 97 Minnesota .......... lit* 7 31 75 95 St. Louis .......... 12 20 3 27 47 92 Oakland . ......... 7 23 4 20 44 99 Monday's Results No games scheduled. Today's Genies No games scheduled. It Wednesday's Games Toronto at Montreal Boston at New York Los Angeles at Minnesota Oakland at St. Louis Bowl Results Monday's Results • Rosa Bawl Southern California 14, Indiana S .-Sugar Bead LSU 20, Wyoming 13 Saturday's Results Oiler Bowl Penn state 17, Florida State 17, tie Sue Issrl Lst..-Texas at t| Paso 14, Mississippi 7 All-star Oames Blue 22, Gray 14 last 14, West 14 Scot to Get '68 Started on Right Foot JOHANNESBURG (AP) -Jim Clark of Scotland has won a leg on the 1968 world driving championship and has a cherished record in his pocket. Clark, driving a powerful Lotus Ford, won the South African Grand Prix Monday, first championship race vbf -.the 1968 Formula One series. And it was his 25th career victory in a Grand Prix, breaking his tie with Juan Manuel Fangio, the retired Argentine great, and putting him alone as the biggest winner of all time. ♦ ★ ' ★ Clark took the lead itujhe second of the 80 laps around the Kyalami circuit and held it the rest of the way. He finished the 204 miles in one hour, 53 |104 in the only American Bas-ketball Association game scheduled. Bing Passes 1,000 Points Piston Ace Hitting 27.5 Average NEW YORK (AP) - Dave Bing of Detroit scored 70 points in three games last week — pushing him past the 1,000 mark for the year — and continues to lead the National Basketball Association scoring race. Bing, with 1,045 points in 38 games, has a 27.5 average, ac-coMipg to NBA figures released today, and has a 101 total point lead over Walt Hazzard of Seattle, who is averaging 22.5 for. 42 games. • ★ ■ ★ ★ The figures include games minutes, 56 seconds for an aver-[through Dec. 31. age speed of 107.42 miles per hour. Graham Hill, Clark’s British teammate on the Lotus Ford team, was second. He was followed in order by Joachen Rindt of Australia in a Repco Brabham, Chris Amon of New Zealand in a Ferrari, Dennis Hulme of NeW Zealand in' a McLaren BRM and Jean-Pierre Beltoise of France in a Matra-Cosworth. it ■. it it Only 10 of the starting field of 23 cars finished the race in the broiling, 93-degree temperature. A crowd of about 80,000 was on hand. Flyer Hospitalized Cage Scores By TUB AmegieteB Frees New Mexico 17, Denver 74 . Mississippi State 54, Florida 55. St. Joseph's, Fe., M, Brigham Young 74 Georgte m, Mississippi 44 Penn75, JmJprtU.54___________ Ersklne TiTbuorgl* Southwestern 40 Newberry lliTMers Hill 04 Wtieeton 109, TOyler » , Mitt, el Tvite,. canceled, | ton on Thursday., PHILADELPHIA (AP) - Ed Van Impe, star defenseman for the Philadelphia Flyers of the National i Hockey League, entered Lankenau Hospital Monday for treatment of an injury suffered in a game last Thursday against Detroit. A team spokesman said that Van Impe suffered a fractured left cheekbone in , the game when he was struck by a puck. The swelling , has worsened so that hospitalization was required, the spokesman said. Doctors said they would operate on Vam Impe Wednesday. He is expected to be out of action for at least 10 days. J/„ The Flyers said thata pjayer would be recoiled from their farm club, the Quebec Aces of the American Hockey League, before the game here with Bos- Wilt Chamberlain of Philadelphia continues his lead in field goal percentage, .563, and rebounds, 958. widt Bellamy of New York is second in field goal accuracy at .544 and Nate Thurmond of San Francisco is runner-up in rebounds with 937. it it it Larry Siegfried of Boston was out of action with a back injury last week, but maintained his free throw accuracy lead, 131 of 152 for .862. ; :i St. Louis’ Len Wilkens improved his lead in assists with 293 for an average of 7.7 a game. Hazzard is second with\a 6.2 average. Flayer, Team 1. Bing, Del. ... 2, Hazzard. Sea. 3. Greer,.Phil. .. 4, Baylor, la O FO FT Pit. Avg. 33 420 205 1,045 27.5 42 347 210 944 22.5 39 351 210 912 23.4 34 342 212 194 24.9 5, Thurmond, SF 42 325 230 OM 21.1 4. Chblan, Phil. .. 39 351.173 HO 22.4 7. Boozer, Chi. .. 39 322 227 371 22.3 3. Beaty, St.L. ... 31 302 231 035 22* 9. Reed. NY .... 38 323 171 034 21.9 10. LaRUSSO, SF . . 42 234 244 014 19.4 The Bulls rushed out to a 75-55 edge late in'the. third period before Baltimore, led by Kevin Loughery and LeRoy Ellis, began a comeback. ★ ir it The Bullets cut it to 195-103 with seven seconds to go, but Flynn Robinson and Keith Erickson each hit two free throws to pull it out for Chicago. TOP SCORERS Robinson finished with 34 points and Erickson had 24. Ellis topped the losers with 32. St. Louis whipped Seattle for the fourth time in a row this season, pulling away in the second half. The Sonics built an. early 10-point lead but the Hawks were ahead 4847 at halftime, .. --■•V Coach A1 Bianchi of Seattle was ejected with 9:34 to go after drawing two technical fouls for disputing a goal-tending call too strenuously. Lenny Wilkens converted the foul shots and St. Lbuis opened its biggest lead at the point, 88-72. ♦ it it Record Crowds Turn Out to Watch Bowls By the Associated Press Record'crowds turned otlt at the Rose Bowl and Orange Bowl1 as four New Year’s college foot-! ball classics drew a total of 335,-326 fans. v A Rose Bowl turnout of 102,946 — largest in the Pasadena, Calif., game’s. 54-year history — jwatched national champion {Southern California defeat Indiana 14-3 Monday afternoon. | * * * ! Oklahoma edged Tennessee lected 26 points apiece to pace 26-24 under the lights in the 6r-the Hawks while Walt Hazard ange Bowl at Miami before 77,- rs.. ryrrr/'A VmBfy SHOW YOU UNDER was high for the Sonics with 17, In the ABA, Dallas jumped off to a 35-22 lead and never was extended in outclassing New Jersey. Five Chaparral players hit double figures with Maurice McHartley scoring 21 points and Player-Coach Cliff Hagan contributing 20. Bruce Spraggins led the Americans with 22. 913 — biggest crowd ever to see a football game in Florida. $ * it it it " The Sugar Bowl in New Orleans drew a crowd of 78,963 for Louisiana State’s 20-13 victory over Wyoming, while 75,504 packed the Cotton -Bowl in Dallas for Texas. A&M’s 20-16 triumph over Alabama. Nothing brings out the malfunctions in a car like sub-zero temperatures. Don’t wait to have your car thoroughly winterized and safety checked. Skilled car care is a "Specialty" at Motor Abrt, Pontiac’s No. 1 Auto Safety Center ... Make An Appointment Today I" HEAVY-DUTY NEW TREAD nAk Vallv antprpfi fha ranka lSutton, 211-257—6811 "Doc" Of 1 inty# 222-J50D Iveiiy enierea we Gary Greene, 222-209—619; Gary of 700 bowlers Thursday nigtft Blankenship endEd Gorney, with a 222-254-230—706 perform- _____________'.Tuesouy Louies classic ance as the Airway Lanes Mixed League concluded its 1967 it tivity. HIGH SERIES—Grace Laster, 554; Ella Irwin, 553; Norma Stasiuk, 533. HIGH GAME—Sue Felice. 330. TEAM POINTS —The Vineyards, 45; Huron Bowl, 44. HIGH TEAM SERIES—Johnson's Paving, 3518. HIGH TEAM GAME—Oxford Mat- His sterling efforts outshone 'w**- *4* wasT ,,qa lanes those of Joe Turcsak (202-241-634), Eleanor Turcsak (223) and Bob Dearing (226). The second half of the North Hill Lanes Classic League season will commence tomorrow BALTIMORE Q 0 CHICAGO Egan Monroe UwMy Marin Johnson Scott Manning McKnze 12 10-10 34 4 3-5 15 1 1-3 3 10 4-4 34 Thursday St. Michael's Man HIGH SERIES—Mac- Siegers, 314-300— 403; Bill Bookie, 334-31£-400. HIGH GAMES —Al Ndrmart. 333; Phil Felice, 219,-Larry Cote, 213.' 300 BOWL ' Friday Ladles All Star f HIGH GAMES AND SERIES — Peg Carter,' 335-335—435; Norma Conley, $4 (400); Lorrle Dulzo. 324-319-402; Maggie Young, 214—594; Ruby Kelltr, 210-540; Wilkens and Bill Bridges col-1 night. Hazelton Lettering com-.Nency Burner,,214^^— pleted the old-year phase of the HiGH sERiEs - ida How, 5« <»M»n r , , ,t 1 • ..__. ..jit, _ 1 high) tor Nod's Drillers. HIGH GAME— schedule by placing first With a Wanda White, 245 (season high and also jo aa nntrlietonxina tho ,0° Pins Plus award) tor Overflow Car- 4o-z0 margin, ouraisiancuig me pentry team high game—overflow's. Bank of Rochester team’s 42-26. ^Mh^i^hT^ The NationalIT wist Drill.on Hip m souad hit a 1041 game m last -HIGH SERIES — Jeannette Wlschmen, ■ ll , *1 V- .. . ... « . ~... 4I3. SPLIT CONVERSION-lrene Rouse. week s action. Individually, Bill 2-7.10. Kirkland led the way with 266-202—661. Merle Aemisegger had a 247 (628) and Walt Ruebel-man 225—631. The Howe’s Lanes Senior Classic Friday recorded a fine 214-228-652 for Clarence Staple-ton and a big 251 (610) for Jack Tophfun. Jay Vargo hit 222-242-624, H.rtw£?T PLACE and George Rynerson q 237. | high GAMEs^jack*A^ton,*245,- Fran. ces Ashton, 240; Stu Sherwood, 230; Joe Spring, 223; Bill Martin, 214. Tuesday BloemtteW Knells -HIGH GAMES AND SERIES - Larry Anaott, 223-247—494; .Gene Hamlll and Carl Shelford, 217 each; Joan Davis, 204; Bud Mahlbarg, 209. Tuesday MulH-Lekers HIGH SERIES—Grace Klzar, 533; Iona Moran, 523; Barb Kuhlman, 531. HIGH ' " Donna 6.00xt 3—6.50x13 6.50x15-6.70x15 7.50x14-8.00x14 8.50x14 PE 0 Sloan 8. Robnsn 9 5-4 23 Washton 5 7-8 17 Haaklfts 5 3-4 13 Erlcksn 0 3-3 3 Clemons o o-o o 2 1-15 McLnva 1 30 2 10-0 2 Boozer 10 44 24 1110-1032 •tali 33 31-34 103** Totals 42 25-29 139 Baltimore ............. 24 22 29 IS—Jg Chicago j.... .... .., ll I* 11 2-139 Fouled out—Baltimore, Leughery. Total fouls—Baltimore 20, Chicago 25. Attendance 1,380. Florida State Coach Eying 49ers Job TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) -Bill Peterson, file football coach credited with helping Florida State University grid fans forget FSU was a girl’s school less than 20 years ago, said Monday he will fly to California to talk about coaching the $an Francis co 49ers. HIGH GAMES AND SERIES — Paul George, 201-253—442; Jack Fourijlar, 245— 434; Rich Fuller, 202-233-421; Wayne Smith, 203-215—419; Pate William. 240; Bob Goins, 234; John Qlsvtoskl and Art Anderson, 224 aach; Andy Helmbrlng, 221. Tuesday 30i Bowlers HIGH GAME AND SERIES—Pat Pola-sak, 213—545 (season high) for Polosek's Market; LaVerne Hansen, 553; Bav. Me-Lelan, 529. COOLEY LANES Thunday House Juniors HIGH SERIES—Bob Chamberlain, 227— 432; Jerry Owczarskl, 235-226—429. HIGH GAMES — Jim Sander, 241; Joe Lasar, AIRWAY LANES Friday Pentlac Motor Tempest Man HIGH GAMES AND SERIES — William Avenall, 125-234-470; Jim Cheat, 227— 424; Gonzales Santa Cruz, 223—414; Edward Hummel, 231. * Wednesday Knights at Columbus Man HIGH GAMES AND SERIES — Ed Leonard, 255-214-444; Garth Mat lick, 241-220—444; Bob Landry, 235—407; Lou Millar, 242; Mike NOgel, 241; Jerry RO- gAMES—Dorothy Phekosm, 209 bak, 224; Dick Wright, 22L....W- Grissom, 202. WtdnaodBy FirsPwoman . t LAKEWOOD LANES HIGH GAMES AND SERIES—Gladys I Thursday County Womtn Employees Ryden, 209—540; Jean Whetstone, 209 HIGH SERIES — Juanita Silvis, 530; (504). FIRST PLACE TEAM —Father 3 Crate Voyles, 511. HIGH GAME — Flor-Son Cleaners. enca Looney. 310. Pntnrann caiH that ho would1 HURON BOWL v_______/ SAVOY LANES reierson saia mat ne WOUJU Wednesday Nlta "A" Man HIGH GAMES-Gana Jonas, 223) Ray HIGH GAMES AND SERIES — John Wonnacott, 215; Kan Groth, 204. make the trip Wednesday “to sit down and talk about a job” with the National Football League team. According to published reports, Peterson has been offered a five-year contract as head coach at $50,090 a year. His earnings as chief Seminole coach have been estimated at $40,000 annually. WORLD'S LARGEST TRANSMISSION SPECIALISTS / 24-HOUR ANSWERING SERVICE 7 / AAMCO TRANSMISSION ISO W. Montcalm, betwetn Oakland \ '/ and Baldwin, 33449SI ' m When in Doubt See Hanoute and Ask for Bob Johnson, Al Hanouto’s gonial Ganaral Manager. With tha axcaption of four yaars in tha U.S. Navv In tha Keraan war, Bob has boon sailing Chovrolats. and Buickg hara far 11 yaars. His bread experience includes 2 .years at tjio Ganaral Motors Institute. At Hanoute’s Chevrolet-Buick, Inc. 208 N. 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Our staff of expert mechanice pledge to kaap yew ear hi true, sale nandng condition the year around. r 30 DAY ^ B.F.Goodrich^ 123 East Montcalm 12 MONTH TKRM8 MADT safety IflAll I 0ENTIH FE 3-1140 ■BaaMaaaaaa«MaMBBaaaBBaaaaaaasa'- IP iSSi . mm m THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, JANUARY $, 1068 m ## v»„ » 'V * anL* Prep Front 'Old Man After By FLETCHER SPEAKS Available for all to know now is the secret of Pontiac Northern’s suqC6ss in high school wrestling circles. ** The secret? “We work,” says coach Bill Willson with a slight chuckle, not implying that others do not, just that his kids have toiled long and hard to achieve their position among wrestling teams, in the state. Willson guided the team to the state title last year, and during the first few] weeks of this campaign,] they have been ranked j among, the top three teams in the state in a weekly rating guide. After winning the Oakland County tournament Fri-j day for the second straight] time — and fourth over-j all — the team is likely to occupy the No. 1 spot this week. Wrestling has improved greatly—at high school level — in the past few years and Willson was talking about that improvement yesterday. Hiere’s no substitute for hard work and Willson gives his team plenty of that. “We practice from 3:30 until 6 five days a week and 9 to 12 on Saturday, so we spend about 15 hours a week in practice. EARLY TRAINING | But much of the improvement has come at the junior j high level. The kids have to be I exposed to wrestling in junior high! By the time we get a wrestler, he knows what it’s all about. Another thing, Willson says, is that coaching and the kids arej better. ! And while success has come often for PNH and Willson —! he was named Wrestling Coach] of the Year last year in Michl gan—he’s no slave-driver. “We tell a kid what we expect of him and what he can expect of us, but then we let him determine his own weight and where he’ll wrestle. ★ ★ j* “Oh, we hint or suggest a change sometimes, but the kids are smart. They come to the conclusion of where they belong. MOVING-DOWN “For instance, Ken Corr (he won 180 pound title Friday in the county tournament) weighed 185 at the end of football season. After working out several weeks he got down to 170 and was wrestling in the 180-pound class. * ★ ★ ‘After awhile, he knew he lost a lot of weight and was too light to be a 180-pounder, so he told us and A1 Morris (the team’s 165-pounder) that he was moving down to the 165-pound class. “Morris said okay, so he's O'Brien Seeking Fifth Trip to Games SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - At the “old” age of 36, Parry O’Brien will be aiming at a record fifth Olympics when he competes in the 5th annual San Francisco Examiner-All American Games Friday. 0 k ★ ★ O’Brien is a four-time Olympic shot putter. He captured titles in the 1952 and 1956 games, placed second in 1960 and fourth in 1964- He pioneered the turn-around technique of shot putting which is in universal use todpy. ★ ★ * v The Southern California weightman was first to smash the 60-foot barrier back in 1954 when he tossed the 16-pound ball 60 feet 5. He claims more 60-foot heaves than any other contestant in history despite the fact his 64 feet 7% best is a far cry from the 71 feet 5% world mark claimed by Randy Mat-son. ★ ★ ★ Another top competitor will be Otis Burrell now completing his studies at Nevada but who will represent the Pacific Coast Club of Long Beach in the high jump. He has won the last three AAU outdoor high jump titles and a 1967 NCAA gold medal. His best jump was 7 feet 2% in an im doors meet. ★ ★ - Another all-star member of the meet cast, Lee Evans, the San Jpse State Junior, is entered in the 440 yard run. He holds a piece of three world records in the 800 meters, 880 yards and 1600 meter relays and Claims the second fastest 400 meter relay split of 44.2. He is a two-time AAU outdoor champion. Hat Trick Brings Triumph, Record for Dayton Six Thre^’^players scored the three-goal hat trick as the Day-ton Gems set a team scoring record in routing the Toledo Blades 15 - 1 in International Hockey League play in Dayton Sunday night. ★ ★ ★ In the other IHL games, Port 'Huron swept past Des Moines 5-2 and Fort Wayiie dumped Muskegon 4-2. k , ★ k Barry Merrell led the Dayton attack with four goals. Cliff Bristow and Garry MacMillan also came through with three goals each. Tile Port Huron Flags led 4-0 going into the third period in beating Des Moines in Port Hur on. Wadnebbev Powell's Trucking vs. Day's Diggers, 6:55; Genesee Welding Supply Vi. Buckner Finance, (-15; Spencer Floor vs. Gian's Auto Sales, 9:30. Thursday—Lakeland Pharmacy vs. Mattingly Realty, 6:55; Haskln's Auto Sales vs. Mel's Sport Shop, 8:15; Day's Pump-art vt. Struble Realty, 9:30. WATERFORD CAGE STANDINGS Continental League 8Icon's , ay's Diggers Oenesee welding Packer QB More Daring Don't Like to Gamble By MILTON RICHMAN NEW YORK (UPI) - Every human being has his own Personal hang-up and Bart Starr is no exception. Some guys like Sugar Ray comes right down to gambling he’s an arch conservative alongside a Johnny Unltas, a Fran Tarkenton of a Don Meredith. Maybe be It that way because Robinson, for example, wilLhe la so much a product ef walk up 20 flights of steps rather than get in an elevator. They don’t like elevators. Other guys would rather ride three days on a train than a half hour on an airplane. They don’t like airplanes. And Vince Lombardi, under whom he has blossomed into one of professional football’s finest performers. Lombardi will gamble now and then but not often enough for everybody to get up and would have watched the Super Bowl game on TV. But he won andso did the Packers, 21-17. THREE FAILURES Starr had sent his big gun, Donny Anderson, into the unyielding Dallas line three straight times for those last two precious yards but the ball still was 15 inches short of the goal line following Anderson’s third try and the Packers still trailed 17-14. Twice during this time Starr REITAL Bloomfield Hills 700 S<|. Ft. of Prime Office Space in Bloomfield Hills’ Finest Location —Carpeting Included — Office Built to Specification Call Mrs. McMillan for Appointment WO 1-3850 some guys, believe it or not.jj^ake room when he wants to sit ; had conferred with Lombardi on simply don’t like to gamble. |in for a hand. He believes pri-the sidelines but good as Bart Starr happens to be one mariiy jn straight football and Lombardi is, he couldn’t carry of them ★ ★ k“ “If there is a noticeable shortcoming in my makeup as a quarterback,” says Green Bay’s field general, “it probably is my lack of desire to gamble. In recent years, however, I think I’ve become much more daring.” That’s Starr’s story. He’s a superb quarterback but when it that more than anything else is what he has based his coaching on since coming to Green Bay nineyears ago. the ball over himself. Now there were only 13 seconds left. Time for one more Iplay, that’s all. For the Packers, What brings’’the whole thing'the whole season boiled down up is the gamble Starr took with to this one final play. It was 13 seconds, remaining in 13 be-now entirely up to Bart Starr, low zero weather Sunday. He was the one who gambled, !®am^*e the guy who doesn’t like to not Lombardi. Had he lost, he and the rest of the Packers AP Wirepheto BOBBLE HALTS TROJANS — Southern California fullback Dan Scott (top 38), with a touchdowii in sight, heads through a hole in the Indiana line but fumbles (center) as two Hoosiers jolt him. The ball rolls loose in the end zone (bottom) and Indiana halfback Nate Cunningham (22.) cov-* ered the ball for a touchback to halt the USC scoring threat. Making the initial stop on Scott was tackle Doug Crusan (78). USC won, 14-3. Windsor Raceway a / MONDAY'S RESULTS lit—MSB Claiming Pact; 1 Mlk: Dark Demon 5.90 3.50 2.40 Shadydale Gayboy 9.20. 3.30 Junto Dor wood 2.40 2nd—MOO Claiming Pace; 1 Mila: South Side Boy 17.60 9.10 6.10 Colorado Ray Direct J Dally Double: (4-6) Paid S71.M l 3rd—$900 Claiming Trel; 1 Mila: Sneaky Petr 4.90 3.10 2.S0 Jett Ida 4.10 3.10 Mr. Kurylowka 2.(0 4th—$900 Claiming Pacel 1 Mila: Lady Edan N. 9.50 5.T0 3.50 . Royal Victoria 26.40 9.50 he 11*00 6 50 Trefoil Gin 2.70 670 5th—$1000 Claiming Pace; His first impluse was to call a “31 wedge.” That’s one of the Packers’ standard plays in which Starr would hand off either to Anderson or Chuck Mer-cein. But at the last instant Bart Starr had an inspiration. He would gamble and keep the ball himself. It was as it should be. If he failed to make those 15 inches, he would have to shoulder all the blame. And if did make it, well, then, Happy New Year! Bart Starr made it"with a few inches to spare and he should 4.40 3.20 2.70 invite big, jovial Jerry Kramer rn 2 «?to bis house for a steak dinner Mil*: Maud's Cookie 18.70 12.20 12.00 Thaddeus 6.10 3.80 Gordon Lee 6.70 Quinella: (2-3) Paid $41.90 6th—$1400 Cond. Pace; 1 Milt: I. C. Rainbow Terry Ann Northco Scotty ___ 7ib—31290 com. pace 1 miio: sometime because ft was Kram Chief Armbro 4.70 3.00 2.50 , . ,, Flashy Flic 4.20 3.60 er s brilliantly executed block °o^u1to(4.s> Paid (10.30 '*” of on charging Jethro Pugh AcTs1o1i?itComl' Tw” 1 *oi 3.10 a.oo Which made the whole thing pos- Trudy Hal 4.20 3.20 sible Frisco Guest 4.40 9th—$1000 Claiming Paco; 1 Milo: ! ----------------------- Trumpet 15.70 9.50 6.401 Hanloy Lad 15.10 5.50 Floyd's Honor 4.10 Exactor: (6-2) Paid (159.30 TONIGHT'S ENTRIES let—(1000 Tret; I Mila: Armbro Fury Stovla Dares Kathy Kid The Eight Ball Birth Day Vallov Maid Doctor Jim B. Lind Frisco 2nd—(900 Claiming Paco; 1 Milo: Deep Run Blaze Maior B. Pick Orphan Adlos Janice M. Grattan Mope's Pride Cash Bombsr Miss Trudy Spencer Bit O' Gold 3rd—(900 Paco; 1 Milo: Odette Adlos Todd County Girl Mike's Sister Dresden Prince Wanetto Jasper's Gold K: Count Rimbo Count Float i! 4th—MOO Paco; 1 Mile: -I Nick Adiot Butch Way Star Coburn Little Wait Fayette Time Maggie McBride Mr. Harmony Wyn Alexandra Morris Purdue Walla Creed Silver Ronnie Green Meadow AP Wlrephote HAULING HALL—Alabama tackle Mike Hall hauls down Texas A&M tailback Larry Stegent after the Aggie runner hauled in a pass from quarterback Edd Hargett in the third quarter o( their gamfe in the Cotton Bowl yesterday, t A&M won, 20-16. PNH Alumifl Dunk Varsity Swimmers Pontiae Northern’s alumni . . swimmers, home for the holi- moyhig down to toJ^P^days, defeated the PNH var- division where he’s better.” isity, 133-129 in a meet held Sat- Writers to Host Former Slugger Speedy Prince i Mighty Glad > Knight Traffic 6th—(1200 Pace; ; Mary's Joy 1 Mr. Fllntstone Dolly Widow ' Leo O. | Choleemar Direct Starllte iHolod 7th—$900 Claiming Paco; 1 Milo: Hi Lo Wayside ' Evelyn Travel Chrome Queen Glendale Jo* Hasii Mlk* Pen brow Bill. Mr. Doctor Olrect Grattan Counsel tth—(I9M Pec*) 1 Mila: Splandld Wick Buttarnut Lad Prince Leo By* Yell Bewitching Comet Black Orchid Davey Lea tth—(12** claiming Pace; I Mile: Taffoiet Song Niki N. Wee Lady Gee Butch Johnston I Amber Chltf Libby's Girl I Meadow Gone WaUY Red Rainbow Ticket Prices Up for Lions The Detroit Lions announced today that ticket prices will be increased for the 1968 season. Reserved seats in both the upper and lower deck areas will be raised $1 although there is no price change in the upper deck “Coaches Corner” or the un-reserved bleachers. The price of standing room tickets also remains the same. Upper deck boxes, third deck and hanger seats are increased $1.50. Horn* of the CHRYSLBt-HEMl AA/F DRAGSTER and 289 FORD B/F DRAGSTER offars Custom Engine Boilding and Balancing WOHLFEIL-DEI Eng. 2274 S. Telegraph Rd. Acroft from Miracle Mile FE 2-4907 mvML SNO-CAPS 4 FULL PLY, 2**19 31 Month Reed Hazard luarantee FREE MOUNTING 2f"521* t:H«U Tuhetou Mix •behaege-WhitowaH* (I M more Retread Fad. Tax MleJI Safely Mode Available Open Daily (-(, (el. M UNITED TIRE SERVICE 1007 Baldwin Ave. 9 Min. From Downtown Pontiac The Oakland County touma-lurday in Northern’s pool, ment held Thursday and FrS-| Recent Huskie stars Carl day at Oakland University drew niller, Frank and Steve Yedlin, ^ ^ ||J__________ 32 teams. There were a fewjcarl and Lou Cascaddan were j Novemberf^won the U4. title teams that hqve just undertaken among the top pointmakers for [during the’weekend by upsetting a wrestling program. “After | the alumni, who were coached 'top-seeded Connie Capozzi of they have worked a couple of ^y, ex.Northern coach Ed Dauw,kfidd]etown, Ohio, 6-3, 7-5 at the years with their wrestling pro-jnow assistant principal at Pon- North Shore Squash and Tennis grams, the wrestling touma-jtiacCentral. A t o t a 1 of 85 alumni and varsity swimmers took part in the meet. Oldest members participating from the 1961 team were Phil Wells and Randy Curry- . Hiller was a triple winner in the 12 events held. Teen Surprises Favored Netter SALEM, Mass. (AP) — Andrea Voikos of Pawtucket, R.I., is the youngest champion in the 47-year history of the Nationaljgames^ wMbe honored at the Indoor Tennis Tournaments 18- 29th Boston baseball and-under division. idinner Jan. 24. BOSTON *(AP) - Wally Berger, the Old Boston Braves’ slugger who played in the major leagues’ first four All-Star Knicks Plan New Starter NEW YORK (UPI) — Freddie Crawford, a seldom-used guard on the New York Knickerbockers may get a chance to stifrt writers’!tonight in a National Basketball {Association game against the ICE FISHING BOX Mad# of light, (Hong material. Compartmanti for lantern, fish, halt, and tackle. $6.75 each. Send far descriptive materials. AUSTERBERRY-BERG, INC. 15324 Mack, Detroit, 46224 Manpower White Glove Girls-the temporary office workers you'll want back again! TYPISTS • STEN08 • RECEPTIONISTS FILE CLERKS • KEY PUNCH OPERATORS MANP0WER* THE VERY BEST IN TEMPORARY HELP 1338 Wide Track West Pontiac FE 2-8386 BUY, SELL, TRADE - - - USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! The 62-year-old Berger, who Cincinnati Royals. Miss Voikos, who turned 14 in hit 38 homers as a rookie with the Braves in 1930, accepted an Natlenat League w O'Neil Realty ................... 3 Lighthouse Lanes ................ 2 Irwin Really .................... 2 Drayton Drug .................... 1 L.L. B.'t ....................... 1 Huntoon Cougars ................. 0 i American League ment should really be something." k k k Last year, three champions at the county tournament went on to take state championships. Willson feels that this year’s title crop will be well represented when the state battles open. The task of making the tournament run smoothly for the 32 teams and 384 wrestlers fell to Chuck Skinner, coach at Hazel Park, who served as director. Another gentleman V ways keeps activities moving i smoothly is Oakland University's tireless athletic director, Hollie Lepley. {Club. invitation during the holiday weekend. The writers have a policy of honoring a former Boston Brave each year. Ex-Track Coach Dies at Age 84 Select Top Athletes tourney middie I Kansas, blSeilMl Pharmacy ay'* Sottttary-2 Mattingly Realty flraMe hi ' iv'e Senttery-2 — Reair lealty SCORING LSADERS Dove Dodd, Powell’s j)m Nybarg, Spencer TP Aug. 33 11 71 26.0 12 1 66 12.0 3 25 11 65 21.7 I 29 3 61 MJ 1 14 U 60 KLO 0 Weekend Right* 1! gy The Auociated Free* 1 BERLIN — Karl Mlldenberger, 20314, 2 Germany, outpointed Gerhard Zech, 2 224*4, Germany 15; Mlldenberger re- 3 teined European heavyweight title. j TOKYO Rlc Magramo. 1127 Philippines, drew with Speedy Hayes# 112V1, L Japan, 10. ^ For ALL, jour Insurance needs Don STOCKHOLM, Sweden Iff) — Jim Ryun, the world record distance runner from and Mark Spitz, 17-w ho al- (year-old world record swimmer from Santa Clara, Calif., were]championships, the 1-2 selections as ^Athlete of Olympic team coach from 1920 the Year in a world-wide poll through 1932. taken by Aftonbladet, the Stock-h61m newspaper, announced Sunday. BRUNSWICK, Maine (AP) John M. "Jack” Magee, former Bowdoin College track coach and a four-time U.S. Olympic coach, died Monday in a local hospital. He would have been 85 Jan. 12. k k k Before retiring in 1955 after 42 years as coach, the “Little General” led Bowdoin to 20 state He was an *k k k Funeral service will be held Thursday. tm Diehm. Qua*** ""“L«y9n TP A» Mlk* Mlley. Drey'n O. 3 34 IF (5 IKIe* itesv *• t s ,1 fi Oiry Adame. Irwin 3 71 V U American League alii Debar id:, HMkin'i 3 23 ^1 Doolittle 500 4th Strggt Pontiac, Mich. 3344068 SENTRY.jJjNSURANCE The Hardware Mutuals Organization SNOW TIM SALE *28 4-Ply Nylon 7.18x15 Black PAIR Some 6-ply available in (hit size. Other liiat at com parable eavingel Fab. Excite Tex I1JI We stud snow tires ... 2 tires $12 CRESCENT UNlriOYAL DIST. 520 S. Saginaw 333-7051 CUP THJS COUPON International Hockey League Monboy'. Retell. Dayton 16. Port Huron 3 Toledo 7, Columbus 6 ■ Muskegon 7, Fort Wayne I Today', seme. No gem*, scheduled. -r Wednesday's Game* Columbus at Ode Moines Toledo at Fort Wayne Red Holzman, the neW Knick I coach, said, he might go with' Crawford in place of the injured Bill Bradley. Bermuda Booters Win HAMILTON, Bermuda (AP) — The Bermuda Football Association beat the Winnipeg All-Stars 5-1 in a soccer match Monday. NEW YEAR BILLS Catching Up With You! Ziebart-protected cars and trucks are worth more. " ; Because they can’t rust through! We Innorcoat every rust-prone area of your new truck’s or car's body with special Ziebart rust preventive applied by our patented process. Wo seal all exposed treat too. Resale statistics prove Ziebart rustproofing adds up to $200 to the vehicle’s value. And Ziebart guarantees the protection! Army, Navy, U.S. Post Office, thousands of fleet owners choose Ziebart, world’s largest auto*truck rustproofer, for guaranteed protection. Win the war on rust Phone us now. ET AH THE MONE YOU NEED With Our Confidential HOMEOWNER’S LOAN PLAN Borrow All The Way *5,000 UP TO On Your Homo Equity CHECK THIS CONVENIENT MONTHLY 4-YEAR TERM PAYMENT SCHEDULE! $6,000 • UN Per Month $1,$00.$1741 Per Month $1400-$4946 Per Month Lower Payments Over A Longer cPeriod Alto Available! no eioiMO com ...ns application Fin...NO COST FOR COMPLETE IMUMWt LOAN PROYIQTIM FAMILY ACCEPTANCE CORPORATION 117 National Building pp n 1 nitn 16 WEST HURON Ft 0**4UZZ THE PONTIAC PRftSS, TUESDAY. JANUARY 2, 1968 : ■/■ |||p| Consensus of Forecasts ..for- 1968 MARKETS Gains Outnumber Losses Stock Market Posts Advance The following are ^op prices covering sales of lpcally grown: produce by growers and sold by! them in wholesale package lots. I Quotations are furnished by the' N^\V YORK (AP) — Thei The Dow Jones industrial av- Johnson^ proposals for limiting Detroit Bureau of Markets as st°ck market advanced early!erage at noon was off .41 at!American tourism abroad, of Friday. ; this afternoon as trading got'904 7fl I Jbe Associated Press average Produce FRUITS Apples, Jonathan, ou. .......... $3.00 Applet, Cider, 4-gal. casa ....... 2.75 tional Applet, McIntosh .. ..... 3.50 , Apples, Northern Spy, bu. ....... 4.25 ■ plane Applet, Red Pelldou' Apples, Golden Delicious, bu. VEGETABLES Beets, topped, bu. Cabbage, Curly, bu. Cabbage, Rad, bu. Cabbage, Standard Variety, t» Carrots, topped, bu Celery, root, ft^bu............ Horseradish, pk. bskt. ........ Leeks, dz. bens. . ............ Onions, dry, 50-11). bag ............ 2.00 Parsley, Root, dz. bch.............. ,.00: Parsnips, ft-bu. ................. 2.001 Potatoes, 50-lb. bag .g.............. 1.301 Potatoes, "20-lb. bag .. " .............63 Radishes, Red, Hothouse, fcxfh. 1.00 Radishes, Black, ft bu. ............. 1.30' Squash, Acorn, bu....................175 Squash, Buttercup, bu.............. 1.75j Squash. Butternut, bu. ............. 1.751 ............... ................ 1.751* ........ 2.75 under way for 1968. The market was weather weakness in airlines, some makers, gold Softness in some of the 30 blue chips represented in the average wiped, out an early gain and effected the small net loss |of 60 stocks at noon was up 1.1 at 323.4 with industrials up 1.2, rails up .8 and utilities up .7. ITT Cancels Directors Cite Long Delay in Getting OK A majority of the forecasters also believe the able to interna-of the mining j;o31stocks and selected drugs as it!which was contrary to the gen- moved ahead on balance. leral drift of the market. [determination to defend the U.SrliTT’s agreement for a $2.8-bil- i .7s1 Gams outnumbered losses by Airlines which specialize in {gold supply — brought sellihg to [lion merger with the American 2:00 better than 7 to 5 on the New;international tourist flights were gold mining shares. Homestake;Broadcasting Companies Inc. jjojYork Stock Exchange. i shaken down badly by President'and Dome Mines lost 2 or more. By JOHN QUNNIFF AP Business Analyst NEW YORK (AP) -A sampling of forecasts regarding this **rs* °f fi*e year’s gross national product, ^ear W'N the total of all goods and serv- strongest, Ihrit ices produced during the year, 8 tax increase shows k consensus in the area of W*N be needed 8840 billion. early in the , This seemingly would mean a year and that $53 billion increase in output inflation will over 1967, but many of the fore- simmer down CUNNIFF the problem of Vietnam and simply assumed that It would cause the government to spend no more nor no less than in 1967. HIGHER LIVING In general, forecasters seem more certain than ever that in 1968 most Americans will enjoy a standard of living never before achieved, with the per capita share of production exceeding $4,000 for the first time in history. NEW YORK (AP) — Direc- cas’ers *)el'eve as much as $27 during the late President Johnson’s declared | tors of the International Tele- j^***00 be inflation, summer months , . , war on the widening gap in thelphone & Telegraph Corp. have ^®asure,,n ma*<'ng ^e‘r estimates,! By comparison, India’s per balance of payments - and his voted unanimously to cancel gam would be nearer *27 bllhon some analysts stumbled over Capita production last year was under $100, Brazil’s under $400, The New York Stock Exchange LETTUCE AND OREENS Celery/ Cabbage/ dz. 2.0Q, Lettuce/ bibb/ hothouse/ 5-lb. bskt. . 2.75 Lettuce, leaf/ hothouse/ 10-lb. bskt. 2.50 NEW YORK (AP) - New York Stock Exchange selected noon prices , GenDynam Poultry and Eggs Abbott Lab 1 Abex Cp 1.60 ACF Ind 2.20 AdMIllis .40a DETROIT POULTRY ijgfiHS ' 40 DETROIT (AP) - (USDA)-Prlce. PbrJftSJJft, 150 AleanAlum .1 20g , -__u 2. DETROIT EGGS * . | 1 90b ....M 1.32 pound for No. 1 live poultry: Heavy type hen>, 20-21 cents; roasters AMen cD heavy type, 26-27; broilprs and fryers JMe?Lup , whites, ;2,orrRO,T EGGS IaIhSicV'20 DETROIT (AP) 'm (USDA)—Egg pricejl ...Sctr1 per dozen paid by first receivers (in- Alli, ri , , eluding U.S.): Alcoa fin White Grade A lumbo 33-37 cents; ex-' Amerada t Ira large, 30ft-34ft; large, 29ft-32ft; med-1 Am Airlln 80 lum, 25-28; small, 20. I Am Bosch .60 CHICAGO BUTTER, eGGS Am Can 2.20 CHICAGO (AP) — Chicago Mercantle'AmCrySug I Exchange — butter steady; wholesale buy-jAmCyan 1.25 Ing prices unchanged; 93 score AA 66; AmEIPw 1.52 A 66; 90 B 65V., 89 C *3ft; cars 90 AmEnka 1.30 B 66; 89 C 65. A Home 1.20 Eggs irregular; wholesale buying prices Am Hosp .60 unchanged to lft lower; 75 per cent or'Amlnvst 1.10 better Grade A whites 27, mixed 27; I AmMFdy .90 mediums 25, standards 25. AMet Cl 1.90 -CHICAGO POULTRY , CHICAGO (AP)—(USDA)—Liva poultry: ? ,2 wholesale buying prices unchanged; roast-17„ „h„, „ ' •rs 24-27; special fed White R6ck Fryers WW Am Smelt 3 . . . , I Am Std 1 Livestock DETROIT LIVESTOCK AMP Inc 36 DETROIT (AP)—(USDA)—Cattle 1.400, Ampex Corp slaughter steers and heifers active, 50 Amphenol 70 higher; cows active, 25-50 higher. Anacon 1.25q Slaughter steers; choice 900 - 1,200 lb Ank.-1 Chem 27.00- 28.00; mixed good and choice 26.25- iArchOan 1.60 27.00; good 2S.75-26.25; slaughter heifers, : Armco Stl 3 choice 800-950 lb 24.75-25.50; good 23.00- Armour 1.60 24.75; utility COWS, 17.00-18.00, few 18.50.lArmCk 140a Hogs 3S0; barrows and gilts, U.S. 1-2 Ashid Oi M.30 200-220 lb 19.00-19.15; 1-3 220-240 lb I8.OO-1 Assd DG 1.60 19.00; 2-3 240-270 lb (6.75-18.00; sows, 1-3 Atchison 1.60 300-400 lb 1375-14.50; 2-3 400-600 lb 1175- A'l R'ch 3 10 13.75. Allas Ch .80 Vealers’ 150; high choice and prime 1 Atlas Corp 41.00- 44.00; choice 36.00-4t.00; good St.OO-'Avco Co 1.20 36.00. ---| fH CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO (AP)—(USDA)— Hogs. 5,000; butchers generally steady; 1-2 190-230 lb 17.75-18.25; 75 head at 19.25; 1-3 220-240 „,h.t w , .. lbs 17.25-11.00; 2-3 260-200 lbs 16.00-16.50; niltrB 1 5 sows steady to 25 higher; 1-3 330-400 lb 221, ££ « sows 13.75-14.50; 1-3 400-450 lbs 13.25-13.75. Cattle 3,500; calves none; slaughter, EHKSJL 1 h steers 25 to 1.00 higher; heifers 25 to 50 Sirt HAiT sn higher; prime 1,200-1,325 lb slaughter Senrtiv 1 4n steers yield grade 3 and 4 28.00-28.50; Si": i,' u high choice and prime 1,100- 1,350 lbs 5»th kti 1 so 27.25-28.00; choice 950-1,325 lbs yield grade , 2 to 4 2575-27.25; choice 050-975 lb slaugh-, o ter heifers yield grade 2 to- 4‘ 25.00-26.00., Borden 150 Sheep 200; mixed good and choice *5-105, B0raW»r 1 95 lb wooled slaughter lambs 21.50-23.00. nriqasS 2 40a -----—:----------------- ! Rrun«wick . . , _ . i [ BucvEr 1.60a American Stock Exch. i|*"cvErii wl Salts nA (hds.) HighJ^w Last Chg. GenYlec"2.6O A Gen Fds 2.40 A | Gen Mills .80 > GenMot 3.80g + ft GenPrecyl 50 — ft GPubSv ,56e GPubUt 156 + W.GTal El 1.40 + Gen Tire .80 + ft 1 Genesco 1.40 , — 1 Ga Pacific lb «r. ft "Gerber 1.10 + W GetyOII ,10g . Gillette 1.20 + 7, Gien Aid wi + J*J Glen Aid .70 + ft* Goodrich 2.40 — ft Goodvr 1.35 — ft GraceCo 1.40 — 74 Granites 1.40 — ft Grant 1.10 + ft Gt AAP 1.30a + ft Gt Nor Rv 3 —2'4 Gt West Flnl Sales Net (hds.) High Low Last Chg i The proposed merger, which would have been the largest in | broadcasting h i s t o r y, was I fought by the Department of [justice on antitrust and other [grounds. ★ ★ ★ ; The ITT directors voted Mon- Police Credit Woman's Talk as Lifesaver 11 66 65*4 65V, Avnet Avn*t Inc wl Avon Pd 1.40 11 47% 47 47 15 29 2834 287/a 15 447/* 44% 44% 21 63 Va 62 627/* 73 80 79% 80 73 19% 19 19'a 35 34% 34% 3434 114 26' 4 26V* 26% 28 137/* 13% 137/4 11 71% 70% 71% 12 22% 22% 22% 49 40% 39% 40% 15 37% 3634 37 101 - 4 36'a 35% 36 80% 8034 6034 44 80% 80% 80% 157 337/* 32% 33 24 64 61% 6334 21 513/4 51% 51% 16 25 2434 25 498 26% 25% 26 42 36% 36 36% 30 4l3/4 41% 41% 109 ‘57% 561% 56 Va 16 8934 89% 8934 29 18’ a 18*4 18% 97 21 la 2034 21’/* 56 48% 48% 4834 76 13% 13% 13% 39 36% 36 36 6 273/4 2734 2734 534 15% 14% 143/4 2 23% 23 23 13 73% 72% 73% 361 303i 30% 30% 646 51% 56% 51% 60 32% 32 32% 3 37 37 37 57 3634 „ 36'4 36% 230 49% 46% A9 99 477/* 47 4734 40 12% 12% 10 58 57% 57*4 38 49% 49% 49% 190 37% 36% 36% 139 55% 54% 55’4 14 35% 35% 4 72 71 Va 72 4? 28% 28 28% If 105 104% 104% 1?7* 19% 19% 79 6% 6% 6% 126 64% 63% 63% 21 6434 63 64 7 49 48% 49 65 96 13 70 69^,4 6934 + V« 12 35 34'* 34H + >4 138 82^/9 82^» 82Vs + Va 79% 79V* 79% -I- % PubSvcColo l Publklnd ,46f POflSPL 1.60 Pullman 2.80 (has*) High low Last cm''day at an unusual New Year's MARSHALL (UPI) A young xas 21*1 2i 2i',i + h mother was credited by police W"k talking a berserk 35 6% 6Va 6% + VB RCA 1 27% 27% j RdlstonP .60 + % Rayonr 1.40b Raytheon “ 55 27% 85 42*/4 39 28% 27% 41% 42% + 58% 58V Co 25 144 143 143% -fl —B— 39 4*3/4 47% 47% -f 3 6 8934 80 R93B — 3 5*% 553* 55%. +vi — % GreenGnt .88 —l’B Greyhound 1 + % GrumAirc .80 Gulf Oil 2.60 + '■* | GulfStaUt .88 + % GulfWIn .30b — — % iHalllburt 1.90 — % Harris Inf 1 iHecIa M 1.20 + % 1 Here In 1.20g — % HewPack .20 +.% Hoff Electrn Holjdylnn • .30 -7 % HollySug 1.20 + % Homestk .80b 71% Honey wl 1.10 + Hook Ch 1.40 Housfe Fin 1 — % HoustonLP l •f % Howmet 1.40 — % j Howmet wi + Yf ! HuntFds .50b IdahoPw 1.50 i Ideal Cem 1 III Cent 1.50 | Imp Cp Am IlngerRand 2 1 Inland Stl 2 InsNAm 2.40 InterlkSt 1.80 IBM 4.40b Int Miner 1 | Inf Nick 2.80a Inti Packers lint Pap 1.35 1 Int T8.T 1.70 lowaPSv 1.24 ITE Ckt 1 5 48 47% 48 feeichCh .401) RepubStl 2.50 Revlon 1.40 Rexall .30b 12% 12% + v*'Reyn Met .90 ......7 + ’AIRbynTob 2.20 i — %>RheemM 1,40 a 4- v® RoanSe 1.67g « -f % Rohr Cp .80 1 + % RoyCCola .72 4 — % RoyDut 1.90g + Va RyderSys .80 iv+ % 12% 13 17 32% 31% 32 V: 18 513/4 50% —R— 237 53'/a 53 44 22ft 2276 64 44 43ft 65 106ft 105 106ft +1 27 22ft 22ft 22ft + Mexico’s less than $500, the United Kingdom's about $1,700, Belgium’s a bit more than $2,000 and Sweden’s about $3,100. ★ -k ★ Here are a few of the more important estimates of America’s productive power in 1968: National Industrial Confer- Pound Devaluation ence Board-a researeh 31,(3 edu- cational organization supported Should Aid Exports mainly by business, surveyed 12 r economists for its Economic Forum. The consensus was for a British eco- GNP of $842 billion, a gain of 7.5 Boom Is Seen LONDON (AP) 22% 5 29% 29% 29% 26 983% 96% 96% 86 61% 61 5 71% 71% 713 43 543/4 54V* 54’ 51* +)* the Dec 31 deadline that had gunman out of shooting her and been set for either party to with-fjve others, including her two _ % U v| ®raw irom the two-year-old young children, as he held them nomists and industrial -leaders cen* over ^ with half I merger agreement hostage for more than three predicted Monday an automo-*he Jncrease accounted for by --- -- - f The directors cited long de- hours. ^ 'higher prices. » My. 43ft iift + ft j lays and indications of more de- Marshall police and Calhoun le sPar e export oom a^j PARTLY INFLATION T 3?ft -ft j lays in obtaining final approval County sheriff’s^ deputies sur- should take this island kingdom J js^a^jona] p]annjng Associa S'/. | of the consolidation. [ NO COMMENT rounded a second-story apart- out of the red by the end of 1968. ment in the downtown section The Nov. 18 devaluation of S'. 33ft -— ft The Federal communications S,h°KrULa uert,3 ^ today,af^r the pound, they said, had per-n' ™/* i?’ X Z lfie . . e- communications j0hn yj Kelly, 21, ran into the miftpd nHr(. siashp„ that arp B 32 32 + V| ^nmmiMinn whmh tii/too haH__i:_~a_a:_____i a.u il,__ price SiaSDCS Inal are *S— - 52 22% 22% 22% -139 38V2 37% 38% + 86 763* 75% 76% — -H- % Safeway 1.10 % StJosLd 2.80 % StLSanF 2.20 % StRegP 1.40b % Sanders .30 zy/4 + % Schemey 1.80 60% +1 Va J Schering 1.20 i Scientif Data jSCM Cp .60b 62% 62% + % , Scott Paper 1 65 65 — % | Sbd CstL 2.20 127 25% 24V 25 30% 59% 12 623/4 46 65% 10 58 58 27 45% 45% 45% + 28 71% 70% 70% —1 20 12% 12% 12% -f 20 53% - 51% 51 Searl GD 1.30 5 32V 32V 32 Va 61% ■ 106% 11 853/4 85% 85% + 10 30Va 38 17% 45 63% 95 6% 10 44% 29 34Va 36 59% 13 28% 23 627% < 173 30V* 11 116% 20 9% 9% 9% 398 31 30% 30% 145 116% 115% 115% 3 22% 22 22% 29% 30 +1V $2? .34 37! !Budd Co NEW YORK CAP) - American Slock j 5u!,J,rd Exchange selected noon prices ! Bulnva .70b Aerojet .50a Ajax Ma .I0g Am Petr .65g ArkLGas 1.60 Asamera Oil AssdOil & G AtlasCorp wt Barnes Eng BrazilLtPw 1 Campbi Chib Can So Pet Cdn Javelin,. Cinerama Creole 2.60a Data Cont Dynaiectrn EquitCP 05d Fargo Oils Fed Resrces Felmont Oil Frontier Air Gen Plywood Giant Yel .40 Goldfield Gt Bas Pet Gulf Am Cp GulfResrc Ch HoernerW .82 Husky O .30g Hycon Mfg Hydrometl Is ram Corp Kaiseri Ind McCrory wt MichSub J0g MohwkD Set Molybden NewPark Mn Pancoastai RIC Group Scurry Rairn, SignalOiTA la Sfatham Inst Syntex Cp .40 Technicol .40 WnNuclr Sales ' N«tiRurl l.’O (hds.) High Low Last Chg.' Burroughs 1 11 27% 267/* 27% + V* l 2 54Va 54% 54% — ’a 45 18% 20 39, 65 511-16 5 288 6% 77 ,3% 5 S67/* 112 12% 163i — 363*4 36% — 75% 95% + 72% 73 + A"* 4i% . 793/4 30 + j Jewel Co 1.30 jJohnMan 2.20 John John .60 (Jones L 2.70 jJostens .50 [Joy Mfg 1.40 56 1»3% 181» —c— 18V* 18% + Va Cal Finanr 99 6’.^ 6 6% 38% 38% + ft CahimH V.M 76 4fl 471/7 4734 i 7-16 5% .. r»mooi. 45^ 9414 9694 9634 634 634 i Camo Souo 1 1 ' 26 29% 9014 9R3*, 3% 334 V* Cant#*n .80 *8 2«i/e 36 Va 367/4 + ft j CaroPt 1 1.38 X76 4.1% 41 41% 12% l2'/a % . Taro T8.T 68 6 7914 9914 7% 7 3-16 iCarrlA»» Cp 1 16 66% 6614 56% 2% •2%+l-16 C*rt*rw .40a 41 1634 I6I/7 10% 13% + 34 C«sa J| 126 1654 1614 1634 8 8Va + Va'CaterTr 1.70 ?4 49 413/. 34V* 34 Va + % C(*la«p»ACp 3 2 62>% 6,914 6914 18% IBVa + 3* Cencb 1*a ?0 5*% 22 22% % j Cent SW 1.60 91 463/4 461/j 46% 6% 6% lrArr0Co 1 60 96 443«t AS 4 4*/? 6% 6%- -1- •14 r»r*-t„d »0 n T6% m* 11% •ft 1 ,o 493. 491/. :699<» 12% 12% % CFl Stl .80 31 1714 193% 19% + 3* rOhiA 4 16 6034 61% 6914 8% 8'4 + ’• rh»M» sto ] 97* 9% Chi RI Pac 3 1814 18 18 8 rhrf'Traft ia 4T,-'4 -4914 4* a 4% + ’ s ChrVcipr 2 643-i, 657/, J85iriT p?rt l ao pH 33% 34% + ftVlfiaxSvc 1.W 39 4«34 40 49 I'd 16% jflark Pn 1 *>0 961/4 961,4 22% 22% ’• CIavFUH 1.90 14 1/3* 17% % 1 rnraCnla 0 *0 19 34 34% + • Co’n Pal 1.10 97 49% 43% * |rolttr.DAo 09 . Macke Co .30 Macy RH .90 j MadFd 2.63g ! Magnavx .80 iMarathn 2.80 MarathOil yvi Mar Mid 1.40 Mdrquar .25g MartinMar 1 MayDStr 1.60 Maytag 1.60a 493^ + Va McDonD .40b 391.4 X % Mead Cp 1.90 4114 + sfc Melv Sh 1.60 _ i/n | Merck .l.60a MGM 1.20b MidSoUtil .82 + V2 33 17% 17% 17% + % 19 36% 36 , 3614 + V2 V20 29% 29% 29% - % 156 40% * 3971 40% + % 50 82% 82 82Va + V* .1 41% <41% 41 Va 12 31 Va 30% 3TVa + % 21 16% 157/* 16% + % 92 20% 20% 20% + % 18 40% 40 40% + % 16 36 35% 36 + % 382 54% 53% 53% >-1% 17 39 38% 38% — % 10 86 85% 86 +% 30 8371 83% 83V* — 1% 45 48% 47% 47% — % 257/* 25% 25% - % Sears Roe la 90 57% Seeburg .60 92 25% Sharon SU 1 35 377/* Shell Oil 2.10 49 67% SherwnWm 2 13 48 Sinclair 2.60 42 76% SingerCo 2.20 31 69% SmTthK 1.80a 55 51% SouCalE 1.40 X42 367/* South Co 1.08 27 28% SouNGas 1 30 9 44% SoutPac 1.60 85 297/* South Ry 2.80 1[0 467/* Spartan Ind 109 23% SperryR ,10e 319 63% SquareD .70a 11 23% 'StBrand 1.40 41 36% Std Kolls 50 30% StOilCal 2.50 78 63 StOillnd 1.90 41 54% StdONJ 3.45a StOilOh 2.50b 446 69% 9 71% St Packaging 135 16 Stalev 1.35 3 35% StauffCh 1.80 5 45% Sertl Drug 1 StevensJ 2.25 40 52 * 1 53 Stude, Worth 126 64 .Sun Oil lb 3 64V* Sunray 1.50 249 41% Swift Co 1.20 52 33'/4 T— Tampa El .68 10 27% .Tektronix 37 49% Teledyn 3,81# 121 142% Tenneco 1.28 104 28 ; 1 Texaco 2.60a 123 83% TexETrn 1.20 16 22 1 Tex G Sul .40 35 128% Texas Inst .80 96 107% Tex PLd .35g 16 19Va Textron .70 72 53% Thiokol .40 84 20% Timk RB 1.80 11 40’/a TransWAir 1 744 501/4 Transamer 1 115 53% Transitron 145 18% Trl Cont ?92g 43 31% TRW Inc 1.60 36 103% TwenCent .80 96 31% u— UMC Ind .60 156 21% Un Carbide 2 140 497/0 Un Elec 1.20 30 22% UnOilCal 1.40 52 56% UnionPacif 2 16 38% Un Tank 2.50 . 5 77% Uniroyal 1.20 UnitAirLIn 1 51 49% 313 66% Unit Aire 1.60 27 82% Unit Cp .50g 21 11% Un Fruit 1.40 18 60% UGasCp 1.70 7 85Va Unit MM 1.20 16 27% US Borax la 3 29% USGypsm 3a , 18 66% US Ind .70 58 447/* US Lines 2b 140 47% USPIyCh 1.50 M3 45% US Smelt lb 21 57% US Steel 2:40 190 41% UnivOPd 1.40 14 90’/a Upjohn 1.60 x26 50% IT tion, which describes itself as nonprofit and nonpolitical and Commission which twice had r •" ’ ' , , , - muieu price siasnes mai are devotedtoplanningbyAmeri- merhflfi^hadh^P°UCe stat,an. and t.0,d the™ a making British goods competi-^^cans^n agriculture business, la- „ R- ft aPProved me merger.-had no man was holding his mother,.. ° .. * . t fnrth„ bor and professions” forecasts a 4ft + ft comment on the/z-fTT action, stepfather and sister and r§efl!l “SS™ th GNP of $844.5 billion, but with |H ft Neither was theite any comment two children hostages at gun- lime 10 many-years. more than half of it inflation. by the Department of Justice, point. * , * * William Freund, formerly, which had challenged the merg-j Kelly said the man already: Pre(«c<*ons directly con- chief economist of Prudential er each time. The department’s had taken one shot at him with tradict foreign criticisms that Life Insurance but now vice second challenge is pending be-a shotgun but missed. British exporters have so far'president of the New York Stock fore a three-judge U.S. Court of ^ wa* nWificH ac failed t0 cut their Prices andl Exchange, foresees a GNP of Sft 37V. +m'Appeals panel in Washington. r,iff H , take advantage of the lower $848 billion, with government H-Lls! “• W"? iff contributing 1195 billion, busi- Mft r+!!b<*n envlsIoned as a financial taken into custody and charged1 s°me industrialists said they ness $93 billion, consumers $555 »ft 36ft + ft | boost to ABC through ITT in- with asault to do great bodiiy have lowered their export prices billion and foreign trade $5 bil- u ”ft [vestment in programming and harm. between 3 and 12 per cent. The **00 Ti*is means about an 8 per *6ft 2ft + ft i technological improvements. ] Police said he continually pound was devalued by 14.3 per cent advance, with 3 per cent of *iib * * * threatened to kill the persons in cent. it inflation. Leonard H. Goldenson, presi-the apartment but finally Leaders of the autbmotive,! . 4[dent of the American Broad-passed out, apparently from computer, chemical, machine tool, electrical e(ju.pment. and,aa advance> C0unting 40ft 40'/ 19 60V. 50 60 ])’/* 30ft 54 66ft 65ft 39 50ft 49Va 49ft + ft 29 70 69V. 69ft — ft 37 139 137ft 138 +lft 96 S6ft 54ft 55ft +1 96 28ft 27ft 28 + ft 49 49 48ft 49 + ft 22 5?Va 55% 55% —1 56ft 56ft — ft 23ft 23 ft + ft 35ft 36Ve + ft 30ft 30ft 62ft 62ft 67ft 68ft +lft 71 71ft + ft 15ft 15ft + ft 31ft 35ft + Va regretted the ITT decision. He said that while the merger was 51 ft sift-i pending, ABC’s corporate hands oi'/. 63ft + ft [were tied, but now it plans to Tiit ; “move vigorously and forcefully ! to strengthen and expand our company’s interests and growth.” He indicated that oth-[ er mergers may figure in ABC’s — ftjplans. *- -ift| American Broadcasting Coni-[ Tiftjpanies Inc. is a parent company 32Vl — ft' 27% 27ft + Area Hunter Says Youth Shot 2 Dogs agricultural machinery indus-! jnfjaHort » tries all reported improved ex-; _ port possibilities. They and others also said de-j valuation will help them great-; ly in the home market by forc-j iAg their foreign competitors toj -raise prices charged in Britain.; An Independence Township Sir George Harriman, presi-1 man complained to Pontiac der,t of the Society of Motor | Many Bogus $5 Bills in NY Reported 64V. 64ft — tft 80ft 80ft — ft lift 11V. — ft 59ft 59 Va — ft 85% 85ft — ft 27ft 27ft — ft 2»ft 29ft +-ft 657/. 66ft + ft 57V. + ft 41ft +1 90ft + ft 50 ft + ft ______ H Goldenson said ITT’s termiria- '30 iift 22* 22ft + ft j ti°n of the merger plans “per-3«* jSf T ft^mits us to start immediate discussions with compatible companies that have privately expressed an interest in being ac-j quired by our company.” He did] not name the other companies. The ITT directors said ITT) $100 each and ABC had made the merger! agreement “as a constructive1 State Police yesterday, that Manuiaciurers ana cnairman oj| YORK (AP) —- A large his two hunting dogs were shot British Motor Holdings, whicU , nrtlintopiuu «c kui- and killed by a young teen- makes Jaguar, Austin, Morris fmber of counterfeit $5 bUls of ager iij a wooded and swampy (and a number of other autos,! fair quality circulated in New area of the township. I told his staff: “BMH are head* | York City during the Christmas The complainant, Emersonling for record exports In theishopping season, the Secret Vliet of 10081 M15, said he was [first quarter of 1968.” The com-|Se^ic®,ffP°^s; fox hunting when the incident bine has 45 per cent of all happened at about noon yes-1 British car exports, terday. * * * He said the dogs, described! Sir George said BMH already as a male Goodman and a* fe- has cut its prices 12 per cent in male Walker, were valued- at Europe and 3 Vi per cent in the United States. The slash would | to $3,000 a week. . Jhave been greater in America,! * ★ t ■ o J“nT® fST1'ibul for the addrf cokts o( meet ' Lewis B. Hensley of 3086 Mar-[. ■ Irc UJ-------- garet, Pontiac Township, told1*1® ^ ^ . jlating heavily in October. Be I _ a Even cn nn coin fnroinn f______ ...aL h nt.mUnM ni Vliet’s The office of Albert E. whitak-er, special agent in charge of the New York district of the Secret Service, said Monday that the amount of counterfeit $5 bills passed in this "area has been running as high as $2,000 The bogus bills began circij- Copyrighted by The Associated Press 1968 Cfkr%f r 15.2 16.0 Cu"' 25.2 25.6 18.0 19.0 Stocks of Local Interest Figures after decimal points are eighths rnm OVER THE COUNTER STOCKS • Quotations from the, NASD are repre- Cow'i sentative inter-dealer prices of iipproxi-jrn-t* mately 11 a. m. Inter-dealer markets ’ rro«»* change throughout the day. Prices do crow not include retail markup, markdown or rrow commission. , r-*w AMT Corp. Associated Truck Braun Engineering Citizens Utilities Class A ... -Detrex Chemical Diamond Crystal . Kelly Services Mohawk Rubber Co. .......... Monroe Auto Equipment North Central Airlines Units Safran Printing .... Scripto ........ Wyandotte Chemical mutual funds Affiliated Fund Chemical Fund Commonwealth Stock Dreyfus ........ Keystone Income K-i . • Keystone Growth K-2 Mass. Investors Growth Putnam Growth Television Electronics Wellington Fund Windsor Fund , 1/*; MinnMM 1.30 20 947/* 93% 94 UyI A>\ 1 21% 21% ,21% , 4. ii 1 Mo Kan Tex 208 20% 20% 20'/a m MobilOil 2 93 43 V* 42% 43% f 14 | Mohasco 1 37 24% 23% 23% 0*1 9 34 70', 747/, 743; , -l 34, | Monsan 1.60b 83 47 V* 46 46% l/'O 0 407'/ AO AO -l m' MontDUt 1.60 8 297/* 29% 29% ,40 40% JOTj, 4A7/( , 4- %;MontPw 1.56 . 18 28% 28’ a 28% O 34c 34^ 349 _3 MontWard 1 1/8 243 'A 24 24 i 4_ 14: Motorola 1 2/ 118% 116'4 118 50 , _ 7 ? i Mt St TT 1.24 5 22V* 2,1% 22% WarnLamb 1 Was Wat 1.20 Westn AirL 1 Wn Banc 1.20 WnUTel 1.40 Westg El 1.60 Weverhr 1.40 Whirl Cp 1.60 White Mot 2b WinnDix 1.50 Woolworth 1 step in the public interest.” «/ A A 1 ct) r uiiuciL x uwiv/ivi ( , , ^ 40 32ft 3ift 3iv. + ft [police he confronted the youth' Even so, he , said, foreign;fore then, such a number of ^ ' Among, the original Depart-[shortly after the dogs were sa » 25% 27 34% 33% 280 s 23% 34 25% 24’la ??% +1 i PennRR 2.40 23% - %; Pennzoll t.40 75 — % < PepsiCo .90 36% + % i PerfFilm .419 16% + % PfizerC 1.20b 54M» + % PhelpsD 3.40 26’4 — % Phila El 1.64 72% + % Phil Rdg 1.60 39 + % PhilMorr 1.40 PhlllPet 2.40 l PltneyB 120 26% +1% PitPlato 2.60 34 —i Pitts Steel 23% +1 Polaroid 64 24% * PrpctrG 2.20 42% 42% 42% - % DOW—JONES AVERAGES 134 30% 29% 29% + %, STOCKS* 13 65% 65 65% — % 30 Indus .................. 32 v 29% 28% 29% +1% 20 Ralls ................... 22 62% 61% 61%-% 15 Utils ......... 3 123 122% 122% -1% 65 Stocks ................ 88 41% 41 41 +1 BONDS: 13 66% 65% 65% - % 40 Bonds 391 70% 65% 66% -8% to Higher grade rails . 34 72% 71% 72% + % 10 Second grade rails 32 30 29% 29% + % 10 Public utilities 51 927/a 91 92% + % 10 Industrials' 28 44% 44% 443/4 + % » —------------ 66% 66 66’/4 — 34 j Tuesday's 1st Dividends Declared Commission discussion at to- ^wo cj|y employes alleging jpital Supply at 43. After reading \c earnings record and has ris-|jfl|4*0 ft at r,fwi ■ . ... ‘n number of columns predicting en sharply on a proposed merg- ■n Atnar micmAe* pmn a break in the stock market, I er with Amphenol. I advise you The commission jS| scheduledi »«' gofj out at 57. Pm sorry now, to avoid it, unless you really to consider a resolution calling .. f p r n because the shares have since want to speculate. |; for an end to the city’s sub- ’968 budget for Ront.ac Gen-hjt 8J Ja jt t(M) hjgh to buy , a a sidy of bus transportation pro- ^a f[| ’again? Can you advise me on, Q — In December, 1957, I “■ “K‘ Of Iftlkc (Ml 0^. bought Tylflt Drag & Ch.rak.1. Last week the commission de-!o( ^ustees. a - I think it is always wise 1 have nev" heard ,ron’ thi* ferred action on the resolution “ ? one week, although District 4 The commission is to set losses uui ici you, . 78^4 'Commissioner Leslie H. Hudson date for a public hearing oni rojit run American Hospital A 83.7 opposed the delay. Hudson has’he proposed appropriations lProflts run- Amencan Hospital been a long-time foe of the sub- * * * + .2 + .1. 86.8 78.4 89.1 78.9 86.8 78.2 89.1 78.8 66.7 78.4 IM. 78.7 86.8 78.0 90.2 792 91.5 81.9 90.5 86.2 95.6 84.9 92.5 89.4 86.1 78.0 89.1 78.4- 101.4 86.1 93.1 90.7 i 88.9 79.2 90.4 83.7 sidy, which is $35,000. to remember the trading adage: company and would appreciate take your losses, but let your an>r 7°“ can «ive me- “ profits run. American Hospital T. jSupply is in a powerful growth a — I have nothing orf this field and is getting a big assist (company in my files or man- A public hearing is also frorn Medicare .The stock is no uals. My broker tells me that 26 71 12 66V 70% — 66% +1' ft Slk. ol E.y-rlod R.cord obi. REGULAR Rat. 234^)3+3!7* The city is considering cancel- scheduled tonight on special as-[ longer cheap, but it has had an the last bid He can find for 31s!»+1.I0-ing the subsidy as‘part of cut-1 scssment-s for sanitary sewer uninterrupted growth record Ijor your shares was 5 cents in 1950/ backs needed for lack of/a city con?tru.c’'on hr Fern, Howland, niany years an(] j believe this and that at presept there is nd Bloomfield arid H i g h 1 a n d[wm continue. The' shares sell bid aJld he thinks your stock is streets. 'for abput 50 times this year’s worthless. You might write to * * * [estiniated earnings. This is a the company at 42 Newark St., its effective pate has been de-' Also, a hearing will be held big multiple, but not out of line Hoboken, N.J., and get some in-layed because of petitions call- on delinquent weed cutting bills with other fast-growth issues. I formation ic 1967. ‘ jadvise you to buy it back and, (Copyright, 1968) 74.73+0.0* 74-3i+0.23. income tax. ^ 78.08+D.01 * * * ‘ 88.i7+«:to . . , , , The tax has been enacted, but C—6 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 2, 1968 te j&j Carpets Burned POMPANO BEACH, Fla. (AP) — A million dollars worth of, carpeting was \ destroyed Monday in a warehouse fire that investigators suspect was set by someone who ransacked files and desks before the blaze. Robert Salame, co-owner of lervlc* hereof, this summons end notice! shall be served by publication of « copy NOTICE OP PUBLIC HEARING To Cltliens and Taxpayers of the CUV1 one weak previous to said hearing In the Io> Pontiac Michigan' Pontiac Press, a newspaper printed andi. Notl<( ls Mrtby glven that on Tuesday, circulated in said County. 'January 16, 1868 at 1:00 P. M„ Eastern „Witness;, .the Honorable Eugene Arthur standard Tima, a public hearing will be Moore.Judoe ofsald Court.Jn the City held by the City Cpmrnlleton If Ilia Com- mucsT of Pontiac Tn said Coyhty. this Wth day miM|on chamber. City Hsll, on the pro- — • ---- posed tltt Budget for the City * Pontiac. By Order of tna City Cammlstlon Oated: December V, iMr OLGA BARKELEY,, City Clark January 2, IMS of December A.P, 1M7. EUGENE ARTHUR MOORE (Seal) a true copy Judge of Probate J SHIRLEY SMITH Deputy Probate Register, January £ IfOS SPECIAL ELECTION To the Qualified Electors: . _ . I NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, That a ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS | Sealed proposals will be .-received by WALTON BLVD, I Places of Holding the provide dual electric service [iw m IndicatedSlow! Court House Complex at the ■■ i,y 05 inotcaieo oeiow, County Service Center In . Poiytlac, Mich WALLED LAKE JUNIOR HIGH SCHOOL L 43. >!• «etM ./ CASE Vo. *7-11-2 the Boston Rug Co. said County o. O.Marn, SI... one million yards of carpeting °' Tuesday. January ia. was along with an required equipment i was a total loss, most of it by p|||| ................................. . water damage. jjjijy >o lakssjunio* high school ■ legal notice , — IS uJWiAir ' • tional looo-lineai fMt of underground Notice It htreby given of • Public FOR THE PURPOSE OF VOTING electric service to the, Oak land County Hearing to be held by the Waterford ON THE FOLLOWING PROPOSITIONS, sanatorium on the sante life. Township Planning Commission on Janu* V. Shall the following described Plans and Specifications will be avail- ary 2& 1948, at 7:30 p.m.. In the Wa- tories (areas A, B and Q be detached (ajj|e f^e office of the Oakland County terford Township High School, located at from Commerce Township, Facilities Engineering Division, 1200 1413 Crescent Lake Road, Pontiac, Mlchl- County, Michigan and annexed to the North Telegraph Road, Building "K", gan, to consider changing the zone City of Walled Lake, Oakland County,, pontiac, Michigan, on and after Decern- designation from R-1A, Single Family Michigan? .... ber 18, 1967. A deposit check In the. Residential District, to R-2# Multiple .AREA. A iamount of $25.00 will be required for! Dwelling District, as defined by Town* N Description of Area A: each set of the Plans and Specfflcsiftbns, (ship Ordinance No. 4S, being the "Zoning "Part of Sections 27, 2*, 33 and J4, W(,leh will be refunded upon the return Oralnance of the Charter Township, of Town 2 North, Range 8 East, Commerce!0( sam(, |n good condition, within ten I Waterford," Oakland County, Michigan, Township, Oakland. County, Micniaan ()()) days UIUVIUBU Ur III® VWIIBI• PA UtU UUIIU Ul the west line of Section 33 (Beck Road) certified £heck In the amount of 5% of to a point 214,50 foot south °{tft ,th® bid shall accompany each proposal, west corner of said ^Mjpjon, |Checks shall be made payable to tha erly aldllg a line 214.50 feet.south jOakland County Board of Auditors, parallel to the north line of said section! j^e accepted bidder shall be required to the west line of tha east Vi of fho|t0 furnish a satisfactory Performance west v? of said section; thence northeriy Bond and Labor and Material Bond, each along said west.lino to tha the amount of lOfrpercant of tho Con- Public common to Sections 28! and g> msnce tract. The cost of the bonds will be Hearing to be held'by the Waterford easterly along said section line, to the j paid by the accepted bidder ■ a ----------------------------- —" It Tha County Board of Audi Township Planning Commission on Janu- north and south 5® line or aecrion wr The county Board of Auditors will re-ary 23, 1968, at 7:30 p.m., in the Water- thqnct northerly along said north and ceiye the sealed bids until 2:00 P.M., ford Township High School, located at south V* line to the east and west__4i | Wednesday, January 10, 1968, at 14]5 Crescent Lake Road, Pontiac, Michj- line of ^Sectipn 28; /hence the offices of the Oakland County Facilf gan, to consider changing the zone desig- the east and west\ Va* line of Sections 28 nation from R-1A, Single Family Resi- and 27 (McCoy; Road) to the JMStlno rfentui District to C-i. Local Business ot the west Vj% of the west >i of section Dlst/ict, as defined bv Township Ordi- 27; thence s9,ut^Jfr0fa?L:t on nAnrp No as Kpjna the "Zonino Ordi- of the west /i of thq wesf /» of Section riance of the Charter Township of Water- 27 (Ladd ''"i*0* Pan.: ford," Oakland County, Mlchigah, on the Sf.JUlS.inn-* Llhar8 «.P*r£ ,0ll°Case ^ prOP'r,y^cor«d !n the Oakla”d County Vgist” I»I, M V ind if ot Dixie Heights if Deeds, Oakland County, Mlchlgan; XuMivkinn -SKtion 10 T3N, R9™ Wa- thence easterly along the south line ot flS oaiin d County, said subdivision to the north and south Mirhioan P R line of Section 27 (also the west line Michigan. ARTHUR J. SALLEY . ol_'Penny _L«k«IE3tMM_No:_2S L^b*r 113, ties Engineering Division, 1200 North Telegraph Road, Pontiac, Michigan, at which time the bids shall be publicly opened and read. Board of Auditors Oakland County, Michigan DANIEL T, MURPHY ROBERT E. LILLY JOHN B. OSGOOD December 28, 1987 and January 2, 1988. Part of the E Vi ot the SW ’A of Section 24, T3N, R9E, Waterford Township Oakland County, Michigan. Beginning at a point on the N and S v. line of Section 24, T3N, R9E, Waterford Township, Oakland County, Michigan, said point being S oo°H' E, a distance ot 1183.81 feet from the center post of said section; thence continuing along said quarter lint S 00°I8' E 1501.IS (eat te the S quarter post of said sectlon; thence N 89°J5' w along the S' line of said Section 1323196 feet; thence N 00°-31' 05" W 1331.44 feet; thence N 00°-25' E 167.81 feet; thence E 1327.79 feet to the place of beginning, except the E 264 feet ot the S 311.50 feet, containing! 43.816 acres. (W-S24-A) ' ARTHUR J. SALLEY ‘ Clerk «. Charier Township of Waterford I Oakland County, Michigan 4995 West Huron Street Pontiac, Michigan 48054 January 2, 16, 1968 HUD-3087 (12-65) t, ■ . .... ________________■......... NOTICE OF SALE Clerk Pages 34 and 35); thence southerly along of $1,015,000 Preliminary Loan Notes of Charter Townshio of Waterford said north and south 'A line to the south!City of Pontiac, Michigan. OaklanTcounfy.Xhlgan line of tha north V, of the South ’/.of' ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS City of Pontiac/ Michigan Kannatt Road-Columbia Avtnua Sewer* AP Wirephoto A LOFTY PURPOSE-At Mesa College in Grand Junction, Colo., they’re doing something about the shortage of stilt-walking peach trefe pruners. There’s a course in the art now, and students like John Butler (front) and Max Cruz will get instruction for two weeks,: work as trainees, then prune on their own. Bitter Cold Numbs Midwest and East 1 i 1 LA SALLE P ft ■**—- 237*^-® N -4 Caaa Mo. 67-11-4 . LEGAL NOTICE Nee Is hereby given of be held by the W^vOTwlbSSr Section 27™ in^c. ‘ v£«t^Ty ™long * 'the I'lSeeled proposals wl.l *Mgr Lhws Pontiac, Michigan 48054 .south line of the north Mr of the eouth Vajthe above-identified local public body cor- . 5**** January 16. 1968 !of Section 27 to the east line of the west porate (hereinafter celled the "Local * f'lJ? ___________— IV? of the east }/a of the west M» of Section Public Agency") art City of Pontiac, 450 SSRSf?* appurtenances | 127; thence southerly along the east line Wide Treck Drive, East, in the City of 2? -/piS A of the west Vi of the east ’/a of the west Pontiac, Michigan 48058, until, and bub- Oakland j Vj of' Sections 27 and 34 to a point 200 ilcly opened at, ona o'clock P.M., East- Michigan,^at tna ^OTica^of. the, feet north of the centerline of the Grand ern Standard Time, on January 17th# IfttitiS,.™™?, !R*J' 2;00 JP. AA. (EST) on :Trunk Railway; thence southwesterly for the purchase of $1,015,000.00 of notes 5* which time they will: j along ai line 200 feet north of and .parallel of the Local Public Agency to be known j -*•!?*?!• .1 I to said centerline to a point 200 feet west as "Preliminary Loan Notes (Eight)) ,*15® installation of^ of-the east line of the westof the west I series B),"'being issued to aid in fl- UJf *3S Jf-M jjnitary saajfr) I vs of Section 34; thence southerly a ongjnancing its Urban Renewal Project, das-!“0 ®f i °L24 i Ilf, a line 200 feet west of and parallel to j iQnated Project No. Mich. R-44. Tha19j, *1'-ft of 42 J ^,0,b48.,I said east line of the west W of the- west j UnTted States of America has agreed to Itx Jov ,!5-erl;I and 3890 of 1 % of Section 34 to a point 200 feef north make a ioan under Title I of the Housing ar9J9j-'3 m.,er ‘il*- 4. of the east and west 'A line of Section Act'of I949 as amended (42 USC 1450 Copies of the Plans. Specifications and 34 (West Maple Road); thence westerly .. fhe Locai pU|,iic Aaencv »o'°,her contract Documents may be ex-1 along a line 200 feet north of and parallel ;a,SiSt the latter in undertaking and carry- *"1'n.ed. IWMSI ft ,h* .ci,T Engineer, to the east and west Si line of Sections ino ou. Prolect Bv euthorltv ot or al Stf®* of Jones A Henry, 2000 34 and 33; to the extended east line of the U?d ... and wnh the aareement of the We!t Cen,ral Avenue, Toledo, Ohio 43606, west 25 acres ot the northeast 'A ot the Lnral Public Aaencv the said Notes are wlthout charge, and may be obtained at , p,,hnr southeast of Section 33; thence south- tLocfi unconditional I v ".cured as to the ,h* la,ter 0,,ic* u00n deposit ot 510.00. Jv.t.rtnrS *rfl' alon0 said extended east line to the ' vm.nt , nrlncloal and Interest The ,u" amount of the deposit will be ■ bids. Proposals must be submitted on the YownaV Planning Commissionjon Janu- l^trandncredd|S.'01'^°.' tt&T&ii! "0=1 1 ford 2 Township* High "iSooL ISc'ated8'^ 'fof Ih".* southlasTu EtME^gMSgEiliMi 0P!nln9 % 1415 Crescent Lake Road, Pontiac, Michi- ,2t-J}*L!5?ancl southern alona sa?diunqualified payment agreement endorsed Proposals . .. .. gan, to consider changing the zone des-1 ^!,?n 33t' th^south0 Nneof Section *33* on eac^ of th* Notes. Under said Act, form furnished by the City,4 must con-i gnat ion from R-1B Single Family Res- thenceiesterlv Song safd soufhMne to such a^eement is required to W con- tain the narneofevery person interested idential District to C-T, Local Business1 IwinninJni SOUTn 0 strued by all officers pf the United States therein and shall be accompanied by __ jiE——**«“ rs-xA; Tne po t ot 9 9- separate and apart from said loan agree- either a proposal bond, with latisfactory jment and Is Incontestable In »h^, hands surety, or by a certified check on a beginning. AREA "B" | nance of^ the1' Charter ’Township ’of Wa-| D?,s5MlptJ?n J oa 'os *nrf ta aiso terford," Oakland County, Michigan, on! All of Sections 24, 25 and 36, also District, as defined by Township Ordi-1 nance' No. 45, being the ''Zoning _ Ordi* of a bearer thereof. v i solvent bank. In the amount of not less The Notes will be dated February 14th, than five per cent (5%) of the amount renora, uawqtiu v-uumy, fvnwusuM, | c«.n«w. m a# t«uib q 1 w —. .... . „ - --- ■--- -- ------ the following described parcel of proper- P*™* 0,_ Sections M, 26 arto 35, T^n 2 will be payable to bearer on August of the proposal, sub|ect to conditions pro-! ty: .. ..... »ae,rn" IT? *»" 1968,wl!ib*ar Interest _from Kir, vlded in the Nolle, to Bldd«-S. By The Associated Press jan early morning reading Freezing rain, drizzle, snow degrees. In Baltimore or sleet slicked highways frQm degrees, the northern Rockies to Dixie Biting cold weather settled today as the piercing cold that over Minnesota and the Dakotas numbed the Midwest spread and overnight temperatures through the East. |were expected to drop to —35 in ★ * ★ Jthe northern regions of North Another blast of frigid air Dakota and Minnesota. The Weather Bureau said daytime highs probably would not edge above the zero mark in most of the region. There was a light Hazardous driving warnlngsjsnow cover in the area, but no were in effect for an 11-state travel problems were reported, area from Wyoming to North RASH OF FIRES Carolina. ■ I The usual rash of fires in the New England ushered in the Dakotas and- Minnesota broke; * Clerk Section 35; (D®cker Roed), ttienco thdtrenf Mfill h* nAVJihle inch Inrnr. ................... _.... ... IV „,v Charter Township of Waterford ™Jh*^'Val0"9a l,"e.'?W fe®, *??*,£{ porated Bank having trust powers or 251?ed_u„l*5hal1 WtHelr-aw his bid 4995 West Huron Street ^', | soi'h . 'therica northeasteHv atono chaser designates In the proposal. Such ™bl," ’'i**.J50) d,ys a,,er ,ha ,c,ual Pontiac, Michigan 48054 5Sad,;..,hJS5fh nl and’narallelto Bank »r Trust Company must be a mem- 0P®nlngthereof. . . January 2, 16. '968 llW.h? & M Z in ^ east 'A of the east 'A of Section 35; 'f® EWfil D«po®'» Insurance Corpora- ma'|it|' , hiddino thence northerly along the west line of H°n: ,and must have an unimpaired Dated- December 30 1967 the east 'A of the east 'A of Section 35 capital and surplus of not less then the $”®d: oioa Barkelev Clerk point 200 feet north of thefooregate principal amount of Notes des- "nesl' OIBa yo„„J£T,r moved down into the north-cen tral states. Subzero readings were widespread. ★ ★ ★ out as the temperatures dropped into the minus 30S. There were gusty winds in the in the eastern section. A ★ ★ new year with bitter cold temperatures. Readings dropped to 20 below zero in parts of northern New England and to zero to 5 below in southern sections. A New Year’s Eve snowstorm covered the region with an average of 4 inches of snow. UPSTATE N.Y. It was cold and clear in upstate New York. Early morning temperatures generally were well below zero, it was 28 below in Massena in the St. Lawrence Valley. it. it it The tions berland Plateau area of eastern! wintery weather. In those sec Tennessee had rough driving tions it generally was fair and conditions with an accumulated mild, snowfall on top of frozen rain. I * * . * Several counties' ahd cities in| Early morning temperatures the area—-mostly in middle [ranged from 28 below zero in Tennessee-closed schools today Massens, N.Y., to 71 degrees in and some industrial plants also Key West, Fla. shut down. Driving conditions ★ ★ ★ throughout most of the state other reports. New York n cleat1, Boston 3 clear, Philadel- _ . , , . 8 , B phia 13 clear, Washington, D C., Fne^s^p^Jntemat.onal g|Jj clear AtlanW-39 rain, Miami 66 clear, Detroit 10 cloudy, Chicago 16 cloudy, St. Paul-Minne-apoiis —3 partly cloudy, St. and 26 to _ r— — ----------------- centerline of Pontiac Trail; thence south-1 ignoted- in the proposel or proposals westerly along a line 200 feet north of 'submitted by the purchaser; provided, and parallel to said cenlerlioe, to a point however, that such unimpaired capital 200 feet east of the north and south 'Al®™t surplus need not exceed One Million line of Section 26; (Decker Road); thence |Dollars. The Notes Will provide that they northerly along a line 200 feet east of are not valid until after such Bank or, and parallel to the north and south 'A Trust Company has signed the agreement,: Hoe of Sections 26 and 23, to the extend- appearing on each Note, to act as paying ed south line of 'Clarence Sub-Division', [ agent. The Notes will be transmitted to Liber 25, Page 2, as recorded in the such Bank or Trust Company .for delivery Oakland County Register of Oeeds, Oak- to the purchaser upon receipt end dis-i land County, Michigan; thenca westerly bursement by such Bank or Trust Com-along the extended south line of said peny of the purchase price thereof In subdivision, to the southeasterly corner of; accordance with Instructions from the said subdivision on the westerly shore of i Local Public Agency. After taking de-Hawk Lake; thence northerly along the livery ot the Notes, the purchaser shall east line of said subdivision and thelobtaln the signature: ot such Bank or westerly short of Hawk Lake to the-Trust Company upon'the Notes as afore-northeast corner of said subdivision; I said. AH fees or charges, if any, of said thence westerly along the north line of Bank or Trust Company shall be paid said subdivision to a point 200 feet east by SUCh purchaser of the west line of the east ’A- of the, Sald Notes will'be special obligations west 'A of Section 23 (South Commerce 0f the Local Public Agency and will be I Road); thence northerly along a line 200 secured by a requisition agreement be-« ,ween »h« Local Agency and the, 2f JL?1 United States of America under the terms City, of Pontiac. Michigan By Order of the Commission January 2, 1968 northern part of the state and tori Township‘ niSh located, at i ’Tsouth CommerceWeRoad)T ™ "*' and ffiE-fSS, • - ,1415 Cr*scent • Lake Road, Pontiac. Mich- northeriy along said west line ot the east ! igan, to consider granting "Special Ap-1,/, of the west 'A of Section 23 to the i fpL!ud!!|**?!} .J? jprovel" under Section 11.03, . paragraph nortt, line of'-Section 23 (Oakley Park!™, ^ ,p®,' °lj1i,uKI showers in the sopth. ' ▲ X A [Utuvat viiuci •KLiivH ii.wt i rsowyiwr" iigiin mie ui roeviiuii M iwoMcy fai R i .4 l. .r'sk^ * w ■ (a), Ordinance No. 45, to be allowed to Road); thence easterly along the north ^/ Temnpraturpq dronnpri below i construct and operate a candy process- line of Sections 23 and 24 to the east line Y®™P*"y *» leniperdiures uroppea DeiOWjjn9 distrlt>ut|0n> and retell business, on Of Section 24 (Haggerty Road); thence »h,Notes art Payable for the freezing in most Darts of Oretron property zoned C-2, General Business southerly along the east line of Sections R®'’®"' bold*r or nolders thereof, trce^lllg tn rnobl parts 01 uregon propyy “ ®d f| d* b Township Or- 24, 25 and 36 lo the point ot beginning." Under the proceedings authorizing said during the night and near zero dinance So. *5, being the "Sonmg n„,.. th. -------- Ordinance of the Charter Township of Waterford," Oakland County, Michigan, on the following described parcel of property: While the Arctic air masses! Case No. 67-n-s mi«c 111c nixire Michigan. .thence westerly along the northerly line of uouay, Denver 1U Clear, rnoe- p|ease take notice that the City Council ”'<* Outlot "8" to the southeast corner nix 17 ftlpar T.no Anuplpo Sfi wlll be meeting at the City Hall on'0* Outtot "A" ot said subdivision; thence nix 0/ Clear, L,OS Angeies Wednesday, the 10th day ot January, 1968, "0^h*rlr along the easterly line o( said Cloudy, San Francisco 43 ata8,-00 p.m. for the purpose of reviewing °d,a°'r A to the northeast corner of December 30, 1967 ; 620 Broad Street, Eaton Rapids (Formprly Df Oxford); age 78; dear mother of Mrs. Mabel Howard and Mrs. Alice Fick; dear sister of Mrs. Eleanor Wright, Mrs. Gertrude Howard and James Betts; also survived by 11 grandchildren and 15 greatgrandchildren, service will Wednesday, January 3, at 2 p.m. at the Bossardet Funeral Home, Oxford. Interment in Oxford Cemetery. Mrs. Clingsmith will lie in state at the funeral home'. Funeral be held and ono-elghth per centum (4'»%). Proposals may be tor all or any part of the Notes, and separate proposals will be required (or each part ot said Notes for,which a separate Interest rate Is bid. The Interest rate specified for each pert of said Notes shell be a multiple of one-hundredth (1/100) of one per cent (145). fs, .. # n. • [LTuuuy, oau riaireiscu p-m; ™ "A"T'thinri"^'w«i>Viv"'>i«na *a,d No,»* Win be awarded at Itie lowest Station for Birds Cloudy, Seattle 37 clear. Anchor-]” hearing* enySwHaH oblectlons to *']e ahnd- "he^^t’fon'TlL“common °o'Sect'll! Pfopos’als,"w!tho°ut r^VenM^’l'emlum* age 31 cloudy, Honolulu 73 Sf ”n-■ V^e'ioviTtTt/eM S’Z Q ,0"°wn9 ™ lmprov- 60 pfPla.,, Page°H thence nSrlheastinv^I»*a£ *«' be made on the basis 1 Storm drains nRrM«rv to drain tho a,onO ^e easterly line of said subdlvl- ®f.tha highest premium per dollar princl- i foMnwinn ItrmJ!* frS^ nrodArh? ah.lt Islon* to the western most corner of' Lot pal amount of Notes specified In such following streets and Pr<>partv abut-'^ 0| Shores', Liber 61 of Plats. J>r°PO**1*. No bid for lets than 850,000 I oP?hxrder*Lxke ^"“rxrlxnd Pa9*» 4 and 4A; thence northeasterly fprlnc.|Pal amoun' ®' said Notes or tor 1 -»!£n?.ld L ke Avenue to Garland. and easterty a|ong 1he westerly and '•*» (ban oar and accrued Interest (which Th.Ver,U;-,™.„. n_11 „„ , j - .. northerly lines of said subdivision to the! Interest shall be cbmpyted on a 360-day !n«T?f n^h^rrtS'r^Sii ri northeast corner of said subdivision; basis) will be entertained, and the Local of'h' 51%. S! er,y /°r. mek thence easterly to the northwest corner Public Agency reserves the right to 1°f 'Paynes Manor'# Liber 85 ot Plats,! award to any bidder all or any part of contained have .bean assessed according [ page ^6; thence easterly along the I the Notes which *uch bidder offers to ™ .ft Parcel5 of lend northerly line of said subdivision and I Purchase In his proposal, upon the basis constituting the Specie! Assessment Dis-; the north line of the south Vi of the of such proposal; provided, that If lass trict No. II. which District Is described. southwest ’A of Section 23 to the west thqn $50,000 principal athount of Notes Is ** . . . , I 11 'line of the east of the southwest v4 to be awarded to any bidder, such All lots and parcels of land on Sher- of Section 23 (South Commerce Road); bidder will be relieved of'the obtiga-wood Road from Orchard Lake Ave- thence Southerly along said west line to'tlon to purchase such Notes upon nue to Garland Avenue. the section line common to Sections 23 written notice to tNt Local PuDltc am properties described herein are lo- and 26; thence westerly along said sec- Agency within two*’days after notifies ted In the City of Sylvan Lake, County tlon line to the point ot beginning." -“*•— —j§ ----------1 ----*■ of Oakland, Michigan. i 3. Shall the following described terrl- Dated: City of Sylvan Lake, the 29th tory (area E) be detached from the I Village of Wolverine Lake, Oakland County, Michigan and annexed to the City of Walled Lake, Oakland County, I Michigan? ) AREA "E" \ : t j»rx# r» "ioas-f in n m \n th* Water \Lause no. Z3377 «\ \ Description of Area "E". Mr. and Mrs. fcdward Jordan ffi!" !5c.t^a,'.r;1 sjatb of MICHIGAN - In th« Pro-jR"Part of SKtion 27, Town 2 North, •« . _ , , . , i,,« rrMr.m i a,, pnxn Pnntixr Mlnhi* boto Court for the Countv of Oeklend,1 ■? , 9® ® —6“’ commerce Township, said Monday they have saved JS?, to- 05, Stctiop », T3N, R9E, Waterford Town-,dor the lurlsdictlon of this Court. KPfflBPSli* .**.'1 .b*-.^j!l»yt“|)! the Jordan home since Fridav ship. Oakland County, Michigan, ac- ln 'be, Nam® 'be People of the Stale ipoionoeV Ev2rJdL r,ii3 .|a;fo^,!A A™ uurudn uuiire suree ipiiuajr., cor^ng )0 the p|at ,nereof as recorded of Michigan, You are hereby notified that and in9 |lne at7h* Do ^ Hie Jordans raise -Wild birds asl in Liber 58 of Plats, Pe~* 4gr'-vi—aim. «*:-< *— *--•-* ■ n* al 'be Pb"* a* the hour pra- . , ., , / t, f I County Record. a hobby and are among the few; arthur Maine residents with the federali ____________________________________________HP .JHR..PL. ... ™, un, normiis rormirori fn hanrllo tho Oakland County, Michigan!the forenoon, and you are hereby com < election, permits requirea lO nanaie me 4995 West Huron Street manded to appear personally at said, hirrfq Pontiac, Michigan 48054 jhaaring. Aiisua. January 2, 16, 1968' it being ImpracticaJ to ,*nake personall cation of such .^proposed award, only a part of tht Notes bid for In' a proposal are awarded by tha Local Public Agency, the premium, if any, offered In such proposal shall be prorated, and said Notes will ba issued In denominations in the o»*der pf the towest denominations specified In such proposal; provided that ona Note may be issued (q a smaller DABNEY, ANDREW W.; December 31, 1967; 383 Luther Street; age 66; beloved husband of Flla Dabney; Funeral service will be held Friday, January 5, at 1 p.m., at the Macedonia Baptist Church with Rev. L. R. Miner officiating. Interment in Oak Hill Cemetery. Mr. Dabney will lie in state at the Frank Carruthers Funeral Home after 7 p.m. Thursday. DANCE, MINERVA E.; December 30, 1967; 117 Godfroy, Monroe, Michigan; age 59; beloved wife of Mark G. Dance; dear mother of Miss Barbara Dance; also survived by two grandchildren. Eastern Star Memorial service wi|) be held today, January 2 at 7 p.m. at the Earle Little Funeral Home, 115 E. Elm Street, Monroe, Michigan. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, January 3 at 1 p.m. at the funeral home. Interment in Oak Hill Cemetery, Pontiac. Mrs. Dance will lie in state at the funeral home. GRAFF,“GLADYS C7; De-cember jl, 1967; 127 Mohawk Road, Pontiac; age 78; dear mother of Mrs. Death Notices , Marion Boys Howe and Mrs. Glenn Bradford'; d°ar sister of Mrs. N. A. Woodworth, Mrs. I. J-Snader and Riley Aldrich; also survived by two grandchildren and six, great-grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, January 3 at I p.m. at the ’ Donelson-Johns Funaral Home Interment in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mrs. Graff will lie in state at the. funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9 p.m.) HERRON, MYRTLE: De-cember 30,1967; Port, Sanilac, Michigan (formerly of Pontiac) age 72; beloved wife of Ira Herron; deaf sister of Lila and MaWin Redmond, dear aunt of Donald, Robert Redmond and Mrs. Morton SprentalL Funeral service will b#held today, January 2 at 1:30 p.m. at the Jewell Funeral Home, Carapnville, Michigan. Interment in Port Sanilac, ^Miahigan. JUSTIN, FRANK* J.; December 30, 1967; 244 Draper Street; age 79; dear father of Mrs. Eldon Yar-nold, Mrs. Pierce Ryan, Mrs. Gordon Shafto, Mrs. Frank Coluzzi and Edward F. Justin; also survived by seven grandchildren. Recitation of the Rosary will be today, January 2 at 8:30 p.m. at the Soartys - Griffin Funeral Home. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, January 3 at 10 a.m. at St. Vincent de Paul Catholic Church. Interment in Mount Hope Cemetery. Mr. Justin will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9 p.m.) KNIGHT, SHERRY A,; January 1, 1967 ; 203 South Center Street, Highland; age 17; beloved daughter of Lane E. and Ann Knight; beloved granddaughter of Mrs. Agnes Hazen, Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Kowalski; dear sister of Michael and Spec. 4 Wayne L. Knight. Funeral service will be held Thursday, January 4, at 1 p-m-at the Richardson-Bird Funeral -Home, Milford. Interment in Milford Memorial Cemetery. Sherry will lie in slate at the funeral home. MAKI, DAVID GLENN JRT; January 1,1968 ; 39 Thorpe Street; beloved infant son of David and Carol Maki Sr.; beloved infant grandson of Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Sherman and Mr> and Mrs. R a y m o n d Scarborough. Funeral service will be held January 4, at II a.m. at-the Huntoon Funeral Home with Rev. Robert Richardson officiating. Interment in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. McDUFFIE, LORETTE MT, December 30, 1967 ; 4847 Curtis Lane Road, Waterford; age 58; beloved wife of Archie McDuffie; beloved daughter of Mrs. James McNally; d e a r mother of Mrs. Richard Brondyke, Mrs. Luis Galindo and Anne Marie McDuffie; dear sister of Lee H. and George C. McNally; Also Survived by four grandchildren. Recitation of the Rosary will be today, January 2 at 7:30 p.m. at the Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, January 3 at 11 a.m. at Our Lady ' of the Lakes Catholic Church. Interment in Lakevlew Cemetery, Clarkston. Mrs. McDuTRe will lie) in state at the funeral^hcinfe. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9 p.m.) MILLARD, ROBERT E.; January 1, 1968 ; 243 Haux-well Drive, Lake Orion; age 53; beloved husband of Beatrice Millard; dear father of Bruce and Barbara Millard; also survived by mother, stepfather, one sister and two step-siners. Funeral arrangements are pendihg at the Flumerfelt Funeral Home, Oxford, where Mr. Millard wiJL lie in state after 7 p.m! tonight. MITCHELL, DOYLE J.; December 30, 1967; 111 St. John, Highland; age 18; befbved son of Mr. and Mrs. Cari Mitchell; beloved grandson of Me, and Mrs. Joseph Mitchell; dear brothet* of Mrs. Richard Higgins, Vicki, Larry, Ronald and Erwin Mitchell. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, Janu-‘ ary 3 at 12:30 p.m. at the E 1 tti n Black Funeral Death Notices Homel 123* Union Lake Road, Union Lake.. Inter-mem in tttjmnnd Cemetery. Mr. Mttcheu will lie in state at the funeral home. MUSE, ROBERT C.; Jan-uary 1,1968,1022 Bathavis Street, Royal Oak; beloved infant son of Charles i and Marilyn Muse Jr.; , beloved infant grandson of Jake and Helen Smith and Charles and Anne Muse Sr. Funeral service will, be held Thursday, January 5, at 2 p.m. at the Bossardet Funeral Home, Oxford. Interment in North Oxford Cemetery. Robert will lie in state at the funeral heme after 7 p.m. tonight. MYERS, MRS. EjiTELLA; January 1, 1968 ; 473 Dit-mar Street; age 67; dear mother of Mrs. Mable Davis, LaWanda Washington, Theadore Gholson, Helen Waters, Louise Searcy, Buvetta Sandon, Mary, Gladys, Archie Jr.; Paul and Made Myers; also survived by 13 grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Thursday, January 4, at 1 p.m. at the Macedonia Baptist Church with Rev. L. R. Miner officiating. Interment. in Oak Hill Cemetery. Mrs. Myers will lie in state at the Frank Car-rutbers Funeral Home after 7 p.m. Wednesday. SAVAGE, STELLA E.; Jan-uary 1, 1968 ; 7525 Lilac Court, Orchard Lake; age 81; deer mother of Mrs. L. L. Liebfried and Mrs. S, O. Rogers; also survived by one sister and one grandchild. Recitation of the Rosary will be Tuesday at 8 p.m. at the C. J. Godhardt Funeral Home, Keego Hartjor. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, January 3, at 10 a.m. at the Our Lady of Refuge Catholic Church. Interment in Mount Hope Cemetery. Mrs. Savage , will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) 3 SONNENBERG, WILLIAM A.; January 1, 1968; 1478 Rosedale Street; age 79; beloved husbandr of Elsie Sonnenberg; dear father of Mrs. Adeline VanVleck, Mrs. Evelyn Palmer, Edwin L. and William A,, Sonnenberg Jr.; dear brother of Mrs. Alvina Lindow; also survived by three grandchildren and six great-grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Thursday, January 4, at 2 p.m. at the Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. Interment in White Chapel Cemetery. Mr. Sonnenberg will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) STOGNER, ROGER DALE; December 31, 1967 ; 3536 Jackson Boulevard, Highland, Michigan; age 18; beloved son of Thelrfler A. and Mildred Stogner; dear brother of Mrs. Norma Huffman and Robert Stogner. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, January 3 at 2:30 p.m. at the Huntoon Funeral Home. Interment in Perry Mt. Park Cemetery. Mr. Stogner will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9 p.m.) STULL, VIRGINIA RUTH; December 31, 1967 ; 303 Whippoorwill, Union Lake; age 48; beloved wife of, Louis Stull; dear sister of Mrs. Nannie Payne, Mrs. Raymond Ledbetter, Mrs. Margrette Partian, William and Charles Hall. Funeral service will be held today, January 2, at 1 p.m. at the Richard-son-Bird Funeral Home, Walled Lake. Interment in Sunset Hill Cemetery, Harrisburg, Illinois. She will be taken to Harrisburg, Illinois immediately following service for another service and burial Thursday afternoon from the Gaskin’s Funeral Home, Harrisburg. ZANDER, OTTO (DUTCH)'; January 1, 1968 ; 956 Mat-lock, White Lake Township (formerly of Pontiac); age 72. Dear uncle . of William', Edward, Victor Winkler and Mrs. David Johnson. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, January 3, at 2:30 p.m. at the Donelson - Johns Funeral Home/ Interment in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mr. Zander will lie, in state at the funeral home after 7 p.m. tonight. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) / Dial 334-4981 or 332-8181 Pontiac Proto Want Ad* FOR FAST ACTION NOTICt TO ADVIRTISIt* ADS •ICIIVIO IV S AM. Will It PU8USH8D TMI FOLLOWING OAY. All error* ihould bo mportod immodiotoly, or no lofor than th# day lellooMnf publication If no notification of *ucn arror it mad* by thot tune, it will be at turned the ad i« correct. The Pro** a*«umo* .tie re-tpom.ibility for error* Other than to el thi chorgo* for thot portion cancel the, charge* ter thot port of lh« first insertion of the advert) merit which ha» been rendered volue-lott through the error. ' The doodline for cancellation of fronalent Want Ad* i* 9 am. Iho, day of publication after th# first insertion. When cancellation* are made be Cure to got your "KILL NUM BIN/* No adjuifmont* will be given, without it. Clesidji time far oduartisament* containing type size* larger than regular agate typo is IT o'clock neon the day prevysu* la publication. CASH WANT AO «ATIS (whan cash accompanies order) Imns 1 1-Day 3-Day* 6-Dayi 2 - $2 00 8246 $3 84 3 200 3.60 5 58 4 244 468 6.96 S 305 540 840 6 366 Mf 10*08 7 4.27 7 56 n 76. S 4 81 • 64 13 44. 9 549 9.72 15.12- 10 i 6 10 1080 16.80 ' An additional hargn of SO cants will bn mod* far u»o of Pontiac Pros* Box numbers. The Pontiac Press FROM I A M. TO 5 A M. Announcements THE PQNT1AC PRESS. TUESDAY, JANUARY 2, 1968 31 Help Wanted Male A | Help Wanted Male LOSE ■ WEIGHT SAFELY WITH Only M unit it Simms Broe. prugi. BOX repues | ■? At in a.m. today there \ | were replies at The Press ,j Office to the following j boxes: ! | C-13, C-15, C-36, C-39, T C-45, C-59. ) Funeral Directors COATS D«AYTONFftUASL H0ME DON EL SON-JOHNS Funeral Home 'Designed for Fung nit** Hiintoon FUNERAL HOME . Serving Pontiac lor 50 year* TV Oakland Av«. » pe 2 0189 C. J. GOOHARDT FUNERAL HOMl Keeqo Harbor. Ph. 483-MOO SPARKS-GRIFFIN ALUMINUM SIOERS, S T R A 0 Y FACTORY WORKERS. LOCAL Help Wanted Rein yaar around work, experienced and wood product* plant It looking for with odulpmant, good wage*, and I mature, dependable workers. Good ■benefits, Gala Whlfterd Rooting arid pay. Libaral benefits, steady year Siding, 437-2468. ASSISTANT CONTROLLER, EXP-able.ot administrating and super-vising an offlca In a Tool and Ola Operations. Northtaitarn Tool GAS STATION ATTENDANT, Ola Corp., 35411 Ryan Road, Warrtn Michigan, 539-0500. ATTRACTIVE SERVICE AND sale* opportunity. Salary, bonu*, commissions. No onporlanco necessary, will train. 474-M73. AUTOMATIC SCREW MACHINE OPERATORS Excellent opportunity with Troy manufacturer. Some prtvlou* ling It spindle experience preferred. Steiady year round, work With overtime and benefits,- Phone 549-7432. AUTO MECHANIC TUNE-UP MAN SI 50 weak guarantee, full benefit* and retirement. Contact Mr. Giuliani. Ml 4-1930, Automobile Parts Assistant Voorhees-Siple Cemetery Lots 4-A Experienced Lincoln, Mtrcury, Ford preferred by faff moving dealership. Excellent position and future opportunities. Pleas* apply to Parts Manager Only. round work. Soma experience with wood or snood products desired but will consider anyone with sincere deslre lo work. *53-3100. chanics, wrecker driven, over 31. Local references, experienced only need to apply, S a.m, to 4 p.m. daily except Sunday's. Shall its-lion, Woodward and 'Lons Lake Rd„ Bloomfield Hills, GAS STATION ATTENDANTsT»RE-far exparlanctd man but* Will train. Pull or part twite. Days only. Sun- oco. Telegraph at Maple Rda. GAS STATION ATTENpANVrnK?- oerlenced, mechanically Inclined, local rat*., full or part time, Gulf, Telegraph and Maple. GENERAL CAR PO R T E R FOR auto doplarahlp. Must have driver's I leans*. Contact Mr. Reynolds .In person. Oakland Chrysler-Ply-mouth. 734 Oakland. Pontiac. GUARD For Utica, Mt. Clemens and De- troit ares. Top Unton seals Paid Blue Cress, V/ Vacation and holiday benefits. Call us collect. Bonded Guard (orvlcts — 441 E. Grand » Blvd., DETROIT LO 8-4158. Helper to work in shipping and receiving. Towna & Country Furniture, Bloomfield Hills. 442-8833. In Memoriam AT WHITE CHAPEL Moving to Fla. Choice graves $95 ea. These Graves are privately owned Ml 2*3534 HILLSIDE LINCOLN MERCURY 1250 Oakland 3 Personals .IN LOVING MEMORY OF. LEON-ard Gerald Gracey who passed away November 8, 1957. You left this world of sorrow, And era free from pain and " harm, And now rest fn peace and comfort In the blessed Savior's arms. Sadly missed by his parents, brothers and sisters. BROILER MAN, DAYS, MUST BE an! dependable. Apply In person, closed 9-B—Sum—and—holidays. Bedell's Res- ANY GIRL70R WOMAN NEEDING a friendly adviser, phone FE 2-5122 before 5 p.m. confidential AVOID GARNISHMENTS! GET OjJT OF 06BTI , We can help you with Ian you can afford, a plan you can afford. DEBT CONSULTANTS Announcements DEBT AID, INC., 71* RIKER BLDG PE 2-01*1, Rotor to Credit Ad-visors. 16-A HALL FOR RENT. RECEPTIONS, lodge*, church. OR 3-5202, FE 2 3838. ____________________ VILLAGE LIVERY Horse drawn Hay and Sleigh rides along scenic taka Trails, open all year, 3200 acres, private club-room, picnic facilities. Relive yesteryear at Kettlngton Antique Village. 2378 Joslyn Rd. 391-1370 OF PONTIAC. INC. 114 Pontiac Stale Bank Bldg. FE *0333 «T*T6 LICENSED-BONDED Open Saturday 9-13 a.m. GET OUT OP DEBT ON A PLANNED BUDGET PROGRAM YOU CAN AFFORD TAILORED TO YOUR INCOME SEE MICHIGAN CREDIT.COUNSELORS 702 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. PE 8-0454 BORING MILL HYDROTEL Night shift. Top rates. Steady employment. Journeymen only. LIBERTY TOOL & ENGINEERING CORP. 2250 W. Maple Rd. Walled Lake HOLD IT! ON AND AFTER THIS DATE, j» January 2, 1968, I will not be responsible for any debts Contracted by any other than myself. Janies D. Cottrill, 731 St. Clair St., Pbn-tiac,__MichL__ PLAN NOW FOR DELIGHTFUL old fashioned sleigh ride. Ideal outing for your club or group. Oc BOY 16, DRUG CLERK AND GEN-eral store works Russ's Country Drugs, 4500 Elizabeth Lie. Rd-CAB DRIVERS, FULL OR PART time, FE 2-0305. ____________ CALL 5 TO 7 P.M. Part time help. 21 to 3$. 682-6203. IMMEDIATE OPENINGS FOR REM-RAND TAB OPERATORS Pleasant Surroundings Friendly Co-Workers Interesting Jeb Good Pay and Banatits VICKERS DIVISION OF V SPERRY-RAND CORP. 576-3415 An squsl opportunity Employer PART TIME On* man, married, Over 21,' 150 per week. 391-3334 between 12 end 4 p.m. ,___________ PHARMACIST REGISTERED Needed Immediately for expending Pharmacy Department In Modern Progressiva 40* bad hospital. Help Wantsd Fsmalt _, 7j DRUG AND COSMETIC CLERK/ full or part fim*. Russ' Country Drugs, 4500 BliuMttt Lake Rd. DRUG CLERK, 6v#t if, NIGHTS' Htlp Wantsd Fsmals good P*y, Lake Center Drug, 3317 Orchard Lake Road, iwphone oils. DRY CLEANER Salary rang*, *10^0*112,000' *n _________ . .... nually. Shift differential ter after- EXECUTIVE SECRETARY F O R No axparlanc* nacassary, will train. Paid vacation, Mid holidays, good working conditions. Janet Davis Dry CNMmars. 447-3009. larga concern, unlimited opportunity for right gel, *475, caM *T?oVr*J “hir OuStendl'ng: frlrtft Bfhffltf. Stnd Resume to! —•■*1f^-Porwlec Pr«i Box Number C-18. RXPBRI6NCRD CLEANING LADY, PORTlR~-'ix»iBiWeiD, NEED-i °wn transportation, ear .ellowsnee ed et once, with good drivers li- ar ee, $1,50*12. Coll Public Rsltions Trainee $6000 21-3S, H.S.G., Ideal training program tor ambitious man, Mr. Fry, 851-1050. » INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL . 5723 W. Mspls Rd. Orchard Lake REAL ESTATE SALESMEN WITH proven sales ability In real estate, automobiles, insurance or other lines. Ample floor time and brokers assistance. KINZLER REAL-TY, 5219 Dixie Hwy. 42*0335. RlAL ESTATE SALESMEN full time openings are available. Experience preferred. Generous Pull time waitress, eve nlngs, Rocco's 5171 01x1* Hwy. Drayton Plains. '_________» FIRST BAKER Pull llms position available hospital dietary dept. Must heve solid beckground In beklng procedures. We offer en exc. selery Reply Pontlec Press Bex i PULL OR PART TIME For women who *r* Interested in having s good steady Income. Experience unnecessary, Avon sells Itself. Call PE 4-0439 or write P.O. Box 91, Drayton Plains. PULL TIME CLEANING, DAYS. Rocco's, .5171 Dlxlo Hwy., Drayton Plains PART TIME CLERICAL HELP. Nlgnts and weekends. Good typist. Experienced necessary, Must be reliable. Call 42WM. P,unch Press Operators wantsd Hafap Wanted M. or F. Initructioni-SeHooI* medical technologist. ascp may be eligible or eqylvalent. Pull time, permanent petition. Excel- lent' starting eatery, regular Increases. Generous bonetlf* taebo- ing, retirement plan. Cpnteet fir/ sonnei Director, Saginaw aimiral riflll'-' ' Harrison' Hospital, 144r N. new, Michigan. Prater a familiarization with pro- NEW CLASSlFSTARflNO-LEARN gresslve punch press operation. Rear Estate now. For Information Day and night shift. Apply bs I Employers . Temporary Sorvica 45 S. Main, Clawson rEgisterES 6ENTAL HVoifiN-Ist. Full timt position ter dt-pandsbl* person with Slncoro interest In dentistry. Cell 343-4410 ter Interview appointment. ■ iI3ljrfETE6NUlSfS FOR DAY end P.M. shifts, In private psychiatric hospital. Up to SS.400. Kings wood Hospital, 10300 W. I Mil*, 394-3200, call 343-7700. OPENINGS FOR CASHISd'i, ers and coheeisun help, USH I ... —WW—i |mk Miracle Mil* Prlya-ln. OPENINGS, ushErs, CiASHIERS concession halo. Apply attar 4 p.m. Pontiac Drtva-ln Theater, 243* Dlx la Hwy. RN . Supervisors and ' LPN Real Estate Salesmen Sail real estate el the Mall. On* of the hottest locations In Oakland Co, Lots of leads — lots oi ' contacts — lots of business. Will train. Call Von Raalty, 4*2-3*00. ROOFERS WANTED, NEW ANb RE-cover, steady work year around. Gale Whltford Roofing and Siding, 437-2446. „______'_________ SALESMEN HELP! INDUSTRIAL-COMMERCIAL SALES manager. Experience In Industrial and-or commercial real estate. Sales and leasing necessary. Well established company I* expanding and otters excel tent opportunity for self starter who can direct and manage. Sand resume or call ter interview to tho Thompson-Brown Co. 32S3 W. 12 Mile Rd. 474-1700. Ask for Mrs. Goodspeed. INSPECTOR, EXPERIENCED IN tubbing layout. 2240 Scott Lk. Rd. JANITORIAL HELP NEEDED AT once, apply 50 wl:Square Bloomfield Hills. 338-0345. CARPENTERS - ROUGH, FOR, custom homes, over time, 8 hour day, 2-year protect, 646-4431, eve-riings, 682-6003 or 356-8275. caslons f... kind,”' L'SET £b CH,E_F__PHARMAC^T. .IMMEDIATE room and dining areas. Daytime no or evening parties for group! . spot is of 20 or more. Just the spot your holiday party. Call for reservations, 626-1611. UPLAND HILLS FARM DEBT AID. INC.. 711 RIKER BLDG. FE 2-0181, Refer to Credit Advisors. 1*-A ________ ON AND AFTER THIS DATE, JAN-uary 2, 1948, I will not be re-, sponsible ter any debts contracted by any other then my*elf- Phillip C. Brockman, 3424 Silver Sands. Drayton Plains, Michigan. VIRGINIA: YOU MUST REtURN and remortgage home today or I have to daclare bankruptcy and file divorce. WEDDING PHOTOGRAPHY B Y Professional color. For free bro-, cure call 338-9079, anytime. opening in 300 bed acute general hospital. Salary to be negotiated. Assured Increases, generous fringe benefits Including retirement program. Contact assistant adminis- trator, Saginaw General Hospital, 1447 N. Harrison. Saginaw, Michigan. 48402. Phona 517-753-3411 ext. CAR WASH - DRYERS — 149 W. Huron - apply 8:30 to 9 a.m. CLERK, COLLEGE MAN, DAYS OR nights, part or full tlma, must be neat. Hunter Maple Pharmacy, 45S E. Maple, Birmingham.____________ COLLEGE GRADUATES $7200 UP. Management positions In all fields INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 1080 W. Huron, Pontlec 334M971 Lost and Found OTHER FOLKS DO... Other folks make money from Pontiac Press WANT ADS If you haven't ... try one. Hundreds of others do . . . daily I It pays ... A. REWARD for fritz small shaggy gray dog, lost from the White Lake area Dec. 24. Call 887-4025 or 335-4111 ext. 2567. FOUND: FEMALE BEAGLE, cinity of Pine Knob and 1-75. 674-1398. LIBERAL REWARD FOR LOST fawn and white boxer missing since Dec. 23, Middlebelf-Long Lk. Rd. Area. Answers to name of boots. Call 338-3645. COUNSELOR. IF YOU ENJOY working with people and have sales ability, there is no limit to your potential in this field. Call Angie Rook, 3344471. Snelling 8. Snell Ing. DESIGNERS AND DETAILER5 FOR fixtures and machine tools. Super _lor Design Co., 1771 Pontiac Trai near Decker Rd., Walled Lake- 624-0300.________ *____________ DISHWASHER AND BUl BOY, night shift only, good wages plus ____ >.iiy, ______________. all benefits. Elias Bros. Big Boy, Telegraph and Huron. LOST DEC. 27: TOY POODLE, apricot — biege color. Male. "Pepi". 15 Ml. 8s De^uindre. Reward. 689-9538 LIVER AND male Birittany, vicinity of Indian WHITE pE- Village. Childrens pet. PE 2-5301, after 3:30 ft LOST; BLACK. BROWN AND TAN Basset. Vicinity of Watkins Lake. REWARD. Call 674-2790. Electronics Trainee $5000 H.S.G., electrical or mechanical background, with soma exp. Mrs. Smith, 851-1050. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 5722 W. Maple Rd. Orchard Lake ENGINEER. AREO SPACE RE' search, man with creative ability «..ll kanadtc MIA. 'rail Mf»lpr full benefits, $12,000. 'call Helen Adams. 334-2471, Snelling 8, Snell- Child's pat. 343-7220. LOST WHITE MALTESE POODLE, with black ears, answers to Charley, reward. FE 4-S174. _ LOST — BLACK AND TAN TJj-Q rler, named’Chris, wearing choke collar, near Commerce and Greer Lake Roads. Reward. 343-7897. LABRADOR LOST BLACK LABRADOR RE-triever, 2 years old, answers to name Royal, Vic., of Union Lake, reward, 363-5395. LOST:'BLACK ANb TAN-GERMAN Shepherd, male, red collar, Waterford dog tag. Believed to be In vicinity of Square Lake or'Sylvan Lake. FE 8-3473. ENGINEERS $8,000-$15,000 POSITIONS IN ALL FIELDS INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 1080 W. Huron; Pontl*c 334-4971 JOURNEYMEN—AUTO MECHANICS APPIY Pontiac Motor Di v. Employment Office penses. Mrs. Plland. INTERNATIONAL, PERSONNEL 1880 S. Woodward B'ham. 442-8248 SERVICE STATION MECHANIC AT tendant. Experienced. Opportunity to learn auto glass business. With future partnership potential. Drayton Pis. area. After 4 p.m., 474-2593. SHOE SALESMAN Full time, salary plus commission, Blue Cross paid. Backer Shoes, - ntlac Mall. 482-0511. Bontl IfRVii SERVICE STATION ATTENDANT, starting pay $120 weekly, expert enced, part time. Si .85 hourly, ilng shifts, available, Howards South Shell, Long morning and evenln able, Howards Soul Lake and Telegraph, GAL FRIDAY, TYPE, FILE, AND answer phones In this busy office. 8280. call Donna Allen, 334-2471, Snelling 5 Snelling.__________• GENERAL OFFICE $325 - $525 jy Racetplonlsts, typists, accounting clerks, many varied positions. Many fa* paid. Mrs. Tanner. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 1880 S. Woodward. B'ham 442-8248 GENERAL DRUG CLERK, PRE-ter experienced reliable, mature woman, would consldar training applicant with .good references. Union Lake Drug. 8090 Cooley Lake Rd., Union Lk., Mich. 343-4134. , GIRLS DAY OR NIGHTS. EXCEL- need you 'MosMeiTpate' car! *xll®ll Sr. and Jr., also tab operators INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 1080 W. Huron, Pontlsc 334-4971 A PART-TIME JOB A married man, 21-34, to work 4 hours por evening. Call 474-0520, 4 p.m. to 8 p.m. tonight. $200 PER MONTH ACCOUNTANTS $6,000414,000 Jr. and Sr., aga 21-45, gan. or cost, 2-4 yrt. cortege exp. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 1010 W, Huron, Pontlec 334-4971 AMBITIOUS YOUNG MAN TO train tor management. Pae paid 15.500. Call (taw King*. 334.2471 Snelling 8. Snelling. ANALYST DETAILERS Special marine equipment. Paid Blua Cross, vacation, holiday* and in- surance, JERED INDUSTRIES, INC. l29f*Axtel Rd.. Birmingham Ask tor Mr. Chlanall Ml M200 An equal opportunity,employer car salesman, required immediately for new car dealership, free demp, benefits, guarantee! Top pay plan, bonus, good traffic, no phono calls, apply in person to Oakland, 724 EXPERIENCED > MOPAR— PARTS counter man, top wages and bene fits. Call or see Mr. Estes. Oak-land-Plymouth. 724 Oakland. Pon tlac. Phone 335-9434. ._______■ I__________ REAL ESTATE salesman needed for Immediate opening Inquire Warren Stout, realtor, 1450 N. Opdyke Rd., Pontiac. FE 5-0145 ter Interview. EXPERIENCED GAS AND OIL burner serviceman, $4.50 per hour, time n for overtime, O'Brian Heating, FE 2-3919. EXPERIENCED MECHANIC NEED-ed ter GM Dealership. Please apply ' In person to Mr. Ernst et Homer Hlght Motors Inc. Oxford, Michigan._____,. ■ 1 EXPERIENCED AUTO SALESMAN to sell Chevrolet. Bulck and Pon-tlacs. All fringe benefits. Apply to Everett Ernst, Homer Hlght, Motors Inc., Oxford, Mich. (Apply In Person Only). Factory, Workers By day or week: Warehousemen; assemblers; machine operators; material handlers; common laborers; etc. Dally pty. Report any tjm* after 4 a.m. Employers Temporary Service Clawson 65 S. Main Radford 26117 Grand River FISHER BODY DIVISION Livonia Plant IMMEDIATE, OPENINGS IN THE FOLLOWING JOURNEYMEN CLASSIFICATIONS: PAINTER-GLAZIER ELECTRICIAN APPLY: 1:00 a.m. to 4:00 P.m. MONDAY Through FRIDAY 28400 Plymouth Rood Livonia, Michigan Maintenance Mechanic Requires City of Detroit and Suburban First Class Refrigerator Operator's License. 40-hour week, overtime beyond 40 hours. Enjoy benefits such as purchase discounts, Life Insurance, hospitalization, retirement plan, paid holidays; arid liberal vacation plan. Apply In Person EMPLOYMENT OFFICE tjasemeni Hudson's PONTIAC MALL MARKETING TRAINEE $6600 car, no fee. 2)30. some college preferred. National Growth Corp., Mr. Fry, SSI-IOSO. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 5722 W. Maple Rdt. Orchard Take MECHANIC. CHRYSLER l&XPERI ence, full or part time. Ask for Wally or Al, Birmlngham-Chrysltr 447-3211 ■ ________________■ National Corporation NEEDS MEN 3 DEPARTMENTS OPEN Man accepted will be trained (or a career position. Must be neat appearing and abls to converse Intelligently with willingness to vyqrk. Opportunity for rapid advance- ment. Above average starting pay. Transportation furnished. NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY. MUST BE ABLE TO START WORK IMMEDIATELY. Call Mr. Fox 9 a.m. tb 2:30 p.m-> 33B0359. UP MAN NEW CAR CLEAN UP MAN NEED-*d at once to work our GM Dealership, drivers license, apply In person to Mr. Ernst, eates manager, Homer Hlght Motors Inc. Ox-ford, Michigan. NIGHT COOK WANTED, 10 TILL 4. 425-5370. ONE MAN 21 AND OVER, $200 PER month. 474-0791 bttwton 5 and 8 p.m.' OPPORTUNITY PLUS The Clark Oil and Ret. Corpora tlon has available at 944 Oakland Ave„ Pontiac a service station Dealer Franchise. We speclellie In gesollne sales only, we otter $6,000 per year to start. Excellent opportunity for advancement, Hos-pltlllzatlon, Lite jnd Retirement Program available?* Ages 21 to 60. Por additional Inrarmaflon and In-ttrvltw call LI *-7222 or FE 2-2017 attar 4 p.m OPPORTUNITY MANAGER WANTED •jt incom® tux •vrvicv* winn n locale a parson capabla of hand-ling a volume income tax tarvlca In Pontiac. Excellent opportunity tor right parson. W* train you. For detals write M, and R-Block, P. O. Box HI, Flint, Mich. 41501 or call Mr. Edwtrdii. 747-3540,.Flint. ____________ ■ PORTER Used car department. Must hav* valid driver’s license, many bane-tils, top pay, steady employment. See DON WILSON. SUBURBAN OLDS, 435 S. Woodward, Ml 7-5111. YOUNG MEN Pleasant Outdoor Work PONTIAC AREA EVES. 2*10 P.M. . „ WITT'SERVICES, INC. corner Walton «nd m j Adaml p|au< Rm. B'ham. TYPING ANt) CLERICAL, MONDAY thru Frl., 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Apply et 49045 Pontiac Trail, Wlxom City Hall. LADY FOR PRESSING IN QUAL-Ity dry cleaners. Paid holidays, vacation, and other fringe benefits. Top pay. Exp. preferred — but will train. Apply to Ono Hour Martlnizlng. 339? Elizabeth Lake Rd., Waterford of call 482-8910, ask tor Mr. Book. WAITRESS, EXPERIENCE, AFTER- LADY OVER 35 Help Wanted Ftmale For personnel work Steady work’hlstory Work in e pleasant office CALL MR. FRANCIS _ INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL / 1080 W. Huron, Pontlec 334-4971 $6D-$80 GENERAL OFFICE—TYPIST ' Age 21 UP. Muet type .60 WPM INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 1080 W. Huron, Pontiac 334-4971 $80-$10D-$120 BOOKKEEPERS-SECRETARIES INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 1000 W. Huron, Pontiac 334-4971 ! SUNNY SMILE, PLEASANT voice will answer this call, $240 call Wanda May, 334-2471, Snelllqg 8. Snelling.__________________________ A TELEPHONE GIRL $1.75 per hour to start plus bonuses and chance ter advancement ter experienced telephone solicitor. Call Mrs. Petty 674-2231 9 a.m.-5 p.m. ACCURACY IN DETAIL FOR YOU. Careful typist for medical forms. $325. call Donna Allan, 334-2491, Snelling & Snelling. VAR IE ALERT SECRETARY, here. No shorthand needed. No Saturdays. $347, Call Donna Allen, 334-2471, Snelling 8. Snelling. ASSISTANT BOOKKEEPER, FULL time employment. < apply it Grin-nell's Pontiac Mall ATTENTION Job openings in the following departments 1. Kitchen > ' 2. Laundry 3. Housekeeping __ 4. Nurses Aide* with experience Apply at 50 W. Square Lake Rd. Bloomfield Hilts 338-0345.____ BABY PHOTOGRAPHERS We need high school graduates to . train as baby photographers for our department store studio In Pon-■ tlac. No previous experience necessary. Salary While In training. Minimum age 18. Great opportunity tor advancement. Cell Detroit Collect. 272-4343. BABY SITTER NEEDED, ( TO 5:30 5 day wk. for 3 small children. In our hom*> Clarkston area. Older person preferred, must heve own Iran*.; 623-4360. Attar 6 p.m. BABY SITTER TO LIVE IN, 50 TO 60 years old, FE 5-4947. BABYSITTiR, 1 CHILD, 2 MOS. old, near Baldwin and Walton. 9 to 5 p.m. 5 day wk. FE 5-2520 BABY SITTER, IN MY HOME, 7:30 a.m. to 5 p.m., 5 days, Lotus Lake area. Call after 6 p 7170. BABY SITTER, 2 GIRLS, 4 AND 6, live in, own room. Dependable, $20. FE 8-3393. before 1 p.m BABY SlftfeR TO LIVE-IN, LIGH+ housework, 5 daye. 332-7618- BABY SITTER TO START IMMfebl ately. Live In, Birmingham area 2 children. 642-9249. BABY SITTER, 5 DAYS, LIVE IN or out. 682-4475 BAKERY SALESWOMAN, FULL time, no evenlhgs or Sunday*, good pay, Anderson Bakery, 124 W$ 14 Mile, Birmingham, Ml 4-7114. BAR AAAID, FAMILY BAR. pAYS over 35, steady, ret. FE 5-3472._ BTaUtTCIAN, RECENT GRAD uate, excellent opportunity, salary, commission, hospitalization other benefits. High volumn salon. Bernard Heir Stylists — Bloomfield, Miss Brycs - Ml 7-3033. Blrmlng * lit.. D.t AAl ham, Ml** Pat — Ml 6-8383 BEAUTIFUL SURROUNDINGS, personality and smile wins this pleasant spot, $260, call Fran Fox 334-2471, Snelling A Snelling CASHIER-TYPISt, WITH el office experience. Pull time or >art time. Apply Osmuqs. SI N part tlmi Saginaw. CHRISTIAN WOMAN FOR .SALES opportunity. Profit sharing H2-413I COOK, LPN NURSES AID, FULL or part time, UL 2-2730. COUNSEL6R. IF YOU ENJOY working with people and hdv* sates ability, titer* is no limit to your potential In this field. Call Angle Rook, 334-2471. Snollino & Snelling. COCKTAIL WAITRESS. , NIGHTS, Holiday inn, Pontiac, iboi s. Tela graph, Se* Mr. Bronson DO YOU LIKE PEOPLE? NEW office needs bright girl. Good location, $275 call Pat Cary, 334-2471, Snelling 8, Snelling. 60C TOR NEEDS RECEPTiSNIST, 282. call Pal Cary, 334-3 Ing 8i Snelling. LPN NAME YOUR PRICE For toil or parMlm* work. Afternoon .and midnight shifts. Union Lake area. EM 3-4)21.__ MAIDS WITHERS- MANICURISTS. EXCELLENT OP portunity, salary, commission, high volumn salon. Barnard Hair Stylists — Bloomfield. Miss Bryce. Ml 7-3033, Birmingham, Miss Pat Ml a-8383. Manager ASSISTANT MANAGER Manager and assistant manager for our new (Marianne Fashion Shop) in the new (Pontiac Fashion Mdll). Ex. cellent salary plus company benefits at no cost to you. Apply to Miss Stebbins for interview. 682-4914. MATURE RELIABLE GAL WILL shin* In this receptionist spot, flexible hours, $240, cell Fran Fox, 334-2471, Snelling 8. Snelling. MATURE GAL. WOULD YOU LIKE to help the sick, hires the job tor you, $220, call Wanda May, 334-2471, Snelling 8. Snelling. MEDICAL OFFICE BACKGROUND needed here, enthusiasm Is the password. $280, call Wanda May. 334-2471, Snelling 8. Snelling, MEDICAL SECRETARY, prestige firm. Typing and spelling Important here, $400, call Fran Pox, 334-2471, Snelling 8, Snelling MIDDLE-AGED WOMAN TO DC housework and llva In, good wages, 335-7588. NEAT, INTELLIGENT GIRL FOR bookkeeping. Put your skills to work. $260 call Pat Cary, 334-2471 Shelling 8. Snelling, NURSES AIDES All shifts. Good working conditions Experienced end Inexperienced. Apply In person Tuesday and Wednesday from 9;30 to i! a.m. Seminole Hills Nursing Home, 532 Orchard Lake Avenue, Pontiac OFFICE GIRL WITH INSURANCE experience In fire, and abto policy writing and rating. Call Nina Mar tin, 451-7272, __________ ORDER DEPARTMENT Downtown Pontiac office. Young lady to start Immediately. No -experience necessary. Starting salary $65 ppr wk. For appointment call Mr. Ternpla. 332-8878.____ PHARMACIST REGISTERED Needed Immediately for expand Ing Pharmacy Department In Modern Progressive 400 bed hospital, Salary range, SI0,000-$12,000 annually. Shift differential tor after-non and night duty, 50c par hour! Weekend differential S2.50 on Saturday and S2.50 on Sunday for any a hour shift. 'Outstanding fringe benefits. Ssnd Resume to Pontiac Press Box Number C-Ta Payroll Clerk Personnel Clerk Women with gensral offlca Payroll or personnal axpaNance. Must ba detail minded, and have an aptl tuda for flaures. The personnel position requires good typing sk“ Apply Personnel Dept. 2nd floor Pontiae Maty ; Montgomery Ward An Equal Opportunity Employer WAITRESS-BAR MAID. NEAT. 9-5009, Gey 90's bar. 3801 N. Woodward, RoyalOak.___________ WAITRESSES CURB GIRLS TELE-TRAY OPERATOR Day a> night shift, excellent earnings, profit sharing, free hospitalization, apply in person. Big Boy, 20 I. Telegraph, Pontiac; 334-4503 WAITRESS WANTED. JOE'S CON ay Island, 1651 S. Telegraph. 338 8020. WAITRESS WANTED. NO SUNDAYS no holidays, Inquire 444-4420. WAITRESSES, DAY WORK ONLY, no Sundays or Holidays, Birmingham. 444-4333. WANTED MOTHERS HELPER TO live In and cart tor 1 child Ref., 624-0003. ________________ WE NEED STENOGRAPHE-RS SECR ETARI BS—TYPI STS Profitable temporary Assignments, available now Call MANPOWER 332 *384 _ WOMAN TO HOSTESS AND SUPEft-vise dining room, wa naed a mature woman who has tha abirty to suparvlss, good wages plus b*ne-' fits. Big Boy Restaurant, Telegraph and Huron Strait, Inter view, 1-4 pjn,_____'_____■ WOMAN FAMILIAR WITH SHEET music, records and musical instruments,. full time. Apply at Grin-nail's Pontlsc Mall. WOMAN FOR COUNTER CLERK, hours 2 to 6 p.m. Apply Pontiac Laundry and Dry Cleaners, 540’S Telegraph. FURNITURE EXPERIENCE _ qulred, full tlma, any adt, good conditions and pay. Bloomfield area. House of Bedrooms, Mr. Goldman. 334-4593. REAL ESTATE SALESMEN Bon Real Estate needs 3 more salesmen ter tha Utica office. Experience not nacassary — wilt train. Hospitalization and up tc *150 par watk to start. Call Mr, Campbell. 731-1010, SALES TRAINEES AGE 18-25 * High echooi graduate. Neat appearing. Who would like to progress to learning operation of local business. Experience not nacassary. SALARY DISCUSSED AT INTERVIEW Call Mr. Pafford 9 a.m.-2 p.m. FE 8-0159 Instructions-Schools 10 ATTENTION AUTO MECHANICS DAY-NIGHT CLASSES STARTING JANUARY 22 ENROLL NOW-START TRAINING Auto Body Collision Acety-Arc Welding WOLVERINE SCHOOL MICHIGAN'S OLDEST TRADE SCHOOL APPROVED UNDER Gt BILL 1408 West Fort WO 3-0892 REGISTER NOW Day and evening classes Federal & State IncomeTax Course Licensed by Mich. State Board of Education MICHIGAN SCHOOL OF BUSINESS It E. HURON 332-5898 HUDSON'S HOME IMPROVEMENT CENTER SIDING ROOFING HEATING & COOLING BATH MODERNIZATION KITCHEN MODERNIZATION WATER HEATERS and many other home Improvements. Convenient credit term*; no charge ter estimates. All work according to dty codas. 8*2-3232; extension 342 qr 341 Hudson's PONTIAC MALL Credit Advisors 16-A GET OUT OF DEBT AVOID GARNISHMENTS, REPOSSESSIONS, BAD CREDIT. HA-RASSMENT,' BANKRUPTCY AND LOSS DP JOB. W* have helped thousand* of people with creditor problems by providing a planned managed, organized program. LET US CONSOLIDATE YOOR DEBTS WITH ONE LOW PAYMENT YOU CAN AFFORD. NO limit M Ip amount owed and number «I creditors. Per those who realize, "YOU CAN'T BORROW YOURSELF OUT OP DEBT . LICENSED AND BONDED Horn* Appointment Gladly .Arranged No Coat or Obligation ter Interview* HOURS 9-7 P.M.—SAT. 9-5 P-ltL DEBT AID 71* Rlkar Bldg._______PE 2-81*1 Convalescent-Nursing 21 OAK HILL REST HOME, PRIVATE, Exc. care. 527-345*. _____________ Moving and Tracking 22 LOCKWOOD MOVING COMPANY -wa will mbv* or store your fumt- Painting and Decorating 23 .,, PAINTING, PAPERING Tuppor. OR 3-7041 PAINTING AND P A P E R I NO. You're next. Oryol Gldcumb, 473-0414. _________. r£- PAINTING AND GENERAL pair. Lktensod. 425-2101- Upholstering 24-A AGED FURNITURE Roupholstarod, bettor than now at holt tho prlco. Big saving* ate* on carpal and droporl**. call 335-1700 tor FREE animate In your homo. . . Transportation 25 CAR AND FUEL FURNISHED TO drlvar to Florida about Jan. II. Rot. Coll ovos. 482-0434, RIDER Florida. 4901. Help Wanted M. or F. 8 Help Wonted M. or F. 8 ALL RESTAURANT HELP, PART and full time experienced help wonted. Good working conditions, good pay, apply'In person botwean 3 and 6. Great Dana Restaurant, 31644 Northwestern Hwy. and Mld-diebeit. ' BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED All RH Positive All RH Neg. with positive factors A-neg., B-nsg., AB-nog. O-neg $7.50 87,50 iio 112 MICHIGAN COMMUNITY BLOOD CENTER In Pontloe _ FE 4-9947 1342 wide Track Dr., W. Mon. thru Frl., 9 ».m.-4 p.m. wed. 1 p.m.-7 p.m. BUS DRIVER. PRIVATE SCHOOL. Bloomfield Hills, highest wags In state. Call Ml 7-0097,____________ CURTAIN AND DRAPERY SALES, top salary, downtown Birmingham. Irving Kay's Draparloa. 044-5280. EVER CONSIDER A CAREER IN REAL ESTATE We hsvs' recently expanded our office facilities and now have room for several more qualified people Interested In high Income. estate end are contemplating change or possibly hav* never told before, you could quality ter our next training class starting soon. Wo otter a lino building program, an excelltnt bonus and profit sharing plan, plus a liberal commission schedule, In addition to ample flpor and model tlma. FOR A CONFIDENTIAL INTERVIEW CALL DICK BRYAN FE 4-0921 AT KAMPSEN REALTY & BUILDING COMPANY 1071 W. Huron St. Pontiac EXPERIENCED C06k! DoLliA'3 Bar and Restaurant. Rochester. 651-3*04. FULL AND PART TIME, NO '|X perlence needed, age 1* to 50. 12 on hr. Call 33ipiS92. WANTED, LIMOUSINE DRIVERS must ba 2S or over, con pc 2-9148._______ .__________________ MAN DRAWING P.I.6.A. TO W6RK In parking lot. 332-84(0. LAST CHANCE 1! To Enroll in Our 1968 Training Course CAREER OPPORTUNITY IN REAL ESTATE ’ BATEMAN REALTY CO. ANNOUNCES THE OPENING OF ITS 1968 ... "TRAINING COURSE FOR THE BEGINNING REAL ESTATE SALESMAN." Fundamental Salesmanship Preparation for Board Exams Rpal Estate Law Appraising THE COURSE WILL RUN FOR A PERIOD OF 4 WEEKS, STARTING JANUARY 8th. CLASSES WILL BE HELD AT BATEMAN REALTY CO., 377 TELEGRAPH, MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY OF EACH WEEK FROM 7 TO 9 P.M, FOR INFORMATION ON ENROLLMENT PLEASE CONTACT MR. JACK RALPH FE 8-7161 'A sr * '■’'#4—* V Cr-8 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY; JANUARY 2,. 1968 26 PME-OWNERS POLICIES AT SAV Hu up to IS per cent. Hampstead. Barrett and Associates. 334-4714, Its Ellzabatn Lake Road. Wanted Honsehold Goods 29 CASH FOR FURNITURE AND AP-^gSwe^t^jaoa or tiousatui. "ear CASH FOR GOOO USED HOUSE-hold floods. Hall's Auctlort .Spies, MY sm iRSHKITTP RICES PAID FOR good furniture and appliances. Or what have you? B & B AUCTION sow pixie, Hwy. _______OR 3-tm Wanted Miscellaneous 30 COPPER, BRASS; RADIATORS; starters and generators, C. Dlx-son. OR 3-5I49. SILVER CERTIFICATES, $1.25; SIL-var dollars, SI .40. FE 5-4492. Wanted to Rant 32 Wanted Real Estate 36 LOTS—WANfEO IN PONTIAC Immediate closing. REAL VALUE REALTY, 442,4220 NOTICE: J CLARKSTON AREA HOME, LOT AND ACREAGE OWNERS. Being your local Real Estate Co. we nave many calls In this area ter lacfus before you list! Clorkston Real Estate 5854 S. Main MA 5-5821 SMALL FARM OR WOOD? WITH pond, Or small tlake for hunt club. Write BILL JENNINGS* 37411 Grand River, Farmli?qton, Mlchl-qan or call 476*5900._____________ TIMES Apartments, Furnished 37 1 ROOMS AND BATH, PRIVATE, attractively decorated, no, children or pets, 335-7942. . ROOMS AND PRIVATE BATH, clean, adults. 221 North Cass. 2 BEDROOMS, BATH, CHILDREN 2 BEDROOMS. INQUIRE AT 208 N. Johnson, 482-Vltt after 4. 2 ROOMS AND BATH, CHILD WEL-come, 525 per wk., with 850 dep.. Inquire at 273 Baldwin. Phont 338,4054. __________________ OR 3 LARGE CLEAN ROOMS, carpeted, adults, no drinkers, FE 5-5182. ________I WHY NOT START OUT ^he new]3 year by engaging pur staff here ROOMS AND BATH. PONTIAC area. Clean. Ml 4-1456. "Rooms •and bath, also «t room. No drinkers. 154 N. Perry. GIRL FROM LAPEER, GOING TO school in Pontiac needs a room to rant or will help evenings. References. MO 4-4285 or MO '4-8990. WANTED; GARAGE FOR CAR, VI- Share Living Quarters 33 MAN WILL SHARE HOME family or couple. 332-0091. WITH WOMAN TO SHAR,E HOME WITH older woman. Minimum expenses. Mora for companionship. 363-7460.1 Wanted Real Estate 36 utilities paid by us. Inquire • bt 273 Baldwin. Phone 338-4054,____ BACHELOR, 2 ROOMS. BATH, close in. Clean, modern, quiet. 335-3590. , at Times Realty to handle your\* ROOMS AND BATH. BABY WEL-real estate problems. We have! P*r ^***2 £|2f every means available to you such as mortgage money, all FHA and VA closings in our office, Investment buyers, for home or acreage, and 18 capable salespeople to assist you. Call for your assistance now and we will have one of the following salespeople at your door within 15 minutes from the time you call— -------------- Allen LaFontalne, ‘George Ver- SHARP 1 ROOM. FOR MATURE not, Bert Hungerford, Florence person. $15 plus $35 dep. 674-1581 Blimka, Don Genereux, Shirley WARM APARTMENT, NO PETS OR Burton, Beverly Williams, Rich- children. FE 4-1735. ard Williams, Tony Manzella, ■----------------------—-----—" Ray Hayward, Ray Hunter, Art M . _ .. , • . . Glen, Bob Frey, Bob Monahan,! AptirtltieiltS, Unfurnished 00 Apartments, Unfurnished 3S BLOOMFIELD ORCHARDS - APARTMENTS Ideally situated In Btbomftflld-Blr-mingham area, luxury 1- and 2-bedroom apartments available tor Immediate possession from $135 per month Including carpeting, Hotpolnt, air conditioning and appliances, large family kitchens, swimming pool and large sun deck — All utilities except electric. No detail of luxury has been' overlooked In Bloomfield Orchard Apts, located on South Blvd. (20 Mile Rd.), between Opdyke and 1-75 expressway. Open dally, 9 to 8 p.m. Sunday, 12 to 8 p.m. For information: UN 4-0303. ,Mgr. 335-5470, FE 8-0770. _____________ ELIZABETH LAKE SHORE APART-ments, T bedrdom. Lease. Electric heat, boat dock, beach Inc. Adults, no pets. 5375 Cooley Lake Rd. KITCHENETTE APARTMENT ON Pontiac Lake, no pets or children. . Royal Apartments 8180 Highland' Rd. 673-7605. EMBASSY WEST APARTMENTS 1- AND 2-BEDR00M Carpeted, drapes, central air conditioning, pool, applications being accepted. 5347 Highland Rd.. Apt. 137, Waterford Township. 4 miles west of Tel-Huron Shopping Center. Mrs. Schultz. Mgr.________ ROCHESTER MANOR 9APARTMENTS ' 1 BEDROOM, $140 - 2 BEDROOM, 8165 Immediate occupancy, spacious, fully carpeted, wit(h Individually controlled hydronic heat, air conditioning, Hotpolnt kitchen, swim-pool, many extras, in a 1 TO 50 HOMES. LOTS, ACREAGE PARCELS, FARMS, BUSINESS PROPERTIES, AND LAND CONTRACTS WARREN STOUT, Realtor 1450 N. Opdyke Rd; FE 5-8145 Urgently need for immediate Salel Pontiac Dally 'til 8 • MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE ALL CASH For homes any place In Oakland \ County, money In 24 hours. YORK WE BUY WE T.R^E OR 4-0343 OR 4-0363 4713 Dixie Hwy. Drayton P.alns ALL CASH 10 MINUTES •van If behind in payments or *un-der torclosure. Agent. 527-4400. * CASH 48 HOURS LAND CONTRACTS —HOMES EQUITIES WRIGHT „ 382 Oakland Ave. _______FE 2-9141 Bill Oliver. Russ Johnson, Kay Svetcos, Pat Flood. No obliga-j« acnonoM nM pontiac i ake I duie. ,— • . , m i...e"•M-bedroom on iPONriAt laac,i t0 shopping, churches. Lease op-week. EM 3-7376 or EM fional. 812 Plate off Parkdale. 651- _______ :__________________i------1 3044. ______m 1 BEDROOM, HEAT, HOT WATER'-, abi/ctqm 1 ROOM, UTILITIES, ....m gu................m *” CbSf?Wn stove and oven, adults: evenings 625-1865 tion, no high pressure, just Warm welcome. Thank You. 5890 DIXIE HIGHWAY 623-0600 Open 9-9 dally 3-5790. SPOT CASH FOR YOUR EQUITY, VA, FHA, OR OTHER. FOR QUICK ACTION CALL NOW. HAGSTROM REALTOR, OR 4-0358 OR EVENINGS FE 4-7005. WANTED-HOUSES TO SELL Call BREWER REAL ESTATE**. 724 Riker Bldg. FE 4-5181. ,. We Need Listings furnished, no children or pets, $75: monthly„ sec, dep., 674-1823. 1 BEDROOM, STOVE, REFRIGER-) ator, air conditioned, $117 month-1 ly, plus utilities. Union Lake area, 363-7571 or 683-3144.__________ ORCHARD CT. APTS. 2 bedroom apartments Adults Manager-Apt. 6. 19 Salmer Sale Hemes BUDGET MINDED? 4f For just $1000 down, we win build you » Basic-Blit 3> bedroom alum, sidad ranch on our tot near Crescent Lake. Total prick $10,460 on Uum contract. Will tutnlqh add SCOTT LAKE FRONT Way and attached garage, Preporp now tor next summer's tun. 81,000 down plus costs, $42.94 mo., plus tax and Ins. Total $11,500. HAGSTROM; REALTOR 4900 W. HURON MLS OR 4-0358 EVES. refrig, furnished, near! St. Benedict's. FE 2-2992. SAGAMORE MOTEL, SINGLE OC- Price is $23,500. FE 2-7819. cupancy, $30 per week. Maid serv-i 3-BEDROOM BRICK RANCH. LO- ki the basement. Fenced rear On paved street. Price reduced) to $21,500 with 10 per cent down. The Rolfe H. Smith Co. Shelton B. Smith, Realtor i 244 S. Telegraph I 333-7848 Office open 9-8 bedrobms, 10x12 each, living and dining area, 17x19, on cor-j ner l4t 50x160. In need of re pair. Best otter takes. 0RT0NVILLE 3-bedroom ranch, ne6r schools and shopping. Includes built-ins In kitchen and 1-car garage. Full price,' $14,900. 2-BEDROOM APARTMENT. FULLY caepeted. Refrigerator and stove. Welcome‘pets, $165 monthly, 417 Parkdale. 651-7595.____ 1 CROSS REALTY AND INVESTMENT CO. 3487 Sashabaw Rd. OR 4-3105. We pay cash for used homes ROOMS AND BATH/ OAKLAND Ave. FE 5-4878, 333-7603. ROOMS ON OAKLAND AVENUE near Wisner School. Automatic gas heat, private entrance, rea-sonable. Inquire 900 Oak land. TO MODERN LAKE FRQNT, ADULTS or 1 child, $127,50 monthly, lease,!^'7--»,■ m._Zj first and last month - rent In ad-IROORIS With Board vance, near Union Lake, call after!---- T2 noon, EM 3-0134. IgOOD HOME FOR NICE PERSON EASTHAML distance to schools. $24,500.00, by TUC oai c rmiDCC owner. Call 851-2717. _ THE GOLr LOUKot 789 S. Wood- cated in Edgewood Park Subdk vision. Large wooded lot, garage, attached. F.ull basement, finished. On Private drive. Walking OPEN EVES. AND SUNDAY List With SCHRAM And Call the Van MACEDAY LAKE Huge 32' x 64' ranch on large Well landscaped lake front lot. Home is sharp throughout. Clark ston schools. CalfTor details. « 3 Bedrooms Rent Houses, Unfurnished 40; PRIVATE ROOM. HO.ME COOKED meals. Close to ptent. 335-,1679. ____________ 2-BEDROOM BY MALL, NEWLY decorated, adults only. FE 5-8585. Henf Office SpOCO LOW DOWN PAYMENT NO MORTGAGE COSTS /A0DEL OPEN 285 Fisher 1:30 to 5 p.m. — 6-day week KENT 47 We have the sales force, financing, advertising, experience and even cash buyers. We work hard and get results. Call DORRIS 8, SON, REALTORS for a free appraisal. OR 4-0324. ______ HAVE CASH BUYER FOR SMALL HOUSE ELW00D REALTY 482-2410 t HAVE A PURCHASER WITH CASH FOR A STARTER HOME IN OAKLAND COUNTY. CALL ,A6ENT YORK AT 674-1698 LISTINGS NEEDED FARMS-HOMES-ACREAGE RIDGEWAY, REALTOR MLS 338-4086 IN; Apartments, Furnished 37 ROOMS, COUPLE ONLY, pets, FE S-0090. 1 ROOM AND GARAGE, UTILITIES furnished, *16 wk., no smoking or drinking, 590 E. Walton Blvd. 2 ROOM BASEMENT APARTMENT, everything furnished, suitable lor 1 or 2 working men. North end. FE 4-3135. ROOMS, LOWER. PRIVATE EN-trance, bath. Oep. FE 2-1718. QUIET ROOMS AND BATH, STOVE, RE-frigerator and utilities turn., 1 or 2 children welcomed. OR 3-0601 5 ROOMS HEAT FURNISHED Upper, $90 monthly, 682-5490. _ ROOMS AND BATH couple or lady. FE 5-8929.__________ ROOMS. BATH, MURPHY BED.j garage, adults. FE 8-6275. ROOMS IN PONTIAC, BAB?! welcome, 852-1975. AMERICAN HERITAGE APARTMENTS 1- and 2-bedroom, all modern conveniences, carports and all utilities 'Included in rent. No children or pets. Manager on Premises BEDROOMS, BASEMENT, 2 CAR garage. Near Northern. $115 mo. _ , fe 2-2064. _______ i in Rochester BEDROOM, lVa BATHS, BASE- new COMMERCIAL OFFICE CEN-ment, family room 2 stall garage,; ter spaces from 400' to 8,000 sq. carpeting and draperies, bulltin, ft. ideal tor Barber, Beauty Salgn, good location. FE 4-7827. | Real Estate. Insurance Office. Call 651-4576 WEST0WN REALTY is what this beautiful 3-bedroom^ brick rancher overlooks. Imagine a 13'x20' master bedroom with door wall and balcony, large carpeted living room with natural fireplace, full finished base-j ment, ^2-car attached garage andJ ........ rrany other qualities. Reduced tolMOVING TO FLORIDA. $34,950. TRADE INTO THIS ‘ * |M ONE. CLARKSTON ___________ 3-bedroom ranch, ceramic bath and a half, finished recreation room, close to schools and churches in sharp neighborhood. $18,950, full price. Established in 1916 Bill Eastham Realtor — i MLS Then see us tor a real nlca water front | home at a price you can afford Call (or complete detail. OXFORD 2 family Income. Ideal for re* tirement, income or tremendous investment. Excellent terms., CONNECTING WATERS TO CASS — 2 bedroom house, gas heat, ref, and deposit req. 3165 Kenrick. MODERN 4-ROOM, 1 OR. 2 CHIL-dren welcome. 681-0860. RENT $11,590 BRAND NEW. 3-bedrm. ranch, on your tot, full basement fully INSULATED, family kitchen. No money down. MODEL. EASTSIDE PARK RENT OFFICES—*35 AND UP. 4540 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-1355-________J Ik. Rent Business Property 47-A Y0UNG-BILT HOMES REALLY MEANS BETTER BILT Russell Young, 334-3830 53’/a W. Huron St. , Vacant 2 bedroom ranch, gas heat,! full basement, carpeting and panel-, ing, attached garage, ZERO down,) FHA approved, owners agent —, 674-1698.__________________ L0TS-ACREAGE Orlonville, 1 acre building sites, *1800 Oxford 10 acre sites. Baldwin Road, LEAN 5-ROOM BRICK, one-bed-i$900 per acre, room, on one acre. Nice trees / and shrubs. Gas heat. Also ga- WE BUI rage. On paved road, closa in. $13,500 and $1,500 down. Floyd Kint, Inc., Realtor 2200 Dixie Hwy. at Telegraph FE 2-0123 or FE 2-1984j WE WILD-TRADE 628-2548 823 S. Lapeer Rd. (M24) Oxford Office Hours 9 to 9 except Sun. Elizabeth Lake Front ROSSHIRE COURT, IDEAL FOR the young couple or retirees, 2 bedroom, Tull basement, $100 per mo. I THE ROLFE H. SMITH CO 673-51681 7848. 25,200 SQ. FT. adjacent bldgs, across from] A NEW YEARS START AT WALTERS LAKE CLARKSTON SCHOOL AREA Lake Vista Apartments 3 rooms and bath, carpeted. Stove, refrigerator, utilities. Adults' only. 5366 Cooley Lake Rd. HmI senke bkectmy mm 2,000 sq. ft. living" on I acre country site; — 530,000 — 10 per cent down1.' Immediate occupancy. Two__.__ . _ ■ Osteopathic Hospital. Will remodel1T cnVFp i to suit tenant or will provide new 3 SAM WARWICK HAS AT 4050 CASS-; building with parking on site 120x-Elizabeth. 3 bedroom, gas heat,, no. Contact Bruce Annett personally sun porch, garage, lake privilege' Annett InC. Realtors j 28 E. Huron St. 338-0466 RANCH HOUSE MJ* *'• Office Ooen Evenings 8. Sundays 1-4 fabulous view of country site. _ Ready for your paint and tile SMALL 2-BEDROOM, *25 A WEEK,' I selection — *26,900 — 10 per no pets, dep., 1 child welcome.'—uuTrui cent down $135 lease. 602-2820. MOTORWAY DRIVE 26' living room, new carpeting, beautiful drapes, 2 extra large bedrooms, breakfast room with scenic view. Kitchen with toads ot cupboard space, large dishwasher, full basement, completely panelled with divided area for additional bedroom if desired^ Two-car garage with divided space for cookout. Large patio, automatic sprinkling system. Excellent beach, many other features. Immediate possession. Only $45,000 with reasonable down payment. KINZLER STRUBLE BRICK RANCH TRADE Village FE 2-5876. UNTIL MAY 31ST, 3-BEDROOM house, full basement, Pontiac-mediate occupancy, $160 nlshed or furnished. 332-9562. 30,000 SQ. FT. BUILDING WITH ft^deafance^and^rajlroM sid-jj BEDROOMS — new and furnished at $15,400. K. L. TEMPLETON, Realtor 2339 Orchard Lk. Rd. 682-0900 Rent Rooms O'Neil Realty OR 4-2222. uniur-i INDUSTRIAL PROPERTY IN CITYj ■ of Pontiac. Warehousing and of-lLAKE FRONT — 2 bedrooms, a ----- . tice space available with railroad steal for cash at $10,600. | AO facilities. For information call 8 a m to 5 p m. FE 5-8141 or 548- NOW AVAILABLE — select choice -------------" -----------— - j 2226. GLEAN ROOM FOR ONE PERSON, Tq LEASE BUILDING, LIGHT IN- $14 week. 338-8644. _____ dustrial area,' 4,000 square feet, 11 GENTLEMEN NON - DRINKER*! miles northwest of Pontiac, on M59. smoker, *10 weekly. 673-3791 after 4.| Reply Pontiac Press Box -----------------------------MAN Pontiac Michigan. ____ FERRY FARMS SUB. Six-foom bungalow. Full basement, gas heat/ 0 down, about $52,000 a month. Call: HANDYMAN'S PARADISE 3-bedroom home needs some finishing but very livable while being completed. 2-car garage, good neighborhood, electricity, plumbing, cabinets and bath are Installed. Priced,at $10,500. Call to-.day. * COUNTRY LIVING * Close In attractive 2-bedroom building sites, i Homes now under construction^by: C-37,1 Aluminum Bldg. Hems ALUMINUM SIDING, ROOFING IN itallfld by "Superior" — Your authorized Kaiser, dealer. 3177. ALUMINUM GUTTERS and down spouts, $.75 par foot, call now 864-1900, and save.* Boots and Accessories BIRMINGHAM BOAT CENTEW Your family boating headquarters. Starcraft aluminum and flberglat Shell Lake and IJ1A.P. flberglas. 1265 S, Woodward at Adam* Road. Ml 74133. Sno-Mobile sales, service and storage___________________ Brick & Block Service brick, block, stone, cement work, fireplaces specialty. 335-4470. Banding Modernization l-A QUALITY GUARANTEED, licensed, free estimates. Spring-tleld Bldfl. CP., 625-2128. REMODELING AND NEW HOMES. Deal direct with builder. Will supply retj License and bonded. MY 3-7291.' . ' ________ Excavating BACKHOE, LOADER WORK, DRY wells, oseptic fields, footings, dozer work, fill. 682-3042 or 334-8968, END LOADING DOZER WORK, septic fields, dry wells. FE 5-1081. Fencing Rental Equipment KENT FLOOR CLEANING AND polishing equipment, heaters, mlsc. 62 W. Montcalm. 332-9271. Jackson's. ________________ Roofing A-l NEW, REROOF — REPAIRS — Call Jack. Save the lack. 338-6115, OR 3-9590. PONTIAC FENCE CO. 5932- Dixie Hwy. 623-1840 QUALITY ROOFING. NEW AND reroof. Bonded materiel. Fr$e es- Floor Sanding CARL L- BILLS SR., NEW AND old floor sanding. FE 2-5789. . G. SNYDER, FLOOR? LAYING sanding and finishing. FE 5-0592. Floor Tiling CUSTOM FLOOR COVERING. LI-noleum, formica, tile. Carpeting. 741 N. Perry, FE 2-4090.__________ Jantiorial Services timates. Reasonable. 682-7514. ROOFING For any house up to 1000 square feet, $99.00. Call now 864-1900 and save. WOMACK ROOFING, REROOF Complete ins, coverage. Free esti-mates. 338-4545.___________________ Sign Painting LARGE SLEEPING ROOM, Pontiac, 852-4959v MODERN SLEEPING ROOM FOR a young working girl or lady, FE 8*6284. Rent Miscellaneous 48 1 - Dan Mattingly 2 - John Voorheis 3 - Herb Smith 4 - Daryle Adams 5 -JJames Raisin NICE SLEEPING ROOM PLUS meals and laundry if desired, oid-j . . u er man preferred, no drinkers. Call 5016 HOIIS6S FE 4*1019* CAR GARAGE SUITABLE storage. FE 2-5876.___ Ms \!!r»nt|903 Pontiac State Bank 334-1545 rancher In Waterford. Living room and kitchen paneled. lVj-car rage and storage shed on . over t aero of property. Close to schools and shopping. Immediate possession. $1,700. MILO STRUBLE Open 9-8(REALTOR 674-31*75 MLS vacant -°$450 MOVES IN. On FHA mortgage — tor sale by owner-—335-2808._________________ .. Large Family 3 MODELS OPEN DAILY AND SUNDAY Drive out M$9 lust west ot Cass Lake Rd. to Candelstlck. Directly behind the Dan Mattingly Buslhess Center. DAN MATTINGLY FE 5-9497 Ot,, 1-0222 IMMEDIATE POSSESSION WATKINS HILLS $26,988 Apartments, Unfurnished 38 Apartments, Unfurnished 38 j Mortgage costs only, down By owner, pteasant Lake Front 2 bedroom modern, large living n. . n*9 bath. roorh, plus family room and dining 35fntjfSFSaso ft bia room. Wet plaster walls, narowooo ,evel' 169 n' D,s- floors, 60' good beach by 120' plus 12 BLOOMFIELD SCHOOLS depth. Excellent neighborhood, only bluumficlum,huui.» $17,500, immediate^occupancjt^ H,,, mlle N. of' Bkjonrfjold Hills. Huge 4-bedroom, Vh bath, colonial. 2571 Wendover. Just $4,400 acre with 2 bedroom ranch, tached garage and carpeting, sume $75 per jjionth payment, qualifying, 7 day possession. Own er's Agent. 674-1698 ____ No You select the brick, paint, ceramic tile, formica vanity, style «nd color of kitchen cabinets, 2 car garage, and thermo-sealed 91*** DDIAkl winrinuK Hnm» under construe*! 5904 Dix Open Daily from *a.m. to 8:30 p.m. 4626 W. Walton — OR 4-0301 _____ \ lTkFa warm puppy That's huw yuu'll feel In this cai-pfted, almust new, 3-bedruum; tri-level with family room geraige. $1,-858 down. Warden and Realtors & Builders Since 1939 windows. Home under construction, move in 30 days. Directions: 5 blocks North of Walton Boulevard and East off Sashabaw. At 414$ Pomeroy. PRESTON BUILT-HOMES AND REALTY 6-73-8811 623-0702 Hwy., Waterford LONGFELLOW Asbestoes Ranch, full basement, | Aluminum IMMEDIATE POSSESSION A sharp 3-bedroom ranch In Waterford Township on large lot. Has gas heat, alum, storms and screens. Owner moved and wants a quick sale. $12,500 with terms. GAYLORD HIGHLAND ESTATES: Three bedroom brick with full basement and beautiful landscaping; large lot and fenced yard. House ^as built-ins; carpets; drapes end ■ tub enclosure. 1384 Dundee. RECREATION ROOM of knotty pine | on first tiger in this 6-room home Let us build you a house that Is |n village of Lake Orion. Lots ot out ot the ordinary. Prices are vaiue for $13,288. Call MY 2-2821, reasonable end our designs ere fe 1-9493, MY 3-1743. Custom. les Brown, Realtor storms and screens.: Home real clean. Immediate oc-! cupancy. FHA approved. Owner Agent, 674-1649. _____________ LOOKING FOR A CAREFREE HOME? All new 3-bedroom elec, heated. Beautiful oak floors, 16' kitchen, formica cabinets, ell aluminum siding, In White Lk. Twp. Near Union Lk. shopping, $11,000, terms. A. LANGDON BUILDERS c SCHUETT 682-0340 UL 2-2898 3-BEDR00M FURNISHED Owner moving out of stale, all furnishings included. Sharp ranch on paved street with city water and sewer. An excellent buy at $13,900 with terms. WARDEN REALTY 3434 W. Huron, Pontiac J33-7I57 WEST BLOOMFIELD Comfortable 3-bedronm l*Vloor with gas heat on 80' x 140' landscaped site, attached garage, .only $14,900 total. * 1 509 Elizabeth Lk. Rd. J (Across from the Mall) 332-4810 or 334-3564 BY OWNER 'MODEL OPEN EVERY DAY, 3 bed rooms, $12,900 total price. Direc tions: N. on M24 to Orion Rd ! left at light to Pontiac Dr. Mo • on corner. Call MY 2-2821 8-9693, MY 3-1743. FEi Golf Manor Subdivision. Union Lake and Commerce Rds. 4-bed-room, I’a bath. Living room. Dining room. Family room with fira-piace. Kitchen with built-ins. Completely carpeted eqd draped. 2-car garage. Excellent condition. $29,900 363-527*. EM 3-7188 . __ 8800 Commerce Rd. Union Lk. New Years in The Country j wyman lewis realty Pretty grey brjck 3 bedroom ranch 389 Whltfemore_______ 338-0323 on ’a acre lust north of Rochester.! Has large paneled family room,* built-ins in the kitchen, new car-| peting, and spacious living room. Easy terms at $18,500. Shepard Real Estate CLARK UPPER SILVER LAKE AREA: 7* room brick ranch, with full basement, large living room with ledgestone fireplace. Dining room, hardwood floors, plastered wails, den 18 x 13, gas heat, V'a baths, 2Y2*cer attached ga-ige. Northern school district, 651-8503 GAYLORD INC. 2 W. Flint St., L.ke Orion MYJ2-282V_____________FE 8-9693 HAROLD R. FRANKS, Realty \ BRICK RANCH 3 bedrooms, living room, dining room, kitchen with built-lhs. Ha hutod P^.c«iDtod?ronH3nlmSl OPEN ANY TIME BY APPT. I WEST FE 5-8183 New Model NORTH Threb bedrooms, corner lot, garage, wall to wall carpeting, auto, heat, terms. lots, with lake privileges on Pleas ant Lake In Waterford Twp. Price $24,500, $5,000 down, $150 per month on lend contract. Everett Cummings, Realtor 2583 UNION LAKE ROAD EM 3-3208 363-7181 school disfrif prfee reduced to $27,900 — will) trade 3-BEDROOM BRICK TRI-LEVEL on Williams Lake Rd. 1 block north) of Union Lake VIIlege. Choice of 3 elevatlonsl $19,400 to $20,200 plus) lot. WATERFORD ELIZABETH LAKE ESTATES: 5! rooms and bath, hardwood floors,! large kitchen with built-ins, new gas heat, blacktop street, 49x200 ft. lot. Full price $9,950, G.l. terms More land available ot full! price of $12,950, te^ms ' ! CLARK REAL ESTATE 1362 W. HURON ST. FE 3 7181 Multiple Listing Service I ALSO WE BUILD 3-BEDROOM TRI-LEVEL with lVa-cer garage, $13,600 plus lot. Highland Estates A well built 3 bedroom ell brick rancher with attached brick garage. Ceramic tile bath, bulit in|sTATELY 4 BEDROOM COLONIAL] crATT,.. range, oven and hood. Full base-! with 2*? baths, formal dining room1 M.UI I LAKt ment with small bar and good! and 2-car garage, $29,200 plus lot. possibilities. 75x150 lot, well landscaped and fenced-in rear yard. I Let us dispose of your present home PatlO/ pavad driveway and side* and place you In a new home tor walks maka this tha home fo seel! 1968. Brisk, two bedrooms on first floor, unfinished upper, fireplace, screened porch, well fo wall carpeting, tile bath, basament, gas heat, fwd-car garage. Va* cant, terms. Two bedrooms, attached garage, alum, siding, gas heat, lust decorated, easy terms. Vacdnt. Snjall home with breeieway and attached garage, gas heat, dec-Prated. Vacant with terms. 75' on the take. Full price $21,500. . , SISLOCK & KENT ‘ 1309 Pontine Stfltfl Bank Bid. 363x1404 338-9294 338-9295 'x J. C. HAYDEN, Realtor 10735 Highland Rd. IM 59) Call Mr. Cattail FE 2-7273 iiie west of Oxbow Lake Nicholie & Harger Co. W.*Huron ST. FE 5-8183 7 % t5—. Sib Hoorn ; 4-H REAL ESTATE LAKS PRIVILEGES ’ ON torus LAKE - 3-bsdroom bungalow, alum,, tiding partial basement, Mi furnace, large all purpose braezewey, 1-ear garage. Vacant. Quick possession. Erica 110,500 — ttf mo. total payment before Jan. tat. OR 3-tm EM 34141 OR J-0455 // // OXFORD-ORION AREA 3-bedroom trl-level, good condl tion, newly carpeted living room, tile bath with vanity; large kltch-an and dining area, dandy tarn My room with ftraplaca and built-in bar, gaa heat, quick postal-, slon. Priced at 114,900.00, terms, ‘ call us now. CASS LAKE CANAL FRONT Fifty (50) feet on the water, cozy I-bedroom home with large living room, fireplace, carpeting, sun room, kitchen and dining combination, ample utility, gas heat, carport, cyclone fencing, Breakwater. Priced at 115,500.00, farms, quick possession. NICHpLIE-HUDSON Associates, Inc. 40 University Dr. FE 54201, after 6 p.m. FE 4-8773 VON NORTH SIDE Do you need * cozy 3-bedroom bungalow? Tak< a look at this e-room home. Living room 12x]4 with enclosed shower. Full basement Oil heat. 2-car garage. City water and sewer. Pontiac Northern School district. See It today! Just $15,500, land contract, $2500 down,. DAVISBURG AREA It's a doll house—sharp, 2-bedroom ranch home. Located at Big Lake. Hardwood floors. Plastered walls. Large utility room. Oil heat. Fenced back yard. It's spotless! ' "larkston school system..Canter of ontlec lust 16 mills. See It today $12,900. VON REALTY GEORGE VONDERHARR, Realtor In Pie Mall MLS Room 110 ' 602-5002 If busy 612-5800 GILES OAKLAND UNIVERSITY ’ 2-bedroom with unfinished attic, on a large lot In Pontiac Township. lVk car garage, carpeted living room, gas heat. 2 FAMILY INCOME North side, $260 par month Income, payments only $125 per month. Has been rewired to city ' code. Has been redecorated inside and out. WEST SIDE 5-room, 3-bedroom home, newly deeprafed Inside and out. Lake privileges on Lptus Lake. Only $23,500. Claude McGruder Realtor 221 Baldwin Avt. FE 5-6175 Multiple Listing Service Open 9-1 Mi Houses 49 Wideman BRICK RANCHER Clean 3-bedroom home, featuring carpeting, targe k I "chert with built-in disposal and hood tan, formica counter tops, tfle bath with vanity, -Hlaid base-water softener and shower, VACANT- - IMMEDIATE POS SESSION - CALL TODAY. WEST SIDE—FHA 7*room home, 3 bedrooms and den. Large dining room. New kitchen cabinets, basement, gas FA haat. Large garaae. Immediate pos-U7ID0WN-MT I. O. WIDEMAN, REALTOR S2-5UI!SP.ST- 334-4526 EVES. CALL_________335-6669 ARRO TED McCULLOUGH, Realtor CASH FOR YOUR LAND CONTRACT OR< EQUITY SUBURBAN LIVING In this dean 3-bedroom aluminum sided ranch located within walking distance to schools. Large lot, paved drive. Loeds of storage space. $13,950. Terms available. CLOSE TO OAKLAND COMMUNITY COLLEGE wlthorlvlleges on Union Lake, handy to shopping center, this 2-bedroom home nestled In area of new homes can be yours with less than $2,000 dywn. PHONE: 682-2211 5143 Cass»Elizabeth Road _________OPEN DAILY 9-9 IRWIN Sab Houms PAINLESSLY PRICED end terms to suit e good Jbuyer on land eon-wtract tbr this exceptionally sharp 2 story home located near Perry and Joslyn. This very 'Salable package is situated on * very nice shaded center let with a 2-car garage. Has p carpeted living room end dining room, a bedroom* and bath up, 2 andosad porches and a full basement with gar haat. *14,-900, 97 S. ANDERSON. Just aft Auburn Rd. Drive Inf fhU Miuty and Call us. Large 5-room bungalow with stairway, to axptnalon attic for 2 additional bedroom*, full basement with pas haat, 2 tots and 2-car garage. FHA appraised far $13,700. Gl APPRAISED $1,500. Truly a 2-bedroom doll house and an excellent opportunity for tn* young Gl who would Ilka to break that rtnt habit. 5 rooms In all with separate dining room full basement with gas haat and outside entrance to beautiful backyard with a 2-car garage. DORRIS I, SON, REALTORS 2536 Dixie Hwy, 4744324 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE ANNETT Forest Lake Estates Williams Lake 2 bedroom bungalow with privileges on williams and Maceday Lakes. PosstsSlon on doling. Priced right at SIA200, farms. Northern High Area TMK PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 2, 1968 49 Sab Noam A NEW. 3-BEDROOM - Brick and tram* ranch In Waterford Maturing large bedrooms, lots at dosat room, country kltchan with lovely cabinets, community watsr, clean gaa haat. 113.900 total’ prlet, $1400 down plug closing coals. CMI tor your appointment. 3-BEDROOM RANCH - With brick and cedar shake exterior featuring 1'A Iliad baths, carpeted living room, 21'1-car garage, paved drive, large tvy tiled baths, carpatad living room, 2'/,-cer garage, paved drive, large 120' .lot with nice shrubs. *14.508 total price. Onwar says salt. Call for more details. SMALL FARM — with approximately 2 aero* and small barn. H6r* Is a horn* for .the large family featuring 4 large bedrooms, IVs ■■ baths, -.separate dining room, dan plua targe country kltchan, full dry basement. Home I* vary ct*'n and neat, and ‘pfjirad tor only >11,950. Don't WMI on this on*. CLARKITON AREA - extra dean and neat ansdrasm ranch with gleaming hardtMM- floera, natural finished woodwork, full basement, finished recreation . area, 1 Vj-car garage, fenced lot. approximately $1000 will move you If). TRACES ACCEPTED « B. HALL REALTY 456? Dixie HWy. 9-9 dally 425-4114 O'NEIL . WHY NOT TRADE? VALUE WITH COMFORT^ AND PRIVACY This lake front horn* la 4 years young. All brick exterior, custom built, 3 large'bedrooms, 2 ceramic i I. tiled baths, Island fireplace. Owners 3-bedroom home In excellent movlna to Florida and ar* ready condition, full tasement, 1W- ™W,^q™ck mi* Located only 3 BETWEEN ROCHESTER AND Orion — 80 acres with */$ mile of fmved rood frontage. Land Con* ract —-terms. garage. Close to bus fri^crarkston'Yncf 3 miles NEAR ROCHESTER—77 acres with TIZZY % Kate Osann • ms ty hoc ha tj*. w os. r«. oat ‘Let’s not complain. Between taxes and inflation, we’re lucky to get any allowance at all!” Wooltd Cawtracli-Mtf. I0«A . Wi ; Million Ooltar* has bean mad* available through an Inheritance. We have a family who wishes to purchase land contracts, assume mortgages or purchase homes and vacant property for cash. This phone number is available to you 24 hrs, par day. - Call now (or personal appointment. - TED McCullough jr. 674-2356 QUICK CASH for LAND CON TRACTS. CLARK REAL ESTATE FE 3-7888, res. FE 4-4813, Mr. CI4rk Money to Loan 61 ^JMcensad^Money Lender)_ LOANS TO $1,000 Usually on first visit. Quick/ friendly* helpful. ’ , FE 2-9206 Is tha number to call OAKLAND LOAN CO. 202 Pontiac State Bank B __9-5 Mon.-Thurs.—9-7 Frl. LOANS $25 TO $1,000 COMMUNITY LOAN COSO E. LAWRENCE FE $4421 Lots—Acroage 54 •tor.s, $12,800, from 1.75. pull price $24,900. Don't hesitate on this one, reasonable I terms or trade. No. 7-42 WEST SIDE: - Clean and neat.• All on 1 floor.! terms.” "■ 5 rooms and bath, full base-1 ment. New gas F.a. furnace,i r-_;iw u„m„ alum, tiding. tvi?ia w. University room, formal DR, large LR.peths, good sized family room, 2- -------------noavr/3 Full basement. gear ga-car attached garage and double lot n„*vm ling. Available with lend contract. CHEROKEE RD: Custom built horns on a large lot features separate dining, targe living room with fireplace, 3-bedroom, one down. Unusually good cabinet space and separate Breakfast room. Plastered walls. New wall to wall carpet throughout. Gas heet. 2-car attached garage. Well, located'1 near all schools. BUYING OR SELLING CALL JOHN K. IRWIN & SONS 313 west Huron — Since 1925 , , FE 54446 after 5 p.m. FE 5-8683 AT ROCHESTER—120 .rolling acres with plenty of road frontage. Ideal for new home, subdivision develop ment. Terms evsllabls. MILTON WEAVER, INC., Realtors In the Village of Rochester 6314141 Frushour SPACIOUS LOT For the children to romp or for your garden next .Spring. This 3-bedroom ranch. home has 16' kitchen and 2-c * r rage. Selling tor 115,500 — $...— down plus costs. We wllll take your house In trade. IN THE SUBURBS SEE THIS lovely 8-room bl-level home nestled on a wooded lot, twp. water, and blacktop street, there are 3 bedrooms, or 4. If needed, iVa baths, 23' family room and attached 2-car garage. Selling tor $23,900. IMMEDIATE POSSSSSION — Trade-in accepted. JACK FRUSHOUR, Realtor 1730 Williams Lake Rd. MLS 674-2245 Val-U-Way New York St. Special 1 -wear-old 3-bedroom home. Dos hrat, large'utility room. Situated on a spacious lot In 'a good part of town end Immediate possession. Owner transferred. Must sell. Will accept $1300 for his equity. Don't miss this. Herrington Hills Special bargain for a prestige , home. Your (Mends will know you are really up lit the world when you buy this marvelous home. It's a big brick beauty with full basement, gaahpat and carpeting. Oh yes, 4 rooms and Died bath. Best of all, price now reduced. $550 down and $550 closing casts. South Side Pre-owned and completely reconditioned. Lika new, sharp 3-bad-room brick ranch home. Look, look. It hat full basement, warm gas heat and tiled bath. Priced really low. Only ’ $12,050, $500 moves you In. Notes less than rent. R. J. (Dick) VALUET REALTOR FE 4-3531 $45 Oakland A VO. Open 9 to 7 MILLER AARON BAUGHEY REALTOR TOP RENftNO. Start the New Year right with this rant beater! 11,000 down, lend contract. Ideal for couple beginning or retiring. 4 rooms, full basement, auto, oil nett. 7-car garage. Nice lawn with lots of trees and shrubs, Just $7,950. INCOME PROPERTY. INVESTORS LOOK! This 9-rpom home on North side of city. Nice condition with 5 lots, ideal for now Incomes, gas heat, full basement plus lots more, LOVELY BRICK RANCH featuring carpeted living room with fireplace, family kitchen with built-ins. Ceramic bath with vanity, VS bath, 3 bedrooms with master bedroom carpeted. Rec. room end bar In full basement. 2-car attached garage, Large lot. North suburban. $31,000, Terms. FE 2-0262 670 W. HURON OPEN 9 TO 7 STOUTS Best Buys Today WARM AND COZY - Built In 195S this home otters loads of area for a larger family all on 1 floor, Outstanding features Include 14x15 family room, 3 bedrooms, fins carpeting end drapes, gas heat, attached garage, patio giant 200 ft. deep lot. Quick possession. Municipal water and sewer. Best of all $16,500 is the total price. SEE THISI AVON TOWNSHIP - This property Includes 8 lots In good location In township. One and one half story home built In 1952 Includes 1 bedroom down end r up. Oil heat and electric hot water 2-cer garage. $13,500. SOMETHING DIFFERENT - North side location off Oakland Avenue, we are ottering this attractive 3-bedroom family -home that Is In excellent condition throughout. Fresh new carpeting plus many other extra's Inside and out. Full basement. Paved drive to 2-car garage. Beautiful shaded lot with lots of privacy. Let us show you! Warren Stout, Realtor 1450 N. Opdyke Rd. FE 5-8165 Multiple Listing Service Daily till « rage. S23.900, terms. WE WILL TRADE REALTORS 28 E, Huron St. Office Open Evenings & Sundy 1-4 338-0466 Only $21500 Is ins price, wny nor trade In your present home? No. 1-50 LIVE INDEPENDENTLY on this newly listed ranch home with 2 acres of land completely fenced, even a pond on the property which provides the water for complete Irrigation for the huge garden and lawn. So stop buying, all those vegetables, grow your own next spring. 2 bedrooms, huge carpqfod living room, kitchen and dining area, large 2-car attached garage. All kinds of fruit, grapes and Kerries. Let's go take a look today. The price Is only $10,900 on land contract. No. 8-49 price. Why not TED'S Trading INVESTMENT Auburn Heights area. Commercial frontage, 2 units renting for $175 per month. FUII price $12,000, excellent Investment. Terms to suit your budget or let's trad*. $1300 DOWN Waterford area — Sharp 2-bedroom rancher, aluminum siding, storms and screens, fenced yard and attached garage. Full price $12,900. LEFT OVER FROM 1967 passed up In the holiday shuffle was this 3-bedroom aluminum sided ranch, full basement, breezeway, attached garage, recreation room and new ceniatlng, large lot, good location. $1700 down or let's trade equities. ROOM FOR EVERYONE A large family will appreciate 1961 ever so much when you move them Into this attractive S-bed-room home located In Indian Village. Full basement with recreation room, bar and bath. 2 full Mattingly FOR THE FOXY BUYER Why pay tor ell the extras? You won't need to spend a penny to Improve this Immaculsts noma, Includes 3 bedrooms, bath end e hall, 2-cer garage and a tiled basement with an extra lot on Lake Oakland Shores. See this full brick home today. DRAYTON PLAINS Here we have In this Ideal location thle Immaculate 2-bedroom home with 2 foil baths with • fireplace In living room, new kitchen, alt aluminum siding and an axtr* lot. All for >16,000. fat this tin* buy today. . DO YOU ENJOY ~ Paying rant? Old I hear you say no? Tlwn why not start- building an equity tn fnls lovely 3-bedroom rench locatad on Hatchary Rd: near Drayton Woods. Has s large jandsca^d yard and Is prlssd st DAN MATTINGLY AGENCY 462-tOOO — OR 4-0360 — OL 14222 TIMES LAKE FRONT For your summer pleasure Is offered with a sele this 3-bed-room stone constructed home, and what a time to be thpklng ot the warmer climate with all th* cold weather we are having. But wa all know this is the time to get your bead purchase. Also offered with thfc excellent home Is a lull basement, large . stone fireplace, glassed-in front room; 1 Va-cer garage, all for only $15,900. Cell early for your appointment. LAKE PRIVILEGES Go with this petite' 3-room ranch home, with gas heat, large Iht-Ing room, end lot. Built In 1958, this would make you and yours an excellent summer home1 for only $9,950 with $1500 down on lend contract, First offering for this home with lakt prlviletes only 100 feet away. BRICH RANCH with 3 large bedrooms, finished recreation room, wall-to-wall, carpeting, gas hast, 100 x 156 toot lot, with backyard lanced. Extra storage building In back yard.i Close In to Clarkston schools NO. 16 and shopping. This home Is In exceptionally good condition and decor. Call for your appointment. WHEN YOU SEEK OUR SERVICE YOU "JOIN THE MARCH TO TIMES." Times Realty ’ 5090 DIXIE HIGHWAY 423-0600 RlALTOR Open 9-9 dally KAMPSEN "IT'S TRADING TIME" LIKE FIREPLACES? Thar* are two In ■th?*-three-bedroom rancher with Cast Lak* and Elizabeth Lake JUST What the Doctor ordered. 3-bedroom brick pnd aluminum rarich, full basement, attached garage, lVj baths, patio, large lot, many extras. Full price $21,500, 10 per cent down or let's trade. TED'S CORNER we are planning our next open question and answer period Jan. 25 at 8 p.m. We have some fine experienced speakers who have willingly dpnatad their time In order to make real estate better known to the general public. If you are buying, selling, trading or lust went to be better ln-1 formed on real estate, financing of the same It would pay for you to attend. As usual there will be . _ , refreshments. Due to limited space iHCOIIIIt^rrejMrty GOSH Owners —---------- --I-----,, session, have very clean, very I ble 3-bedroom ranch style home ana family room wlm fireplace, attached garage. Lake lust across the street. A good location and a good home at a fine price — $13,750. No. 9-17 G.l. WEST SIDE Spacious 3-bedroom homy with basement and 2-car garaae. A reel buy for e veteran. God* employment, good credit and dosing costs will move you in this home near General Hospital. Call now tor an appointment to sae this nice home at the low low price of $11,900. Payments less than rent. No. 7-43 FOR THE CONSERVATIVE MAN that wants to get ahead we have lust listed,this real nett and clean 2-bedroom home with 2V>-car garage, lake privileges on Mlddlt Straits Lake. Good credit and employment Is all that Is requlrsd to buy this home. The total price ,1s only $9,-950. Closing cost approx. SSS0.00 your monthly payments less than rent. Better see this one right now, we have the key. Quick possession. ■I NO. 7-44 FOX BAY MODELS OPEN SAT. B> SUN. 2-5 P.M. Drive out to Fox Bay on the Huron River and visit our model homes. West on EIIZ. Lake Road, right on Parry Blvd., left onto Fox Bay, right to Maria Drive. Priced from $25500 including choice lot. LIST WITH O'NElL REALTY For 3 Good Reasons We Think Our Sente of Values Our List of Good Prospects And Our, Tireless Efforts Will Meke You Glad You .Called — RAY O'NEIL REALTY 352$ Pontiac Lake Road OR 4-2222 MLS FE 4-4365 DRAYTON PLAINS 53 acres, light manufacturing 800' road frontage, 1800' rail-: road frontage: Terms. AL PAULY FOR LOTS AND ACREAGE IN THE Ctarkston arts call: w MENZIES REAL ESTATE 625-3485 *, 9230 Dixit 625-5015 FrorrfOne To a^Hundred TAKE YOUR PICK ACREAGE 1 ACRE* In the country* hilly* apple trees* 100x300* $1*695* $550 down. 10 ACRES* nice hill*, some trees* good road* $5/220* terms. 20 ACRES* kittle north of Lapeer* apple orchard* hardwood trees* gently rolling* $7*115* $1*000. down. 100 ACRES* Maples* Oaks* Sassafras* Beech plus lake possibility (5 acres or more)* (pins state land. Hadley Hills area. $390 per acre. MANY OTHER PARCELS AVAILABLE. See Pangus Inc.* Realtors* Ortonville. C. PANGUS INC., Realtors OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 630 M-15 Ortonville CALL NA 7-2815 COLLECT Sale Farms 56 MARLETTE - SANDUSKY AND LA-peer areas, country homat with S to 240 acras. Excellent cattle or horse ranches. Parcels at 3-10-20 ' . acres for country estates available! with small down payment and] small monthly payments. For ln-j formation cell Mn Smith eves, after 7 at 724-3545. LOANS S2J to 81500 insured'Payment Plan BAXTER 8, LIVINGSTONE Finance Co. 401 Pontiac State Bank Building FE 4-1538-9 Sola HousahaM Goods 65 NECCHI DELUXE AUTOMATIC Zip zeg sewing machine — net model — embroiders, ' ' etr 1B44 7, cab). hems, buttonholes, etc. l»66 modeL Taka oyar payments of : $5.90 PER MO. for 9 mos. Or $53 Cash Balance UNIVERSAL SEWING CENTER FE 4*0905 ONE OF A KIND Freight Scratch 4 pc. b4drm„ (walnut) ........879.95 Sofa end chair $69-00 42" rbund table, 4 mete chairs $79.50 Boston rockers . $22.95 Pearson's Furniture 210 E. PIKE__________'_____FB 4-7911 Pontiac Resale Shop Buy-Sell urnlture,' g l ■feyette, firs ■ Oakland on wide Trade. 335-6914. SFBUILT VACUUM CLEANERS. $16.50 end up. Washer and dryer parts. MICHIGAN APPLIANCE CQ. 3282 Qlxlt Hwy. 673-8011 REFRIGERATORS AND RANGES-1967 closeouts, save plenty. Little Joe's. Baldwin at Wilton. 2-6842. SINGER DIAL-A-MATIC Zlg zag sewing machine — In modern walnut cabinet — makes designs, appliques, buttonholes, stc. Repossessed. Pay off: $54 CASH or $6 per month payments UNIVERSAL SEWING CENTER FE 4-0905 far late MImiIIwihw |B UMd by jSS iTUFFio JMlMALi, toy*/ bR4 novelties, lay-sways. 3265 Disks fifty, OR s.m. to 9. p.tn. •vv.'RlIlHIllIWi talb(5Yt lumber ' Black and packer drill, 19.99' ..Appliance rollers, $7,fS a e'xl'ws" particle beard, ' * t«y»* fllftt* , _ 118 W. LAWRENCE St. Everything fo meat your needs Clothing, Furwttura, Ajpgilencw USED AND now' officb duKIL -chairs, tables, filet, typewriter^ adding machines, offset printing presses, mimeograph, drettlmp-boards and tables, Perbes, 4500 Dixit, Drayton, OR 34787 or Ml 7-2444. S.aH USED MATTRESSES, TWIN SIZE. Ilk* ngwj Mjrple table dk„ FE 4-458T USED 80,000 BtU GAS COUNTER flow well furnace with blower, 60,-000, BTU) two 104,000 BTU used oil furnaces, basement models) 2 used gas 60,000 BTU space heaters. Call 324-1239. WANTED: U^RIGHtS, GRANtlS, ' Spinets end console pianos—at , Grinnell's f u ® CALL MR. WOOD FE 3-7148 WASHED WIPING RAGS, AS LOW as 19 cents per lb. 25 lb. boxes 'e 300 lb. bales. Industrial cafeteria tablet, seels 6. 819.95 ^ 36' van trailers, ckn be used on the road or for storage. Start it $250. Clark fo-k lift truck, 4000 lb, 8895. Sale Business Proparty 57 30.000 SO. FT. BUILDING with II ft. clearance, and railroad siding, O'Neil Realty. OR 4-2222. Mortgage Loans 62 MONEY TO LOAN - FAST 24 HOUR SERVICE First and Second- mortgages for everyone, efven If behind. Widows, divorcees end people with bed credit are OK with yt. Call ALL -RISK MORTGAGE CO., Mr- Winn. 1-398-7902. SLIGHTLY SCRATCHED Maple Hutch, 30" width .....$69.50 40" width hutch ...... $89.50 Corner hutch ......$59.50 New and ^ ,feel/ lnBl<$, beams, plate, pipe. Pearson's Furniture 210 E. PIKE FE 4-7881 STUDIO COUCH, GOOD CONDI-flon* folds down for bedt~f25. 686 Stanley Ave.* 2nd house on right off Montcalm. After 3 p.m, USED MAYTAG WASHER4 (GUAR-anteed) $39, Apartment Elec, range $29. Range hood with tan MILFORD COMMERCIAL 550 ft. of vacant frontage, six acres, between Milford and Highland, railroad at rear of property. Ideal - for distributor type business, $too per ft. and owner will divide. COMMERCIAL BUILDING 2260 sq. ft. in Pontiac, oh main street, ideal tor distributor type business. ROCHESTER INDUSTRIAL One acre In city* h6s sewer and water* also i Includes good eight room house ^And garage. $26*500. BATEMAN COMMERCIAL DEPARTMENT 377 S. Telegraph Rd. 338-9641 ’# Attar 5 cell 334-8199 MODERN 1-FLOOR MANU-facturlng building, 19,120 sq. ft., 1,200 sq. ft. offices, 19 acres, - -1,200 foot rail. Commerce Twp. W. Maple and Haggerty Rd. Call Lynn Morgan, 353-1000. BYRON W. TRERICE ORION TOWNSHIP — LAND FILL mlt on a| Realtor. PONTIAC AREA Sale with lease back pn 36x60' commercial bldg., well located on corner lot In new shopping area. Plenty of parking space. A good Investment with only $5,000 down. RIDGEWAY REALTOR MLS_______338-4006 HOWARD T. KEATING DIXIE HIGHWAY Juki off the freeway not far from Grand Blanc end Clarkston. 56 acres mors or less. Spring: field Township. 81,000 per acre. Suitable for commercial — high rise motel — recreation, efo, DIXIE HIGHWAY Corner of Holly Road and Dixie .Highway, zoned commercially 30 Sat. Til 4. EZ Terms i PIECE SECTIONAL - BRAND new close-out, t beige 1 blue, nylon covered. Foam cushion. Regular $229, now $139. Pearson's Furni-ture, 210 E, Pike, FE 4-7861. 4-PIECE BEDROOM SET (Brand New) $09.00 $2.50 Weekly PEARSON'S FURNITURE 2)0 E. Pike FE 4-7881 PIECE TWIN BED SET, Dresser, 820. OR 3-7476. 8150. 9x12 Linoleum Rugs $3.89 Solid Vinyl Tile ......... 7c ea. Vinyl Asbestos tilt ...... 7c ea. Inlaid Tlla, 9x9 ........ 7c ea. Floor Shop—223S Elizabeth Lake "Across From the Mall" 0" TAPPAN GAS' RANGfc S59.95. Frlgldelre refrigerator, big freezer $69. Others from $39.95. 2 pc. living room $39. Oes dryer like new $69. Wringer washer low as $24. Baby cribs $1.95. Bedrooms, chests, end dressers. Lots of used bargains at Little Joe's Trade-Ins, Baldwin at Walton, FE 2-6S42. BATEMAN COMMERCIAL DEPARTMENT '377'S. Telegraph.Rd. 338-9641 After 5 call 332-3759 LIQUOR BAR With living quarters, forced sale. Only „ $40,00 with $19,000 down. Will consider trade. STATEWIDE REAL ESTATE usual rural subdivision curved blacktop * streets. A for miles. $1100 down. ROSE TOWNSHIP Rolling 10 sera parcel that lays perfect which contains 4S6 feet of roed frontage. Ideal for that smell tract you are looking tor $9,000 with terms. Warren Stout, Realtor 1450 ~N.' Opdyke FE 54165 with 2661 S. Lapeer Rd. ORION TOWNSHIP — LAND FILL permit on approximately 31 acres. Nix Realtor. 651-0221 — 552-5375. START THE NEW YEAR RIGHT — with a’ down payment on a large lot in Hl-Hill Village nr your future home — priced from $3375.00 with only 10 per cent down. LADD'S OF PONTIAC 3677 LAPEER RD._________391-3300 ORION TOWNSHIP — 3 ACRES near Orlon-Rochester Rd. Ideal building site. $6,000. GREEN ACRES 1469 S. Lapeer Rd. Lake Orion . MY 34262 UNDERWOOD 10 acres near Holly recreation area lust off Dixie Hwy., rolling with some trees, 334' on road, 219' well and pump. $9500 terms. . 6.9 acras N. of Pontiac with 200' on road, 1 ml. from 1-75 Interchange, trees. $7950. 2VS acre comer parcels, 2 available, both are fronted on one side with paved road, Holly end Ortonville schools, prlcsd at $4500 end $4950 respsctlvsly, terms. UNDERWOOD REAL ESTATE 0645 Dixie Hwy. ____________625-2615 PARTRIDGE "IS THE BIRD TO SEE" A TOP LOCATION STORE Over 2600 sq. ft. at busy Intersection on Highland Rd. Large partially paved lot 150 x 260. Hes hundreds of uses In this prims location. For an Investment or your own use — don't welt. It's priced right for quick salq at only $40,000, on terms. , ASK FOR BUSINESS GUIDE PARTRIDGE REALTORS 1050 W. HURON STREET FE 4-3581 Open Wk. Nltes III! 9:00 SAND & GRAVEL BUSINESS JUST OFF M-59 17 acres with 41'x61' steel bulld-Ing, loading dock, frontage on paved roed. Owner leaving town. Sacrifice on lend contract terms. BRIAN 623-0702 5904 Dixie Hwy., Waterford THEATER 570 seats, excellent condition, good suburban location. Priced td sell. Send replies to Pontiac Press Box C-13. WANTED Trash and garbaga routa with or without trucks. 651-9513. Sal* Farms S6 80 To 800.ACRES In lower Michigan. Dairy,1 grain, beef or hogsl Name your farm needs, wt have It at one ot "Michigan's" Farm Real Estate Coidwater, Michigan. Dele A. Dean Farm Broker end Auctioneer. Write or cell 517-271-2377 - days Headquarters — Dean Realty Co., or 517-18S4127 - nights. A, sandKrs OA 0-2013. FARM INVESTMENT PROPERTY 240 ACRES 2 homas, 1 Imposing and melsstlc with 5 liras bedrooms, the other smaller but nest end modern. Excellent lend, Located south ot Lapeer close to giant new take now being developed.. $444 per acre. C. PANGUS INC., Realtors OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 630 MIS Ortonville CALL COLLECT NA 7-2815 WARDEN HAS BARS We have an excellent selection ot bars and taverns available. Call or come In tor confidential consultation. NO OBLIGATION. Trade-Ins sccspted. WARDEN REALTY 3434 W. Huron, Pontiac 333-7157 Sale Laad Contracts 60 60 YARDS OF USED CARPETING, reasonable. Must be out of the house by Jan. Sth. 646-9830 BASSETT BEDROOM SET, EXC condition. 0115. Walnut 7 piece dinette set, exc. condition $75. French provenclal living room set, new and never used, $275. Pontiac Rasate Shop, Days 335-6932 days, 335-7942 Evet. * ... . BEDROOM SETS: MAHOGANY, $95t maple, $65; walnut, $60* blond, $79. Dining room table, 4 chairs. Chine cabinet, buffet, $150; living room set, $75; end table set, $23; desk, $25; piano, $85* stove, $25; refrigerator, $25; dinette, $13, M. C. Lippard, S59 N. Perry. I USED TV'S, $19.95 COLOR TVs, $299.95 Repo. Hoover Washer $99.95 - SWEETS RADIO AND APPLIANCE, INC. 422 JV. Huron . , 334-5677 Antiques 6S-A CUSTOM ANTIQUE REFINISHING Specializing In fine antique re-finishing, furniture repair of ell types, efl work guaranteed. Harold Richardson, 363-9361. Mon.-Frl. Hand Tools—Machinery 68 AIR COMPRESSORS, L U B R IC A-lion equipment, hydraulic lacks, staem cleaners. Welding equipment. Etc. Pontiac Motor Parts* 1014 University Drive. FE 24106. Hi-Fi, TV A Radio* 66 • MONTH - OLD BEAUTIFUL 5' stereo, sliding front panels with bar end record storage. AM-FM 21" SILVERTONE COLOR TV, 1-year-old, $250, 624.5301, after 6 p.m. 21" USED TV .. $29 Walton TV, FE 2-2257 open 515 E. Walton, corner of Joslyn ALL REMAINING 1967 STOCK OF Colored TV, black and white TV, phonos, close out at cost' puts 10 per cent. Dalby TV and Radio. FE 4-9002. Off Walton Blvd. First St. W. of Joslyn. COLOR TV BARGAINS, LITTLE Joe's Bargain House, FE 24042, GE HIGH BAND RADIO EQUIP-ment, l bass unit,. 1 mobile unit, with antenna, cell FE 54571. RECORD PLAYER NEEDLES herd to find? q See us — We have most all kinds Johnson TV—FE 8-4569 45 W. Walton near Baldwin Vfottr Softeners 66-A HOT WATER HEAT AND WATER softeners a specialty I Condra Plumbing 8. Heating FE 8-0643. For Sale Miscellannoas 67 Vi TO ., THEORY CLASSES STARYiHG JaN-usry. Beginners or advmcod. children or adults. OR 3-0923.________ Oifito Iqulpmant 72 PAYAAASTER CHECK PROTEC-tors* new* $60 each. FE 4*7651. LARGE 49" METAL DESK WltH recessed typewriter well. Included, — upright Underwood lypawrltar, 830, 6824489. . _______ . PRINTING PRESSES-OFFSEY 5433 OIXIo. Wotortord 4214200' StorB Equipment 73 Sporting Goods 74 KEEP CARPET CLEANING PROB-lems small , — use Blue Lustre GIFT IDEAS . USED SKI-OOO, 1966 MODEL. SUPER OLYMPIC. 14W H.P. WITH COVER, LIKE NEW, ONLY S69S. . USED POLARIS, 1966 MODEL, 1] H.P., LIKE NEW, ONLY $596. ( KING BROS. FE 4-1662 . FE 447J4 Pontiac Rd. *t Opdyke ICE FISHING SHANTlVi ANb stoves. FE 4-1457. 5-V GUNS—720 W. HURON. 234-1461. Exc. selection ot used gun». 1967 15W HORSE POWER IHOw mobile, 1 only, now. Dealer met. Triple H Collision. 1634 Auburn Road. __________j wall to wall. Rent electric sham-pooer, $1. Hudson's Hdwe., 41 E. Walton. __________ KENMORE SEMI AUTOMATIC washer, $20. Combination plantar and room divider, $15, Ilk* new floor polisher, $15, high seat upholstered swivel chair, $7, Admiral 21" TV, $10. 18' round pool with ell accessories, $45 used on* season. 624-3814. MEDIUM-SIZED BOYS 1947 WAT^R-ford class ring, $17. Call after 6, 335-9624._ MISCELLANEOUS ' HbUSftHoLb furniture and appliances, coal stove mlsc. hand tools. 5905 Weldon, Clerkston.___________________ NEED A COMMERCIAL PHOTOG-rsphsr? Cell DONOVAN I That's H&S DONOVAN, 2878 N. Adams. 852-2351 PLUMBING BARGAINS. FTTO standing toilet, > $16.95; 10-gellon heater, $49.95; l-oi*c* bath sets, $59.95; laundry tray, trim, $19.95; shower stalls w|tn trim, $39.9$t 2-bowl sink. $2.95t levs., $3.95; tubs, $20 and up. Pip* cut end threaded. SAVE PLUMBING CO., 841 Baldwin. FB 4-1514. POLAROID CAMERA, TOUCHES, chairs, tables, baby clothes. Ml >2033.______________________ 7 POOL TABLES 1965 $, Telegraph — Tournament. 6PRED-$ATlN bAlWti. WARWICK Supply. 267$ Orchard Lake. 682* STALL $ H O W E R S COMPLVtI with taucets and curtains $69.58 value, $34.58. Lavatocfon. oowMete with taucets $14.96, toltats $ll.?3. Michigan F luarescent, 393 Orchard Lk., FE 4-6463 — 17. . . FOR THE WHOLE FAMILY! I Compact 1966 folding 3 hp. EVINRUDE with carrying case. See the AMF SKI DAQOLER power sled. Fun for evervens. SUZUKI CYCLES 50CC-250CCX4 Hustler. RUPP Ml l-Mkis tram $129 Specials an boats, mo tare and trailers. Lay-*-w*y now tar big savings. Take M-59 to W, Highland. Right on Hickory Rldga fid. to Demoda Rd. Laft and follow signs to DAWSON'S SALES AT TtPSICO LAKE. 629-2179. BOWS AND ARROWS—1364Mi ---------it-.? -- ] wTHQUi GENE'S ARCHERY-714 I URON HEADQUARTERS for Rupp Sno-Sport Polaris, Scorpion SNOWMOBILE Buy early and save $8 DOWN. EASY BANK TERMS MG SALES & SERVICE ' All anowmobllo scceseortae 4667 Dlxlo Hwy. Dr*ytan_Pl6lng 103 E. Mentcilm Nliflil JOHNSON'S SNOWMOBILE AT TONY'S MARINE 612*5440 JOHNSON SKI HORSfc 't SNOW MOBILlS Ico tlshlng tscklo Tip-upo rods, augora> NMff PAUL A, YOUNG* Inc. i THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 2, 1968 „ ... I___________, starting Dee., 24 to Fob., 15. o'nwi l: BRAMBLEWOOD COUNTRY aUBS WINTER SPORTS BASIK DIR! From hchXy i wiles NO. OF GRANGE HALL NO.. FUH UIti RO., THEM LEFT Vi »1M MINER RD. HOLLY 634 9209 ’ LIKE TO ROUGH IT? tike to punish yourself? Don't llkt luxury? Then don't come end see the most luxurious camping trailers on tho Market. The worlds largest setting lino—Apeche. EVAN'S EQUIPMENT 415-1711 Just N. of Waterford Hill 4507 Dixie, Hwy. Solar i s snow-mobiles, «?5 and up. Perry's Lawn and Garden. 7415 Highland Rd.-M-5t. Form Produce SKI-DOO'S We have a complete line on display. AS LOW AS $695 Also a complete line., of skl-doo clothing access, and trailers. Come In 10r a demonstration ride now. See end drive the lively one. CREDIT TERMS AVAILABLE KING BROS. PONTIAC RD. AT OPDYKE FE 4-0734 _____ FE 4-1441 NO. 1 PONTIAC AND SEBAGO Potatoes. Middleton's Orchards, 1510 Predmor#., Rd., Lake Orion. MY 2-1941 after 4. ___________■ i Farm Equipment CLARK'S TRACTORS AND MACH IN- ery. MA 9-9374. ____________ ROAD GRADER, TANDEM, GOOD shape, 32,750, owner. 473-3488. SKI-DOO SKI-DADDLER Snowmobile CLEARANCE SALE ON USED TRACTORS AND SNOW BLADES - AS LOW AS $150 A large selection to choose from KING BROS. FE 4-1442 FE 4-0734 Pontiac Rd- at Opdyke Rd. DACHSHUND, DALMATION, AND poodla puppies. AU AKC registered Kennel closing. $40 and up, De trplt, TR 1-3745 or LI 35605. DACHSHUNDS, MINIATURE, AKC. 7 Mu.,.......... ' FOR SALE DACHSHUND PUP. FE-male. 474-3955. GERMAN SHORT HAIRED POINf er male, 10 mos„ papers, all shots, .852-3842, before 1 PM. - GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPS, champion Una S50. 424-8792. AKC GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPS, AKC and pedigree Ine'l, 7 weeks, good temperament, show quality. 482 2S34. , Hungarian vizla retriever female, l-yr.-old, 150. 335-7481. LABRADOR, 4 MONTHS, FEMALE with papers, shots, axe. health, reas., 3334888. MINIATURE POODLE. male. 2 yrt. 481-0443. AUCTION 80 AUCTIONLAND PERKlNg SALE - SERVICE - Auction. Swartz Creek Phone 4339400 livestock S3 FIRST LESSON FREE. KLBNTNER Riding Academy. 3434)009. HORSES BOARDEO, BOX Watted Lake area, 349-1904 STALLS, PONIES AND RABBITS. , 423-0473 REGISTERED QUARTER HORSE Sale. Buckskins and Palaminos trained, terms. 634-3923.* Meats 83-A WE' CURE AND SMOKE Gall FE 2-6)55. MEATS Hay-Grqin-Feed 84 FOR SALE: HAY AND 628-2056 STRAW. HAY AND STRAW 50 CENTS PER bale. North of Rochester off Rochester Rd. 625 E. Buell Rd, Best Mobile Home Sales Open Daily—9 a.m.-8 p.m. Marietta Champion Royal Embassy Regent Squire Lendbia Delta Victor MARLETTE EXPANDOS ON DISPLAY FREE DELIVERY AND SET UP. WITHIN 200 MILES.. , SPECIAL 2 ONLY — 1948 Champions 12 X # - 84995 ON DISPLAY AT: Cranberry Lake Mobile Home village 9420 Highland Rd., (M-59) 2 miles West of Williams Lk., Rd. 343-5294 343-5400 86 FOR RENT, DRIVE AND LIVE IN Cruls Air motor home, Heap* *> 343-2088. ______________ <89 87 : F A R M A L L TRACTOR WITH snowblade and plow. 8450. 394-0278. BUY NOW AND SAVEI CRUISE OUTS rare black, terms. OR 34002. AKC PEKINGESE PUPS, EM 33778. AKC GERMAN SHEPHER PUPS, *39,4235451. AKC BEAGLES, EXCELLENT hunters, rabbit* or blrda. OR 3-5007. / SALE- Fall Inventory Reduction 14* Frolic $1,495 14* Frolic $1,895 19* Frolic *2,395 21‘ Travolmaster $3,595 24' Boles-Aero it . $5,875 All arc self-contained TRUCK CAMPERS 8' Skamper (told-down) ....... 81,195 10W' Frolic, S.C. *1,795 AKC, CKC, ALASKAN MALAMUTE pups, show and sledding, champion bloodllna, all shots. Terms. 634-3923. ALL PET SHOP, Si WILLIAMS, FE 44433, Parakeets and Finches. BASSET HOUND, 8 MONTHS OLD with papers, call after 4 p.m. 391-215L BEAGLE PUPPIES. PUREBRED, excellent Hunters or pets, $10 ee. Call after 3 p.m., 6234945, BEAUTIFUL COLLIE PUPPIES. 492-1901 see thIse VALUES TODAY1 Also 75 used campers and trailer! on display. COLLIE PUPPIES AKC, BRED F6R gentleness, intelligence and beauty, males and tamales, $75. MY 32979. This means we ere overstocked to the point where we must sell 20 NEW AND USED mobile homes. ALL AT A LARGE DISCOUNT FOR EXAMPLE — 50'xt2', list price $5,185 OUR PRICE: $3,895 Don't miss fhls chance ot a lifetime. All sizes In stock. Also sea 1948 models on display now. Free delivery and free set-up within 300 miles. We will riot knowingly be undersold. MIDLAND TRAILER SALES Open 9 to 9 7 Days Week 2257 Dixie Hwy. 5490 Williams Lake Rd. OR 3-5981 Open Mon.-Frl., 9 a.m.-8 p.m. Sat., 9 to. 4, Closed Sundays MIXED COCKER-POODLE PUPS Call 343-S490 or Inquire 1402 Peter- ton. Union Lake.__________ PART DACHSHUND PUPPIES. S10 each. 332-9820. PAltt COCKER PtlPS. I WElTS. 85 and *10. 335-3314. POODLE BEAUTYF SALON Cllpplnga-AKC Pupa—Stud Servlet Pat Supplies—412-4401 or 482-0927 Doodle clipping and sham- poolng, by appointment. FE 5-4095. PUPS. 5 WEEKS OLD, OACH shund, 451-3638. RED AKC DACHSHUND PUPPIES, 4 tamales, 9 weeks, $40 each 424-4458.; ' _______ REGISTERED Toy fox ter SIAMESE KITTENS- 12 , WEEKS ' old. cf* iham m—-1 point.________ ST BERNARD PUPPIES, Mobile Hemet •9 or-., sates equipped ATTENTION! Hbuse trailer, owners 1943 Ford, N-4C3 fully to handle any trailer, *1;#W John McAuliffe Ford 277 West Montcalm FE 34101 ., ’ '■ LI 3-2030 HAVE A MERRt, * CHRISTMAS and buy a new 1948 Detroiter Mobile Home Now on display ’at BOB HUTCHINSON'S 4301 Dixie Hwy. (US-10) Drayton Plains OR 3-1202 or 22350 Telegraph Rd. between 8 & 9 Mile EL 4-1444 Open dally till 8 p.m. Sat. and Sun, till 5 p.m. AT LOST OUR LEASE TOLEDO,. OHIO SALES LOT tTOWN & COUNTRY MOBILE HOMES CLEARANCE SPECIALS NEW UNITS M'xtO' Suncraft „.......... 12'x60' Suncraft, colonial 12'x40' Homecraft *5195 USED UNITS I0"x52' Suncraft 1964 *3250 |2'x52‘- Suncraft 1944 $3450 DELIVERED AND SET UP TELEGRAPH AT DIXIE HIGHWAY 334-6694 Oxford Trailer Sales MARLETTES - 50 to 63 long, 12 wide, 20 wide. Early American, Conventional and modern decor. Expando or tlp-outs. Priced right, Built right. Phone MY 2-0721, ml. S. of Lake Orion on M24.____ Rent Trailer Space 90 LARGE LOTS, NATURAL GAS PONTIAC MOBILE HOME PARK. Auto Service 93 EXCEL PAINT AND BUMP. Qrtonvllle. 482-0173.______ Motorcycles 95 CHRISTMAS SALE Mini Bikes,- Go Carts 6 brands to choose RUPP — FOX — 'LIL INDIAN RUTTMAN — TACO — BONANZA From $1 >9.95 UP $0 down or use your Michigan Bankard MG SALES & SERVICE 4467 Dixie Hwy. Drayton Plains Open 'til 8-p.m. 6 days wk. MINI BIKES Candy paint, chrome fenders, 31fr n.p., safety throttle $149 with 85 down. MINI BIKE,KITSMl?., ANDERSON SALES,8. SERVICE S45 S. Telegraph FE 3-7102 SUZUKI CYCLES, 50CC-250CC. RUPP Minlblkes as low as 8139.95. Take M59 to W. Highland, Right on Hickory Rldga Rd. to Demode Rd. Left and folio# signs to DAWSON'S SALES AT TIPSICO LAKE, Phone MAIn 9-2179. ________________ 1967 305 HONDA SCRAMBLER Good condition. 8500. 493-4432. WINTER PRICES SPECIAL REDUCED PRICES on all motorcycles A few '67s tort at huge savings. ANDERSON SALES 8. SERVILE 145 S. Telegraph FE 3-7102 Bicycles 96 SCHWINN 10 SPEED bike. 6234670. VARSITY Boats-Accessories 97 Birmingham BOAT CENTER See Them Now! PRE-BOAT SHOW SPECIALS ON ALL 1968 MODELS ft Men Silvei Save Now! Spring Delivery: Wanted Curt-Truckg 101 HELP! Wp need 300 sharp Cadillacs, Pan-tides, Olds and Bulcks tor out-of-state market. Top dollar paid. MANSFIELD AUTO SALES 1104 Baldwin Ave- . FE 5-5900 ... FE 8-8825 STOP HERE LAST M & M MOTOR SALES Now at our new location We pay more for sharp, lata mod* el cars. Corvettes needed. 1150 Oakland at Viaduct m 338-9261 "TOP DOLLAR PAID" GLENN'S FOR "CLEAN" USED CARS 952 W. Huron St. FE 4-7371 FE 4-171 TOP $ PAID (Downtown Store Only) FOR ALL SHARP P0NTIACS AND CADILLACS. We ore prepared to make you a better offer!! Ask for Bob Burns. WILSON CRISSMAN Wanted Sharp Cars!.- We Pay-Top Dollar! Immediate Cash! All Mekefbnd Models WE WILL -TRADE DOWN SPARTAN DODGE 855 Oakland_FE 8-9222 We wotiid like to buy late model GM Cars or will accept trade-downs. Stop by today. FISCHER BUIGK 544 S. WOODWARD 647-5600 WE'LL MAKE YOU A BETTER Offer on your used car — SEE DOWNEY OLDS, INC. 550 Oakland Ave. FE 2-8101 Junk Cart-Trucks 101-A 1 TO 100 JUNK CARS AND TRUCKS, free tow anytime. FE 5-9044. , 2 JUNK CARS—TRUCKS, FREE tow anytime. F5 2-2444. ALWAYS BUYING end scrap. JUNK CARS — WRECKS WANT ed — highest price paid. FE 5-3620.1 COPPER — BRASS; RADIATORS— starters and generators, C. Dlx-son, OR 3-5849. Us«d Auto-Truck Parts 102 1961 TO 1944 HIGH RISE TRI-POW-er complete, '61 to '64 4 barrel manifold, '45 to '67 alum., wheels, front only. 644-8459. ________ 1963 RENAULT CARAVELLE FOR parts, 674-0128. _____ USED ENGINES, TRANSMISSION, rear axle, trl powers, bell housing, body parts, ate. N t H Auto Sales. OR 3-5200. New and Used Truck* 103 4 WHEEL DhlVE, CHEVY 1941 44 ton, with snow plow, new motor end clutch, exc. condition will take trade, *2150, 549-3177. 1948 FORD TRUCK. OLDS Powered. New tires. $150. 473-6723. By 4 p.m.___________________ 1952 JEEP, Vi TON PICKUP, wheel drive. 4 cyl., $385, also 1957 Jeep, motor, flat 6. 850. EM 3-6879. 1940 UNIVERSAL, SHARP, LIKE new, new top, new paint, snow blade.; A' real money maker, ready tor snow. GRIMALDI CAR CO. 900 Oakland FE 54421 1961 FORD ECONO VAN, GOOD condition. Call between 9 a.m. and 7 p.m. FE 5-5158.____________________ 1963 DIESEL CHEVY (40 SERIES) 14' stake, air brakes, air horn, .all new rubber, 920 tires, spoke wheels, exc. condition. UL 2-2792. 1963 FORD PICKUP TRUCK, stick, balance due S410.92. Just as-sume payments of S5.07 per week. CHOICE OF 4. CALL MR. WHITE FE 6-4088. KING. MARMADUKE By Anderson and Learning Kessler-Hahn ■ CMRYSLER-PLYAMIUTH RAMBLER-JEEP , . • 4473 Dixie Hwy. ■ CH32S2---:vjv.v MI10SCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH Small Ad—Big Lot SO CARS TO CHOOSE FROM Wt buy or will edlyst your payments to less a»ansly«-car. 677 M-M, Lk, Orton 1942 DODGE, 2-OOOR HARDTOP, white with rad bucket seats, radio, heater, whitewalls, 6-cyllnder, stk, balance due *317.24. CALL MR. WHITE FE 8-4088. KING. 1942 DODGE DART: RUNS GOOD *125. Sava Auto. FE 5-3271. V yrcer ITB'C JvIlOOi.ilLil O DODGE CARS AND TRUCKS Sales and. Service Oxford_____ ____OA 31400 1964 DODGE CORONET 440 WITH factory experimental 440 Magnum engine and 4-speed. FE 5-8329 or FE 4-9248. 9 s t*» mam. Nm lew k* ‘That’s the side Marmaduke sits on!”. 1942 RED FALCON STATION WAG-on, body good condition. Radio, heater, power back, window, snow tires. Needs engine. Silt. Ml 4-55)2. 1962' T-BIRD. GOOD CONDITION. $300. Call 343-5413, after i p.m. or 343-9232 daytime. ,____________ Foreign Cars 105 1943 VW IN SUPERIOR CONDI-tlon, red, radio, whitewalls, $650. Ceil 444-3422. LOW MILEAGE, BILL GOLUNff VOLKSWAGEN "HOME OF THE L.V.W." ... Michigan's fastest growing Volkswagen Dealer 1821 Maplelawn Blvd. Off Maple Rd. (15 mile Rd.) ACROSS FROM BERZ AIRPORT Troy ____642-6900 YOUR VW CENTER 70 To Choose From —All Models— —All Golors-—All Reconditioned— ■ Autobahn Motors Inc. Authorized VW Dealer mile North of Miracle Mile L 1765 S. Telegraph_FE 8-4531 New and Used Cars 106 BANKRUPT? CREDIT PROBLEMS? We Can Finance You— Just Call Mr. Mason or Mr. Murphy at I FE 5-4101 McAuliffe_______ New and Usad Cars 106 1955 CHEVY, REBUILT ENGINE, 852-4119 1957 CHEVY 301, 3 SPEED, S300 887-4242 1958 CORVETTE, 301 MALLORV Cam. Hurst lifters 3 speed tact), new tires, brakes, convertible, *550 firm. FE 4490*. ADKINS AUTO SALES 1962 Falrlana 500, 4-cyllndtr automatic. Now only *395. - - 738 Oakland __________ FE 2-4230 1961 CHEVROLET BtSCAYNE door, stick, radio, heater, full price *184.97. KING AUTO, CALL MR. WHITE. FE 8-4088.. 1941 CHEVY FULL PRICE- *295. with 850 down, buy here - pay here — at Marvel Motors 251 Oakland Ave. F E 8-4079_____ 1961 CHEVY BEL Am, AUTOMATIC. 482-9223, Riggins, Dealer. 1962 CHEVY IMPALA WITH V-8, automatic# radio, heater. Full price only $495 with no money down, $5.47 weekly. Standard Auto 109 S. East Blvd. ___FE 8-4033 1962 CORVAIR, GOOD SHAPE. | , Call UL 2-3591 HASKINS AUTO SALES 1962 CHEVY wagon 9-passenger, V-8, excellent condition, save. See this oriel 4495 Dixie Hwy., Clark-ston, MA 5-3112. BEEN BANKRUPT? DO YOU NEED a car? Garnisheed? Got a problem? Divorced? New In the area? Call Mr. White FE 8-4080. King DO YOU NEED A CAR? GOT A problem? Divorced? Been bankrupt? Repossessed? New In area? Call Mr. White FE 8-4080. King. GOOD CHEAP CARS — 12* UP ECONOMY CARS 2335 DIXIE — FE 4-2131 NEED A CAR? NEW IN ’ THE area. Repossessed? Garnished? Been bankrupts? Divorced? Got a problem? Ball Mr. White FE 8-4080. NEW- FINANCE PLAN. IF PROBLEMS, BANKRUPT, OR GARNISHEED WAGES; WE CAN GET YOUR CREDIT REESTABLISHED AGAIN. WE have over 80 CARS THAT CAN BE PURCHSED. WITH NO DOWN PAYMENT. COME In and see credit MGR. MR. IRV. LUCKYAUTO DIVORCED? BEEN BANKRUPT? Repossessed? New In area? NEED A CAR? Call Mr. White FE 8-4080. King,_________ WE HAVE JUST RECEIVED 1967 Chevy 4-dr., auto., V-8's. 1944 Ford auto., V-8'S, 1 1944 Chevy auto., v-8, also 2 194S Pon-tiacs, auto, with double power. These cars are priced to sell fast. No reasonable otter refused. Cars can be purchased with no money down. LUCKY AUTO brad, pedigreed, champion papers. 781-7041, Washington, Pet fwppHoi-Sorvlcg LARGE BIRD CAGE ANI 19X14X15, 820, OR 3-5742. Auctioa Salas 80 B I B AUCTION EVERY SUNDAY ; WE BUY - SELL -• TRADE RETAIL 1 DAYS WEEKLY •os? Dixie Hwy. - or 32717 m&m SPORTCRAFT MANUFACTURING Steal frame pickup sleOpefs and tops 4140 Foley, Waterford, 6230450 1967 models. 1265 S. Woodward at Adams * Ml 7-0133 TRAVEL TRAILERS Your dealer tor — LAYTON, CORSAIR ROBINHOOD, TALLY HO 20 new and usad trailers In stock ALSO CORSAIR PICK-UP CAMPERS NEW SERVICE DEPT. Ellsworth Trailer Sales 4577 Dixie Hwy. 6234400 CLEARANCE 1967 MODELS BOATS AND MOTORS SAVE-SAVE-SAVE CRUISE OUT INC. 43 E. Walton Daloy 9-6 - FE 34402 GLASSPAR, STEURY, GW-INVAD-er, Mirrocraft boats, Grumman canoes, Evlnrude motors, Pamco trailers. Take M-59 to W. Highland, Right on Hickory Ridge Rd. to Demode Rd. Left and follow signs to DAWSON'S SALES AT TIPSICO LAKE. Phone 429-2179. TROTWOOD AT JOHNSON'S 517 E. Walton Blvd. , FE 4-0410 FE 4-5053 WE CARRY THE FAMOUS Franklins—Crees Fans—Monitor ThunderBird, jlitz-Craft Travel Trailers Skamper and PliasureMate Campers—7 & 8 Sleepers Holly Travel Coach 15210 Holly Rd. Holly, ME 44771 Open Daily and Sundays — INSIDE WINTER STORAGE KAR'S BOATS & MOTORS 405 W. CLARKSTON RO.' LAKE ORION - MY 31400 SAILBOAT - VIVACTIY, TWIN keel, 20', fully equipped, 4 berth cruiser, heavy duty trailer. 692-5101 THl SEASON IS COMING, SO MAKE THE MOVE NOW . . . HARRINGTON BOAT WORKS "Your Evlnrude Dealer" 1899 S. Tulegraph 332*8033 "'THE COLDER THE WEATHER-THE HOTTER THE DEAL" AT PINTERS Stercraft-Thompson-MFG Johnson Boats and Motors SNOWMOBILES NEW ANO USED 1370 Opdyke 9-4 FE 4-OT24 (1-75 at Oakland University Exit) WOLVERINE TRUCK CAMPERS and sleepers. New and usad, $395 up. Also rentals. Jacks, Intercoms, telescoping, bumpers, tedders, racks. Lowry Camper Sales, 1325 S. Hospital Rd., Union Lake. EM 33481. Spare lira carriers. Mobile Homes 89 Airplane* 99 1-A Beauties to Choose From RICHARDSON DELTA MONARCH DUKE HOMETTE LIBERTY COLONIAL MOBILE HOMES FE 2-1457 4231310 25 OPDYKE 5430 DIXIE Auburn Heights S. ol WOtertorc F.A.A. APPROVED SCHOOL — LET our Instructors leach you to l|y. ■ ADI Ipc., Pontiac Airport. OR «• 0441. d| Wanted Cart-Truck* 101 ADKINS AUTO SALES. NEEDS transportation cars now. 730 Oakland. FE 2-4330, eve. 338-6414. 12X50 1967 MODEL, COMPLETELY furnished. Ilka .new, excellent for \ city living and It would also make u an Ideal home up north tor tum-\ mer and winter vacations. \ McCullough realty 1 REALTOR 5440 Highland Rd. (M-59) MLS Open 9-9 674-2239 EXTRA EXTRA Dollars Paid FOR THAT EXTRA Sharp Car "Check the rest, then get the best" at Averill 12XSS NEW MOON, CARPETED furnished, 2-bedroom, $400 down fake over payments. 334-3407, 14' 1959 VA-KA-SHKINETTE, VERY good condition. Must sell. 402-9425 1944 RICHARDSON GLENHAvEN,' 3 bedrooms, turn. 82,700. 052-4734 402-5201. AUTO SALES FE 2-9871 2020 Dixie FE 4 6894 1957 PACEMAKER, 10x47, FUR nlshed, *1578. 3354)442. TOP * FOR CLEAN .CARS OR trucks. Economy Cars. 2335 Dixie. BIG INVENTORY OF NEW 1948 JEEPS Buy Now and Save ROSE RAMBLER-JEEP i Lake__________EM 3-4155 [Tomejn and see Frank Rocctssi For That Truck Deal John McAuliffe Ford 277 West Montcalm , FE <*-4101 WOULD YOU BELIEVE NO GIMMICKS-NO GIVEAWAYS JIST RIGHT CARS A1 RIGHT PRICES MANY MANY T3 CHOOSE FROM OPDYKE MOTORS 2230 Pontiac Rd. at Opdyke FE 8-9237 FE 8-9238 1943 BUICK LeSABRE CONVERTI-bla, black with white top, automatic, power steering, brakes, AS IS $895. VANDEPUTTE BUICK-OPEL, 194-210 Orchard Lake, FE 2-9165. 1944 BUICK RIVIERA SILVER green, 1 owner, exc. condition, lull powr. $2495. 444-0173. COMPLETE NEW SHIPMENT '68 JEEPS Ready tor immediate delivery Complete line of plows, cabs and special equipment Ready to deal now at discount prices. Grimaldi Jeep 900 Oakland Ave. Pontiac________FE 5-9421 END OF YEAR SALE 1957 Ford 6 V, pickup 1955 Chevy 44 pickup 1957 Ford 6 Ranchero 1957 Chevy 6 panel i960 GMC vs-ton pickup 1964 Chevy 8 44 pickup 1299 S. Hospital Rd. ,i Union Lk. Dealer JACK LONG FORD Michigan's Fastest Growing Truck Dealer Vi-ton, 1-ton, pickups; and camper specials, Get the 1966 BUICK Riviera GS, factory air-condiNerving, with full power, very sharp, SAVE ON THIS ONE. $ave BOB B0RST lincoln-Mercury Sales 479 S. Woodward Ml 4-4538 1944 BUICK LeSABRE CONVERTI ble black with white top, power steering, brakes, automatic, e rea' nica car for only *1995. VANDE PUTTE BUICK-OPEL, 194-210 Or chard Lake Rd. FE 2-9165. ____ 1944 BUICK Le SABRE. 4-DOOR One owner. Holiday special, 81695. KEEGO PONTIAC Keego Harbor'______________682*3400 Been Bankrupt HAD A REPOSSESSION? , BEEN TURNED DOWN BY OTHERS? £ YOU CAN BUY A C^R FROM US! BU^HERE! PAY HERE! HERE ARE A FEW EXAMPLES: 1942 CORVAIR Monza 2-door, coupe, with automatic, n*w tires, vary sharp! $5 down — only S3 week-ly. FULL PRICE ONLY .S297 1942 CHEVY Blscayne 2-door, stick shift, excellent condition. $5 down — only S3 weekly. FULL PRICE ONLY ... S297 1961 FORD Galaxlt 2-door .hardtop, automatic, V-8, ' very sharp. *! down — only S2.25 weekly. FULL PRICE ONLY . .. S297 •PAY HERE! BUY HERE! STANDARD Auto. Sales 3400 Elizabeth Lake Rd. VS block West of West Huron (M59) 681-0004 1942 CHEVROLET NOVA 9-PASSEN GER STATION WAGON, white with red Interior, deluxe chrome rack, 4 Seed, ^k Ihlft: *000. KM 349)3. THE NEW AUDETTE PONTIAC NOW SERVING Troy—Pontiac—Birmingham) Rme ISO Maple, acres* from Berx Airport 1944 PONTIAC CATALINA CON-vertlble, automatic transmission radio, heater, power brakes, i»w-er steering, real luxury *» real savings, J year warranty, *1095. HILLllDE LlNCpLNWlEfeCURY, 1250 Oakland, 3337843, TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS , 1945 PONTIAC Starchlaf 4-door sal dan, with automatic, power steering, brakes, radio, heater, beau-tttut black with vfntura trim, $1495. On US 10 at. M15, Clark-stdn, MA S-5071. . 1965 PONTIAC 'CATALINA 2-OOOR hardtop, automatic transmission, '■ radio, healer, power, brakes, power steering, air conditioning, a steal at S1495, 1 year Warranty. HILLSIDE LINCOLN-MERCURY 1250 Oakland, 3337843. IMS PONTIAC BONNEVILLE WAG-on, loaded, 334-2114. 945 PONTIAC 4 DOOR "STAR chief, power steering and brakes, Hydramatlc, exceptionally clean, 51450. F E 35455.____________________ All - FE 8-9661 1943 FORD FAIRLANE, 2 - D O O R hardtop. V8 automatic, red with red matching Interior, radio, heater, whitewalls, balance due S587.17. Assume weekly payments of *4.22. CALL MR. WHITE FE 8-4088. KING. ________ " 1963 FALCON 2-DOOR, AUTOMATIC, WITH RADIO, HEATER, AND WHITEWALL TIRES, FULL PRICE, $595, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Assume weekly payments of S5.44. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD. Ml 4-7500. 1963 FORD CLUB SEDAN, POWER EQUIPPED, WITH RADIO, HEAT-ER AND WHITEWALLS, FULL PRICE S495, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Assume weekly payments of S5.88. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7500. 1940 MERCURY 4-DOOIL V-8,.AUTOMATIC, POWER STEERING AND POWER BRAKES. EVERYTHING WORKS,. . , $99 COOfER-S Extra Cleon Used Cars 4278 Dixie Dreyton Plalnv Open 9 to 9 dally ____ 474-2257 1945 COMET CALIENTE 2-DOOR 202 engine automatic, power steering, radio, heater. Nicest i one we have had In agts. This one owner beauty, 8)295. Hillside Lincoln-Mercury, 1250 Oak-land 3337*43 1966 COLONY l Park Station Wagons. 2 to choose from, factory air-conditioning, both real sharp. $ave BOB B0RST Lincoln-Mercury Sales S. Woodward Mi 6*4538 RUSS JOHNSON PONTIAC RAMBLER On M24 in Lake Orion MY 3-6266 1945 PONTIAC CATALINA 4-DOOR hardtop, sllvermlst finish with matching Interior, power brakes, power steering automatic transmission, radio, heater, 1 year warranty, S1295. HILLSIDE LIN-CDLN-MERCURY, 1250 Oakland, 333-7863.________!____ - 479 1964 FALCON STATION WAGON, V automatic, radio, heater, white-walls, deluxe rack. White w matching Interior, balance due $472.44. Just assume payments of $3.12 per week. CALL MR. WHITE FE 8-4088. KING. _________ 1944 MERCURY PARKLANE Convertible, • bright red beauty with matching all vinyl Interior, power brakes and power steering, automatic transmission, stereo tape. This Is not a run of the mill convertible—It Is a 1 owner garage kept beauty, sold and serviced by us. Has the balance ot the new car warranty laft. *2195. HILLSIDE LINCOLN-MER-CURY, 1250 Oakland, 3337843. 1964 FORD 4-door# automatic transmission/ V8j only $895 BOB B0RST Lificoln-Mercury Sales 19 S. Woodward r\ Ml 4-4538 1965 FORD COUNTRY SQUIRE STA-tlon wagon, 352 V-8 angina, automatic .transmission, power brakes and power steering, radio, heater, need lots of room, here It is, 50,000 mile warranty. $1595. HILLSIDE LINCOLN-MERCURY, 1250 Oakland Ave., 3337843. 1965 FORD 4-DOOR. AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, P O WE R EQUIPPED, WljTH RADIO, HEATER, AND WHITEWALL TIRES. FULL PRICE. *985. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEiY DOWN. Assume weekly payments of $5.92. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks a* HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7500. ______ 1965 FORD Country Squire, power equipped, with factory air conditioning. Automatic transmission, radio, heater, whitewalls. Full price $1,695, only $49 down and weekly payments of S12.92. HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. BIRMINGHAM _Ml 4-7506 1943 CHEVY II NOVA WAGON, 33,-000 miles. Extras Include mounted snow tires, power steering, auto., rack. $475 or best offer. Eves. FE 8-3418 days, TO 8-2146, 1944 CORVAIR 700 4 DOOR, AUTO. 18,000 miles, $495. 391-1932. TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS 1944 CHEVY Wagori, with V-8, automatic, power steering, radio, heater, whitewalls, white with a red Interior, *1195. On US 10 e» M 15, Clarkston, MA 5-5071._ 1966 FORD FAIRLANE 500 2 door hardtop, radio, heater, automatic, red In color, only $195 down, balance to finance of only - $1695 OAKLAND CHRYSLER — PLYMOUTH 724 Oakland Ave. FE S-9434 1944 CORVAIR CONVERTIBLE, AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, WITH RADIO, HEATER, AND WHITE-WALL TIRES. FULL PRICE *»5. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Assume weekly payments of $7.92. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7500. _______' 1966 THUNDERBIRD Convertible, factory'*, air-conditioning, automatic transmission, full power, with radio, heater and whitewall tires. Only 879 down or your old car, and up to 34 months to pay at bank rates. HAROLD TURNER: FORD, INC. 1 444 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM Ml 4-7500 HASKINS 4-speed, 327 engine, perfect shape! Save. 6695 Dixie Hwy., Clarkston. MA 5-5077: A________________i TOM RADEMACHER * CHEVY-OLDS 1945 CHEVY 4-door sedan, with 6-cyl. automatic, radio, heater, whitewalls, low mileage, one owner, new car trade $1,195. On US 10 at M 15. Clarkston, MA 35071. 1965 CHEVROLET Blscayne 2-door, radio, heater, and automatic transmission. A WONDERFUL SAVINGS FOR ONLY $995 BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth 840 S. Woodward^_____Ml ,7-3214 1967 Ford LTD Hardtop 4 door with V-8, power steering, brakes, only - $2695 BEATTIE FORD "Your FORD DEALER Since 1930" ON DIXIE HWY., WATERFORD 623-0900 1966 MERCURY Town Sedan, power equipped, breeze-way window, automatic transmission, radio, heater, white-walls. Full price $1,495, only S49 down and assume weekly payments of $12.92. HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. GET A MERRY OLDS M0 DEAL MERRY 0LDSM0BILE S28 N. Main ROCHESTER. MICHIGAN I960 OLDS HARDTOP, EXCELLENT mechanical condition. Make offer 673-0175. 1942 OLDS CUTLASS CONVERTIBLE, V-S, AUTOMATIC, < POWER STEERING AND POWER BRAKES. SAVE. v $695 COOPER'S >! Extra Clean Used Cars 427$ Dixie Drayton Plains Open 9 to 9 dally_______474-2257 1944 OLDS 98 Luxury sadan, full power, with factory air-conditioning, Ilka ntw. $1495 SUBURBAN OLDS 435 S. Woodward Ml 7-5111 Birmingham Pontiac Retail-Store 65 University FE 3-7954 1966 PONTIAC Club Sedan, automatic, power equipped, with radio, heater, end whitewall tires. Full price *1,788, only $49 down, and weekly payments of $12.92. HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 444 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM _ Ml 4-7500 1967 Pontiac Bonneville Hardtop 4 door with power steering, brakes, low mileage! Radio, now only - $2695 HOMER HIGHT CHEVROLET - BUICK - PONTIAC On M24 In Oxtord.- MIch. . OA 8-2528_ 1947 TEMPEST 2 DOOR CUSTOM hardtop. Full power, air. Head rests, all extras, large tires. 10,-000 miles. I owner. Fe 31789. OWNER, 9 PASSENGER. 1965 Olds, red station wagon, good condition, wj call 451-4778. 1965 OLDS 88. 4 DOOR. A REAL beauty.1 Holiday Special, $1395. KEEGO PONTIAC Keego Harbor 482-3400 1966 OLDS Toronado deluxe, full power, 6-war seat, factory air conditioned, tiltj and telescopic wheel, like new at only. $2995 SUBURBAN OLDS 63* S: Woodward Ml 7-5111 Birmingham WHY NOT SHOP AND COMPARE AT ONE STOP TRANSPORTATION DOWNEY 0LDSM0BILE 550 OAKLAND AVENUE FE 2-8101 1966 OLDS GO! HAUPT PONTIAC NEW YEAR J SPECIALS 1967 Pontiac Bonneville Hardtops 4-door with automatic, power steering, brakes, factory offlcal carsl $2795 HAUPT PONTIAC Vinyl top, like new | Clarkston throughout. $AVE SUBURBAN OLDS 435 S. Woodward Ml 7-5111 Birmingham On M-15 at 1-75 Interchange JEROME MOTOR SALES . 1980 Wide Track Dr. FE 37027 MUST SELL AT ONCE. 1944 CAD-I _ Utac, good condition. S187S. _ 1945 CADILLAC COUPE beVILLE i ell white with black vinyl trim ! with black vinyl top, full power, premium whltewells, spare nev-been used, e low price, one TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS 1944 CHEVELLE 2-door, with V-8, automatic, radio, heater, white-walls, vary low mileage, new car trada, *1495. On US TO at M 15, Clarkston, MA 30571. . 1944 IMPALA SS 2-OOOR HARD top. 396 engine. Turbo let hydra-malic. Bucket seats. Console shift. Power steering brakes. Post-tree-tlon. Cruise control. Air conditioned. Push, button radio, 7 wheels and snow tires. Tinted glass. Exc. condition. Ml 6-7391 afternoon. » 1967 Ford Galaxie 500 Hardtop 2 door, with ,V-I. automatic, power steering vinyl root, only - $2445 BEATTIE FORD "Your FORD DEALER Since 1930" ON DIXIE HWY., IN WATERFORD 623-0900 SPCECIAL 1966 GMC Vj -TON PICKUP GMC Factory Branch Oakland at Cass _______FE 5-9485 Auto InsuraNca-Marint 104 AUTO INSURANCE j Terms Available CALL .TODAY I ANDERSON & ASSOC. F'i 4-3535 1044 JOSLYN AVE.1 MIKE SAVOIE Troy's New CHEVROLET DEALER 1900 W. Maple 2 Miles East of Woodward Ml 4-2735 NOW Is The TIME To Save ^ On A New Model MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES 631 Oakland Ave. FE 4-4547 ____ Want Ads for Action TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLOS 1966 CHEVY Impale Super Sport, 2-door hardtop, v-8, automatic, radio, heater, whitewalls, blue with black vinyl roof, 11*95. On US 10 at M 15, Clarkston, MA 35071. 1967 CHEVY IMPALA Super Sport convertible, with full power, automatic 327 angina, showroom new! Only — $2595 BILL FOX’ CHEVROLET 755 S. Rochester OL 1-7080 Pretty Ponies 1965 and 1966 MUSTANGS SEVERAL USED MUSTANGS TO CHOOSE FROM CONVERTIBLES HARDTOPS FULL EQUIPMENT Priced From $1295 As Low As $39 Down And 39 Per Mo’nth HAROLD TURNER • FORD, INC. TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS 1967 OLDS 4-door hardtop with automatic, power steering, brakes, one owner, new cer trade! Only $2,495. On US 10 at M15, Clarkston, MA 35071. 1964 PLYMOUTH HARDTOP 2 door, Belvadera with V-8, power steering, whitewalls, only 895 down, finance balance of only - $995 OAKLAND CHRYSLER -724 Oakland Ave. 1966 PLYMOUTH Mterelll, J-door hardtoi ____netlc transmission, will. er. Maroon with black Interior $1695 BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth - *60 S. Woodward Ml 7-3214 1940 RAMBLER STATION WAGON, perfect condition, no rust, auto, must see to appreciate. FE 32949. 1962 RAMBLER WAGON Classic with radio, heatar, full prlca only I S $195 OAKLAND CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 724 Oakland Ave. FE 39434 1943 RAMBLER LIKE NEW, FULL price S395. Buy hare - pay here at Marvel Motors 1944 PLYMOUTH FURY III 9-PAS-senger station wagon. V-i. power steering, auto, tram., only 12,000 miles. 624-0213. AL HAN0UTE Chevrolet Bulck On M24 in Lake Orion v MY 2-2411 1944 IMPEllAL CROWN COUPE, full power AM end PM radio, power bucket seals. Stereo tape unit, vinyl tea mart, A-l condition, cell FE 60101. 1967 Fore} Custom 4 dpor with V-I, radio, htatar. Only - $2195 BEATTIE FORD "Your FORD DEALER Slnco 1930" ON DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORD 623-0900 1967 PLYMOUTH GTX d, vin i new! i $2495 BILL FOX CHEVROLET 755 S. Rochester OL t-7000 iooo Pontiac station wagon. New tires. 3430001. Daalor. SHELTON PONTIAC BUICK *55 S. ROCHESTER RD. 451-1500 1943 TEMPEST CLUB SEDAN,,AU-TOMATIC TRANSMISSION, WITH RADIO. HEATER, AND WHITEWALLS, FULL PRICE *495, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Assume weekly CALL CREDlf el HAROLD Ml 4-7500. 1943 GRANO PfilX HARDTOP. HOL Iday special. S79S. KEEGO PONTIAC Keegd1 Harbor 4*2-3400 YEAR END SPECIALS SELECT USED CARS 1944 AMBASSADOR Station Wagon, automatic, V-I, power steering, power brakes, power windows, luggage reck, alr-conditloning, tilt-wheel, and much morel Some new car warranty.......11795 1945 AMBASSADOR 990 Sedan, auto- matic, radio, hooter, full power .............. *1091 1966 RAMBLER AMERICAN, automatic, radio, heater, new white-wall tires .... 81241 1945 AMBASSADOR Station Wagon, automatic, V-8, power steering, ■“ power wlhdows, ilr condltl ' simulated Mwer brakes, ■■ luggage rack, air conditioning, UNDER *300 _ , -** 1942 AMBASSADOR WAGON, flick. V-8, radio, heater ...... OAVU 1942 CLASSIC SEDAN, stick, radio, _ heator, run* >gaqd. .. 8AVB 1962 RAMBLER SEDAN, automatic, radio,, heater, good transportation ......... ..... SAVE W USED CAR LOTS ATt 4447 S. Woodward, Birmingham ond 1 > • 4? E. Maple. Treat yillage Rambler 1947 REBEL HARBfoP, V4 4OT0-malic, radio, power brakes end steering, official car, SMclal 0t 11995. ROSE- RAMBLER-JEEP, Union Lake, EM 34IIS. f THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 2, 1968 C—Il _ if ir Television Programs ....I ;s ■ v^-.. Programs fumishod by stations listod in this column aro subject to change without notice Ctwuuwi*! 2-WJSK-TV, 4—WWJ-TV, 7-WXT2.TV, O-CICLW-TV, SO-WKSD-TV, 36-WTVS" TONIGH 1:00 (2) (4) News, Weather, Sports (C) (7> Movie: “The Nevadan” (1950) Randolph Scott, Dorothy' Malone, Forrest Tucker, George Macready, Jock Mahoney (C). (9) Dennis the Meance (9) (50) Flintstones (C) (R) (56) Friendly Giant 1:15 (56) Tales of Poindexter 0:30 (2) News — Cronkite (C) (4) News—Huntley, Brink-ley (C) (9) F troop (C) (R> (56) What’s New (R) 7:00 (2) Truth or Consequences (C) (4) Weekend (C) (9) Tim Tunnel (C) (R) 7:30 (2) Daktari — Archeologist’s presence causes friction among Wameru staff. (C). (4) I Dream of Jeannie— Barbara Eden’s husband, Michael Ansara, plays King Kamehameha (1758-§ 1819), whom Jeannie re- turns to his native Hawaii for a" brief but unhappy visit (C). (7) Garrison’s Gorillas r* When Garrison’s felons stumble onto a group of handcuffed prisoners, they don’t know that the MB guarding them is part of the gang (C). (50) I Love Lucy (R) 8:00 (4) Jerry Lewis — Guests are Nanette Fabray and Sergio Fanchi (C). (9) Monroes (C) (H) (50) Hazel (C) (R) (56) U.S.A. — J. p. Salinger’s novel, “The Catcher ** in the Rye” is examined. 8:30 (2) Red Skelton — Red’s guests are Milton Berle and Linda Bennett (C). (7) Invaders — Device is! implanted in man’s] brain by his brother, a neurosurgeon who has sold out to the invaders (C). . (50) Honeymooners (56) People in Jazz 9:00 (4) Movie: “The Evil o f Frankenstein” (1964) Peter ushing, Peter Wood-thorpe (C). (9) Wojeck — This critically acclaimed series returns, Its first program is a penetrating look at auto safety. Coroner Wojeck is angered when a fatal accident is blamed on drunk* en driving. He believe the fault lies with the auto maker’s indifference to designing safer cars, and demands a full-scale investigation (C). (50) Perry Mason (R) (56) Lorenz on Film — A TV Features I DREAM OF JEANNIE, 7:30 p.m, (4) 11:50 (56) Modern Math for Parents GARRISON’S GORILLAS, 7:30 p.m. (7) WOJECK, 9 p.m. (9) YEAR - END ROUNDUP, 10 p.m. (2), (8) Defense Dept. Cites Success of Bias Drive postwar film, “Nuremberg,” documents the rise and fall of the Third Reich. 9:30 (2) Good Morning World—] Dave is frustrated in his -attempts to see the big « football game (C). „ (7) N.Y.P.D.—Wife of ex- iled South American patriot is murdered. 10:00 (2) Year-End Roundup — Eric Sevareid is moderator for the first of two ■ CBS year-end correspondents’ reports (C). . (7) Hollywood Palace — Hostess Phyllis Diller pre-sents Johnnie Ray, Robert Vaughn, Shari Lewis and Charlie Manna (C). (9) Year-End Roundup — A look at the year’s top storeis (C)'. (50) Movie: “Slattery’s Hurricane” (1949) Richard Widmark, Linda Darnell. 11:00 (2) (4) (7) News, Weather Sports (C) (9) News, Weather, sports 11:30 (2) MdVie: “History Is Made at Night” (1937) Charles Boyer, Jean Arthur, (4) Johnny Carson (C) (7) Joey Bishop (C) (9) Movie: “The Great Gilbert and Sullivan” (1951) Robert Morley, Maurice Evans. 1:00 (4) Beat the Champ (7) Movie: “Flight Command” (Part 2) 1:30 (2) Naked City (4). News (C) 2:15 (7) News. 2 Doctors Face Fine for Refusing to Help Police 'NORTH SCFrUATE, R.I (AP)* — A North Scituate couple, both physicians, have been charged under a little-known state law for refusing to aid state police in,treatment of a woman who suffered a fatal heart attack on New Year’s Eve. ★ ★ ★ State police said they telephoned Df. James K. C. Wang and his wife, Dr. Sui-yen Wang at their hdhie Sunday night after Mrs. Bessie Lindinfeld, 51, of Foster, was brought unconscious by her husband into the state police barracks at North Cituate. * * ★ The Wangs refused to come state police said. Mrs. Lindinfeld died 15 minutes later. k k k A state law authorizes “town sergeants and constables” to “command all necessary ' aid and assistance” in execution of their duties. The penalty is a fine of up to $20. TOMORROW MORNING 6:00 (4) Classroom 6:15 (2) On the Farm Scene 1 6:20 (2) News (C) 6:30 (2) Sunrise Semester (C) (4) Ed Allen (C) (7) It’s a Wonderful World (C) 7:00 (2) Woodrow the Woodsman (C) (4) Today (C) (7) Morning Show (C) 7:55 (9) Morgan’s Merry Go-Round 0 8:00 (2) Captain Kangaroo (C) (9) Barney Boomer 8:30 (7) Moyie: “My Favorite Brunette” (1947) Bob Hope, Dorothy Lamour (R) (9) Bonnie Prudden (C) (56) Modern Supervision 9:00 (2) Merv Griffin (G) (4) Gypsy Rose Lee (O) (9) Bozo the Clown (C) 9:05 ( 56) All Aboard for Reading 9:25 (56) Of Cabbages and Kings 9:30 (4) PDQ (C) 9:50 (56) Art Lesson 10:00 (4) Snan Judgment (C) (7) Girl Talk (9) Mr. Dressup 10:05 (56) Reason and Read 10:20 (56) Science Is Discovery 10:25 (4) News (C) 10:30 (2) Beverly Hillbillies (R) (4) Concentration (C) (7) Donna Reed (R) (9) Friendly Giant (50) Yoga for Health 10:35 (56) Children’s Hour 10:45 (9) Ontario Schools M:50 (56) Spanish Lesson 11:00 (2) Andy of Mayberry (R) (4) Personality (C) (7) Temptation (C) (50) Little Rascals (R) 11:15 (9) William Tell (R) 11:25 (7) News (C) 11:30 (2) Dick Van Dyke (R) (4) (7) How’s Your Mother-in-Law? (C) 11:45 (9) Chez Helene TOMORROW AFTERNOON 12:99 (2) (4) News «5) (7) Bewitched (R) (9) Take 30 (50) Movie: “Escape Me Never" (1947) Erro Flynn, Ida Lupino. (R) 12:25 (2) Topps in Fashion (C) 12:30 (2) Search for Tomorrow (C) (4) Eye Gfkess (C) (7) Treasure Isle (C) (9) Movie: “Gentlemen Marry Brunettes” (1955) Jane Russell, Jeanne Crain. (50) Movie: “A Midsummer Night’s Dream” (1934) James Cagney, Olivia de Havilland. (R) (56) Spanish Lesson 12:45 (2) Guiding Light (C) 12:50 (56) ATI Aboard for Reading 12:55 (4) News (C) 1:00 (2) Love of Life (C) (4) Match Game (C) * (7) Fugitive* (R) 1:10 (56) Children’s Hour 1:25 (2) News (C) ^ (4) Carol Duvall (C) (56) Reason and Read 1:30 (2) As the World Turns (C) (4) Let’s Make a Deal (C) 1:40 (56) Art Lesson 1:55 (56) Of Cabbages and Kings 2:00 (2) Love Is a Many Splen-dored Thing (C) (4) Days of Our Lives (C) - (7) Newlywed Game (C) 2:00 (50) I Love Lucy (R) 2:30 (2) House Party (C) (4) Doctors (C) (7) Baby Game (Cl (50) Make Room for Daddy (R) 2:45 (56) Interlude*9 2:55 (7) Children’s Doctor (C) 3:00 (2) Divorce Court (C) (4) Another World (C) (7) General Hospital (C) (9) Pat Bonne (C) (50) Topper (R) (56) Medically Speaking 3:30 (2) Edge of Night (C) (4) You Don’t Say! (C) (7) Dark Shadows (C) (50) Captain Detroit (C) (56) Memo to Teachers 4:00 (2) Secret Storm (C) (4) Woody Woodbury (C) (7) Dating Game (C) (9) Swingin’ Tiine(C) (56) Big Picture (C) 4:30 (2) Mike Douglas (C) (7) News (C) (50) Three Stooges fR) (56) What’s New 5:00 (9) Bozo the Clown (C) (50)Little Rascals (56) Misterogers 5:30 (4) George Pierrot — “Florence to Rome” (C) (7) NeW$/ — Bob Young (C) (9), Fun House (C) (50) Superman (R) (56) TV Kindergarten Mixups Answer to Previous Punflo m ACROSS 37 Part pt a shoo WASHINGTON (AP) - Mora than 150,009 housing units previously closed fo Negro servicemen across foe nation have been opened in foe past six months, says' foe Pentagon. k k k The Defense Department said its program mixing persuasion with muscle in the form of sane tions achieved an increase since July of better than 24 per cent -from 646,700 to 802,200-in the number of apartment and trailer units now open on “an equal opportunity basis.” k k k I Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara inaugurated a program last July in which landlords barring Negro service personnel were asked by the government to change that policy. . -C" ★ k k...... At the same time, McNamara said the Pentagon would place off-limits to all servicemen—except those already occupying such units—apartments and trailer courts refusing to let in Negro Servicemen. k k k Thus far the sanctions have been applied in five areas—four in Maryland suburbs of Wash ington and one in a three-mile radius of the Pentagon, in Arlington County, Va., within a mile of the nation’s capital. • Vociforat# • Depot tab.) U “Original sinner" 13 Notion 14 Male swan 15 Bullfighters 17 Brasilian 1 macaw • : IS Vigilant lSComog|baek Z1 Bondage, ' (or iniUnco / 31 Mariner's >' direction ' 34 Mohammedan commander-27 Brood of 30 Lateral part 41 Kxiited . 42 Minoral spring 44 Vend 41 Savory sauces (var.) I Bird of prey S3 Arabian caliph pbeuants IR#v« 84 Pinochle term M Moccasin S7 Nautical term M Blood (comb, form) f It Abstract being SO Misplaced •1 Female sheep (Pi) DOWN 7 Once existed st Endures * 0 Farmer's bird scarer 10 Ripped 11 Arab garments 16 Makes amends varbsrste, as sound 20 Employers 22 Highlanders’ 1 One’s own (bare garments MGT 2 False god U Metallic element 3 Female bora* 4 Variety of adorn 34 Flog soundly (coin 36 Take into corund S Command •Bus of fresh-water ducks \ 28 Damsel ' 28 Kind of pucclo 26 Ignore 30 Hawaiian dance 31 Uncloses (poet) S3 Retains 85 Anointed 40 Upshots 43 Of the ear 45 Machine tool 46 Sleeveless garmsht 47 Wolfhound 48 Horseback game 80 Gained stature' 51 Citrus fruit 82 Epic poetry A Look at TV ***■ *i -fa ’1 1 W i i mm ./cy'Gri^vJt^ Ridk H 1 \ i r T~ r 6“ V ft 9 Itr rr 12 15 14 15 16 17 18 ■ 19 k 21 25 24 25 28 ■ 25 30 31 32 36 5? 38 ■ k 42 43 44 4b 1 46 47 46 49 50 51 ii 5T 54 55 86 8? 58 58 6b 61 2 By RICK DU BROW HOLLYWOOD (UPI) - Raiw dom thoughts after a New Year weekend of football Watching oh television; All that fancy talk about how scientific professional football has become Was turned into a farce when the Greeh Bay-Dallas championship game was played on a below-zero, icy Wisconsin field on which the performances looked like slapstick comedy. For such a popular, multi-miUion-dollar sport to put such effort into self-development, refinement of strategy and a round - the - year promotion — and then to aiiow the championship game to be played junder disgraceful conditions for showdown — is embarrassing for fans, athletes and owners. ] It looked like an ice ballet for elephants. :---------------it kt k k The argument that hometown fans should have the right to see their players in person in a championship contest is a weak one. I turned off several of foe bow! games Monday for a while c because foe tastelessness of some of the commercials was just too much. * 1 * k y, k k Nothing, perhaps, is as Offensive as the, deodorant ad' about fellows who take the stuff with them and are moronicaUy reprimanded about leaving their ' families “defenseless.” jr QUALITY REPAIRS on oil make HEARING AIDS Loaner* Available PONTIAC MALL OPTICAL A HEARING AID CENTER Thu Pontiac Mall Phona 682-1113 3 on Plane Unhurt in Mississippi Crash OXFORD, Miss. (AP) — A chartered plane landing to pick up the University of Georgia basketball team crashed and burned Monday night while the team watched. k k k Wilson Reports Army Food Is Not What It Used to Be SINCE WHEN Since when has pro football, which has been so completely dominated by television and its audience, suddenly become so concerned about anything but its own betterment? . The fact is that National Football League games are blacked out in home towns anyway, and more residents of an area have a chance to see them —. via television — if they are played away, ideally in a neutral city which generally has favorable [weather. If U R Socking Peace of Mind in This Restless Age Dial 335-0700 Sherriff-Goslin Co. Pontiac's Oldest Rooting ‘ and Siding Company Free Estimates 332-5231 By EARL WILSON SAIGON, Vietnam—In World War II, it was reported that a very good meal happened to. reach the soldiers one day, where- , upbn all the enlisted men askc:d what could have possibly the contests themselves happened. The answer came back loud and strong: m “Somebody shot the coqk ” The constant pounding of commercials during pro and college games is enough to sour one on the whole atmosphere of NU-SASH - Replacement Windows Prat Estimates CALL 338-4036 f’HowIs the "j i Time to Buy i Here in Vietnam now there has been a great M ___l -C A__JUU—I UissUkillUl Armtt fH The three crew members reversal of the traditional inedibility of Army aboard escaped without injury but the plane, a twin-engine Martin 404 owned by Southern Airways, was destroyed. There were no passengers in the craft. k k k “The boys that saw it said it looked like it landed on the front gear (wheels) and nosed into the runway]” Georgia head coach Ken Rosemond said. cooking. At Da Nang the other day I askedv an 1 officer why he wasn’t eating, when I was feastpig | on the shrimp and baked beans and ham and | potato salad at a buffet lunch. “To tell the truth,” he blushed, “I’m dieting. | “Sounds funny, I suppose, in Vietnam,” he* said, “but I have to watch my weight.” f k k ' ★ Up stepped a fellow journalist, Buck Lanier, of Long Beach, Calif., to make the pronouncement: “This is the best-fed war in history.” Birthday Shared KALAMAZOO, Mid). (AP) Three-year-old Shannon Stark of Kalamazoo won’t have ally trouble remembering her new baby brother’s birthday. It’s the! same as hers—New Year’s Day. Die boy, named John Patrick, arrived one hour and 17 minutes after the start of the new year. Their parents are Mr. and Mrs. James Stark of Kalamazoo. Undercover Police Officer Traps Florida Drug Ring HIALEAH, Fla. (AP) - A de- tective who set up housekeeping with two policewomen and posed as a junkie for three months survived three mistakes to help seize 600 pounds of marijuana and spring a trap on seven men charged with delivering the drug. Tony Martin, 26, said he assumed the name of a West Coast narcotics pusher who had died. The officer rented a home, pretending the policewomen were his family. GAINED CONFIDENCE With the assistance of Sgt. Charles Murphy, 56, Martin worked into the confidence of those offering illegal drugs for sale. ♦ * k' The 600 pounds received for a promised $51,000—never delivered—was worth over $500,000 for resale, according to Police Chief David I. Maynard. Martin was successful even though he once called Murphy Radip Programs WJR(760) WXYZd 270) CKLW(800) WWJ(950) WCAR(1130) WPONfl 460) WJBK(1500) WHFI-fM(94.7) TONI0HT 9:9B—WWJ, N • w I, Sports, Weather WJR, Nows, Sport* CKLW, News, Tom Shannon wpon, News. Sports WHFl, Unco Joy Show WCAR, News, Jack Senders WXYZ, New scope WJOK, News, Toler *>4J—WWJ. News, Emphesle 7:96—WWJ. News, Sport! WPON, News. Music WJBK, Nows, Music ' WCAR, Rod Mllltr, News. Mows, Duke Windsor, WHO). Dinner Concert WJR, Specie! News Coverope 7:15—wxyz, News, Dove Olles Music Sil6-WPON. Hontlec Cite Commission WXYZ, News, Dive Lock-hort Show WJR, Special News (lOP—WHFl, Jack Fuller lliSP—WJR, News, Music It i*6—WWJ, News, Sports. Overnight WPON—Arliane Weston WflONBtDav MORNINO 9:00 WJR, MUSIC Hell WWJ, News. Cerlson wcar, News. Bin Oelrell WXYZ, News, Martin A Howard Show WPON, News, Musle tKiW, Newt, Pud Davies WJBK, News Music, Avarv 9:18—WJBK, Bob Lae. Music tiM-WJR, Newt, music WHPI, News. Almanac W*ON, News, Music 9:M WJR, Newt. Sunnytkte CKLW, Jot Van WCAR, Newt, Jim Davit WrtFI. Uncte Jay WWJ, Newt. Ask YOur Neighbor Neighbor IH9P-WXYZ, Breakfast Club WHP', i'll Boyle WJBK, rNowt, Patrick WJR, Newt, Music WPON, Newt, Mutlc 11:99—WJR, New* Kaltldotcape WXYZ, Dsnny Taylor. Show WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON 11:90—WJR, NeW*. Perm WPON, Newt, Music WXYZ, News, Music -, WWJ, Revtewt Nawti Men ket WCAR, Ron Rose WHPI Bill Boyle CKLW, News, Dave Sheter WJBK News. Patrick lltW-WWJ, Marty liOewjR. .News Oodlrsy WHPI, News, Encors fltl—WPON, News, MUSIC WJR, News, MUSK WXYZ, Dave Prince Show liSP-WlR, Mutlc HCII 1:99—WCAR, Newt. Jack Se niters WJBK, Newt. Tolas CKLW, Newt, Tom Shanon WILSON 10 Years Late PITTSBURGH (AP) - Christine Ehman’s gift for her sixth birthday is arriving 10 years late. I A secretary for Judge Samuel ! Strauss of Allegheny Court found an envelope addressed to Christine in a law book while researching a Mint of law •k k k > The envelope, with a birthday card and $1 enclosed, apparent- on the envelope and ihailed It to Christine, who is now 16. BUCK ft WHITE ‘Sgt. Murphy” in the presence of two pushers, even though an acquaintance greeted him by name before others and even though his picture ran on the front page of a local newspaper during the undercover job. LONG CHANCES “We took some real long chances, but we had a lot of luck and it ended up the right way,” he said. “We started Off with the little man, buying a matchbox (of marijuana), then moved up to foe man with a pound,” said Murphy. k k k Sunday a panel truck backed up to the rented home with 600 of 1,000 pounds Martin ordered and police closed in. Four men in the truck were seized and three men in a car that followed the truck were captured after a running gunfight. All were charged with possessing and transporting marijuana. Murphy said the rest of the shipment probably was en route from Mexico. Police identified the \ truck driver as FemRndo Ernesto Lopez, 32, who said he was from Tampa, Fla. The others on the truck were identified as Hugo dos Santos, 28, who gave the address of a Miami Beach hotel, and Aleodoro Rodriguez Carra-do, 45, and Damaso Garcia, 34, both of New York City, The, three men In the automobile were identified as Nestor Gonzalez, 33. and Ramon Betancourt, both of North Miami, and Luis Agustln Montalvo, 56, of New York. Since war rations have never been gourmet quality, that may not be saying much. Yet, just to find fellows not griping about the chow appears to be precedent-setting. The helicoptering, the improved agriculture, the fact that here and there a chef is doing the cooking instead of an auto mechanic, may have resulted jjy was inadvertently used as a in the “unbelievably good” meals. j bookmark. ii.-i , |L> li 4/ Strauss added a two-cent THE MIDNIGHT EARL IN N.Y. ... stamp to the three-cent stamp Pearl Bailey’ll be named Entertafiner of the Year by Cue magazine ... Cary Grant flew to Miami-Beach, spent New Year’s Eve at the new Hilton Plaza . . . Walter Matthau’U get 300Gs for two weeks’ work in “Candy” . . : David Merrick’s talking to Columbia Pictures about a Broadway musical version of “Casino Royale”; it would star Ursula Andress. Pretty soon cafe openings will be covered by fashion writers. Buddy Greco, premiering at the Royal Box, describes his costume as “a Mao Tse-tung jacket with flare back, white wool with white satin facihgs.” (His singing’s notable, too). And at the St. RegiS—where former TV spieler Julia Meade debuted as a singer—her conductor Dick Leonard wore a turtleneck in the elegant Maisonette ... / 20th Century-Fox is rushing a sequel of “Valley of the Dolls,” which is racking up big grosses] TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: Did you hear (a$kS Bob Orben) about the girl who wore a miniskirt out in the fSin—and it shrank somethingwonderfol? - - WISH I’D SAID THAT: It pays to watch your calories. Even a million dollar figure can be ruined by inflation.—Shelby Friedman. REMEMBERED QUOTE: “Marriages may be made in heaven, but man is responsible for the maintenance work." EARUS PEARLS: Pat Cooper says his parents have a happy marriage: “When my father takes out the garbage, my mother goes with him. That’s love!” Allan Sherman discarded the horn-rimmed glasses he’s worn for years: “I wanted a new image, so people would no longer refer fo me as ‘the fat little guy with the glasses.’ So now they say, ‘foe fat little guy wtih the contact lenses.’ ” That’s earl, brother. / (Tin Hall Syndicate, Inc.) TIRES I Tubtltxs Black | - 7.00x14 j -----Parryi NEAR KMART V OPEN MONDAY ft FRIDAY EVENINGS TIL 0 P.NL_ Reasonable Jllllii ... Efficient ’ ANTENNA INSTALLATIONS UHF • VHF COMBINATION • ROTORS RADIO ft APPLIANCE . 422 West Huron , FE 4-5677 I Premier Quits in Cambodia BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) -Cambodia’s Premier Son Sann and his interim cabinet resigned Monday after the National Assembly voted their term had expired, Radio Thailand reported. k k k Radio Thailand’s monitoring service said Son Sann and his cabinet originally had been given three months to rule the country after their take-over from foe previous administration. * * * However, after the deadlipe Cambodia’s chief of state Prince Norodom Sihanouk, intervened and refused to approve the resignation, saying no one was ready to take over the pre miership. Parade Spectators Improvise on Seats PASADENA, Calif. (AP) -Some of the hundreds of thousands who watched the Tournament of Roses parade paid up to for a grandstand seat. Others improvised. k k k Among the do-it-yourself seating: pining room chairs, bar stools, ladders, sawhorses, a church pew. * * * One man provided his family with box seats—four folding chairs under a huge cardboard carton. Aralac, an artificial cloth, ts made from the casein in skim milk. It is used as a substitute for wool and has almost the same warmth and softness. ' window problems? we will remove and replace yourold, sweaty stealand aluminum windows with insulated “vinyl teal” windows! GUARANTEED TO SOLID VINYL WINDOWS / / / NO SWEAT Adds baauty and valua to your homa both insld* and out. Vinyl window* ora guaranteed not to twaat, rot, or naad painting and at on insulator against heat and cold vinyl it 7,680 timat more efficient than ttaei, 20 timat more officiant than wood, 34,800 timat mora officiant than aluminum. Cuttom mado, and doan both tidat frOm tha inside. Mbda to any ttyle. From *59** FOR FAIT IIRVIGE AND WINTER ENJOYMENT CALL NOW! HO STORMS PER WINDOW Minimum 4 Windows (any tizo axcapt pictura) DELIVERY AND INSTALLATION EXTRA MEMBER PONTIAC AREA CHAMBER OF COMMERCE Free Eulmatet, Planning, And Decorator Service CWeedon (fonstrudionffa In Pontiac Since 1931 1032 WEST HURON 3 Hook* Wait of Telegraph FE 4-2587 t X ' H TUB PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 2,1968 Use A lion Charge With Option Terms wsi. 1 Ladies’ Untrimmed Coats Regular to $60 $39 to $44 Men’s Slacks e Regular to $18 799 to ] 499 Girls’ Dresses Regular to $18 399 to 10" For the Whole Family All Styloi Are in Broken ,Sizes — Discontinued Styles ana Colors SSj •v.v 1 p m Ladies’ Fur Trimmed Coats Regular to $125 $49to $99____________ Men’s Sport Shirts Regular to $7 319 to 550 m? va; Ladies’Knit Suits I Regular to $55 _____*22'»$39____________| I Lades' Better Dresses Regular to $30 ^ 8" to 1799 Mss | Ladies’Nylon Shells Men’s fear. WoolShirts Regular to $14 999 | G 1 ~ 4 iirls’ Sweaters Regular to $ 12 599 to *99 |Q W . .T... 1 |; l Girls’ Skirts Regular to $11 J99 ^ 599 Ladies’ Dress Shoes Naturalizcrend Life Stride - High ■ Mid - Cuban HmIo 1 - Regular to $19 Ladies’ Casual Shoes Naturalizer and Life Stride Reg! to $15 — Stacks and Flat Heels 790«nd990 m m % H Men’s Sweaters Regular to $32.50 799 to 1999 Regular $6 399 :$\ Men’s Pile Lined Stadium Coats Regular $30 H 19" Girls’ Blouses and Knit Tops Regular to $5 ]49 to 399 Girls’ Gowns and Pajamas Regular to $7 259 to 4" American Girl and Miss America Regular to $13 .90 Ladies’ Dress Shoes irl ar tgular 6 _________________, Ladies’ Casuals American Girl and Miss America Regular to $11 l C90 . I Ladles’ Car Coats Regular to $40 g 1599 2999 | | Ladies’ Sportswear li Sweaters - Skirts - Slacks Regular to $16 499 to 10" !sr P.natc MSIl’S DfGSS Shifts li fiirk' P.nrrliirnv Stnrm Itflsk i Children’s Shoes sgulo 3 Regular to $7 i99 Girls’ Corduroy Storm Coats Regular $25 16" Children’s Shoes Boys’ and Girls’ Buster Browns >|j: Oxfords - Straps - Slipons — Regular to 10.99 >190 n m m m Men’s Perma Press Slacks \ Regular to $8, 4" iris’ Car Coats, Ski Jackets Regular to $26 10" 18" Men’s Porto Peds Oxfords - Slipons — Regular $27 1590 Boys’ Parkas and Stadium Coats # Regular to $26 1199 to 1999 JMS sjSt W. Xw I Xv» !w!* l*A jjss m m Ladies’ Flannel Pajamas Regular $4.50 359 Men’s Nylon Jackets Regular $13 Q99 Pre-Teen Skirts - Slacks Regular to $12 399 to 699 Pre-Teen Sweaters Regular to $ 13 | 499 ,0 799 ' Boys’ Perma Press Slacks Regular to $7 ■-.» V2 off Boys’ Corduroy Slacks Regular to $8 329 to 599 Men’s Shoes Pedwin and Roblee — Oxfords and Slipons 890 Men’s Hush Puppies Discontinued Styles or Colors Brushed Casuals 799 Boys’ Robes Regular to $7 399and 499 Boys’ Sweaters Regular to $12 499 to 799 Pre-Teen Car Coats k Regular to $35 13" 26" I Pre-Teen Dresses - Jumpers Regular to $25 599 ,0 ]599 | Boys’ Juvenile Sweaters Regular to $7 Boys’ Flannel and Knit Pajamas Regular to $4.25 269 ond 2" 399 to 499 Men’s Nunn Bush Regular to $28.99 1890 Ladies’-Hush Puppies Regular to $12.99 ;i$ij 4L99 . ■ > I Boys’ Coats and Coat Sets (4-7) Regular to $25 16" Boys’ Lined All Weather Coats Regular to $25 > 15" 19" Children’s Hush Puppies Regular to $10.99 3" to 5" iv$ ■' ■ • ' ■ * *' f X 4 • l l From Our Nows Wires DUNREITH, Ind. — Fire triggered by the collision of two freight trains and fed by gasoline, crude oil and ammonia, today burned (Hit of control. The 236 residents of Dunreith already had been forced to flee their homes in near zero’ degree cold. Dangers of additional explosions and deadly chemical fumes left firemen helpless against the holocaust which apparently had burned nearly half of the town. Three firemen and a policeman suffered minor injuries. Officials ordered 'firefighters and police out of the town when there was danger that two 12,000-gallon ammonia tanks would rupture in an atmosphere already heavy with flammable and toxic chemicals. ★ ★ ★ The Butterfield Canning Co. plant and a service station were destroyed by flames, which also spread to several houses. Some were empty migrant worker dwellings, officials said. ,:,r SPECTACULAR COLLISION * The collision Of eastbound and westbound Pennsylvania Railroad trains last night set off the blaze and explosions. It was spectacular but caused no loss of life. . * ’ W. R. Sheets of Zionsville, brakeman of the westbound train, said he believed a rail broke under the 75th car of die 98-car train. Flames broke out almost immediately, he said. Despite heat from die burning wreckage, crewmen were, able to separate the front portion of the westbound train and move it out of town. • it. ♦ ★ Officials awaited the arrival today of Air Force foam trucks designed to combat chemical and petroleum fires, and ' gas masks. City Man Arrested Authorities said until the fire was put out, there was no way of getting humans through the toxic smoke to ascertain damage. Observers on the scene said that when the wind shifted slightly four badly damaged houses could .be seen. Patrols of state police sent north from Dunreith to alert rural families of the-smoke and chemical danger drifting their way found empty houses. Antilooter patrols were established. At least one state .trooper was overcome by the fumes. V '?-• Traffic was rerouted from busy U.S. 40 which parallels the Pennsylvania main line through Dunreith. SEEN 40 MILES AWAY- The explosion and ball of flame that erupted at the height of the holocaust lighted a milewide area “like daylight’’ and could be seen or felt* as far as Indianapolis, 40 miles to the wept. State police Sgt. James Klieman said there were several railroad tank cars, loaded with chemicals that were in danger of exploding at any time* He said one car carried extremely lethal acetone cyananhydrin. FIERY DERAILMENT — Chemical explosions and fires were set off In several cars of a derailed Pennsylvania Railroad freight train near Dunreith, Ind., last night, forcing evacuation of the eastern Indiana community of 236. Special chemical fire-fighting equipment was used to put* old the blazes that burned through the night. Brain Hemorrhage Kills Donor 3rd Heart Swap Successful The Weather ' U. l. Wlitlwr SwrMu PoracMt Snow Flurries. ' (Octailt fast 11 VOL, 125 NO. 282 ! 4 pontiac, Michigan; Tuesday, January 2, ides in Hit-Run Death A Pontiac man was arrested yesterday on charges of manslaughter and leaving the scene of an injury accident 1 in the hit-and-run death of a Highland Township girl early in the day. ' Arrested was Gary Gillespie, 22, of 350 Third, according to Oakland County sheriff’s deputies. - He was taken into custody about 4 p.m. by Deputy Frederick Fleming, who. spotted the suspect in his car, which answered a police description, at North Telegraph and Walton. Capt. Leo Hazen, chief of sheriff’s detectives, said the description was developed from physical evidence found at the scene of die mishap, in which 17-year-old Sherry Ann Knight, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lane E. Knight of 203 S. Center, was killed. She and her escort, Alan Lengeman, 17, were run down from behind about 2:45 a.m. while walking on the shoulder of Milford Road near Highland in Highland Township. BOY IN FAIR CONDITION Lengeman, son of Mrs. Janet H, Lengeman Of 3727 Gulfwood, is reported in . fair condition in Pontiac General Hospital Denudes said the couple was apparently walking to the Knight .home from Lengeman’s stalled car when they were struck. 1 A motorist found Miss Knight and Lengeman lying in the road. The passerby told investigators he was pursuing a car which had bumped his vehicle shortly before the fatal accident. ★ ★ Deputies said they believe the same car was involved in both incidents. The car in which Gillespie was arrested had damage in the right front area, including the headlight, fender and windshield, according to Hazen. . Deputies said Gillespie probably will be arraigned - in Waterford Township Jusice Court today. i . tt-fto.tf mV UK »■ I In Today's Press Weather Watch Bitter cold moves into the East - PAGE C-6. I Quest tor Peace World settles down to problems of 1968 - PAGE B-10. . Job-Bias Victory NAACP feels pact symbolizes failure of voluntary compliance policy — PAGE B-5. Area-News ............... A-4 Astrology ......f........ B-8 Bridge B-8 Crossword Puzzle.........C-U Comics .......t..........B-8 Editorials ................A-6 Markets ...... .........., c-5 Obituaries ............. :A-8' Picture Page .............. B-3 Sports ................C-l-C-4 Theaters ............... B-9 TV and Radio Programs C-1I Wilson, Earl C-U Women’s Pages ...... B-l—B-3 GARY GILLESPIE Suspect Is Held SHERRY ANN KNIGHT Hit-and-Run Victim Social Security Series Starting today, The Pontiac Press fs presenting a 15-part illustrated series explaining the wide - ranging changes in the Social Security program. The, series is written by Bruce Bios-sat, the Newspaper Enterprise Association’s Washington correspondent, who has been following the progress of the legislation through Congress. Part 1, on Page B-4, explains the size and scope of the program. U.S. Traffic Toll Is a Low 355 By the Associated Press The New Year holiday weekend death toll was below advance estimates and a National Safety Council spokesman today gave credit for the improvement to bad weather and good driving. * ★ Hr The total reached 355 in a count that began at 6 p.m. Friday and ended at midnight yesterday. The safety council predicted earlier that 460 to 540 persons would die in traffic accidents over the 78-ljour period. “There ti nothing immutable about the death rate,” a spokesman said. “We don’t have to just accept it.” “Die major reason we believe is that the behavior -of drivers must have changed-,’’ the Spokesman said. “How it changed, we don’t know.” ★ ★ ★ “Weather certainly was a consideration, too,” he said. Record-breaking cold and heavy snow in some sections apparently kept some persons at home. During the final hours of the weekend a car-truck crash in Chicago claimed four lives and injured five others. Earlier, three persons were killed and eight injured when a station wagon carrying members of a Dallas, Tex., family and another auto collided north-east of El Dorado, Kan. The death total was below that of a nonholiday period of equal length. ★ ★ Hr For a comparison, The Associated Press counted traffic d e a t ii s, for the period from 6 p.m. Friday, 'Dec. 15, to midnight Monday, Dec. 18. There were 484 deaths. The traffic death toll during the last three-day New Year holiday was 469. The highest toll for any New Year period was 564, compiled during a three-day celebration at the start of 1966. Yemeni Attacking SAN’A, Yemen Ufi — Eight thousand Yemeni Republican troops, backed by the Yemeni air force, were reported today to have struck at Royalist forces entrenched 40 miles southwest of San’a along the road td Yemen’s second largest city, Tai’zz, CAPE TOWN, South Africa W — Dr. Christian N. Barnard and a team of surgeons performed another .successful heart transplant today, replacing the damaged heart of a 58-year-old Cape Town dentist with that of a man who collapsed and died from a brain hemorrhage. Hr Hr Hr Groote Schuur Hospital announced the transplant took more than five hours and termed it successful. They said the patient’s condition was satisfactory. Barnard performed the world’s first human heart transplant Dec. 3 on Louis Washkansky, 53, who lived 18 days with the new heart before dying of pneu-monia. The hospital said Dr. Philip Blaiberg, a man “desperately ill” with a damaged heart, received the heart at Clive Haupt, 24, who collapsed on a nearby beach and died in the hospital. Haupt was a mulatto — a man of Deadline Today in Baby Contest Deadline for the first-baby-of-the-year contest is 5 p.m. today. The first baby bom in 1968 will receive a multitude of gifts. ★ . Hr .Hr. ■ Any, baby born to married parents living north of 14 Mile -Road in Oakland County after midnight Dec. 31 is eligible. Entries must be made through the family doctor. .They should be sent to the* Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce, Hiker Building. The doctor’s statement must include the exact time and date of birth, sex, weight, name of baby and the name and. address of parents. Hr * Hr Gifts include a $25 savings bond, a $25 savings account, two cases of Carnation Milk, three pair of baby shoes, a diamond baby ring, a sweater, a bonnet, booties, and a silver cup. BABY SCALES Other gifts are baby scales, a baby blanket, a high chair, $5 gift certificate, $10 gift certificate, new tire, free car. wash and poljSh; three dinners for two at area restaurants, slippers for mother,- a ham, two cleaning certifi-catesr two floral arrangements, and five gallons of milk. N. Viet Reported Willing ^ to Talk if Bombing Halts SAN ANTONIO, Tex. Ufi - President Johnson says the administration is carefully evaluating reports that- North Vietnam might enter into peace discussions if the United States were unconditionally to stop bombing that country. Johnson said yesterday at the LBJ Ranch that he was familiar with newspaper reports quoting North Vietnamese Foreign Minister Nguyen. Duy Trlnh to that effect. Hanoi Radio broadcast a statement yesterday saying North Vietnam “will talk” when ’the United States has “un- conditionally stopped its bombing and all other acts of war” against the North. ‘‘We are evaluating them,” Johnson said of the reports. .★ Hr ★ Johnson spent considerable time talking about his program to curtail the U. S. dollar drain in 1968. FOCUS ON BUDGET .Die President , focused his attention today on budget work and the Department of Health, Education and Welfare,- He had until midnight tonight to slgn- the new Social Security law that would boost benefits and Social Security taxes. On the passenger list today of the Washlngton-LBJ Ranch jet plane shuttle , were the names of HEW Cecretary John Gardner, Budget Director Charles Schultze and presidential assistant Douglass Cater. . The Social Security /measure will mean bigger benefit checks beginning in March for 24 million persons. The minimum retirement pay will go from $44 to $55'a month, the maximum from $142 to $160.50. mixed race — but this apparently posed no problems for Barnard in racially segregated South Africa. Finding a donor for Blaiberg was difficult because of his rare B-pOsitive blood type. 5-HOUR OPERATION * The hospital said the operation began at 11 a.m. and was completed about 4 p.m. The historic transplant in which Washkansky received the healthy heart of a 25-year-old woman who died in a traffic accident also took five hours. Blaiberg has been waiting three weeks for the operation and did not reconsider when Washkansky died. Haupt was on Fish Hoek Beach yesterday with his wife of three months when he collapsed with a brain hemorrhage. When he was taken to a hospital and his blood typed, Groote Schuur Hospital was notified. ★• H ★ ★ Barnard’s surgical team spent several hours studying the transplant possibilities before proceeding. SECOND TRANSPLANT A few days after Washkansky’s historic transplant, a team of surgeons in Brooklyn, N. Y., made the second heart transplant. Dr. Adrian Kantrowitz used the heart of a dead infant to replace that of a dying infant, but file baby lived just 6 % hours. Blaiberg is married and has a daughter, Jill, 19, who is ht Israel. In Haifa, she went into seclusion on learning, her father was undergoing history’s third human heart transplant. 1. - Blaiberg suffered his first coronary 14 years ago but his wife, Eileen, said his heart “completely gave out” about nine months ago. ★ ★ ★ Deterioration of Blaiberg’s condition in the last few days was understood to have sped the return of Barnard from a tour of the United States: WHITE-NEGRO \ Barnard said during his tour in the United States that his team had transplanted kidneys- between white “Europeans” and “Bantus,” or Negroid South African natives; and:.that they had done this for a number of years.' ' " ★ ★ ■ Among cases he cited were a Bantu kidney given a European matt and’ a kidney from a European given a Bantu , child. He said such transplants presented no biological problem. He did not get into the politics of the matter. ★ ★ ★ • After Washkansky died, Bernard had visited Blaiberg and asked, whether he still wanted a transplant. “He said he was quite confident it would work one day,” Barnard reported. GOP Drive for Control of Senate WASHINGTON — The odds are heavily against it, but* there’s a possibility Republicans could win control of the Senate in the 1968 elections. Some party strategists argue this should become a priority GOP goal. The Republicans need 15 additional seats to gain a Senate majority for the first time since 1954. But most forecasters expect them to capture far fewer than 15 new seats. The National Committee for an Effective Congress, a liberal-minded, nonpartisan group, considers a GOP gain of six seats to be “a prudent estimate at this time.” ★ ★ * But one GOP official contends the Republicans could take control if the party’s top figures in contested states would become Senate candidates. THE MATHEMATICS^* Here are the mathematics of the situation: • The terms of 34 senators expire next year. Twenty-three of them are Democrats, ll Republicans. • There are now 64 Democratic senators, 36 Republicans. ★ ★ it • Forty-one Democratic senators and 25 Republicans are serving terms which extend beyond the current 90th Congress. This means the Democrats would need to capture only 10 of the seats contested in 1968 to hold clear control, while Republicans would have to perform the politically awesome task of winning 26. A GOP victory of that magnitude’'is Improbable. But one Republican professional contends the party could do It by putting some of its biggest names into Senate races next year. For example, this party official said, the GOP would have to persuade such men as former Pennsylvania Gov. William W. Scranton to run for the Senate. Scranton has said he will not seek public office again, Washington - based Republicans believe he could capture the Senate seat now held by Democrat Joseph S. Clark. . ( : \ it ★ ★; In Ohio, the official said, Gov. James A. Rhodes would be a potent candidate for the Senate seat of Democrat Frank J. Lausche. OPPOSE MORSE Oregon’s Gov. Tom McCall could seek the post, held by Sen. Wayne Morse, another Democrat, the official said, even though that might cost the GOP control of a state house. Light Snow, Cold Forecast for Area The weather outlook for the Pontiac area for the next few days is cold with occasional snow or snow flurries. The US. Weather Bureau forecasts light snow or flurries through tonight with a low of eight to 15.‘ Partly cloudy with a chance of snow flurries is tomorrow’s prediction. Fair and quite cold is Thursday’s forecast. Morning winds southerly at eight to 16 miles per hour will become northerly tonight. .Hr ★ A Precipitation probabilities in per cent are: today 50, tonight 70, tomorrow 40, The low recording in downtown Pontiac preceding 8 a.m. was 9 above. Tht mercury had moved up to 16 by U:$0 p.m. THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, JANUARY 2, 1968 IIf i SAIGON (AP) — U.S. officials I “repeatedly intruded into the today called the allies’ New'airspace” of several provinces. Yearcease-flre “the bloodiest of | American headquarters ae-all” Vietnam war truce at-knowiedged that it had recon tempts after a Vietcong force . 6f 2,ISd9 men broke the stand-down and* smashed into , an American outpost, killing 23 infantrymen and wounding 153. The guerrillas' 9th Division, augmented by North Vietnamese replacements, lost 348 men in its attack oh the base camp near Black Virgin Mountain, about 62 miles northwest of Saigon and eight miles from the Cambodian border, U.S. officers said. ★ * ★ The Communist thrust, spokesmen said, gave the allies sec-mid thoughts about a 48-hour truce that has been accepted in principle for Tet, the Lunar New Year Jan. 30. The regimental-sized Red attack force was pursued into the jungles of War Zone C. A half; dozen lesser engagements flared in the nearby jungles of Tay Ninh Province during the night. BOMBING RESUMES While American headquarters tried to-assemble an accurate picture of the collapse of the cease-fire from field reports, U.S. warplanes resumed their bombing of North Vietnam with the end of the allied 36-hour truce at 6 a.m. Saigon time today. I 5 Hanoi, meanwhile, accused the United States of \ raiding many “populated areas” during the truce. It did not elaborate on what constituted “raids”, saying only that U.S. aircraft had naissance planes in the air over the North, but said no attacks were launched. ’■, w • ★ On the basis of incomplete communiques, the truce-breaking ground-fighting, as vicious as that of normal operations, cost the allies 72 killed and 337 wounded—27 Americans and 45 South Vietnamese soldiers killed arid 205 Americans and 132 South Vietnamese wounded. This compared with 14 Americans and five South Vietnamese killed and 27 U.S. troops and seven South Vietnamese wounded during the 48-hour 1967 New Year’s truce. The 1968 figures involved 168 shooting incidents, 10 fewer than last year. COMMUNIST DEAD Communist dead over the current cease-fire were put at 546. Calculations were complicated because the Vietcong’s announced three-day truce ended' at 1 a.m., five hours before the allied stand-down. ★ ★ * U.S.'"officials said the fierce raid on. the U.S. 25th Infantry Division camp in the jungles just above the old Michelin rubber plantation town of Dau Tieng came one hour and 20 minutes before the Red truce • expired. It began with a hail of Red mortars and Russian-model rockets and was quickly followed by Communist troopers streaming out of the jungle with submachine guns blazing. Officers "on the . scene said the Red troopers were from the vet eran 271st and 272nd Regiments —both units of the 9th Division which hit nearSy Loc Ninh last October. At that time*U.S. com manders claimed the units were eliminated1,as fighting forces. • The U.S. bake camp was manned by parts of a battalion of the U.S. 25th Division plus three batteries of 105mm howitzers—a defending force of perhaps 500 men. Within minutes of the initial jjborder at a suspected infiltra-Red assault, however, U.S. tion route about 10 miles above flareships were overhead to the battlefield light the battlefield and slaShj * * * the Red jump-off points with No Pursuit OK quick-firing miniguns. Fighter bomber pilots were scrambled fifom Bien Hqa Air base near' Saigon and 28 jets successively raked the attacking Vietcong battalions. ★ ★ -k High-flying B52 bombers also were called in to strike near the tral highlands. While the Tay Ninh battle was by far the most spectacular during the trUce period, other violations were reported up arid down South Vietnam. They ranged from Red infanty assaults to the abduction of a Montagnard official in the cen- Sihanouk Denial Still Seems Not Complete Birmingham Area News :-v v PHNlpM ' PENH, Cambodia (AP) — Prince Norodom Sihanouk said Monday that he was not giving tl.S. forces permission, even tacitly, to enter Cambodia in pursuit of Communist forces. But* he still seemed to ledve the door ajar. In a statement, the prince referred to what he had said last week, indicating that he would not immediately oppose U.S “hot pursuit” if it was in sparsely inhabited areas of Cambodia. ★ ★ ★ The new statement said, “1 will never let any foreigner occupy the least square meter of our territory without doing everything possible, and even impossible, to drive him out of our Cambodia.’ “But in case of partial occupation of our territory, we must first use protests and political and diplomatic means to make the adversary withdraw. It is onlyt after exhausting these peaceful1 means that- we would go to war.” ’ RADIO INTERVIEW In a radio interview carried Monday by the French radio station Europe No. 1, Sihanoukl said his government “would j REMOVING FALLEN COMRADES — ■Leathernecks from the 5th U.S. Marines carry bodies of fallen comrades to waiting evacuation helicopters through ankle-deep mud of a rice paddy near Hoi An, about 25 AR Wlrwhot* Proposal Is Revised on Boat, Trailer Storage BIRMINGHAM — A revised!will be .considered at the City amendment to the city 'code!Commission * meeting, tonight dealing with storage of house trailers, boats and boat trailers at 8. Previously submitted to the commission Nov. 20, the proposal has been reworked to include provisions for exceptions. As p r e s e n 11 y worded, the amendment would not affect parking and storage of .vehicles which have not changed ownership after its passage, or which were stored prior to passage. Also excepted from the amendment would be owners physically unable to comply with the ordinance due to size of lot, building location, or other factors. a* . ★ a , The exceptions were made in lieu of establishment of an appeals procedure, which had been suggested by the commission. ' : . ,* -—— N0T IN FRONT n, Under the proposed ordinance, trailers and boats may not be stored at the front of a residential zone district, and may not be stored beside a house between the front and * i back of a district for more Envoy to Italythan 30 days- GARDNER ACKLEY LBJ Names Top Aide as miles south of Da Nang. The Marines came under heavy Vietcong fire when they landed in the area by helicopter. Both sides took heavy casualties. at The commission will also , wASHTNfUTON fAPW_____p^ ,!consider Interim parking provi- onlv protest against both sides” , w. „ iv. sions during the construction of if u; s- aad /Ackh^fhe “StaLSE** neW parkin* 8tructBre f were to clash m uninhabited regions of Cambodia from across the South' Vietnamese frontier. 1 “We would not risk the lives Pontiac area residents received a variety of weather conditions in December including a white Christmas. There were a few snow flurries during the month with one-half inch of Dec. 24. On Christmas Day, the weatherman dropped three inches of fresh snow. Snow shovels had a workout again on Dec. 31 when another two inches of snow arrived bringing the total accumulation for the month to six inches. Sixteen inches of snow and 1.30 inches of . rain were recorded last December. There were nine sunny and two partly sunny days during the month. Six days were sunny and partly sunny a year ago. Much of the month was darn and dreary. Heavy rains fell on Oakland County in the early hours of Dec. 21 causing flooding conditions, and mud on dirt and gravel roads’ An estimated one inch of rain fell during the day. TORNADO WATCH A tornado watch Was issued the night of Dec. 21 but no twister was sighted. The rain changed to snow flurries as winter arrived Dec. 22 with temperatures falling 40 degrees to a bone-chilling 17. Rain or drizzle with fog and a little sleet ruled for 13 days. Total rainfall Was 2.90 inches. Last year’s recording was 1.30 inches. Normal precipitation for December is 2,60 inches. ★ ★ ★ Vl’ Ten inches of light snow is equal to one inch of rain. Temperatures were mild during most of the month. The mercury rose to . 60 on Dec. 21 then plunged to five below zero in the,early hours of Dec. 31. lUst Month of Year LBJTakes Aim U. S. 1 deads for War J Was Wet and Chilly f on Dollar Drain With China—Morse DETROIT (AP) - U.S. Sen. President Johnson’s Vietiiam Kore^and^ba^o^end volum ments deficit k* 53 billion ^ Wayne Morse, D-Ore„ said Mon-jpolicies commented in a taped gg ■ miIitaiy pres.lyear. „! -Li iL„ TT«UA<1 Ctntnn in intnixriatl) nn tno “I All i .nrntin ! * —• of our troops in a fight which would be limited to Vietnamese infiltrated in Cambodia without our knowledge and Americans who would come to pull them out,”he said in the interview. * ★ ★ But, he said, any deep U.S. penetration in Cambodia could lead to a “general copflict” and Imposes Controls on Investments Abroad iday night the United States islinterview on the “Lou Gordon headed for a war with Red|Hot Seat,” syndicated by Kaiser WASHINGTON (AP) - The,Ghina which cannot be won ^ith Broadcasting and originating in Johnson administrations de- ner Ackley the aujJ,“uaua"| Merrill and Pierce, tion s top economist and a man; . Johnson calls one of his “mostl City Manager Robert S. trusted and closest fri.ends”-to -Kenning has suggested notify-be the next U.S. ambassador to ing parkers with flyers attached Italy. The surprise New Year’s Day nomination Was made at a news conference at the LBJ Ranch in Texas during which the President also announced stringent government controls over private overseias investments and other measures aimed at slashing the U.S. balance qf pay- to windshields during the week before closing the Lot 1, and encouraging parking in the Lot 5 structure on North Woodward and Lot 4 at Brownell and Forest. ' 1 ★ ★, k Kenning also proposed changing the 12-hour limit on 25 meters in Lot 7, at Merrill, and Henrietta, to two hours. sure became intolerable. dared war on the widening gap in the balance of payments would press every American into the defense of the dollafcAf Congress goes along. nuclear President Johnson pegged) ^ her horrors oh the 'tand we'll have to meet either conventional weapons. ★ ★ * ■ “We can knock out her bases and destroy her cities and kill millions of people. But if she comes into the war, she comes' oh Detroit on WKBD-TV. Morse j was reported resting at home Monday night after being strick-1 en with influenza in Washington last week, America cannot control the world militarily, hek said. He said if war with China did come, that America would have three a New Year’s prbgram he d^'her'on the ground with Amer-i million troops in China within scribed as firmand decisive ,icantroops-> Morse said. ! three years It-ipcorporates the first manda-j Morse Pan outspoken If these measures are not suf-The shaping of these actions Kenning said, parking are matters in which Ackley, u restoctions on Pierce Hennet- chairman of the President’s13- Ches‘er and FJank could be removed as needed. Fire Destroys A fire at a Pontiac home early tory controls in h i s t o r y, on American investment abroad i and an appeal to Americans to travel only in this hemisphere if! possible. k k k ;r The investment controls were! imposed under existing law. Government officials held out possibility of further restrictions such as a tax on Americans going overseas or limits on the amount of money they may take with them. Officials said this must be worked out with Congress. ‘DAMAGING TO NATION’ Henry H. Fowler, secretary of the Treasury, said Americans should realize that travel S. Viets Bar Bureau Chief ican boy to his death on a battleground in the war that is un-I declared.” He added: | “I am shocked at how we can | walk out on all our moral ideals in connection, with the way we’re r j. * f i prosecuting the war. We’d bet- tor Newsweek ter win it, because, don’t forget that only defeated nations are I tried, and if we should lose it SAIGON (AP) — The South ^ verdict of the world would Vietnamese government has re^niake u,'e Nuremburg trials infused to renew the visa of N^ws-| Sjgnificant.” Council qf Economic Advisers has been deeply involved. The President cited Ackley’s long interest in Italy—a country in which the 52-year-old econo-mist once studied as a Fulbright scholar—as his reason for tapping him for the post. NEW YORK ( AP) — James 3Q.YEAR VETERAN P. Boyd, former assistant of jn R0mei Ackley will replace foe of , Morse said, “No president hasten. Thomas J. Dodd, D-Conn.JAmbassador G. Frederick Reip-1this morning did an estimated the right to send a single Amer- says in a magazine article that hardt, a 30-year Foreign Service,$10,000 damage and took fire-Dodd told him during the 1964jveteran> who has been 111 re' men nearly three hours to ex- Dmocrallc N.lloml Conv^j"^^ j„taso„ did iwHS’L, at 215 Ferry broke tion that he would have run a name a candidate to succeed|0Ut sometime before 4 a.m., mile” from the party’s nomina-Ackley in the $30,000-a-yearjwhen a night, watchman several tion for vice president. J chairmanship, Washington spec-flocks away saw flames break- Boyd says in an article in thejulation placed the name of Ar- jng through the roof of the one- Jan. 13 issue of the Saturday four M. Okun high on the list of story frame dwelling and called Evening Post that Dodd made possibilities. the fire department, fire of- the remark after President Johnson had selected Hubert H. Humphrey as his running mate. The senator had been reported under consideration for second spot on the ticket. ★ ★ ★ Morse accused Secretary of State Dean Rusk of feeding the American public “nonsense.” i Asked if he felt Rusk should re- Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Cloudy with occasional light snow or snow flurries likely through tonight. Not so cold today. High 18 to 24. Low tonight 8 to 15. Wednesday: Partly cloudy and colder with a chance of snow flurries. Winds southerly at 8 to 16 miles becoming northerly during the night. Thursday’s outlook: fair and cold. Precipitation probabilities in per cent are: Today 50, tonight 70, tomorrow 40. Twlay in Pnntlnc Lowest temperature preceding I a.rr At I s.m.: Wind Velocity 8 m.p.h. Direction: Southerly Sun eets Tuesday at 5:13 p.m. Sun rliei Wednesday at S:02 a.m. Moon sets Tuesday at 8:01 p.m. Moon rises Wednesday at 10:50 a.m. . Downtown Temperatures | a.m. .......10 11 a.m. Metz Ackley a council member in Boyd„ whose allegations oh 1962. At the time he was chair-misconduct by Dodd led eventu-Jman of the University of Michi-ally to censure of Dodd by thelgan’s economics department Senate on June 23, 1967, quotes and director of. the Social the senator, a former FBI Science Research Council agent, as saying at 1964 Democratic convention time: Ambassador Reinhardt, 56, has held his current post for the 13 13 mi. ' 15i 1 p.m..........16 Houghton Lk. Jackson Lansing —. I Marqoe*ta ! Muskegon 32 Oscoda 27 I Pellston 29.5 Traversa C. I Albuquerque i Atlanta : Bismarck v' Highest and Lowest Temperatures | Boston This Dote in 95 Years ! Chicago it In 1174 18 in 1879 Cincinnati Monday In Pontiac (as recorded downtown) Highest temperature ......... Lowest temperature .......<.... Mean temperature .............. Weather-Sunny Monday's Temperatures Alpena 12 8 Detroit Escanaba 8 -i Duluth Flint ll 7 Fort Worth Rapids 13 10 Jacksonville week magazine’s Saigon bu reau chie(, Everett Martin, and told him to leave foe country within seven days. The South Vietnamese govern-1s|gn, Morse replied: “He should ment has been at odds with kave been fired three years abroad is damaging to the coun. asciis critical of !8®0'” ' trL ■ 2?S3fvJ2£Lw “a*" lSrsT “K The * entire program is de- * * * [Kennedy, D - N.Y., is making signed to slash the dollar drain) It would be the {irst expulsion!“a mistake in judgment” in not by 813 billion. It includes an ef-|of an American newsman from conde.rnnmg. Pubhcly the -John-1 J|| Jj M---------(.............. fort to cqt government spending South Vietnam since 1962i when son a°ministration s foreign pol-|FBI or and)the hefld of the ment. Before his arrival in Italy abroad by 8500 million this year the late presiHent Ngo Din'ey-«Kennedy were to seek the ' ................. and an expansion of exports to!Diem expelled James Robinson P^d‘fThink5 increase the trade surplus by at of the National Eroadcasting J^; ^ said’ J th ^ he d "toUhalrcb. * ■ k mt J in oatlinlng the program Moa.j*^arti„ can appea| the deci. » «» !»'»? “ j j day at a Johnson City, Tex., Lj0n to tbe minister of the interi-news conference the President'or wbose ministry declined to I revealed the dollar drain this ,Lyear would reach $3.5 billion to ‘ billion—highest ‘ the fire department, Okun was named to the, ficiais said, three-man council to fill the va-j / .. , , cancy created when Ackley was| f!re Marslia| Gbar,®s promoted to the chairmanship s^jd damage t0 d,e bu dblg! in November, 1964. occupants were out of Presid^t/Kennedy appointed town^n vacation’was tota1' “There are only two jobs that past six years and has been con-I would leave the Senate for, I sidered overdue for reassign- Central Intelligence Agency,!he served succesively as U.S and I may very well wind up in ambassador to Vietnam and the one place or the other.” [United Arab Republic. It was not possible to determine foe value of contents destroyed, he said. * * * Four vehicles, under foe command of Assistant Chief Lee Nye responded to the alarm and were at the scene until about 7 a.m. Metz, who said his office will continue its investigation of the fire today, tentatively blamed the blaze on an oil-fired space heater. In seven • (,RI...... .* *,m....... TO 8.m. .......13 Oiw Year Ago in Pontiac Highost temperature ............ Lowest temperature ............. Mean temperature . Weather—Partly tunny 2 -i 1 44 42 $4 77 55; Kansas City 23 20 years. Los Angeles 60 51 j i . : . . Miami leach 7» 731 Johnson also listed higher New “orieans 51 <71 Vietnam war costs, more U.S. omaha°rk is 14! spending on foreign travel, big-plttsburgh i” 3?'ger investments abroad and a Tamw1'* 77 Hi smaller gain than expected in s. Lake city 40 » the trade surplus. t AA Ar io *1 .Cl ~ renew the visa. Mcirtin, wjio has been in Vietnam for nearly two years, reentered South Vietnam last Nov. 28 after a short vacation. He came back without a visa, a! normal practice for Americans! returning from a short stay out! of the country, and applied for a! may have trtggeFed a chain of I Flat Tire May j Have Led to Pistol Death j DETRQIT ixley Memorial C ha p e 1 Rochester. MTs. Dean, a member .of the First Church of Christ Scientist, Rochester, died Sunday. Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. John Demlow of Royal Oak; two sons, John of Los Angeles, Calif., and William of Livonia; five grandchildren; two brothers; and a sister. Memorials may be made to the Christian Science Church Center Building Fund. Sherry A. Knight HIGHLAND TOWNSHIP-Ser-vice for Sherry A. Knight, 17, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lane Surviving besld** thepal^ts ol2^ s.Center, will are grandparents Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Sherman of Rochester and Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Scargorough of Pontiac. Mrs. Archie Myers Service for Mrs. Archie (Es-tella) Myers, 67, of 473 Ditmar will be 1 p.m. Thursday in Macedonia Baptist Church with burial fat Oak Hill Cemetery by the Frank Carruthers Funeral Home. Mrs. Myers, a member of Macedonia Church, died yesterday. Surviving |rp U children, Du* vetta Sandon, Mrs. Mable Davis, LaWaada Washington, Theodora Ghdsonn, Helen Waters, Louise Searcy, Mary, * Archie Jr., Gladys, Paul and .Made Myers, all of Pontiac, and 13 granndchildren. be 1 p.m. Thursday at the Richardson-Bird Funeral Home Milford. Burial will be in Milford Memorial Cemetery, Milford. Sherry, a senior at, Milford High School, died yesterday when she was hit by a car. She belongs to Milford Presby-terain Church. Surviving besides her parents are two brother, Michael at Episcopalian Priest Dies; City Native Word has been received of the death of fhe Rev. Francis L, Drake, rector of St. Paul Episcopal Church in Norwalk, Conn., and a native of Pontiac. Service was yesterday in the St. Paul Church with burial there. The Rev. Mr. Drake, 55, died Friday of a heart attack. Surviving are his wife, Sally a son, Barry, with the Air Force; and a daughter, Mary, at home. ★ ★ * A member of a priminent pioneer family in the city, he spent most of his early life fit the home of his grandfather Dr. Robert LeBaron at Orchard Lake and Williams. PHYSICIANS IN FAMILY Bote his father, the late Dr. George Drake, and grandfather were prominent Pontiac phy sicians. A graduate of Kenyon College and of General Theological Seminary of New York City, he was ordained to tee Episcopal priesthood at St. James EpteQopa Church in Cheboygan, hit fir* pastorate in December 1837.' KM: *' * He was ordained to the diac enete in All Saints Episcopal Church, Pontiac, in June of tee umeyeer. Kik' 9 . home And Wayne L. fat tee Army, and grandparents Mrs. Agnes Hazen of Detroit add Mr and Mrs. Stanley Kowalski of Dearborn. - Robert E. Millard LAKE ORION — Robert E. Millard, 53, of 243 Hauxwell died yesterday. IQs body is at Flumerfelt Funeral Home, Oxford. Surviving are his. wife, Beatrice, a daughter, Barbara, and son, Bruce, all at home;- his mother and stepfather; one sister; and two stepsisters. Mrs. John O. O'Connor AVON TOWNSHIP —Requiem Mass for Mrs. John 0. (Mary) { O’Conner, 77, of 3605 Culbertson will be 10 a.m. Thursday at St. Andrew’s Catholic Church,) Rochester. Burial will be in Mount Avon Cemetery, Roches-ter. Rosary will be said at 8:30 p.m. tomorrow at tee William R. Potere Funeral Home, Rochester. Mrs. O’Connor, a member of tee Third Order of St. Francis, died yesterday. Surviving are two sons, Robert O’Connor and Jack Dion, both of Troy; five grandchildren; and .a great-grandchild. Mrs. Adolph Savage WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP — Service for Mrs. Adolph (Stella E.) Savage, 81, of 7525 Lilac will be at 10 a.m. tomorrow at Our Lady of Refuge Church, with burial in Mount Hope Cemetery. Mrs. Savage, a member of the church, died yesterday. Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. L. L. Liebfried of Downers Grove, III., and Mrs. S. O. Rogers of Orchard Lake, and a sister. Mrs. Louis Stull COMMERCE TOWNSHIP -Service for Mrs. Louis (Virginia R.) Stull, 48, of 303 Whippoorwill was yesterday at Richard-son-Bird Funeral Home, Walled Lake, with service at Gaskins Funeral Home, Harrisburg, HI. Thursday with burial in Sunset Hill Cemetery there. Mrs. Stull, a member of the Church of Christ, Walled Lake, died Sunday. Surviving are her husband; three sisters, including Mrs, Nannie Payne of Walled Lake; and two brothers. Pontiac State Police are at- DARRINGTON, Wash. (AP) tempting to locate the owner of — Darrington is finally going to expensive camera equipment get a doctor, found yesterday (me block south (UIU r:' n #*• * J • Check Page AS for More MLt/ Waite's Ads Cases Against Four Dismissed Judge Cites Illegal Status of Grand Juror' Gambling charges against four persons arrested in police raids ordered by the Pratt grand jury more than a year ago have been dismissed. Novi Justice of the Peace Emery Jacques dismissed the charges on the basis that Circuit Court Judge Philip Pratt did not have the authority as a grand juror when he ordered the raids in November 1966. The cases were dismissed Thursday against Roy L. Clark, his wife, Anna L., and George H. Clark, all of Hazel Park, and Donna L. Could* of Detroit. The dismissal came after a motion to quash both the warrant and order for arrest was made by their attorney, Richard Chosid of Ferndale. ★ * ★ "According to a recent ruling by the Michigan Court of Appeals, Judge Pratt had no power to sign an order for conducting the raid and making the arrests,’’ Chosid said. "When the circuit judges got together and signed an order making Judge Pratt the grand juror for a second term, they were violating a state statute and their actions were unconstitutional.” of South Boulevard in Avon Township. * + H . The equipment — a 35mm Nikon model camera, a light brown camera carrying case and Attachments — was found by Charles J. Storey of 3409 Devondale, Avon Township. It It 'h • State Police said.,the equip-men will be helti at the post until claimed by the owner who must show proper Identification and proof of ownership ★. # -Charles Pittson Jr., who headed the dtictor drive, says Dr. Patrick Wu of Taipei, Taiwap, has been given permission by the U.S. Department of Immigration to enter this country when a visa is available. * , * ★ Darrington, located in the foothills of the Cascade Mountains, has been looking for a) doctor since May when its only active physician moved. There are about 3,500 residents in the area. Corner Saginaw pnd Huton . »-Downtown Pontiac FE 4-2511 Second Floor Wednesday Only 9:30 'til 5:30 1 jllliiiii ■ Emergency Notice! Because we have the misfortune to be flooded out by o broken Water pipe it is necessary for us to be CLOSED FOR THE NEXT 2 or 3 days. Please watch The Pontiac Press for our re-opening. Thank you ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD OPPOSITE THE PONTIAC MALL A/netMSmtritb FAMILY ' rosfamtJn mmm r -PANEL END FULL SIZE CRIB SAVE $000 Reg. 32.00 FULL SIZE 1NNERSPRING , M , 1 L . CRIB MATTRESS..................... • Value ' • 3-position steel link • Choice of natural fabric springs finishes DOUBLE DROP I „ • 3 twirl balls for baby • Large, colorful decals to play with on foot of bad SIDE CRIB 3A00 $099 *26 ■§ i s Sturdy Mesh PLAY YARD $]488 Reg. 17.00 Fred White ALMONT — Service for Fred White, 78, of 127 E. St. Clair win be 1 p.m. tomorrow at Muir Brothers Funeral Home. Burial wiU be in McCafferty Cemetery, Romeo. Mr. White, a retired blacksmith, died Sunday. Surviving are a brother, James of Pontiac, and a sister, Mrs. Maude Grubb of Pontiac. Otto Zander WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP -Service for Otto Zander, 72, of 956 Mallock will be at 2:30 p.m. tomorrow at Donelson-Johns Funeral Home, Pontiac, with burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery, Pontiac, Mr. Zander, a retired employe of Pontiac Motor Division, died yesterday. He was a member of Oakland County Barracks No. 49, Pontiac. COMPLETE HEARING EVALUATIONS imntmnMNwtwn YMR SMTM M eUMMl «IM*- isstsr M NR MW MUM MU. nCMUCIMt. » wiiwn mt minim a SIMM OF ALL MAKIt Titos. B. Appleton CortlfUdhytho National Hoaring Aid Socitty Main Floor, Hiker Bldg., 35 W. Huron 332-3052 ntSMmmumtmmmmm Is the glass half empty or half full? If you think it’s half empty, ' - ‘ “ maybe the Peace Corps is not for you. If you think it's half full, • you’ve got the first thing we look for in Peace Corps people. Optimism. If you want to know more about what it takes to pass muster in the Pe^ce Corps, write us. The Peace Corps, Washington, D.C. 20525. Sturdy tubular frame with vinyl mesh sides. Comes with two wheels for easy transporting frfom one room to Another. Folds neatly foe storage. Infant's Two Pilce PRAM SUITS $6" Reg. 10.00 Chooie from several styles I in tine quality one and two piece pram suits. Washable twills, nylons, poplin shells with warm Interlining. Sizes . to 24 months. Slight irregu-I lore. Infants' | Knit Sleepers and Diaper, Sets Wg.2.99 2 for*3°° Slight irregolars of! famous brand knit I sleepers and diaper 1 sets in a wide range of colors and styles. Infants' Unbreakable Dressing Table Reg. $1088 18.00 lv> Unbreakable, odor-proof, ■ moiitu reproof plastic, folds compactly to a chest of drawers for convenient storage. Infants' High " Chair *ir I 3-way folding high chair converts to junior chair! and utility chair. Brawn and while |r(nt. Published as a public service in cooperation with The Advertising Council and the International Newspaper Advertising Executives. The Pontiac Press m C°UI»0'V Infants' Conform Seat *2 67 Infants' Receiving BLANKETS A Power Failure MANISTEE (AP)—Sente 8.000 Manistee County residents were without electricity New Year’s Day as a result of a midmorning power failure. The b 1 a c k o u t, caused by a main circuit tenure, lasted from 10 a.m. to 11:15 a.m. . (fc If Perfect 99c Ea ; 2 f»rt]2S Infants'Gowns KJ2 3<-»lw [Deluxe model < (conform seat* complete with blankets. Slight safety strap qpd irregulars. Choose from white mid Cotton knits to while and poMel | rattles. .assorted colors. Chame Yaws, colors. Slight Irregulars. U. 1 't 1 .......... . 1 " - . " ..............—* We are equipped to serve you apd your needs in any part of our nation. SPARKS ~ GRIFFIN FUNERAL 46 Williams St. HOME, Phone FE 8-9288 , Infants' BLANKET • SLEEPERS 4 i I H . ■ ( \ f Reg. 5.00 2**5 • New Improved blanket i sleeper of 60% cola-" nese acetate, 30% rattan, end 10% rayon. Zip-front, non-skid I0HM. 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At that meeting, he said, “We got some of the primitive facts established. Namely, we held HEW as well as the state of Ohio responsible. Then HEW told the university they wouldn’t let $6 million in matching funds-go unless they settled their peace with the NAACP. ★ ★ ★ "It was really a squeeze play between the federal government ahd the NAACP, and the federal government ran scared because it’s an election year. We threatened to name them in a suit before the same court on the same issue coverings the entire state of Ohio.” Director Kiley of the HEW’s Division of Contract Compliance confirmed 4he meeting with McConnell, but said that when the NAACP representative asked to be admitted, he was incited to attend and fully express his views. . And,, said Kiley, the decision to withhold federal funds for the Ohio State projects was made last May, not at the December meeting. ‘FINALLY JELLED’ In Columbus, the university1! equal employment opportunity officer, Stephen Lance, disputed * McConnell’s allegation that, the school hadn’t tried to implement the court order. “I would object to the words ‘no attempt’ and would say that the attempts being made finally jelled after that (Washington) meeting,” Lance said. He said university officials began negotiating with contractors immediately after the -court decision “to get their commitments to hire iqinority workers.” ★ h ■ ★ . To Hill the Ohio State agreement means more pressure, not less, on government-financed construction projects. He named Newark, N.J., and San Francis-co-Oakland as the next two major targets. Both areas, he said, plan huge construction program^ and have “volatile Negro ghetto areas with very high rates of Negro unemployment.” “We have exhausted all reasonable efforts to discuss these matters with the building trades unions,” said Hill. “Therefore there is no choice but to move to cut off public f^nds... ■k 4t h “Exactly one year ago, after four years of picketing and mass demonstrations against the building trades of northern New Jersey, the five Iron Workers locals signed an agreement with the New Jersey Civil Rights Commission. “Now, exactly one year later, not a single Negro has been admitted.” William Jennings Bryan, in 1896, at the age of 36, was the youngest candidate ever nominated for the U.S. presidency. ;M) fuel oil j [JUUUJUULJJULkJLJUUUULJLSJLO Serving All Oakland County Since 1931 All Credit Terms Oil Burner Service Ctoftift OIL COMPANY TELEPHONE 332-9181 rioi Said Smashed Saigon Counterfeiters. Fake U.S. Bills Seized SAIGON CAP) — South Vietnamese. national police said today they had arrested several Chinese counterfeiters and seized $250,000 in fake U.S. $5 bills, thereby foiling what they called a Red Chinese attempt to destroy the economies of South Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos. Police said the counterfeiters were Red Chinese spies who planned to trade the U.S. bills on the black market to buy equipment to counterfeit the currencies of South Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia. Police reported they closed in on the counterfeiters last Thursday in Cholon, the Chinese section of Saigon, and seized a printing press, paper and ink and complete and incomplete $5 bills. The counterfeiters’ print ing plates also were seized, they said. Several persons, including some who tried to escape, were arrested, officials added, but po iige declined . to disclose their names, saying the investigation was continuing. A police statement said, “In the present case, there undoubtedly will be death sentences given to the Chinese counterfeiters.” Police said they had been investigating for five months “ar important clandestine economic and financial organization led directly by Communist author! ties on the Chinese mainland, whose purpose was to counter* feit various monies in order to subvert the economies of many' countries in Southeast Asia, ahd especially the economy of South Vietnam” They said the counterfeit U.S. bills were to be put into the black market by a Chinese named “Dailthe Gioi”—the great wqrld—who would get South Vietnamese piasters in re turn to “buy needed modern machines for printing counterfeit bills to subvert the monetary base of the countries the Communist Chinese want to invade in the near future.’’ < The Communists “planned to immediately destroy the Republic of (South) Vietnam’s economy by printing and throwing into the market about 30 billion piasters”—$200 million, police said. ■ -l - ---------•---- LOOKING K For a Place To RELAX? 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THE PONTIAC PRESS. -TUESDAY, JANUARY 2, 1908 Consensus of Foreca rr MARKETS As 1968 Trading Begins ITT Cancels Stock Mart Continues Advance 'The following are top prices cpvering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by ^>em in wholesale package lots.j yORK (AP) — The by President Johnson’s propos-| The President’s declared war ^^it°&irrau o^Markete 'as stock market continued to ad-|als to curb tourist travel abroad, on the widening gap in the bal-• vance early today as trading IM0RE THAN POINT lance of payments upset the D i I began for 1968. j World Airways, which special-!gold mining stocks on the big Produce j Taking off front a * vigor- lzes in charter flights, sank board Homestake, the biggest fruits „„ ous year-end rally, the market jmore than a point. Pan American World Airways of Friday. AmUm> Jonathan, ou..........*3,00! ’ ... ' ... . • . J __ Appias, cider,. 4*gai. cas# .2.« rose, with gams outnumbering AMSm, McIntosh ......... Apples, Northern Spy. bu. ____ Apples, Red pellcious, bu..........4.75 Apples, Golden Delicious, bu. VEGETABLES Biets, topped, bu. 4.251 losses about 2 to 1. 5.00' was delayed in opening. Among the domestic carriers, U.S. gold producer, sank more than 2 points. The weekend accumulation of J wo'er.age rose 1.79 at 906.90 The Dow Jones Industrial Av-1 united and Eastern Airlines jbusiness and economic news|jion merger with the American By JOHN CUNNIFF | A majority of AP Business Analyst the forecasters NEW YORK (AP) -A samp-1 J* J* ling of forecasts regarding this {irst year’s gross national product, y*ar wi*J be “1® ithe total of all goods and serv- strongest, that | ices produced during the year, Ia M*a^ incre^ v'»;: ! shows a consensus in the area of w*" be needed Directors Cite Long $340 billion. early in the r\ 1 • r. ... This seemingly would mean a y®*r and that Delay in (jetting Ul\ billion increase in output inflation will over 1967, but many of the fore-; simmer down NEW YORK (AP) - Direc-^aaters ^[eve as much as $27 during the late tors of the International Tele- ^J^on ***'*£ ^nmf,ati°n- .___ , ,, - v • ■ Measured m 1967 dollars, the phone & Telegraph Corp. have u be biiHon. voted unanimously to cancel i ° ______1 - ■ ITT’s agreement for a $2.8-bil- CUNNIFF summer months. In making their estimates, some analysts stumbled7 over Cabbage, Cabbage/ Standard Variety/ ui Carrots, topped, bu Celery* root* Vi bu. ......... Horseradish* pk. bskt. Leeks, dr. bens.............• Onions* dry* 50-lb. bag Parsley* Root, dz. bch. Parsnips# %-bu. ..... Potatoes* 5(Mb. bag .....— • ■ • Potatoes, 20-lb. bag ... Radishes* Red* Hothbuse* bch. Radishes* Black* \h bu. Squash# Acorn* bu. ........... Squash* Buttercup* bu....... Squash* Butternut* bu...... 2.00 2.50| 2.50 3.50 *> h0 2.00 *.00, 2.00. 1.50 .65 i 1.001 1.50. 1.751 1.75 1.75 1.75 ros^ fractionally while Amer-'seemed more favorable than un-|Broadcasting Companies Inc. Some airlines were unsettled jean dropped a fraction. favorable, brokers said The New York Stock Exchange topped* LETTUCE AND GREENS Celery, Cabbage, dz. Lettuce, bibb, hothouse, 5-lb. bskt. Lettuce, leaf, hothouse, 10-lb. bskt. ’Poultry and Eggs NfW YORK (AP) - New York Stock. xchange selected morning prices: ! Sales Net'Glen Aid (hds.) High Low Last Chg. (Glen Aid Abex Cp 1.60 ACF Ind 2.20 AdMillis .40a Address 1.40 Admiral AirRedtn 1.50 Livestock DETROIT POULTRY A1 _ ■ optroit (AP) — (USDA) — Prices AcanAlum l perEpound for No. 1 live poultry; leg-Cp .20g Heavy type hens, 20 * 21 cents;, heavy A egLui 2.40b WP* fryers. heavy type, roasters/Alleg^Pw ^1^20 ' DETROIT EGGS AlliedStr 1.32 DETROIT (API - (USDA) -tSsJS u°s>" Pa'd by ,,r3t recelv*'5 aSAh-lfn SO White Grade’A lumbo, 35-39 cents; ranVM tra large, 33-35; large, 31-33; medium, 2 “ 26-28; small, 20-20'/!. AmEIPw l 52 CHICAGO BUTTER, EGGS | AmEnka U0 CHICAGO (AP) — Chicago Mercantile A Home , 20 Exchange—Butter uneasy; wholesale buy- Am Hosp 60 ing prices unchanged to 'A lower; 53 Api|nvSf uo score AA 66; 92 A 66, 90 B 65'4; 89 C AmMPdy .90 fijVS) cars 90 B 66; 89 C 65. AMet Cl 1.90 Eggs irregular; wholesale buying prices Am Motors unchanged to 2 lower; 75 per cent orjAmNatGas 2 better Grade. A whites 27W-28'/2; mixediAm News 1 27tW8Vi; mediums 25; standards 25. I Am Photocoy CHICAGO POULTRY Am Smelt 3 CHICAGO . (API—(USDA)—Live poulfr Am Std 1 wholesale buying prices unchanged to 2Vj Am i&t 2.40 higher? roasters, 24-27; special fed White Am Tob 1.80 Rock Fryers 19V;-22. \t3g&£% . Anacon 1,25g An ken Chem ArchDan 1.60 DETROIT LIVESTOCK Armco Stl 3 DETROIT (API—(USDA) — Cattle 75,. Armour 1.60 calves 2S, hogs 25, Sheep 25. Slaughter i Arm Ck 1.40a ‘Steers active, steady to strong; heifers {Ash Id Oil 1.20 steady; cows active, fully 50 higher. Assd DG .1,60 Slaughter steers: choice 900-1,200 lb Atchison 1.60 26.50- 27.50; mixed good and choice 2S.75-1Atl Rich 3.10 26.50; good 24.50-25.75; utility cows 16.50- Atlas Ch .80 >7.50 Atlas Corp Vealers: high choice and prime 40.00-;Avco Cp 1.20 43.00; choicd 35.00-40.00; good 30.00-35.00.'Avnet 50b Sheep: prime y0-110 lb wooled lambs Avnet Inc wi 23.50- 24,50. Avon Pd 1.40 Hoga: supply too small for market test., CHICAGO LIVESTOCK Rabrk w 114 CHICAGO (AP)—(USDA)— Hogs 5,000; {S?,, r f= butchers generally steady; 1-2 190-230 IteSJJL SE 17.75-18,15; 75 head at 19.25; t-3 220-240;S??!™* 'A5 lbs 17725-18,00; 2-3 260-280 lbs 16.00-16.50; 1,h sows Steady to 25 higher; 1-3 330-400 lb i Sfn woL in sows 13.75=14.50; 1-3 400-450 lbs 13.25-13.75. m Cattle 3,500; calves none; slaughter w steers 25 to 1.00 higher; heifers 25 to 50 SrS?MSi , ™ higher? prime 1,200-1,325 lb slaughter; , m steers yield grade 3 and 4 28.00-28.50;! high choide and iprime 1,100- 1.350 lbs 2°'^ , 27.25-28.00; choice 950-1,325 lbs yield grade|g?raWar 1 25 2 to 4 25.75-27.25; choice 850-975 lb slaugh., , 40a ter heifers yield grade 2 to 4 25,00-26,00. Brunswick Sheep 200; mixed good and choice 05-105 BUC«Er 1 60a lb wooled slaughter lambs 21.50-23.00. ' Bucy Erie wi Rudd Co .80 BuloVa .70b Burl Ind 1.20 Burroughs 1 NEW YOR K(AP) - American Stock { Exchange selected noon prices: 'Cal Finanl Sales Aerojet .50a Am Petr .65g ArkLGas 1.60 12 38 37V. 37Vl . {CaroPLt 1.38 Asamera Oil-AssdOil & G AtlasCorp wt Barnes Eng BrazllLtPw I Brit Pet .56® Campbl Chib Can So Pet Cdn Javelin Cinerama .Creole 2.60a Data Cont Dynalectrn EquitCp ,05d Fargo Oils Fed Resrces Felmont OH' Frontier Air1 Gen Plywood Giant Yet .40 Goldfield Gt Bas Pet Gulf Am Cp GulfResrc Ch HoemerW .82 Husky O .30g Hycon Mfg Hydromell Isram Corp Kaiser Ind McCrory wt MichSug ,10g Mohwk D SCI Molybden NewPark Mn Pancoastal RIG Grup Scurry Rain SlgnalOilA la St^ham Inst Syntex Cp .40 teoinicol .40 .20 American Stock Exch. (hds.) High Law Last Chg. I 71 27% 26*/z 26% 19 18% 18 18% + %' 12 38 37% 37% 33 5 11-16 5 9-16 5 9-16—1 •16 | 74? 67/8 6% 67/8 29 37/8 3% 3% % 7 38% 37% 37% % 54 1244 12% 12% 2 7% 7% 7% 57 7 6 15-16 7 80 2% 5 ? $-16; ? 7-16 197 10Vi 10 10% + %i 43 8% 8%. 8% +. 18 34% 34 34 % 13 18% 18% 18% 149 22% 21% 217/8 + 65 6% 6%. 64! 36 6 9-16 6 7-16 6 9-16+3 -16 i 45 II'/8 11% 11% + 3 127/8 12% l?7/* + 11 19% 187/! 19% + %, 47 8% 8% 8% 58 10% 10% 10% 93 8% 77/b /7/a 32 4% 4% 4% 45 9 8% 9 + 27 33% 33% 33% + 3 16% 16% 16% 178 22% 21% 22 20 177/8 17% 17% + • % 84 33% 327/a 33% + 1 r/i 7% 7% +. 30 19% 19% 1?V. % | 3 10% 10% 10% 9 7 67/8 67/8 + 65 1687/8 162 166 +1 I 88 42% 42 42% + % ‘ 36 11% 11% 11% 769 2% 2% 2% + 83 3% 27/8 3% + 61 49 48% 49 199 357/s 347/8 35% 18 363/4 36% 36% 154 74% 73% 74 39 27 26% 263/4 + 12 32% 32% 324(» + % 1 ClaneseCp e2 Cenco Ins .30 Cent SW 1.60 CFI Stl .80 Ches Ohio 4 ChiMII StP 1 CitiesSvc 1.80 CocaCola 2.10 Colq Pal 1.10 Co'linRnd .80 ColoIntG 1.60 CBS 1.40b Stocks of Local Interest AMT Corp. Associated Truck Braun Engineering Citizens Utilities Class A ... Detrex Chemical Kelly Services Mohawk Rubber Co. Monroe Auto Equipment North Central Airlines Units Safran Printing............ Scripto iL FUNDS Affiliated Fund ... Chemical Fund * Commonwealth Stock Dreyfus ......j Keystone Income K-l Keystone Growth K-2 Mass.- Investors Growth Mass. Investors Trust Putnam Growth Television Electronics Wellington Fund Windsor Fund 13.29 10 16 13.00 Treasury Position FairCa rHill .30g Goodrich 2.40 —A— [ Goody r 1.35 5 29 29 29 Hr.JA GraceCo 1.40 4 44^/8 447/8 447/8 I GranitCS 1.40 10 63'2 63 63 + W ' grant 1.10 12 79’/2 79Vb 79V2 + ’ s Gt A&P 1.30a 30 19*4 19 19'/4 + 3e jGt Nor Ry 3 21 347/8 347/8- 347/b + lijGt West Finl 67 26'/4 26'/b 26V4 — »/8 GWSug 1.60a 18 137/8 137/8 137/8 + W 4 70% 70% 70% ..... 5 22%’ 22% 22% ..... 25 4Wa 39% 40% + % 10 37% 36% 367/e .... 55 *36 35% 36 + % : 6 80% 80% 80% + Ve 77 337/8 32% 33 — % 13 63% 63% 63 Va — % 15 51% 51% 51% — % 3 24% 24% 24% — Va 28 36V '9L GjreenGnt Greyhound 1 GrumAirc .80 Gulf Oil 2.60 GulfStaUt .88 GulfWIn .30b Sales .. Net 1 - (hds.) High L6w Last Chg j wi / 16 12% 12% 12% Sanders .30 .70 148 13% 13% 13% 4- % Schenley 1.80 5 71% 71% 71% % Schering 1.20 29 54% 154% 54% + Ve; Scientif Data 20 42% 42 42 — % 'SCM Cp ^0b 5 26'/a 26%' 26% + % Scott Paper 1 1 34% 34% 34% I Sbd CstL 2.20 27 28% 28% 287/e -f % Seacl GD 1.30 .5 56% 56% 56% ■+■ %,Sears Roe la 20 t3 .12%, 13 !Seeburg .60 2 48 48 ,48 + % j Sharon Stl 1 35% 35% — % Shell Oil 2.10 *413/ 41=V 23 563/4 56% 56% 5 89% 89%* 89% 9 I8V2 18Va 18% 2034 2078 48 Va 48% -11 20% 19 48^ 41 13V 18 36V 13% 13 36% 36% 27% 27% 273/4 — % 15% 15V# 15% + % 6 73 72% 72% r- % 205 30% 30 Va 30% — | 185 302 51% 43 32% 32 / 33 36% 36% 57 47% 46% 70 47% 47 17 12% 12>/a 5 577/8 57% 21 49% 51% 4 % 32% 36% 41 47% 41% 471/4 — Va 12% 4 4 Va' int Harv 1.80 49% 4 % Int Miner l 28 37% 367/a 37% 4 % I IntNick 2.80a 3 55% 55% 55% 4 % ! inti Packers 10 35% 35 , 35 —1 tint Pap 1.35 2 71 Va 71 % 71% 4 %'lnt T8.T 1.70 17 28% 28Vi 28% 4 Va ; lowaPSv 1.24 13 105 104% 104% — % ! ITE Ckt. 1 . 21 197'8 19% 19% 4 % 15 6% 6M 58 64Va 64 1 483/4 48% 48% — 18144 1‘ —B— 21 473/4 47V Jewel Co 1.30 JohnMan 2.20 — John John .60 + 3/4 Jones L 2.70 j Joy Mfg 1.40 Kaiser Al 1 KanGE 1.32 KanPwL 1.03 .60 Kennecott 2 Kerr Me 1.50 KimbClk 2.20 Koppers 1.40 Kresge .90 Kroger 1.30 4 7/8 29% 29% 4 % 2 62 61% 61% — % 5 62% 613/4 61% — >/4 K - R 1 41% 41% 41% 4 % !SaVserR?. 1 89% 89% 893/4 8 54% 54% 54% 4 % 115 8% 8% 8% 4 Va 53 33% 33Vs 1 33% 4 % 23 90% '89% 893/4 — 3/4 5 41% 41 41% — % 13 343/4 343/4 343i — 3% 9 30% 30 3GVa 4, % 3 55% 55% 55% .4 % 145 17 167% 17 + i/8 24 36% 36% 36% — % 5 25% 25% 25% 4 Va 52 23 22% fc) 4 % 2 297/8 297/g 29% 4 % 12 39 38% 38% — % 13 183% 1823/4 183% -4% —c— 53 47% 4 Lear Sieg .80 LehPCem .60 Leh Val Ind Lehman .98e LOFGIss 2.80 Libb MCN L Liggett&M 5 LilyCup 1.20b Litton 2.65L Llvingstn oil LockhdA 2.20 LoewsTh .25g LoneSGa 1.12 LongtsLt 1.16 Lukens Stl 1 IT 473/4 471 16 «26% 26 14 28% 28% 28% 4 % j tS!rS5r3 2 50 15 25% 25i% 25% 4 % lL1°^4i2 S x73 41% 41 41 4 % !-u?ky £S * - 2 22% 22% 22%.— % 11 56% “ 56% 56% 4 % 12 167/e 16Va 16% — % 85 16% 16% 16% 4 % 4 43 43 43 *- % 1 63Va 63% 63% 5 56% 56% 56% 4 % 18 468/4 46Va 46% 43 44% 44 44 4 % 7 16 157/a 16 4 % 9 43% 143% 43% 4 % 17% 17% 17% 4 % 62% 4 % 38% 4 % 18% 4 % 42% 4 % 56% 4 % 4 % 4 % 8. 62V 2 18% 14 42% 417/s 77 56% 56% 28 33 16 48% 8 26% 96% 196% 4 % 4 363/4 36% 363/44% 11 134V 18 44 41 10034 100 100* Comsat Con Edis 1.80 ConEiecInd 1 " COnFood 1.50 ConNatG 1.70 ConsPwr 1.90 Contafnr 1.30 ContAirL .40 Cont Can 2 Cont Ins 3.20 Cont Mot .40 Cont Oil 2.80 Control Data 1 ‘43% 43% 43% 4- 25 55% 5434 54% 4 19 26 25% 257/8 4 4 31% 317% 317/8 -, 4 36% 36% 36% 4 17 47 44% 46% — 28 50 49V4 39 32 3*sk 6 41 40% 54% 54% Macy RH .90 MadFd 2.63g MagrhaC 3.60 Magnavx .80 Marathn 2.80 Mar Mid 1.40 AAarquar ,25g MartinMar 1 MavDStr 1.60 Maytag 1.60a McDonD .40b > Mead Cp 1.90 Melv Sh 1.60 Merck 1.60a MGM 1.20b MidSoUtil .82 MinnMM 1.30 MinnPLt 1.10 Mo Kan Tex MobilOil 2 Mohasco 1 I Monsan 1.60b Mcti*DUt 1.60 Mont Pw 1.56 I MontWard 1 Motorola 1 Mt St TT 1.24 .CrouseHind 1 Crow Coll 2f Crown Co*"k CrownZe 2.20 Figures after decimal points are eighlhs Cruc Stl 1.20 OVER THE COUNTER STOCKS I Cudahy Co Quotations frokn the NASD are repre*jCurtis Pub tentative Inter-dealer prices of approxi- Curtiss Wr 1 mately 11 a. m. Inter-dealer markets change throughout the day. Prices do1 not Include retail markup, markdown or Dan Riv 1.20 commission. Rayc«Fp ^ Bid Asked Day PL 1.40 5.2 5.5 Gel Mnte 1.10 8 7 9 2 DeltaAir .40 15.0 15.4 DenR GW 1.10 25.4 26.0 DetEdis 1.40 16.0 16.4 Det Steel 60 39.0 40.0 DlaSham 1.40 33.6 34.4, Disney .30b 30.2 30.6 Dom«»M;h .80 ■13 8 7 DowC^hm 2.20 13*0 13.6 Dresslnd 1.25 7 5 8 0 Duke Pw 1.20 - mw H—wr.... - 7 29 11 43 497/b 10 31% 31% 29 24% 24% 13 49% 487/% 2 80 79% 79% 5 22% 22% 22% 19 75% 74% 75% + 44 137% 136% 137% + 7 49% 49 49% ■+■ 12 40% 40% 40% 4 32 54 47 7 61% 61% 61% + 6 45% 45% 45% — 15 32%’ 32% 32% 17% + 12% + 27% 27% + 17% 16 277's —D- 21 261 23 22’1 65 3P. 35% — 34% + 17% + 26% + ..m...StlounfftTr duPont 5q Sid Asked Duq Lt 1 66 8.63 9 33 DynffAm .40 19.03 20 84 10.54 11.52 _ . A , 15.36 16.67 East A,r 5° 9.27 10.12 E Kodak 1.60a 7*28 7 95 EatooYa 125 13.03 14*24 EG&G .10 17 54 19 17 ElBondS 1.72 14 52 Electron Sp !mar°ETl li i573 zo:36 iJSSci-ajj' Ethyl Cp 60 EvansP 60b Ever sharp T7% T7*?f-F% 38 55 14 57* 36 33* 26 20'. —F- SOg Fedde • Filtrol 1.40 Flrestne 1.40 FstChrt 1 24f Fllntkote WASHINGTON (AP) - The cash position of the Treasury compared with cor-, responding date a year ago: Dec. 26* 1967 Dec. Balance— HR . $ 7*454*762,988.35 $ 6,604,939,011.00 haPwLt 176 Deposits Fiscal Year. July 1— , pMc Cp 75 71,23*.631,531.17 68.604,057,45^00 FoodFair .90 Withdrawals Fiscal Year— FordMot 2 40 88*054,495*759.92 81,925,616,213.69 ForMcK .1*20 X—Total Debt— . iFreepSul 1.25 346|<9^693,735.64 330,067.800.665.711 FruehCp 1.70 13,159,474,124.81 G Accept 1.40 I Gen An) IF .40 Geh Cig 120 . GenDynam 1 I Gen Eldc 2 60 Gen Fds 2.40 Ind. Rails Util, stock! Gen Mlfts 80 65 16 15% J6 12 39% —G— 7 '261* 13 34Y. 85 23 28 , 25V. The proposed merger, which j would have been the largest in {broadcasting history, was ! fought by the Department of [justice on i antitrust and other [grounds. ' ^ ~7 1 { - — t ★ ★ I- I g Ne) TheITT directors Rioted Mon-1 MARshaLL (UPI) - A youngj gSfiiTSSS 6L5“^t ?fy at an unusuaJ ^ew Year s mother was credited by poiice 33 sou ilt^lDay meeting, only hours after;tpday with talking a berserk! the Dec. 31 deadline that hmi|gunman out of shooting her and! Police Credit ! Woman's Talk as Lifesaver ! 18 22% 22% 22% 99 38% 37% 38% +1 31 76% 76 76 — % 12 25% 25% 25% + % 289 60% 59% 60% -fl Halliburt 1.90 1 Harris Int 1 Herein 1.20g Hoff Electrn Holidylnn .30 Homestk .80b Honey wl 1.10 Hook Ch 1.40 Hotfise Fin 1 HoustonLP 1 Howmet 1.40 H unt Fds .50b IdahoPw 1,50 Ideal Cem 1 imp Cp Am IngerRand 2 Inland Stl 2 InsNAm 2.40 InterikSt 1.80 IBM 4.40b SherwnWm Sinclair 2.60 SingerCo 2.20 Smith K 1.80a SouCalE 1.40 South Co 1.08 SouNGas 1.30 SoutPac 1.60 South Ry 2.80 y 4y/2 43’/* 43’/2 t va Spartan Ind 13 12% 12% 12% 4- % i SperryR .10e 3 53% 53 53 — Va SqoareD 70a 34 61% 60% 61 —2Va StBrand 1.40 66 108 1073/4 1 08 — % std Kolls .50 4 43% 43% 43^/8 + Vs StOitCal 2.50 12 30% 303/4 3034i — % StOillnd 1.90 6 46,/a , 453/4 45% StdONJ 3.45g 85% 853/4 + % ; stOilOh 2.50b 56% 56% — % ; S7 Packaging | Sta.uffCh 1.80 Sterl Drug 1 StevensJ 2.25 Sun Oil 1b Sunray 1.50 Swift Co 1.20 49% 69% 693/4 27 138% 137% 1383/4 +2% 66 56 54% 72 28% 28 31 49 48% 12 57% 56 Va 66 57V 68 25»/2 25Vs 25Va + % 20 37% 36% 37% +1% 43 67% 667/a 67 +1 7 47% 471/4 47% — Va 28 76% 75% 76 + % 12 68%r 68% 68% — % 44 51 50% 5J + % x32 367/e 36Va 367/a + Va 18 28V4 277/8 28 — % Boom Is Seen * Pound Devaluation Should Aid Exports the problem of Vietnam and simply Assumed that it would cause the government to spend no (note nor no less than in 1967. HIGHER LIVING In general, forecasters seem more certain than'ever that in 1968 most Americans Will enjoy a standard of living never before achieved: with the per capita share of production' exceeding $4,000 for the first time in history. By comparison, India’s per capita production last year was under $100, Brazil’s under $400, Mexico's less than $500, the United Kingdom’s about $1,700, Belgium’s a bit more than $2,000 and Sweden’s about $3,100. - # Here are a few of the more important estimates of.America’s productive power in 1968: National Industrial Conference Board, a research and educational organization supported mainly by business, surveyed 12 economists for its Economic Fo- 45 63 62% 621' __ ^ ~ 1 rum. The consensus was for a ji’^ibeen set for either party to with-1^“^1^.3" Including0 her two I LONDON ( AP) -r-. British eco-jGNP of $842 billion, a gain of 7.5 |! draw from " the two-year-old young children, asWheld them nomists and industrial leaders Per over 1967, but with half S6% 56%-% merger agreement. Ihostage for more than three predicted Monday an automoifhVncrease accounted for by The directors cited long de- hours. ibile-snarked export boom thatitUgher priCeS' lays and indications of more de- Marshall police and Calhoun D‘le “P0, P°®m *** lays in’obtaining final approval;County^ sheriff’s deputies sur-j should take tms island kingdom of the consolidation. * Irounded a second-story apart- out of the red by the end of 1968. uo tomMfnt ment in the downtown section The Nov. 18 devaluation of j . .... . . o • ,■ shortly after 3 a-n»- today after|the pound, they said, had per- nonProfrt and nonP°lltlcaI and The Federal Communications j0hn W.-Kelly, 21, ran into the nripp that arp'“dev°ted to planning by Ameri- i Commission, which twice had police station and told them a mauin„ Rr:ti_h onnrt« pnmnpti. cans in iigriculture, business, la-30./, 3ov, * approved the merger, had no man was holding, his mother, .. ° ,d 8k, { Pthj!bor and professions” forecasts a m----------m Mi ITT action. | stepfather and sister and her^. LrTn rnrv vearr GNP of ^ bilUon, but with hu pnmmnnl tu/n philHron hnetuape at ann- J J • 3 44 21 297/ 182 63% 62% 62% —1 PARTLY INFLATION National Planning Association, which describes itself as 8 853/4 3 56% —I— 16 30% + % 14 177/8 1 73/4 1 77/a + % 72 6% 6% 6% + % 8 44 % 44% 44% + Ve 16 34Va 34Va 34Va 4* % 21 59% * 59% 59% + % 8 287/b 28% 28% + Va Tampa El 11 627% 627 627% + % Tektronix 55 353/4 35% 35% + % Teledyn 3jBlf 120 30% 29% 30% +1% Tenneco 1.28 10 116% 116 116% — % Texaco 2.60a 5 97% 97/8 97% + Va TexETrn 1.20 156 31 303/4 307/a 4- % Tex G Sul .40 42 116% 116% 116% t % iTexasInst .80 2£% 4- % ; Tex PLd .35g 2 72 72 72 m: Textron Thiokol .40 ’TimkRB 1.80 7? iTransWAIr 1 Transamer 1 Transltron Tri Cont .92g —J— ' 4 33Va 33 33% + % 3 547/8 54% 54% + % 3 92Va 92% 92% + % ^ tIv* Si/fl 34't/! i % I 1 ri v*onT ’r49 6 34% 34*/8 34/4 — /a jTRW ,nc —K.^— ITwenCent .80 3 48% 48% 48% — % 7 25% 25% 25% — % 1 20% 20% 20% 4- % 30 30% 29% 30 4* % 4 47% 467/a 47% + % 13 125|% 125% 125% 4- % 3 57% 57 57 — Va 2 36Va 36% 36% + Vz 3 87% 87% 87% — % 26 23% 23% 233A 4- % more than half of it inflation. I William Freund, formerly The predictions directly con- chief economist of Prudential tradict foreign criticisms that British exporters have so far failed to cut their prices and take advantage of the lower value of the pound. comment on the « +n‘|Neither was there any commentjtwo children hostages at gun-[4 + < by the Department of Justicejpoint. 16 52 2 5?v? sl/Ji »t|Which had challenged the merg-j Kelly said the man already ! mv. 64v. Sw + er each time. The department’s .had taken one shot at him with 'S ^ iL, IS i'JJ second challenge is pending be- a shotgun but missed. * *' —T—■ JjSSt- V* f TTie man w„ Identified as 'Clifford Goodman, 23, a next- The proposed merger had doop, neighbor. He was finally FL «qo (J P “J* Kg I ??iDeen envisioned as a financial taken into custody and charged S01™5 industrialists said they j ness $9J billion, consumers 20128 i27Va 128 +i boost to ABC through ITT in* with asault to do great bodilv have lowered their export prices billion and. foreign trade $5 bill's ’??£ ’8S ’W -''y I vestment in programing and W "between 3 and 12 percent The! bon. This meansabout an 8 per 6i 201" 2oVil 20 +'vS technological improvements. • | Police said he continually pound was devalued by 14.3 per c.eat adYance* wdb 3 P®1" cen 0 486 50% 47%-3%{ ★ ★ ★ |threatened to kill the persons in cent. it iniiatiom ^ + 8» io'/2 ?*% + % Leonard H. Goldenson, presi-(the apartment but f i n a 11 y| Leaders of the automotive,! 40 31% 31V, 31% — ; 33 103% 102% 103% + V, Life Insurance but now vice president of the New York Stock Exchange, foresees a GNP of $848 billion, with government contributing $195 billion', busi- 30% 30% — '/, -L 45 — Vi Un Carbide 2 Un Elec 1.2Q UnOilCal 1.40 UnionPacif 2 Uniroyal 1.20 P/8 + ■ 1% 4 32 4 % , NatAirlin .30 41 + % | Nat Blsc 2 54% — % j N Dairy 1.50 29 4 % | Nat Fuet 1.68 43 — % Nat Genl .20 31% Nat Gyps 2 24% — Va | n Lead 3.25g 49% 4 % Nat Steel 2.50 % Nat Tea .80 Nevada P .92 % | Newbrry .45a % i N Eng El 1.48 % NY Cent 3.12 INlaaMP 1.10 % j NortolkWst 6 Va l NoAmRock 2 % I NoNGas 2-60 % j Nor Pac 2.60 iNoStaPw 1.60 % | Northrop 1 % ! Nwst Airl .70 % j Norton 1.50 • Norwich .75 44 45*/a 44% 5 12V* 12% 12*/a 4- % 89 9*/a 9% 9% 4- Va 19 22% 22% 22% — % 6 47% 47% 477% 4 % * 4 157% 157/8 157/8 + % 5 71 71 71 4 % 11 34% 34% 34V* ... 40 1043/4 104 104% — % 27 10 10 10 - 29 54% 54% 54% 4 % 8 139% 139% 139% —1 241 30 29% 297/8 4 Va 16 26% 26% 26% 4 % 8 48% 48 48 13 34% 34% 34% 4 % 10 35% 35% 35Va 4 % —M;— 3 36 36' 36 + Vi 14, 29% 29V% 29W ........ 2 57% 57% 57% 90 40 39% 40 + % 22 82% 82% 82% + % 6 31 30% 31 + % 11 16% 16 16% + % 44 20% 201/2 20% 3 40% 40% 40% + % 2 35% 35% 35% J- % 56 54% 54 54% — % 2 39 39 39 + % 2 85% 85% 85% — % 5 83% 83V2 83% — % 12 48% 48% 48% + V, 1 25% 25% 25% — % 11 94% 94% 94% 1 21% 21% 2T% + Vi 175 20% 20% 20% + % 31 43 42% 43 + 1% 3 24% 24% 24% 13 47 47 47 — % 3 29% 29% 29%. + % 4 28% 28% 28% — V, '81 24% 24% 24% — % 9 117% 116% 117% + % 5 22% 21% 22% + % —N— 6 34V4 34Vi 34*W + 34 43*fc 43 43*A 30 35Va 35Mi 35*/a — 2 27Va 27*/a 27*/a — va 77 25 24Va 247 a + Va 13 43*/4 43Vi 43Va ...... 11 667/s 66'/4 66V4 ... 49 46*/4 45Va 46 Va + V4 5 13!! 13% 13*/a -f V4 4 4S'/7 45V» 45*/! 4 28»/a 28V4 28»/a -f »/4 7 26 25% 25% — *4 $ 75 75 75 — V* 36 20% 20 20*/! + % 36 92% 91*4 92% +17! 44 40% 397! 397! — *4 6 49% 49 49*4 -f *! 55% 55% 55% + Va UnitAlrLin 1 UnitAirc 1.60 Unit Cp .50g Un Fruit 1.40 UGasCp 1.70 Unit MM 1.20 US Borax' la USGypsm 3a US l*nd .70 US Lines 2b USPIyCh 1.50 US Smelt lb US Steel 2.40 UnivOPd 1.40 Uplohn 1.60 Varian Asso Vendo Co .60 VaEIPw 1.36 58 31*/ —u----------- 95 497! 49% 21 22% 22 36 567/a 56% 6 38% 38 38*/a + % 49*4 49*4 — V! 65 65 —1 81*/a 82 + ’/a 11% ..... 49% 16 82*4 14 11% 10 60*4 60 60 % dent of the American Broad-, Passed out, apparently from computer, chemical, machine casting Companies Inc., said he drinking regretted the ITT. decision. He said that while the merger was pending, ABC’s corporate hands were tied, but now it plans to “move vigorously and forcefully to strengthen and expand our company’s interests and growth.” He indicated that other mergers may figure in ABC’s 85% 85% 11 27% 27% 27% — 2 29% 29 Va 29% + % 12 66’/a 65% 66% + % 39 44% 44% 44% + % 96 47V, 46% 47’/,'— Va 7 45V, 45 45% + % 14 57*/a 567! 57% 4* 7! nlonc 144 41% 41% 41% + % Fiailo‘ 12 90Vj 90% 90% + Va ■ x20 49Va 49 49*/a... —V— 29 32% 31% 317! + % 15 28Va 28*4 28% + % , . M , i8 44 43% 437/8 + >/4|tion, production and recording —W— 28 45% 44% 44% — % 4 22 21% 21% ... 18 34*4 34 34*4 + *4 5 28 27% 28 . 61 36% 357/s 3578 + % 707/a 70% 70% + % Area Hunter Soys Youth Shot 2 Dogs Fortune magazine estimates 11968 GNP will reach $835 billion, “a $50-billion advance, counting inflation.” American Broadcasting Companies Inc. is a parent company of television, radio, film exhibi- enterprises. OTHER MERGERS Goldemson said ITT’s termination of the merger plans “permits us to start immediate discussions with compatible companies that have privately expressed an interest in being acquired by our company.” He did not name the other companies. Hie ITT directors said ITT and ABC had made the merger SStid ai5l<^au’»?r»?evV3SSlffi5?,'inestfe agreement “as a constructive l*no,es 'step in the public interest.” 8r It h Warn Lamb 1 Was Wat 1.20 Westn AirL 1 Wn Banc 1.20 WnUTel 1.40 Westg El 1.60, Weyerhr 1.40 Whirl Cp 1.60 White Mot 2b WlnnDix 1.50 Woolworth 1 •XeroxCp 1.40 YngstSht 1.80 ZenithR 1.20a Coyrlghted by The Associated Press 1968 Sales figures are unofficial. Unless otherwise noted* rates of dividends In the foregoing table are annual disbursements based on the last quarterly or semi-annual declaration. Special or1 extra div' nated as following footnotes a—Also extra or extras, b—Annual rate Pius stock dividend, c—Lf 5 39% 39% 39% 3 51 50% 50% % 5 49% 49% 49% 6 28% 28*/s 28% + 79 257/a 25% 25% + 1 I r 28 304 302% 302% _ % 34 31% 31% 31% + 39 57% 57% 577/8 + % Among the original Depart- plus stock dividend, e— Paid last year, f — Payable In stock during 1967, estl- V‘ I distribution1 dallr’g—Declared* or* paid*so I ment of Justice objections tO the % f*r thls^ year h Declared or paid after m{,rger ^ eUmina- tion of ITT as a fourth major broadcasting network, and possible elimination of ABC as an independent party bargaining in | tool, electrical equipment and agricultural machinery industries all reported improved export possibilities. They and others also said devaluation will help them greatly in the home market by forcing tlieir foreign competitors to raise prices charged in Britain. it it it • An Independence Township! Sir George Harriman, presi-man complained to Pontiacdent of tbe Society of Motor i State Police yesterday, that'Manufacturers and chairman of NEW YORK (AP) — A large his two hunting dogs were shot British Motor Holdings, which o{ counterfeit $5 bills of Many Bogus $5 Bills in NY Reported and killed by a young teenager in a wooded and swampy area of the township. The complainant, Emerson makes Jaguar, Austin, Morris and a number of other autos, told his staff: “BMH are heading for record exports in the first quarter of 1968.” The combine hds 45 per cent of all British, car exports. ★ ★ ★ Vliet of 10081 M15, said lie wad fox hunting when the incident happened at about noon yesterday * He said the dogs, described! Sir George said BMH already as a male Goodman and a fe- has cut its prices 12 per cent in male Walker, were valued at'Europe and 3% per cent in the $100 each. | United States. The slash would ,n. , .. jhave been greater in America, Vliet s Jhunting companion, but f the aKdded costs of meet- Lewis Bd Hensley of 3086 Mar-tag UA safety regulations, garet, Pontiac Township, told1 _ . ... police he confronted the youthl ,Evea so- he .,fa'd’ fo[elg" shortly i after the dogs were ?ales this year wlU be UP bV 40 shot. cent- h it' it " According to Hensley, the youth said the dogs' were com-| ing at him ami that he became scared and fired his shotgun at; the animals. Vliet told police that the dogs Occident .80b OhioEdis 1.30 OklaGE 1.04 OklaNGs 1.12 OlinMat 1.80 .Omark U7f +TVa Otis Elev 2 , Outbd Mar 1 — *4 Owens III 1.35 25 29* 45 437/8 227 85 3 41% —O— 96 112% 111% 25% 25V! 28% 43% + 83% —2 41% + 4 26 V “fair” quality circulated in New York City during the Christmas shopping season, the Secret Service reports. The office of Albert E. whitak-jer, special agent in charge of the New York district of the Secret Service, said Monday that the amount of counterfeit $5 bills passed in this area has been running as high as $2,000 to $3,000 a week. ★ ★ # f The bogus bills began circulating heavily in October. Before then; such a number of counterfeit $5 bills had not been seen in a considerable time, ex. cept for a brief flurry in 1965. The great majority of the bills have been found in New York City. But some have been spotted in upstate-New York, New Jersey and New England and along the Florida coast. The Secret Service, which has the duty of coping with counterfeit mon- ,1-in bankruptcy or receivership or 1“^ ----v. ing, then took an undetermined ey, said the bogus $5 bills “defi- Act!°orr'seajr!tf« a»2medhby^ch«Mv several congressmep-was a' State Police said the shoot-,number of ,tems according to’nitely seem to be emanating Foreign^ issue subject to ivi- j contention that ITT might at-mgs took place in an area pontiac police. , 'from the metropolitan area.” tempt to influence ABC’s news bounded by Sashabaw, Perryi coverage. {Lake, Hoyt and 1-75. | — yi-. .. _ ---- 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* do* ferred or no action taken at lost dividend meeting. r—Declared or paid irv 1966 Plus stock dividend, t—Paid in stock during 1966, estimated cash value on ex-divid0nd ’or ex-distribution date. ,uMv .. *. ^ e v,, (government proceedings with cld-rCalled x—Ex dividend, y—Ex divl- 0 • , r p dend and sales in full, x-dis—Ex distrlbu-1 communications Carriers. tibn. xr—Ex rights, xw—Without war-1 iuav Among the other criticisms of were friendly and would»never ^ on ^ ^ o{ ^ build. delivery. I the merger—particularly from | hurt anyone. News in Brief Burglars entered a service station at 1001 Joslyn early today by smashing through win- 20*a 25% 26% +1 34*/2 34’ 3 - I. 22% 2278 -f * Net change Noon Frl • Prey. Day . , Week Ago Month Ago Year Ago . 1967 High .. 1967 LOW ifM High . 1966 Lew . +2.0 + .7 + 1.1 3 80g 66 82% 82% 8278 ,. . 466.3 180.5 145.0 321.2 GenPree 1 M 11 79% 79% 79% ,464.3 179.8 145.0 320.1 .56e 76 6% 6% 6% ... 457.5 179.0 143* 316.2 GPubUt 1 56 11 27% 27% 27% ... 454.1 180.8 141.3 315 1 GTel El 1.40 38 47 41% 42 . .. . 411.4 157.7 151-5 291.2 GBn Tirt .80 19 28*8 28 28 493 2 209.6 159.1 342 6 *G*nesco 1.40 1 41% 41% 41% . * 413.4 159.4 136.5 292.8 G« Pacific lb 10 58% 58% 58% ... 537.9 213 9 170.5 369.7 GettyOU 10g 14 98% 98 98 388.0 143.9 130 2 769.4 G ilk’ll e 1.20 49 61% 61 61% + Pec G El 1.40' Eac JJa LsHius man »n«/4 ■*»» "“"l oDDosed the delav. Hudson has § T SK T ^"{Monday after she kept nagging , “Vm L of tae sub- 14 'iw'm*. 'jIvI + v< bim about,his fajlure t0 "*a^® gidy which is $35,000. I A p u b 1 i c hearing is also g ttt, ^ tk * JJ said The city is considering cancel-jscbeduled tonight onspecial as- 17 g* |f*Z‘5S Officers said Irene Batts suf- ing the subsidy as part of h £ T + u fered a shotgun wound to the backs needed tLr lack of a city'^^ction ta^Feni Howland « + y? foot after she continually [income tax. H,!n,ana j 33i» 334k Wk - w warncd Willie Batts, 32, that he! * * * streets. i« wi 32v? 32v. + 4k!should “turn over a new leaf”! The tax has been enacted, but' * sidy of bus transportation pro-^ budget of $11,-i .n? Cjm y#u advJse me on vided by Pontiac Transit CorpJ2*7’57’ has alrcady been aP- Bunker-Ramo? — O. T. proved by the hospital s board; of trustees. A — I think it is always wise | . . . „ to remember the trading adage: The conjmisslon is to set a . fe t f t * h4«,i Supply is in a,powerful growth field and is getting a big assist from Medicare. The stock is no longer cheap, but it has had an uninterrupted growth record for many years and I believe this will continue. The shares sell for about 58 times this year’s jSataway MO + %|StJosLd 2 80 SILSanF 2.20 —I’lStRegP 140b 87 25 24% 24% 26 40% 40% 40% 17 50% 50 50 46 31% 30% 31% |_______ _____ __ _ ___________________________ estimated earnings. This Is a land do such things during the its effective date has been de-| Also, a hearing will be .held|Wg multiple, but not out of tine + Vljnew year as keep the house layed because of petitions call-|on delinquent weed cutting billsjwith other faqt-growth issues. I tag for a vote on the measure. I (or 1987. [advise you Jo buy it back and year as keep 1 stocked with firewood. stay with it. It appears to me to be safer than Bunker-Ramo, a relatively small electronics firm controlled by Martin-Marietta. The company has had an erratic earnings record and has risen sharply on a proposed merger with Amphenol. I advise you to avoid it, unless you really want/to speculate. ★ ★ ★ Q — In December, 1957, 1 bought Tyrex Drug & Chemical. I have never heard from this company' and would appreciate any help you can give me. — A. T. A — I have nothing on this company in my files or manuals. My broker tells me that the last bid he can find for your shares was 5 cents In 1959 and that at present there is no bid and he thihks your stock is worthless. You might write to the company at 42 Newkrk St., Hoboken, N.J., and get some information- . (Copyright, 1968), r. * From Our Newt Wires DUNREITH, Ind. - Fire triggered by the collision of two freight trains and fed by gasoline, crude oil and ammonia, today burned out of control. The 236 residents of Dunreith already had been forced to flee their homes in near zero-degree cold. Dangers of additional explosions' and deadly chemical fumes left firemen helpless against the holocaust which apparently hhd burned nearly half of the town. :L;\_ Three firemen and a policeman suffered minor injuries. < Officials ordered firefighters and police out of the town when there was danger that two 12,000-gallon ammonia tanks'would rupture in an atmosphere already heavy with flammable and toxic chemicals. The Butterfield Canning Co. plant and a service station were destroyed by flames, which , also spread to several houses. Some were empty migrant worker dwellings, officials said. SPECTACULAR COLLISION J The collision of eastbdund and westbound Pennsylvania Railroad trains last night set off the blaze and explosions. It was spectacular but caused no loss of life. ] W. R. Sheets of Zlonsville, brakeman of the westbound train, said he believed a rail broke under the 75th car of the 98-car train. Flames broke out almost immediately, he said. Despite heat from the burning wreckage, crewmen were able to separate the front portion of the westbound train and move it out of town. * * «. Officials awaited the arrival today of Air Force foam trucks designed to combat chemical arid petroleum fires, and gas masks. City Man Arrested Authorities said until the fire was put out, there was no way of getting humans through the toxic smoke to ascertain damage. Observers on the scene said that when the wind shifted slightly four badly damaged houses could be seen. Patrols of state police sent north from Dunreith to alert rural families of the smoke and chemical ,danger drifting their way found empty houses. Antilooter patrols were established. At least one state .trooper was overcome by the fumes. Traffic was rerouted from busy U.S. 40 which parallels the Pennsylvania main line through Dunreith. —1 SEEN 40 MILES AWAY The explosion and ball of flame that erupted at the height of the holocaust lighted a milewide area “like daylight” and could be seed or felt'as far as Indianapolis, 40 miles to'the west. State police Sgt. James Kliemen said there were several railroad tank cars loaded with chemicals that were in danger of exploding at any time. He said one car carried extremely lethal acetone cyananhydrin. * _ i§ FIERY DERAILMENT — Chemical explosions and fires were set off in several cars of a derailed Pennsylvania Railroad freight train near Dunreith, Ind., last night, forcing evacuation of the eastern Indiana community of 236. Special chemical fire-fighting equipment was used to put out the blazes that burned through the night. Brain Hemorrhage Kills Donor 3rd Heart Swap Successful The Weather U. i: WMUMr Butmu nncut Snow Flurries (0«Mlt NS* * t) YOU 125 PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, JANUARY 2, 1968 -80 PAGES UN(TBg«STfN°T«™ Fumes in Hit-Run Death A Pontiac man was arrested yesterday on charges of manslaughter and leaving the scene of an injury accident in the bit-and-run death of a Highland Township girl early in the day. Arrested was Gary Gillespie, 22, of 350 Third, according to Oakland County sheriff’s deputies. Ie was taten into custody about 4 n. by Deputy Frederick Fleming, who rited the suspect in his car, which swered.a police description, at North legraph and Walton. \ r. Capt. Lfeo Hazen, chief of sheriff’s de-ectives, said the description was de-eloped from physical evidence found t the scene of the mishap, in which 7-year-old Sherry Ann Knight, daugh-er of Mr. and Mrs. Lane E. Knight of 03 S. Center, was killed. She and her escort, Alan Lengeman, 7, were run down from behind about :45 a.m. while walking on the shoulder f Milford Road near Highland in High-ind Township. Deputies said' the couple was apparently walking to die Knight .home from Lingeman’s stalled car when they were itruck. A motorist found Miss Knight and Lengeman lying in the road. The passerby told investigators he was pursuing a car which had bumped his vehicle shortly before the fatal accident. ★ ★ * Deputies said they believe the same car was involved in both incidents. The car "In which Gillespie was arrested had damage in the right front area, including the. headlight, fender and windshield, according to Hazen. Deputies said Gillespie probably will be arraigned in Waterford Township Jusice Court today. In Today's Press Weather Watch % Bitter cold moves into the H East - PAGE C-6. Quest for Peace m - World settles down to prob- & lems of 1968 - PAGE B-10. 1 Job-Bias Victory 1 NAACP feels pact symbolizes 1 failure of voluntary compliance policy - PAGE B-5. Area News ............... A-4 $ Astrology ................. B-8 | Bridge V.;.........:..v...... B-8 I Crossword Puzzle......:;....C-ll Comics .........,.........B-8 Editorials ............. A-8 Markets .’.... j.....C-5 Obituaries ................. A-6 Picture Page ...... .. . B-3 Sports C-l—C-4 f / Theaters ............... B-8 TV and Radio Programs C-ll Wilson, Earl ........... C-ll Women’s Pages B-l—B-3 GARY GILLESPIE Suspect Is Held BOY IN FAIR CONDITION Lengeman, sop of Mrs. Janet H. Lengeman of 3727 Gulfwood, is reported in fair condition in Pontiac General' Hospital i SHERRY ANN KNIGHT Hit-and-Run Victim Social Security Series U.S. Traffic Toll Is a Low 355 By the Associated Press The New Year holiday weekend death toll was below advance estimates and a National Safety Council spokesman today gave credit for the improvement to bad weather and good driving. ★ 1' * The total reached 355 in a count that began at 6 p.m. Friday and ended at midnight yesterday. The safety council predicted earlier that 460 to 540 persons would die in traffic accidents over die 78-hour period. ? JiF‘‘There fo nothing immutable about the death rate,” a spokesman said. “We don't have to just accept it.” CAPE TOWN, South Africa UPl — Dr. Christian N. Barnard and a team of surgeons performed another successful heart transplant today, replacing the damaged heart of a 58-year-old Cape Town dentist with that of a man who collapsed and died from a brain hemorrhage. ★ w- ■ ★ Groote Schuur Hospital announced the transplant took more than five hours and - termed it successful. They said the patient’s condition was satisfactory. Barnard performed the world’s first human heart transplant Dec. 3 on Louis Washkansky, S3, who lived 18 days with the new heart before dying of pneumonia. “The major reason we believe is that the behavior -of d r i v e r s must have changed,” the spokesman said. “How it changed, we don’t know.” w ★ * “Weather certainly was a consideration, too,” he said. Record-breaking cold and heavy snow in some sections apparently kept some persons at home. During the final hours of the weekend a car-truck crash in Chicago claimed four lives and injured five ethers. The hospital said Dr. Philip Blaiberg, a man “desperately ill” with a damaged heart, received the heart of Clive Haupt, 24, who collapsed on a nearby beach and (Bed in the hospital. Haupt was a mulatto — a man of Deadline Today in Baby Contest Earlier, three persons were billed and eight injured when a station wagon carrying members of a Dallas, Tex., family and another ahto collided northeast of El Dorado, Kan. Deadline for the first-baby-of-the-year contest is 5 p.m. today. The first baby bom in 1968 will receive a multitude of gifts. ■().. Hr w k Any baby born to married parents living north of 14 Mile Road in Oakland County after midnight Dec. 31 is eligible. Thq death total was below that of a nonholiday period of equal length. ★ k ■ k For a comparison, The Associated Press counted traffic d e a t h s. for the period from 6 p.m. Friday, Dec. 15, to midnight Monday, Dec. 18. There Were 484 deaths. —The traffic death toll during the last three-day New Year holiday was 469. The highest toll for any New Year period was 564, compiled during a three-day celebration at the start of 1966. Entries must be made through the family doctor. .They should be sent to the Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce, Riker Building. Starting today, ThS Pontiac Press is presenting a 15-part illustrated series explaining the wide - ranging changes in the Sociaj Security program. v ~ * The series is, written by Bruce Bios-sat, the Newspaper Enterprise Association’s Washington correspondent, who has been following the progress of the legislation through Congress. Part 1, on Page B-4, explains the size and scope of the program. The doctor’s statement must include the exact time and date of birth, sex, weight, name of baby and the name and address of parents. WS * * * Gifts include a $25 savings bond, a $25 savings account, two cases of Carnation Milk, three pair of baby shoes, a diamond baby ring, a sweater, a bonnet, booties, and a silver cup. Yemeni Attacking SAN’A, Yemen UP) — Eight thousand Yemeni Republican troops, backed by the Yemeni air force, were reported today to have struck at Royalist forces entrenched 40 miles southwest of San’a along the road to Yemeli’s second largest city, Tai’zz. BABY SCALES Other gifts are baby scales, a baby blanket, a high chair, $5 gift certificate, $10 gift certificate, new tire, free car wash and. polish, three dinners for two at area restaurants, slippers for mother,- a ham, two cleaning certificates, two floral arrangements, and five gallons of milk. N. Viet Reported 6- , to Talk it Halts SAN ANTONIO, Tex. \k k k In Ohio, the official said, Gov. James A. Rhodes would be a potent candidate for the Senate seat of Democrat Frartk J. Lausche. But one GOP official contends the Republicans could take control if the party’s top figures in contested states Would become Senate candidates. OPPOSE MORSE * Oregon's Gov. Tom McCall could seek the post held by Sen. Wayne Morse, another Democrat, the official said, even though that might cost the GOP control of a state house. THE MATHEMATICS Here are the mathematics of the situation: • The terms of 34 senators expire next year. Twenty-three of them are Democrats, 11 Republicans. • There are now 64 Democratic senators, 36 Republicans. Light Snow, Cold Forecast for Area • Forty-one Democratic senators! and 25 Republicans are serving terms which extend beyond the current 90th Congress:^ This means the Democrats would need to capture only 10 of the seats contested In 1968 to hold clear control, while Republicans would have to perform the politically awesome task of winning 26. The weather Outlook for the Pontiac area for the next few days is cold with occasional snow or snow flurries. The U.S. Weather Bureau forecasts light snow or flurries through tonight with a low of eight to 15. Partly cloudy with a chance of snow flurries is tomorrow’s prediction. Fair and quite cold is Thursday's forecast. A GOP victory of that magnitude is improbable. But one Republican professional contends the party could do it by putting some of its biggest names into Senate races next year. Morning winds southerly at eight to 16 miles per hour will become northerly tonight. , ★ * k For example, this party official said, Precipitation probabilities .in per cent J are: today 50, tonight 70,tomorrow 40. The low recording In downtown Pon- * | tiac preceding 8 a.m. was 9 above. Thf , mercury had moved up to 16 by UffO - | p.m. Jr HHi THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, JANUARY 2, 1968 ’ll m SAIGON (AP) today called the U.S. officials [ “repeatedly intruded into the allies’ New!airspace” of several provinces. Year cease-fire “the bloodiest of | American headquarters ac- all” Vietnam war truce attempts after a Vietcong force of 2,500 men broke the stand-down and smashed into an American outpost, killing 23 infantrymen and wounding 153. The guerrillas’ 9th Division, augmented by North Vietnamese replacements, lost 348 men in its attack on the base camp, near Black Virgin Mountain, about 62 miles northwest of Saigon and eight miles from the Cambodian border, U.S. officers said. ★ * ★ The Communist thrust, spokesmen said, gave the allies second thoughts about a 48-hour truce that has been accepted in principle for Tet, the Lunar New Year Jan. 30. knowledged that it had reconnaissance planes in the air over the North, but said no attacks were, launched. .77i Ur ★ On the basis of incomplete communiques, the truce-breaking ground-fighting, as vicious as that of normal operations, cost the allies 72 killed and 337 wounded—27 Americans and 45 South Vietnamese soldiers killed and 205 Americans and 132 South Vietnamese wounded. This compared with 14 Americans and five South Vietnamese killed and 27 U.S. troops and seven South Vietnamese wounded during the 48-hour 1967 New Year’s truce. The 1968 figures involved 168 shooting incidents, 10 fewer than last year: > Officers cm the scene said the Red troopers were from the veteran 271st and 272nd Regiments —both units of the 9th Division which hit nearby Loc Ninh last October. At that time U.S. com manders claimed the-unite were eliminated as fighting forces. ■ The U.S. base camp was manned by parts of' a battalion of the U.S. 25th Division plus three batteries of 105mm howitzers—a defending force of perhaps 500 men. Within minutes of the initial;border'at a suspected infiltra-Red assault, however,- U.S. tion route about 10 miles above flareships were overhead to'the battlefield light the battlefield and slash * f * * the R^d jump-off points with quick-firing miniguns. Fighter bomber pilots were scrambled from Bien Hoa Air base near While the Tay Ninh battle was by far the most spectacular during the truce period, other violations were reported up and down South Vietnam. They ranged from Red infanty assaults to the abduction of a Saigon and 28 jets successively faked the attacking Vietcong battalions. Hgh'W T .‘T^L'S “sHf“•« were called in to strike near the tral nigmanas. Sihanouk Denial Still Seems Not Complete Birmingham Area News *01 PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (AP) — Prince Norodom Sihanouk said Monday that he was not giving U.S. forces permission, even tacitly, to enter Cam- BIRMINGHAM - A revised amendment to the city, 'code dealing with storage of bouse trailers, boats and boat trailers The regimentabsized Red' at- COMMUNIST DEAD tack force was pursued into the jungles-of War Zone C. A half-dozen lesser . engagements flared in the nearby jungles of Tay Ninh Province during the night. ‘ BOMBING RESUMES While American headquarters tried to assemble an accurate picture of the collapse of the cease-fire from field reports, U.S. warplanes resumed their bombing of North Vietnam with the end of the allied 36-hour truce at 6 a.m. Saigon time today. Hanoi, meanwhile, accused the United States of raiding many “populated areas” during the truce. It did not elaborate on what constituted “raids”, saying only that U.S. ail-craft had Communist dead over the current cease-fire were put at 546. Calculations were complicated because the Vietcong’s announced three-day truce ended at 1 a.m., five hours before the allied stand-down,. ★ w ★ TJ7S: officials said the fierce raid on the U.S. 25th Infantry Division camp in the jungles just above the old Michelin rubber plantation town of Dau Tieng came one hoyr and 20 minutes before the Red truce expired. It began with a hail of Red mortars and Russian-model rockets and was quickly followed by Communist troopers streaming out of the jungle with submachine guns blazing. REMOVING -FALLEN COMRADES --Leathernecks from the 5th U.S. Marines carry bodies of fallen comrades to waiting evacuation helicopters through ankle-deep mud of a rice paddy near Hoi An, about 25 miles south of Da Nang. The Marines came under heavy Vietcong fire when they landed in the area by helicopter. Both sides took heavy casualties. Last Month of Year Was Wet Pontiac area residents received a variety of weather conditions in December including a white Christmas. There were a few snow flurries during the month with one-half inch of Dec. 24. On Christmas Day, the weatherman dropped three inches of fresh snow. Snow shovels had a workout again on Dec. 31 when another two inches of snow arrived bringing the total accumulation for the month to six inches. Sixteen inches of snow and 1.30 inches of rain were recorded last December. There were nine sunny and two partly sunny days during the month. Six days were sunny and partly sunny a year ago. - ■ / 7 . * Much of the month was dant and dreary. Heavy rains fell onOakland County in the early hours of Dec. 21 causing flooding conditions, and mud on dirt and gravel roads; An estimated one inch of rain fell during the day. TORNADO WATCH A tornado watch Was issued the night of Dec. 21 but no twister was sighted. The rain changed to snow flurries as winter arrived Dec. 22 with temperatures falling 40 degrees to a bone-chilling 17. , ,7, - ..... ■■ Rain or drizzle with fog and a little sleet ruled for 13 days. Total rainfall was 2.90 inches. Last year’s recording was 1.30 inches. Normal precipitation for December is 2.60 inches. ★ ★ ★ Ten inches of light snow is equal to one inch of rain. 'Temperatures were mild during most of the month. The mercury rose to 60 on Dec. 21 then plunged to five below zero in the early hours of Dec. 31. LBJ Takes Aim ollar Drain U.S. Heads for War With China—Morse ledve the door ajar. In a statement, the prince referred to what he had said last week, indicating that he would not immediately oppose U.S. “hot pursuit” if it was in sparsely inhabited areas of Cambodia. ■ " *’★ * * The qew statement said, “I will never let any foreigner occupy the’least square meter of our territory without doing everything possible, and even impossible, jo drive him out of our Cambodia.' ~ “But in case of partial occupation of our territory, we must first use protests and political and diplomatic means to make the adversary withdraw. It is only after exhausting these peaceful means that we Would L go to war.” RADIO INTERVIEW In a radio interview carried Monday by the French radio station Europe No. 1, Sihanouk said his government “would only protest against both sides” if U. S. and Vietcong forces [were to clash in uninhabited regions of Cambodia from across ' the South Vietnamese frontier, j “We would not risk the lives of our troops in a fight which would be limited to Vietnamese infiltrated in Cambodia without our knowledge and Americans who would come to pull them out,”he said in the interview. ★ * ★ But, he said, any deep U.S. penetration in Cambodia could Unj 4a n “ftonorol nAnflirit” UIlH lieu of establishmer peals procedure, w. been* suggested by the sion. Y. • LBJ Names Top Aide as Envoy to Italy WASHINGTON (AP) lead to a “general conflict” and he would ask Red China, North DETROIT (AP) - U.S. Sen. President Johnson’s Vietnam Rorea gnd to send Volun- Imposes Controls on _____________....... . n.u.c, . ■/* A i i jWayne Morse, D-Ore., said Mon-policies commented in a taped|teerg lU have to meet r» Mntir Voiip’c nrn'crrnm hfl flfi-'r * . • _•_ nuclear Detroit on WKBD-TV. Morse j was reported resting at home i Monday night after being strick-j en with influenza in.Washington| last week. America cannot control fhe world militarily, he' said. He said if war with China did come, that America would have three a New Year’s program he de- her on’the" ground’ with’Amer-'million troops in China within scribed as “firm and decisive. ---------. -rMnrco sairi |three years. From VP Bid' year. , .... The shaping of these actions ficient, Kenning said, parking F 8 1 restrictions on Pierce, Henriet- ta, Chester and Frank could be remdved as needed. are matters in which Ackley, as chairman of * the President’s Coundl of Economic Advisers has been deeply involved. The President cited Ackley’s long interest in Italy—a country in which the 52-year-old econo-mist once studied as a Fulbright scholar—as his reason for tapping him for the post. NEW YORK (AP)James 30.YEAR VETERAN Boyd, former assistaht of in Rome, Ackley will replace Fire Destroys The Weather Morse tory controls in history on1 American investment abroad and an appeal to Americans to: travel only in this hemisphere if possible. The investment controls were imposed under existing law. Government officials held out possibility of further restrictions such as a tax1 on, Americans going overseas or| SAIGON (AP) — The South limits on the amount of money Vietnamese government has re- S. Viets Bureau Chief the right to send a single American boy to his death on a battleground in the war that is undeclared.” He added: “I am shocked at how we can walk out on all our moral ideals in connection with the way we’re prosecuting the war. We’d bet- for Newsweek t^mU^bwauMTdon’tforget jJan-' 13 issue of the Satarday|thur M. Okun high on the list of story frame dwelling and called IUI ^ only defeated nations are Evening Post that Dodd made possibilities they may take with them. Officials said this must be worked out with Congress. ‘DAMAGING TO NATION’ tried, and if we should lose it I the remark after President the verdict of the world would Johnson had selected Hubert H, make the Nuremburg trials insignificant." Morse accused Secretary of State Dean Rusk of feeding the American public “nonsense.” Asked if he felt Rusk should re- Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Cloudy with occasional fight snow or snow flurries likely through tonight. Not so cold today High 18 to 24. Low tonight 8 to 15. Wednesday: Partly cloudy and colder with a chance of snow flurries. Winds southerly at 8 to 16 miles becoming northerly during the night. Thursday’s outlook: fair and cold. Precipitation probabilities in per cent are: Today 50, tonight 70, tomorrow 40. fused to renew the visa of Newsweek magazine’s Saigon bureau chief, Everett Martin, and told him to leave the country replied: "He should staid realize b“" abroad is damaging to the coun-l^. critical ofa8®- . . 1 the South Vietnamese army. Kri D NY is makine The' entire program is de-( * *. * ivenneay, u- in..i., is maxing signed to slash the dollar drain It ho the first •ynnlsinrif 8 ™istake in I104 hv sn billion It includes an ef- , . w H ___condemningpublidy the John- by 513 billion, it includes an et |of an Arnencan newsman from administration’s foreign doI- fort to cut government spending jSouth Vietnam since 1962, when*0" “SSdvwe reKitiM abroad by $500 million this year the iate president Ngo Din Ke.nnedy wore ,t0.seek , ___1 ' _____:____r ____.Jlne ,aie rreMUC111 vw Democratic nresidentia nomin- Humphrey as his rimning mate. The senator had been reported under consideration for second spot on the ticket. ★ ifr it the fire department, Okun was named to the ficials said, three-man council to fill the vacancy created when Ackley was promoted to the chairmanship in November,' 1964. President Kennedy appointed Ackley a council member in Morse said U.S. Sen. Robert and on pvnancinn of exnorts toJPr 1316 ,77, • !Democratic presidential nomin fncrealTJrade surSbJ TT \^n, Morse said, “I think he’e increase the trade surplus by at of the Natl0nal Broadcasting;^ g ^ chance> still> to Today In Pontiac Lowest temperature preceding t a.m. At I a.m.: Wind Voloclty 1 m.p.h. Direction: Southerly Sun sets Tuesday at 5:13 p.m. Sun rises Wednesday et 8:01 a.m. Moon sets Tuesday at 0:01 p.m. Moon rises Wednesday at 10: SO a.m. , Downtown Temperatures i a.m. ........10 J a.m..........10 • a.m, ........10 1 p.m. * Kilt, ..... 10 a.m. ...... Alpena Escanaba Flint | G. Rapids ii m!*'' . . . . : iS|Houl»h,on Monday In Pontiac (as recorded downtown) Highest temperature ......... Lowest temperature ....... Mean temperature ............. Weather—Sunny least that much ★ Boyd, whose allegations oM962. At the time he was chair-misconduct by Dodd led eventu- man of the University of Michi-ally to censure of Dodd by the gan’s economics department Senate on June 23,1967, quotes and director of the Social the senator, a former FBI Science Research Cpuncil. agent, as saying at 1964 Demo- Ambassador Reinhardt, 56,, cratic convention time: (has held his current post for the “There are only two. jobs that'past six years and has been con-I would leave the Senate for, sidered overdue for reasslgn-FBI director and the head of the ment. Before his arrival in Italy Central Intelligence Agency, he served succesively as U.S. and I may very well wind up in!ambassador to Vietnam and the one place or the other.” ] United Arab Republic. [Co. and Francois Sully of News-' thflt nomination’ _ if’ it.. ( In outlining the program Mon-s day at a Johnson City, Tex., 5jnews conference, the President I revealed the dollar drain this J year would reaen $3.5 billion "to billion—highest in ' seven 'week IIJ Houghton Lk Jackson Lansing _____ Marque+te Ont Yaar Ago In Pontiac 1 Highest temperature ..............32 Lowest fpmpprpturt V Mean temperature .................2».5 Traverse Weather—Partly tunny « $4 77 55- 23 20 years. 60 t’l , u Johnson also listed higher Albuquerque Atlanta Bismarck Boston Chicago Monday's Temperatures 12 8 Detroit 8 -4. Duluth 11 T Fort Worth 13 10 Jacksonville 2 -6 Kansas City 9 1 Los Angeles 10 S Miami Beach 79 72 's -t New*orieans It 471 Vietnam war costs, more U.S. Vi 'o om"haork is u\spending on fqreign travel, big- || i Pittsburgh \l 3?‘ger investments abroad and a a 22 st. Louis i* vs;smaller gain than expected in s. Lake city 40 29 the trade surplus. COst llsrit 1 ( 1 «■ Martin can appeal the decision to the minister of the interior, whose ministry declined to renew the visa. Martin, wjio has been in Vietnam for nearly two years, reentered South Vietnam last Nov. 28 after a short vacation. He came back without a visa, a normal practice for Americans returning from a short stay out on the foreign policy issue.” Flat Tire May Have Led to Pistol Death OU Fees Cut for Part-Timers Ste. Marie 17 12 Seattle DETROIT (AP) - A flat tire of the country, and applied for a I may have triggered a chain of reentry visa. Preliminary reaction to the plan from Congress seemed | cheery with Chairman William j Proxmire, D-Wis., of the Sen-] ate-House Economic Commit-1 tee, calling it “exactly the kind of decisive and comprehensive action the situation called for." 100 Take Dip in Cold Pacific Woodward Que for Road Repairs Si] AP Wlruphot* NATIONAL WEATHER—Snow and snow flurries are forecast tonight over a large portion of the Northern and Central sections of the country. Rain is expected in the ftutheast with showers due over the Southwestern portion of the nation. Milder temperatures are predicted in the Atlantic states and the deep South. The State Highway Department has assigned a survey to gather data for the resurfac-ling and repair of 1.7 miles of Woodward from South Boule-lgrees vard in Pontiac to Square Lake Road in Bloomfield Township. SAN FRANCISCO (AP) More than 100 persons the Olympic Club’s 75th annual | tire. circumstances, which ended in the shooting death Sunday of Walter Jones, 39, Detroit police reported. Jones reportedly was waiting at the apartment of a girlfriend Remell Jones, 52, who was supposed to get off work at 8 a.m. * * * She told police when she arrived home at 10 a.ih. that Jones accused her of being with some-joined |one ejse <5j,e sajd she had a flat For some 700 Oakland University part-time students who began registration today for winter semester, the new year started out on a pleasant note. They found that course fees had been reduced. Oakland University followed Michigan State University’s lead in putting a new part-time fee schedule into effect until next fall. New Year’s Day swim in the Pacific. Air and water temperatures registered the same—42 de- Miss Jones told police that in tHe ensuing argument, she ran into a bathroom with a towel containing a pistol. He followed |her. Police said one shot w?s * fired,/striking the man in the "It’s cold." said Scott Butler, cl*681- ■ MSU trustees, who also govern OU, reduced MSU undergraduate resident part-time fees for this winter, spring and summer terms by up to $17 for seven to nine credits over two weeks ago. * * * i - The trustees, however, had\ Oakland University officials wondering whether OU would also reduce its fees since they did not specifically call for a new schedule at Oakland. semester, and $175 for graduates, $5 less than last semester. • 5 to 6 credits—$141 for undergraduates and graduates,, $39. less than last semester. • 3 to 4 credits^-$102 for both undergraduates and graduates the same as fall semester. • 1 to 2 credits—$49 for undergrads, compared to $102 last semester, and $49 for grads, unchanged. Nonresident undergraduate and graduate fees are unchanged, according to Swanson. The survey is expected to be; "I've never missed one," said icompleted in April. No date:Otto Wallfisch, 84, who made his has been set for taking bids on'first plunge in 1905 and was en-! the project. ! joying No. 63. ★ ★ * j Police held Miss JoneS fori questioning. No charges w e r e | filed. NEW SCHEDULE OU Business Director Robert W, SwanSon came up with a new Oakland schedule just Friday. Here is the new schedule for Michigan resident undergraduates and graduates. • 7 to 9 credits—$165 per semester for undergraduates, compared to f 180 fall Michigan State now charges a total of $297 for those taking seven to nine credits during a September-through-spring school year while OU charges $330. Swanson explained that the two Schools fees, do not compare exactly because tkey have different course multiples. Most MSU courses are in multiples of three—3, 6, 9, 12 credits—while OU has multiples of four.. Next fall MSU and OU As ill return to es-s , past fall’s schedule/with provisions, for reductions based on’ability to sentially this/past fall’s sc! visii pav Then, seven to nine credits st OU would cost a , maximum of about $174 with reductions on family income to a ’minimum of about $123. 1 Proposal Is Revised on Boat, Trailer Storage wfll be considered at the City ^Commission meeting tonight at 8.: '-r'\ ' '.v' Previously submitted to the commission Nov. 20, the proposal has beeh reworked to include provisions for exceptions. As p r e s e n 11 y worded, the amendment would not affect parking and storage of vehicles which have not changed ownership after its passage, or which were stored prior to passage. Also excepted from the amendment would be owners physically unable to comply with the ordinance due to size of lot, building location, or other factors. * * * The exceptionr ere made in an ap-had NOT IN FRONT Under the proposed ordinance,trailers and boats may not be stored at the front of a residential zone,, district, a nd may not be stored beside a house between the front and back of a district for more than 30days. The commission will also . consider interim parking provi-. , (7 es!" sions during the coiistruction of dent Johnson has named Gard-jy^ new pm-Mug structure at ner Ackley—the ,v administra-| Merrill and Pierce, tion’s top economist and a man 1 Johnson calls one of his “most! City Manager Robert S. trusted and closest friends”—to Kenning has suggested notify-be the next U.S. ambassador to ing parkers with flyers attached to windshields during the week before closing the Lot 1, and encouraging parking in the Lot 5 structure on North Woodward and Lot 4 at Brownell and Forest. ★ ★ ★ 7 , Kenning also proposed changing the 12-hour limit on 25 meters in Lot 7, at Merrill and Henrietta, to two hours. If these measures are not suf- scriDea as iirm ™ ueua»c, iran trooos ” Morse said I three years. S? -------- —:--------- . m touk, ntucj ici<.uv.c, A fire at a Pontiac home early It incorporates the first manda-. Morse Han outspoken foe of Morse said, “No president hast Sen. Thomas J. Dodd, D-Conn.,' Ambassador G. Frederick Reip-jthis morning did an estimated says in a magazine article that hardt, a 30-year. Foreign Service'$10,000 damage and took fire-Dodd told him during the 1964jveteran, who has been ill re-imen ncariy three hours to ex- Democratic National Conven-; AI^0Ugh j0j,nson did notj^he biaze at 215 Ferry broke tion that he would “have run a name a candidate to succeed|out sometime before 4 a.m., mile” from the party’s nomina-jAckley in the $30,000-a-yearjwhen a night watchman several tion for vice president. I chairmanship, Washington spec-jbiocks away saw flames break- Boyd says in an article in thejulation placed the name of Ar- jng through the roof of the one- fire of- Fire Marshal Charles Metz Said damage to the building, whose occupants were out of town on vacation, wfft total. • It was not possible to determine the value of contents destroyed, he said. ★ ★ ★ Four vehicles, under the command of Assistant Chief Lee Nye responded to the alarm and were at the scene until about 7 a.m. Metz, who said his office will continue its investigation of the fire today, tentatively blamed the blaze on an oil-fired space heater. £ A I THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 2/1068 in 1 Some (0 courses, ranging superintendent of community length fironisix to 10 weeks, are school services, being offered during the winter) Registration for the classes term by the Department of j will take place from 7 pm. te Community School Services ofj*-* O-"*; »«t Monday tor ougb the Waterford Township School I SdL, District. . , % J The classes wilt begin the week of Jan. 15, according to Donald Youmans, assistant su 2 New Assess Nixon, Rockefeller ■ 1415 Crescent Lake Registration for limited class* es and Bishop sewing must be completed in person. ■ * For- all other classes, participants can register tn person or by mail. MAILING ADDRESS & Checks or money jorders should be mailed to Waterford Community, SchooIs, 3835 W. Walton, Drayton Plains, Mich. NEW YORK (UPI) - One poll of Republics party leaders shows former vice President Richard M. Nixon most likely to get the 1968 GOT presidential nomination, but a separate poll shows Gov. Nelson Rockefeller of New York would be the stronger candidate against President Johnson. A poll by Newsweek Magazine showed Nixon has a commanding lead among potential dele; gates, to the Republican National' Convention next August in Miami. The magazine said that if the convention were held today, Nixon would get 561 votes, only 106 short of the 667 needed for the nomination. The other poll, by the New York Times, indicated party leaders and observers in the R states with 378 electoral votes, compared with 169 for Johnson and 68 for former Gov. George C. Wallace of Alabama, whp is campaigning as a third party candidate. lie classes are open to rest* dents of the Waterford Township School District and the surrounding area. Several new courses f have been added for the winter term, Youmans noted. H i "A | Included is an adult - crafts class in which the instructor is prepared to work with any individual on any craft project of the student’s choice. ANOTHER NEW COURSE This could include copper tooling or enameling, metal spinning, archery equipment through lamination, wood carving and plastic forming. • < Another new course is an art The Newsweek survey of delegates put Rockefeller in second place behind Nixon with 363 potential delegate votes. GoV. Ronald Reagan of California had 201 and Gov. George Romney of Michigan, the only declared GOP candidate, had 89. ★■ , ★ ★ There were 114 undecided votes among governors, state chairman and leading spokesmen polled in all 50 states. ★ * - ★ Hie Times said its survey showed that in a two-man race Nixon would edge Johnson by “a relatively narrow margin,” 271 electoral votes to 267. But with Wallace in the race, Johnson,would get 301 votes to 210 for' Nixon and 27 for Wallace. The newspaper said Wallace was the “chief im ponderable” in assessing next November’s election. Both publications said their surveys were based on current conditions and on how potential delegates feel now. Neither made any attempt to consider possible shifts in issues during the seven months remaining before the national conventions. 'Splash Day' Gets ■ .O'1 a Cool Reception CORPUS CHRISTI, Tex. (AP) — A crowd of some 400 gathered on Padre Island Monday for the 14th annual “splash day” observance, which is supposed to demonstrate for all to see that the climate is mild in the Corpus Christi area. Nine young ladies in bathing suits shivered their way through a beauty pageant. Then Mayor Jack Blackmon led a dozen swimmers for a dip in tile surf in 53-degree weather. , ( ★ ★ 0Wjjm The dip was a quick one, and the swimmers had blue lips awl chattering teeth as they headed for the dressing rooms. class for mothers aad their preschool children. This class, according to Youmans, is an opportunity for the mother and child to express themselves with various art media, including finger painting, chalk, charcoal and water colors. * ★ * Still another new'course in the art field is decoupage, an art form which rapidly is becoming very popular. -CUT AND PASTE Various prints or designs are (tot and pasted to purse!?, picture, plaques, lamps, furniture or any other personal or household item. No art talent is needed for this approach to new decorative pieces in the •-home, Youmans emphasized. Two new classes have been added in furniture refinishing. "*""*■..4F" * ★ They are chair caning, the art of reseating chairs with cane reed or rush in any of the traditional methods; and furniture upholstering. SPEED READING Speed reading is another of the new classes. It is designed to help the student increase his reading rate hnd, at the same time, retain or .improve his comprehension of the material “Bishop sewing is still our stogie most popular program, said Youmans, who informed that 36 separate classes will be offered during the winter term. Besides the continuation of the Bishop H through VI classes, eight beginning courses and specialty classes in double knits, shifts, slacks and advanced fittings are being offered. A “Our Bishop staff of 16 teachers is one of the largest and best trained in the country,” said Youmans. ,‘t “About 150 women will begin theirBishop MALLORY DUMCELL Alkaline Here FRESH! MallorY and most of them will remain in Bishop until they have learned to tailor thrfr own two-piece suit in Bishop VI,” Youmans said. Commenting on the entire program, "Youmans said: “As more and more people realize the opportunities offered in their schools, our program continues to grow. Front a small beginning four years ago, we have approached the point where it is no longer unique for someone to participate in these Sizes For Toys, Cameras, Radios and Flashlights SIMMS!* Saginaw—Camara Dapt., Main Floor f Hard of Hearing? . r remarkable new ? -? & m. :r invention helps restore your ability to hear more clearly 1 I f y.o u have a hearing problem, y o n* 1/1 want to know all about an important new device developed by a Texas inventor. This new idea is not only surprisingly uncomplicated—it is amazingly inexpensive. Yet it is so remarkable, a patent has been applied for. It may do much more than merely help you hear. It may help you hear more clearly — even in crowded noisy rboms or out in the open! Called NORMEAR (Pat. Pending), this scientific invention is now being offered exclusively in combination with the Beltone Andante hearing aid. You’ll be thrilled with Andante’s small size —amazed it’s so inconspicuous. FREE HEARING TEST Eveq if you’ve been told a hearing aid won’t help ...or that efficient hearing aids must be large and bulky to give you , the help you need . ,. you owe it to yourself to investigate Normear and the Beltone Andante-Bring in this ad, or call today. Have a FREE electronic hearing test, using the precision Beltone audiometer. You may havq your FREE test in our office, or in the privacy of your own home.-No cost. Naturally, no obligation. During World War 1, Russia once had. a peak strength of 54 cavalry divisions, according to the Encyclopaedia Britan-nica. T HEARING AID CENTER Earl Glaspio Certified Hearing Aid Audioligist 450 W. Huron St. Opposite Pon. Gan. Hospital Fraa Forking 334-7711 I OAKLAND COMMUNITY COLLEGE COMMUNITY SERVICES Div., Office of Cultural Affairs, Announces THE RENAISSANCE QUARTET Lute , Tenor Viola da gamba Recorder ViMteEpiff SsOO P.M. 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Get it an a credit card, Model . SIMMS!?, Cameras Simms Bns.-98 N. Saginaw St.-Downtown Pontiac NHUCdPEN ullVIHIu TOMITE ' Weds. Hours: 9am to 5:30pm m §®1§ ! ■ IP -Uw ,l - ’, ■ mm ■ These are such tremendous bargains, we mutt limit the sale today 'til 9pm and tomorrow 9am to 5:30pm. All items subject to stock on hand at time of adv. and we reserve the right to limit quantities.. Pontiac’s Bargain-King Store Twin Pack of 5’s—SCHICK Stainless Razor Blades .-Double Edge World’s Largest Seller Jergens Lotion 10Vi Ounces $1.58 value twin pack' — total of 10 stainless steel blades for fqst, smooth, more comfortable shaving. Limit 2 deals. r* DRUGS Main Floor $ 1.00 value — world famous" ____ Jergens ail purpose lotion in • generous 1 OVi-ounce size. With pump dispenser,. too. Limit 2. -COSMETICS Main Floor - Smooth ‘Bankers Choice’ Box of 50 CIGARS $3 Seller Smooth smoking. 6c sellers. Full box of 50— •give yourself a smoking treat at a low price, tax included, too. Limit 2 boxes. -TOBACCO Main Floor Recharge Your Toy, Flashlight, Radio Batteries With Your Favorite Brands CIGARETTES Choice of regular, king size and filter brands. Ml00 or 101 sizes not included at this low price. Limit 2 cartons. ’ « ; -TOBACCO Main Floor ‘Fedtro’ Battery Re-Charger m $5.75 value — don't throw away weak batteries — give 'em fresh life with a charge - up. For C, D sizes plus 9 - volt transistor batteries. Complete with built-in. tester. -SUNDRY Main Floor SMtssasasssssstsiossssssssssIssaa The Hew REMINGTON Selectro 300 Electric Razor with Dial-A-Shave The dial adjusts the thin, sharp shaving heads to the right position for your skin and beard. Dial trim for side-burn trimmer. Dial clean for instant cleaning,1 —SUNDRY Main Floor ALL METAL 'Porta-File* Chests LOCK A KEY Marbleizad Finish Wood Toilet Seats All metal portable filing cbeit to hold important papers. Index dividers to keep papers in order. Holds 800 documents. Limit 1 chest. -HARDWARE 2nd Floor Choice of marbleized green color or Mother-of • Pearl blue color. Complete with standard fittings fpr regulation toilet * bowls. Limit 1 per customer. -HARDWARE 2nd Floor Special! Irregulars of $3.9B Values Ladies’ Better Slacks 99 0 Choice of better quality slacks in a wide assortment of fabrics Including) corduroys, twills, wash V wear cottons, western jeans, ' etc. Selection of colors and styles In plains or prints. All sizes 8 to 44. -CLOTHING Main Floor A Very Special Purchase! American Made Ladies’ 1st Quality SHOES Group of FLAT Styles Loafer style suedes, patents, suedes, etc., tn a variety of colors. All leather uppers. Your choice at one price. All sizes. Work and Dress Heels Low and mod heel's for casual and work, spiff# heels for dress. Wide variety of colors antf styfeii Regular leather uppers, some suedes. Sites shut ot 4 and up • to 12. in s6me styles. Widths Include B to AA^A, -SHOES Bae,m,nt L.v.l / L 98 North Saginaw SIMMS!?., 3 Floors of Better Bargaine V' * "■ Ml I;N 8 is'V'V' IBB ‘Xt'VA" *‘ ;?“ Tibs POlM^Cf^lSSS. TUESmY, JANUARY 2, 1968 rtZKyj t RPASIS tm Deaths in PontiacNearlty Areas Mrs. Ula Ml Service for Mrs. Ula Bell, 64, of 692 Bagley will be 8 p.m. today in New Hope Baptist Church. Her body will be' taken to Mount Pleasant, Tenn., for burial by the Davis-Cobb Funeral Home. Mrs. Bell, a member of New Hope Church, died Saturday. Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Vera Jackson of Pontiac; a foster son, Staff Sgt. Walter G. Ford with the Air Force; and two sisters. Andrew W. Dabney Service for Andrew W. Dabney, 66, of 383 Luther will be 1 p.m. Friday in Macedonia Baptist Church with burial in Oak HB1 Cemetery by tiie Frank Carruthers Funeral Home. Mr. Dabney, owner of Never Sleep Shoe Shine Shop, died Sunday. He was a member of Macedonia < Church. • Surviving is his wife, Ella. Mrs. Ira Herron Service for former Pontiac resident Mrs. Ira (Mrytle) Herron of Port Sanilac was to be from the Jewell Funeral Homo in Carsonville today. Burial •was to be in the Prat Sanilac Cemetery. Mrs. Herron died Saturday. A graduate of the Harper Hospital School of Nursing in Detroit, Mrs. Herron had served as a nurse for the Oakland County Board of Health and for Hie Pontiac Public School System.. "" - . She was a member of the First Presbyterian Church, Pontiac, anti a life member of the Or«r of Eastern Star in Mar lette. Surviving are her husband; a sister, Lila Redmond of Pontiac; mid a brother, Marvin Redmond of Pontiac. David G. Maki Jr. Service for David G. Maki Jr., infant son of Mr. and Mrs; David Maki, will be il a.m Thursday at the Hun toon Funeral Home with burial in Perry amount Park Cemetery, The infant died yesterday, two days after birth. Surviving besides the parents are grandparents Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Sherman of Rochester and Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Scargorough of Pontiac. Mrs. Archie Myers Service for Mrs. Archie (Estelle) Myers, 67, of 478 Ditmar wtil be 1 pan. Thursday in Macedonia Baptist Church with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery by the Frank Carruthers Funeral Home. Mrs. Myers, a member of Macedonia Church, died yester* Surviving are ll children, Du-vetta Sandon, Mrs. Mable Davis, LaWanda Washington, Theodore Gholsonn, Helen Waters, Louise Searcy, Mary, Archie Jr., Gladys, Paul and Made Myers, all of Pontiac, and 13 grannddiQdren. William A. Sandbars** ^ Agnes Hazen of Detroit and Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Kowalski of Dearborn. Service for William A. Son-nenberg, 78, of 1478 RoSedale, Sylvan Lake, will be 1p.m. Thursday at \ SparksjGrtflto Chapel with burial in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. ' | Mr. Sonnenberg died fester-day. He was a member of St. Trinity Lutheran Church. j Surviving, are his wife^Elsie; two sons, Edwin L. of fontiac and William A. Jr. of California; two daughters, Mrs. Adeline VanVleck of Cleveland, Ohio, and Mrs. Evelyn Palmer of Chicago, 111; three grandchildren; six great-grandchildren; and a sister. Mrs. Gface A. Clingsmith OXFORD — Service for former resident Mrs. Grace A. Clingsmith, 78, of Eaton Rapids wiU be 2 p.m. -tomorrow at Bossardet Funeral Home, Oxford. Burial will be in Oxford Cemetery, Oxford’. Mrr Clingsmith, a member of the Oxford Baptist Church, died Saturday. Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. Mabel Howard of Flint and Mrs. Alice Fick of Metamora; 11 grandchildren; 15 greatgrandchildren; two dbters; and a brother. Mrs. Harry W. Dean AVON TOWNSHIP - Memorial service for Mrs. Hairy W. Dean, 75, of 3425 S. Rochester will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at PJxley Memorial C h a p e l Rochester. Mrs. Dean, a member of the First Church of Christ Scientist, Rochester, died Sunday. Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. John Demlow of Royal Oak; two sons, John of Los Angeles, Calif., and William of Li vonia; five grandchildren; two brothers; and a sister. Memorials may be nude to the Christian Science Church Center Building Fund. Sherry A. Knight HIGHLAND TOWNSHIP-Ser-vice for Sherry A. Knight, 17, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lane E. Knight of 203 S. Center, will be 1 p.m. Thursday at the Richardson-Bird Funeral Home, Milford. Burial will be in Milford Memorial Cemetery, Milford. Sherry, a senior at Milford High School, died yesterday when she was hit by a car. Sbe belongs to Milford Presby terain Church. Surviving besides her parents are two brother, Michael at Robert E. Millard LAKE ORION - Robert E. Millard, 53, of 243 Hauxwell died yesterday. His body is at Flumerfelt Funeral Home, Oxford. Surviving are his wife, Beatrice, a daughter, Barbara, and son, Bruce, all at home; his mother and stepfather; one sister; and two stepsisters. Mrs. John O. O'Connor AVON TOWNSHIP - Requiem Mass for Mrs. John Or (Mary) I O’Conner, 77, of 3605 Culbert-; son will be 10 a.m. Thursday at St. Andrew’s Catholic Church, | Rochester. Burial will be in Mount Avon Cemetery, Rochester." .. ,J Rosary will be said at 8:30 p.m. tomorrow at the William R. Potere Funeral Home, Rochester. Mrs. O’Connor, a member of the Third Order of St. Francis, died yesterday. Surviving are two sons, Robert O’Connor and Jack Dion, both of Troy; five grandchildren; and a great-grandchild. Camera Equipment Town Finally to Get Doctor Pontiac State Police are attempting to locate the owner of expensive camera equipment get a doctor, found yesterday one block south * * of South Boulevard in Avon Township. - , . ' it ik f ,' / The equipment — a 35mm Nikon model camera, a light brown camera carrying case and attachments — was found by Charles J. Storey of 3409 Devondaie, Avon Township. . ’ it it ■ .# State Police said the equip-men will be held at the post until claimed by the owner who must show proper identification and proof of ownership. DARRINGTON, Wash. (AP) Darrington is finally going to Charles Pittson Jr., wjio headed the dtictor drive, says Dr. Patrick Wu of Taipei, Taiwan, has been given permission by the U.S. Department of Immigration to enter this country when a visa is available. ★ ★ ★ Darrington, located in the foothills of the Cascade Mountains, has been looking for a doctor since May when its only active physician moved. There are about 3,500 residents in the area. Cases Against Four Dismissed Judge Cites 'Illegal Status of Grand Juror' Episcopalian Priest Dies; City Native Word has been received of the death of the Rev. Francis L Drake, rector of St. Paul Episcopal Church in .Norwalk, Conn, and a native of Pontiac. Service was yesterday in the St. Paul Church with burial there. The Rev. Mr. Drake, 55, died Friday of a heart attack. Surviving are his wife, Sally; a son, Barry, with the Air Force; and a daughter, Mary, at home, - we* A member of a priminent pioneer family in the city, he spent moet of his early life to the home of his grandfather, Dr. Rdbot LeBaron at Orchard Lake and Williams. PKYMCIANS IN FAMILY Both his father, the late Dr. George Drake, and grandfather were prominent Pontiac physicians. A graduate of Kenyon College and el General Theological Seminary of New York City, he was ordained to the Episcopal priesthood at St. James Episcopal Church in Cheboygan, hit first pastorate to December 1887. ewe He was ordained to the disc-onate In AH Saints Episcopal Church, Pontiac, in June of tile stone year. s Gambling charges against four persons arrested in police raids ordered by the Pratt grand jury more than a .year ago have been dismissed. Novi Justice of the Peace Emery Jacques dismissed the charges on the basis that Circuit Court Judge Philip Pratt did not have the authority as a grand juror when he ordered the raids in November 1966. The cases were dismissed Thursday against Roy L. dark, his wife, Anna L., and George H. dark, all of Hasel Park, and Donna L. Coultis of Detroit. The dismissal came after1 a motion to quash both the warrant and order for arrest was made by their attorney, Richard Chosid of Feradale. wee "According to a recent ruling by the Michigan Court of Appeals, Judge Pratt had no power to sign an order for conducting the raid and makings the arrests,” Chosid said. ‘.‘When the circuit judges got together and signed an order making Judge Pratt /the grand juror, for a second term, they were violating a stat« statute and their actions were unconstitutional.” Mrs. Adolph Savage I WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP — Service for Mrs. Adolph (Stella E.) Savage, 81, of 7525 Lilac will be at 10 a.m. tomorrow at Our Lady of Refuge Church, with burial in Mount Hope Cemetery. Mrs. Savage, a member of the church, died yesterday. Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. L. L. Liebfried of Downers Grove, III., and Mrs. S. O. Rogers of Orchard Lake, and a sister. Mrs. Louis Stulb- COMMERCE TOWNSHIP Service for Mrs. Louis (Virginia R.) Stull, 48, of 303 Whippoor will was yesterday at Richardson-Bird Funeral Home, Walled Lake, with service at Gaskins Funeral Home, Harrisburg, HI. Thursday with burial in Sunset Hill Cemetery there. Mrs. Stull, a member of the Church of Christ, Walled Lake, died Sunday. Surviving are her husband; three sisters, including Mrs. Nannie Payne of Walled Lake; and two brothers. Fred White ALMONT — Service for Fred White, 78, of 127 E. St. Clair will be 1 p.m. tomorrow at Muir Brothers Funeral Home. Burial will be in McCafferty Cemetery, Romeo. Mr. White, a retired blacksmith, died Sunday. Surviving are a brother, James of Pontiac, and a sister, Mrs. Maude Grubb of Pontiac. Otto Zander WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP — Service for Otto Zander, 72, of 956 Mallock will be at 2:30 p.m. tomorrow at Donelson-Johns Funeral Home, Pontiac, with burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery, Pontiac, Mr. Zuider, a retired employe of Pontiac Motor Division, died yesterday. He whs a member of Oakland County Barracks No. 49, Pontiac. Emergency Notice! Becouse we have the misfortune to be flooded out by a broken water pipe it is necessary for us to be CLOSED FOR THE NEXT 2 or 3 days. Please watch The Pontiac Press for our re-opening. . Thank you ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD OPPOSITE THE P0MTIAC MALL Atnetic&ifevorite mtiiy restQuwnfe Is the glass half empty or half full? If you think it’s half empty, ■ maybe the Peace Corps is not for you. • If you think it’s half full, you’ve got the first thing we look for in Peace Corps people. Optimism. If you want to know more about what it takes to pass muster in the Peace Corps, write us. The Peace Corps, Washington, D.C. 20525. COMPLETE HEARING EVALUATIONS mm minis MgMqrnMMf —i Mens mT — LMIIT M MSSMMH-NOIMl • BATTUNtS end MMMMIIS • MMIR Of AIL MAKES Bus. B. Appleton Certified by thn Motional Hoaring Aid Socloty Main Floor, Rikor Bldg. 35 W. Huron 332-3052 ran MMIM to IS* eWRTNMU MT Published as s public ssrvics in cooperation with The Advertising l Council and the International Newspaper Advertising Executlvss. I • w ' . The Pontiac Press A Power Failure MANISTEE (API-Some 6,000 Manistee County residents were without electricity New Year’s Day as a result of a midmorning power failure. The black $ for Flow.r Making Plastic Flowers and Foliag. New Cake Pans for Horn* 8ak.r» CLEO’S HANDCRAFT SHOP 366 Oaklbnd Ave. FE 8-3361 Vows, Gala for Thrashers A reception in the church parlors honored newlyweds, the Thomas Stewart Thrashers (Cathy Ann Wilson), following Saturday vows in First Baptist Church; k k k Their parents are Mrs. Cath- erine Carpenter of Chamber lain Street, Albert Wilson of Miami, Fla., and the senior Edwin Thrashers of East Boule- 31st January Clearance SAIE! SUBSTANTIAL FRIGE REDUCTIONS ON QUALITY FURNISHINGS FOR EVERY ROOM FAMILY OWNED AND OPERATED FOR OVER 31 YEARS AT THE SAME LOCATION YOU ALWAYS GET MORE FOR YOUR MONEY AT MILLER'S FURNITURE 144 Oakland Ave. ConvenientTtnns-tO day plan aaaia as oath '8:10 TO 5:30 OPEN DAILY I M0H. and FBI. EVENINGS Tit I Free Parking Lot Off Clark Street mmm floor flKI MODELS AND iMHf DEMONSTRATORS SAVE UP TO $50 OFF REGULAR PRICE WHEN NEW Join the great “Save-in” on floor model and demonstrator sowing machines at SINGER now, including the Touch &Sew * sewing machines by SINGER. COME EARLY FOR REST BUYS Hurry in! The ‘early bird' gets best choice of a wide variety of sewing machines: desk models and consoles in modem, contemporary and traditional styles! Plus Portables. New SINGER* sawing machines start at $69.95. Floor model and demonstrator sawing machines carry the same guarantee at new SINGER sawing machines! IllKY SEWING MACHINES PORTABLES mH.*9.95 CONSOLES fiwi.$19.95 ZIG-ZAGS fra. *29.95 These sewing machines were taken as trade-ins during the Christmas season. Now, to clear them out, we'll lower prices. All are in perfect working condition! SINGER* SENT * SEE SUARAHTlt With every used tewing machine goes the singer guarantee of money back if not satisfied with purchase, or full cfwdlt toward the purchase of a new SINGER sewing machine, within 90 daysl A credit plan designed to fit every budget. DOWNTOWN PONTIAC in Narth taalnaw Phtn. SSS-THf PONTIAC MALL SHOPPINQ CtfNTM Phan* tn-aiu For addrtis of store nearest you, Me white pages of phone book under SINGER COMPANY. • A Trad.Mafh of THE SINOEE COMPANY ‘Hi && MM 0! M JR ^ MRS. T. S. THRASHER vard North. Venise lace accented the bride’s nylon gown fashioned in Empire style with detachable train. Her headpiece, was petal shaped with seed pearls and crystals, she carried miniature white carnations surrounding a white orchid. Juanita Law was maid of honor with bridesmaids, Peggy Carpenter, the bride’s sister, and Susan Kitson of Detroit. The bridegroom’s brother, Edwin, stood as best man with ushers, Alex Brown, Donald Stone, Paul Jeffrey and Michael Madison. The newlyweds are honeymooning in Maryland. / Show Vitamin C Non-Effective •• - v .... • in Cold Therapy NEW YORK (UPI) - One new scientific report holds that large doses of vitamin C will not prevent or shorten the course of the common cold. People who have been getting adequate intake of the vitamin are not benefitted by additional doses. The report comes from “Nutrition Reviews”, a monthly publication of the non-profit Nutrition Foundation that supports research and education in food fields. . k k k It reports that a series of tests with volunteers revealed that contrary to common belief, massive doses of C will not stop a cold, reduce its severity or alter the length of time it takes to run its course. , Com* and Maot SHERON EATON All-Around Stylist Qo/ifoi,- Hair Fashions (Next fo Frank'* Nuri.ry in th. Tower Mall on M-59) . at Airport Road Quality Service with a Smile! Appointment* Nat Alway* Nacauary OR 3-3998 Invites You and Your Family’ To Be Wednesday Nighters Enjoy Tender, Golden, Deep-Fried COMPLETE CHICKEN DINNERS Only $1 20 Children Under 10 95 PONTIAC MALL choigm/ POTATOES Oft VEGETABLE DINNER SALAD OR DISSERT ROUS AND BUTTER COFFEE, TEA OR MILK tedi SERVED EVERY WEDNESDAY NIGHT PONTIAC MALL CAFETERIA ONLY 4:30 to 8 P.M. SPECIAL COUPON Good At All 3 STORES Executive Shirt Service Hats Blocked and Cleaned AN Types Of Leather And Sued* Work Alterations and repairs. Dry Cleaning Special 3 DAYS ONLY Clip And Bring With You Tues., Wed., Thurs., Jan 2-3-4th i Good thru Jan. 4th COUPON No Limit ANY 3 GARMENTS Suits, Coats and Dresses Count as 1 Garment $ 2 98 ! With Coupon j I ONE HOUR MARTINIZING Miracle Mile S.G> Phone: 332-1822 Open Daily 5aiMy 'B/tent Cfeoite/iA (formerly One Hr. Valet) TEL-HUR0N S.C. Phono 335-7934 Open Daily: One Hour Martinizing Elizabeth Lake S.C. 3111 Elizabeth Lake Rd. Phone 332-0ttl Opon Daily; HOURS: (At All Stores).7:30 A.M.-7:00 P.M. ■SHE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY g, 19ft8 The engagement of their daughter, Sharon Marie Rose, to Charles L.Cycan was announced by the Preston Roses of Pleasant Lake at a family dinner party on Christmas day.' He is the son of the Milton Cycans of Watkins Lake Road. A midsummer wed-' ding is planned by Deborah Sue Skipne and Pvt. David John Lyons, USA. Parents of the engaged cguple are the Wendell Skrines of Oxford and Mr., and Mrs. Thomas H. Lyons of Cheltingham Street. Speak Evening Vows Rev. and Mrs. D. E. Littllefair of _ Alto announce the engagement and forthcoming spring wedding of their daughter, Candi, to James H. Mair. He the son of Hugh Mair of Chippewa Road and the late Mrs. Mair. The bride-elect is. a junior at Eastern Michigan Univeisity, her fiance’s alina mater. An early April wedding is planned by Christine Vergis and Earl D. Spring Jr. The bride elect is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Vergis of Royal Oak. Her fiance, a junior at Midwestern Baptist College,. is the son of the senior Earl D. Springs of Miller Street. 4l' 4 * , Reading Habits Are Formulated in Early Years LOUISVILLE, KY. UP)-A child’s most important habit—a love at- reading and books—is formulated by th^ time he is 2; years old, believes Mrs. Lesley! Frost Ballantine, daughter ofj the late poet, Robert Frost. * ★ ★ ■' Speaking before a local woman’s club, Mrs. Ballantine suggested that parents should read aloud to their children from the time they are tiny tots, and should continue reading sessions as a family activity. ★ ■ ,★ ★ The New York City resident recalled that some of her fondest memories aa a child are of evenings by the fife in her native New Hampshire, listening as her parents read aloud Taffeta, Lace Highlight Saturday Bridal Ensemble Newsprint Wrap When you are packing that picnic lunch, don’t forget that newspapers make wonderful insulation for keeping hot foods hot or cold ones cold for short periods of time. Always use sev eral layers of newspapers wrapped tightly about trays of ice cubes or a hot dish. A floor length gown of white lace taffeta was chosen by Saturday bride, the former Bonnie Irene Davis, as she repeated [vows with 'Sp. 4 Michael M. jKing, USA, son of the Melville ; Kings of Lakeview Drive, Independence Township. SHOULDER VEIL Completing her ensemble was a crown.of matching fabric that held a shoulder illusion veil. She carried a cascade of red roses and white carnations. ★ * * Mrs. Wes Schaar was her sister’s matron of honor. They are the daughters of t h e Alburn Davises of Churchill Raod, Pontiac Township. > * * Bridesmaids were Suzane Byers and Janet King. Leta King and Walter Dixon were flower girl and ring bearer. ★ ★ ★ Larry Evon.stpod as best man with ushers Thomas Byers and Jerry King. ★ ★ * . Following vows in the Auburn Heights United Presbyterian Church, the couple was feted at a reception in Auburn I Heights Boys’ Club before leav-[ihg on a northern honeymoon. Twin Sister i Is His* Date ; ATCHISON, Kan. M - In order to pick, dates for a school 'dance, students at the all-male 1st. Benedict’s College here de-, j tided to use computers to select! [partners from among the girls I at nearby Mount St. Scholastics, an all-women’s college. Both the boys and the girls filled out cards which were “matched” as to likes and dislikes by the computer. Mike Flaton, a 19-year-old St. Louis youth, was surprised when his date, picked as one having similar interests, showed up for the dance. It was his itwin sister, Sue Flaton. I MRS. DONALD J. BRUCE Woman Receivesj Man of the Year] -Tobacco Award SYRACUSE, N. Y. (A — WherT Mrs. June Mele, who has been manager of the Smoke Shop in a local store for 30 years, was named ““Man of the Year” re-, cently by the tobacco industry, i the traditional award of a pair of cuff links wasn’t appropriate. Instead, the Retail Tobacco Dealers of America, at their annual convention, presented their only female member with a gold bracelet. *■ j. ★ - ★ ★ t Mrs. Mele studied tobacco blending at Indiana University and now mixes special blends for 350 regular customers, each catalogued in her mind along with his tobacco formula preference. Saturday evening vows and reception in 0 a k 1 a n d Avenue Presbyterian Church united Susan Louise Moore end Airman t-C Donald JameB Bruce. * * * A full chapel train framed the white sheath Empire-waist-ed gown of the bride who completed her ensemble with a cluster headpiece holding a silk illusion veil. Her flowers were white roses and Stephanotis. ♦ ★ * Mrs. Thomas McKinnon was] Members of Areme chapter, matron of honor Tor the daugh- Order of Eastern Star will meet ter of the Richard I. Moores of Wednesday at 8 p.m. in the Oakland Avenue, pridesmaids'Roosevelt Temple. were Michelle Moore and Vicki and Sherri Menard. ' ' John Menard was best man with ushers, James Moore and Frederick and William Ziem. The bridegroom’s parehts are the Robert J. Bruces of Union Lake. , ,VJr " The couple Will honeymoon in Oregon where Airman Bruce is stationed at Baker AFB. OES to Meet BUY, SELL, TRADE - - • PONTIAC PRESS WANT Scissor Haircutting Carl Suggests You look a> beautiful every day as you did on New Year's Eve. See ut regularly. Come >n' or Call Beauty Shop Riker Bldg.,FE 3-7186 Free Parking on Courthouse Let MRS. MICHAEL M.KING OFFICE WORKERS! SALESGIRLS! CLERKS! wm! your next Job can be more rewarding! Choosa i sicrstarial carter nd your days vi to filled with aajoyable Intereattag duties, outlet with exciting piople, plus a glamorous Mora ahead. ABC SHORTHAND MAKES IT SO EASY! Speedwriting shorthand It Hie modem shorthand. It utea tha abe’e you already know. No symbols. No machines. You Idem quickly and easily-ln a natural, relaxed my...In only a fraction of Nit time symbol shorthand requires. Discover how Speedwrttlng shorthand can help you toward anhe» tereatlng, exciting business career. Free Lifetime .Placement Service. - NEW CLASS BEGINS JAN, 22 18 W, Laurence FE 3-7028 -r>------- Glove-Stretchers Insert the old-fashioned kind of wooden clothespin in the fingers of gloves after washing them, and the gloves will- hold their shape while drying. The fingers will be nice and smooth for They will dry without wrinkles. WALLPAPER BARGAIN RENTER 1028 W. Huron : Alvin's ftfatn's PONTIAC and ROCHESTER Regular to $85 ... .. $49$69 Regular to $210 .... *79»*159 Fur Trimmed Coats Regular to $200... *99 ,0 *169 Regular to $350... ♦119 . *279 FUR CLEARANCE Goats - Jackets - Steles - Minks - Broadtails Regular to $2750. $2991-$2299 . SALE OF SHOES Famous fashion name fall and winter dress shoes, casual and sport, shoes dyring our sale . . . selection of this season's styles, colors and leathers. ANDREW GELLER, now $18.90 DELI SO DEBS, now $14.90 CARESSA, now $12.90 ADORES, now $12.90 TOWN & COUNTRY, now $9.90 . ^ FIRST EDITION, now $9.90 CAP^ZIO, now $9.90 Casuals B# CAPEZIO, CALIFORNIA COBBLERS, COVER GIRL, TRAMPEZE, TOWN & COUNTRY Now *690 and *790 , T HURON at TELEGRAPH ' Casual and Dressy Dresses Regular to $26 ........ *1Q ,*>*19 Regular to $50 ........ *2] to *31 Regular to $125....... ♦34 - $69 SPORTSWEAR Skirts - Sweaters - Slacks - Tops - Jackets to OFF CONTINENTAL ROOM Knit Suits - Dresses - Costumes 16 ,o V2 OFF Car Coats Regular to *55 $39 ,0 $44 RNHii THE PONTIAC PllESS, TUESDAY; JANUARY 2, 1968 NAACP NEW YORK CAP) - An agreement reached in Columbus, Ohio, guaranteeing 140 jobs for Negroes on Ohio State University construction projects looks like a clear-cut victory for the National Association for the Advancement'of Colored People. & But to the NAACP staff members who negotiated.it, the pacf symbolizes the end of once-bright hopes that federal and state governments would vigorously enforce antidiscrimination statutes and shows that pressure must be applied unrelentingly against unions and builders. ★ * * “It’s an indication of the fail-| ure of voluntary compliance,” said Herbert Hill, national labor 1 director for the NAACP. “There is a federal executive order issued by President Johnson forbidding discrimination in all federally financed construction. The U.S. Division of Con-tract Compliance is a dead letter. They have never enforced this, they depend instead on voluntary compliance.” FUNDS HELP UP In Washington, the head of the division, Owen Kiley, replied that federal funds for ,the Ohio State projects had been held up since last May. That was when U.S. District judge Joseph P. Kinneary ruled in a suit brought by the NAACP that government funds may not be used on projects where there' is racial discrimination in hiring. The judge also held that the state had primary responsibility for requiring that such work forces be integrated, apd it was under his order that agreement was reached last Thursday, more than six months later. Until last month, according to Dr. David McConnell, a university biochemist who headed the NAACP negotiating team as labor chairman of the Columbus branch, the university had made no attempt to implement the decision. McConnell, who is white, said negotiations were arranged only after he gained admittance to a Washington meeting of Health Education' and Welfare Department officials last Dec, 1 by threatening “to hold / a/ press conference in the hall if they didn’t admit me.” At that meeting, he said, “We got some of the primitive facts established. Namely, we held HEW as well as the state of Ohio responsible,' Then HEW told the university they wouldn’t let $6 million in matching funds go unless they settled their peace with the NAACP,. ★ ★ ★ - “It was really a squeeze play 1 between the federal government and the NAACP, and the federal government ran scared because it’s an election year. We threatened to name themjn a suit before the same court*on the same issue covering the entire state of Ohio.” Director Kiley of the HEW’s Division of Contract Compliance confirmed the meeting with McConnell, but said that when the NAACP representative asked to be admitted, he was invited to attend and fully express his views. And,, said Kiley, the decision to withhold federal / funds for the Ohio State proje^ was! made last May,- not at the December meeting. ‘FINALLY JELLED’ In Columbus, the university’s equal employment opportunity officer, Stephen Lance, disputed • McConnell’s allegation that, the school hadn’t tried to implement the court order. 1 “I would object to the words ‘no attempt’ and would say that the attempts being made finally jelled auelr that (Washington) meeting,” Lance said. He said university officials began negotiating with contractors immediately after the court decision “to get their commitments to hire minority workers.” ★ ★ ★ » To Hill the. Ohio State, agreement means more pressure, not less, on government-financed construction projects. He named Newark, N.J., and San Francis* co-Oakland as the next two major targets. Both areas, he said, plan huge construction program^ and have “volatile Negro rjghetto areas' wRh /very high rates of Negro unemployment.” “We have exhausted all reasonable efforts to discuss these matters with the building trades unions,” said Hill. “Therefore there is no choice but to move to cut off public funds. ★ ★ * M “Exactly one year ago, after four years of picketing and mass demonstrations against the building trades of northern New Jersey, the five Iron Workers locals signed an agreement with the New Jersey Civil Rights Commission. “Now, exactly one year later, not a single Negro has been admitted.” William Jennings Bryan, in 1896, at the age of 36, was the youngest candidate ever nominated for the U.S. presidency. Saigon Counterfeiters, Fake U. S Bills Seized SAIGON (AP) — South Vietnamese national police said today they had arrested several Chinese' counterfeiters and seized $250,000 in fake U.S. $5 bills, thereby foiling what they called a Red Chinese attempt to destroy the economies of South Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos. Police said the counterfeiters were Red Chinese spies who planned to trade the U.S. bills on the black market to buy equipment to counterfeit the currencies of South Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia, Police reported they closed in on the counterfeiters last Thursday in Cholon, the Chinese section of Saigon, and seized a printing press, paper and ink and complete and incomplete $5 bills. The counterfeiters’ printing plates also were seized, they said. ; ‘ \ 'Several persons, including some who tried to escape, were arrested, officials added, but police declined to disclose their names, saying the investigation was Continuing. A police statement said, “In the present case, there undoubtedly will be death sentences given to the Chinese counterfeiters.” Police said they- had been investigating for five months “an important clandestine economic and financial organization led directly by Communist authorities on the Chinese mainland, whose purpose was to counterfeit various monies in order to subvert the economies of many' countries in Southeast Asia, and especially the economy of South Vietnam” They said the counterfeit U.S. bills were to be put into the black market by a Chinese named “Dailthe Gioi”—the great wqrld—who would get South Vietnamese piasters in return to “buy needed modern machines for printing counter feit bills to subvert the monetary base of the countries the Communist Chinese want to in vade in the near future.” ■ The Communists “planned to immediately destroy the Republic of (South) Vietnam’s economy by printing and throwing into the market about 30 billion. piasters”—$200 million, police said. • LOOKING For a Place To RELAX? 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MICHIGAN BANKARD • SECURITY HONORED Open Til I PM.______- ft 4-4TM Telegraph And Square Lake Roads AMPLE FREE PARKING CENTER-TELEGRAPH AT SQUARE LAKE RD. OVER PISS' A majority of the forecasters The following are top pripes cpvering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by tiem in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as li be needed Directors Lite Long $840 billion. early in the p- 1 , • r ... fy.v This seemingly would mean a year and ttfat UOiay in oening CJIV $55 billion increase in output inflation w i 11|I over 1967, but many of the fore- simmer down rimnsninr NEW YORK (AP) — Direc-Icasters believe as much as $27 during the late tUNN,FF tors of the Internationa Tele-!billion of that will be inflation, [summer months. ______ phone & Telegraph Cojxt have Measured *n MSI dollars, the! In making their estimates,} By comparison, India’s per voted unanimously toTcancel?0'11 W0ldd nearer^ billion.,some analysts stumbled over1 capita production last year was [the problem of Vietnam and [simply assumed that it would cause the government to spend no more nor no less than in 1987. HIGHER LIVING In general, forecasters seem more certain than ever that in 1968 most Americans will enjoy a standard of living never before achieved, with the per capita share of production' exceeding $4,000 for the first time in history. ITT’s agreement for al$2.8-bil-| The New York Stock Exchange Poultry and Eggs ,Abex Cp 1.60 [ACF.Ind 2.20 AdMUtls .40a Addrq5s 1.40 I Admiral DETROIT POULTRY JAIrRedtn 1.50 DETROIT (AP) — (USDA) — Prices AlcanAlum i per pound tor No. 1 live poultry: £ efl.Cp,J2? Heavy type .hens, 20 - 21 cents; heavy [A legLu 2.40b type fryers, 19-21; heavy type roasters,! Ailed Pvv l20 oz 57 I AIII6(H C 1,900 DETROIT EGGS »!!iedS-u ,,aB DETROIT (AP* — (USDA) — Egg'Allis Chal 1 prices per dozen paid by first receivers "mer?ua 3 (Including U.S.): IoLrJih White Grade A |umbo, 35-39 cents; ex-tra large, 33-35; large, 31-33; medium,-) Am^Can 2.20 26-28; small, 20-20'/V. CHICAGO BUTTER, EGGS CHICAGO (AP) — Chicago Mercantile'jjf Exchange—Butter uneasy; wholesale buy- Am Hosp .60 Ing prices unchanged to Vz IdWer; 53 Amlnvst I’to score AA ’66; 92 A 66;J0 B 65'+; 89 C AmMFdy .91) 63'/i; 'cars 90 B 66; 89 C 65. AMet Ct 1.90 Eggs irregular; wholesale buying prices,Am Motors unchanged to 2 lower; 75 per cent or.AmNatGas 2 better Grade, A whites ?7'/x-28'/^; mixed'Am'News 1* 27 Vi-28 Mi; mediums 25; standards 25. |Am Photocpy CHICAGO POULTRY Am Smelt 3 CHICAGO (AP)—(USDA)-Live poultr Am Std 1 wholesale buying prices unchanged to 21+ *.40 higher; roasters 24-27; special fed White Tob 1.80 Rock Fryers 19W-22. iSno^O ,, Anacon 1,25g NEW YORK (AP) - New York Stock, 2.75 Exchange1 selected morning prices: Sales Net Glen Aid wi 2.00 (hds.) High Low Last Chg. I Glen Aid .70 2.75> a {Goodrich 2.40 5.50 Goodyr 1.35 5 29 29 29 + 'A! GraceCo 1.40 I 44 Vt | GranitCs 1.40 63 Grant 1.10 79Vi + V* Gt AAP 1.30a 19'A + S8 i Gt Non Rv 3 " Gt West Flnl 447s 44T 10 63Vi 63 12 79'+ 79V 30 19'A 19 21 347/s 347/s 347s + 67 26'A.. 26' e 26'A — V«|GW5Ug 1.60a 18 137/a 137/8 13'/»2i+ V* GreenGnt .88 4 7044 7044 7044 . . . Greyhound 1 5 22V*’ 2214 22'A .... GrumAlrc .80 25 4044 3944 4044 + 44 Gulf Oil 2.60 10 37V4 3644 367/e GultStaUt .88 55 36 35'A 36 + 44 GulfWIn ,30b 6 80-74 8044 8044 + Vi If 337/4 3244 33 Salas Net 1 (hds.) High Low Lost Chg 16 1244 1244 1244 Sanders .30 148 1344 1344 1344 + '+ Schenley 1.80 5 71 Vs 7144 7144 - 44jschering 1:20 S JJS 54V7 + A Sclentlt Data 20 4244 42 42 — 'A SCM Cp -60b S 26'+ 26V* 26V4 + 44 Scott Paper 1 1 3444 3444 3444 Sbd CsU, 2.20 27 2844 2844 ' 2844 + **SearlGO 1.30 5 5644 5644 56*A + 4b Sears Roe' ta 20 13 1244 Tj - Seeburg .60 2 48 48 48 + 'A sheron Stl T 9 36 35Va 35'+ -s 44 Shell Oil 2 10 18 2244 224* M44 +i'A'sherWnWm 2 Sinclair 2.60 SlnoerCo 2.20 'SmlthK 1.80a Police Credit Woman's Talk as Lifesaver under $100, Brazil’s under $400, Mexico’s less than $300, the United Kingdom-’s about $1,700, BelgiumVa bit more than $2,000 and Sweden's about $3,100. Boom Is Seen ! AmCrySug 1 •AmEIPw 1.52 lAmEnka 1.30 13 63'/a 63V4 63'/a — 3 15 51% S\'M Si'* 4- x 3 24% 24% 24% — V 28 36Va 36 36V4 22 41% 413/4 41% — \ 23 56% 56% .56% — 1'/ 89V; 89% 11 20% Halliburt 1.90 'Harris Inf 1 Here In 1.20g Hof# Electro Holldylnn .30 Homestk .80b Hbneywl 1:10 Hook Ch 1.40 House Fin 1 ! HoustonLP 1 Howmet 1.40 i HuntFds .50b Livestock ,Anken Chem 1 ArchDan 1.6(1 DETROIT LIVESTOCK Armco Stl 3 DETROIT (AP)—(USDA) — Cattle 75, Armour 1.60 calves 25, bogs 25, sheep 25. Slaughter1 Arm Ck 1.40a steers active, steady to strong; heifersl Ashld Oil 1.20 steady; cows active, fully 50 higher. 'ASidDG 1.60 Slaughter steers: choice 900*1,200 lb Atchison 1.60 26.50- 27.50; mixed good and choice 25.75-; Atl Rich 3.10 26.50; good 24.50-25.75; utility cows 16.50- Atlas Ch .80 17.50 Atlas Corp Vealers: high choice and prime 40.00- ;Avco Cp 1.20 43.00; choice, 35.00-40.00; good 30.00-35.00.1 Avnet .50b Sheep: prime 90-110 lb wooled lambs Aynet Inc wl 23.50- 24.50, Avon Pd Hogs: supply foo small for market test.i CHICAGO LIVESTOCK L . ^ CHICAGO (AP)—(USDA)— Hogs 5,000;| butchers generally steady; 1^2 190-230 lb 2217* Hi 17.75-18:25; 75 head at 19.25; 1-3 220-240,jgfJI™* ' A5 lbs 17.2S-18.00; 2-3 260-280 lbs. 16.00-16.50; sows steady to 25 higher; 1-3 330-400 lb nffi iunuf In sows 13.75rl4.50; 1-3 400-450 lbs 13.25-13.75. Cattle 3,500; calves none; slaughter 40 steers 25 to 1.00 higher; heifers 25 to 50 5om?u|I. , cn higher,1 prime 1,200-1,325 lb slaughter; g„I?rtn , 0n steers yield grade 3 and 4 28.00-28.50;! high choice and prime 1,100- 1,350 lbs'nnrrton iSn '* 27.25-28.00; choice 950-1,325 lbs yield gradeinXrnWar i « 2 to 4 25.75-27.25; choice 850-975 lb slaugh-lSHnn^l o jna ter heifers yield grade 2 to 4 25.00-26.00. Sr Sheep 200; mixed good and choice 85-105 BucyEr 1.60a ) Bucy Erie wi I8V2 203/4 20% ... 19 48% 48% 48% 41 13Va >13% 13% + 18 36% 36% 36% 1 27% 27% 27%— 185 15% 15% 15% + 6 73 72% 72% — % 205 30% 30% 30% 302 51% 50 51% + % 43 32% 32 32% 33 36% 36% 36% 4-L 57 47% 46% 47% +1V 70 47% 47 47% — % 17 12% 12% 12% + % ■ IBM 4.40b 5. 57% 57% 57% -j- % ; Int Harv 1.80 21 49% 49Vs 49% + % j int Miner 1 28 37% 36% 37% + %| intNick 2.80a 3 55V2 55V4 55% + % i Inti Packers 10 35% 35 35 —1 i Int Pap 1.35 2 71% s 71% 71% -F % I lift TAT 1.70 17 20% 28% 28% + Va [ lowaPSv 1.24 13 105 104% 104% — % ITE Ckt 1 m 19% 19’/2 19% + % : IdahoPw 1.50 Ideal Cem 1 Imp Cp Am IngerRand 2 Inland Stl 2 InsNAm 2.40 InterlkSt 1.80 99 38% 37% 38% -fl 31 76% 76 76 - % 12 25% 25% 25% + % 289 60% 59% 60% +1 —H— 4 62s,1 i2’A lt2+a + i ClanpseCp e2 1 63% 63 Va 63% 5/ 7 6 15-16 7 5 56% 56% 56% + % 80 2% 2 5-16 2 M6 Cent SW 1.60 lfl 46% 46% 46 Va 19/ 10% 10 10% + 43 44% 44 44 + ** 43 8% 81a. 8% + 7 16 15% 16 + % 18 34% 34 34 ** CessnaA 1.40 9 43% 43% 43% + % 13 18% 18% 22% 21% 18% '* ! CFI Stl .80 ?fi 17% 17% 17% + »* 149 21% + '+' Ches Ohio 4 8 62% 61% 62% + % 65 6% 6% 6% iChiMII StP T 7 38% 38 38 V4 + % 36 6 9-16 6 7-16 6 9-16+3-16i Chi Rl Pac 2 18% 18'/4 18% + % 45 ]!% 11% 11% + %1 ChrtsCraft la 14 42% 41% 42% + % 3 12** 12** 12** + '*: Chrysler 2 U 19** 18?* 19** + **,CIT Fin 1.60 47 8** 8'A 8'A .— CitiesSvc 1.80 58 10** 10'+ 10'/, .....Clark Eq 1.20 93 8'+ V/6 Vh ..: cievEIIII 1.80 32 4'A 4V* 4'A ICocaCola 2.10 4S 9 5 /a + '* Colq Pal 1.10 33'* 33'A + '* Co'IInR-'d .80 16*a 16*» IColoIntG 1.60 21** 22 CBS 1.40b UJ4 Gas 1.44 32*8 33** + ** , ComlCre 1.80 1 JVi 71+ 7'+ + '+, ComSolv 1.20 30 19'A 19'+ J.9'A — '+ ComWEd 2.20 3 10** t0'+ 10'+ .. Comsat 9 L A7/‘ . 47/* Con EdiS 1.80 65 160?* 162 166 +1 IcotiElecInd 1 88 i?.. «** + **'conFood 1.50 11*4 TI** 11** . IConNatG 1.70 ... 2'+ + ** |ConsPwr 1.90 27 33*4 3 16** 170 22'a 20 17** 769 77 56** 56'A 56'+ + 28 33 33 33 + 1.32 KanPwL 1.03 KayserRo .60 Kennecott 2 Kerr Me 1.50 KimbClk 2.20 Koppers 1.40 Kresge .90 Krpger 1.30 Lear Sleg .80 LehPCem .60 Leh Val Ind Lehman ,98e LOFGIss 2.80 Libb McN L Liggett AM 5 LilyCup 1.20b Litton 2.65f Llvingstn Oil ' LockhdA 2.20 LoewsTh .25g LoneSGa 1.12 LongtsLt >.16 Loritlard 2.50 Lucky Str .90 Lukens Stl 1 Macy RH .90 Ma0Fd 2.63g MagmaC 3.60 Magnavx .80 Marathn 2.80 Mar Mfd 1.40 Mdrquar .25g MartinMar 1 MavDStr 1.60 Maytag 1.60a McDonD 40b Mead Cp 1.90 Melv Sh 1.60 Merck 1.60a MGM 1.20b MldSoUtil .82 MinnMM 1.30 MinnPLt 1.10 Mo Kan Tex MobilOII 2 Mohasco 1 Monsan 1.60b Moti*DUt 1.60 Mont Pw 1.56 4 33V2 33 33V2 + % 3 54% 54% 54% + }M 3 92Va 92Va 92Va + % 16 56% 56 56% + % 6 34% 34Va'' 34V» — % —K— 3 48% 48% 48% ~ % 7 26% 25% 25% — Va 1 20% 20% 20% + % 30 30% 29% 30 + % 4 47% 46% 47% + % t3 125% 125% 125% + % 3 57% 57 57 — % 2 36% 36% 36% + % 3 87% 87% 87% — % 26 23% 23% 23% + Va *% | Textron Thiokol .40 3, Tlmk RB 1.80 i+! |TransWAir 1 Transamer 1 Transltron Trl Cont .92g TRW Inc 1^0 TwenCent .80 The proposed merger, which would have been the largest in broadcasting history, - was fought by the ' Department of Justice on antitrust and other grounds. it ■ Hr. ★ The ITT directors voted-Mon- ,,ADO„AT. _______ aaiai mi ' ■ . •, .. , ,. i MARSHALL (UPI) A younc iay at a" unusual Nuew Years mother was credited by police li fm ^l’i::LDayho^sta[teI today with talking a berserk 27 138*4 1371+ i38*A +2;+!^e ^)ec deadline that hadjgunman out 0f shooting her and 72 28'a W? 28v* +1* jbeen set for either party to with-: fjve others, including her two _ ” ijj ” ’/j [draw from the two-year-old y0ung children, as he held them nomists and industrial leaders Per cen* 0ver 1967, but with half merger agreement. {hostage for more than three predicted Monday an automo-jt^e 'ncrease accounted for by The directors cited long de- hours. . [higher prices, lays and indications of more de-j Marshall police and Calhoun[Di e’sparked export boom that[PARTLY INFLATION lays in obtaining final approval [epunty sheriff’s deputies sur-|s^ou^ ta^e ^is island kingdomi . of the consolidation. Irounded a second-story apart-;out of the red by the end of 1968.| uona anning Associa- NO COMMENT ment in the downtown section | The Nov. 18 devaluation of;’ Wfh'ch describes itself .as The Federal Communications ^V^t3 T' todaytafJf! the pound, they said, had per-:nonProflt and "Unpolitical and L had J°.hn Wt ^ y’ 2i’faia ‘u he mitted price slashes that are “devoted t0 Pining by Ameri- v iCommission, which twice had police station and told them a kj British onoris r-nmn^ti cans in agriculture, business, lav-8 approved the merger, had ho man was holding his mother,!™' “J ^H ^TptsfnTml'bor and professions” forecasts a comment on. the ITT action.[stepfather and sister and her,!'.® . ® *or he GNP of $844.5 billidn, but with Neither was there any comment two children hostages at gun- U,M u“,e many years. ■ |more than half of it inflation. ! William’ Freund, formerly which had challenged the merg-| Kelly said the man already “ie predictions directly con- ch[ef economist of Prudential er each time. The department’s had taken one shot at him with tradict foreign criticisms that second challenge is pending be-|a shotgun hut missed. British exporters have so far fore a three-judge U.S. Court of, m man was identified as tfa“ed *heirf prhices, and Clifford Goodman, 23, a next-tt/^antage f the ,ower .. _ dooi-neighbor. He was finally [ 0 tbe P°und- i6 S'* \m fiv. Z ^,been ehvisioned as a financial taken into custody and charged! Some industrialists said they ness $93 billion, consumers $555 7« +!,/ boost to ABC through ITT in-[Wjth asault. to do great bodily have lowered their export prices billion and, foreign trade $5 bil- H........................ .. irm n [between 3 and 12 per cent. The|«oh. This means about an 8 per Police said he continually pound was devalued by 14.3 per cent^advance, with 3 per cent of threatened to kill the persons in cent Leonard H. Goidenson, presi-the apartment but finally: Leaders of the automotive, dent of the American Broad-[Passed out, apparently from computer, chemical, machine 106'+ 106** —, „, . , . . . is i9'+ 19'A i9**->* vestment in programming and harm 53'+ 52'* 53 +11+ . ..... 7 1 20** 20 ,20 + >+ technological improvements. ★ ★ ★ 40'+ 40** 486 50'A 46% 47 —3% ' 81 53% 53 S3'+ + % 89 18** 18'+ 18% + 'A 40 31% 31'A 31% 33 103'+ 102*4 103'A + 'A 58 31 'A 30% 30*4 — >A —u Life Insurance but now vice president of the New York Stock Exchange, foresees a GNP of $848 billion, with government contributing ,$195 billion, busi- ! it inflation. Un Carbide 2 Un Elec 1.20 UnOIICal 1.40 UnionPacif 2 Uniroyal 1.20 4A% 46% 50 49% 50 + %] 32 31% 32 + % 41 40% 41 + % 54% 54% 54% 24 2% 3% *f % Contalnr 1.30 61 49 48Va 49 , ContAirL .40 199 35% 34% 35%-% cont Can 2 18 36% 36% 36% — V«'cont Ins 3.20 154 74% 73% 74 iCont Mot .40 39 27 26% 26% + % ront Oil 2.80 12 32% 3i% 32% -f % Control Data NatAIrlin .30 Nat Blsc 2 N Dairy 1.50 Nat Fuel 1.68 Nat Genl .20 Nat Gyps 2 N Lead 3.25g Copyrighted by The Associated Press 1967 Coooerln l.?0 , ,.. — I Com Pd i.7o Stocks of Local Interest Figures after decimal points are eighths I Cruc Stl 1.20 OVER THE COUNTER STOCKS Cudahy Co Quotations from the NASD are repre- Curtis Pub tentative Inter-dealer prices of approxl-' Curtiss Wr 1 mately 11 a. m. Inter-dealer markets i change throughout the day. Prices do; not include retail markup* markdown or Dan Rlv 1.20 commission. (DaycoCp 1.60 Bid Asked!Day PL 1.40 AMT Corp. ....................5.2 S.S'DelMnte 1.10 Associated Truck ............. 8 7 9.2 Ee,t2Air; .40 Braun Engineering .... .......15.0 15.4 Al® Citizens Utilities Class A .. 25.4 26.0'OetEdis 1.40^ Detrex Chemical ........... . >6.0 16.41, Kelly Services ............. Mohawk Rubber Co............ Monroe0 Auto Equipment ..... North Central Airlines Unit! .. Safran Printing .......... . Scrlpto — ............. Wyandotte Chemical MUTUAL FUNDS Affiliated ftjnd ....... Chemical Fund — Commonwealth Stock Dreyfus . Keystone Income K-l Keystone Growth K-2 Mass, investors Growth Mass. Investors Trust Putnam Groprth Televlelon Electronics Wellington Fund .. . Windsor Fund Treasury Position 39.0 40 0 DiaSham 1.40 33.6 34.4 Disney .30b 30.2 30.6' DomeMin .80 . 1.3 8.71 DowChm 2.20 . 13.0 13.6 Dresslnd 1.25 7 5 a o Duke Pw 1.20 . 30.4 31.4| DlbblM SO duPont 5g Sid Asked' Su<* L* >■« 8.63 9.33 DynaAm .40 19.03 20.84 10.54 11.52 „ . „ ,15.36 16 67 East.Ale SO 9 27 10 12 E Kodak 1.60a 7*28 7.95 EatonYa 125 lira U74 EGAG .10 17.54 19.17 |l,Bo.n<,s V72 13.29 14.52 f . 10.16 11.07 EIPasoNG 1 13.00 14.13 In\*r.Ei , M 18 73 20 36 E"q JOnnson IS.7J «.J0 Eri#Lack RR - I Ethyl CB .60 EvansP -60b £versharp + '+ 11 43 .49% 43 10 31% 31'+ 31'+ 29 24'A 24'+ 24'+ __________I 13 49% 48?+ 49% + '+ Nat Steel 2.5# I 2 80 79'+ 791+ — *4 Nat Tea .80 ■ 5 22*4 22'+ 22*4 Nevada P .92 19 75'A 74*4 75'A + *+ Newbrry .45g 44 137% 136% 137% + Vi NEngEI 1.48 7 49*4 49 49'A + *4 ny Cent 3.12 12 40*4 40'+ 40'+ NlagMP l.to 4 32 32 32 + 'A NorfolkWst 6 54 47'A 47 47 — '+ NoAmRock 2 7 61% 61% 61% + '4 NoNGaS 2.60 6 45% 45% 45% —■ 1+ Nor Pac 2.60 15 32% 32'+ 32%'- NoStaPw 1.60 28 17% 17% + % j Northrop 1 98 12*4 12% 19*4 + ** Nwst Alrl .70 16 27** 27% 27?+ + *4 Norton 1.50 —D— « j Norwich .75 7 22% 2222% + % j 2 46% 46Va, 46Va — % Occident ,80b 3 27% 27% 27% - % OhioEdlS 1.30 14 35% 35% 35V4 — % I Okie GE 1.04 14 34% 34 34% + % OklaNGs 1.12 9 17% 17% 17% + % 'oiinMat 1.80 21 26% 26% 26% ’+ %|Omark 1.17f 23 22% 21 22% +1% Otis Elev 2 65 31% 31% 31% ■ ! Outbd Mar 1 44 45% 44% 45 — 5 12»/a 12Va 12% + 89 9Va 9% 9% + 19 22% 22% 22% — _ , 6 47% 47% 47% + Vs US Lines 2b 4 15% 15% 15% + Va 5 71 71 71 + % 11 34% 34% 34% ... 40 104% 104 104% — % 27 10 10 10 .... 29 54% 54% 54% + % 8.139% 139% 139% —1 241 30 29% 29% + % 16 26% 26% 26% + % 8 48% 68 48 13 34% 34% 34% + Va 10 35% 35% 35% + % —M— 3 36 36 36 + * . 13 47 47 47 — ** 3 29?+ 29** 29** + ** 4 28** 28** 28** — 'A 81 24*4 24** 24'+ — 'A 9 117'/* 11#** 117'A + 'A 5 22’+ 21*4 1 22'+ + 'A —N— 6 j4*4 34'+ 34** + '+ 34 43** 43 43'A .. 30 35’+ 35'+ 35V* — '+ 2 27V* 27'+ 271+ — 'A 77 25 24'+ 24?+ + 'A 13 43'A 43'A 43'A ...... 11 66?+ 66'A 66'A ... 49 461A 45'+ 46'A + 'A 5 13** 13** 13'+ + 'A 4 45'+ 45'+ 45V* . 4 28'+ 28'A 28'+ + 'A 7 26 25*4 25*4 — 'A 5 75 75 75 — 'A 36 20** 20 20'+ + ** 36 92** 91'A 92** +1?* 44 40** .39?+ 39’+ — '+ 6 49** 49 49'A + V* 3 55** 55** 55** + 'A 25 29'A 28AA 28*4 45 43?+ 42*4 43** + ** 227 85 83 83** —2?A 3 41** 41V* 41** + ?* 6 45'+ 45'+ 45V* — V* 36 56** 56** 56'+ — '+ 6 38** 38 38'+ + '+ , ■■ , 21 49*i 49'A 49VA UnltAlrLin t 31 66'+ 65 65 UnltAirc 1.60 16 82'A 81'+ 82 + '+ Unit Cp .50g 14 11** ll'+ m* Un Fruit 1.40 TO 60'A 60 60 UGasCp -1.70 6 85'+ 85** 85** — ** Unit MM 1.20 11 27*4 27*4 27*4 US Borax, la 2 29*4 29'+ 29*4 + ** USGypsm 3a 12 66'+ 65** 66'+ + *4 US Nld .70 39 44** 44V* 44*4 + *4 M - - __ 96 47iA 46** . 47'A — V* USPIyCh 1.50 7 45'A 45 45V* + ** US Smelt lb 14 57V* 56V* 57** ?+ US Steel 2.40 144 41** 41V* 41** + UnivOPd 1.40 12 90'* 90V* 90'* 4- '* Uplohn 1.60 x20 49'* 49 49'* .. —'V— Varian Asso 29 32V* 31*4 31** + ■** Vendo Co .60 15 201+ 28'A 28** + ** VaEIPw 1.36 18 44 43** 43?+ + 'A . —W— . WarnLamb T 28 45V* 44** 44** — 1+ Was Wat 1.20 4 22 '21*4 21*4 ... Westn AirL 1. 18 34'A 34 34V4 + 'A Wn Banc 1.20 5 28 27*4 28 ' WnUTel 1.40 61 36'+ 35** 35** + ** WestgEI 1.60 20 70** 70** 70*4 + *4 Weyerhr-,1.40 5 39** 39** 39W. Whirl Cp 1.60 3 51 50*4 50*4 — 'A White Mot 2b ' 5 49** 49** 491+ — Vs WinnDix 1.50 6 28'A 28'/a 28'A + 'A Woolworth 1 79 25** 25** 25*4 + V* X—Y—Z— ■XeroxCp 1.40 ' 28 304 302'+ 302'+ — '+ YngstSht T.80 34 31'+ 31** 31'+ + 'A' ZenithR 1.20a 39 57?/« 57*4 57?+ + ?+ Coyrighted by The Associated Press 1968 Sales figures are unofficial. Unless otherwise noted, rates of dividends In the foregoing table are annual disbursements based on the last quarterly or semi-annual declaration. ' Special or extra.dlvidbhds or payments not designated as regular are Identified In the following footnotes. a—Also extra or extras, b—Annual rate Plus stock dividend, c—Liquidating dividend, d—Declared or paid In 1967 plus' stock dividend, e— Paid last year, f — Payable In stock during 1967, estimated cash value on ex-dlvidend or ex-distribution date, a—Declared or paid so far this year h—Declared or paid after ’ stock dividend or st>llt pp. 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 leaf dividend meeting. r~,Declared or paid In 1966 Plus' stock dividend, t—Paid In stock during 1966, estimated cash value on ex-dlvidend or ex-dlstrlbutlon date. Sales in full casting Companies Iric., said he driving, regretted the ITT decision. Hej said that while the merger was pending, ABC’s corporate hands were tied, but now it plans to “move vigorously and forcefully to strengthen and expand our company’s interests and growth.” He indicated that other mergers may figure in ABC’s plans. American Broadcasting Com panies Inc. is a parent company of television, radio, film exhibi tion, production and recording enterprises. OTHER MERGERS Goidenson said ITT’s termina tion of the merger plans “permits us to start immediate discussions with compatible companies that have privately expressed an interest in being acquired by our company.” He did not name the other companies. The ITT directors said ITT and ABC had made the merger agreement “as a constructive step in the public interest.” Area Hunter Says Youth Shot 2 Dogs j tool, electrical equipment and agricultural machinery indus-[ tries all reported improved export possibilities. | They and others also said devaluation will help them great-|ly in the home market by forcing their foreign competitors to 'raise prices charged in Britain An Independence Township] Sir George Harriman, presi-man complained To Pontiac [dent of the Society of Motor State Police yesterday, that [Manufacturers and chairman of his two hunting dogs were shot British Motor Holdings, which Fortune magazine estimates 1968 GNP will reach $835 billion, “a $50-billion advance, counting inflation.” Many Bogus $5 Bills in NY Reported tion. xr— Ex rights, xw—Without warrants. ww—WIth warrants, wd—When distributed. wl—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 sublect to interest equalization tax. 96 112% 111% 112% +1% 21 25% 25% 25% + % 4 26 % 26% 26% .. 17 20% 20% 20% — 35 54% 12 87% 3 38% 54 54 87 87'< -2% Owens III 1.35 24 71% 10 28% Xl2 42% 33 29% 19 57 71% — % 27% 28 42% 42% — Va 26% 29Va — % 56% 56%' - % 38% 38% 4- % 37 37 2 17% 17% 17% + % 15 157% T57 157%-!% 14 30 30 30 • % FairCam 50g WASHINGTON (AP) - Tho cash po- peduers 8§9 sition of the Treasury compared wltfr cor? p,|tr0| j ^ responding date a year ago: Fireatn* 1 40 ’ 0«. 26. 1967 W. 23, 1944 Baancj-^454,262,988J5 t 6,604,939.011.00 plaPwlIt 1 76 Deposits Fiscal Year July l— ' ' fmc Cp .75 ' 71.239.43U31.I7 68,604,057,459.00 FoodFalr 90 Withdrawals Fiscal Ytar— FordMot 2.40 88,054,495,759.92 81,925,616,213.69 ForMcK .12q x—Total Debt— . ^ iFreepSul 1.25 346,895,693,735.64 330.067,800,665.71 FruehCp 1.70 Gold AsietS--* I 12,432,992,763.83 13,159,474,124.81 x—Includes 1160,702,461.47 debt not sub- Gam Sko 1.30 Pac G El 1.40 Pac Ltg 1.50 Pac Pet .15g PacPwL 1.20 PacTSiT 1.20 PanASul 1.50 Pan Am .40 Panh EP 1.60 ParkeDavis 1 PeaCoai .25e PennDix .60 Penney 1.60a PaPwLt 1.52 PennRR 2.40 Pennzoir 1.40 PepsiCo .90 PerfFllm .41# PfizerC 1.20a biz , PhelpsD 3.40 ?S?J ??,? t i Phlla El 1.64 18V* 18'+ + Va phll Rdg 1.60 PhilMorr 1.40 , „ Pblll Pet 2.40 88'+ + *A pltneyB 1.20 33** 33'A 33** -f 'A i Polaroid .64 55** 55** 55** + *A ProctrG 2.20 15 ?2'A 21*4 22'A -f ** PubSvcColo 1 211+ 21'A 211+ + 1* —E— X182 48 47% 47% +1% 13 148% 148% 148% — % 1 32% 32% 32% — % 38 55 54% 54% + % 14 57% S7% 57% + % 36 33% 32% 33 — % 26 20% 20% 20% + % 99% 99% 99% ... 4 28 28 1 16 9 18% 28 1% 1% 37% 37% -► % 17 35% 35% 35% — % - 9 28% 27% 28% + % 87 17% 17 17% + % 5 21% 21% 21% + % 4 22% 22% 22% + % 70 41% 40% 41 +% 752 23% 21% 22% — 1% 5. 34% 34% 34% + % 63 27% 26% 27 + Vi 7 42% 42% 42% . 30% 29% 29% + % 4 65% 65 65 V 26 28% 28% 28% 4- % 7 62% 62% 62% + % 2 123 123 1 23 —1 71 41% 41 41% +1% 7 66% 65% 65% — % 278 70% 65% 67% -8% 22 72Va 71% 72 V4 + % 20 297 19 92% 91* 91% -1 —F— 32 88% 877/1 13 23% 23v I 47% xl4 44% 44% 44% + % 47 66% 66 66 —1 19 71 70% 70% —1 - J\...60, 65%..66 r TrJr 12% 12% 12% BOND AVERAGES Compiled by Tba Associated Press 26 10 ind. Net change Noon Frl. Prev. Day— Week Ago Month ago Yaar Ago 1967 High 1967 Low 1966 High 1966 Low 65.2 65.3 64.6 66.6 70*1 73.0 64.6 70.5 86.7 86.7 |6,4 86.6 91.5 95.6 86.1 101.4 88.9 Fgn. I —.3 89.0 89.3 89.7 90.5 90.4 OOW—JONES AVERAGES STOCKS: 30 Industrials .............. 901.76+3.93 20 Railroads ................. 232.44+0.79 15 Utilities ................ 127.91+0.07 65 Stocks ................ .. 313.15+1.11 BONOS: 40 Bonds ...................... 74.70-0.14 10 Higher grade rails ...... 63.43 10 Sacond grade rails ....... 74.13—0.17 10 Public utilities . 79.03—0.35 10 Industrials ....... 82.22—0.05 Among the original Department of Justice objections to the merger were possible elimination of ITT as a fourth major broadcasting network, and possible elimination of ABC as an independent party bargaining in government proceedings with communications carriers. Among the other criticisms of the merger—particularly from several congressmen—was a contention that ITT might attempt to influence ABC’s news coverage. and killed by a young teenager in a wooded and swampy area of the township. The complainant, Emerson VUet of 1Q081M15, said He was fox hunting when the incident happened at about noon yesterday. He said the dogs, described as a male Goodman and a female Walker, were valued at $100 each. Vliet’s hunting companion, Lewis B. Hensley of 3086 Margaret, Pontiac Township, told police he confronted the youth makes Jaguar, Austin, MoiTis and a number of other autos, told his staff: “BMH are heading for record exports in the first quarter of 1968.” The combine has 45 per cent of all British car exports. NEW YORK (AP) — A large number of counterfeit $5 bills of fain” quality circulated in New York City during the Christmas shopping season, the Secret Service reports. Hie office of Albert E. whitak-er, special agent in charge of the New York district of the Secret Service, said Monday that Sir George said BMH alreadyiyje amount of counterfeit $5 has cut its prices ,12 per cent in Europe and 3*6 per cent in the United States. The slash would have been greater in America, but for the added costs of meeting U.S. safety regulations. Even so, he said, foreign shortly after the dogs were sa*es this year will be up by 40 shot. [percent. bills passed in this area has been running as high as $2,000 i;o $3,000 a week. * * The bogus bills began circulating heavily in October. Before then; such a number of counterfeit $5 bills had not been seen in a considerable time, except for a hrief flurry in 1965. The great majority of the bills have been found in New York City. But some have been spotted in upstate New York, New Jersey and New England and VliertoldMlice that the dogs s£tion/at 1001 Joslyn early t0- alon8 the Florida coast were friendlv and would never !day by smashing through win- cret Service? which has the duty were friendly and would never |dowg Qn ^ sJde of the build- j of coping with counterfeit mon- nurtanyope. j. then t00k an undetermined ey, said the bogus $5 bills “defi- State Police said the sh°°t-!number 0f items, according to'nitely seem to be emanating ings took Place in an area Pontjac police bounded by Sashabaw, Perry, > Lake, Hoyt and 1-75. According to Hensley, the youth said the dogs* were coming at him and that he became scared and fired his shotgun at the animals. News in Brief Burglars entered a service from the metropolitan area.” Commissioners Will Air Pontiac's Bus Service iS i# ill S uccessTul *ln vesting “ i' '| li 4* w iSi #• m it ■ l«ct to it.tutory limit. GAccepI 1.40 iGepAnllF .40 Gan Clg 1.20 .GenDynpm I I Gun Elite 2 60 JO If, IS 40 G«n Fd* 2.40 Ind. Ran* Util. Stock* Q«n Mill* M +2.0 +.1 +1.1 GanAAgt },log 446.3 180 5 145.0 321.2 GMlPrOC 150 «4.3 IW.8 145.0 320.1 G+ubSv 54t 457 5 172.0 143.0 316.2 GPUbUt 1.54 Month Ago ...... 454,1 180.8 141 3 315 1 GT«) f I 1.40 Year Ago ......... 4IM 1577 151.5 291 2 Gen fir* .80 1967 High 493 2 209.4 159.) 342.6 GaneiCO 1.40 1967 LOW 413.4 159.4 136.5 292 8 Ga Pacific lb 1966 High 537.9 213.9 170.5 369.7 fieltyOl! log 1966 Lov» 388.0 14) 9 130.2 269.4 Qllletla 1,20 ► t N#*f chAriqe Noon Frl. . Pr*v. Day . 51 24% |4% 24% + % Publklnd 9 75 75 15 — V, pugSPL 1.60 15 36'+ 36V* 36V*- 'A Pullman 2.80 65 16 15** 14 + *A 114 54'A 54 54'+ + ** • ■ 40 26** 26V* 26'+ + V* RCA 1 6 73 73 73 + ** RaHfonP .60 13 39V* 39 39 + V* Rayonr 1.40b GRaythaon .00 Reading Co 7 26** 25** 26** +1 RalchCh .40b 13 34** 341+ 34'+ — '+ RepubStl 2.50 85 23 22** 22** + 'A Revlon 1.40 28 25V* 24** 24** Rexall .30b 5 46 66 66 — 'A Reyn Mat .90 35 96 95V* 95** — v* ReynTob 2.20 8 70 . 69** 49** + 'A RheemM 1.40 4 341+ 34V* 34V* +, V* RoanSo 1.67g 66 02’+ 82'+ (2** + ?* Rohr Cp .80 11 79'+/ 79'+ 79+ + 'A ROyCCola ,72 24 6*+ 4'+ 6<+ RoyOut 1.900 11 27*+ 27'j 27'+ RyderSys .80 30'42 41** 42 + '+' < 19 Ml* 28 28 .... L ) 41*4 41** 41*4 Saleway 1.10 10 58*. 58*4 5B»A + '* SIJo.Ld 2.80 14 98** 98 98 SILS*hF 2.20 49 61?* 6] 4H* — 1 ISIRegP- 1.40b .14 250Vi II 93 x!5 21'/ 250 250'A - Vv 92 92 — 'A 21 21V* + V4 9*4 9’+ + ’•< 31** 31?* + « 50** 50**.+ V: 173 53VV 53'+ 53'A - '+ 23 22** 22 W 22*. - 1* 52 44 431+ 44 +1 32 105'+ 105 105'+ + 1* 14 22** 22*4 22*4 . . 30 171* 16H If + ** 30 44'+ 43** 44 + ** 30 841+ 82** 83*4 — ** 7 37** 37V* 37V* — 'A 17 SOB 49*4 50 'A 96 44'+ 44 44'+ + 'A 17 50** 50 50 43 9** 9** 9** + '4 31 35?* 35V* 3 33** 33+1 42 47** 47'+ 10 32'+ 33'+ —s— 87 25 24% 26 40% 40% 17 50% 50 46 31% .30% i *6: Husband Shoots Nagging Wife MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) - A Memphis man shot his wife Monday after she kept nagging him about his failure to make New Year’s resolutions, police said. * Officers said Irene Batts suffered a shotgun wound to the foot afte/ she continually warned Willie Battfe, 32, that/ne should "turn over a new leaf" and do such things during the new year as keep, the house stocked with firewood. Bus service for Pontiac will, again be the subject of City Commission discussion at tonight’s meeting at 8 at City Hall. The commission is scheduled to consider a resolution calling for an end to the city’s sub- By ROGER E. SPEAR Q — The only time I made Meantime, the vote has hit a [money in the stock market was when I bought American Hos- stay with it. It appears to me to be safer than Bunker-Ramo, a relatively small electronics firm controlled by Martin-Marietta. The company has had an errat- legai snag through a suit filed by two city employes alleging the petitions are not valid. In other business, the com- . S'“.tfr waM0s',*“la* * sidy of bus transportation Pro' 2«f«7°S,a.daRain? Can y°u advlse me °" Q — In December, 1957, I Tided by Pontiac Transit Corp. **7;5” Bunker-Ramo? - O. T. bought Tyrex Drug & Chemical. pital Supply at 43. After reading jjc earnings record and has ris-a number of columns predicting en sharply on a proposed merg-a break in the stock market, I er with Amphenol. I advise you sold out at 57. I’m sorry now,[to avoid it, unless you really Last week the commission deferred action on the resolution one week, although District 4 Commissioner Leslie H. Hudson opposed the delay. Hudson has been a long-time foe of the subsidy, which Is $35,000. The city is considering canceling the subsidy as part of cutbacks needed for lack of a city income tqx. / - / / • ★ ★ * proved by the hospital's board of trustees. I A — I think it is always wise The commission is to set a to remember the trading adage: take your lossps, but let your date for a public hearing on the proposed appropriations. A p u b I i c hearing is arso scheduled tonight on special assessments for sanitary sewer construction in Fern, Howland, Bloomfield and Highland streets.'1 1 ' m , I have never heard from this company and would appreciate any help you can give me. — A. T. A — I have nothing on this company in my files or manuals. My broker tells me that the last bid he can finj) for your shares was 5 cents in 1959 profits run. American Hospital Supply is in a powerful growth field and is getting a big assist from Medicare. The stock is no longer cheap, but it has had an uninterrupted growth record for many years and I believe this [and /that at present there is no will continue. The shares Sell [bid and he thinks your stock is for about 50 times this year’s! worthless. You might write to The tax has been enacted, but; * * * [estimated earnings. This is a [the company at 42 Newark St., its effective date has been de- Also, a hearing will be held|big multiple, but not out of line!Hoboken, n.J., and get some in-layed because of petitions call- on delinquent weed cutting bills with,other fa^t-growth issues’. I formation, ing for a vote on the measure. I (or 1967. -*. [advise you to buy it back and! (Copyright, 1968)