The Weather THE PONTIAC PRESS Horn* Edition PONTIAC. MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 18, 1967—76 PAGES [((NATIONAL VOL. 128 — NO, 266 2 Brigades Airlifted to VietAFU:i0Confab SAIGON (AP) - Hit biggest airlift Of the Vietnam war pushed U.S. troop strength in South Vietnam to about 475,-000 today, more than the peak of 472,-800 American fighting men in the Korean war at its height 14 years ago. About 7,0M of the paratroopers have been flown across the Pacific since Nov. 17, and another 3,000 are due by Dec. 20. Wearing combat fatigues with a, .45 revolver and dagger tucked in his belt, BILL STUDIED—Democratic Sens. Coleman Young of Detroit Cleft) and Roger . Craig of Dearborn (center) confer informally with Assistant Senate Majority Under Charles Zollar, R-Benton Harbor, yesterday as theyconsider the .proposed open housing measure. Senate Republicans later injected a proposal that the Senate take 1 up the controversial measure while the House worked on tower court reorganization. The king repudiated the military coup of last April. Still Hope for Housing Bill Despite Rebuff by GOP LANSING it) — The open occupancy bill remained the exclusive property of the House today after Senate Republicans refused to take up tbe controversial measure. Despite apparent lack of support* among Senate GOP ranks, the bill’s bi- introduction of open occupancy in the Senate. See Related Story, Page A-2 partisan backers in both houses still expressed hope for its passage during the * remaining days of the special session. Meanwhile, House Speaker Robert Waldron, R-Grosse Potato, said the House will try to finish the complex lower court reorganlzation'Wtl today or tomorrow “and get to work immediately” on open occupancy. en housing, .The open occupancy, or open] bill would bar racial discrimination In most real estate transactions. The Senate move Tuesday was a slap at Acting Gov. William Milliken and the majority Republican leaders of both houses, who had agreed that the Senate should take over open occupancy while the House worked on the court bin. But the Senate GOP caucus voted not to support a proposed resolution to allow Both houses would have to approve the special resolution. Both GOP and Democratic leaders had said earlier that they would not object to the move. The secret-ballot In the GOP caucus reportedly was 11-8 with 18 of the 20 senate Republicans attending. One senator reportedly abstained. Some legislators interpreted the vote as an indication that there are only Mu solid supporters of the bill among Senate Republicans.. Others felt it was a procedural vote and was not indicative of how-the Republicans would vote on the bill itself. If minority Democrats could come up with 10 votes for the biU, the Republicans would need another 10 to ensure the 20 votes necessary for passage. Estimates by party leaders on how many votes each has for passage change from day to day . Pressure from both sides of the open housing issue reportedly is increasing. The king spoke by radio from Salonika, the major city of northern Greece, There were reports that the 3rd Armored Corps in Salonika had rebelled against tee military dictatorship. The leader of the corps is a Gen. Peridis, known as a strong supporter of the king and an opponent of the April coup. The Greek Embassy In London said the Ministry of Information in Athens reported a coup had been attempted by a group of army officers. . Greece is a\ member of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization but the United States showed its displeasure with the April coup by cutting off arms shipments. , I In Today s Press New Attitude on Crime Asked Deadly Slick More than 350 ducks killed by oil in,Novi draln-PAGE D-4. Appalachia Boy's Christmas wish for a fire wagon is tempered by poverty of family - PAGE A-18. ' Kidnap Plot Fails. Police nab California pair; victim unhurt; ransom recovered- PAGE B-ll. Area News ............. A-4 ....... TUI ...........C-II zzle ...."...1m Comics ................ C-l* Editorials ...............A4 Food Section C-4, C-17, C4I Markets,,............. D-i Obituaries ............ D-10 Sports ..............D-l—D-4 Theater* ” D-5 TV and Radio Programs D-17 Wilson, Earl .......... thll Women's Pages ..... B-l—B-4 Yule Stories .......M, B-ll Michigan Atty. Gen. Frank J. Kelley, addressing the annual Oakland County Law Enforcement Association Conference at the Pontiac Elks Club last night, called for a new attitude toward law enforcement to combat the crime rate. Kelley told a representatives county law enforcement groups that eryone says they’re for law and but few are apparently willing I the price.” Kelley suggested state subsidy law enforcement “in support funding.” Kelley urged better recruitment programs, pointing out that private industry has recently absorbed the vast majority of potential college-educated law officers. “Bettor pay end a revised system of entry Into police ranks would facilitate this foal," he said. the 101st commander, Maj. Gen. Olinto M. Barsanti, snapped a salute on his arrival today at Bien Hoa Airbase and reported to Gen. William C. Westmoreland: “The 101st Airborne Division is present for combat in Vietnam.” When completed, the airlift will have involved 378 transpacific flights, which after discharging men and supplies generally took off witohi 15 minutes on the 0,783-mile flight back to 101st Division headquarters at Ft. Campbell, Ky. Roars Approval of LB J Speecji The U.S. Command took the security wraps off the transfer from the United States of two more brigades of the U.S. 101st Airborne Division, World War IPs Screaming Eagles of Bastogne. Westmoreland, now commander of all U.S. troops in Vietnam, was the Screaming Eagles’ commander from 1958 to 1960. U.S. spokesmen said the airlift is the longest and largest ever staged direct from the United Staten to Southeast Asia. TO RECEIVE TRAINING The new paratroopers are not expected to go into combat immediately and will repeive some training before heading into tbe field. Then they will join the division’s 1st Brigade, which has been in Vietnam since July 1965. Die U.S. Command -also removed the security wrapt today from a new American infantry operation 28 miles northeast of Saigon and said 52 Communist troops had been killed in six days. Total U.S. loses for the period were put at two dead and 25 wounded. MIAMI BEACH, 71a. UR - President Johnson says he will not be deterred, influenced or inflamed by his Viehiafo war critics “regardless of my polls and regardless of the elections.” Departing from his prepared text in a nationally televised and broadcast speech to the AFL-CK) convention here yesterday, the President said: “I am goirfg down the center of the road — doing my duty as I see it — for the best of my country.” Oust Regime, Says Greek King ATHENS, Greece UR — King Constantine, evidently backed by part of the army, called on his people today to oust the military dictatorship and restore democracy to this land where it was born. His. appeal raised the specter of civil war in the Wake of withdrawal of part of Greek forces from Cyprus in the face of Turkish demands. Weather Satellite Rockets Into Orbit The representatives of organized labor roared their approval when Johnson said he would always be ready to hear and act on any proposal for ending tee Vietnam war. And their volume increased when he added: CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (API-Beaming back strong signals to earth, a robot “interplanetary weatherman” named Pioneer 8 rocketed into orbit around the sun today to help weave a network that could warn astronauts of deadly solar radiation storm? in space. to be used for testing America’s man-to-the-moon tracking network. The double payload blasted off at 9:08 a.m., EST. The tricky two-in-one shot closed out the 1987 launch schedule at Cape Kennedy. “But in the meantime I want you to know — and I want all, Americans to know — that I am not going to be deterred. I am not going to be influenced. I am not going to be inflamed by a bunch of political, selfish men who want to advance their own interest.” The President also had harsh words for congressional Republicans, terming them “wooden soldiers” warring on progress. ASKS LABOR’S HELP Shortly before he spoke troops and tanks took up positions around key buildings in Athens, and the state-run radio said the government was ready to defend itself. En route to tbe sun-circling path between that jA earth and Mars, Pioneer 8’s fiery Delta booster rocket successfully kicked a radio-relay communications satellite into orbit around earth Die 27-year-old monarch declared. leaders of last April’s coup were only a segment of tee army*, “A spirit of revenge will not prevail,” he said, “but I will not accept any disobedience from now on and it wiff be crushed mercilessly. There will be no compromise.” * Inquest Sought in Teen's Killing He referred to the Communist-led civil war of 28 years ago and asked tee people to assist him, follow him and support jiim. A petition requesting an inquest into the death of Jimmie King, 17—shot by police attempting to escape arrest early last Thursday—was filed yesterday in Pontiac Municipal Court. Although Oakland County Prosecutor S. Jerome Bronson ruled Friday that tee killing was' a justifiable police action, a number of civic leaders mid organizations last night asked the suspension of the two police officers involved pending outcome of the inquest. Scientists refer to the Pioneer family of spacecraft as “interplanetary weathermen” and said sensors aboiard Pioneer 8 could provide the best information yet on how great a danger radiation storms emitted from the sun pose . to astronauts. Working with other craft previously launched, drum-shaped Pioneer 8 could possible lead to a foolproof means of predicting when dangerous flares will erupt on the sun — just as earth-orbiting weather satellites help forecasters predict climate on this planet: Manned space flights then can be scheduled around them, officials said. RELAY STATION 4Z Meanwhile, the eight-sided communications payload - called TTS for test and training satellite — was to act as att orbital relay station to. exercise America’s Apollo man-in-space global tracking network. He asked the representatives of the 14-million-member “house of Labor” to help Democrats elect a “great Congress” About 2,000 convention delegates, officials and guests frequently Interrupted Johnson’s jibes at tbe Republicans with cheers, applause and laughter. “The people know that the old Republican buggy can only go one way — backwards downhill,” Johnson said. “That old Republican buggy has been colliding with us all year long,” he said of GOP efforts in Congress to block or alter his proposals on education, anti-poverty, medical care and Social Security. • ' Mayor William H. Taylor Jr. said the requests were somewhat unexpected. Speaking at the city commission meeting, be said the commission will review the case and reach a decision on the suspensions next Tuesday. Scientists packed tee TTS in tee engine compartment of tee three-stage Delta’s second stage so It could spring free into Earth orbit while the upper stage propels Pioneer 8 into a sun-circling path. Forecast Tonight Is Snow Flurries Albert Shaw, a Negro leader and executive board vice chairman of sin interracial-group known as Voice of Oakland County Action League (VOCAL), told TTS was designed to receive Earth-to-space signals on the same radio frequency used in Apollo manned flights, while returning.signals to ground tracking stations on,'frequencies which will be used to report spacecraft and astronaut status, during an actual mission. Christmas shoppers will be scurrying around town in the midst of a few snow flurries instead of rain and drizzle tonight. Die weatherman predicts cloudy and colder tonight with Autries -likely and a low of 25 to 30.. (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 3) Flash DETROIT (AP) — Hepry Ford H said today teat while 1987 has been a difficult year for tee automobile industry, things look much better for 1968. There’s a chance of snow or snow flurries with continued cold temperatures Friday. Winds southwesterlyjM5to 25 miles per hour this morningwnTdiminish a little tonight. Precipitation probabilities in' per cent' are: 30 today and tonight, 40 tomorrow. TEMPERATURES An above freezing 35 was the low temperature prior to 8 a.m. in downtown Pontiac. The mercury had edged up to 43 by 2 p.m. , For 'Ohs' and 'Ahsr Unusual Items Plentiful (EDITOR’S NOTE-This the eighth in a series on suggestions for Christmas gifts available in Pontiac Area stores.) By JUNE ELERT If you enjoy shopping for gifts that *Sre a “bit different,” a little looking will reveal lots of items to draw surprised "Ohs" and “ahs.” ■ The dieter will be delighted with a gold-finish saccharin scuttle and tongs for a little over a dollar. For those easy-going souls who always keep their cool, how about a game of “Frustration?” Keep the steel ball riding uphill on the rods and gain points for steady hands and keen judgment. |7.50. A wild print is combined with psychedelic colors to accent freedom in a lounging culotto for the lady of the house. Available in sizes 10 to 18 at about $12. The party hostess will enjoy owning a cocktail-pick tree to add a touch of glamor to her buffet table. It cornea with 12 hors d’oeuvre picks with green ball heads in a flower pot base, at 88. Chess buffs could fill a lot of traveling time with a compact set of tiny pieces in a zippered leather case. Imported from Germany, it has a magnetic board to foil spills. Only |850. LEADING LAWMEN—The top-ranking Mw enforcement officers of Pontiac, the state and Oakland County-(from left) Police Chief William K. Hanger, Michigan Atty. Gen. Frank J. Kelley and Sheriff Frank Irons—go over the schedule for The teen party miss will be delighted with a jeweled slipper-shape purse just large enough tot lipstick and “mad" money, with instep zipper closure. About ♦2- To go under the little misses’ minidresses, how about some pretty panties last night’s county law enforcement conference in Pontiac. Kelley was the main embroidered on'.the lace-trimmed back speaker at the riitetrattyi: pockets. In *iz< ' pockets; Whizes** to 8-7 at $2 a pair. ’ SHOPPING DAYS TO A" CHRISTMAS f* mm t. H THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. DECEMBER 13. 1967 Hpae#’ ■ Ponds for Pay Hike, *Poverty Fight OK'd; Spending Is Slashed WASHINGTON (AP) - Con-' • Both Senate and House great, clearing its decks of most | passed and sent to President major money measures and,Johnson legislation for a $3.4 aiming for weekend adjourn- billion, three-step pay raise af-ment, has okayed spending bil-j fecting 5.5 million federal work-lions of dollars for government ers and servicemen. The legisla- pay raises and to fight poverty while endorsing a $4.1 billion over-all spending cut. Congressional action Tuesday included these developments: Romney Plan Finds Favor Britons Like Idea to Neutralize SE Asia LONDON (AP)—Gov. George Romney was reported Tuesday to have received favorable reactions in London on his idea of neutralizing Southeast Asia to help end the war in Vietnam. The Michigan Republican, first declared candidate for his party’s presidential nomination, is on a foreign affairs tour that will tgkeJum to Moscow later this week and Saigon during Christmas. He began the tour in France and Britain. ★ ★ ★ Romney has identified himself, with tiie idea of changing American objectives in Vietnam through keeping all the big powers out of Southeast Asia and allowing the countries in the area to work out their own policies. But he has not publicly spelled out the details of how such a policy could be achieved. One purpose of this trip has been to get different viewpoints on it j SOME OPPOSITION A source dose to Romney said he had received many favorable comments on the idea of neutralization, although some of the governmental officials he saw disagreed. Disagreement seemed to come from those who supported preSent U.S. policy in Vietnam and were convinced it was working, the source Among those Romney saw Tuesday was Sir. Alec Douglas-Home, former Conservative prime minister. He favors neutralizing Vietnam, with the big powers guaranteeing its neutrality in the cold war through the U.N. Security Council. Upon his return home next month, Romney has no plans to unvfil any Vietnam “peace plan” immediately but the source said he believes that if the Republican party and its presidential candidate criticize President Johnson’s handling of the war during next year’s campaign, they also will have to outline an alternative policy of their own for the voters to choose. I tion also includes a hike in postal rates, raising to 6 cents the cost of mailing a letter. ★ * ★ The House passed and sent to the Senate a $1.61 billion appropriation bill for the Office of Economic Opportunity, $370 million less than Congress already has authorized for the antipoverty program. • The Senate passed ana sent to the President a bill requiring most federal agencies to cut; most spending by 19 per cent—a i move designed to save $4.1 bil-| lion. BENEFITS BILL Today the House Is to take up a Social Security bill that Would SAYS BODY ISN'T HIS SON—Fred Hettich, looking at a picture of his son, Cpl. Donald Hettich, says the body of a soldier killed in Vietnam helicopter crash and shipped to Sarasota, Fla., for burial is not his son. Army officials, who first backtracked on the identity and agreed it was joot the _______________ I_________ _ _ 19-year-old Hettich, now contend it, is. They say the elder boost all benefits by at least 13 Hettich does not want to accept the death. Reports of a ....................... - '• - fingerprint examination and supporting data are being delivered to the Hettich family. per cent as well as hike Social Security taxes. The bill provides for minimum monthly benefit payments of $55 -compared with the current $44. President Johnson is expected to sign the pay-rals- bill for [government employes and Servicemen in time for them to get by Christmas retroactive creases from last Oct. 1. Total cost of the raises by 1969, when all stages are in effect, is estimated at $5.4 billion. It would give postal workers a 6 per cent raise, other government workers a 4.5 per cent hike and servicemen a 5.6 per cent boost. , * * ★ The pay-raise bill included provisions for hiking postal rates designed to bring in an additional $900 million annuaDy. Next Jan. 7 regular mail stamps will go front 5 to 6 cepts, airmail from 1 to 10 cents, post cards from 4 to a cents and airmail cards from 6 to 8 cents. THIRD CLASS MAIL Third class mail will go from 2.875 cents to 3.5 cents and to 4 cents in JulY 1969. But the rate for the first 250,000 pieces mailed in any year will be 3.8 cents, Second-class rates, covering newspapers and magazines, will go from 1 cent to 1.1 cents next year under the minimum rate, then to 1.2 cents in 1969 and 1.3 cents in 1970. This legislation also includes a provision to ban any more hiring of relatives by congressmen, federal judges, postmasters and other federal officeholders. The $4.1 billion spending-cut proposal approved by the Senate is an outgrowtli of the hassle earlier in the session between the White House and House Ways and Means Committee. The committee said tne administration would have to come up with spending cuts before it would consider the President’s proposal for a 10 per cent income tax surcharge. Sponsor of Court Bill May Vote No On It LANSING UPI - The chief sponsor of Michigan’s court reorganization bill says he may vote against' it himself as [result of amendments passed by the House of Representatives yesterday. Approved with four votes to spare were amendments by Rep. Joseph Swallow, R-Alpena, designed to insure that in the lower court system the bill would establish, each of Michigan’s counties would have at least one judge. Rep. Donald Holbrook, Clare, sponsor and chief spokes-for the court bill, said he would try today to have Swal- Noneconomic Issues Divide GM, UAW low’s amendments removed. If failed, he said, he urge defeat of his own bill. In counties of under 25,000 population, according .to Swallow’s plan, existing probate judges would assume duties of the district judges which the original bill would have created. * * * Holbrook’s proposed system would 'combine groups of the smaller counties into single districts with two judges each. He said that under Swallow’s one-county, one-judge system, many judges in the smaller counties would have little work to do. LAWYER-JUDGES EYED He also noted that in 13 of the 34 counties which Swallow’s amendments were intended to affect, the probate judges are not attorneys. Holbrook and the House Judiciary Committee had! DETROIT (UPI) - Qnly non-economic matters separated negotiators for General Motors Corp. and the United Auto Workers as they prepared to resume bargaining today on new contract—with less than 40 hours remaining before the deadline set for a settlement. The UAW has set midnight 'Fair-Housing Bill May Die' Sen. Kuhn Sees Link to Court Reform Issue Sen. George W. Kuhn of West Bloomfield Township predicted today that -fair-housing legislation will be a dead issue at the current special 'season of the lawmakers if another major Is-court reorganization — fails to pass the House this week. “There will not be nearly enough time to debate the fairhousing bill in the Senate,” said the Republican senator. “The whole session will be abortive.” Kahn was one of 11 Republican senators out of 17 present yesterday who rejected lution that would have introduced open occupancy on the floor of the Senate. “I think there were a number of general reasons for the rejection of the resolution,” said Kuhn. “First, there is priority,” said Kuhn. “The special session was called specifically for the lower o u r t reorganization and not 1 open housing/-” * ★ ★ I “Then there is the constitutionality of the fair'4)ousing apt. There are a number of senators who like myself have grave doubts that it is legal and would like to see pending cases involving the civil rights commission, resolved in the State Supreme Court firsts ■ If neither piece of legislation is adopted before a proposed adjournment date of Dec. 22, and possibly earlier, said Kuhn, they will have to be reintroduced when the Legislature reconvenes Jan. 10. Exam Begins in Kidnaping Case in City The preliminary examination of Donald C. Olmsted, accused of the Dec. 5 kidnaping of his ex-girlfrierid from her Pontiac home, began in City Municipal Court yesterday with testimony from the victim and her 24-year-old roommate. Judge Cecil B. McCallum, who raised Olmsted’s bond [from $4,000 to $10,000, adjourned hoped all duties TthrishTc^,^68""? “g,' courts would be performed byl^"?8 “c^“|a*h,e’J4’tesVfied lawver-iudses lthat 01msted forced her from T u ik ... Jher home at 1265 Featherstone Meanwhile, Holbrook’s courtiand took her at mjm to a WASHINGTON (AP) - Ten states topped by California account for more than half the U.S. battle deaths after months of Vietnam fighting, a Pentagon tabulation shows. Leading in war deaths according to computer records are California, the most populous state, with 1,289, New York 988, Pennsylvania 814, Texas 789 and kUinois 703. Rounding out the first 10 are Ohio 699, Michigan 584, Florida 459, New Jersey 397 and Indiana 377. ■ M. These states combine for 7,099 of the nation’s 13,634 deaths listed as a result of hostile action in Southeast Asia between Jan. 1, 1961 and last Sept. 30, the last computer run available. TOTAL DEATHS War deaths stood at 15,265 as of last Saturday. In addition to the first 10, another 15 states have given up 200 or more men to the conflict. All the other states also have posted losses ranging down to Alaska’s 10. ARLINGTON, Va. (UPI) -JohnC- Patler, accused of American Nazi Party leader George Lincoln Rockwell, was expected to take the stand today before the defense rested its ise in his murder trial. Frank “the Holy Father’ Smith, an ex-convict and close friend of Rockwell, was a char-! , acter witness Monday for Patler. Vietnam combat deaths also are listed for Guam, the Virgin Smith *°ld ti»e Arlington Cir-Islands and Puerto Rico. !cnt‘ Court J“ry the s,ala Nazl The basis for determining |leader thought of Patler as “al-state losses is the serviceman's|m#st a son*” He sa,d #ne mont'1 home of record, which may or j>elor^ tile Aug.25^tialjjer slay-may not be his birthplace. In most cases this is his native bill came under fhje again from Wayne County Auditor Richard Austin, who met with House members from Wayne County and urged them to defeat the measure in its present form. * * t Austin said the proposed court system would Impose an “unfair and unwarranted financial The Weather tomorrow as the deadline to!*>ur<*en * on He esti- reach agreement on a newjmated *** net c?st 10 Wayne I three-year pact for the 406,000[ C°unty at $2.5 million. workers at the giant of the auto --------------------‘------ industry. But it has vowed not! to strike until after the new Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Cloudy today with a chance of a few snow flurries or light sprinkles of rain. Highs 36 to 42. Cloudy and colder tonight and Thursday with snow flurries likely. Low tonight 25 to 30. Winds southwest to west 15 to 25 miles today, diminishing a little tonight. Friday’s outlook: Snow I behind a news blackout for or snow flurries likely and cold. Precipitation probabilities: 30 about nine hours yesterday. year. GM said it regards tomor-'s deadline as a strike ulti- matum. UAW President Walter Reuther and GM Vice President Louis G. Seaton and their teams of negotiators huddled per cent today and tonight, 40 per cent Thursday. They were to meet again at 9:30 j a.m. today. 4 ! liPi#!!!# o.5 No word leaked out how ne-jgotiations had progressed. GM, HI UU U u | however, has already said it is S'ready to necept the $1.02 per 4i "(hour boosts in wages and fringe " 37 benefits the union hammered jj'out of Ford Motor Co. m| Chrysler torp. Graham Cancels All Engagements ATLANTA, Ga. (AP) - Evangelist Billy Graham, under strict orders from his doctor, has canceled all engagements— including major crusades—uiitil April 1968. a member of his staff said Tuesday. WWW Quoting Dr. Walter H. Smith, Graham’s director of crusades, the Atlanta staff member said the action came “after long sultation with Dr. Graham’s physician, who is treating the evangelist in Jamaica.” Graham is recovering from pneumonia. Pontiac Township motel. The victim was released from a room at the King Motel, 1366 Opdyke, after police and Oakland County sheriff’s deputies stood by for more than an hodr. Before the testimony began, McCallum cleared the courtroom of spectators at the request of Oakland County Asst. Prosecutor Rick Schmidt, “due to the nature of the case.” Olmsted, a Flint resident is in custody in Oakland County Jail in lieu of payment of bond. 3 Michigan GIs Killed in Viet WASHINGTON (AP) - The Defense Department has announced the names of three more Michigan servicemen killed in action in Vietnam. All were in the Army. They are Sgt. Richard G. Sherwood, son of Mr. and Mrs. Richard E. Sherwood of Jack-son; Cpl. Robert J. Bawal, husband of Mrs. Jaqulyn Bawal of Marine City; and Cpl.,Randy E. Dillinder, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harold D. Dillinder of Dearborn. >k« City J7 05 |gSInquest Sought in Teens Death NATIONAL WEATHER — A large band of precipitation in tM south-central states is forecast for tonight. Snow flurries are expected all along the Rockies and in the Great Lakes region. Winner weather Is predicted along the East - Coast. > (Continued From Page One) commissioners that Bronson’s decision was made on “grossly inadequate facts.” He said suspension of police officers involved in a death until cleared of any suspicion of wrongdoing is standard procedure in most municipalities, and one that should be followed in Pontiac. TOO SEVERE * Although those speaking in favor of the suspension did not specifically accuse the officers of a deliberate miHicious act the? unanimously indicated that shooting^ at a person fleeing a stolen edr was too severe an act for the transgression involved. Clarence Barnes, executive director of the Pontiac Area Urban League, said that rumors about the death Were sweeping through the Negro community. Milton Henry, a'forfrier city commis-’ sioner add a Pontiac attorney, who filed the petition for a coroner’s inquekt, said the sdme two officers—Travis Lively and Dennis Mutrynowski—had arrested King during ijjie previous week. * * * Others asking for the two suspensions were Mansfield Samples, chairman of VOCAL; James McNeely, executive director of the. Oakland County Commission of Economic Opportunity; James Dyer, an NAACP official; Donald Bau-der, regional director of the Michigan Civil Rights Commission; Hubert^Price Jr., vice president of the Blank Organization of Pontiac Youth; Rev. Fr. Frederick Klettner of ■ St. Vincent de Paul Catholic Church; and Rev. Stanliy Ste-fancle, of the Birmingham ’ Unitarian Church, a VOCAL member. Birmingham Area News Sewer Assessment Roll OK'd BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP —i With approval of the special assessment roll of $86,140, sani-tary sewers for the central district of Colonial Estates subdivision are on their way to completion in about four months. The cost of $1,722 per site for 50 homes was approved by the Township Board Monday after a public hearing. Construction work is expected to begin in about one month, according 'to the township building department. The second public hearing to confirm the assessments for the sanitary sewers in the southern district of Colonial Estates is set tor Jan. 8 at 8 p.m. 10 States Account for Half of Battle Deaths in Viet At the first piiMic hearing Monday, the board approved the need for the $31,378 project to serve about 18 homes. Several Objections were heard. * *' .* Approval was also given to an increase in fees for township licenses, permits and inspections. SCHEDULE OUTDATED The building department, which recommended the hike, reports that it has been operating under an outdated fee schedule which is below the standard in the area. ly ahead of Ohio as the No. 5 state'. California also tops the non-hostile death category with 227 out of an over-all total of 2,705 dead through September. The non-hostile tabulation includes such causes as accident plane crashes, truck wrecks, explosions, fires, drownings and other incidents not connected with enemy activities. Nazi Murder Suspect May Testify Today home but some servicemen list homes of record their parent’s current home or the military bases where wives remain. For all practical purposes the home-of-reegrd System is regarded as relatively accurate in indicating the various state loss-i. There has been only a slight change in the ranking order of ing, Rockwell confided to him that he feared for his life and “suspected treachery from within the party.’ Smith also testified he saw a German Mauser pistol belonging to party member Robert Lloyd in Richmond almost one year after Lloyd testified he loaned the murder weapon to, Patler and “never saw it again." ★ * ★ The prosecution alleged that the states with the largest num- P a 11 e r used the pistol to kill ber of deaths since the first j Rockwell at a suburban Wash-last spring. Illinois moved bare-iington shopping center.* BIRMINGHAM — George Vi-hos, based in Birmipgham, was the only Michigan artist to win One of the cov-f ““ eted Tiffany! Fou ndation| awards. Vihos, who! has a studio at J 845 Pierce, ceived $2,000 fori his work in the! field of paint-1 ing. Thirty-two VIHOS* other artists were also cited by the Foundation. *■ ★ ★ Vihos is Visual Arts Coordbia-tor for the Michigan State Council for the Arts, and instructor of drawing and painting at Arts and Crafts in .Detroit. His residence is in Royal Oak. 'Army Projects Shape Politics' WASHINGTON (AP) - The military-industrial complex has become a major political force through such steps as locating defense installations fend plants in the home districts of key congressmen, Sen. J. W. Fulbright tid today. Each new project'creates “ft constituency that will strive mightily to protect” it, he said, _ that a politician wants to preserve “the good will of his constituents by helping them to get what they want.” * ★ ★ Fulbright, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and a long-time Clitic of administration Vietnam war policy, commented in the second of two appraisals of the effect of the Vietnam war on the nation: It was prepared for delivery in the Senate. I South Africa Under Fire in U.N UNITED NATIONS, N.Y.* (AP) — South Africa, which for nearly two decades has frustrated U.N. attempts to change its their government, and attempts iernment had “no intention of to remove the mandate over abdicating its responsibilities to-South-West Africa have had ward the peoples of South-West much the same effect. Africa.” racial policies, faced fire on two Last December, the assembly! Ireland Foreign Minister scores in the General Assembly I voted overwhelmingly for a res-'Frank Aiken told the assembly today. lolution saying that South Africa .this week that South Africa’s at- The 122-nation assembly was no longer had the right to gov-jtempt to hold onto South-West to discuss first possible ways of era South-West Africa, which Africa was “a challenge to the was mandated to it' by the United Nations.” League of Nations. * ★ ★ * * * Aiken urged the assembly to For the first time in its histo- fa ry, the United Nations had de- j cided to take over a country. ! But it soon became apparent c that the world organization could not enforce such a drastic ,p step Without going to war. The assembly set up a 14-na-1 tion ‘'council” to recommend with it. The council has enforce-ways of administering the terri- ment powers under the U.N. tllity of repeated attempts by tory, but South African Foreign charter and used them last year the United Nations, prodded by Minister Hilgard Muller chal-jln calling for mandatory eco-other African members, to|lenged the right of the Unitedjnomic sanctions against the bring South Africa to heel. I Nations to end his nation’s man- white minority regime in Attacks on apartheid have date from the League of Na- Rhodesia. But the sanctions only helped to make the white tions. haven’t overthrown the Rhode- South Africans rally around! Muller declared that his gov-Isian government. enforcing its decision last year end South Africa’s control over neighboring South-West Africa. Later in the day the assembly was to make its annual deipand that the government of South Africa abandon its policy apartheid, or face segregation, and lift the restrictions on its 11 million blacks and 1.5 million citizens of mixed blood. The Debates highlight the fu- be realistic, however, and recognize that the “Council for South-West Africa is incapable ot carrying out its mandate.” The assembly, he said, should place the matter in the lap of the Security Council as the only U.N. organ with power to deal Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. Give Luggage—It's Sure to Please 1 Ladies’ 3-Pc. Set of Molded Luggage Scuff Resistant Vinyl 24-Inch Case 21-Inch Gate 17" Vanity 16*# 14-lnch Matching Train Gate with Mirror. YoV ora sura to moke a hit this matching sat of molded gaga that Is aluminum able handles. The vanity Casa has g mirror.* With haavy duly locks and keys and comes with matching luggage name. togs. Your choice of red of blue. .4.99 •IN. Saginaw P Street SIMMS"* Luggage -Basement Level 1 THE PONTIAC PRftSS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 196T a~* m WotogHounfp So/e .jjtar 8dence Service WASHINGTON - Workers in the United States today are putting In more hours, not less, than they did in 1956, and the trend shows no signs of abating. Ah economist with the Upjohn Institute of Employment Research, Dr. Herbert e3 Striner, challenges the common notion that U. S. workers face a future of too much leisure and too little work. Working conditions, he finds, are moving in the opposite direction. In a paper called “The World of Work: 19M and Beyond," Dr. Striner reports that manufacturing workers put in 40.4 hours per week in 1056 and 41.4 hours in 1091. In mining, the increase amounted to nearly two hours per week. During the same decade, overtime work went up by, 40 per cent in die manufacturing and goods industries. The Waterford Township Goodfellows'' annual newspaper sale to assist needy families hajs been termed successful by Ernest Latimer, president of the group. / 'We went way over our goal of $2,000," said Latimer who disclosed that more than $2,000 Some viruses live for three to five months on woolen fabrics but three to five days on cotton materials. was raised in Saturday’s one* day drive. . In behalf of the Goodfellows, Latimer expressed gratitude to members of the pine other organizations who sold copies of the Goodfellow edition of The Pontiac, Press and to persons who donated money. Latimer estimated that approximately 85 per cent of the 3,000 copies of The Pontiac Press up for sale were pur- InterfaitK Breakfast Set The Pontiac YMCA Ecumenical Affairs Committee, under the chairmanship of Dr. Milton Banks, has announced that it will sponsor an interfaith Christmas breakfast Dec. 19 at 7:30 p.m. at the YMCA, 131 University. Kathleen McClure and Carol Haames are organizing the members of the Youth Council to prepare and serve the pancake and sausage breakfast to over 100. -served for six years as pastor ■ of Pontiac’s St. Micahel Catholic Church. The Rev. James L. Hayes, pastor of the Shrine of the Little Flower in Royal Oak, will be the guest speaker. Prior to his present appointment, he Among the other participants at tha breakfast will be William Kirk, the executive director of the Pontiac YMCA, and Rev. Jack Clark, executive secretary of the Pontiac Council of Churches. Advance reservations are required for the breakfast. The $1 tickets can be reserved through the YMCA by tomor- Simms, 98 H. Saginaw St. And You’ll Save, More When You Get Them at SIMMS 2nd FLOOR SPECIALS 4-Speed Solid State Portable General Electric Phonograph 14" Rugged, yet lightweight >, scoff proof and washable, houses a 4-speed solid state phonograph with large 4-inch dynamic speaker and on/off volume control. Model RP 3020. General Electric ’Show ’n Tell’ Phono Viewer-Radio Comb. 29" Show, picture. ■ In time to word, ond music. Designed for easy use by children. It's o high-quality 4 speed record player ond e full color slidefilm projector and transistorized AM 12 to 30-Cup Automatic West Bend Coffee Maker Yours for J77 Reg. $10.00 — mokes 12 to 30 cups of delicious coffee and keeps It hot. Has pull-down pour spout. Model 9308. Limit I. Ideol for Christmas parties, dutp, schools, etc. Swivtl Top - Canister Style General Electric Vacuum Cleaner 29" For complete floor and above the floor cleoning: Swivel top vacuum cleaner comes complete with attachments for chairs, drapes etc. Model C200. The Peeket Sized Machine Strap DREMEL Moto Tool KH Simms Prica Just ihdrpom end engraves. Weigh, only 13 ounces. Comes In sturdy steel carry cos# with attach- Never Before! And Especially At Cbristmac •.. Famous ‘amt’ Scale Slot - Cars Proceeds will be used to purchase food orders negotiable at area stores and to prepare food baskets for needy families. SHOES AND BOOTS Gifts, including shoes and boots for . children, also will be given to the needy, according to Latimer. Anyone knowing of a family needing assistance can contact Latimer at 3345 Curwood or Mrs. Clayton Soncrainte at 3273 Pirrin. Values to $8.00 Vacation Break WAVERLY, Iowa WV-Police gt. Robert Greenlee temporarily has retired as the teacher of ' iss in woman’s self defense. During a demonstration, one of tee feminine students broke Greenlee’s wrist. Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. \ Lots of Gifts at Bigger Savings AIL At SIMMS Sundry Dept Then specials for Weds., Thursday, T'rldisy find Saturday JDKMI I Gifts From SIMMS Camera Dept. Cost Much Less For Main Floor sundry depts. 9-Pc. Pocket Sizes ‘CHIC’ Men’s Manicure Set Il.uf. 1.1 In Useful long-lasting gilt, Include, complete nail and Cutido cart-taking lm-, plements: toenail nipper, fingernail nip- 4.95 Cut-Away Solid Body 4-Pick Up Elect Guitar 4-ptek up ejebtrfe guitar with tremlo bar tone control, volume control. Complete with cord, pick ctpd Instruction book. ‘FLORN’ Luminous Dial Folding Travel Alarm Clock $4.95 Value Only 3«8 A dependable time piece for the traveler. With luminous dial thcr you cat; read in the dark. And folding leatherette cose. Other travel clocks et 4.H end S.ll Recharge Batteries for Toys— Flashlight* ‘FEDTR0’ Battery Charger Novsr Needs Batteries — Ash Flash Rechargeable Flashlight 5" New tnpored style, throws a long, bright spotlight beam. Recharges in any AC outlet. Nickel cadmium power cells. Hond- CUSCO’ 8-Way Thermal Manage Pillow Mastagds away tension and aches, and pains. Use it with or without heat and with or without massage, pig enough to lit the entire back and head. A great gift idea for the whole family. Genuine 'amt' slot cars In 1 /32nd scale . . . choice of Ford GT, McKee, Lotus 30 and Chevette modeles ., . exclusive self .adjusting weight equalizers. Top quality slot racing kite at an unheard of price. Stock-up for * Christmas gifts now. This price while quantities last. SIMMS.fl. Christmas Gift Giving! TODAY - THURSDAY - FRIDAY ONLY SALE SIMMS CAMERA DEPT. POLICE CALL 8 AM Portable Radio S29.9SV.kl. Aloron 10 - transistor with POLICE CALL band and AM stations. Model B10AP — complete ready to use. Only SI holds. SIMMS.*!,.. led Piper INIs 1 0* North ft Soiinsw R Shoot SIMMS.*!,., ! Sundries 1 —K»in I Fleer ’ 1 usl* fVVVVTKri rr i »,rM* £ II North « Ssklnow 1 Street $26.95 value — deluxe zoom 8 to 25 power. Fine fully coated optical 30mm objective lens. All metal construction with sturdy 10" chrome tripod with case. $1 holds. CAR STEREO 4-TRACK TAPES Unlimited Choice off All Titles Featuring Herb Alpert and Tijuana Brass In Over 10 Different Titles. Only 300 tapes in this special group at this ridiculous price. Stock-up for Christmas giving. Super 8 Camera $149.50 Value [Power* zoom reflex movie [camera .with fl.8 zoom lens ____________ at d touch of a button. Cds electric eye meter for perfect exposures, reflex viewing to see exactly whgt you're taking. All this plus drop-in loading. $1 holds or get it on Instant Credit with a major credit card. PAHAS0NIC All Channel Portable 9” Television with'.. Radio ming pleasure. 9-inch sen gives brilliant, clear .and steady picture! — even In-braad daylight . . . and autp. timer left you loll aileep and this set turns itself old (M-AM rodlo with slide rule tuning. Swing-up UHf antenna lor hard-tp-get stations. Model TR903R )1 holds. Optional battery charger available. SIMMS OPEN NITES TILL CHRISTMAS 9 a.m. to w 9:30 p.m. EVERY BAY UNTIL CHRISTMAS tWltWItWMlIlWRtllMIIMWWtUWIt Look at What 'SANTA SIMMS' Has for You to Give in RADIOS— RECORDERS and PHONOGRAPHS . . . All by PANASONIC ? Panasonic quality built products moons you'll give better gifts at | lower cost this year. And you'll get 'em all at Simms. $1 holds In f layaway or you can charge them with a major credit card. PANASONIC Portable AM Pocket Radio 8 to 257\Z00M Lens POWER' Telescope mm 8G350 combination -’AM radio and 2 speed record player Is battery operated—use * anywhere. Batteries included. PANASONIC Portable Battery Solid State Tape Recorder i Model RQ113S—as shown Is a compact recorder wun I drive. Simple, easy operation, 2 speeds, 314" dynamic PM e . remote control mike, etc. And weighs only 5 pounds. $39.95 Seller PANASONIC Wood Grain Finish FM-AMTdble Radio $39.95pellet 3J« RE7327 radio with 4" PM dynamic speaker, slide rule tuning, AFC 1 Handsome wood grain finish cabinet. PANASONIC Pocket Size FM-AM Radio $39.95 seller—model RF626 camera styled radio with FM and AM j bands. 2Vi" dynamic speaker, slide rule tuning, tone control, AC powat pack. Earphone for private listening. $1 holds. PANASONIC Lighted Face on FM-AM Clock Radio $49.95 Seller 3D95 FM ond AM station* plus [ full feature Telechrorf dock with lighted face. 3V^ Inch dynamic - speaker, slide rule tuning. $1 holds 'til Christmas. PANASONIC AC and Battery Power :M-AM Portable Radio $59.95 Seller Portable model RP767 radio AFC on FfA ci control. Earphone for Private listening. Use It on battery power or AC house currant. $1 holds. See SIMMS for All the Latent in PANASONIC Quality Built Products Troy Board Plans Millage Election TROY — The school board plans to meat next Monday to set up a millage ' . elction after approving another deficit budget last night. » The approval is contingent upon the >. opinion of the schools’ attorney on the anticipated 1233,000 deficit for the 1967-" «;• 69 school year. ~<'r* This deficit will be added to the $376,090 deficit from the last two school ‘ years, making a total of $606,000 (cash basis) in the red. vi . The tentative verbal opinion of the ,,r attorney, said Supt. Rex B. Smith, is that the deficit budget is. legal if the . budget includes a provision of borrowing on next year’s state aid and local taxes within the legal limit. ★ ★ ★ y With the deficits, the district is finan-■ dally “approaching a dangerous point,” stressed Smith. He recommended that the millage proposal to liquidate - the deficit and provide for operational needs for the next five years be put on the Feb. 19 ballot: PRIMARY DATE . This is also the date for the possible dty primary and the city request for a half-mill tax increase for the new library. Smith suggested that the district still have the election even if the ; dty doesn’t have the primary because * teacher hiring begins soon after February. The superintendent emphasized that the board and administration together set the amount of the millage to be re* quested so that the proposal becomes “a true board proposal, not a ‘Smith proposal’ or a hurried citizens committee proposal.” District voters have twice this year defeated requests for 7-mill tax increases for one-year terms. The June 12 election was motivated by the school administration and a citizens’ committee. Only a citizens’ committee pushed for the Sept. 11 dection. , ★ ★ ★ After the June defeat, the board made ; 27 cuts in the educational program. CURRENT BUDGET This year’s budget lists expenditures of $3,587,713 and income of $3,354,738. About 88 percent of the budget goes for salaries and fringe benefits. The three master agreements with employes completed in October delayed the finalizing of the budget, said Smith. The remaining 12 percent of the budget finances fuel, utilities and supplies. Although income is up $432,638 over last school year, state aid is $40,(MO less than the maximum hoped for this year because enrollment was about 200 less than expected last spring. LOCAL INCOME The superintendent also noted that \ Detroiter Arraigned • on Marijuana Charge * DETROIT (UPI) — A Detroit man [ was arraigned here yesterday on charges of concealing and transporting , 107 kilograms of marijuana worth an es- • timated $220,000, the U.S. District At- ! tprney said. \ Some of it was reportedly meant for\ Oakland County. f Hockey Stoup, 25, had also been arraigned Dec. 6 on a charge of possess- * ing hashish, mescaline and marijuana, all hallucinatory drugs, worth an esti- ! mated $30,SOO, federal agents said. Ross Ellis, district supervisor of the bureau of narcotics of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, said the haul C was the largest made by federal agents in the area over the last 30 years. * ★. * Stoup allegedly shipped 107 kilo bricks of marijuana from San Francisco to De-■ trait in three footlockers, Ellis said. this year local sources will be paying about $140,000 more and state sources about $6,000 less than last year. He explained that locally derived income is up because of an increase in the state equalized valuation of property. Expenditures are up $387,755 from last year due to increased costs of salaries, instruction, plant operation and transportation. Smith added that although the “salary schedules are quite competitive with our neighbors . . . they are more than the present tax rate will support.” ★ ★ ★ The budget was approved unanimously except for the dissent of Harold A. Janes who said he wanted more time to study it After hearing an enrollment report, the board indicated that after Christmas it will be faced with a teacher shortage in the Hill, Troy Ijnion and Big Beaver elementaries. Principals of these schools have reported that enrollments have been increasing weekly since .Nov. 10. After the board approved payment of current expenses for stadium use, it commented that revenues aren't near expectations. While the district has been able to pay bond principal and interest, it hasn’t put any money into die stadium replacement and stadium suplus funds. THE PONTIAC PRESS AreaNrn WEDNESDAY* DECEMBER 13, 1967 A—4 Township Board Confirms Need for Sewer Setup FARMINGTON TOWNSHIP - The Township Board decided affirmatively on the necessity of a $74,520 sewer project for Medbury, Middle Belt and Hemlock streets in Supervisor's Middle Belt Ten Mile Plat No. 2. * -★ ★ The decision regarding the system to serve 52 lots came after a public hear ing on the project Monday. The second hearing on the project’s cost will be held in about two months when the assessment roll is drawn up, said a township official. Iq, other action, the board1 approved three subdivision preliminary plats. They are: • Independence Commons near Halstead, 11 Mile and Drake roads, being developed by Thompson-Brown Co. * ★ ★ • Wedgewood Commons on Farmington Road near Briar Hills subdivi-sion, also being developed by Thompson-Brown. • Philip Judson Gardens North on Drake Road south of Guy R. Polley subdivision, being developed by Leah-ner Associates, Inc. School Cutbacks, New Election Face Voters in Romeo District Sharp cutbacks in school services for the balance of the current year and a new election Jan. 29 face residents of the Romeo School District. The board of education voted Monday night to pare about $35,000 from its anticipated $100,000 deficit by cutting back in teaching and maintenance supplies and in transportation services and purchases. The combined action was the result of a narrow defeat Nov. 27 for a renewal of three mills and an additional five new mills for the operating budget. The vote was 345 to 338. School Supt. T. C. Filppulla in announcing the decision for a new election recalled a closer margin of victory in 1956 which built the town’s new high \ Nntltc Mm Photo ‘PARKS n6^V’—James L. McLaughlin, an official withxthe National Park Service, spoke to the JDowntown Pontiac Ki-wanis Club yesterday at Fortino's Steak House. He stressed,,the importance of obtaining land for futur\ parks and cited the dangers of pollution due to urbanization. school. That issue, he recalled, passed by one vote. The new millage, if approved, would not be levied until the December 1968, tax bills, Filppula said. DEBT RETIREMENT Three of the additional five mills sought are earmarked for debt retirement and the other two for additional maintenance, the purchase of six new school buses, plus some remodeling and salary adjustment. The increase to the average property owner would amount, according to the superintendent, to about $40 a year,of $5 per $1,000 of state equalized valuation. WWW “We are hopeful — and very much in need — of a favorable vote,” Filppula said. I Judges for the contest will be I Village President Wallace Crane I and Councilmen Arlie Reed and 1 Fred Cole. Renewal Funds Resolution OK'd OXFORD - The Village Council last night approved a resolution opening the way for payment of $198,492- in federal government Title I funds to cover the cost of surveying and plans for the Central Business District Urban Renewal project. The resolution will be forwarded to the Chicago office of Housing and Urban Development, according to Robert Smalley, village manager. A report by Robert Pearl of Vilican-Leman Associates of Southfield, in regard to the project, revealed" that letters Will be sent to about 100 residents of the involved area asking for information. He said the letters, In the form of census questionnaires would be kept anonymous. The council gave Smalley approval to negotiate with Chester Bushman of Bushman Disposal Co. in regard to pay-ments'on village refuse pickup. Bushman had asked that either his contract which runs until May be canceled or that he be given an additional $100 a week until that time. He said he was not breaking even on the operation. State Man Is Killed ASHLAND, Wis. (AP) - George Paulsen, 30, of Ironwood, Mich., was killed Sunday in a two-car crash on Highway 2, 10 miles east of Ashland in the northern Wisconsin village of Odanah. NEVER FORGETS-Not even a pre-Christmas costume party makes Mrs. Donna Barry of Rockford, HI., forget it’s feeding time for her 6-month-old son, Jason. ' Decoration Entry I | Deadline Is Friday I 1 LAKE ORION - Home owners I here have until 6 p.m. Friday to enter their homes in the Christmas decoration contest sponsored by the Orion Area Jaycees. # Anyone in Orion Township is eligible to compete, according to Donald DeLong, Jaycee official. The dub has received only five entries to date, he said. In Pontiac Twp. Junk Car Complaints Heard Subdivisions Get Preliminary OK in Oakland Twp. OAKLAND TOWNSHIP — The way was cleared for construction of nearly a hundred new homes here last night as the Township Board gave preliminary approval to plats for three new subdivisions. Some 67 acres are involved in the new Coach Lamp Hills Subdivision being developed by Oakland - Rochester Development Co. of Rochester. Located adjacent to Oakland Valley Subdivision on N. Rochester Road, the development in its first stage will contain 30 homes. The board also approved preliminary 'plans for Oakland Valley No. 7 in the same area and gave first approval to the development of 40 lots by George Knorr of Rochester to Knorrwood Estates located in the area of Lakh George and Orion Roads. • * ★ * The board voted $50 a month subsidy on a six-month trial basis to Fleet Ambulance Service. That amount with the $500 voted by Avon Township and $300 voted by Rochester is expected to keep an ambulance stationed in the area. ★ ★ ★ It was pointed out last night that Oakland Township is also served by ambulances from Lake Orion, Oxford and Romeo. PONTIAC TOWNSHIP - Junk automobiles and rising taxes occupied the Township Board Monday. Petitions from residents of the Taylor-Giddings roads area protested the alleged spread of a car-dismantling operation owned by Sam Gottesman on Taylor Road. Supervisor Roy Wahl announced suit has already been brought against the owner. Gottesman will be requied to show cause Monday in Circuit Court as to why he should be allowed to proceed,' Wahl said. Counsel Studies Romeo Zoning ROMEO — A new zoning ordinance formulated by Dryker Associates of Birmingham with the village planning commission has been referred to the attorney for study. Clerk Norman Engel said the new or* dinance provides for stronger and more enforceable zoning laws than the village presently has. Three trusees, John Kegler, Kenneth Smith and Stanley Ludtke, were appointed to a committee to negotiate with the police officers’ union on salary. Patrolman James Reid was promoted to corporal. ★ ★ ★ The council voted to cover parking meters from Dec. 14 to 26 for free parking for Christmas shoppers. A bill of $6,000, for construction of a sanitary sewer adjacent to the Ford property, was approved. Objections to rising taxes were taken up by Wahl after the meeting. * a * Township figures reveal that new tax bills are up 27 per cent over last year in the Pontiac School District and 21.88 per cent in the Avondale School District. . INCREASE MAGNIFIED Clayton Lovelace assessor said a slight increase in millage had been magnified by the 11.82 factor with which he was required to multiply last year’s valuations. The factor was needed, he said, to meet the state requirement far a 50 per cent valuation. In other business the board passed a resolution backing the Oakland County Protective Service branch in Pontiac Township and tabled a request for new radio equipment needed by the fire department. Holly's Council Gets Petition to Annex 238 Acres Brandon Schools Okay 2 Clinics BRANDON TOWNSHIP - Permission to build health clinics in each of the two elementary schools was won by Schools Supt. Henry Versnick Monday night at the Brandon Board of Education meeting. * * * Versnick said he would solicit bids on steel partitions to create permanent rooms for use by the Oakland County health nurse. The district owns most of the equipment necessary to furnish such rooms, be reported. HOLLY — A petition to annex 238 acres of mostly vacant property to the village was received last night by the council. Jack Albright, Holly surveyor representing Fred Barton, the owner, asked that the council consider taking in 178 acres to the north which contains a trailer park on 63 acres and 67 acres to the south which is vacant. The matter was referred to the planning commission with a decision due Jan. 9. Advantages under village government would include refuse disposal, water, added police protection and a lower insurance rating. * * * • Barton is reportedly interested in becoming a part of the dty mainly for the refuse pickup that would be afforded his trailer park. Hie park already has a water and sewer system, according to village officials. . In other business last night the council approved a replat of Holly Bush Shores Subdivision No. 2. Previously the Wier Subdivision. It has been sold to Nicho-lie-Hudson Associates of Holly. A discussion of the present water system enlargement and a street improvement program also occupied council members. Bill to Prevent Disputes Okayed to American a ton of the grain, and the j,students volunteered their time after a local newspaper suggested the program. * Senate Acts on 1-696 Snarl LANSING CAP) - A bill designed to untangle the dispute over proposed 1-896 expressway in Oakland and Macomb counties and prevent future snarls over route locations received Senate approval yesterday. The bill, approved 25-3 and given immediate effect, provides that communities, which now have veto power over interstate highway routes, must submit to binding arbitration in route selection. The measure, already passed by the House, provides that race the State Highway Department has certified the need for arbitration in picking a highway route, the affected communities have 29 days in which to act. . ......^ T They may agree either to a nkite or to arbitrated choice of a route voluntarily. ★ * a If they fail to do either, the American Arbitration Association would submit a list from which the communities could select a three-member arbitration board to settle the dispute finally. UNABLE TO AGREE Should they be unable to agree on board members, the governor wquld be empowered to appoint the board, which would reach a binding agreement on the highway route. » * The provision allowing voluntary arbitration was Inserted by the Senate to overcome possible Constitutional restric- tions, which reserve to local units el government the right to “reasonable" control of their streets and highways. The completion of 1-696 has been held up for months by the failure of six southern Oakland County communities to agree on a route. “We’ve readied the end of the road on voluntary community agreement on a road,” said Sen Sander Levin, D-Berldey, “and either the Legislature acts or I486 will never be built. *• *> * “I think the vast majority of the people In the metropolitan area say. they want the highway,” he added. J)e bill now goes back to the House concurrence in the amendment. THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 18, 1067 A—fl Youngsters Yule Party Held Sonia 80 underprivileged elementary pupils from Pont! a c schools went to Oakland University yesterday to attend mg Christmas party in the! honor. It was one of the last activi-ties of Oakland University stu-dents before they take the I r h oliday and end- of-semester break. Tha youngsters have been gofag eat to the campus weekly through a novel OU student vol-unteer program aimed at widening their experiences and strengthening their academic attitudes and abilities. Each youngster received a small gift from his or her campus “big brother" or “big sister." Christmas carols were sung, cookies and punch were served and some of the children made greeting cards for their friends and family., * ★ The party was culmination of the fall semester activities in w project known as POEAT, code name for Pontiac-Oakland Educational Assistance Team. IN THIRD YEAR Now in Its third year, the project currently involves first through sixth grade pupils from, Whittier, Franklin and Bagley schools. Bused out by the Pontiac school system, the youngsters work with an OU student volunteer who spends two hours each week serving as big brother or sister, confidante, tutor David C. Brisker, Instructor in education ft the university and faculty consultant for the student volunteer project, said one of the main goals of the program is to open avenues of communication with the chU-dren. ' ,twr * “Almost all of the youngsters have verbal deficiencies in varying degrees,” Bricker commented. “They are not used to talking and not used to people listening to them talk. ONLY ADULT ATTENTION “For a lot of them, this is the only adult attention they received." All of the children come from deprived areas and many are from big families in which they are often overpowered by their brothers and sisters in competing for attention, according to Bricker. Although the OU students and their youthful charges often get together in small groups, they are involved more frequently on a one-to-one basis. ★ * * During the fair weather they may wander around campus on nature hikes, play touch football or other sports or visit a farm or zoo. MAY DROP IN When the weather is bad they may drop into Kresge Library to read magazines, listen to tape-recorded, foreign language instruction at the OU Language Lab, dissect worms in a biology lab or listen to a student’s late pop records in his dormitory "Mm. Bricker said ether Pontiac schools are hoping to involve their pupils in POEAT and that a meeting wffl be held at the start of winter semester to see If more Oakland students would bo willing to expand the project. Other volunteer projects vying for the students’ interest include those of service organizations such as Circle K and the Association for Women students. * ■ Sr, In addition, Oakland’s Office of Volunteer Program^ cooperates with the Detroit city schools and the MiUer District Demonstration Project in a program known as Project Look Ahead. INVOLVES BUSING This program involves the busing of about 20 elementary school children and their parents to the campus each Saturday. Like POEAT participants, the Detroit toner-city pupils are ' with Individual university students to expose them to • campus environment and to give them, even at this young,age, a desire to strive toward a college education. At the same time (heir parents are involved in educational programs with students and members of the faculty and administration. ★ * , ★ William D. Peterson, coordinator of OU volunteer programs commented on the various projects. “Parents who accompanied their children to the campus on Saturdays indicated that their children looked forward all week to the chance to go out to Oak- land and be wifli their college VERY REWARDING’ “The students who participated in Look Ahead also found themselves looking forward to Saturdays. it/.★/ * “Personally, I have found my work with volunteer programs to be very rewhrding, and I have seen a real responsiveness on the part of Oakland* students to volunteer efforts. * * * \ “Students are eager to be involved in social action, but only if the social action has clearly defined) goals and objectives, and they do not wish to be involved in projects which only serve to alleviate the guilt of the middle class over poverty conditions elsewhere." She's Used to World of Law Enforcement By HUD WILLSE Mrs. Myrtle Buraia is a woman in a man’s world. She is the only female employe of the Waterford Town-■ ship Police De-H§ partment and in a similar capacity with the Waterford Township Police Department, assisting policemen in involving male juveniles. QUESTIONING OU PARTY—Some 80 underprivileged Pontiac* ydungsters enjoy an early holiday treat at Oakland University. OU students threw Pwrtlac Pmt nw them a Christmas party yesterday complete with Santa Claus, gifts, games and caroling. 9 Are Added to Rights Unit Marks an Attempt to Intensify Activities City Approves Extension of Storm Sewer Lines City commissioners last night made nine new appointments to the Human Relations Commission bringing the membership to a full 24 members. The commission had been fairly inactive in the recent past and the appointments are part of an effort to broaden and intensify the scope of the commission’s activities. Appointed for terms to end in June 1918 were Mrs. Cornelia Jackson of 488 Ferry, Melvin Boersma oft 1288 Locke and Floyd Miles Sr. of 188 W. Columbia. Appointed for terms ending in June 1989 are Rev. Clyde Smith, pastor of the First Methodist Church; Mrs. Dwight KeibUng of 80 S. Genesee and Kenneth G. Hempstead of 185 Elizabeth Lake. Samuel A. Baker of 576 Granada, Mrs. Jeremiah Hollis of 261 Whittemore and Rev. James Wysocki of St. Michael’s Catholic Church were appointed to terms ending in June 1970. In addition three members were reappointed for terms to end in June 1970. They are Ronald Covault of 125 N. Johnson, Rev. Thomas E. McGrath of St. Vincent dePaul Catholic Church and Rev. Jack H. C. Clark of 497 W. Iroquois, executive director of the Pontiac Area Council of Churches and recently elected chairman of the Human Relations Commission. A 870,000 public works project to extend storm sewer lines along Kennett from Akott Elementary School west to a planned 525-unit rent supplement housing project was approved by the City Commission last night. The funds will come from the city’s capital improvement fund, which, officials say, is fairly solvent compared to the city’s general operating fund. In other action, the ifommis-on set a»Jan. 8 date for receiving bids for construction of storm and sanitary sewers and water mains in the city’s planned Industrial Park. They also set a public hearing date of Dec. 19 for considering necessity of projects to provide sanitary sewers on Sarasota,N Tallahassee to Kennett; and Kennett, Sarasota west to the rent supplement project; and a water main to run from Kennett to the housing project. Both of these construction projects are necessary to provide utility service to the planned housing project, officials said. Under the city’s assessment formula, the city would pay $40,709 of the total cost estimate at $51,053. Commissioners approved construction of sanitary sewers on Fern, Howland to Highland; H o w 1 a n d, Fern to L u t h e r, Bloomfield, Fern to 405 feet north and Highland, Fern to 316 feet north. New Name Must PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) The Portland School Board has yoted to change the name of Girls Polytechnic High School to James Monroe High School, as of next year. Why? They’re letting boys in next term. OB* Doors Open ; 9:30 "til 9 fa. Every Day & 'til Christmas MISS KING'S CAKES Famous Miss King's cakes in tins for Christmas giving. Beautifully boxed In gold foil. Choose from chocolate chip, apricot, eggnog nut, banana nut, cranberry nut, or pumpkin pecan. Gourmet Shop ... Street Floor miilMIIIUMff/f/t///////////' PORTRAIT Your choice of several finished poets. Let our photographic specialists capture your child s ex-pression forever! Groyp pictures slightly higher, -limit I p*r lamily DOWNTOWN STORK ONLY PORTRAIT ITU OK) HOURS. Open 16 e.m. to 7 pM. THE PONTIAC PRESS . 41 Wart Huron Street .. Pontiac, Michigan 48058 ‘ WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1967 IlHM A. fUMHUU Howard H. MMttA IX 0h«lniua«f th» Board President and Publisher Cm H the more... the merrier (Wo mako a groat caaa for a party.) CHRISTMAS, APPLIANCE, TV SHOPPERS! FRETTER SAVES YOU MONEY! FRETTER’S PRE-CHRISTMAS OLLIE FRETTER One of Michigan's Original Piscounters ranges refrigerators BL E TV ■ 1 VA Wood cabinet console Color $07095 Floor Model AlO French Prov. Fruitwood Stereo, $1DR burnproof gab. was $239,95 now 109 Admiral Early Amor. Color, was $00095 $4Tf.M, slightly scratched, now Vww Admiral 8-speaker B/W Combo $4 QQ95 was $499.95 .. .now 133 Admiral 8-Speaker Stereo. $2j|(|95 RCA Color 295 sq. in., Walnut $00095 Cabinet,now................. , Zenith Early American Stereo $40095 60 watts power, $399.95 .. now £09 it Early Amor. RCA Stereo 40W. 6- $00095 speakers. Was $269.95 .. .now £v«f Admiral Combo Color Big Screen $00095 was $799.95, slightly scratched v«f«f COLOR TV 24,000 void of picture power. Solid-•tat* signal lyitem. Aula. Color lock d.gauuing big 4 inch oval ipoakor. Walnut finish. UHF-VHF. Haro IMS ISO »q. In. portable color rat with exclusive initant-onl Sound at once, picture in 6 seconds and instant color fidelity, 26,000 volts of picture power. Illuminated Sop-up UHF/ VHF choanal numbers, and memory fine tuning. A slim trim beautiful A brand now Zonllti high ante handcraft.d color TV atoms. Super Video Rang, lunar. Sunshine Color Fictura Tuna, onclusivo -Color Demacutater circuitry, 6" twin.ton. speaker. 21,000 volts f,rj,w,$29995 $369 ?jn.w^39988 COLOR TV WANT BICTANOULAR SCRUM Stg 270 sq. In, ptdura tuba, rectangular screen, 26,000 volts, UHF-YHF. Wood walnut lo-boy. RCA VICTOR Sat Scroon, Wood Wains COLOR TV Frotter Firm Tap Quality RCA Victor Color TV In a handsomt I, walnut color cabinet, at a law price. Full 12 channel reception, lighted tuning panels, ann-snf fin# tuning control, 25,000 volt chassis slay set volume central, and much, much moral 227 sq. In. DUMONT 205 SQ. IN. COLOR TV Wood Walnut lo-Boy Console. The Glonmoro with 25,000 volts of pier tore power, with full 82 channel UHF/VHF tuner, auto, color monitor fidelity control and picture stabil. liar. Fush-pull, on-off volume control and complete 2-year warranty. *425 POST ABU TV UHF-VHF Tuner • Bedroom Slso • Compact 74-Square-Inch Scroon 0 Auto. Fringe lock circuit • Front Side Sound • stage IF amplifier. $9988 WESTINGHOUSI ALL SOLID STATI CONSOLE STEREO COMBINATION *229 Hess* »«n 5 Vmrs is Fnyt SOLID STATI STEREO COMBINATION O 75 Wans O Six Matched Speakers with FM-AM, FM. Stereo ladle stereo combination with leaanlflcont sound r< production. 75 watt solid st *449 *489 Hematic 4-spi diamond sty JET-SET INSTANT-ON PORTABLE TV Softer, dearer, easier to watch Hondsoma new trim shop#, with top controls. Illuminated pop-up channel numbers. No wait, no warm up. 172 sq. in. viewing area. Sensational buy. *130 ►95 1222. Hotpoint TOP-LOADING PORTABLE DISHWASHER largo family capacity, single ratting contrels wash, rinse and dry cycles with silvarwara bosket, shuts self off automatically. Re Mersey HHhotfioint Automatic Washer with tjj • • - Inside us eared I Fully ....---. I -------labs fata cycles, 2 to 14 pound loos special attochmonts, 3 • TePey *99 80 Stem Dsn., 1 teas to Fey. *169 Keivinatnf 2-DOOR, 14-FT. REFRIGERATOR FREEZER NO FROST THROUGHOUT Deluxe 2-door, with big 101-lb. top freezer, 4 full width fafrigarator shelves, 1 adjustable full width porcelain crispur, super storage doors, interior lighting, magnetic door gaskets. No. P649. *219 WESTINGH0USE NO FROST 14 FT. 2-Dr. Refrigerator Fretf-free always. Ilg 121-lb. freezer, full width vegetable crisper. Built-In egg storage. *229 §w :p?r ULjS M i^jsm gglKw Wmm Kelvin, ntor Giant 21.3 Cu. Ft. Frostproof F00DARAMA . REFRIGERATOR *t Ivory KiSftsaa rutl Site Inches FULL SATISFACTION GUARANTEED INSTANT CREDIT 3 YEARS TO PAY FRETTER’S Pontiac S. Telegraph Rd. Vi Mila South of Orchard! Lak§ Rd. FE 3-7051 FRETTER’S Southfield On Telegraph Read Just South sMZ Mils Rd, 358-2880 FRETTER’S Oakland 11 W. 14 NHn Read Opposite Oakland Mall 585-5300 •fqa Daily 15 «a •-Sunday 15 h \ THK PUJ^TIAC PRESS, WEDJNESDAV, DKCEMUKK la, 1967 ?J mmm LIKE SPORT SHIRTS THAT ARE SURE TO PLEASE THE HARD-TO-PLEASERS ON YOUR CHRISTMAS LIST And ng wonder, for our collection of sport shirts is as varied os it is big. We've sport shirts that are brightened-up, buttoned downed, wash -'n' wearable, permanently-pressed. All are in sizes small, medium, large and extra-large-—and here is just a sampling, (A) Permanently-pressed, ombre effect with two upper pockets. Green, blue or brown. $7. (B) Permanently-pressed woven plaids In green, blue or brown. $6. (O Machine washable wool-ond-nylon plaid In green, blue or grey. $9. (D) Hathaway's Durable Press regular collar in green, blue, navy or gold. $10. , (El Puritan's Ban-Lon cardigan with placed cable panels in front. Green, blue or gold. $16. (F) Puritan's Ban-Lon Hbbon knit, overlaid orv two-tone background. | ' ont wool c BP gtewmlaci gold/grey. 22.50. (H) Permonently-prefsed but- Green, blue or gold. $16. (G) Fly front wool cardigan mode jn Italy. Brown/beige, greW|>l0ck or tondown in assorted tattersall checks. $6. Striped sport shirt with solid mock turtleneck. Black/white, blue/white or gold/whit,e. $12. (J) Ribbed cardigan shirt-jac with long sleeves. Green, blue or gold. $15. (K) Puritan's washable wool plaids in green, blue, red or brovrfi. $14. (L) Washable wool with regular collar in tattersall, stripes or plaids. Green, It. blue, navy, rust or yellow. $16. (M) Full-fashioned Ban-Lon knit with mock turtleneck and long sleeves. Green, It. blue, navy, white, maize or cocoa! $8. Mail »nd.Phon* Orders <82-2200 Add 4%'Mleh. Saks Tex Our Poetise Moll Store Open Every Night till Christmas to 9 P.M. A-U THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13,1967 St Your Christmas Dollars Go Further at Sears Everything for Your Holiday Viewing Pleasure Christmas Gift SALE Saturday Last Day 295-sq. In. Viewing Area Consolette Color TV Versatile 23-in. diagonally measured picture TV can be used without legs as Table Model. Legs opt., extra., *388 117-sq. In. Viewing Area Portable Color TV Personal-size color TV with 15-in. S*.r. law Sri*, diagonally measured picture. Col- Aai» orguard, tinted picture tube, dipole * ^ M antenna. 282-gq. In. Viewing Area Silvertone Consolette TV Big Instant-start 22-in. diagonally SaeraUwMaa measured picture, plus powerful A Ann chassis for excellent reception even 8 I ^51®® in far fringe areas. 38-sq. In. Viewing Area Solid-State Portable TV Beautiful walnut finished plastic s.«r. ».tui.r cabinet has an 8-iri. diagonally UwPrk. measured picture. Tinted safety shield reduces glare. $0488 NO MONEY DOWN on Snare Easy Payment Plan NO* MONTHLY PAYMENTS Until Fab. 1, 1.68 One Year Tube and Parts Guarantee 90-Day Free Home Service Free home service on any Silvertone Console TV (90-day free in-store service on Portables) if any part proves defective within 90 days of Mle. Free replacement of any part nr tube (including the picture tube) which proves defective within one year. Service is extra after 90 days. You Can’t Do Better Than Sears Saors Radio and TV Dtp). "Satisfaction guaranteed or your money back" SEARS Downtow n Pontiac Phone FE 5-4171 You Can't Do Better Than Sears Stan TV & Radio D#p». One Year Parts Guarantee 90-Day Home Service frfce home service on any Silvertone Console Stereo if any part proves defective within *0 days of sale. Free replacement .of any part which proves defective within' one year (transistors, 5 years from date of sale). Service is extra after 90 days. 'Satisfaction guaranteed or your money back" SEARS Downtown Pontiac Phone FE 5-4171 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER : Your Christmas Dollars Go Further at Sears Everything for Your Holiday Listening Pleasure Sale Ends Saturday AM/FM Clock Radio Powerful Sttransistor AM/FM Soars Price Clock radios with new design cabinets in beige or white. Luminous-tip clock hands, snooze alarm. *34»9 Stereo Portable Phonos Solid-state changer is styled with Sears Price the teen in mind. Has two 514 in. speakers, one of which is removable. Has 9 in. turntable. *59” Save $41 Silvertone AM/FM Portable Radio* Regular $15.99 ’ll 97 Versatile portable comes in a dark green plastic cabinet. Has direct drive tuning. 2V4 in. speaker, whip-type FM antenna, and disc tuning diaL Save $3! Silvertone AM Portable Radios Regular $12.99 ?997 Compact 8-transistor radio comes in gift carton with earphone, battery, and carrying strap. 214 in. speaker available in 4 Colors. Has slide-rule tuning. Save $10! Tape Recorders Lightweight, battery-operated re- Regular $59.99 corder gives a maximum of recording flexibility. Has mike, battery level meter. The Perfect Family Gift... Silvertone Console Stereos Regular $319.99 $ 268 Contemporary style walnut veneer Regular $319.99..268.00 \ ' ' ^ No Money Down orfT&ars Easy Payment Plan You can choose from Contemporary, Mediterranean, or Early American styles. Whichever one you choose you can be sure it is crafted from only the finest veneers. Solid-state amplifier develops 75 watts of peak jpower through six speakers. Integrated circuits provide a more reliable performance. Has our Advance-Design changer, AM/FM, FM Stereo radio, and includes convenient tape playback jacks. Mediterranean style mahogany veneer, Regular ,$319.99....268.00 Flat Top Guitars "Country, Western" type guitars Soars Prica have birch bodies with high gloss walnut shaded top, back. 4-position fingerboard. $1597 Tape Cartridge Players Continuous 114 hr. playing 8-track Soars Price tape cartridge players with easy-on, a easy-off finger-touch push-in cart- $£wV|«t«/ Ut/ Automatic Monaural Phonos Ideal gift for teenagers! Compact Sears Price washable blue cabinet has large 5 )4 s\d\r7 inch speaker in lid. Power control shuts off automatically. A Zj MONEY DOWN on Sears Easy Payment Plan THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 191*7 Yrnrn a member of the poverty class, wants nothing more than a fire wagon for Christmas. It isn’t much, but he probably won’t get one. His father, an out-of-work West Virginia coal miner, gets $121 a month from the welfare department, and that has to stretch over six kids, a mother and an old family dog. Christmas in Appalachia HIS DOG STANDS GUARD - As the family dog stands watch, Richard Church slumps in a corner of his house in West Virginia. An epileptic and cross-eyed, he seldom leaves his home, which is unpainted and almosj unfurnished. Plastic sheets are nailed to the windows. The roof leaks. And coal' dust covers everything. AND EVANS' CHEROKEE SLIPPERS COME IN ALMOST EVERY SIZE and width, from 61A to 14. from A to EEE. They're made of fine saddle leather, with padded leather soles: long wearing and wonderfully comfortable. And we carry them in an extraordinary range of sizes (shown on the chart below); in rich mahogany brovvn. If finding his size in slippers has kept you from giving him one of the most appreciated Christmas gifts, see the Cherokee... at 9.95 Fire Wagon Is Unlikely Gift By TOM TIEDE NEA Staff Correspondent WELCH, W. Va. — A mile and a half into the hills off State Route 10 near here, 7-year-old Richard Church waits excitedly for Christmas Day. He wants a fire wagon. “Boy,” he says, “oh, boy, I can hardly wait.” IMPORTANT TO BOY But, then, a Are wagon is important to a boy, even i who has nothing else. boy And besides, shoes would hurt his feet, his hair would grow shaggy again, and a stocking over the door would very likely go empty. So, a fire wagon. “Oh, boy!” Will he get it? Probably not. Young Richard Church is one of the 34 million Americans who await the holidays {his year under the official government pronouncement of belonging to the poverty class . . . that is, a member of a family whose total Income is $3,000 or less each year. EARNS NOTHING J__________ In Richard’s case, his family earns nothing each year. His father, an out-of-work coal miner, gets $121 a month from the welfare department, and that has to stretch over six kids, a mother and aq old family dog. Take two or three meals a day for eight mouths, the rent, the electricity, enough clothing to keep the chill away ... and the rest of December’s $121 may not cover a fire wagon, not even a cheap one, which is the only kind under consideration. Richard’s mother, Patricia, 35, says the family will definitely celebrate Christmas. A GOOD MEAL She promises a tree, because they can be freely harvested from the immediate Appalachian hills. And she promises, with fdod-stamp aid, a good meal. But a fife wagon? “Well,” she shrugs, “we’ll see.” Actually, young Richard Church understands the imponderables here. And he tempers his wishes with knowing restraint. A kid who seldom gets anything he asks for is hardly n optimist. A kid like that Is suspicious of hope. E KNOWS And the boy is icily realistic anyway. He knows full well the way it is. In his time he has had most of life’s cold water tossed at him. x He is, for one thing, crosseyed. His right pupil turns decidedly inward. When he wants to see anything clearly, which is most of the time, he must cock his head to one side to get the correct focus. •% SIDE EFFECTS This sight problem itself isn’t so bad, perhaps, but the side effects are dangerous. The deformity has upset Richard's sense of balance and he often falls lor no reason . . . down the stairs, In the dirt, on the rocks. It happens daily. “Like to scare us to death,” his ifaf-ent admits. 1 Mrs. Church says a clinic doctor in Biuefield prescribed corrective lenses years ago. Buf she didn’t know where to get them. “So I never did.” ' TOO BUSY WORRYING f dually, getting the spectacles has never rated high priority in the Church family. Nobody really pays that much attention to Richard's eyes. Everybody is too busy worrying „ about the rest of hihi. He Is,” says the mother, “also an epileptic.” Richard is, in fact, a serious epileptic. He has a seizure almost daily. And virtually all of his waking hours are spent shaklr)0^0 ^ ^nsified but completely uncontrolled "Ha’ll Just be sitting there or something," says Mrs. Church, and then it’ll happen. He just goes to pieces. Ain’t nothing we can do for him at all.” HASN’T RETURNED Combined, Rktiaitf"' Church’* physical mlsiriei- have forced him into o shut-in's existence. He attended a preschool program two years ago bat ted himself out during a fit and hasn’t returned to class Today he seldom leaves his home, which is a half-century old, unpainted and almost unfurnished. Frankly, his wish is a selfish and impractical one. He needs other things worse. He needs shoes, for instance. He needs a haircut badly. He could even use a pair of stockings so that one might hang over the door Christmas eve. Plastic sheets are nailed to the windows. The roof leaks. A stain of coal dust covers everything . . . including Richard. DREARY DAYS His days are dreary and monotonous. Morning. Afternoon. Evening. All the same. Sleep. Wake up. Begin the whole thing over again. Mostly, the boy plays with whatever is available, which isn’t much. He runs around the rubbled yard without shoes. He likes to dig the ground with sticks. He sits on the porch. There is an old, woeful television set. , “He don’t do much," his mother says, “he needs something." In truth, Richard Church needs almost everything. Medical attention, balanced meals, education, decent clothing. But as of now, this Christmas, there is scant possibility of this classic case of privation getting any of them. Not even the fire wagon. HUGHES HATCHER SUFFRIN 1300 Twelfth Street. Detroit; Mich. 48216 Please send the following Cherokee slippers to: NAME.____________ ADDRESS_________ □ check □ money order □ C.O.D. □ charge to my account Please add 4% Michigan Salas Tax. OUANT_--------5 SIZE-______. QUANT.__________ SIZE.________ QUANT------- _ SIZE______,__ QUANT. ,________SIZE _ OUR PONTIAC MALL IE OPEN EVERY EVENING TILL CHRISTMAS TO $ P.NL SKCUINMMSE HAMILTON WASHERS and DRYERS NOW AT SPECIAL PRICES Hamilton . . . Washers and Dryers Whisper With the Quiet OF QUALITY WASHDAYS BECOME SO SIMPLE WITH THIS HAMILTON HELPMATE . . . Heavily soiled work clothes, diapers, Permanent Press garments, or any other type of fabric or load that is part of a normal washday can be handled automatically by this handsome Hamilton washer. You simply match the CYCLE SELECTOR to your wash load, dial the washing and rinsing program you want... and forget about itl •00 SERIES Dryer Ffatures • Exclusive Twin Air Stream drying system dries clothes quickly but gently • Seven Temperature settings give you ideal conditions for every fabric. The special cool down period preserves the newest permanent press fabrics • Sun-E-Day Ultra-Violet Lamp adds sweet smelling freshness to your clothes in any weather • Full 2 Year Warranty on all parts with a special 5 Year Warranty on the drum assembly- 13 .POUND CAPACITY • 8 POSITION PROGRAM e CONTROL MULTI-CYCLE • 3 WATER LEVEL SELECTOR e FABRIC SOFTENER DISPENSER. SENTRY DRYNESS CONTROL 4 7 TEMPERATURES e TWIN AIR STREAM DRYING e QUIET OPERATION) \ Consumers Power 333-7812 .U S. Air Toll: Who Is Right? Hanoi Exaggerating, Says Yank General SAIGON (AP) When Hanoi broadcasts that It has shot down 3V4 times as many planes as the United States admits losing, what is the answer? “They started of! exaggerating, and now they’re stuck with it,” says Brig, Gen. Winant Sidle, chief of information for the U.S. Command. * * * "We guarantee the figures we’re giving out Hanoi has been exaggerating for two years. They can’t very well go back. I don’t have the slightest idea why they do it It is so far removed from reality, it doesn’t make any sense.” There is a possibility of duplication in Hanoi’s reporting of U.S. planes shot down, he added. SEEKING FORMULA “For example,” be said, “one gunner shoots at a plane from the east of Hanoi, another from the west and another from the north,.and they aD turn 11 in." Studies have been made seeking the formula the North Vietnamese use. ! % ♦ ★ “We tried taking the duplicating factor into consideration put that didn’f work out,” Sidle said. “We tried all kinds of complicated devices and none of them worked out” Gen. Jammie M. Philpott, deputy chief of staff for intelligence for the U.S. 7th Air Force says: “They overclaim.” U.S. REPORTS Radio Hanoi has claimed North Vietnamese gunners have shot down 2,607 American warplanes since the United States bombing campaign began in February 1965. The U.S. Command’s reports last week listed 758 American planes shot down. “Four surface to air missiles may be shot at one plane and it is shot down, but they claim two or three,” Philpott theorized. “The flow of information and the recording of information is fast. There is no time to analyze.” ★ ★ it Philpott said the United States sometimes is trapped the same way. During raids on the Phuc Yen airfield in October, he recalled, first reports from pilots Indicated that 17 MIG interceptors has been destroyed on foe ground. This information was passed on to news media but analysis of reconnaissance photographs showed four MIGs were destroyed and eight damaged on foe ground. Astronomer: Mars Probe Is Imperative Gape Kennedy (upd -One of the nation’s foremost astronomers says it is of foe utmost importance that the United States reinstate plans for exploration of foe planet Marr. ★ ★ ★ Dr. Fred L. Whipple, director of foe Smithsonian Institution’s astrophysical observatory, told a recent meeting of foe American Astronautical Society in New York that it is imperative that man search the planet for evidence of life. Recent congressional cuts in the space agency’s current budget virtually killed the Voyager project that was to land unmanned spacecraft on t h e Red Planet in 1173 and 197S to look for life. “We very badly need a soft-lander on Mars to find out if there is any life there,” Whipple said in an interview. it it it If there is, he said it would show that the life force In foe universe “must be, immensely powerful and practically omnipresent wherever conditions are remotely favorable.” MARINER PROBE America’s Mariner A probe two years ago found that foe Martian atmosphere Is only about 1 per cent aa thick as Earth’s and that the planet closely resembles foe moon. But Whipple said that, even though Mars Is far more inhospitable than had been anti-cipatoi^ “We mast not be discouraged by the practical elimination of possible sentiment forms existing there.” “It is til the utmost Importance that we reinstate our original plans for continuing exploration of this planet," he said. THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1967 A—17 Open Sunday 12 to 6 p.m. Shop Every Evening Till 9 p.m. look your holiday best with. SOFA gifts from Peoples huge selection of colors, fabrics and styling . * • all for immediate delivery! Beautiful Tuxedo Foam rubber sofa comploto with bolsters in smart coordinated traditional fabrics. Exquisite hand - tailored deep - tufted back, wide selection of colors .Beautiful hand-tufted frame top Italian Provincial sofa in a smart •aUction of fabrics, with reversible foam cushions. 3-cushion supported plastic vinello sofa, hand - tufted back, reversible foam cushions. Ideal for any room, don er recreation room. •ale *249 Elegant foam rubber Tuxedo sofa, deluxe foam rubber cushions complete with bolsters. Exquisite traditional fabrics in a wide color choice. ...for more of everything for. Christmas Oversixe 3-cushion sofa with foam reversible cushions, authentic stylo Colonial print fabrics. Maple wood trim on wings and arms. PEOPLES OUTFITTING CO. Telegraph & Square Lake Roads utoTpT Miracle Mil. Shopping Center ?nSiV95P ALSO DOWNTOWN DITROIT • WISTSIDK • NORTHWEST e EASTS IDE o SOUTHGATE e ANN ANION • FORT HURON A—18 THE POjNTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1967 Rider on Pay Bill Was Sneaked In Dem Wins Ban on Nepotism WASHINGTON (AP) - Anl Iowa congressman has won his six-year fight for passage of legislation to ban nepotism in the! federal government— from the! smallest post office to Congress and the White House. Rep. Neal Smith, a Democrat serving his fifth term, says the] power of federal officials including judges to hire relatives or get jobs for them in other federal agencies is unfair to other joH seekers. "I don’t think the government gets its money's worth when lyou I Smith have that sort of thing,” [Smith said in an interview.! “There are exceptions—Some of these relatives work hard—but| [the bad overcomes the good.” Smith’s antinepotism proposal was a rider to a bill raising the pay of federal workers and hiking postal rates. Congress passed the measure Tuesday and sent it to President Johnson, who’s expected to sign it. The measure will not affect relatives already working for congressmen and other officials. The 47-year-old Smith's strat- egy in getting his rider through reflected an absence of enthusiasm for it in a Congress that, according to a recent Associated Press survey, includes some 50 members with relatives bn their payrolls. After it appeared his plan would die quietly in committee, he proposed it as a rider during routine debate on the postal-pay bill. Only about 80 of the 434 House members were on the floor and it went through. DOWNTOWN PONTIAC Offers FREE PARKING ON THE COURTHOUSE LOT (CORNER SAGINAW and HURON) Furnished by the Following Merchants: ARTHUR’S 48 N. Saginaw St. OSMUN’S MEN’S WEAR 51 N. Saginaw St. BOBETTE SHOP 16 N. Saginaw St. GOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP 51 W. Huron St. CONN’S CLOTHES 73 N. Saginaw THE PONTIAC PRESS 48 W. Huron St. Smith said some absent opponents of the plan weren’t happy when they found out what he did. “But if they were interested in amendments they should have been there,” he added. Once the rider was in the bill, congressional sources said, it would have been embarrassing for any member to fight it. 'About half the relatives Working in Congress do their work; half don’t earn their pay,” Smith said. Detroit Poverty Official Hits Del Rio's Subpoena DETROIT (UPI)—State Rep. James Del Rio sought to publicize his own personal views about Detroit’s poverty program when he signed a subpoena against two top city poverty officials ordering them to turn over financial records, one of the officials has charged. Del Rio, a Detroit Democrat and chairman of the Michigan House committee which is investigating the administration of the Mayor’s Committee for Human Resources Development (HRD), Monday signed a subpoena against Richard Simmons, acting director of HRD, and Bernard Klein, city ''controller. He said his committee wanted to find out what had happened the $53 million spent in the Detroit poverty program, and charged that “stalling tactics” had been used in turning over documents to an investigating agency. In a letter to the Michigan House of Representatives yesterday, Simmons said Del Rio seems to have shifted “from a previously announced desire to [investigate numerous com- it ennew ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY * Action Complaints. Dip for Police in Waterford plaints regarding irregularities in the local administration of the poverty program to publicize his personal views about Detroit’s Community Program." ★ * * Simmons called on Del Rio to substantiate or retract his charges, and said that the rec-| ords and files of HRD are open' for public inspection, since it isj a public agency. “I would only be too glad to| meet with the House or any ofi its committees at any time,’ Simmons said. The Waterford Township Po- ice Department investigated three fewer complaints last month than the previous November, however, complaints through 11 months this year are far ahead of last year’s total for the same period. Last month, township police investigated 817 complaints, it eluding 147 larcenies, 77 malicious destruction of property reports, 56 break-ins and 13 automobile thefts, according to a report accepted by the Township Board last night. Through 11 months this year, the department has investigated 8,646 complaints compared with 8,700 for the same period last year. The complaints already have exceeded the 1966 total of 9,571, the report indicated. Sr Sr . ★ Arrested last month were 77 adults and 25 juveniles. Police cited drivers for 86 traffic violations, 78 involving adults and eight juveniles. Dog warden complaints investigated last month totaled 381. Eleven citations were issued by the animal welfare department and 120 dogs were transported to the Oakland County Animal Shelter. The Blue Danube River | mostly muddy brown with occasional patches of gray and igreen. | Town Rallies Behind Fake Doctor f DALLAS, Tex. W»— The man who was a Texas lumber town's .only doctor for more than five months — until jailed an ex-convict imposter last week—says he is astonished at the way townspeople have rallied around him. “I’m amazed by these people, by their faith in me and their desire to help,” said Freddie Brant, alias Dr- Reid L. Brown. He referred to the residents of Groveton, who have circulated a petition urging for lenience in prosecuting Brand on perjury and forgery charges. They have talked of raising money to send him to medical school so he can become a legitimate physician. wouldn’t be accepted by any medical school because of my prison record,” the crew-cut Brant, 44, said at a news conference Tuesday in the office of his lawyer, Emmett Colvin. He posted 910,000 bond at Kaufman, Tex., earlier in the day. “I’d rather they’d donate any money they collect to the hospital fund," he said. During his stay at Groyeton in eastern Texas, he helped organize a drive for a hospital in the town of 1,20b. The nearest doctor was more than 30 miles distant before‘Brant moved into an abandoned clinic in July. Brant said he’d like to return to Groveton when free of his legal entanglements—as an X-ray or laboratory technician, for which he is qualified, rather than as a make-believe physician. “It will feel wonderful to work again without fear of something happening,” he said, adding that it “was a great relief” to be found out. The charges stem from hiy posing as Dr. Reid L. Brown from 1964 to last May at Terrell State Hospital in Terrell) Tex., Where he worked as a physician taking psychiatric training. MODERNIZE your KiTCHiN Mwmm FE 8-9251 (No obligation) 328 N. Perry, PONTIAC This lush looking tree will keep its fresh cut look ... for years! 21.99 7Vi ft. ARTIFICIAL SCOTCH PINE R.oliltic PVC plastic bristles gives tree that 'outdoor' look, steel wire ranc es Stic into green trunk. Easy to set up, fake down. Complete with stand, pine cones. AVa' JIue Spruee-.- '• -----’■’"“'"Blue Spruce . CHARGE IT! . .$29.99 PENNEYS MIRACLE MILE STORE HOURS: 9:30 A.M. to 9:30 P.M. ’til CHRISTMAS A Smart Way to Play/SantaNext December Get This Beautiful • SANTA CLAUS BANK 99' A/ regular $2.50' value, ifourtfor only 99c when you open your 1968 ChrUtmae Club at Pontiac , Stato! 1SST The Bank On The “GROW” Be one of those wise Santas who are already looking ahead to next year. . . Stop in and join Pontiac State Bank's New CHRISTMAS CLUB . . . Open one large enough to care for next year's holiday shopping and those year-end bills, too. There’s a Size Club for Everyone $ 25.00 Club-Deposit . .. .50 Weekly 50.00 Club—Deposit ....... 1.00 Weekly 100.00 Club-Deposit..2.00 Weekly 150.00 Club-Deposit..3.00 Weekly 250.00 Club-Deposit ....... 5.00 Weekly 500.00 Club-Deposit .......10.00 Weekly Pontiac State— Bank !2 Convenient Offices... Mein Office: Saginaw at Lawrence.., Open Daily I A M. Member Federal Depoilt Inturanee florparalton Where Each Depoiltor ' /« Note insured to $15,000 by F.D.I.C. THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 18, 196T A—10 VI* SmdtjAcartm Gwm ^ocuJtm (w For men who Wont the right time of day, give him the Astronaut Accutron for HIS Christmas hour, if you want him to think of you every minute after Christmas Day. The unvarying watch ... Remember, it's guaranteed up to one minute a month. From $125.. Charge • Layaway Michigan Bankard DOWNTOWN PONTIAC - CORNU OF HURON AND SAOINAW STRUTS FI 1-02*4 Another on NY Mayors Team Resigns NEW YORK (AP) -M*yc BUY!SELL! TRADE! USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! Whenhe took office Mityor John V. Lindsay recruited a breed of bright young men he called “urban-and assigned them key posts in his administration. But their turnover has been high: In less than 24 months 10 top Lindsay appointees have resigned-some under fire, some in anger, some with regret and some with relief. The latest to leave, Water Commissioner James L. Marcus, one o! Lindsay’s top political advisers, resigned Tuesday while the district attorney’s office was Investigating a complaint about his activities as an investment counselor before he joined the city administration. Marcus, slated for a top job as head of the Environmental Protection Administration, one of the mayor’s proposed super-agencies, fit the Lindsay specifications perfectly. LONG HOURS At the time of his nationwide talent search, close aides said the mayor was looking for a “Kennedy-type” administration, meaning “young, brainy and vigorous.” Selection, they said, was based on a man’s ability to work long hours and his absence of political affiliation. Marcus, the 37-year-old son-I in-law of John Davis Lodge, former governor of Connecticut was graduated from the Vniver sity of Pennsylvania, spent several years in business, joined Lindsay as a mayoral assistant and began a steady climb to the top of the Lindsay team. , His surprise resignation was announced as political leaders speculated on the status of Health Services Administrator j Howard Brown, who is in the hospital with a case of infectious hepatitis. It has been rumored thall Brown had also handed in his' !resignation, but Lindsay said Tuesday he would make no comment until Brown, leaves the hospital. Lindsay was initially pleased by the success of his talent search. At the end of his first year in office, he said one of his major accomplishments f had been the installmeitf of “competent young men—the 'urbanists', that hew breed of nonpoliticai government specialists—in key il positions of i bility and judgment...’ However, the rash of resignations since the Republican mayor's appraisal—seven since February—drew sharp criticism Tuesday from City Councilman Edward L. Sadowsky. “The first requirement for the successful operation of agencies is for administrators to stick with their job,” the Queens Democrat said. “What appears to be a precipitous departure of top executives in recant months does the dty no good and can effectively paralyze the operations of these agencies.” First to leave the Lindsay team was Sanitation Commissioner Joseph F, Periconi, who resigned his $30,000-a-year in November after a probe into alleged shakedowns and promotion payoffs in his department, the 56-year-old sanitation chief was not personally mentioned in any charges. Within days after Periconi’s departure was announced, Lindsay had two other resignations on his desk—from Deputy May- Robert Price and Press Secretary Woody Klein. Price, 33, Lindsay's closest political adviser ahd manager of his four successful congressional campaigns and his mayoral campaign, left his protege to become an executive with the Dreyfus Fund, Inc. BUY, SELL, TRADE - - - USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! ft Let Penneys Be Your Santa! enncui iaiav/b cidct nnAIITV ™ ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY fc The gift he'd, like in duplicate! Towncraft Penn-Prest dress shirts . carefree and tailored to flatter BROADCLOTH: Dacron* polyester/cotton tailored With the Kingdor spread collar, long sleeves and trim, tapered body. Never needs ironing . . . just wash and tumble dryl White.** OXFORD WEAVE: Fortrel* polyester/cotton long point buttpndown collar style with tapered body and long sleeves. Keeps its fresh look wash after wash, wear after wear. White, PENNEYS MIRACLE MILE 3.98 Charge Itl him ©srnmt’a far Christinas Baby, it’s cold outside. And •the cold weather is just beginning . . . it’ll be even colder after Christmas. Think of that. Think of him. Think about a Zero King Corduroy coat. Warm and comfortable — fully lined with Orion acrylic pile and pile collar. Sort of warms your heart just to think about it. Thick and Thin Corduroy Wale in comfortable, all-weather Colors: Antelope Tan and Cocoa Brown. Sizes . 36 to 46, just $45. See Osmun’s wide selection of weather-proof coats. If you can’t give him warm weather, you can at least give him Osmunds. a part of Christmas since 1931 SMUN’S STORES FOR MEN Sc YOUNG MEN . FREE PARKING at ALL STORES I Downtown Pontiac Optn tvtry Night 'til 9 I Tel-Huron Confer In Pontiac OpRn (very Night 'til 9 I Tech Plata Center in Warren Optn Ivtry Nl|ht 'Ml » THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1967 Hudson’s is open nights till Christmas Wk Reflections of her: from the lighted make-up mirror in travel case to the magnificent mirror tray to hold all her perfumery, here’s a complete vista of gifts. Come find these and many more in Hudson’s Aisles of Beauty — 1st Floor, Pontiac; also Downtown Detroit, Northland, Eastland and Westland. Or shop conveniently by phone. I. Mirror-compact has regular and magnifying mirror-even converts to stand. 1.50 10. Lighted vanity mirror reverses to magnifying, packs easily for travel. U.L. approved. 111. "Extra hours to Christmas Shop; Hudson's Pontiac open till 9 p.m. Monday through Saturday 16. Cushioned mirror tray in an elegant shape. 12.54 17. Clear lucite hand mirorr reverses regular to magnified. 12 it’s Christmas Mine at H XT ID S O N ’ S 18, 1967 B—l MRS. ARNOLD HILLERMAN Women's Society of Bethany Baptist Church, 1 p.m. Annual Christmas tea with program by pastern Junior High School Bell Ringers. Woman’s Society of Christian Service, St. James Methodist Church, 7:80 p.m. Christinas pro* gram with Mrs. Reid Straub as soloist and also group carol singing. Twins' Mothers’ Club of Oakland County, 8 p.m. Pontiac State Hospital, employes' lounge. Regular meeting. FRIDAY Areme chapter, Order of Eastern Star No. 503, 8 p.m. Roosevelt Masonic Temple. Annual Christmas party and gift exchange. BOPOFR Club, 9 p.m. Birmingham Country Club. Formal Christmas dance with music by the ‘London Fog.’ Midnight breakfast to be served. Mrs. Tobin Rote is chairman. Mrs. Hillerman Keeps 'Sew' Busy By JANET ODELL Pontiac Press Women’s Editor Initiative and independence have always been the hallmark of Americans. These traits have not been lost and anyone who thinks they have should make the acquaintance of Myrtle Hillerman. For over 25 years, Mrs. Hillerman has operated her own tailoring shop in Pontiac. This spunky little woman says she’ll never retire. She believes that Working every day keeps her from growing old. ★ ★ ★ Southern Illinois was her birthplace and she lived on a farm and In small towns until her graduation from high school. All the women in her family sewed so it was natural that she learn the skill. Everyone made her clothes at home in those days. CLAN ARRIVES Guest Conductor Is Scheduled at Detroit Symphony Sergiu Comissiona, recently appointed music director of the Goteborg Symphony Orchestra, makes his first appearance as guest conductor of the Detroit Symphony Orchestra this Thursday and Saturday. Concert times at Ford Auditorium is 8:30 p.m. * * * One of Myrtle’s sisters had come to Pontiac to live and Myrtle came for a visit that was to become permanent. Eventually, a number of brothers and sisters followed them here. For a while, she ran a multigraph for General Motors Corporation. But she left that job to take up her first love—sewing. She was with Barnetts’ Clothing for 12 years, resigning only when she opened her own shop. Sydney Barnett was her first customer. : Freedom of work and hours is what appeals to her as an jqHpindent business woman. She does both altering of men’s and women’s clothing and makes new garments. She is training a grandniece who helps her weekends and who expects to pack her sewing machine when she goes to college next fall. W ★ 'fc- ■ For nearly 50 years Myrtle has been married to Arnold Hillerman; they will celebrate their golden anniversary in April. The couple has a daughter, two grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. Holding a full time job doesn’t stop Mrs. Hillerman from participating in the civic affairs of Pontiac. She was president of the Pontiac Federation of Women’s Clubs from 1858-19160.' At that time, the Pontiac Citizens Committee on Youth was formed and she became a member. This is a post she still holds.; she is in her second year as president of the group. She is still on the Federation board. She has been on the board of the Pontiac Symphony Orchestra since It was formed. The first edition of “Who’s Who of American Women’’ lists Myrtle Hillermap. What does Myrtle Hillerman do if and when an hour of leisure presents itself? She does needlepoint. Comissiona was bom in Bucharest, Rmnania in 1929. His musical training /included violin, chamber music, theory and composition plus special training in conducting. From 1959 until this season, he was conductor knd musical director of the Haifa Sytaphony Orchestra. PROGRAM Comissiona’s program will include Ravel’s complete music for the ballet “Daphnls and Chloe,” with chorus. The Wayne State University Choral Union, conducted by Malcolm Johns, will participate, in conjunction wittt the Centennial Celebration of the University. Malcolm Johns is associate professor of niusic at Wayne State University, and is organist and choir master of Grosse Potato Memorial Church. * * * * The 128-voice Choral Union is primarily devoted to performing large choral works with orchestra. Hie other work performed will be Stravinsky’s “Petrouchka.” Three Matinees Open to Public The \ John Fernald Company of the Meadow Brook Theatre will open three matinee performances of “Charley’s Aunt’’ to the public. The play begins Friday and continues through Jan. 14. Managing director David Bishop said student matinees scheduled for Dec. 28, 27 and 28 have been opened to the public because of school Christmas vacations and heavy popular demand for tickets to the delightful farce. Tickets to the Christmas holiday matinees, which begin at 1:30 p.m., are being sold a* $3 on an unreserved-seat basis. Evriing performances are presented at 8:15 p.m. on Wednesdays through Saturdays, and at 8:30 p.m. on Sundays. Exchange certificates for tickets to productions at the Meadow Brook Theatre are now available for use as gifts. Company manager Donald Britton said the Theatre has prepared special, attractive gift certificates to meet increasing demand for Christmas and other occasions. “Many individuals and businesses have requested a convenient way to five theatre tickets,’’ Britton said. “Itto difficult to give actual tickets,” he explained, “because they must be chosen by toe giver in advance for specific performances.” With the new exchange certificates, the recipient of the gift can choose any performance of any play. He simply pre*. aents bis gift certificate at the box office in return for tickets of his choice. Gift certificates can be validated for enything from a single ticket to hundreds of tickets, or for season tickets, «nd in any price range. Fop gift information, write or call Meadow Brook Theatre, Oakland Ual> vanity. , v- f \ Pontiac Prm Photo by IdwiN II. Noblo Previewing decorations for the first city-wide Christmas dance sponsored by Porttmq Area Council of Beta Sigma Phi are Mrs. Earl A. Kreps, Sylvan Lakii who is council president (left) and Mrs. Russell C, Perkins, South Sharon Street. Cochairmen for the Saturday event at Bay Pomte Country Club are Mrs. Robert F. Schmidt and Mrs. Robert Ryeeon. .. Teen Manners Sometimes Vary From Adult's Pontiac BPW Club Hears Yule Program By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: My husband works in an administrative group. They are all highly educated people. In searching for new approaches to work, they bandy such terms as “creativity,” “sensitivity” and “relating” to one another. My husband says it is tiresome and ludicrous. Not only does this ■' ABBY require special meetings, they also retreat to some dude ranch where there is a bar, pool, fine meals and overnight accommodations to relate to each other even better. Left over spouses are not included, so we sit home for days, waiting for them to finish up all the relating they can’t seem to accomplish in town at the office. I think it’s admirable to organize such outings for the unmarrieds to help lead them to closer interpersonal relationships with each other, but my poor husband gets fed up with all this nonsense. He telephones to tell me how bored he is, and frequently he comes borne early if he hasn’t driven out with someone else. I asked him what would happen if he flatly refused to go. What do you think, Abby? FROSTED IN TUCSON DEAR FROSTED: And what did he say? If the whole business is as tiresome and ludicrous as he says it is, why doesn’t he flatly refuse to go and find out? WWW DEAR ABBY: My teen-aged daughter is convinced she is ugly, and she is right. The sad part of it is', she does it to herself. She is a very bright girl, and God gave her a pretty face, but she ruins her appearance by wearing her hair in an unruly mop and letting her posture go. I have told her if she would cut off half that mop and take some time for The annual Christmas brunch of Pontiac Business and Professional Women's Club was held Sunday at Devon Gables. Vera Bassett, Mrs. E. C. Carlson and Margaret Harths took part in a seasonal program of song and story. Guests were Mrs. George Campbell, Janet and Mary HeiticH, Mrs. Madeline Vick, Charrie Peterson, Ethel Bassett, Delores Ellis, Mrs. A. C. FuUen-wide and Lillian Davidson. Chairman was Mrs. John Buchanan assisted by Bonnie Davidson, Mrs. Lola Sandage, Mary Pauli, Grace Heltsch, Josephine Seeley, Julia Dimond and Margaret Norths. By ELIZABETH L. POST Dear Mrs. Post: I have always been taught that a gentleman gets off a bus first, turns and helps his lady companion off for fear of her falling. I was shocked to see a teen-ager on a bus almost knock her date down so she could get off the bus first. Then she stood on the street and held out her hand as if she were helping him. I think this teen-ager was extremely wrong. Teen-agers read your column and I hope your answer will straighten out some of these discourtesies. — Paula Glinn. Dear Paula: You are right that an adult gentleman precedes a lady down steps and turns to help her as she follows. BUT — a teen-age girl rarely needs such assistance. The youngsters you saw undoubtedly thought they were observing good manners when he let her go ahead of him. Correct behavior must he taught from an early age, but it sometimes varies to fit the circumstances. It is difficult to say where to draw the line between what is right for youngsters and what is right for adults, but the child who is taught to base his manners on thoughtfulness and consideration will change his customs to adapt to his growing up. When he reaches the age where his date needs assistance, he will — If he has been taught to be aware of such things — undoubtedly act in such a way as to provide it. \ PMtliM Prill PIMM The Christmas feeling prevaued at Tuesday’s annual holiday luncheon of the Pontiac PTA Council. From left, Mrs. Willis Schnekenburger of Opdyke Road and Mrs. Robert Petty of Alberta Street, both Pontiac Township, examine xme bf the festive center-pieces for the event in Joslyn Avenue Presbyterian Church. Is He Afraid or Just Fooling You? Let Mate 'Relate' Own exercise to strengthen her abdominal muscles and her ankles each day she would be attractive, but she doesn’t listen to me. Should I continue to nag and insult her? Or should I let her face the insults of the outside world? LOVING MOTHER DEAR MOTHER: Leave her alone. If she is as bright as you say she is, she will soon realize she is losing out (if indeed she is) because of her appearance, and 'she will do something about it. ★ ★ ★ DEAR ABBY: I am trying to plan my daughter’s wedding, and my prob-lem is that her fiance has too many parents. His mother was times and his father was times. They have remained with ail their ex-mates, and not that, there are half-sisters and brothers and stepchildren galore, not to mention grandparents on all sides. The other night my daughter started counting them and she quit af 48. If I invite all these folks to the wedding there, won’t be room for anybody else. Where does one draw the line? How can we tactfully get this message across to my daughter’s fiance? MOTHER OF THE BRIDE DEAR'MOTHER: Allow your daughter’s fiance “X” number of guests, and let him invite whomever he wishes. LIVE MODERN Hare's an exquisite Modem bedroom grouping designed to fit the modem budget Yule Greens Market Set by Waterford Unit A Christmas Greens Market will be held by the members of Milford Branch of the Woman's National Farm and Garden Association Friday from 10 a.m, to 8 p.m. Wreaths, swags, door and table decorations will be on sale along with unusual gifts for children and adults. Baked goods will also be available at the qvent which is being held in the new Masonic Temple in Milford (formerly the Methodist Church.) • Beautiful Triple Dnutr with matching Framed Mirror • Majestic 5 Drawer Chest with dovetailed center' guided, dust proofed drawer construction. • Deluxe Matching Panel Bed in twin or full tin $199 Sima? af laftraattta 1716 S. Telegraph Rd. 334-4593 Open 9 to 9 Mon. thru Hat., Between Miracle Mile and Orchard Lake Rd. THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 18, 1967 Check for Stains Fresh stains are always more easily removed than old stains. Red Quads Born MOSCOW (AP) — The wife of j Russion village ^tractor driver has given birth to healthy quad- Make it a rule to.check linens and children's garments before ^ Anna Korotneva, who has putting them into the clothes [ one other child, gave birth to hamper and treat the stains two boys and two girls in the while they are relatively fresh: village of Sergiyevsk, near Kuy- ..TT.'..,,.,—.--------<---------<- byshev, 500 miles southeast of J Moscow and “all four bab! ~ are feeling fine,” Tass added. SEW SIMPLE By Eunice Farmer Make Your Appointment' Now! PERMANENT and HAIRSTYLE Tinting-Bleaching Cutting IMPERIALS 158 Auburn Ave. Park Free FE 4-2878 Edyth Stenton, owner A handy way to quickly find the scarf you choose to wear) each day is to mount a strip of foam plastic on a closet wall or door, and pin the scarves to the strip from one corner. They will be easy to see and choose from. at Yule Bazaar Dear Eunice Farmer, My daughter loves the long bodice dresses with the circular yj,e annual Christmas bazaar skirts. However, she isn’t too thin, and they are usually cut too'0f the Azteca Auxiliary will take full to be becoming. Is there any way the extra fabric can be pJacc pyjday from 5 to 9 p.ih. taken out before I cut the skirt? ' ■ in the cafeteria of Eastern Juo- Mrs. L.R. jor jjigh School. ; Typical Mexican fare will be could be used for all served durin* those hours or may be purchased to be taken home. Tamales are a Christmas j tradition of Mexico and will be [available for s n a c k s or takeouts. Also for sale will be the pinatas shown in the accompanying picture. i Dear Mrs. L-R-: This isn’t a difficult adjustment m 0% m • "T* i JIIIB .1W.II • • gUIIVWt w^M^MBaisivsia niiU vwwiu **ov Scarf Storing 7/p circular Skirts to reduce the width at the lower edge. 12.-10 To Reduce Widtti of Skirl" The pinata is made by gluing a covering of papier mache over Ian inflated baloon. When dry, the ballon is pricked and witti-drawn. The outside is-decorated with crepe paper. Candy and small favors are dropped inside. When a lucky hit is made by a blindfolded player, a show- Fold your pattern in several places on the skirt at even er 0f treats is his reward, intervals. Pin a tuck resembling a dart in the paper pattern', be- Purchasers must provide their ginning with approximately half inch at the lower cut edge and 0wn sticks, which can be dec- tapering to nothing at the hipline. The shorter the skirt, the less orated with crepe paper stream- you will fold out of each tuck or dart. ers in keeping with the festive w w * spirit.7' Articles for home decoration Dear Eunice Farmer, will also be on sale. I had a rather disastrous thing happen to a piece of velvet Mfrs- R_u1ben, F,ore® °,LN.or^ fabric. I bought it some time ago and didn’t use it at that time. Sanford Street, is president of I When 1 got it out to make, it had many creases in it. I placed it he gnoup, *^jP^ose w to face down on a turkish towel and steam pressed it. Now it looks irnProve the imagq.of the M l- worse than ever. What, if anything, can I do? Mrs. M.W. can segment Of the population and stimulate interest in community affairs. Dear Mrs. M.W.: | Proceeds of the bazaar will There are only two ways velvet should be pressed unless you, he added to the Auxiliary’s are a professional. The first is simply steaming the area to be building fund. Meetings pressed and brushing up the nap as it dries. The second is to use I held presently in the home of a velvet needle board for pressing seams etc. tbe president.__________ This board Is covered with tiny wires, and when the fabric is placed right side down over the board, you may press with the| /\ Lora© PoCK6t .steam iron since ttfc tiny wires protect the fabric. This makes a [wonderful gift, even if you only use it once or twice a year, it can £qj. |_jff|g PJckuDS save a garment and is excellent for heavy napped fabrics as well. r The ’’pinata” a traditional Christmas decoration of Mexico, holds candy and small favors. This version is 'made of papier mache. A hit by a blindfolded player results in a shower of sweets. Mrs. Guadalupe Sanchez Of Palomas tartlM taM Photo ky Row WlRtw- Street, Wolverine Lake, holds the pinata while Mrs. Raul Ochoa of Boston Street prepares to swing. Pinatas will be sold at the Christmas bazaar of the Azteca Auxiliary Friday in Eastern Junior High School. Club Hears Chorus in Superb Program Miss Spain Selects Satin I would suggest you take the fabric to a dry cleaners and see A floor-length gown of white [satin featuring sweetheart neck-, line was chosen by Eva Delores By BERNICE ROSENTHAL one given by the chorus two 5^ for her Saturday nuptials P 0 n t i a c Tuesday Musicale weeks ago with the Pontiac jwjth yernon Orval Crowe Jr. mi Make a large pocket in your' if they can save it for you. I wouldn’t suggest any more home cleaning apron to hold those . . - n. remedies. After this, whenever you purchase velvet, roll it im- "’any sm®” °dds and ends that p . . . f y p y , mediately into eight or nine inch folds, and pin the selvages to- have to be 8athe™d up from BETTER PERFORMANCE | The bride, daughter of the se- gether with large safety pins and hang it from a hanger. This ev er,;room whie you are rh . Under the familiar baton of its ni°r Charles Spains of Summit will keep the fabric in excellent condition until you are ready straightening up. ... „ own conductor, and with the ac- Street, completed her ensemble for it. Such things as buttons, bobby! With Christine Gaensbauer as_____. . . 9! u . HHH . . . pins, marbles, crayons, or small its director, the chorus was as- SKPSvSWtlg , toys that .the children have left sisted by guest artists Betey^l j ’ ... p811.. ., Between wearings, you may wish to hang your garment in Ion the floor. They are quickly [Fitzgerald, violinist and Sandra- tenderness and clarity than the bathroom and steam it, by running hot water in the bathtub placed in this pocket to be put'Myers, organist. ’ j performance ter’s maid of honor with brides- and allowing it to penetrate the velvet Brush the ,nap slightly away later when you are in the Soloists from within the groupU diction'was clearer and the maids, Pamela Gromer, Geor- with a flower, sequin headpiece holding a shoulder veil and carried white and blue carnation^. Deborah Spain was her sis- as it dries and it will look pew with each wearing. I room where they belong. included Marilyn' Chapman, Phyllis Gehman and Murifel . [Mercer, sopranos, and Dorothy. w w |Pelton,,flautist.^ ; | Marilyn Chapman, who sang It ™ ertrttfy fmt ^ 1.™ F M iharknpvp.d nropram. and the 0 ^ ? blending of voices was 8>a wi,80n and flower 8»rls. S®"-........... dra and Patti Spain. MEN Gary Crowe was his brother’s best man. They are the sons of unhackneved nroKram and the aays nuuVe.’ ■ ®‘,*UU1U,the senior Veriion Crowes of absence ot thePusual carols was “"1 tone^aiJd^x lTubbs Road' Ushers **”; K*n' a challenge to the musicianship " ‘ d Ineth Karas Jr., Burtls and Ben- and spiritual interpretation of “jL "!P. I?V& - ....__________ _|nie Crowe and Edward Gromer. director and chorus. In a lighter vein were a,, Ralph Vaughn Williams’ con- Foll°wing £• church Parlors temporary “Magnificat” was the .f. ^ UnSheDherdirccep^on b-each Road nn Z nroffram: nn^ckgromd, ‘ RwUp Shepherd Churchi the p - left for a southern honeymoon. Use Bias Tape for Torn Pockets Employes Given a Vacation Gift high point on the program, one d ^Swedish Dancecarol.’ could not help but compare yes- Th was climaxed| terday’s performance with thel^ Bfxe*rs ..Agnus Dei,” which featured Muriel Mercer in [the solo voice part. VIOLIN SOLO | The spiritual violin solo was artistically played by Betsy) PORTLAbfD, Ore. UF> — Just Fitzgerald, who gave one of herlin case an employe's wife hap-When the top corners of a rare solo performances. H e r pens to miss an item or two on pocket tear into the material of beautiful tone and deep under-the family's vacation checklist, a dress or apron, use a matching standing of the i n s t r u m e n t Omark Industries hag come up color bias tape for mending, should be heard more often. , (with a novel backstopping idea. Stitch the tape flat all around An organ interlude consisting! Before leaving on vacation the pocket. This neatly covers of “Swiss Noel" by Daquin, [each employe is given a plastic the tear and also strengthens “Prelude” by Franck, and “Dul-|kit containing suntan lotion, in-the material around the torn cl “Jubilo” by Bach, featured sect repellent, a first aid kit area, making the pocket as the accomplished playing of and a reflectorized safety bump-strong as when new. | Sandra Myers. |er sticker. GIFTS Under the Tree, We Suggest •m slips rGOWNS • ROBES 1 GLOVES • PURSES SWEATERS • SLACKS BOUTIQUES • JEWELRY CARDS and GIF WRAP by HALLMARK THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1967 B—8 This season, the National Safety Council is taking a new (hopefully, more effective) approach — how to make decorations that ire less likely to burn, celled “Starchies,” the tree ornamehts are made with balloons, liquid starch and, ironically, paper — flameproof crepe paper. A fun pre-Christmas project for the whole family and one, that's not expensive! Flat, Cut-out ornaments of bells and (loves, too, can be made with the flameproof crepe paper and starch. A great-great-grandmother for the third time is (left) Mrs. Frank Klein, urith the advent of little Jeffrey Figa to the family, held here in the arms of his grandmother, Mrs. Joseph Figa Sr. of Middle Belt Road, West Bloomfield Township. He is the son of Joseph Figa Jr. of Troy (left, standing) and great-grandson of Mrs. Alfred Dunckel (right, rear). Mrs. Klein and Mrs. Dunckel reside. in Orchard Lake. 'Starchies' Provide Family Fun, Beauty cut-duts of flameproof paper on the “starchie" and fill in the holes with glitter. Thread'or cord can be,used for ornament loops. (Remember, whenever possible use non combustible materials to decorate the “starchie.”) FLAT CREPE “STARCHIES” Making flat crepe “starchies" out of liquid starch and flameproof crepe paper is an ideal project for Mom and the kids. Flameproof crepe paper also must be colorfast; otherwise, the color runs when wet and the paper loses its flame re-tardancy. Here’s how to do it: • Cut 5”x5” squares of crepe paper or larger if desired. • Place paper squares on waxed paper, then pour a small amount of starch on paper Spread starch completely over the square, smoothing out wrinkles in the crepe paper with your fingers. BALLOON STARCHIES “Starchies” are made with inflated balloons wrapped with tfarch-dipped strips of flameproof crepe paper, dried and decorated. Flameproof crepe paper also must be colorfast; otherwise, the color runs when wait and the paper loses its flame retandancy. Here’s how to do it: • Blow up small, round balloons to ornament size and knot • ^jet squares dry thorough-or tie the top. Iffi overnight, then peel from Cut strips of crepe paper waxed paper. mantel or near other flame — as long as the paper used has a flameproof label. Here’s how to do its • Trace and cut-out holly leaves from green crepe paper. Also trace dotted vein lines on leaf cut-outs. • Cut short pieces of lightweight wire1 (or green florist’s wire) for leaf veins. • Glue wire pieces to backs of leaves along dotted vein lines. When glue is dry, bend leaves slightly along the vein lines for realistic scupltured effect. • For the wreath base, use a 10” or 12” length of chicken-wire, rolled lengthwise and shaped into a ring. Coyer with green crepe paper. Then, glue paper holly leaves (overlapping them where desired) to wire and paper base. Wreath can also be made without wire base by simply gluing or stitching leaves together in a ring. • Put clusters of holly berries about the wreath and tape or glue in place. • Wreath is ready to hang. Or place it on tray or plate for a centerpiece, and arrange two or three different-sized candles it\ the wreath’s center. Celebrate Yule The Dirt Gardeners held their Christmas party Tuesday fallowing the regular business meeting. Mrs. George Quine of Merry Road opened her home for the gathering. She was assisted by Mrs. Percy Rose. w w ★ Members voted a contribution to the Pontiac Symphony Orchestra. VMTME WATCHES n Jiwal (across the grain) about 1V4” to-2” wide. • Holding one end of the paper, dip doubled stip into a shallow bowl of liquid starch-just enough to wet the paper through the fold. Squeeze out excess starch carefully. * ★ * • Unfold paper strip and wtap around the balloon, leaving the knotted balloon top uncovered. Cover balloon with two or three layers dTpup’. (Occasionally, crepe strips break during the wrapping process, however, patches will not show when the “starchier is dry.) • Using clothespins, hang up “starchies” to dry overnight. Draw and cut-out Christmas motifs on starched paper • Outline the edges of the cut-outs with all-purpose white glue. Stick gold or silver cord along glued edges, looping the cord at the top of the design for hanging. Lightly glue other areas of the “starchies” and decorate as desired with beads, sequins or glitter. • NOTE: Flat crepe ‘starchies” can be decorated before cutting out. PAPER HOLLY WREATH A Paper Sculpture Holly Wreath, made of green, flqme-proof crepe paper cut-outs, When dry, let air out of j bunches of holly berries, and a balloon and remove from ring-base of chicken wire, is Polly's Pointers Tile Works Wonders DEAR POLLY—When somelglass. It performed miracles for remodeling was finished at out us.—NINA house we had left over a box (Polly’s Note: Don’t forget to „UM ______ Ul)ll t n 1M. _n ri J of odd-sized pieces of accousti- rinse window with clear waterj<‘Starehie” or leave balloon in- creative, but safe substitute for f®1 01e- “ems a shame to'after using cola process, -jgide. U candle base or centerpiece of throw this tile away so I won- DEAR POLLY—Keep a small • Decorate “starchies” with flammable evergreens, ribbon der what could be made with it. | container in the refrigerator just felt-tipped pen, glass beads, gold and plastic foam. My husband thought of tacking|for storing margarine and but-j0r silver cord or bright-colored1 Or, the paper wreath can be them on a boardto make a large,ter wrappers. They are great for medallions. Or, paste snowflake hung safely over the fireplace cork-type bulletin board for the!greasing, cookie sheets, cake r™ F children—MRS. E. C. Sounds as if your husband bad a fine idea. Why don’t you try It? POLLY DEAR POLLY—I have found a wonderful way to display Christmas cards so they can be enjoyed individually throughout the holiday season. I covered my four panel screen with matching color nylon net. As the cards arrived, I inserted a small drapery hook in the back of pans, casseroles, etc.—MRS. Officers for the coming year: were elected Monday by the Pontiac Republican Women’s each, hooked the blunt end!Club. The meeting was held in through the net and filled one!the Ottawa Drive home of Mrs. GOPChapter Names Heads HOLIDAY MILLINERY SALE were to 12.98 *5 50 panel of the screen at a time. When it w a s all covered, 1 opened the screen to expose another panel of net and so on until (he screen was full of pretty cards. The cards may be rear- ranged for a more artistic effect without disturbing any but those that are to be moved.—ALTA DEAR PQLLY—Do tell the lady who wanted to know what would clean windows after screens had been left on for a long period of time that a popular cola drink is the answer. I used it on old, old windows and if left them sparkling One rainy night, my husband tried It on a car windshield when a customer at his service station had an unusual film on the Youthful Galas Are Announced in Area Schools In tune with the holiday spirit are the annual Chrjstmas programs planned for Thursday at several elementary schools. Among those announcing festivities are LeBaron, 7 p.m. “Christinas in the School”; Me-Carroll: 7:30 p.m. “The Night Before Christmas;" and Willis, 7:30 p.m. in the multi-purpose room. * * * WATERFORD “Christmas Far and Near' will be presented at Dorvelson at 7:30 p.m. under the direction of Mrs. Jean Putnam; Hudson Covert students will hold a Christmas open house at,7:30 p.m.; and the McVittie School chorus and guitar class will entertain during an open house scheduled for 7:30 p.m. ' ★ i At Pontiac Lake Schpol the PTA is sponsoring a bazaar from 0 a.m. until 3 p.m. and again from 7-0 p.m. in addition to the Christmas program to be held at 7 p.m. "RICHARD'S BOYS' and GIRLS' WEAR FOR HOLIDAY WEAR TNI, PONTIAC MALL 1 r ................ Richard Reiter. Serving will be: Margaret Scott, president; Mrs. Frank Irons, secretary; and Mrs. Daniel T. Murphy, treasurer. Members voted a contribution to the “Neighbor to Neighbor Drive” of the Oakland Coun^ Republican committee. Neat Bedmaking Is Explained Know how to show your t making to advantage? When using a patterned top sheet, put thfe sheet on wrong side up. The large hem touches the head-board. * ★ * Tuck in the same amount at the foot of the bed, miter cor-and pull sheet taut. Put on blanket or comforter and turn hem down over blanket edge. Every hat Is a beautiful bargoin, In this eagerly awaked millinery event! Scores of styles, colors and textures to top off your gala costume. You'll find felts, shimmering brocades, rich velours and deep velvets, ell in glorious festive shades. Millinery Sato* — Second Floor OF THE WEEK! "SOMETHING NEW" Round brilliant cut diamonds alternating with baguette cut deep blue genuine Sapphires or fire-red genuine Rubles. If Is a source of pride to offer these magnificently designed rings set in platinum. Diamonds and Blue Sapphires — $1,900 * Diamonds and Rubies — $2,500 Patients Gifted by Alpha Delta Unit : Highlighting the recent meeting of Rho chapter, Alpha Delta Kappa, was the wrapping of Christmas gifts by members for patients at Hilltop Rest Home. The annual Christmas event was hosted by Mrs. Walter Sheffield in her School House Drive home assisted by Dr. Jufte Gab- ler. Entertainment was provided by Mrs. Finley Kennedy with a program of holiday stories. NOTICE We Will Bo Open SUNDAY, DEC. 31 Call For Rosorvationt Du* to bad waathar durian our wigs show Wf, ora •xtending our 10% Discount an any Mirada Stretch Wig ordered before Dec. 16. . J4air ^a&kioi\0 t 0 887 Woodward Avo. (Across from St. Jossph’s Hospital) >T7IW .. - |. 9.|, Sat. 9-3, NOW OPEN MONDAYS V\\ 338-0317 •>£'0 crcjne t \ H,$. SlSl.S* MBA80 MOTHER or DAD Looking For O Christmas Frooont For Your Homo? SPECIAL!! FOR THE HOLIDAY SiAtON 13” COMMERCIAL FLOOR MACHINE FULLY GUARANTEED FREE INSTRUCTIONS PONTIAC 852-5033 JANITOR SERVICE A and 3915 AuburH Rd SUPPLY COMPANY Auburn Heights OPEN EVERY EVENINGS ■ , NOW TIL CHRISTMAS „ ? jiwttiM a j DOWNTOWN PONTIAC BIRMINGHAM \ Corner of Huron And Saginaw Stmts 162 North Woodward ■ FE 2-0294 .Ml 6-4293 J ttninimtititiitmHHiilimiiimi THREE-DAY SALE Thurs., Fri. and Sat. MINK STOLES Monday morning, these Mink stoles wfll be marked to their origintf) much higher pricel Remarkably Priced for Only *199 These are sensational buys . . . you'll roalize this the minute you see theml New styles in Natural Mink. Use Our Convenient Credit Pldn thow country of orlgW. CmJ j Corelli’s Tur-Telle regularly $17 NOW ONLY Corelli Tur-telle. . . wSarar pressed calf that comes on looking like the real thing! It's fashion elegance and excitement for just $12.97! Have yours oh o low heel, dashed with a gold-rimmed buckle, in Tur-telle uppers of black, Brown. SVdLiZ 140 N. leglnew Street '! m aod MRS. MODERN or TRADITIONAL f^aJlIXSTIEt and 1AZY-BOY :j. . JP ?s' iJHECDLl THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 18, 1967 Sunday-Concert to Be Presented by Bell Chorale A concert by the Bell Chorale under the joint auspice* of Theta Lambda Omega chapter of Alpha Kappa Alpha and the Pontiac Parks ami Recreation Department, will be presented Sunday. Beginning at 8 p.m. in the Newman AME 'Church, the Chorale will be directed by Frederick N. Bellinger and perform Camille Saint-Saen’s Christmas Oratorio.” Guest soloists will be Phyllis Harris, soprano and Con well Carrington, bass-baritone. Gilbert Jackson will be at the piano with Joseph Agee as organist. Area Resident 100 Years Old Mrs. Joshua Marcum (Elisabeth) of Union Lake and Warren celebrated her 100th birthday on Sunday. i>'^j Born Dec. 12, 18J7 in Kermit, West Va., she lived in Pontiac for 25 years. Mrs. William Matael of Union, Lake, the daughter with whom die lives half of the year, was hostess to ISO guests at Sunday || event Two more of Mrs. Min' cum’s seven children, Luther and Arthur Marcum, live Ip Pontiac. She has 25 grandchildren; 53 great - grandchildren ana 2# great-great-grandchildren. Illusion of Space Strategic location of a natural stone patio adjacent to the picture window of a living room will give an effect of greater spaciousness to both the living area and the exterior grounds. White on Back You don’t have to worry about I multicolored look from the 1 street when you choose ”du- I plex” shades. They’re made in a [ wide assortment of colors and designs and are white on the reverse side for uniformity from, the street. MRS. JOSHUA MARCUM Gossard Robes Sweet ’N Snug $12 to $15 Comfort comes in the beautiful gift robes you find at Hadley's. Here favorite styles long and short, fleece, quilted or tricot Gifts she's sure to enjoy, day-in and day-out. Exciting colors in our new and easy travel or at-home coat, left $12. Give her our nylon fleece robe trimmed with satin, right $15. Make gift shopping easier Use your Michigan Bankard or Security Charge for holiday buying... For everything under the tree Tie New Fashion Nall in the Pontiac Mall » Open 9t30 to 9 Monday thru Saturday if mmikim THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDN] BSDAY, DECEMBER 18, 1067 rt x Big Drop inState Traffic Toll This Year Seen by Trooper Chief i LANSING (AP) - Michigan is heading for a significant reduction in highway fatalities this lyeah, CoT.. Fredrick Davids, • State Police, director, fold the “With continued good luck, • rT -; ’, ~~ — enforcement and good publicity, State Safety/ Commission Tues-1 believe we can took forward ’‘day. As of Tuesday, the state recorded 1,936 highway fatalities, down from 2,149 at that date a year ago, i l * * . • Last year’s final traffic uc«un death toll war 2,296, the highest on record. Delayed and late reported deaths helped make up the total. ; “We believe the public has become more safety minded as a result of the generally increased emphasis on traffic safety,” Davids said CREDIT GIVEN Contributing to the good record, Davids said, are the new check lane inspections by State Police, publicity concerning the GOP Victor Will Go to Viet Shirley Temple Black's Conqueror Tops Dem REDWOOD CITY, Calif. (AP) — Republican Paul N. Mc-Closkey, elected to Congress Tuesday on a Vietnam peace platform, says he will go to Vietnam as soon as possible. Unknown before his upset primary victory over former child movie star Shirley Temple Black Nov. 14, McCloskey defeated Democrat Roy A. Archibald, 66,314 votes to 44,370, with all 567 precincts reporting in the affluent 11th Congressional District. ★ ★ * Winner of the Navy Cross and Silver Star while serving as a rifle platoon leader with the Marines during the Korea war, McCloskey ran as a Vietnam “dove,” advocating negotiations for peace and a reunification of North and South Vietnam under the Geneva accords. GOING TO WASHINGTON The Portola Valley attorney told a news conference Tuesday night that he will go to Washington immediately to take care of applications for the service academies that piled up following the death of Congressman J. Arthur Younger last June. As soon as he takes care of paper work, he wants to go to Vietnam, either as a congressman or in his present rank as a lieutenant colonel in the U.S. Marine Reserve, he said. “But if neither wants to send me, I’ll pay my own way,” he declared. In both-Washington and Vietnam, he said, he will ask: “Are the South Vietnamese willing to fight, now or in the near future? “Are they willing to identify the VletCong in their villages? “Do they want to maintain an independent Vietnam at all costs?’* EARLY LEAD McCloskey took an early lead and Archibald conceded only 40 minutes after the tabulations began. Mrs. Black backed McCloskey after he defeated her in the primary by 15,000 votes. She disclaimed a write-in campaign by her supporters. She received 3,905 write-ins from a total turnout of 115,472, 51,6 per cent of the registered voters. ,4 * ♦ McCloskey is married and has four children. A third-generation member of the California state bar, he won a landmark decision two years ago against the Atomic Energy Commission when he frustrated its plans to string overhead power lines past the community of Woodside, Mrs. Black’) home town, to nearby Stanford University’s two-mile-long atom smasher. The courts upheld Me-Closkey’s contention that this would violate local ordinances, and an agreement was reached with ARC to (Hit the line Underground at a future date. new implied consent law requiring testing of drinking drivers to a more acceptable traffic death record for 1967,” Divide Said. The State Police director said several inquiries have been re-ceived about Michigan’s good record, one from New Zealand. The safety commission also was told that Michigan had the best traffic death record among the major industrial states at the end of eight months. The Michigan, fatality rate is 4.2 deaths per 100 million miles Davids reported breathalyzers now have been placed in all state police posts and 342 state) Davids said during foe first policemen have been trained to two months of such tests, 343 operate foe machines. The train-|motoriSts flunked the tests and fog course will continue until it 10 passed. Another 42 drivers has been completed by 750 refused to take foe tests and officers. |wjll have their cases judged by foe license appeal board of the secretary of state’s office. Secretary of State James Hare was reelected chairman of the, State Safety Commission for the 14th consecutive year. Stranger Flushed Out Their Money VERNON, Tex. (AP) - Five Vernon men rented a motel room Tuesday night and settled down to play poker. The game had barely started when a stranger clad in blue Jeans and a straw hat walked in and drew foe top hand: A blue-steel revolver. The stranger relieved the five of 12,500 fit cash and their trousers, they told police. SEARS, ROEBUCK AND CO. Only 10 More Shopping Days Till Christmas-Your Christmas Dollars Go Further at Sears! Gifts to Give Her for Her Home Electric Fry Pan WITH HARD-COAT TEFLON«• 97 18 N»-»li<-k, no-|mm|ier Teflon 10*15Vi” cooking turface. Heal control remove.. Lid included. Slimline Toaster WITH 10” L0N0 TOAST SLOT Reg. 17,96 Slot it wide enough to toaal Engtiak muffin., long enough to .toast French bread. Save! 1397 4-Slice Toaster FAMILY SIZE . . . DELUXE a 2397 Separate control#, for each 2 , alicea; make dark and light toaat together. Save. Coffeemaker Sale STAINLESS STEEL fl-DUP 16 Super-fuat perking to flavor you •fleet. Automatic shut-off and kee|»-h©t units. Sava now! Electric Griddle WITH HAHD-00AT TEFLON "> Reg. 19.60 Bake, fry and keep-hot for party Frlea, staws, braises, steams, and everyday food.. No-slick roaatal Thermostat-controlled Teflon. Ilxl7-in. heal. Chrome-plated steel. 1697 Cooker-Fryer KENMORE SVi-0T. SIZE Gift 8“ Sale! Table Appliances Kenmore Mixer WITH THUMB-TIP CONTROL Gift £*44 Idea O Lightweight 3-speed design. Chrome-plated beaters. Pushbutton ejeetor. ’White enamel. 12-Speed Mixer MAKES IDEAL RIFT 33" 150-watt motor givaa yon constant, uniform mixing at all speeds. 2 Pyre* bowl*. Sears Best Iron KENMORE -STEAM-SPRAY !S 1897 Stainless steel aoleplute won’t •cratch, mar or snag. Variable ■team control. Waffle Bakers WITH TEFLON* COATING RDg. 16.96 1497 Makes waffles to brownneas you wank No sticking to grids. Chrome-plated 12-in. ELECTRIC CAN OPENER Opens any size cans smoothly and efficiently. Also sharpens knives to keen edge. Reg. 15.99 _____12.97 AUTOMATIC COFFEEMAKER 4 to 11 cup. Chromed aluminum ex-' terior, aluminum interior. Brew gauge in handle. Reg. 17.99, 12.97 12-SPEED HAND MIXER Won’t race or atall even in heavy batters.. .governor-controlled. With chromed beaters. Reg. 17.99, 12.97 Scan Electrical Dept. REGULARLY 15.99 and 17.99 12»7 Your Choice Charge It 5-Speed Blender ■ Automatic Timer CHROME-HATED FINISH TURNS LIDHTS ON, OFF S 1997 » 8s7 Puree, grate, chop, blend and Turn lights on, off while you’ra liquify! 5-cup container which away or uso it for applianeas conveniently opens at both enda. up to 1875 watte. Handy Christmas Gifts to Please Mom! Sale! Spice Rack Provincial style. 12 Rag. 4.71 ready to fill iwulea. Q77 Labels. 1114x214x16”. O Punch Bowl Set 26-pc. Early Amerlmn N> design. 8-qt, bowl, 12 044 cups, plustie ladle. O 10” Bun Warmer Salt and Pepper 4-Pc. Canister Set Chroma plated eiesl. Els- . lt gent walnut handles. Cav* gamraao an ham vinyl gasket sad. "7*® State canister In stainless Steal, regular t!.M, „.I.SS Not Shown: 1 «nd 2-Qt. Covtred Sauce Pm, 4-Qt. Covered Sauoo Pot, 9-inch Open Skillof and 10-inch Oovtrad Skillet Warm French frlea, rolls, ate. Cover removes and Is washable. 007 asserted ealert. Rag. is,,,,,,, ill Sale! Revere Cookware Set Sale! Electric Knives Rsg. 14.99 11" Rog. 22.99 19" It's stainless steel—fW lasting beauty and 9easy care. It’s aluminum lined to spread heat quickly, prevent “hot spots” that burn food. It’a Perm-Loc-Teflonrt • . • a tough, wear-resistant Teflon that withstands rough use. Result: fust, even cooking that’s economical us well us fluvorful. Black plustie handles. Suva $5. Soon HouMwor.i Dapt. Regular 34.99 5-Piece Set 2997 Sears Electric Knife Chrome-plated knife has slim, comfortable handle; ^serrated edge blades, storage tray and 8-foot cord. Charge It Cordless Knife Sale Stainless steel blades with exclusive isometric serrated edge. ^ Slim white handle. Recharging .unit acts us storage case. 'Satisfaction guaranteed or your money back" SEARS Downtown Pontiac Phone FE 5-4171 cl THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 18, 1967 B—fl ■; BUCKTS CHRISTMAS CAPER By Wally Wood New Fighter-Bombers Hold Big Promise Monsoons Giving N. Viet a Breather ABOARD THE RANGER (J> now. But virtually all of its lOOiclude three carriers in the Gulf t-TIm northeast monsoon weath-! missions since the Corsairs of Tonkin from which strikes against North Vietnam launched. Each of the $1.4-million Corsairs can carry about 10,000 pounds of bombs. Navy men say er now sweeping North Vietnam; Went into combat for the first has given Hanoi a breather time Dec. 4 have been against from the heavy U.S. air attacks!secondary targets in the central of the early fall and is enabling!portion and southern panhandle the Communists to repair dam- of North Vietnam stretching ace or get supplies moving from south of Hanoi to the de-lthe Corsairs are stable, can go „ , .... | , southward; Vice Adm. William militarized zone. (twice as far as an A4 with the faul K|t and co-workers at Bay- F. Bringle said yesterday. i The real plums are targets in same bomb load, and. can ® 'SSE at least JB"*.-?*1! £ «• -*•* t»r»et hourslooger. pJJfSSi rus when they learned where a Cancer Virus Pattern Found By Science Service WASHINGTON - New insight into the cancer-causing action of viruses was reported recently by researchers from a Texas laboratory. From studies on mice, Dr. Open Dell* 10*10, Sim. 1 O le 7 WED., THURS., m, SAT. for a short period, we’ll have to eluding four major railroad and! _ and restrike probably some of the areas we have already hit," the commander of the U,S. 7th Fleet told a news conference aboard this aircraft carrier in the Gulf of Tonkin. highway bridges over which “They’re roughly twice the! military supplies flow southward for Communist forces fighting in South Vietnam. WWW I^avy bombers delivered concentrated series of blows on these bridges late in October and reported all had been knocked out, isolating the port and causing a massive jam-iip of military supplies from Communist-bloc nations. airplane that the A4 is," said Cmdr. Jim Hill, 37, Davis City, Iowa, commander of the first A7 Corsair combat squadron now aboard the Ranger. The Corsairs offer the pilot a great deal of protection with cockpit armor, self-sealing fuel tanks in critical areas and a dispersal of airframe components to minimize damage from Communist fire. Bringle said new A7 Corsair II fighter-bombers recently delivered to the carriers off North Vietnam will enable the Navy tq drop more bombs more efficiently on North Vietnamese targets. / 1 The Corsair, which can carryj Bringle said in an interview!WEAPONRY ___________ twice the bomb load of the A4 before his news conference that| They also are equipped with (one of them. Skyhawk bomber, now used, will the North Vietnamese probably two 20mm cannons, one on each! c-—. viruses attack cells by get its real test as soon aS there;were at work repairing t h e side of the fuselage, and air-to-takin_ over their chemicai ma. is a break In the mon^s Thelbrldges and .likely had eased air missiles. ISr? forctog them to pri With a 3,600-pound bomb load duce more viruses to infect Simian VtruS-40 goes after it infects a normal cell. Several types of cancer-causing viruses seem to disappear either from the cell or inside it after infection. Now, Dr. Kit’s experiments show that SV-4#—a virus known to infect monkeys, hamsters, mice and cultured human embryonic cells—discards its pro-tein coat and releases its genetic material (DNA) into the host cell’s genes where it becomes bad weather has kept Navyjmuch of the backlog of Supplies, bombers away from the portFUTURE SQUADRONS dtyrfHaiphong for i^ore than He gaid that within the next year and a half each Navy carrier would have two squadrons iquadron of of the A7 Corsairs, anywhere I'l Vietnamlfrom 20 to 28. Thjs would in- ■ month.- and maximum fuel, they can fly at more than 500 miles an hour. Bringle said that the A7 "will be the workhorse as the A4 is now. The majority of the attack aircraft will be A7s eventually.’’ other cells. But SV-40, Dr. Kit learned, actually becomes part of the cell’s genetic material and when the cell replicates, it carries with it virus genes that taminated polio vaccines. 100% Human Hair FASHI0HWIGS Our Reg. 26.S8 - 4 Dayt Only 22.88 Create a new personality with a glamorous fashion wig from our collection. In a complete range of colors.. Each comes with its own Styrofoam head. At this unusual low price. - Light Color, Slightly Higher — SHOULDER HANDBAGS RV.lM-4VmyOnly 2.48 In leather - look grained vinyl. With Inside slpper. In banana, black, brown, fawn, birchberry and pepper. Charge It! GLENWOOD PLAZA. . North Perry at Glenwood IP YOU DON'T HIND F27INI & LITIIE COME TO WKC FOR ALL YOUR CHRISTMAS GIFT SHOPPING NO MONEY DOWN “JT 50e WEEKLY! 108 N. SAGINAW - FE 3-7114 Sunhemn PORTABLE HAND MIXER Rtfular IMS, NOW ONLY SAVE $1188 Heavy-duty motor gives greater mixing power. Extra large full mix beaters. Push button boator ejector. SAVE $31.01 /\ Now! New 1968 4-Band Radio with Built-in AC-DC Enjoy FM, AM, Shortwavo and Marino rocoption on this 16-transistor radio! Has no-drift FM Automatic Frequency Control and built-in AC-DC. Salf-containod leather case, battery, ear-phono. Rtg. 69.95- $0088 ‘NOW ONLY UO SAVE*20" CLINER CHAIR High bdek recliner in glove soft scrubable vinyl. Foam cushioned seat and back. Reclines to many positions. Regular 69.95 $ * NOW ONLY 1 RCA VICTOR PORTABLE TV AUTOMATIC PORTABLE STEREO Enjoy sharp, clear pictures at home or away with this precision-craft ad portablel Has 172 sq. inch scroon, ultra-sensitive, solid -state UHP tuner. 20,000-volt picture power and RCA's dependable solid copper circuitry for top performance everywhere. attractive stereo phono with 4-speed automatic record changer. Completely portable, it has two speakers - (one in detachable Id) ter true stereo tone. Use it anywhere — recreatiew room. Regular 139.95 NOW ONLY OPEN EVERY NIGHT TIL 9 PARK FREE in WKC’s Lot Rear of Store SAVE *31” 6-PIECE SOFA BED OUTFIT Booutlful nylon frioxo deep coil spring sofa sloops 2. Concoalad bedding compartment. Includes , cocktail table, 2 and tabTot and 2 table lamps. Regular 119.96 NOW, ONLY $gg88 $11888 SAVE $10°7 EUREKA . VACUUM CLEANER Regular 49.96 $3088 lr*«lel •«nitla.e Regular 49.95 $ NOW ONLY SAVE *8” 17-JEWEL Ladies’ or Man’s WATCH 34“ Regular 16.66 $1288 THE PONTIAC P&ESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 18, 1007 m M—7 SAVE MONEY ON APPLIANCES BY GE, WESTINGHOUSE, HOOVER AHD MORE HOOVEf Coffeepot . * M Completely IB automatic, vl i brew* a cup B 15“ ’ DP HOOVER Automatic Can Opener ■ a .1 u.i »ct the lever and forget it l14» Only the * *• Westlngh f; <' FRY PAN has the non-stick formulation | locked in the mstaf ' permanently, ‘"1 <%e a e metal kitchen tools; they won’t chip, peel, Of crack the permanent itO'ati(4vHe*se0i>r Took without adding fat if you wi»h... food* never alick. Ju»l rime and wipe clean at clean-up time. High dome aluminum lid ha» adjustable vent*. Fry* pan and lid are immersible. Only th® exchiaive new Cyclnmatic OSTER1ZER perform* perfect blending ... automatically! Simply aet the dial, puah a button! 15 cup glaia container open* at both end*! PLUS: exclu*ive MINI-BLEND container, removable 2-oz. measuring cap, cord ator-age compartment, 100 Page cookbook, free Recipe * Folder.A* Ef|88 Month' ice! 59® PANASONIC PORTCHESTER AN 22 All channel portable TV. 75 square inches viewing area. Aluminised picture tubs. “Set and Forget” tuner. Built-in UHF & VHF antennas. Retrac-table handle. 79 i95 From ''Stir" through “l.it|uely” every speed you needxfordeliciout food creation! Eliminate* the guesswork in your blending. Plji* . . nil these extra features: I'limily size 5-cup hcul • resislunl' giussxcontainer that npi'iia at both ends; 2-oz, measuring cap in cord atorag* compartment; 96 page cookbook, Exeiuaivo Extra! “Recipe Folder A Month” aervice for aix months. All Transistor AM Radio WESTINGH0USE4PACEMAKER Smart new five tubs AM table radio with new verticals design Spies Maks cabinet. Wide range full lone Alnico speaker is front mounted for best sound performance. Convenient tuning and “on/off”. volume controls for easy station selection. Built brilliance .and clarity. Measures on 8H" high, 7“ wide, 4” deep. Five 1 tubas including rectifier. e Full Feature# Clock Wakes you to Musie or Bell Alarm • 60 Minute dumber control turn* radio off automatically • High impact cate with textured leather-look fold* to compact, aelf protecting encloaure * Luggage Brown o Only 4tt”H (open) 5tt" W„ 3Vh” D. PORTABLE MIXER M1T Make* A Great Gift, Too Weight only 3 lb>. but mixes heaviest of batters, as well as lightest of sauces. STEAM AND DRY IRON Stylish Beige Cord and Handle. Contoured handle for ironing comfort^ • Cord lift keeps cord out of way for right or left hand ironing ease. • Switches from steam to dry at the push of the button. Real power with lVfe H.P. motor that cleans faster, easier and more efficient. Modern stvlina with the new “slimline** design . . . easier to use... easier to store. • Triple Filtered Exhaust e Easy Aoeals to Beg e Complete Mobility e Complete Set of Tools 2951 SPECIAL VALUE ONLY ^97 CUSTOM Electric CAN OPENER CUSTOM ELECTRIC CAN OPENERS Model EC 18 WESTIN0H0USE 9 TRANSISTOR FM/AM MINIATURE PORTABLE e .Slide rule AM/KM tuning dial* • Auto* malic fre«|u#hcy eonirnl on FM • 24” FM whip antenna, built - in antenna e Efficient wide renge miniuture apeaker n Rrce«»rd “on/off’ volume, and ttuning control* • Earphone jack plua eurphone fur private linlening 6 Operate* «n aingle 9 vull battery * 9 trunalator*, 4 diode*, 2 tharml*tor*. • Opens only standard size cans in seconds C Fingertip control pierces cans c Magnetic lid lift prevents lid from dropping into food • Handy cord storage for neat appearance, s Easy to clean GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1067 Christmas Wonderland Of Discounts Styles For Men, Women DRIVING GLOVES A. Men’s and woman’s toastv warm driving gloves with leather palm. S-M-L. Charge It. B. Boys’ Capeskin Gloves, 5-9...2.2T pr. C. Misses Jacquard Gloves, Ages 7-11... 91c pr. Children's Knit Cloves, Ages 3-6 . ,91c pr. Children's Knit Mittens, Ages 3-6.. 88c pr. Women's Knit Gloves...........94c pr. Ski Mittens ..................1.38 pr. Men's Unlined Leather Gloves .... 2.87 pr. Men's Lined Leather Gloves .... 3.17 pr. Gifts To Delight Men at Christmas KRESCO® POWER TOOLS A. Reg. 18.S8 Kresco® Vs" Drill with \ ariahle speeds, 3 amp*. Kresco" Vs” Drill, Reg. 7.44 . . 6.96 B. Kresco® Sander, Our Reg. 7.44 'Vibrator sander with 2 amp., 115 A.C. 60 cycle, UL approved. Plastic finish. C. Kresco® 7Vt” Heavy-Duty Saw 2 H.P., 10 amp motor, 5000 RPM, ball bearing slip clutch, mirror finish. Limited Quantity - Nana Said ta Daalar. CHRISTMAS YARD GOODS Our Reg. 44c Yd. 4 Days Only choice of poinseltis, bells, candles, Christmas tree, ornament, train, wreath and ‘kitten. Just Charge It. GLITTER CLOTH, 36” wide .. 87c yd. Holds Two 20-Gal* Garbage Cans STURDY GARBAGE CAN TOTE CART Our Reg. 6.88 4 Days Only Sturdy, garbage can tote cart holds 2 regular 20-gallon metal or plastic garbage cans. Features 8” semi-pneumatic rubber wheels, plastio hand grips. Just say, “Charge It.” 30" PEDESTAL BAR STOOL Our Reg. 2 for 29.88 4 Days Only 2 * *25 Walnutone pedestal base. Channel upholstery in black vinyl with two-tone walnut grain back. Just Charge It. Not Exactly as Pictured HANDY BATHROOM SPACE SAVER 594 Our Hrf . 6 97 4 Day, 3 shelves, 2 towel rings Mass lever, Reg. l.tl... i.»s Limited OdeoNty - Man* Said Is Dsalan OVAL-SHAPED BATHROOM SCALE a77 OurReg.S.44 4 Our, Accurate, register* to 300 lbs. Green, gold or black. SEAT VALET WITH ADCESSORVTRAY, UPHOLSTERED SEAT FIREPLACE AND REFLECTOR 1.94 Our Reg. 2.57 4 Days Only Full-size- Printed red brick fireplace with irons and tools. Bulb and revolving reflector included to produce flickering fire effect. 43Vi” high, 38Vin wide, 9Vi” deep Charge It. PLASTIC VANITY ENSEMBLE 7.44 Our Reg. 1.88 4 Days Only Plastic vanity tray with two set-in powder boxes and set-in tissue box ... all with clear “cut-crystal-look” tops. Crystal, pearlized while, pink, avocado. Charge It. BATHROOM SPACE SAVER IN EARLY AMERICAN DESIGN Our Reg. 14.96 12.88 4 Days Only Early American bathroom space saver with brass-finish poles, 2 wooden shelves, wooden cabinet with sliding doors. Just Charge It. Our Reg. 11.56 9.88 4'Days Only “Imperial” seat valet,with W* steel tubing; accessory tray for wallet and keys; upholstered seat in tan vinyL Gift perfect. 50 PIECE FLATWARE Our Reg. 8.94 7.94 50-piece stainless steel flatware in your choice of “Falcon” or “Carden Manor” patterns. 16-Piece Flatwara Sets ...........Ml “THERMDGRIP” Electric Glue Gun 4.88 ■ Our Reg. S.SS 4 Day* Heat melts solid glue sticks. Bonds anything in 60 second*. STURDY HARDWDDD FOLDING CHAIRS d|*6 Our Jt«f. 344,4 Day. ir»35”s I Vs” chair with 14”* 14” seal. Walnut finish. KMART BRAND TORCH WITH KIT 4e« Our K.|. 6.66.4 Day. Comes with lips, burner, more. Propane Fuel Tank......till limited Quantity, Nad* Said te Daaian “RUBBERMAID” SINGLE ORGAMZER 74* hitrounl 1‘rlre 101/*” ilir, chocolate color. Twin Organiser...I .IT Cordless Electric SHOE POLISHER 3*» Our Mr, 4.66, 4 Days Cordlr** time nolither wllh extra buffer. Gffl boxed. WELLER DUAL HEAT SOLDERING KIT 4*6 Our (toy. 5.97,4 Day 100/140 wett duel heal gun, 3 soldryini tips and more. Limited Quantity—Nona Said teD*al*r* GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PFRRY AT GLENWOOD l Footnotes i for CHRISTMAS Pendnt Watch, Necklace, Earrings 1* Our Reg. 8.44, 4 Day* Pendant watch, necklace and earrings in gift box. GIFT BOXED, BUNKER WATCH 3** Our Rif. 6.96,4 Day* Blinker pendant wateh in a Variety of dainty atyles. GIVE DEPENDABLE TRAVEL ALARMS 3“ Our Reg. 3.96,4 Day* Folding travel alarm with radium hands, square case. Put your best foot forward this Christmas with fabulous shoes for the 'family from Kmart! “MENAQERIE” OF SLIPPERS Our Reg. 1.76 — Ditcount Priced A. Children love romping in plushy character slippers. Polyfoam lining. A “CORRAL” OF COWBOY BOOTS Our Reg. 9.97 — Di,count Price B. Black leather boots for children. Dip top and decorative Hitching. SVl-3. MEN'S CORDUROY CASUALS Our Reg. 9.99 im Discount Price C. Cotton corduroy moccasins lined in gold cotton terry. Tobacco brown, loden gren. To 12. "IN-LOOK” MOCCASINS Our Reg. 9.97 - Discount Price D. Cordo smooth handsewn loath-' er. New “beef roll.” Men's and big boys’. 6Vi -12. FLUFFY, COMFY SUPPEtlS Our Reg. 1.99 - Discount Prico E. Pampering vinyl with soft trim. Satin bow, warm lining. LL blue, 'pink. Women's to 10. F. With bow. Black peau de sole; black, brown, blue patent vinyl. Women’s S -10. th-m IN WHN-ag—Mt ttHMHIHHfr Our Reg. 14.96,4 Day* DDeount Price, Charge It Famous name gift watohes Famous name diamond with expansion bands. watches with dainty bands. 17-JEWEL SKIN DIVER’S WATCH I4*‘ DDeount Price, Charge It Waterproof,* electronically time tested. Charge It. Save Every Pay at Kmart ... Americans Greatest Family Store GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 18, 1967 VouM ftyc norland makes all the different Lambswool Coordinates A wonderful selection of soft cuddly gowns in lovely soft pastel colors to delight any little lady. Sizes 4 to 14. Fine imported lambswool spun super-soft. Perfect V-neckline with the beautiful drapeability of a saddle shoulder for wonderful fit. Wonderful colors to brighten your days and nights. Sweater Pants PRINCESS GARDNER* “SNOWDRIFT” Accessories Bright voricolor underlay petals with gold-marked stems and nailheads on Buffalo Calf. Fashion colors. A. French Purse...... B. 'Registrar* Billfold.... C. "Continental" t Clutch...... Ladies’ Leather Gloves Also available: Key Gard* Case. Eyeglass Case... Cigarette Lighter Cigarette Case.. Handbags Give Her Cuddly Slippers The comfy stitch slipper comes in Sapphire Blue, Forest Green or Gold. Sizes 5 to 10. Little heel, rounded toe, and a bold buckle that shines out, make this the shoe to wear with this season's shorter skirted suit. Black, or brown calf and black potent. Sizes 5 to 10, AAA to B widths. Young Men’s Blazers Men’s Dress Shirts Blazers make the holiday scene in ,a big way. Classic throo button styling with patch flap pockets ond contrasting buttons. Bronze or navy Hopsack. a jo, *20 Van Heuson and Bentley offer thoir best for Christmas gifting. In oxford or broadcloth fabrics. Psrma-prsts of Course! Sizes 13 to 20 Men’s Neckwear Men’s V-Neck Pullovers Knit Pajamas Munslngwear knits a fin# balbrigaan pajama of 100% cotton in a wide variety of colors. Sizes 8 to 20. 7 Always « 1 a Perfect 1 Gift— A Lion Store Gift Certificate W A/' DHH f--i> THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 18, 1967 Woman Unhurt, Ransom Recovered Tyro Kidnapers Victim Safe GLENDALB, Calif. (AP)" —(armed men surrendered without Two amateurish kidnapers held drawing their pistols officers a banker's Wife hostage for — J P ’ $80,000 but then settled for 850,000. Then, police said, they got only 11 blocks with the payoff. A butcher and a cabinetmaker were taken into custody Tuesday with the ransom money and the 'unharmed hostage, Frances Howe, under a blanket on the floor of their car’s back seat. Mrs. Howe, 50, told newsmen that one of the kidnapers earlier told her, “If everything goes well, no one will be hurt' ■ + ■ A' Booked on suspicion of kidnaping for ransom were Robert Sheader, 32, who said he is a cabinetmaker, and E d s o n La-grand Little, 26, Who said he is a jmeat cutter. Police said both As the two were being booked, Mrs. Howe and her husband, E. Frank Howe, related details of the two-hour ordeal: Shortly after Mrs. Howe had gotten their 16-year-old son off to school, the doorbelk rang at their 170,000 hilltop home Glendale, a suburb" northeast of Los Angeles. “Two men with guns grabbed Wbeh a fluicMy mobilized po- gave addresses in nearby North lice detail halted the car, the Hollywood. Mao Puts Public Security Under Control of Party TOKYO (AP) — Chinese Communist Chairman Mao Tse-tung has placed the mainland’s public security directly under the Communist party rather than under local and national governments. This tack, which Mao took in October, apparently was aimed at preventing followers of Mao’s archenemy, President Liu Shao-chi, from seizing control of police and militia units through loosely organized revolutionary government committees on local levels. "" * ★ a Mao’s instructions on this subject were coupled with insistence that the army’s prestige “must be resolutely safeguarded” during the cultural revolution. Ttie details appeared in the Canton Wen-Ko Tunghsin, a Red Guard tabloid of the Canton city government. A translation has just been seen in. Tokyo. "Public security organs,” Mao was quoted as saying, “are a knife in die hands of the proletariat. If properly grasped, they can be used to attack the enemy and protect the people; if not, they can easily be used against us. If they are taken away by the enemy, there will be even greater danger. Hence, public security work1' Can only be under the direct leadership of the party committee and cannot be under the vertical leadership of the relevant government department.” UNDER ATTACK Mao’s instructions on the army indicated that it has come under heavy attack in recent months. “The army’s prestige must be resolutely safeguarded and there can be no doubt whatever about that,” Mao was quoted as saying. “Publication of editorials on the need to support the army and cherish the pebple is the center of work at the present time.” “The chief danger at the moment,” he said, “is that some people want to beat down the People’s Liberation Army! That’s also ridiculous,” Howe said. “How can I take it from the bank? I'll have to tell someone.” “Then tell somebody ... in case you think I’m not serious, I’D put your wife on the phone.” Mrs. Howe told her husband shakily: “This is no joke. They It." Howe called police, got the told me they wanted money from my husband’s bank,” she lid. They commanded her to telein nearby Van Nuys where her husband is vice president. Chi the phone, Howe was told to put 680,000 in a specified street trash can “if you want to her alive.” When Howe said that much was ridiculous, the caller suggested $50,000. The banker said he didn’t even have that much. ★ w '★ “Take it from the bank, was told. me and pushed me inside and money from the bank! drove to the drop location and left the money in a paper bag. Some 50 police staked out the location. Meanwhile, Mrs. Howe said, the abductors tied her hands behind her back and put her in the back of the car. “In a way, they treated me kindly and they were polite,” she said. “They were not rough.” Police caught the car about two miles from where they saw one of its occupants pull the ransom money from the trash mazoo school officials came up Tuesday with what they hope will be a solution to a hassle at Kalamazoo Central high school over Negro cheerleaders. Dr. Richard N. Percy, Kalamazoo superintendent of schools directive that cheerleader squads should be open to all candidates from now * * * In years past, tryouts were given and 14 cheerleaders were selected. This year’s squad was RELEASED UNHARMED-Mrs. Frank E. Howe and her banker husband talk to newsmen at Glendale, Calif., yesterday after Mrs. Howe was released unharmed less than two hours after being abducted from their home. Cheerleader Order Issued KALAMAZOO (AP) — Kala- group had two Negro members. Iflvnn anllAAl nffi/ilnln m _Sl_ — it. *_ all white, although last year’s|among them. including the captain. Civil rights groups had protested the lade of Negroes on this year’s squad and the school board added two Negroes recently. That brought a protest from some white students. ★ #' # Under the new ruling, cheerleading will be conducted just like any varsity sport. Candidates will report fer practice op a regular basis and coaches will pick the cheerleaders from WANTEI Highest Prices Paid1 “We Pick Up” FE 2-0200 JUNK CARS Used Auto hits Available Pontiac Scrap 135 Branch 5. Yemen Joins CAIRO (AP) — South Yemen, the1 former British colony of Aden, was admitted Tuesday into the Arab League as the 14th member. DRESS UP YOUR HOME FOR THE HOLIDAYS AMTICO DURA-TILE w»h. Asessroe •»*«» aizn J 5*® MiTICO DURA-TILE ffl 74® BIG SAVINGS ' ON/ ARMSTRONG TILE . IIS N, Saginaw St. Mat M Mn Telephem Mt-MM #SI WMt Hurwi St, at Tatesrasi M. Visit the Sanders Department in your nearest Supermarket Tategasaa nuns •Mia'S Lawn aM Oanjan Equipment 685 N. East Boulevard • 265 N. Telegraph • 2341 S. Telegraph rill Caster laka as., U uteri k-iku Telephone MM1M 3415 Elizabeth Lake Road (Waterford Township) * 8010 Cooley Lake Road (Union Lake) "mt* artww'asuSwST* tatsiitisaa nt-MU And a Sanders Store in the Tel-Huron Shopping Center — , ^ , . THE PONTIAC PRESS; WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1967 B—12 mgasN fig iwM I Juniors! Pe tiles! I SPARTAN 'ATLANTIC | FAMILY DEPARTMENT_STORES__^__^^^ 7it& has iht» low pr ladies9 holiday gift CORUNA DUSTERS 1.69 EACH Cordantf* cotton duston |ust perfect for gift givingl Potor Pan or Mandarin collars and pouff styles! Prettiest prints and solid colors in soft pastels and (ewel-liko deep tonosl Sizes S, M, L, XL DIES'NEW SUP ON GIFT SWEATERS OUR EVERY DAY PRICE 3.89 my sizes 4 to M HOLIDAY DRESSES 89 Terrific holiday group of shifts, skimmers, pleated skirt and belted back sty-lesl Short or long sleevesl In good-looking and easy-care Dacron® polyester 'n cotton blend ... ribbed textures and solids in holiday shades! Sizes 3 to 15. Soft 'n beautiful Orion* acrylic with square, crew and turtle necklines, raglan or set-in long sleevesl Attractive 2 and 3-tone multicolored stripesl 3440. LADIES' 2- WAY any sizes lintanS SUETS! SEEUS! MEN'S! LADIES'! CHILDREN'S! GIFT SLIPPERS LADIES' POM-POM SCUFFS Rayon satin with i bunny fur triml I Foam cushioned heel to tool Great colorsl MEN'S LINED OPERA SLIPPERS Double knit 2-way stretch nylon qlacks with French waistband, fully elasti-cizedl In navy, pink, blue, green and maize, t to 15. Gay prints . and solid colors in acetate or cotton . . . some quilted with cotton paddingl Great colorsl Great gift! Long wearing soles & heelsl In brown or black. LADIES' GIFT BOXED SEAMLESS NYLONS First quality seamless mesh nylon in a beautiful gift box with a 3-dimensional photo-gtbph suitable for framingl lovely colorsl 8Vi to 11. INFANTS’2-K. PAJAMAS Soft brushed cotton In dainty pastelsl Closed feet, gripper waistl Sizes 1-4. PLASTIC PANTS 12-PR. Fully water- PACK pull-on pants machine washablel As- sorted colors I. M. L. XL. ans’sizes 4 to 14 5-PR.PACK PANTIES Long wearing white stretch nylon panties with dainty loco triml OF Q FOR I (CHARGE) ! V m y c. USE YOUR MICHI8AN BANKARD CREDIT CARD! IMichbanBakmd I CORNER OF DIXIE HGWY. AT TELEGRAPH RP.-PONTIAC • GREAT STORES IN FREE PARKING MONEY REFUNDED IF YOU'RE NOT SATISFIED' I , THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1967 R—1S PARTAN FAMILY DEPARTMENT STORES jf\11\,vm* has the /off* pr OPEN EVERY NIGHT 'TILL 11 UNTIL CHRISTMAS! BABBJUiritni BONANZA! MIN'S FINELY TAILORED BETTER PAJAMAS man oft TRAVEL ROBES Quality cotton broad< portly tailored with fully piped notch col-larl In (olid colors A fancy printsl Sizes: A, B, U packed in zipper- BOYS’ 6 16 KNIT SHIRTS Cotton interlock knit ehirts with collar and placket or turtle-neck stylel Assorted solid colors. DICORATOK SCAnER RUGS €Sri MEN'S REVERSIBLE SKI JACKETS Warm quilt nylon reversible to nylonl Thickly padded with Orion® acrylic and other fijbere. Roll-away hoed, 2 zippered pockets, drawstring bottoml Sizes: S-M-L-XL DOLL SUB '3 e Drink 'n wet dollsl . o Toddler dollsl e Snuggle seftee beautiful 26* WALKING DOLL & POODLE Beautiful tall walking doll with her own little plush puppy. A great gift Idea for any little fM MIGHTY MIKE™ TRUCK SET Cotton loop and cur pile geometric pattern! Nan-skid latex back! In rich decorator colorsl 24x40" oblong. BOYS’SIUS 6 to 16 SPORT SHIRTS! DRESS SHIRTS! CORDUROY SHIRTS! Terrific selection of permanent press cotton 'n polyester sport shirts and dress shirts and cotton corduroy shirtsl Assorted collar styles, groat colorsl elback skyway ... over 4-ft. longl Motorized Mighty Mike™ truck, dump, milk and van,, snap-on backs, 4 ob- 110-LB. VINYL BARBELL SET 18 SVk-ft. bar with deep knurled, chrome-plated revolving sleevol 4 each: 10, S, 214-lb. plates. Training charts A two 14-inch long dumbbell bars. 14-INCH HRISTMASf CANDLE atcmnsD 3-BELL DECORATION MATTCL’S M-16 MARAUDER AUTOMATIC RIFLE Per the true spirit of ChristmasT Ideal for homo or offlcol III op- > proved. Kelt action gun _ .. ■ HR . with real smoking MAR 1 flfl barroll Fires long mm 4H J wW , orshortburstsINo ■■ capsl No batteries | orshortburstsINo < capsl No batteries neededl 1 GIFT TOILETRIES BUYS! 1 “ONE LITTLE INDIAN” TOY CANOE BUBBLE BATH to fluid... 98' “FIRE EXTINGUISHER” BUBBLE BATH SETufluid.,. 98< “TIGER & PLAYMATE” BUBBLE BATH SET s fluid •, 98' “GOLDEN GEL” BATH OIL WITH SPOON 9-oz. not weight. |49 BLANCHARD COLOGNE DUO’S 114 fluid oz. each. 87' CORNER OF DIXIE HGWY. AT TELEGRAPH RD.-PONTIAC 8 GREAT STORES IN I FREE PARKING MONEY REFUNDED IF YOU’RE NOT SATISFIED! B—M THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1967 Newark Mayor Recall Campaign: Flicker or Flop? NEWARK. NJ. (AP) - A riot-sparked drive to oust Mayor Hugh Adonizio and elect a Negro is still flickering, its back-jars claim, but a city official 'contends it is a flop. “Our feeling is that the recall movement is going very well,” said Robert Curvin, a Negro active in thd recall campaign, but neither he nor others involved would give any details on what the movement, has accomplished. ★ * * “The campaign looks to us like a fizzle so far,” said Don Malafronte, an aide who usually speaks to newsmen on behalf of the mayor. “We would be surprised if it were successful, but if it were we would have to face it and, then I expect we would win an election.”' , , BLACK POWER The recall campaign was announced during a Black Power conference in Newark\last July, just a couple of weeks after five days of Negro rioting in\the city claimed 27 lives. . Negroes make up sightly more, than half of Newark’s 400,000 papulation, but only 35 to 40 per cent are registered voters, Malafronte said. There was no estimate of the number of registered whites. To bring about a recall elec- tion, 25 per cent—or about 38,000 — of the Newark residents registered to vote In the last municipal election must sign petitions. ★ * * Curvin, a onetime Congress of Racial Equality leader who now is project director of the Rutgers University community action intern program, said there is no target date for the elec-s tion. “It's going to be a very long,-hard job and we have no illusions about accomplishing this in a short period of time,' he said. VOLUNTEERS CANVASS Curvin and the movement’s agent for the recall" petition, Mrs. Mary Massle, said 50 to 60 volunteers have been canvassing for signatures. Neither would say bow many signatures nave been obtained. W W W This is not the first attempt to recall the chunky, balding Adk donizio, a former Democratic congressman who won a second term as mayor in June, 1966, by defeating former Mayor Leo P. Carlin in a runoff. Last January, a group of white property owners began a recall campaign protesting an increase in the city's real property tax rate. The drive never got off the ground. This is the Easiest Way to - ^ please every Sport on your list/ Just give him a BOND GIFT CERTIFICATE The bolder textures I The clearer colors { The livelier patterns. THIS is the American Way with Wool-thoroughbred fabrics expertly woven in the United States. Shapeholding, long wearing-perfect for sport coats and blazers with real character. The style, the needlework-again the work of experts-Bond’s skilled tailors. Come see a holiday collection you'll be proud to chooae from. »3jbo—*44»o Bond’s "major league” accessories: "Permanent Press” Button-down Shirts $3 Tyrolean-shape Fur Felt*Velou rHats $10.98 "Ivy” Leather Slipon Casual Shoes $j },f| Woodward, 1525 Woodward, Detroit Regional Shopping Center, 15 Mile and Orotiet Madison Heights Shopping Center, 12 Mile end John R xiigi i u/iv, runna, vvjCiU^^aiJA 1, IJ^UK.MBKR 13, 1967 Open tonight and every Mon. through Sat.’til 9 p.m. - Sun. 11 to 6 p.m. ■ Pontiac Mall* 682-2330 Crayons are for kids. Color* TV is for kids, too. But buying a set is for grownups. And that’s where Highland can help. Nobody sells more color TV for less. Nobody. Handy portables. Sooper-dpoper cabinet jobs. Everything in between. If you’re on the verge of color TV, ask somebody about Highland’s low prices. Ask anybody about Highland’s easier terms. Better yet, come in and see what all the shouting is about. If you’re skeptical, it could color your thinking. Green. We really do think crayons are for kids. Coloring books too. A box of Crayolas and a Christmas coloring book are yours for the asking, as long as our supply lasts. Come and get yours. This is the only way to get color TV for less than Highland's price. B~i« THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 18, 1967 Rocky Putting Cash on Romney, Aide Says WASHINGTON (UPI) -Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller of New York is “putting his money where his mouth Is” In supporting Gov. George fj W. according to a close Rockefeller associate. Rockefeller was pictured as working hard, both publicly and behind the scenes, to help Romney, providing him with top men Romney of Michigan for the'and facilities needed for a pres-GOP presidential nomination I idential campaign, including a list of potential contributors. 'Money will be available as needed,” the Rockefeller associate said. Rockefeller is known to resent inferences that he is building up Romney as a front for himself or that he is merely waiting in the wings for Romney's bid to collapse before making his own move. , The New York governor, who twice has sought the Republican presidential nomination, insists he will not enter the race again. Bomb Scare Stalls Basketball Game WASHINGTON (AP) — The basketball game between Georgetown and Syracuse was Interrupted for 39 minutes in the first half Tuesday night while police searched for a bomb re* portedly planted in McDOnough Gym. Norie was found.. McNamara Tightens Office Budget WASHINGTON fAP) - Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara has ordered his staff to save money—even if it means canceling some newspaper subscriptions and making sure money spent on coffee breaks doesn’t get charged on expense accounts. Congress, said McNamara in.amount it is essential that we dp a memorandum, has cut $2 mil- so,” McNamara said, lion dollars from his office operating fund, leaving him with $33.7 million for the fiscal year which began July 1. He ordered a freeze on hiring,' a limitation on travel and a hold-down on overtime. “Although It will be difficult for us to operate within that Fruit farms are the cheapest i maintain but the most expensive to harvest of any farm. ' lili |gj p n#v^ \, j \ y ^ WRIjGiLEY NEW CROP FROM FLORIDA! 100 SIZE IN THISHEU FANCY Paper Thin Pecans .. IN THI SHKll Polished Mixed Nuts. FRESH FANCY Red Diamond Walnuts FRESH PICA-NUT Pitted Dates.......... RICH CHOCOLATE Harshey’s Syrup <*194 MEADOWDALECREAMRY , il Fresh Butter........... "n 69* GOLDEN ACI NO DEPOSIT 16-oz.Pop...................XlO» EXTRA FLAVOR t#0«t. _ _ Upton Tea Bags............. pn- 99* ASSORTED FLAVORS CAMELOT Cuke Mix ; I-lb.3-oi., pkg. 254 COUNTRY RITCHEN ., Fresh Milk......................'Tl* DOMINO SROWN OR j.jg Powdered Sugar.....................an 150 PERT STRONG 1#0.tl Dinner Nepkins............per. 25C DlllCIOUS HOLIDAY Fruit Cake.................pe# 89C IEECHNUT OR FOOD CLUI Baby Food.........„7' 7C FOR RARING Karo Syrup........................59C KRAFT DRESSING } f Miracle Whip......................490 BLUE RIBBON Laundry Bleach....................!“■ 36C PIONIIR GRANULATED Pure Sugar...................... 49C Wheaties .............. V, 420 2375 ORCHARD LAKE Ed., SYLVAN LAKE S040 COOLIY LAKE RD., UNION LAKE 45 S. TELEGRAPH, PONTIAC -Op«n Monday thru Saturday 'III f 1495 N. MAIN, ROCHESTER CAMELOT EVAPORATED CREAMY TOMATO Campbell1? * Qoup 10 3/4-ot. If - ■ J ISJT CAMELOT SMOOTH . Cream Chau# M1ADOWDALI PURI r ® **" 19* ...J;i,29* ... 5*. 39* AWRIY DELICIOUS Butter Crust Bread. CAMELOT CRISPY Saltiite Crackers.... pi 22* Raspberry Pie ZlHH h«ii« OLD FASHIONED BAKE SHOP «V35C RASPRiRRV DELIGHT Mb.l-at Awrey Coffee Cake..... ph. 59C *1** 790 AMERICAN / C"AFTED / FINE erenutle DINNERWARE Sheffield 0 r—w»j THIS WEEKi ds Dinner Plata Y.u i.i .< Him* kwnly P*»“* '« |utt *• an* • »»-M P*T*bd*d- EM" • M limit: with • SIAM punlwia yau Cl, fat S yl.c.t (ar IRF- aad M un. ASSORTED FLAVORS VELVET cc mm 3AW- f Crcem 292 BW THE PONTIAC PftESS. WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1967 B—17 Ex-Senator Cleared on Morals Charge bETROFr ( UPI) - Former State Sen. Bernard F. O'Brien Jr., finally clear* of the Morals charge of trying to lure college coeds into performing in sex movies, today said he would consider the possibility of running for public office again. The morals case against O’Brien, the father of four, was dropped yesterday in Ingham County Court after the coed who charged him with soliciting her to pose for nude photographs refused to return to Michigan Mr a second trial. Judge Marvin J. Salmon signed the order after hearing a petition from Ingham County Prosecutor Donald S. Reistg. The effect is that O’Brien's 1966 conviction for .immoral conduct in a public {place is erased. Dismissal came one month after O’Brien, who was a Detroit bemocrat and whose father once served in the Michigan House of Representatives, turned S3. He has since returned to his Detroit insurance business. * * ' $ "I still consider it was a trumped-up charge as we ed in the first trial,” O'Brien said after learning of the dismissal. Official Ousted BELLEVILLE (AP) - Residents of Sumpter School District at Belleville in Southeastern Michigan, have voted 185-16 to remove Elmer J. Pringle from the board. Three-dimensional X rayf are being' used in industry as as medicine to determine the exact location of an object or defect in parts being Inspected. State Guard Strength Revised Upward LANSING W—The Michigan National Guard reports its final revised strength will be 10,331 officers and men, slightly more than the present strength of 1Q;005. Gov. George Romney rejected a troop list proposed by the National Guard Bureau in Wash ington, D. C. on Aug. 22. The governor contended the troop strength was inadequate and the allotment of units lacked capabilities of command, control, communications and logistical support. 2ND LIST SUBMITTED The Guard Bureau submitted a second revised troop list on Nov. 3 which added 10 units and 326 men for the 10,331 total The governor approved the second [list. ‘ The realignment will go into effect Jan. 31 with final approval by the Guard Bureau. BUY, SELL, TRADE - - - USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! 1 “ * MBjb m hi 6eld Bell 6ilt Stsaps ff^nyTliglsy,l1,|, Prims Turksy S, Ooad thru /J J GENUINE SPRING U.S. CHOICE WHOLE CUT U.S. CHOICE BEEP SHOD INTO CHOPS U S CHOICI CSNTIS SLADI Lamb Shoulder Chops.. PUSH GROUND DAILY Lamb Patties............ U.S. CHOICI FANCY Lamb Loin Chops_________ U.S. CHOICI Deluxe Lamb Rib Chops U.I. CHOICI FOR STIWS Lamb Breast............. OINUINI FRESH Sliced Lamb Liver...... Boneless Cure 81 Ham . SO TASTY Eckrich Canadian Bacon HICKORY IMOKiD Center Ham Slices....... $4-59 Lesser quantities. MICH. ORADS 1 HR. FITTS SLICSD Bologna or Skinless Franks..........*• 49C ICKRICH FAMOUS | [2. All-Beef Franks....... .............. OSCAR MIVIR IITT1I SMOKIIS OS Little Wieners....................«.*• 45( DI1ICIOUS PATTIIS | ii, Bob Evans Sausage........................89< ARMOUR STAR , ,k Skinless Franks......................*s, 69< HICKORY SRANO , _ Boiled Ham...........................^*$1.11 FINS FOR COCKTAILS..HA VIIW PIICIS OF fir YOU OllDBR YOUR TURKITOOUBLI ITAUPiON flOH iri ...Just what Is a Wrlgley Prime Turkey ? "A personally SRMcttd turkoy...selected lor It's excellenc* In quality and U.S.D.A.Crado "A" seal...and Wrlgley turkey has That superb llovdr that Is just not twrpasipd anywhere! DOUBLE GOLD BELL GIFT 9TAMP9 WITH THRIFT TICKIT AND PURCHASI OF ANT Wrlgley Prime Turkey THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 18, 1067 ISANTA and the PIGWIDGENl By LUCRICI BEALI The stones weep and iha elf recovers. With att weapons gone, Claus says they must now use their wits against the Pigwidgen. They travel to a great watt. CHAPTER TWELVE The Pygmies CLAUS pushed on the tiny square door in the wall. The door wiggled but did not open. “It’s locked,” said Claus. “It’s such a little door!”! H5d In astonishment knock it dawn! (at the sight before them. “Who’s afraid of a creature who lives in such a little castle?” scoffed Tweedleknees. At that idoment there was the sound of drums and bugles. Fur* lous voices shouted, “Catch them! Don’t let them get away!” Tweedleknees dived Into snowdrift. Claus dived in be-| side him, pened, they timidly poked their heads out of the snow. “It's a game!” blurted the elf in amazement. “They’re doing it all for fen!” * e A band of reindeer appeared over the hill. The pygmies left off fighting and chased the deer. FLEW AWAY Everytime they reached Tis the Season for New Money Getting Crisp Bill for Stocking Is Easy CHICAGO (UPI) t- If you’re planning on stuffing those Whon nrekhine, hon. reindeer * curious thing bap- Christmas Stockings with crisp, When nothing Jj»£pened: the reindeer rose in the new doUar bills, the Federal He beat on it and kicked on it and Claus pushed and they got a log and rammed on it but the, door would not open. e e * Claus was discouraged. He put his hands in his pockets and hung his head. DEFEATED BY DOOR He thought of how he had sworn to break the curse the Pigwidgen had laid on all the children of the world and how he had come so far and now was defeated because he could not open a little door. SHOUTED, HOWLED of pygmies were fighting in front of the castle. They shouted and howled and cut off each others’ heads. Even as the creatures lost their heads they rocked with laughter like schoolchildren playing tag. At last it seemed not a pygmy was left alive. Claus and Tweedleknees stepped out of the snowdrift. MORE FIGHTING Hardly were they out when Suddenly his hand closed all thp fallen pygmies rose to around a small key in his pock- their feet, put their heads back et. He pulled it out. on their necks and began to It was the brass key that hadjfi*ht aU over a8ain dropped from the black purse Claus and Tweedleknees when the chrse had fallen on Jumped back in their snow hole, the children. The single word “Pigwidgen” was printed on the key. . ★ * * “How could I have forgotten!” cried Claus. HOLDING HIS BREATH He fitted the key into the little lock. Holding his breath, he turned the key. Slowly the door swung open. Hie opening was so smal Claus had to wiggle through on his stomach. Even the little elf had to crawl through on his hands and knees. On the other side they huddled against the wall and gazed fearfully around. ★ ★ * Here the wind did not blow sharply. Snow-blanketed hills so fiercely nor the cold bite so rolled down to a lake of ice. Near the lake stood a small castle. air and FLEW away! They swooped gracefully over the castle top, round and round, high and low, like sea gulls at the beach. Claus thought he had never seen so pretty a sight. * * ★ The pygmies got ropes lassoed the deer and brought them down from the sky. They drew their swords and shouted, ‘Horray! There’ll be deer meat for supper 1” LEAPED IN FRONT Before he knew what he was doing, Patrick Tweedleknees shot out of the snow drift. He leaped in front of the rollicking pygmies and cried angrily, “Don’t you dare!” ★ * The astonished pygmies dropped the ropes and the reindeer raced away. Tomorrow: The Pigwidgen Reserve Bank of Chicago says it’s willing to lend a helping Home of STEINWAY, KNABE, STECK •nd other world-renowned piano names From their snowdrift, an astonishing sight greeted them. Arthur Gustavson, vice president of the bank, said every day during the preholiday season, the bank puts into circulation a “tremendous amount” of new, clean currency. , '‘There’s a great increase in the flow back and forth of money at this time,” Gustavson explained. “People are borrowing from their banks and redi accounts to purchase holiday gifts, so there’s a big demand for the Issuance of more money. Gustavson said that right before and after Christmas, when the buying is completed, the flow of money begins back to the banks and the need for new money is reduced. He said Just as the amount increases before Christmas, the same phenomena occurs before summer vacations. DEATH OF DOLLAR The death of a dollar bill actually begins when it comes into the hands of a commercial banker who deems it “unfit for further circulation.” These bills^ are sent to the Federal Reserve Bank where standards of fitness that determine the bill’s survival or destruction are applied, Gustavson said. * . * •* Bills that are usually dirty or imp are showing signs of age :hat send them to the indnera-1 tor, Gustavson said. A torn or patched bill may be recirculated if its condition is otherwise ac-i ceptable. ! The Indicated record winter I wheat crop should enable the IgrinnELL’S, Pontiac Mall, 682-0422—Open Every Eve. 'til 9 U.S. to add to its reserve and - 4-P.yPi.n <90 days ..me. increase foreign aid shipments._________ WONDERFUL OPPORTUNITY TO GIVE YOUR FAMILY THE JOY OF MUSIC! Our Popular 'Holly’ Spinet Piano *529 An exciting special price makes-thiatqraceful spinet a wonderful value iust in time for Christmas! Crafted in our Grinnell Piano Factory, it has many quality features—full 88 note keyboard, fast repeatinq action. Clean contemporary styling in walnut finish. Other New Pianos from *395 Christmas Savings! Downtown Pontiac, 27 5. Saginaw, FE 3-7168—Opan Mon. and P cash), Budget Plan or Christmas Layaway EARLY AMERICAN ROCKERS IN TUNE WITH TODAY'S DECORATING TEMPO! THESE GIFTS ARE ‘AT HOME’ IN ANY HOME! America's favorite aids to rest and relaxation - quality crafted, specially priced and ready far immediate delivery! Swivel Rocker — rocks end swivels — always returns to correct position. Hand rubbed maple finish with gold or olive tweed u and back cushions................... *59" (VI U/tA PONTIAC 361 S. SAGINAW• FE 3-7901 I DRAYTON 4346 DIXIE HWY • OR 4-0321 BOTH STORES OPEN MONDAY THRU FRIDAY. \J 711 9 UNTIL CHRISTMAS — SATURDAY TIL 5,30 y i i & v v 7^^ In stock for immediate delivery! Child's Boston Rocker in charming maple finish. $1995 Maple Boston Rocker—also available in black finish decorated with gold. *29*S Maple Grandfather's Rocker with gold decorated colonial black accents. ’49" THE PONTIAC. PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13* 1967 c-*i COUNTRY CLUB WHOLE OR HALF mm USDA CHOICE 4TH AND 5TH RIBS FRYERS SPECIALLY BRED AND FED TO PRODUCE MORE MEAT WHILE STILL YOUNG AND TENDER FRESH LEAN 9-INCH LOIN END 7-RIB END LOIN CHOPS CENTER CUT RIB LB WHY SETTLE FOR LESS? AT KROGER YOU GIT LOW PRICES PLUS TOP VALUE STAMPS! SERVE N' SAVE SLICED (BACON SLICED BLACK HAWK Rath racOn f FLAT CUT % L 69. i FRESH 3-LBS i UP Roasting Chickens FRESH Cat-Up Fryers.............^ % fiRoos*- Honey Suckle Turkeys <.> 49* 10-22-LB SHIFTS PREMIUM Butterball Turkeys.....<.>49* MARHOEFER mm.Canned Ham......lO*77* PICNIC STYLE Fresh Pork Roast Wm HYGRADE’S WHOLE OR HALF p West Virginia Ham....<. Wlm. FROZEN CHOPPED, CUBED ALL BEEF Family Steaks GLENDALE RF Sliced Bologna frP GLENDALE Skinless Wieners f < ■ WITH THIS COUPOH ON _ 2-PKGS CUT-UP FRYERS ■ 2-PKGS FRYER PARTS OR . ___R______ .... ■ 2-ROASTING CHICKENS ■ LUNCHEON MEAT i 2 Valid thru Sun., Dec. 17, 1967 Volid thru Sun., Dec. 17, 1967 aJ ^e* Kroger Def. i East. Mich. ||f of Kroger Do f. i too*. Mich. Q WITH THIS COUPON ON TWO 1-LB PKGS COUNTRY CLUB FRYER LEGS OR BREASTS FAMILY SIZE mktid' TURKEYS 10 TO 16 LB SIZE 29 ro'o-oz GG( wt can wmw9 GREEN GIANT CUT Asparagus Spears...... GRiEN GIANT KITCHEN CUT Green Beans.........»»'R4* ASSORTED DIETETIC istee Cookies.......... »'?>« 69* DELICIOUS Kroger Oatmeal...;.. 25* LB. BIRDSEYE FROZEN Chopped Broccoli..2.T INDIAN TRAIL FROZEN WITH ORANGE Cranberry Relish BROWNULATED Domino Sugar... BORDEN'S NONE SUCH Mince Moat....... FROZEN BANQUET BUFFET SUPPER 39* Spaghetti A Meatballs2»V>c89* BANQUET FROZEN 4 VARIETIES rfkg33* Cookin’ Bags...........«f”c29* SUNSHINE BRAND 29* Krlspy Crackers..........35* FLEISCHMANN'S GOLDEN CORN OIL ....»-«*.« 57* Margarine..................me 39* 1A i-OZ NT 91 IV FATTIES I LB. i ' ' IlHiiGl liHIW FRESH SMALL FRESH WHOLE OR RIB HALF PORK LOIN l-LB •Wh • « FKO SOUTHERN STYLE OR BUTTERMILK BIG TEN Borden’s Biscuits............ 21* BREAKFAST TREAT! BAYS English Muffins...........22* FOR CAKES A PASTRY Velvet Flour..............5.?.59* COOLRISE Robin Hood Flour.... 25 C—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1967 Senate Seen Sole Social Security Snag WASHINGTON (AP) - Easy House passage and Senate approval after a fight—that’s the outlook for legislation sharply Increasing Social Security benefits and taxes, The House takes up today the measure boosting all benefits at least 13 per cent. The minimum monthly payment would go from $44 to $55 a month and the maximum from $142 to $160.50. Wives over 65 would, as now, get 50 per cent in addition. The Social Security tax would j go up a maximum of $52.80 ini 1968, more in future years. House conferees generally prevailed when they met with their Senate counterparts on dif-| ferent versions passed by the | jtwo chambers. The final prod-| uct cut back sharply higher benefit and tax figures voted by the 'Senate. I HOUSE OK EXPECTED So the compromise, very! I much like the bill the House originally passed, is expected to be approved there, without much ado. But there’s a move in the Sen* ate to defer finaj action until next year and meanwhile try to work out a new compromise closer to the Senate's expressed wishes. It appears, however, that Congress' urge to get a Social Security bill on the books before adjournment, hopefully set for this | weekend, would prevail. Senate Democratic leader Mike Mansfield said he expects to call up the measure as soon as possible !aft.er the House acts. Much of the controversy over the bill is centered outside the actual Social Security provisions. RELIEF OUTLAY The omnibus measure also contains a section designed to slow die swift growth of relief outlays for families with dependent children. It would set a limit based on the present proportion of aided children to the total number of children in the state. Also included in the bill is what Sponsors term a work incentive program designed to put as many aid recipients as possible into paying jobs. * * * Some senators have talked *of trying to separate and pass now the Social Security provisions, keeping the controversial welfare sections for further negotiation. But that move appeared to have little chance of success. One, of the oldest preserved forts in America is located in Beaufort, S.C. Ft. Frederick was constructed by the British ward off pirates and Indians. Increased Access to Capitol Sought LANSING (AP) - The State Capitol would be open to the public seven days a week in stead of the present five day under terms of a concurrent resolution introduced in the House Tuesday. The resolution, sponsored by Rep. Matthew McNeely, D-De-troit, calls on the State Department of Administration to provide public access to the Capitol each day of the week, at least from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. The only days exempted would be Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Year’s day. KC Officials Win Vote KANSAS CITY (AP) — Kansas City’s , reform city government, in office since 1983 and reelected this spring; won another decisive vote in, a special election Tuesday. ' Voters defeated by nearly three-to-one a proposal which would have shortened the terms of elected city officials from four to two years. * ★ * -The unofficial vote against the proposed city charter amendment was 32,963 to 11,27$. Only 23 per cent of the registered voters turned out. Had it been approved, the charter amendment would have forced another municipal election of council members and municipal judges next spring. FIGHT WITH FIREMEN Leading supporter of the proposition wds Fire Fighters Union Local 42 which has fought with the city administration over wages and hours the last 18 months. Stanton M. Gladden, president of the local, said its aim was to “get rid of the people in city hall today—all of them.’’ Firemen circulated petitions which prompted the special election. NEW! oqe LOW LOW VC RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. PRICES AND ITEMS EFFECTIVE AT KROGER IN DETROIT AND EASTERN MICHIGAN THRU SUN., DEC. 11, 1H1. NONE SOLD TO DEALERS. COPYRIGHT mi. THE KROGER CO. FOR BAKING OR COOKING JEWEL Shortening 3*44 KROGER BRAND Cocoeaet Flakes trfl« 55* ALL PURPOSE . _ Wesson Oil. DOMINO LIGHT OR DARK BROWN OR 10-X Segor..fch? 15* PURE GRANULATED Pioneer Soger.. 4 9* Si OFF LABEL Head! Wrap.%i'J39* SALTED COUNTRY CLUB ROLL BUTTER *%olielAty SufijUie&f ALL PURPOSE GOLD MEDAL FLOUR 5*49 ■ . FIRST 1 Z H-gal!_____,______________ Z Valid Am Sun.. Dae. 17, 1H7 * at Krogar Dot. A Eaat. Ml eh. NEW LOW, LOW PRICES! SAVE EVEN MORE PLUS YOU GET TOP VALUE STAMPS! IS* i2~oz eat WT FKG EVAPORATED CANNED Pit Milk.....• •« • OZ~CAN CHOCOLATE Nestle Morsels KROGER BRAND Cake Mixes. EATMORE GOLDEN Roll Margarine •.•ROLL 15* KRAFT PHILADELPHIA ’ Cream Cheese.,..SL'"29* KROGER FRESH WHITE SIMM LARGS EGGS 7-LB ROLL DRY OR NORMAL FOR INDIGESTION Brock Shampoo............... "X*1** Drome Seltxer.................... HAND LOTION PLUS WHITE Cera Hsskirs............. ’S”7 77*Toothpaste..........................VfSt, 48* M FOR SALADS OR SANDWICHES 'i French’s Mastard....ozTL16* I J§ TANGV FLAVOR j§ Kroger Catsnp.........'“.“'"'19* 8 (E , SEVEN SEAS ITALIAN 3 Soled Dressing........»V.k29* § I KRAFT SALAD DRESSING Miracle Whip.........^48* HEINZ ■ Wkite Vinegar..........°.TT29« || HELLMANITS FLAVORFUL ft Meyoeaeisa............RPB9* « BUTTERY FLAVOR I Wesson Oil...:......... H WELCH’S A Grope Jelly...........Jfw38* CLOVER VALLEY SMOOTH OR CRUNCHY Peoaet Batter.......2 JAR 69* BRISK FLAVORFUL Liptea Tea Bogs.....”-"99* IODIZED OR FREE RUNNING ■ Mortoa Salt...........11* FRANCO* AMERICAN Spaghetti..................14* DINTY MOORE Beef Stew..........49* LA CHOY Bene Sprouts..... i....•CAN 13* CHUNK STYLE Cbickeer°NESae Tuna»Vc" 39* ORCHARD PRIDE Appltsoece..........”/?£. 12* f' BORDEN’S NONE SUCH Mince Meat..................V%31< HERMAN TASTY Cleb Crackers...........39* VPTA-BOY DELICIOUS Bacon Crisp...............»V°*C 39* FOR NORMAL OR EXTRA DRY SKIN ALSO MEDICATED FOR CHAPPED HA>ND$ Pacqnin’s Hand Cream 214-02 WT JAR W FOR PIES COMSTOCK Sliced Apples ... 24* OCEAN SPRAY WHOLE OR STRAINED Cranberry Seece.... • • CAN* 22* KROGER BRAND Grapefroit Sections • •CAN 24* KROGER BRAND Mandarin Oranges...£?«21* FOR COOKING-PLAIN ,_LB Contadina Tomatoes.lc“ 28* YELLOW CREAM STYLE Del Monte Corn.... -«c« 21* CAMPBELL’S Pork l Beans.............,«■ 13* GREEN GIANT Swnnt Peas........ • • • 1-OZCAN 22* KROGER BRAND Pork l Boons......... ...CAN* 11* SUTTON BAY Apple Jeice..........■<.«"«< 27* WELCH’S Grope Juice..•••b-ozItl22* KROGER BRAND Pineapple Juice....h's&an25* RECONSTITUTED R&ALEMON Lemon Juice................Wr*** CHICKEN NOODLE Campbell's Soup..........WcttlS* CAMPBELL’S Tomato Soup.................. IP BETTY CROCKER Noodlu Almondine ..-‘ °/r 45* FOR DISHES-MILD Ivory Liquid......... • ••••iJoZSTL 57* MORE SUDS FOR DISHES Joy Liquid.....................&77« BLUE RIBBON Ammonia.... ........ Vr*132* FLU5H-A-BYES Disposable Diapers U-CTFKG NCWBONN MEDIUM TODOLCR 88* *r« THE PONTIAC PILE8S, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1967 C-8 Six Narcotics Agents Arrested in N.Y. NEW YORK (UPI) - Six narcotics agents representing three branches of the government have been arraigned in federal court here on charges of dealing in heroin, cocaine and marijuana. The six - three New York City detectives, two investigators for the Nassau County District Attorney and a f e d e r a 1 agent - were indicted by a federal grand jury last night and arraigned before U.S. District Judge Milton Pollock. The city detectives were ac- cused of trafficking In cocaine and heroin, the county investigators in heroin and the federal agent In marijuana. There was no indication that they Worked together. U.S. Atty. Robert Morgenthau said their activities had been uncovered by New York City Police and U.S. Internal Revenue agents, working together in a massive investigation. "The investigation is continuing," the U.S. attorney said. Those arraigned were city detectives Charles W. Kelly, 37, of Commack, N.Y., Raymond R. Imp and Marvin M, Mosko-witz, both of New York City; federal agent Cleopkus A. Robinson Q, 36, of New York City, and Nassau investigators Frank Dolce, 42, of Hicksville, N.Y., and Jack Gohde, 37, of Massa-pequa Park,N.Y. All six were assigned to narcotics investigation for their various branches of the government. I Moskowttz second Kelly, Imp and were charged with selling and helping to conceal and transport 18.956 grams (about: seven-tenths of an ounce) of c hydrocholoride on May 19. indictment with transferring marijuana on three occasions between. Oct. 11 and Dec. 5,1967. Kelly and Imp also were charged with violations involving 35.15 grams (1.25 odhces) of cocaine on May 31 and 8.36 grams (0.3) ounce) of heroin on Aug. 12. All three had 10-year records of service with the city police. Robinson was charged in a A third indictment Charged Dolce and Gohde with obtaining narcotics to be sold in Harlem. They were sepcifically charged with transfering a half-ounce of heroin on April 20 in Mineola, the Nassau County seat. The county investigators also i were charged with selling quan-tites of heroin for 3300 on one occasion and $1,000 on another. Stealing the Cannon Milwaukee Bill Hit Took Lot of Brass EL PASO, Tex. (AP) - A search—involving the FBI, El Paso officers and military police—is under way for a 1,200-pound brass cannon, taken from the entrance to Ft. Bliss during the weekend. Officers said it was one of two highly polished antique embedded in cement at the Army post’s gateway. Officers said it must have taken the efforts of five or six men to haul away the cannon. Housing Law Approved, MILWAUKEE, Wis. (AP) The Milwaukee Common Council has voted 13-6 to adopt an open housing ordinance. It was denounced immediately by civil rights advocates, who termed it “too little, too late." Mrs. Dale Phillips, the only Negro member of, the council, voted against the measure Tuesday, after four attempts to strengthen it with amendments failed. The ordinance parallels exist-ig state open housing, laws,, ./hich cover an estimated 25 percent of the housing in Wiscon^' PRICES! ‘Thanks for nothing," Mrs. ■ Phillips said to the aldermen ' after the proposal was passed.'' “You are very much too lata with very much too little." 6 The council has defeated four* stronger open housing bills sponsored by Mrs. Phillips. SAVE MORE THAN EVER BEFORE AND YOU STILL BET TOP VALUE STAMPS ! CHECK, COMPARE AND SEE! KROGER SOUR CREAM ZIPPER SKIN TANGELOS 1 SWEET, NECTAR-LIKE JUICE...REFRESHING FLAVOR JELL-O GELATINS 5-59' NEW LOW, LOW PRICES! MELLOW SWEET SAVE EVEN MORE PLUS YOU GET TOP VALUE STAMPS! NON-DAIRY CREAMER Coffee Mato.. ALL PURPOSE Gold Medal Fleer 25L*.*1M FOR FLUFFY BISCUITS Bisqoick............i'z**c44* KROGER BRAND Pancake Mix.........2 A* 29* SUN GOLD Saltise Crackers.......'«• 22* KROGER Zips Crackers..........!•«*39* KRAFT CHEESE SPREAD Velveeta.......... ‘ ASSORTED FLAVORS BIG ,K‘ Coaaed Pep.............7* BEANS WITH ONIONS OR MUSHROOMS WITH IH KANDU BRAND P Gallon Bleach. •••••••••••JUG 36* M SUPER CLEANER GOLDEN BANANAS IDAHO POTATOES Green Giant Peas2,T««29* KROGER BEEF, CHICKEN OR TURKEY Frozen Pet Pies..... >•• rrmrclS* ASSORTED FROZEN Mortofl Dinners.....36* FROZEN Libby Squash...... >••• WTPXG 10* ASSORTED COLOR$ Pert Napkins........./ftf 22* FOR SANDWICHES Cot Rite Wax Paper25* CHATEAU BRAND PINK Liqaid Detergent......& 29* FOR YOUR WASH Rowan Cleanser Miracle White......... 59* f, THE BIG JOB CLEANER Spic t Span............ftf 26* \ ALL PURPOSE CLEANER Clni*“*........ n-OZBTL FOR CLEAN SINKS CoNit Cleanser........ c^lS* FOR POTS A PAHS SOS Pads........... FOR AUTOMATIC DISHWASHERS Cascade .............j»ttn 41V \ \ GETS YOUR WASH WHITER S_LM Fab With Barai......*™ $114 FOR DIAPERS A BABY CLOTHES Berateeai........ 7 -iA 67* INTENSIFIED-WASHDAY MIRACLE Giant Tide........ • ••? -0*Lp5cG 74* CONCENTRATED-LOW SUDS Salve Tablets.......73* FOR YOUR LAUNDRY Dash Detergent.... , ,2-OZPKG 71* CHLORINE Stardast Bleach...niiLc 73* NOURISHING f:. Gaines Bargers.....ii“«*l4* ( §1 DOCS LOVE IT! 'd Rival Dog Food..........IVtfilS* M NOURISHING A NUTRITIOUS 12. 10 79 SWEET W JUICY Florida Oranges 8 BAG 99* 2°Kf99* FRESH SALAD SIZE VINE RIPE Tomatoes 3 BSKT 79* KROGER CANDIED PINEAPPLE OR Candied Cherries c™ 99* FRESH Pecan Meats »-°z»r»cc99< TART FLAVORSOME ZIPPER SKIN Tangerines 64 SIZE WASHINGTON STATE GOLDEN Delidois Apples 8 FOR 99* COUNTRY CLUB GLACE* Fruit Cake Mix ftfft* FRESH Paper Shell Pecans 69* GOLD .CROWN BPpAND I Purina Dog Chow...5.<‘67* BIG ROLL DECORATED OR COLORED Scot Towels....1 WHITE A ASSORTED COLORS Puffs Tissue.........3™c”79 PUSS N' BOOTS FISH FLAVOR Cat Feed............. £ , H S >■ / tSj:y. >• r ■ / ^ ^\ ■; . : v 1i...... . : V' ' i THK-PtwriAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 18. 1967 TV. HMYENINGS’ TV PROORAMS -WIU »I OIVIN AWAY! uo>U«CHA$l REQUIRE^ osuciou* CRY O VAC. BAG tiger town skinless grade 1 Ai Beef pi JUMBO GRADE PITERS REGULAR OR Polirt TOWN PRIDE FARMER JACK LOWERS MEAT PRICES! i TFT APVAWiTliOE w FARMER JACK'S LOW MEAT PRICES! STOCK OP WSAVE! FARMER JACK'S EXTRA FINE MEATS ARE SOMETHING TO BRAO ABOUT--AT PRICES YOU CAN AFFORDI STOCK UP WHILE PRICES ARE LOW AND HAVE A REAL MEAT EATIN' WEEK! DELICIOUS, MEATY, TENDER Medium Size Spare Ribs PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SUN., DEC 17, 1967 11 TO 13 LBS. SWIFT ROYAL OCOMA BONELESS TENDER Hen Turkeys -39* Turkey Rolls ■ 7f*E Sausage SHOULDER CUT Pork Steaks HYGRADE SKINLESS GRADE 1 Ball Park Franks __________ MR. PITTS PLAIN OR GARLIC GRADE 1 SKINLESS GRADE 1 Mr. Pitts Franks Ring Bologna -49* 89* 2 LB. PKG. SWEETMILK OR BUTTERMILK * * Puffin *& Biscuits FKO- "BUSHEL f LL and 11 I^TCASE*, KRAFT 100% PURE FLORIDA Orange , Juice OLASS KRAFT WHIPPED FARM MAID ALL PURPOSE Half and Half NATURAL SLICED Kraft Swiss 8 oz- WT. •neese *ko. Miracle Margarine ctn. q^w«na 39* "Margarine LOWER MEAT PRICES AT, FLEISCHMANNS Margarine PLAIN OR PIMENTO Kraft Vclvcata v INSTANT DESSERT TOPPING | Presto Whip ROYAL,SNACK Shrimp Cocktail FARM MAID LOW FAT DUTCH Chocolate Milk t i n AAa ALL MEAT GRADE 1 SKINLESS ^ 39* Eckrich Franks ... AAa OSCAR MAYER LOAF OO^ Little Wieners 10 OZ. MBW* OSCAR MAYER CAN 37* Little Smokies 3 4 Oz. nnA TOWN PRIDE JARS 89* Fruit Cocktail iPSA* REAL TOMATO taste CTN. 39* Hunts Catsup KRAFT BRAND Marshmallow Creme MUSSELMANS Pure Applesauce NESTLES INSTANT Chocolate Quick A PARTY FAVORITE Sealtest Chipnics 9.7 X 8.25 Puffs Facials S. Telegraph at Square Lake Road — Dixit Highway, Drayton Plains — S. Glen wood at Parry, Pontiac -- S. Telegraph, Pontiac Mall, Wotarford T#p. c-% THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1967 FARMER JACK LOWERS GROCERY PRICES! 'FARMER JACK LOWERED YOUR FOOD RILL- WHEN HE LOWBRED HIS GROCERY PRICES! ok SAT. A JtMJ mmm lEKfiM ' WSpdrl "BUSHEL AN1 CASE" PRICED GROCERIES ARE REAL MONEY SAVERS AT FARMER JACK'S WHERE ALL FOOD PRICES ARE LOWERl 11 X 9-3/8, TWO PLY ABSORBANT Big Roll Gala Towels TV. -Will m m felt] 150 Ct. ROLL S PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SUN., DEC. 17, 1967 LADY LINDA 10 CT. HOT DOG 12CT. HAMBURGER BUNS OR 12 CT. Assorted Donuts YOUR CHOICE 29* RICH, MELLOW, HEFTIER Hills Bros. Coffee 2 LB. CAN ft / SPECIAL LABEL o [ / Cheer 3 lb. j L Detergent | U SPECIAL UBEL..4 1/2 X A wo ,~ i {££"• »2fto ECONOMICAL Fopb WRAP fm* Paper *ou 1 m I N EASY...REGULAR ^ ' Jeno's 13 V2 oz a W«aJWi* a | ih^Wiiinii'iiiiiii l gcj ^22- diamond BRAND Walnut ,Masts 1 LB. PKG. PILLSIURY. ROBIN HOOD 6R Gold Modal Flour - I LIGHTER FRIED FOODS iPurePrido [Shortening BREAST O CHICKEN oX." (Chunk Style -| Light Tuna THE BRISKER TEAr Salada Tea Bags 79* 100 CT. PKG. SPECIAL LABEL CRISCO Shortening 69* 3 LB. CAN I I II SOLIDS, PRINTS, FOILS, STRIPS Deluxe Gift Wrap $J66 JUMBO ROLL EACH INSURED AGAINST ANY DEFECTS^ OR RUNS FOR 30 DAYS AFTER PURCHASE Dana Nylons $Joo 2 PR. PKG. 1 rr —< 1 TEXACO FIRE CHIEF I Gasoline 1 Pump i$299j I GABRIEL | Little Miss II Ironing Set § $3"| If HMNTENSITY If Tensor |[ Lamps 1 MIRACLE WHITE LlOllin ..$3991 Laundry Cleaner Only Two Weeks Left To Play ... •#§ "It's RACING TIME" AT FARMER JACK'S! YOU CAN STILL WINI • Prli.i From II ta 110001 • No lurch*. R.qulr.dl • Now Wlnn.r* Ivory Day I • Any Mult Con Ployl W> Egg FH ■ ~f- n«» trFECTiVi Thru sun., dec. SORRY. NO ftALIft TO DtALttft WITH THII COUPON "It’s RACING TIME” DOUBLE GAME TICKETS- EVERY TUESDAY! PARADISE OLD ENGLISH Fruit Cake Mix PKO. 1 PT. 8 OL BOTTLES Vernon Gingerale HUNTS PRISEASONED Tomato Sauce ALL PURPOSE Town Pride Flour DEL MONTE BRAND Cut Green Beans S. Telegraph at Square Lake Road — Dixie Highway, Drayton Plaint — S. Gjenwood at Perry, Pontiac — S. Telegraph, Pontiac Mail, Watorford Twp. : PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 18, 1967 Form Cheese Mixture into Wreath In Denmark, a* in the resf-of the world, socne of the best decorations of Christmas are edible. '7?™ Cookie* stars and reindeer are invitingly arranged on tiered, epergnes, candy canes hang from the trek, packages of sweets are piled high in compotes, their gay wrappings glist-. ening in the light of die Christmas candles. DANISH BLUE WREATH 12 ounces Danish Blue Cheese (2 cups crumbled) * ltt sticks (6 oz.) butter I l ean (10tt oc.) minced clams 2 packages (g os. each) pum-pemiekel rounds Soften Danish Blue and butter at room temperature, biend. Drain clams well, add to cheese mixture, cull. t Use as spread or shape Jang roll the diameter of the| ir-------------------—-------- pumpernickel rounds, wrap in foil, and return to the refrigerator to become very stiff. Cut die cheese roll Into slices. Shape a wreath around the border of a flat platter with alternate slices of cheese and round pumpernickel, standing on edge. Press together firmly at the inside edges to hold the wreath shape. Chill again until serving time. Decorate with a festive bow. To serve, separate the cheese from the same side of each pumpernickel slice with a sharp knife, remove slices of bread with cheese as needed. JULEGLOGG Danish Hot Spiced Wine Punch 2 bottles claret or other light red wine 10 cardamom pods 5 cloves I 2-inch piece of cinnamon Rind of orange , 1 cup blanched almonds l cup raisins tt pound cube Sugar 1 bottle Akvavit or brandy tt orange sliced thin for garnish Empty the claret Into chafing dish or glogg pot. Tie spices in a square of cheesecloth, add to wine. Add orange rind, nuts and raisins, bring to boiling print. Remove and discard spices and orange rind. At serving time, reheat wine, if necessary. Put sugar cubes Into small '{saucepan that can be brought to the table, add Akvavit and ignite. Pour the flaming liquor into the glogg pot and stir unto the flame dies. Float orange slices on glogg. Serve in small cups or glasses, with raisins and almonds as garnish. Makes 25 servings. 1 SAM A WALTER ] Delicious Sausage 1 Carry Outs—002-9011 \ roffilgtSu. !}' * "MIAMI k BAKE SHOPPE ‘ Open Evenings' 11 THK PONTIAC MALL SERVE rQebhja)uUV MEXICAN FOODS ; i** AMERICA’S HOMES Write for free, exciting rcclpea] “MEXICAN FOODS [ FOR AMERICA’S HOMES” | Qebhardt Mexican Foods Co. Sen Antonio, Texas WmWiMMaiaiaia^>MMWMiWWMMWMaiinMMMBMwaawwwiMiaiiManMMMMawiaimaii«MiM|t MERRY CHRISTMAS WREATH - This wreath,. fashioned of pumpernickel rounds and a rich and creamy mixture of- tangy Danish Blue Cheese, butter, and minced clams, is as good to eat as it is to look at on your holiday hospitality table. Juieglogg — the hot wine punch of the season, is a perfect accompaniment. Old Christmas Food Traditions Linger Many of the Christmas foods, cookies and other delicacies that women lovingly prepare for their families at Christmas had their origin in ancient customs. o In Norway, a bowl of rice pudding, the traditional Christmas dessert, is left in the barn on Christmas Eve for the Christmas gnomes known as the Jule-nisser. • The first course of the Lebanese Christmas dinner, a delicate lamp soup, can be traced to the Christmas Eve of killing a lamb as a sacrifice to Christ. While most of the n is given to. the poor, some is saved, which together with the bones, is used to, prepare the Christmafe Iamb soup. • The heart of every Christmas bird, be it the capon of Italy, die roast goose immortalized by Charles Dickens, or the monarch of the American table, the turkey, is the savory stuff-, ing, creatively and imaginatively prepared and generously laced with love. Perhaps the ultimate stuffing recipe comes from the French and was credited to Napoleon’s Chancellor. It called for stuff- Soft Drink Is Base of Punch When friends drop in during the holiday season, casual entertainment can be easy and enjoyable. Just plan ahead by having the necessary ingredients readily available for this qulck-as-a-wink punch recipe,I and by having an assortment of doughnuts or cookies on hand. A fruit-filled holiday punch will add a colorful note to your serving table. Add a grouping of festive angel figurines, surrounded by bright green holly leaves, on a red table cloth to complete the holiday setting. Four-Fruit Holiday Punch 1 cup halved^ strawberries 1 cup canned pineapple chunks 1 cup sliced bananas 2 lemons, thinly sliced 3 cups strong cold tea 3 28-oz. bottles grapefruit soda Arrange fruit in bottom of punch bowl; cover with cold tea. Chill for one hour. Then fill punch bowl with ice-cold grapefruit soda, (or Diet variety for weight-watchers). Makes about 30 punch-cup serv-ipgs. Helpful Hint: Always pour your carbonated beverages gently and slowly to retain maximum carbonation. ing a turkey with a capon, theiquail with an ortolan with capon with a partridge, the stuffed olive inside It. Bon Ap-partridge with a quail and the! petit! TRADITIONAL EGGNOG — Beat six egg yolks and tt cup sugar until thick and lemon colored. Beat in two cups light or whipping cream, two cups milk, tt teaspoon salt and two teaspoons vanilla. Beat six egg whites until they hold stiff peaks; fold into egg yolks mixture. Serve in chilled punch bowl; sprinkle with nutmeg. Makes 2tt quarts of nonalcoholic eggnog. Dress up your party tray with low-calorie shrimp Sugar Helps Flavor of Canned Soups There are two reasons why Sugar is employed as an ingredient in canned prepared soups. Used in New England clam c h o w d At, French-style petite mirmlte with beef chunks and vegetables, split pea with ham soup, and others too, sugar both intensifies and’ slso blends individual flavors of other foods. Gulf Kist Shrimp fresh from tbs ©utf Coast Homs watsrs for nature'* tastlsst shrimp Gulf Kist captures ell ef the tuoeulent end delloate flavor ef sihrlmp from th# sunny Cutf. No peeling, no waste. Already cooked for you. Good cooks keep several cans handy—ready for good eating any time. Ideal for weight watchers—only 170 calories In • whole cap. Economical, too, one 4-1/t—: oz. can If equal to a 10 oz. peek of frozen unshelled ehrlmp. HONEY BUTTER BILL FARCY HEN TURKEYS Here Is an Excellent Christmas Gift for the Entire family Pounds Choice Quality M Pounds Choice Qi MEAT 10 Lbs. PORK CHOPS 10 Lbs. FRYIMQ CHICKENS • 10 Lbs. BUTCHER BOY STEAKS • 10 Lbs. CHUCK ROAST_ • 10 Lbs. BEEF HAMBUR0 ' Cash and Carry,.. All Freezer Wrapped HOFFMAN'SEHRYOMLOWPRlCESr 1 lb. 4 oz. loaves _ SLICED BREAD ...... 5 *1 «.rrr...........,->*. 89e Creamed Pound 4 COTTAGE CHEESE . . . H». . 19 U.S. Government Grade “A" iniDoz. gaaa^ LARGE EGGS ■ i 39L SMOKED me. HAM HOCKS........... ,33u Pontiac Pride Spicy Ring Baby Link SAUSAU 63t MB • CLUB • BUTCHER BOY Your Choice Cottage Style PORK STEAK 3 Pounds Our Own Poniiac Pride Sugar Oared - Hickory smoked! HAM £49* KING OF BEEF ROAST - FANCY STANDING RIB ROAST and^thRibs PRODUCE P0R A HEARTY WINTER MCAL ALL BEEF - CHERRY RED HAMBURG AQC In 5 Pound Lots or More . Lesser amounts at counter prlcos FRESH PARSNIPS, FRESH TURNIPS . 10* TENBER CARROTS ..** 15* COOKING ONIONS ■ 3i«19c SMOKEHOUSE: SPECIALS 1 Smoked Polish Kielbfisa 59* j Ring or Chunk BOLOGNA .. 43U PRE-CHRISTMAS HOME FREEZER SPECIALS! Order Now — Just in Time for Christmas Delivery — No Money Down Charge Itl MONEY DOWN! FULL SIDES OF BEEF. BEEF HINDS....... BEEF LOINS........ BEEF FRONTS...... 55* 69* Lb. Lb. 69&. 49 V CUT - WRAPPED - DELIVERED OPEN DAILY 8 AM. to 6 P.M. Hoffman s Oakland Packing Co. (RETAIL DIVISION) 526 NORTH PERRY STREET, PONTIAC Serving the Creater Pontiac Area for Over 50 Years FURR PARKINS IN MAR ... TELEPHONE 331-1100 THE PONTIAC PRB^. JffBPyBSPAY, DECEMBER 18. iqat imai. mmi m It’s A Pleasure To Shop and Save at Its A Pleasure To Shop and Save at Tsvej^a^Lov^rice^^Friend!^Servl^^^Gol^3el^tan^^\^^^^^ Everyday Low Prices • Friendly Service • Gold Bell Stamps hJu\ HAMS BAG of APPLES BROOM UM.bs. POTATOES Holiday Chocolates Fresh, Lean lu. Hamburger Lean, Meaty fck Rib Steaks . Blur Ribbon Lb. Ctn. Soft Margarine BREADS BEEF ROAST 2 FRYERS UtDAGradaA Feed tew* COFI FREE GOLD BELL Stamps With Purehasa » Any Box of Christmas Cants SPICES PORK ROAST | FREE GOLD BELL ' Stamps With Purehasa SWEET CORN 6 Cans 2-U». BACON PORK CHOPS DOUBLE LAYER This Week's Future! Genuine Translucent Imported roiwMMW china FREE DINNER PLATE .. ■ wtthptirahass of |ppD yj .| i|)!■ 1 14 f Plat* Siting combtlng oft ■. • Luncheon/Salkd Plate ‘jfc., o*| aa \ryj=:~ *£r*l" CANDY FOOD TOWN SUPER MARKETS PEOPLES FOOD MARKETS PEOPLES FOOD MARKETS 1200 FREE GOLD BELL GIFT STAMPS GIFT CERTIFICATES FOOD TOWN 674-0384 FILL A BOOK FOR THAT CHRISTMAS GIFT Honeysuckle Armour Gold Star Self-Basting TURKEYS TURKEYS 10-16- Lb. Average 18-22-Lb.Anrage 491 cn CO . li|:i EA FREE GOLD BELL Q|| Stamps With Purohasa 3Pkgi. CAKE MIX CA FREE GOLD BELL y|| Stamps With Purehasa ROOM DEODORIZER BA fnee gold bell y|| Stamps With Purehasa Christmas Wrap jSS^SSS^SStSST BA free gold bell y|| Stamps With Purehasa Pickles'Or Olives CA free gold bell yy Stamps With Purehass ' 2 Jars or Cane SHOE POLISH CA free gold bell yy Stamps With Purohass 3 Pound. ONIONS C A FREE gold bell lIU Stamps With Purchase FRUITCAKE I"1' "IT ARMOUR iiklygrade's CANNED < M|i| ", VIRGINIA HAMS ■ ‘ S4k/taw HAMS $459 w 'THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 18, 1967 US. Believes Soviet Pilots Flying Against Yemen Royalists By JOHN M. HIGHTOWER AP Special Correspondent WASHINGTON - Sortie well-informed U. S. officials are convinced Soviet military pilots have been flying combat missions for Yemen’s Republican government a g a 1 n s t Royalist forces attacking San’a, the capita] city. This reported involvement of Soviet fliers, using Soviet-made planes and supported by Soviet took to the hills; in September j changed the political framework 1962 when the monarchy was ov-> in which it has been conducted. erthrown. The struggle has been going on, with periodic eruptions of violence, for five years. But two recent developments President Gamal Abdel Nasser of Egypt pulled out the last of his Soviet-armed troops, which once totaled around 70,000, as a result of a deal with King Faisal of Saudi Arabia. The deal was made necessary by* Nasser’s need for new financing following Egyptian defeats in the June war. Nasser had backed the Repub-i Also ^within the Heart' government and Faisal t^e Britain removed its forces from Royalist group. The result of Aden, giving way to a new nq-Egyptian withdrawal was to tive regime which proclaimed create at least a partial power itself the “Peoples Republic of vacuum. . | Yemen” on the ground Aden is really “South Yemen.” Again the result has been to contribute to the area’s political uncertainty. These developments were long foreseen ami both the So- viets and Chinese Communists have maneuvered to take advantage‘of them. Johnson administration officials regard th§ prospects for the future there with some anxiety. ", !K'' *- mwsAnalyskl ground crews—is considered here to reflect Moscow’s desire to establish power positions in the Middle East, once the exclusive domain of Western iuter- The possibility of Soviet fighter participation was raised a few days ago when a Royalist 1 information minister said the body of a Soviet pilot, carrying Russian-lahguage papers, been found. In official quarters in Washington, it is said there’s no doubt the downed airman was a Soviet. Yemen has considerable strategic importance because —along with the neighboring region until recently known as Aden—it dominates the 12-milewide southern gateway into the Red Sea. ON SUEZ It has a commanding position on the Suez Canal, linking the Mediterranean and the Indian oceans. The canal has been closed since the June war between Israel and the Arab states but is expected to be reopened eventually. Washington authorities say privately they can’t recall conflict similar to that in Yemen in which Soviet pilots have played such an active role. ★ * ★ There have been reports of such involvement in the past in troubled lands, but in the present case, responsible policy makers say they have no doubt the information is true. Whether this marks the beginning of a new phase in Soviet foreign operations is yet to be determined, they caution. The war in Yemen is between the Republican regime and Yemeni Royalist forces which Curfew Wraps Capital City With Quiet SAN’A, Yemen (AP) - Yemen’s gray mountaintop capital was firmly in Republican control today and from no quarter was there any sound of Royalist gunfire. San’a was under a curfew Tuesday night for the third night in a row and several gunshots were heard—but they signaled tiie end of Ramadan fasting at sundown. ★ h ★ “The Royalists have been claiming for the past five years that they were about to capture San’a," said Col. Abdullah Bar-akat, 40, acting interior minister. “It has not happened, you see, and it will never happen.” Sitting in an office furnished with French Empire couches and chairs and carrying a grenade in a breast pocket of his khaki uniform, the colonel said peace would come to Yemen “when Saudi Arabia stops supplying the Royalists, from Saudi Arabia or any other source." ROYALIST BANDS He estimated the active Royalist force at only 300 men, operating in groups of five or less, and said the Republicans could not mount a big offensive to smash them because the Royalists did not have a real army, only tiny bands. Barakat said that the closest Royalist bands had come to San’a was six miles. “Our soldiers are always waiting and always repulse them,” he added. ★ * * The Republican official said he bad Information that European. mercenaries, including Englishmen and a Belgian, fought with, the Royalists in recent clashes with Republican forces. Two hundred Royalists are jM>w under arrest In San’a, ac-cording to Barakat, who said no trial dates have been fixed fori them. He said one prisoner was former Royalist Minister Ahmed Nasser al Sayagbi and another the farmer Royalist director of broadcasting, Yehya al Dqlaimk A bandfol of captured Royalists have died before firing squads. sparkling holiday headwear Misses Triangle* in gold anil silver metallic spark up festive dressing . . . add the right accent. Longt in metallic fishnet... $2 and $3 Shrug In gold color metallic fabric to accent holiday wear............. 7 Gift Handkerchiefs .,. each $1 Fashion Accessories Dept. textured nylon stretch pants for all her casual moments Regular 8.98 A little texturing and a lot of color brightness makes our two-way stretch nylon pants a fashion. Step-in styled with an elasticized waist. Color up her life in orange, pink, light green, turquoise, black, navy in sizes 10 to 18. Fashion Apparel fabulous English crimplene* knits styled for urban-suburban life Small wonder women the world over treasure these Sears Crimplene® polyester knits. They’re PERMA-PREST, too. Simply styled and well cut in easy shifts and skimmers, overblouses with slim skirts; Enjoy them day after day, collect them year after year. Brights and basics. Misses’ petite aiid half sizes. GIFTS for Her |3 jy m Warmly Lined, Lanky 14-inch Fashion Boots REG. 17.99 1297 Trimly in step in this snappy style with softly grained leather upper and ankle ripper. You’ll enjoy the warm lining,’too. Ribbed composition sole and heel. Available in black or brown sizes 5 to 10. "Satisfaction guaranteed or your money back" SEARS Downtown Pontiac Phorte FE 5*4171 / K THE PONTIAC PKKSS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1907 C—18 no rmcEs LOOK FOR GET ACQUAINTED WITH A&P's NEW, LOW * Net Special?.. . But Now Every-Day low Prices • On Thousands of Packages, Bottlos, Cans and Jars Here's What They Mean to You . * Permanent Price Reductions • Savings Unequalled on Your Total Food Bill On All Your Favorite Brands • Come See—You’ll Save at Aft P Here are Just a Few of A*P's New, Low ECONO PRICES! Econo Priced CANNED VEGETABLES OIL MONTI n^c Tomatoes o a o o o a o can 28 2r 22 21‘ UNI quality NrrwT. on. Niblets Corn........21 FRENCH STYLE NIT WT. AAf Freshlike SSS .... '22r 22 CAMPEELL'S I-LI. ■ A. Pork‘n’Beans... 19 MM 1-LB. H*. Baked Beans.... 29 Green Giant Peas 5® OCEAN. SPRAY WHOLE OR STRAINED Cranberry Sauce # # CAN. WHOLI KERNEL OR CREAMED STYLE l*B. Del Monte Corn e e CAN SINE QUALITY NET WT. 10 Econo R?iced CANNED FRUITS Econo Priced MISCELLANEOUS ITEMS FRANCO-AMERICAN ALL VARIETIES O i THANK YOU NET WT. JM M# Blackberries.........35 Gravies TROPI HAI NrWT.|||( Mixed Fruit.........."8^31 COMSTOCK 1-LB. A ■( Apple Pie Filler 35 ROMEO MARASCHINO NET WT. MM an# Cherries.............’iff- 25 SHAMROCK NET WT. ■ MM# Mandarin Oranges 19 SKIPPY Peanut Butter. JIP OR SKIPPY Peanut Butter. VLASIC Polish Dills.. i 1- LB. 2- OX. • • e JAR NET WT. 12-OZ. e • e JAR GERBER STRAINER Baby Feed Econo Priced BAKING SUPPLIES DEL MONTE—SLICED OR HALVES PEACHES 28c 1-LB. 13-OZ. CAN Matches..... FLEISCHMANN'S Margarine... VELVET Cake Fleur... 16‘ 49‘ 39* 47* 10' 39‘ 55' STOKELY'S FINEST OR Del Monte Peas 1-LB. 1-OZ. CAN 21 s r 29* 14' GREEN GIANT Whole Mushrooms HEINZ ? 1 L| Vegetarian Beans «« LIBBY'S 1-LR. Pumpkin....... W 21‘ CAMPBELL'S BEANS AND mm. Ground Beef.........CAN 25 19‘ 12' SLICED OR WHOLE Del Monte Beets.. ALP—SLICED OR WHOLE White Potatoes... Jiffy Cake Mixes ^ W AUNT JEMIMA OR PILLSBURY MM AM# Pancake Mix.. 2 & 39' SUNNYPIELD AA ■ # Pancake Mix.. 2 «« 31 JIFFY AfeJfc* Baking Mix____________ 33' lltRSHlY'S s NET WT. A M# Baking Chocolate IS 35 APNAN WAY N IT WT. AM ga. Pizza Mix ...... “a? 25' FOR COOKING OR SALADS 1-PT. M Pr Crime Oil.................» 45 EVAPORATED NET WT. ■ m. Pet Milk..................^ 15 PLAIN OR IODIZED 1-LB. n ■ ( Merten’s Salt.... - 11 Peaches Fruit Cecktail.... ALP Crushed Pineapple MOTT’S Apple Sauce STEWART'S Blueberries.. 1-LB. 4Vi-OZ. CAN 21' 25' 27' 21' 29' DREAM WHIP OR NET WT. «MMM# lucky Whip...... «!: 39 DESSERT TOPPING NET WT. JW W( Smooth Whip.... 37 ANN PAGE (ALL FLAVORS) NIT WT. AM( Sparkle Gelatin... ~ 3 A Practical Gift That's Practically Perfect AN A&P gift certificate ; Hi m with a malllnt amjaiapa. •*•«!•»& “ imp. offtrtd In ft ana »li Cnnomlnntli Mir ht honortd in any *LP tiara In fY 4-1100, Ext. 14144 j ■Rata tin. nan UnlUd atatat. Far further Infermetien PILLSBURY, ROBINHOOD OR Gold Medal Flour jj:«49c 10-X, LIGHT OR DARK BROWN Domino Sugar 15‘ 1-LB. PKG. SAVE AT A&P, THE HOME OF £cono Prices WHY PAY MORE? SEE NEXT 3 PAGES FOR MORE... AND MORE A&P VALUESI C—*14 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 18, 1967 £cono Priced MISCELLANEOUS ITEMS Syrup...... TURKEY OR CHICKEN—FROZEN NET WT, Meat Pies 5 ml HELLMANN'S Mayonnaise e e e • • ^ CREAMY OR CRUNCHY VLB. j Peter Pan BUTTER • • • e JAR I DEL MONTE, BREAST O'CHICKEN OR NETWT. | Starkist Tuna CHUNK CAN i ARP LIGHT CHUNK Tuna fish......... MARTHA WHITE Bixmix.......... NETWT. t 6 V,-OZ. CAN A NETWT. I 6’/i OZ. • • pko. i Brownulated Sugar HEKMAN—CHOCOLATE FUDGE Sandwich Cookies SALAD DRESSING QUICK SERVING Minute Rice PILLSBURY WHITE Angel Food '».> HERSHEY'S Chocolate Syrup.. MRS. BUTTERWORTH'S Syrup................ FOUR WAY Cold Tablets.... FOR COLDS Bromo Quinine... REEF Mouthwash............ (7 FL. OZ. BTL. S7c) Listerine (ANTISEPTIC) TAME Creme Rinse........... PHILIPS—REGULAR OR MINT Milk of Magnesia NET WT. 15-OZ. PKG. Miracle Whip... ?» 49* 7c OFF LABEL Yll. m MM, Spry Shortening.. «!?• 69 *F42‘ 55 19* 59‘ 43’ 55* 99* 79' 99 69‘ PKG. PKG. Econo Priced CANNED MEATS mm111 MARGARINE COLLEGE INN 1jy4.FL. 3 m . Chicken Broth.... S 14 Chicken a La King "^ 4 7 COLLEGE INN NET WT. M MM, Chicken Fricassee ^r47 WITHOUT BEANS NET WT. MM* Broadcast Chili... ’«»• 44 LI,,7'S NETWT. ■ A, Corned Beef..... '«>?• 59 LI»»Y'S l-LB. mm mm. Beef Stew....... BS 59 u,,vs JJEbj mmm. Spaghetti Vffi? *<£■ 49 Stuffed Cabbage 4 & 1 Pink Salmon.... S 69* Red Salmon.......H 89* CHEF BOY-AR-DEE SPAGHETTI G NETWT MM WMr Meat Balls...... SUPER-RIGHT NET WT. MM MM, Chili.......... ^29* DINTY MOORE i.Ll. m MM. Beef Stew....... “£ 49 LUNCHEON MEAT NETWT. MMM. Spam....... 48 Econo Priced PET FOODS Econo Priced COFFEE, TEA & COCOA Tabby Treat..., DAILY \ Cat Food........... CAT FOOD Nine Lives Tuna, BEEF - LIVER • CHICKEN Alpo Dog Food.. GRAVY TRAIN, PURINA OR Gaines Meal.. TOP CHOICE OR „ GainestPurgers FOR’ DOGS Ken-L Ration.. KEN-L RATION Dog Food RIVAL Dog Food NET WT. tVi-OZ. > CAN NETWT. 15-OZ. CAN NETWT. 6-OZ. CAN NET WT. MVi-OZ. CAN Hc YUBAN Instant Coffee... NETWT. m OR B-OZ. 1 £ JAR 10* 14* 26* 5 a 69* INSTANT COFFEE 1 79* 79* Instant Coffee... • ’!*«• 1 ” NETWT. Instant Coffee... 99 Borden’s Kava... VACUUM PACKED COFFEE Chock Full’0 Nuts MAXWELL HOUSE VACUUM PACKED Sanka Coffee.... « 89* AGP VACUUM PACKED _ ^ Coffee................. «n 69 AGP VACUUM PACKED A ■ m Coffee....... 2 a 1” INSTANT NETWT. m on Nescafe Coffee.. 'Sf 1 LIPTON'S OR RED ROSE m MMMM A A Tea Bags... .100 99 Ever Ready Cocoa ™ 45$ CHOCOLATE.,FLAVORED A m Nestle’s Quik.. 2 a 69* FAMILY STYLE NETWT. m' Hershey’s Cocoa » 31 P.D.Q., INSTANT NETWT. mm. Chocolate Drink.. ’)«• 44 Facial Tissue... SCOT TOILET TISSUE .. 1000 Sheet Roll WHITE CLOUD Toilet Tissue... KLEENEX—2.PLY Facial Tissue... NORTHERN Toilet Tissue». Be OFF LABEL Alcoa Wrap LADY SCOTT —Sc OFF LABEL Bathroom Tissue PROVE IT TO YOURSELF... YOUIL STRETCH TOUR THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1967 C—IS “SUPER-RIGHT SEMI-BONELESS, FULLY COOKED HAMS WHOLE OR HALF NO CENTER SLICES REMOVED "SUPIR-RIGHT"—is TO U II. SIZES mu. Whole Smoked Hams .. *59 HOMELESS BONILISS—FULLY COOKED Canned Hams, CUT-UP FRYERS...lb 33c BONELESS-FULLY COOKED yp j „ 109 nnuj .. j.m. CANNED HAWS Cube Steaks.......... • • 1 whole Fresh Fryers 29 6»” 4** allwop f ms PEELED AND DEVBINBD Sliced Bacon •. • • • • 65 Med. Size Shrimp.... CAP'N JOHN'S Fish Sticks............... "SUPER-RIGHT' _ „ Thick-Sliced Bacon .. l37 Econo Priced HOUSEHOLD ITEMS 3c OFF LABEL Clorox Bleach.... »« 49* 35c OFF LABEL (KING SIZE) 5.LB. AA, Sunshine Rlnso.., SS 99 15« OFF UBEL—2 PKGS. OF 10 aa. S.O.S. Soap Radi 2 i® 29 PERSONAL SIZI V am aa( Ivory Soap.... 4 *«* 28 GIANT Slit BOLD OR j.|j. mi. Tide Detergent... IS 74 ISc OFF LABEL—GIANT SIZE j.li. ■ aa , Surf Detergent... «l: 59 ACTION POWERED 1.LB. m a, Blench..............* 69* 12c OFF LABEL ■ IT liquidWisk...... 1 10c OFF LABEL 1-RT. m Mr. Clean............49 CAMEO—3c OFF LABEL ^ NET WT. A ■ , Capper Cleaner... » 31 ALUMINUM AND STAINLESS STEEL NETWT. A ■ , Cameo Cleaner <&v31 3e OFF LABEL NETWT. m Jfcr Dutch Cleanser. ..’IS 12 chiffon m am c liquid Detergent.. ^ 57 Dry Trend.........2 v^z 35 Econo Priced HOUSEHOLD ITEMS Econo Priced HOUSEHOLD ITEMS SEA MIST Ammonia. £. 25* 12c OFF LABEL Spic A Span... .. & 67* BRIGHT SAIL Ammonia st 19* Be OFF UBEL (RIGUUR SIZI) Safeguard 2 m 34* 20c OFF LABEL Cinch SPRAY CLEANER • • • i 44* MARVEL Air Freshner... ./~F39‘ ALL-PURPOSE CLEANER Formula 409.... & 66* EASY OFF SPRAY Oven Cleaner.. “Cor- 50* • •' SIZE Wf FOR TOILET BOWLS Sno Bol '•£ 34* POWDERED Woolite 1-LB. I» liquid Plumr.... LIQUID DFQnOeeeeeeeee DUSTING WAX Johnson’s Pledge JOHNSON Instant Pride.... KLEAR Floor Wax...... BRAVO Floor Wax...... KINO SIZI SSc OFF UBEL) Breeze Detergent STA-FLO Spray Starch.... STA-PUF Fabric! DQWNY Fabric I NU-SOFT—12c OFF LABEL Fabric Conditioner . AJAX AEROSOL Window Cleaner WINDOW CLEANER Wiadex.............. 4-LB. 1-OZ. > PKO. dpi V WITH A&P’s £oo 12c OFF LABEL Coldwater All..., GIANT SIZI Draft Detergent.. GIANT SIZI Sail Detergent... 2-LB. 15-OZ. PKG. LIQUID DISHWASHING DETERGENT Hil j PALMOLIVE LUX JOY IVORY DOVE k 1*1 ani nil PALMOLIVE LUX JOY IVORY DOVE YOUR choice 1 \ YOUR CHOICE «75c 1 1 * 55c Be OFF LABEL Thrill liquid. RIGUUR SIZI Camay Soap. ist 47* e e e e >TL. TP# BAR 1 AC e e e • ■ w Instant Starch.... ROMAN Non-Wilting Sturdt' Econo Priced JUICES AND DRINKS PINEAPPLE-PINK GRAPEFRUIT 1>QT A _ Dole Drink........ 25* ROST RID 1-OT. - Hawaiian Punch.. ’««• 31 DOLE Pineapple Juke 27( l-QT. 14-OZ. CAN Pineapple Juice.. WELCH'S Grape Juice......... AGP Grape Juice..... AGIf UNSWEETENED Grapefruit Juice.. AGP UNSWEETENED Orange Juice.... V-8 PINE QUALITY Cocktail Juice.. CAMPBELL'S Tomato Juice... BREAKFAST DRINK Start............. ORANGE FLAVORED Instant Tang... STOKELY'S FINIST Chocolate Drink. l-QT. 14-OZ. CAN NETWT. 4Vi • CAN l-QT- 14-OZ. CAN 39* 33‘ 24* 77* 29* n WHY PAY NO TRICES more? C—18 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER* 13, 1967 A&P is the Store that Saves you More Navel Oranges we care ItsAmcricas We think it’s excellence of product. Years and years ago, when we decided to bake Jane Parker Fruit Cake, we also decided to bake the best. That’s why Jane Parker Fruit Cake was then and is today over 2/3 fruits and nuts. Just enough delicious cake to hole! together the bounty of cherries imported from France, pineapple from the Far East, citron from Italy, sun-drenched raisins from California and meaty pecans from the South. We think, too, that value has made it popular. IMAGINE, THE 5-LB. CAKE COSTS ONLY $3.99. That’s the same low price as last year which makes it an even greater value. Now you know why Jane Parker Fruit Cake is America’s most popular. One other thing you should know: You can buy it only at A*P. P.S. Wouldn’t it make a great gift for someone? CALIFORNIA 113 SIZE 69 ECONO-PRICED PRODUCE Brussels Sprouts & 38* Egg Plant...... ■*« 19* Pole Beans.... - 19* Turnips....... .-19' Broccoli....... 'ms 35* Escarole....... 10' Endive........ - 10* Fresh Beets....«*« 15* Vine-Ripe Tomatoes 29' YfUip ) Green Onions BUNCH 9 # I ^ “L 'AS CHOICE J Fancy Cucumbers.. 3'”29' Salad Dressings Bonique Red Wine Shedd’s Chef Italian Frenchette French Wishbone Italian Kraft Italian Wishbone Cr. Onion Kraft Roka Wishbone Russian NET WT. 8-07. BTL. 35- COPYRIGHT ® 1967, THE GREAT ATLANTIC ft PACIFIC TEA CO. I., INC. r Prices Effective Through Serf., Dec. 16th j| hi Wayne, Macomb, Oakland and Washtenaw Counties FOR FOOD STORAGE gn ■■ Baggies .. A&P FROZEN VEGETABLES IN BUTTER SAUCE Peas, Cut Corn or Spinach TOUR CHOICE 27 f NET WT. 2 10-OZ. PKG. Econo Priced CEREALS America's Favorite—lane Parker (Over % fruits and Nuts) Cheerios i Wheaties lucky Charms • KornKix Quaker Quake < iQuaker Quisp Post Krinkles 32 Cut-Rite Paper Handy Wrap 00 Alcoa Wran in TUUK LHUIU 25 FRUIT CAKE Light Batter 1 Vi-lb. Size Light Batter 3-lb. Size I49 29513" DARK BATTER l-|b. 89C . . . 2-lb. 1.69 SAME LOW PRICES AS LAST YEAR 49 JANE PARKER—SAVE 10c Pumpkin Pie m *■*« tee e e e e size JANE PARKER, PLAIN, CINNAMON OR p|(e Sugared Donuts. . . . . •ofn X3 49 SAVE 20c—JANE PARKER ALL-BUTTER Chocolate Brownies . . ^ /iac e pkg. JANE PARKER COOKIES Almond Crescents . . . JANE PARKER FRESH, CRISP Potato Chips SAVE 10c • • • • 2-LB. PKG. 1-LB. BOX 89 59* BONUS 1 JANE PARKER i Econo P* DUNCAN HINES LAYER CAKE MIXES 29* 1-LB. R'/s-OZ. PACKAGE HHI AJAX CLEANSER FAB WITH BORAX ,0‘0,1 2c Off Label NIT WT. — 14-02. 1 CAN 3-Ll. 2-OZ, PKG. 13' 65' SH©P^ The Heme off icono Prices Baby Pizzas Made With French Rolls Make these hot ‘n’ peppy “Miniature Pizza Slices” to go with holiday punch. Slice 6 French rolls into VMnch slices; place on greased cookie sheet. Combine 1 can (8 ounces) tomato sauce, % teaspoon oregano and % teaspoon garlic salt; spoon on bread slices. Dot with Mi cup diced cooked ham and; Vi cup shredded Cheddari cheese; sprinkle with 3 tablespoons grated Parmesan cheese. Broil till hot and bubbly. Makes 16 to 20 appetizers. Something different and de-^ licious: piping-hot chile con car-, ne served over rice and topped with tiny butter-browned cubes of bread. Tuna Sandwich Made With Olives Hot Ripe Olive Tuna Broil is a favorite with teens. Combine 1 cup chopped ripe olives, 1 (6%-ounce) can tuna, 1 cup grated American cheese, y« cup mayonnaise and Vi teaspoon Worcestershire. Spread over 6 hamburger buns and heat in very hot oven 1(450 degrees F.) 15 minutes. 'KmTl always find Michigan-Made Sugar in the finest places, woe blueberry pie 3 e blueberries, \ fresh or frozen 2 T flour 9$ cMichigan-Made sugar Doth toll Flaky pastry for double 9-inch pie 1T lemon juice 1T butter or margarine Jf fresh berries are used, pick over, discard stems and leaves; wash and drain well. If frozen berries are used, drain welL Combine berries with flout, sugar and salt; mix well. lane nine-inch pie pan with half the pastry; fill with the berry mixture; sprinkle lemon juice over top and dot with butter; carefully put on top crust, sealing well to edge of pan. Cut vents in top crust and bake at 450degrees 40 minutes or until fruit is tender and crust is golden; if crust browns too fast, cover with a piece of brown paper. Cool completely on rack. That’s why 6 out of 10 Michigan homemakers buy Michigan-Made Sugar Eat once my Kluski and get to know what good is! great with Goulash. Noodles like mama makes with eggs from the barn fresh, special-made for appetites grown up in the country where great cooking is nearly all. But I should talk so muchl-Now I’m offering coupons so you should hustle and get my Kluski noodles. They come in th^ big bundle that’s so pretty also. Such good noodles. w SAVE WHEN YOU PURCHASE NEW PENNSYLVANIA DUTCH KLUSKI NOODLES Mr. Dealer: Pennsylvania Dutch will NOTE: Invoice* proving purchase of '----this coupon for7^ plus sufficient stock to cover cnugoi- handling charge if conditions of offer 'have been complied wilh by you snd your customer. Mail redeemed $ This offer if void in sny stele, terrier municipality where prohibited, Ik taxed ^or otherwise restricted. Good only in II.S. A. I tented for redemption must be shown upon request. We will not honor re* detention through transferees, assignees, outside agencies, brokers, or others who.are not retail distributors of our merchandise. To Hbmemaker: Redeemable value only on merchandise indicated. Any other application constitutes fraua. lories and Puerto Rico. Not transferable. ONE or I water. Stir in relish. Spoon batter into ice " recbcob cone8, cones about % sifted all-purpose flour quick-cooking oatmeal soda salt mces) cranberry- xtract full. Bake in moderate oven (350 degrees) 20 to 25 minutes, or unUl tops are golden brown.! Cool on a rack. Prepare frosting as directed, using cranberry Juice instead of liquid specified. Spread frosting i top of cake in cones. Press skewers into spearmint leaves and gumdrops, then push into cake to resemble and flowers. Serve with well-chilled cranberry Juice cocktail. Red-colored sugar Cream shortening and gradually beat in sugar; stir in eggs. Combine flour, oatmeal, baking soda and salt. Stir dry ingredients and cranberry-orange relish alternately into shortening mixture, beginning and ending with dry ingredients. Stir in nuts and vanilla. [Chill 2 hours. | With floured fingers, roll piece of dough about the size of small plum on floured surface into rope about 8 laches long. Put rope on well-greased cookie sheet and twist into bow shape. Pinch edges together if dough cracks occasionally. Bake in moderate oven (375 40 large Cranberry-Orange Spice Flowerpots 1 package (1 pound, 2*4 ounces) spice cake mix 2 eggs % cup water Vi cup cranberry-orange relish 24 flat-bottomed ice cream cones 2 packages (6% ounces each) vanilla buttercream frosting mix 5 tablespoons cranberry juice cocktail Green spearmint leaves Assorted colored gumdrops (large and small) or small lollipops Skewers PW drwMd up for the --------1 holidays. Good however all HOLIDAY BEAN.PIE - Beans in a pie? Of course. This is an unusual and hearty main course. Cut your pastry in bell shape to add a timely note to the dish. Pork and Beans Filling for Different Pie Festive, tasty and easy to eat out-of-hand as a pizza is a Flavor Is Spicy year round, it can be a snack by itself or a hearty lunch or supper dish with soup and a Keep everyone guessing as to| clever homemakers willdeco-the combination of flavors in rate it to suit the mood of the this special Christmas 'relish, occasion or even serve it open Put through your blender or face/, TrV W « variety of food grinder 2 cups raw cran- coo*‘® cutter shapes for a chil-berries, 1 cup watermelon ,drensParty-pickle and Vs cup syrup from! Holiday Bean Pie the pickle. Stir in clip, 2 tablespoons fat chopped toasted California wal- 1 pound ground chuck beef inuts; refrigerate until serving | V* cup chopped celery time. Vs cup chopped green pepper Vs cup chopped onion 1 (21 oz.) can pork and beans with, tomato sauce 2 tablespoons Worcestershire sauce Salt and pepper to taste. In the fat, cook all ingredients Instant Molds Use a muffin tin to freeze quickly individual helpings of gelatin. Tb be .sure that your celatin will set to the right consistency, place sponsfuls of the mixture in the refrigerator and allow it to set before you pour the entire mixture into mold. except beans and seasoning for about 10 minutes, stirring occasionally. Stir in beans and seasoning and mix thoroughly, A few of the canned beans can be set aside before mixing and used to add to the design lajer. ★ * a Turn, into a 9-inch pie pan lined with unbaked pastry. Top with bells or other designs cut out ot pie dough or use a plain top crust. Bake in a hot oveu, 425 degrees^till pie crust is done, about 70 minutes. Beef gravy may also be served with the pie. Makes six servings. TWE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1967 HOLIDAY CENTERPIECES-A sugar cube castle and marshmalW-candy Church are yours far the making. You can create them in an evening. Store them after the holidays for another year. Full size patterns for both are available by sending 61 for pattern 249330 (add 25 cents for air mail delivery) by currency, check or money order to: Steve Ellingson, The Pontiac Press Pattern Dept. PO Box 2382, Van Nuys, Calif. 91409. ■ I THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 196T Jacoby on Bridge | NORTH 4863 IS VA65 ♦ Q83 < ♦ QJ49 WEST EAST 4Q107B *2 VJ9 3 VQ10874 ♦ AK8 6 9 107 52 *108 *076 SOUTH (D) *AKJ84 VK2 ♦ J4 ♦ AK53 Both vulnerable Weat North East South Pass Pass Opening lead—9 K By OSWALD AND JAMES JACOBY The only name player lasting to the semifinals in the national rubber bridge championships at 1 the Sands Hotel Las Vegas [was Morrie El- j of New [York. Morrie won Irhany national ■titles including Rhe Vanderbilt •in the late ’30s •. JACOBY and'40s but has confined himself .to rubber bridge play- for the last 20 years. Maybe that's the way to practice for a rubber bridge tournament. Morrie sat South and it was the next to the last hand of his quarter-final match. Both sides | were vulnerable and he was Exactly 600 points behind when [he picked up a fine spade hand. He opened one spade, his partner raised him to . two spades l and Morrie passed. He wouldn’t have done so in a regular rubber bridge game or in any form of duplicate j I state his hand clearly called for [ a bid of game, but this was a J tournament and Morr|le was bidding to the score. . It seemed to him that he i would be just as well-off making a partial as winning the rubber. If he won the rubber, he would go into the last hand with a 20 or 50 point lead, depending on whether he made four or five tricks. This would leave an! even-Steven situation for the [ last hand. If he made a part score hej would be in almost as fine a1 position. Another part score would give him game and rubber, and assuming he made more than one no-trump or two clubs or diamonds he would win by a few points which was all that counted. On the other hand, if his op- [ ponents competed he have to double them and set them two tricks to win. The two. tricks penalty would be 500; the 60 below the line would make-it 560 and he would get a 50-point bonus for his part score to win the match by a 10-point minimum. I whereupon he would be 700 | points behind an but sometimes the way Spellman. He war a man of * a businessman’s^ heart is great personalwarmth, and his!^^^^^ hav. M ing a religious community in 'the United States that is, by and large, aware of its moral .jji .responsibilities to eliminate rac-if |ism. Leaders or organized Catholics, Protestants and Jews are almost unanimous in this. Why then is racism still such a problem? Part of the reason of course, will always YOUNG jis that many people will follow treasure the memory of one of j their spiritual leaders in pure-the last times I saw him. 1 had jy religious matters, but back Just returned from mly visit with|off when incomes to changing Pope Paul VI at the Vatican j their set attitudes in other last summer. j areas. Cardinal Spellman heard of) Another reason is that too my talk with Pope Paul and;many religious leaders just the appeal I made for a strong'aren’t outspoken enough, condemnation of racism. i TIMES OF CRISIS We were both scheduled to ap- But We live in times of crisis, pear at the dedication ceremon-10ur urban problemB just won.t ies of a new building. As I . .. . mounted the platform, I saw;wait for them to conene minute to play in the half. But Powell made a jumper and Joe Danules a free throw to move Kettering within one. • 4 ■ The Wolves displayed good accuracy at the free throw line in the first half, converting 16 of 19 attempts. They ma'de eight of 15 in the last half. a a a Ball handling errors plagued' the Wolves throughout the game. Evans’ defensive work didn’t help Clarkston. He stole the ball nine times before fouling out with a minute to play. O’Connor also was waived out on fouls in the closing seconds. ' Clarkston moves back into Wayne-Oakland League play Friday at home against Clarenceville. Kettering, playing as an independent this season, but scheduled to join the W-0 next spring, hosts Lapeer. JCWTWUNa^ Tf> CLARKST07M5U, • J 8 1 rtnkntr ....1 2-5 4 Grangtr . | 4-4 4 O'Conner .. 5 4-1 it Ostrum ...4 3-4 id event ..... I t-l 22 Johnson . ) 7 j Tama it it-30 40 Tat ala 17 i«-m m ■„ 1CORR BY QUARTERS Im S ft 2 Red Wing Rookies Exchanging Positions DETROIT (AP) - The Detroit Red . Wings called up Gary Marsh, 21, from the Fort Worth Wings of the Central Professional Hockey League Tuesday, and sent Rick McCann, 21, to Fort Worth. Marsh, a left winger, will play his first National Hockey -League game Thursday against Chicago in Detroit, the Wings said. McCann had played three games with Detroit without scoring a point. Marsh was the third-leading CPL scorer with 12 goals and 13 assists for 25 points. THE PONTIAC PRESS Mm WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1967 D—1 Three Share Lead in Parochial Loop NORTHWBST PAROCHIAL LIAOUI ItaiMlna* Laa(M Over-All Orchard Lake St. Mary .... 1 o 3 1 Farmington Our Lady ...,.. 3 0 3 0 ». Francl* da Aalee . ....3 o 3 0 Waterford Our Lady ....... 1 2 13 Pontiac Catholic ......... 1 2 13 Parnoala Jt. Jam** .......I 2 1 3 it. He .............. ....*303 Royal Oak St. Mary .......o 3 a 4 Something has to give in the Northwest Parochial League, and the break for at least one of the three coleaders will come Friday night. On top in the loop at present with 3-0 records are Orchard Luke St. Mary, Farmington Our Lady of Sorrows and St. Francis de Sales, One will drop down when de Sales invades OL St. Mary Friday night Farmington OLS is expected to pest its fourth league decision in a contest at Detroit St. Rita. In action lust night, Orchurd Laike St. Mary romped past Royal Oak St. Mary, 70-49, de Sales bombed St. Rita, 97-76, .and FOLS squeezed out a 62-55 victory over Feradale St. James. ■* A A - A OLSM, running its over-all record to 3-1, had little trouble with the Irish on the ROSM court. The OLM Eaglets rolled to a 19-8 first quarter lead, upped it to 34-19 at intermission and the reserves handled mopup action during much of the second half. A balanced scoring attack kept FOLS unbeaten In the race for league honors. Dennis Perry paved the way for FOLS with 17 markers, while Paul Bunker and Mike Hart contributed 14 apiece. St. Francis de Sales turned loose its one-two punch, of Eugene LaFaive and John Senbert in routing St. Rita. LaFaive tossed in 26 points and Senbert came through with 24. West Bloomfield Posts Easy Decision Over Skippers, 72-52 EASY LAYUP—Joe O’Connor of Waterford Kettering goes up for an easy layup against Clarkston last night. Chuck Granger’s reach isn’t long enough to stop the two-pointer. RO ST. MARY RY (4*) re ft ti Cyman Kslttkl Maooa Suomi . 4 1-4 17 .. 3 4-10 12 .2 0-1 4 I Ho na I «V::r By FLETCHER SPEARS ^JVhat a difference a year makes. At this time last season, West Bloomfield’s Lakers owned an 0-3 basketball record, and while they didn’t know it at the time,’ they were headed for a MS finish. Most of those old hands who suffered through that dismal campaign are back. They’re bigger and better and they appear capable of reversing that ‘66-67 mark. Hie Lakers ran their record to 3-6 last night by surprising previously unbeaten Waterford Township (M), 72-52,' which ended a four-game winning streak for the Skippers In the series. Coach Art Paddy has a promising club in this year’s crop of Lakers and he knows it. “First time in years we’ve had any height,” he was saying before the game. “Oh, we had maybe, one player 6-2 or 6-3, but nothing like we have this year.” * A A Height the Lakers have and plenty of it. Three of Paddy’s starters are* over six feet and the other two are close to the six-foot mark. Another pleasant hi mm BRS£t^U.a§ Renltac Frau Photo, by Ralt Winter i sconn av quarters Orchard Lake St. Miry ... ... ft IS 14 17—7* Royal Oak (t. Mary .... • 11 IS If— 4* BATTING ABOUT—Kettering’s Pete Evans appears to be playing a little volleyball against Clarkston. The senior guard batted the ball in the hoop enough for 22 points in the Captains’ 69-58 victory. Other Kettering players (from left) are Rick Colonna, Joe O’Connor and Joe Danules. * Lifetime Pact for John Pont? BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (AP) - John Pont, who directed Indiana University’s football team to its first Rose Bowl trip, will get a new lifetime contract with a substantia] pay hike, the Indianapolis Star reported today. The tearing up of his old pact and awarding him the new one may take place at a meeting of the university trustees Friday morning, the Star said. Pont’s contract is on the agenda for the trustees’ executive meeting, the newspaper said. It also was learned that a pay increase probably will be given all members of Pont’s coaching staff, the Star reported. Pont’s new salary, the paper said, probably will be between $25,000 and $30,000 a year. He now is in the third year of a five-year contract and is receiving $22,000 a year. thing about those over six feet ii that they’re juniors and will be back next season. Waterford, also flooring a tall, well-balanced squad, was simply outgunned and outplayed by the hustling Lakers, who overcame an early deficit to grab a 39-26 lead at halftime. "They were just that much better than us tonight,” said the Skippers’ coach Bob Taylor. “We gave them too many shots in dose.’’ The Lakers did a lot of shooting from dose range and they shot well, finishing the evening with a hot 51 per cent — 28 of 54 — while the Skippers were ice cold in hitting on only 18 oil II. , Waterford built up a quick 7-2 lead, but the Lakers pulled even late in the first period and actually won the game at the start of the second period when the Skippers went flat. After taking a 15-14 lead at the tail-end of the first frame, the Lakers then scored the next 15' points to open up a 30-14 lead with 3:50 left in the first half. COOL PERIOD Waterford managed 12 points in the second period and only five in the third and couldn’t recover. The Lakers ran their margin to 29 points at one time . during the second half. Paddy’s crop of juniors sparked the scoring attack. Dave Karlson (8-3) led all scorers with 23 markers, Steve Westjohn (6-2) added 11, Curtis Britton (6-2) tossed in II, and Dan Brown, a junior (6-1) forward, came off the bench to pick op 12 points. Guard Mike Sheldon, who played a sharp floor game for the Skippers, wound up with 14 points while teammate Bob Finkle came off the bench to contribute 12. • The Lakers gained a 44-30 edge in tha rebounding department, with Britton and Karlson doing most of the work on the /boards. WATERFORD (]2) W. BLOOMFIELD (71) FO FT TF FO FT TF asr*. Saarla .......« «-z Saffron ...... 3 4 2 Total* it 14-2* i SCORE ii Walarlord ............ wait Bloomfield 3 5 5 HohnofoKf . 12 4 Brown ..... 4-1 0 Ring# ..... 2-2 12 Morodlth .. Tdtal* 21 14-14 72 Hazel Park Falls Lqte Surge Sparks Lahser A strong second-half surge carried Bloomfield Hills Lahser to a 61-55 basketball victory tost night over a visiting Roseville Brablec squad. A A,.' A 7 Down 27-23 at intermission, the Knights of Lahser took charge, and during a 13-minute span of the third and fourth quarters, outscored the visitors 36-12 to open up a comfortable lead. - In a couple other games, Warren handed Hazel Park its first setback o! the season, 67-62, while redbot Norte Branch went on a scoring spree and posted a 104-61 verdict over Brawn City. Lahser ran Its record to M by trimming Brablec, and the big lead late in the game enabled coach Bill Ullenbruch to give the reserves some playing time. *•' , AAA Bill West and Bemie McPheeley led Columbia AD Moves NEW YORK (UPI) -Ralph Furey, athletic director at Columbia University since 1946 and a prime mover in formation of the Ivy League, is relinquishing the post to become special assistant to the president' of the university. the Lahser attack with 14 points apiece and teammate Bruce Gangnath contributed 13. FAILS AT CATCH-UP Hazel Park, now 3-1, fell behind 20-14 In the first quarter and spent the rest of the evening in an unsuccessful effort at catch-up. A A A A bright spot In the Hazel Park loes was the sharp play of guard Jim Mer-chel, a 5-10 junior, who scored 29 points to lead all scorers. Through four games, Merchel sports a 28.2 scoring average. AAA Ted May tossed in 27 markers and Randy Dehayes collected 14 to pace the Warren attack. _ Five players hit in double figures as North Branch routed Brown City and ran Its’ record to 2-0. The loss left Brown City at 1-2. Dave Costello led the winners with 25 points, followed by A! Haack (17), Dave Graham (16), Bob Mayberry (13) and Tom Snoblen (11). A A A~ Jerry Sauder held a hot hand in a losing cause for Broth City as he hit on 11 field goals and added itine free throws for a 31-point performance. Teammate Dennis Kalbfleisch tossed in 20. BRABLEC (H) Tol*l* 37 7-33 41 Rtttvlll* Brabtoc HAZEL PARK (43) WARRRH (47) “ FT TF FO FT TF 4-0 3 Dehiyt* ...4 4-14 14 0-0 I May ....-.10 7-4 27 4-4 J Jarac* ....2 1-3 5 Pru*» . Dsdoro DaCotta I 0-0 2 Ntlfar : 37 3-12 4 score ui JHS Cagers 1 Point | Shy of Perfection | MEADVILLE, Pa. (AP) - The Line-Yille Junior High basketball team isn’t one to press a point. - They make it and that’s it. In their game Tuesday night With Meadville, the opening came in the final period on a free throw. The final score. Meadville 111 Line-ville 1. Swede Netters in Finals STOCKHOLM, Sweden (UPI)-Brltoin plays Sweden today for the championship of the Kings Cup Tennis Tournament. Britain advanced to the final round Monday with a 2-1 victory over Spain thanks to singles triumphs scored by Roger Taylor and. Bobby Wilson. FIRM GRASP—Eric Hood of Clarkston has a firm hold on v tha ball after snaring a rebound in a duel with Kettering’s and Mark Erickaon (53) are other Clarkston players. Joe Dave Powell (11) tost night. Lyle Walters (54), Bob Paltodtoo Danules of Kettering keeps track pf Erickson. British Rule Tennis STOCKHOLM/ Sweden (UPI) --Great Britain defeated Sweden 2-1 Tuesday to capture its fourth consecutive Kings Cup tennlf titlp. , ^ , Wmekme/ We have low prices because we maintain a low overhead, with no middleman. Your carpet is sold direct to you in your home with big savings. Installed Before Christmas Carpet 3 Rooms 100% NYLON For Our Shop-At-Home Service CALL 334-0177 HERCULQN 4* *5"* Ideal For Kitchen and Recreation Room Choosa From Tho Quality Carpott AAAGEE - ALEXANDER SMITH ROXBURY "PotttM CoitofH/ Ca/tpet 334-0177 1672 Telegraph Rd. CALL TODAY 'Ll.. D—-2 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1907 Ziem) Wilson Face Injured Pioneers Albion Cagers in Homecoming at OU Tonight NEIL WARIUNER It will be homecoming tonight at Oakland University, but not for the Pioneers. Albion College invades the OU gym for an 8 o'clock basketball game sporting a roster that more Oakland County than OU’s team. Seven area players are with the Britons and three possibly could start. Mike Wilson, a 5-11 sophomore from Farmington,, led the Britons to their first victory last Saturday with a 29-point effort against Adrian. Former Waterford star Rick Ziem, a 9-0 sophomore, poured in 30 in an. opening loss at Wabash. Centering the Britons is 6-9 senior cocaptian Neil Warriner from Farmington. Other area players expected to see action are 6-4 junior Jim Horner of Birmingham and 6-3 sophomore Craig Georgeff of Southfield. All five are letter- Also on the roster are freshmen Tim Baughman from Country Day and Ron Boger from Bloomfield Hills. The only county player on the Oakland varsity is Jay Shutt from Birmingham. Several players from high schools just outside Oakland County are on the Pioneer roster. ROAD GAMES This will be OU’s last chance of the year to post its first var- sity victory. The Pioneers have dropped three straight and will not play again until they start a five-game road engagement Jan., 5 at Wayne State. a a ‘ a The next home game will be Jan. 20 against Hillsdale. Oakland is hurting in more ways than in the loss column. “We started the school year with 1? varsity prospects,” said coach Dick Robinson. “Now We are down to six and may lose ne more.” One player took a job; another was lost to illness; two suffered .fence .injuries that required surgery; three are ineligible; one is on social probation; one left school; and two were dropped for disciplinary leave. He has a knee Injury Clark and is not expected to see much action against Albion. Shutt may be the next to 'A specialist is going to check it during the weekend," said Robinson, “but it doesn't look And the injury list is longer. ‘Walking wounded" who will start against) Albion are Chuck and Gordy Tebo, both nursing sprained ankles. Don Beier, a freshman from St. Clair, will take over for Shutt. Bob Papak and Gary Lincoln will be the other start- There will be no junior varsity game tonight — not be-' cause of the injuries, but because none is scheduled. <6 JCHARDSO* s Bo | UNITAS Salt! mot? (MACKEY | Boftimorej NICKERSON " KRAMER i Green Boy [OoMAftCO NCElY Dallas I John Unitas Quarterback on NFLs All-Star Offense BEATING WILT—Former U. of Detroit star Dorie Murrey (41) evades the long arm of Philadelphia’s Wilt Chamberlain to put in two points for the Seattle Superitonics in their game last night in New York. At left is Seattle's Bob Weiss, while 76ers’ Lucious Jackson waits at right. Phila-relphia won, 118-107. ' Bullefs Blast Cold Pistons BALTIMORE (AP) — The ed the indured Don Ohl after two Baltimore Bullets ended a six- minutes of the game, and rookie game losing streak Tuesday night, beating the Detroit Pistons 140-117, in a National Basketball Association game. Kevin Loughery, who replao- Warriors Beat Midwestern 5 Michigan Christian JC Pulls put Close Win Earl Monroe paced the Bullets. Loughery scored 35 points while Monroe poured in 32 points, his high as a rookie. Monroe scored 27 of his 32 points in the opening half, which ended with Baltimore on top 73-47. The Bullets led after the first period 42-20. Monroe hit 12 of his first 15 shots and finished with 14 field [receivers were Mackey, Rich- 2 Lions Rate Line Berths on 2nd Team NEW YORK (AP) - John Unitas, shut out without a vote last^year, was named quarterback of the National Football League All-Star team selected for The Associated Press today | by a panel of sports writers and, sportscasters. Unitas’ skill in guiding the Colts through 13 games without defeat was recognized by a landslide vote of the committee, three from each league city.. A A A Despite the Colts’ fine record, the old reUable Green Bay Packers still had the most men on the team with a total of six, two on offense and four on defense. Dallas placed four and Baltimore three. Nine of the teams had players on the first team. New York, Philadelphia,! Pittsburgh, New Orleans, Minnesota, Detroit and San Francisco were blanked. ★ * A Two Lions were named to the second team. Offensive guard John Gordy, t, 6-feet-4 , 240 pounds, from Tennessee and defensive tackle Alex Karras, 32, 6-2, 245, from Iowa, were both picked by panel of sports writers and broadcasters for the second team. Looking ahead to Sunday's meeting of the Colts and Los Angeles Rams for the right to play the Packers in the Western Conference final, Baltimore has Unitas, tight end John Mackey and flanker Willie Richardson on the first offensive team. The Rams put two of their Fearsome Foursome on the defensive line—end Dave “Deacon" Jones and tackle Merlin Olsen, RUNNING BACKS Unitas’ running backs on the first team were the incomparable Gale Sayers of Chicago and Leroy Kelly of Cleveland. His goals in 21 attempts. Tom Van Arsdale led the Pistons with 21 points. ♦ * * Dave Bing, who averaged 40 points against the Bullets the first two times he played it them this season, scored only 11. Ohl aggravated a pulled tendon in his right thigh. The defeat left Detroit in third Rams-Colts' Showdown Has Baseball Parallel NEW YORK (UPI) — The National Football League will stage its version of Bob Gibson vs. Jim Lonborg next Sunday when the Baltimore Colts play the Los Angeles Rams for the Division title. Alsup Boys Aid ardson and, split end Charley Taylor of Washington. ★ < a a Bob DeMarco of St. Louis was the center, flanked by Jerry Kramer of Green Bay and Gene Hickerson of Cleveland at the guards and Ralph Neely of Dal-| and Forrest Gregg of Green Bay at the tackles. VISIT TEAM I—Charley Taylor, Waihli ing Philadelphia and 2*A back of second-place Boston. The Pistons are at Cobo Halil tonight for a game with the New York Knicks. In the only other NBA action, former two-time Princeton All- •ho, and Gene HIc ....---- .3, 348, 30 Mississippi. Canter—Bob DaMar“ " I —1 240, 28, Dayton. Quarterback—John | 184, 34, LoullvIMa. nnlnp backs—Gala Sayer Cleveland. Michigan Christian Junior College closed with a rush Tuesday afternoon to defeat host Midwestern Baptist Seminary, 90-82, in a Michigan Christian College, AA league contest. The visiting Warriors and Midwestern entered the game tied for third place in the standings with 1-1 records, and they battled on even terms until the late, going. The host Falcons held a 10-; point margin during the first half and were on top, 45-41, at| . . IP I , the intermission. M i d w a y: America Bill Bradley fired in 23| through the closing twenty min-|P°ints *or ^ew York but the | Davis,'Gri utes Bill Leak tied the score for1 Knicks bowed U) St. LouiS 145-' Tackles-MCJC. 142 in double overtime while Sari m n. The two then dueled until the .Die*° ,opped Chica«° U^m visitors shook loose for some ..... * quick baskets off their fast! Ee*ore the hopes of the 17,524 .H break during the final five min-!tans soared with Bradley and 4-oT.JM utes. This proved too much forcrashed with the final result, i •the Falcons to offset. Hal Greer put on a Little show of ,j The Falcbns Will travel to If™" | ini , „J - Johnson City, N.Y., tomorrow the Philadelphia 76ers;2,t°M,'nfMaf"southi for a Saturday tournament that past the Seattle SuperSonics JIAJTjg r~~ " also will include Detroit Bible 107‘ College of the MCCAA. * * * , , /’oJiSffiJK S ,40. j Bradley missed the only shot: 32, Tannassaa, and Kan Gray, S*. Louis, . in the first quarter but then hitcan^-MkkH7iwi^nMin»»ao*a, «. J. on eight Straight as the Knicks P ^artOrbac k-Smny Jurgenaan, Waal). The NFL version will be ny Unitas vs. Roman briel and there are at least interesting parallels to the baseball matchup. First, the pro football version matches a veteran 1 \4/Tl_JC star a8ainst a new star and, Unbeaten WTHS secondly, neither Unitas or Ga-ii . »/• , briel is the ieader, percentage- tO Mat VICTOry wise, in his specialty. WWW Joe and Eric Alsup sparked a But the weekly statistics re-Waterford Township surge that lea8ed today by the NFL and earned the unbeaten Skippers a 28-21 wrestling victory over Rochester Tuesday night. ^— ------ "W—... —a-toot-3, 220 pounds, 26, Arizona orere. i The FalCOnS (2-2) jumped into ™ worei iiara WUH place in the Eastern Division,j2,T5K,t 26?Vr«us“#ckev' Han early 13-5 lead but Bill Him-|the official NFL passing cham- four games behind league-lead-melspach, the two Alsups and;Pl°n8hiP. ranks second in the ing Philadelphia and 2Vi back of blm Main resistered Dins as league this year while Gabriel further research by Don Weiss, the league’s director of information, reveal the class of the two stars. Unitas, who never has won !jim Main registered pins as *ea8ue this year while Gabriel WTHS (4-0) swept the next fivelranks fifth- Sonny Jurgensen of to, oi. Louia. *-2-j matches. the Washington Redskins is the Unitai, Baltimore, ! leader with 269 completions in W Erc AtguP has woa all four of 470 attempts for a .572 percen-w..., j any.! his starts by falls, and Joe has ■ —* * • -- ■ • °r1sai»im«rai swept his three outings in the ftrlln Olsen, Los A ah, and Bob Lilly, ixai Christian i, 24, Texas. ______ >3, 245, 26, Penn State, and; Chuck, Mowley. Dallas, 6 2, 230, 30 Watt) ^Backs- Bob 1 Waterford will Invade Por Huron tomorrow night in its final tuneup for Saturday's Waterford Invitational Tournament at Kettering High School. WATERFORD 21, ROCHESTER 1 85-pounds - Ronn Jamieson .Harrl™- - “ £....... I—Jerry Smitti, Washington, I .. _—. R Arizona State. Tackles—Bob Brawn, Philadelphia, 4-. “ |gjj—Ernie McMIllai Ington, 5-2; 103-Chrlt Vizena (R> __ Gibbs, 7-0; i 12—Steve Moffat (W) dec. Hail. 7-2; 12b-Jim Way (W) draw with Paul Boat, (56; 127-Ban Rlgdon (R) pinned Codtta, 3:53; 138—Bill Hlmmel-spech (W) pinned Nicely, 1:30; 138-Joe Altup (w) pinned Gill, 3:20; 145-Eric Alsup (W) pinned , T. Rlgdon, 5:30; 154-Dana Howard (W) dec. Mai kasian, 14-3; 143-Jlm Main (W) pinned Brunt, ,3:34; * 1IO—Alex McKinnon (R) »«.w»R4iiiwr«aBn!r- In another league tilt, Grand Rapids Grace Bible downed Detroit Bible College, 100-92, des- - .BjWWHWI..,..r„.—, ..... pite 51 points by Pontiac’s Bud ran up a 108-86 lead with 6:55| XSning biS^ihn aSiend, s Pressley. The winners pulled left in the fourth quarter. D^in?4'5-wml2?urNewriM.?Ki away in the final two minutes.! ar-r Bible* HOdSO" Hlt 23 f°r GraC* J>BT,,0,T Wrestling Results tage, 3533 yards and 29 touchdowns. Unitas has carried the Colts through an unbeaten season 23S completions In 405 attempts for a .583 percentage, 3222 yards and 11 touchdowns while Gabriel has been the key player in guiding the Rams to a 16-1-2 season. The combined records of the teams is 21-1-4. * * * To Illustrate dabrlel’s impor-ince to the Rams’ success, Weiss went back to the 10th game of the 1965 season when Roman took over as Los Angeles’ first-string quarterback. Since then the Runs have played 31 games and compiled a 21-8-2 record. AW* Leroy Kelly of the Cleveland Browns is the runaway leader rushing with 1143 yards in 220 attempts for a 5.2 average, Jim Bakken of the St. Louis Cardinals leads in scoring with 27 field goals and 34 extra points for 115 points and Charley Taylor and Jerry Smith of the Redskins are tied for the lead in pass receiving with 62 catches each. CALLING IT QUITS — Linebacker Sam Huff, defensive captain of the Washington Redskins, paused yesterday in the ’Skins locker room after announcing that he will retire Sunday after Washington’s final game of the season. Huff, 33, Is onq of pro football’s all-time great linebackers and five times an All-Pro selection. He joined the New York Giants after college at West Virginia and remained in N.Y. for eight years before moving to the Redskins in -a trade. Sam Huff's 'Violence' Coming to End Sunday PNH Mafmen Rated Second WASHINGTON (AP) - The violent world of Sam Huff wjll nd Sunday. The big linebacker, five times an All-National Football League selection, announced Tuesday he will retire after the Washington Redskins’ game with New Orleans. “There comes a time In every athlete’s life when he has to hang up his jersey,” Huff emotionally told a news conference in a dressing room at D,C. Stadium. “That time has come for me." ■e meeting reporters, Huff sat sobbing in front of his locker for 15 minutes. His teammates, filing in from practice, passed him silently. Huff has been with the Redskins for the past four seasons after eight eventful yean with the New York Giants when his name became synonymous with! the bone - crushing defensive! play of the growing sport of professional football. He was the subject of a television show, "The Violent World of Sam Huff,” and was the subject of a cover story In Time Magazine. His duels with Jim Brown, the Cleveland Browne’ great runner, I have become le- Pontiac Northern's Huskies week Lans- After PNH come id Owosso. Royal Oak Dondero occupies the No. slot. The Huskies, winners of the tate championship last year, in their dual record to 2-6 last ight by pinning a 29-13 setback Royal Oak Kimball. In another prep meet last improving Birmingham Seaholm knocked off Warren Fitzgerald, 32-12, with Kevin Wilson winning his 20th bout in row in the 112-pound class. The triumph raised Seaholm’s record to 341 for the season. ★ A A Elsewhere, Lake Orion posted its first victory (1-2) of the season with a 26-21 decision over Waterford Kettering, while Farmington Our Lady of Sorrows ran its record to 3-2 with a 29-14 triumph over Clarence-ville. ■ IMhrtm 32, FHngraM It *5-Fwaiter (S) plnnaf Thompaon, 5:18 103—6OM IF) dal. Booth (SI J-T 112-Wilson ($) pinned Malstrom. 3:34 145—J at) Monptlatti (S) pinned Millar, 154-Klsh (F) dat. B rod la, 51 ■jsswwiiBtsr A graduate of West Virginia, file 33-year-old Huff played In 157 consecutive games before suffering an Injured ankle eight weeks ago. He returned tion two weeks ago. Special ceremonies will honor! Huff before Sunday's game and already the Redskins are talking about trying to persuade him to play again. If Washington needs him for a championship bid next year, Huff indicated, he might be bide. (ROK)I m (fnh) *m 85-^rkiSrwalJrdo SrflTtklnnir ao) ft THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 18. 1907 d~hj BASKETBALL SPOKES Later in. c»»» city «s ■ Caro M. Bad Ax# M Vattar 49. Sandusky « ... COLLBOB Michigan Stata 71, Wattarn Michigan 47 KMitdale 55, Ashland 54 Concordia cc no, HigMeml Park JC telfrldg* Air Force law 711. Macot Central Michigan M, Calvin “ Kingston 40, Unlonvlll* ST Sebawalng 71, Mayvllja 53 Upht 44, Owingagt 53 Midland St, Douglas Mac Arthur 74 •' a 71. Chariot! M ItfM ........on Late 42, Clare 42 Saginaw Arthur Hill Tech 47, Saginaw IS Peter 1 Paul 58 Rasa City si. Big Rapid. 44 WaoDervllle 54, Langsburg S3 Mt. Morrw St. Mary 105, Chetanlng Our Grand Blanc SS. Flint Ainsworth 41 «. FIM Kaartley 40, Flushing SI Owosao 44, Mt. Morris S4 Flint Beecher B. Clio S3 Flint Bentley 45, Flint Hamady SS Chasaning 71, Durand 43 Flint Bendle 47, Corunna S3 Battle Creek Springfield U. Bangor Mount Clemens. L'Anse Creuse SlL Ce tar Line 44 Warn Warn... Detroit ... Bt. Mary 70 St. Clair Shores St. Gertrude 74, Her tramck Immaculate Conception 37 Marine City Holy Cross SO, Richmond St. Augustine 45 Mason S4, Lansing Waverly S3 Eaton Rapids 97, Michigan Center 4S MHridge j Parsons (i^^\si’Normwood' Institute Mast St. John’s. N.Y., 44, Rhode Island 41 Yale 73, Bros---- ! North Carolina S4, Kentucky 77 Vanderbilt si, Davidson 79, OT West. Kentucky 74, Butter 54 Syracuse 95, Osorgstown, D.C., 7S Miami 104, Te^riB Bowling Green S7, Ball s*. 70 Iowa slate 77. Northern III. 49 Toledo 94, Bakhvln-Wallace 41 Defiance 90, Bluffton 71 Otterbelrr 99, Muskingum 43 Hiram 74, Cleveland State 40 Quincy, III., 93, MacMurray S3 Illinois Cpll. 93, Blackburn if Rio Grande 94, Oakland Cl 94 Concordia. Ind»93, Bethel IS U. of Pacific ANorlh Texas 41 Taylor M. New Orleans Loyola 7! >hllllps Oilers 47. U. Tech.-El Paso 4! ; Kentucky Davidson Fall KALAMAZOO, Mich. (Jft-Hey-wood Edwards sank two free with 8.18 remaining in the first half to put Michigan Stata. ahead for good and scored 22 points to pace the Spartans to a 78-67 nonconference college basketball victory over Western Michigan Tuesday night. WWW The 6-foot, 6-inch senior from Brooklyn, N. Y., hit on 9 of 18 shots from the field and grabbed points 13 rebounds. The Sportans tallied 10 straight points in a three-ute scoring burst, but Western battled back to, trail hy only three, 38-33, at the half. Reggie Lacefield led the scoring for the BroncOs with 19 points, while Gene Ford added 13 and Ray Schlaff of Southfield 10. Steve Rymal racked up 14 for the Spartans, followed i l>y Harrison Stepter with 12 and Lee Lafayette with 11. SCORING BURST The Spartans widened their lead to 19 points durig the last half but had to settle for an 11-point, first-half scoring burst) with two free throws several minutes after Edwards put the Spartans out in front to stay. LWtilng Boyi Training 10, Spring.Fi LMlIt 113, Epst Jackson 59 Jackson Wasfsrn 70, Gun Late 5 CoMwatar 77, Albion 43 Detroit All Salnti 01, Detroit St. Elizabeth S3 Detroit St. Gabriel 49, Detroit Sai Heart 30 Muskegon Height! 01, Muikegon 00 (Jtlca St. Lawrance 74, New: Baltimore Anchor Bay Catholic 54 Utica Stovenien 45, " Ypiilr-’1 “----- : AREA PREP SCORES Waterford Kettering 49, Clarkston 54 wait Bloomfield 73. Waterford S3 Warren 47. Hazel Park 43 Orchard Lake St. Mary 70, Royal Oak St. Maty 49 St. Francis do Sales 97, Detroit St. Rita Farmington Our Lady 43, Ferndalo St. Jamas S3 North Branch 104. Brown City 49 Bloomfield Hills Lahser 41, Roseville ’ Jayvee scares RoyaJ Oak St^ Mary S3, Orchard Lake Waterford*1^, West Bloomfield SI Hazel Park (35, warren 33 RosevgN^ Brablec 43, Bloomfield Hills Waterford Kettering 54, Clarkston 53 Western Division ‘ San 'Francisco . 31 Los Angeles .17 1 Chicago ......... 9 3 Los Angelas . 'Philadelphia . Pittsburgh ... 3 10 M t! 7 0 13 7 33 43 I vision 3 10 3 39 74 1 3 9 4 30 57 ! 0 13 3 33 70 ) Los Angeles at Minnesota Oakland at St. Louis Thursday’s Games Chicago at De>'»i' St. louls at P Baltimore 140. Detroit 117 Philadelphia 110, Seattle 107 St. Louis 14S, New York 143, K San Diego 113, Chicago 104 tedey's Gamas Baltimore at Cincinnati New York at Detroit Chicago at San Francisco 8 State Gridmen on North Squad Christmas Day MIAMI, Fla. (AP) - Eight players from Michigan universities have been named to play for the North team, coached by Bump Elliott of the University of Michigan, in the North-South all-star footbaU game Christmas Day in the Orange Bowl. The University of Michigan will be represented by four players, Rocky Rosema at end, Pete Mair and Dave Porter at guard and Dennis Morgan in the defensive backfield. From Michigan State, the North will feature Dwight Lee as a running back, Tony Conti at tackle and Dave Porter at guard. Dale Livingston of Western Michigan will be the team’s kicker. Jerry Reese Helps CMU to Easy Win MOUNT PLEASANT (API-Central Michigan overwhelmed CalvinCollege 93-71 in a nonconference basketball game Tues-I day night, with CMU substitutes playing the last half of the' second half. ★ ★ ★ * Central led 48-37 Mt halftime, Southfield JV Beats Lathrup Lathrup’s first year basket-1 ball team lost a 66-51 decision to Southfield High reserves last [night as Scott Miller hit 23 for the winners. Lathrup, now 1-2, for the sea-' son, was led by Jim Preston’s 119. The losers held a 27-25 halftime margin. Michigan State is now 2-0 while Western has a 1-2 record. * ■ * * Skinner’s Sh o r t Six refers to the Wanderbilt basketball team coached by Ro^ Skinner. ★ * • '* Tom Hagan, a B-foot-3 junior and one of the Short Six, canned a 20-foot jump shot with two seconds left, to give third-ranked Vanderbilt an 81-79 overtime victory over eighth-ranked Davidson at Nashville Tuesday night. * * * Seventh-ranked North Carolina whipped fourth-ranked Kentucky 84-77 at Greensbqro, N. C., in the other Ynajor game involving teams in The Associated Top Ten. * * * Skinner’s Short Six—Hagan, Bo Wyenandt, Bob Warren, 5-8,1 Kenny Campbell, Perry Wallace, and Gene Lockyear — averages' only 6-314, but it came from 12' points back to knock Davidson' from the unbeaten ranks FIRST LOSS Behind at 54-53, North Carolina exploded to take an 11-point lead in the last eight minutes and hand Kentucky its1 first defeat. Larry Miller’s tip-in put the Tar Heels ahead for good at 65-64 and Rusty Clark followed with Several baskets to make it 71-64. Title. Fight Delayed / , a p# • V»i^ ^ MEXICO CITY (AP) — The world championship flyweight title bout between Chartchai Chionoi of Thailand and Efren "Alacran” Torres of Mexico, scheduled for Jan. 14, has been postponed one week to Jan. 21. ) MICHIGAN ST G P Lstsystts S 1-3 11 Lw< Edwards 9 4-7 33 Han Lick 3 0-0 4 Fore Rymal S 4-5 14 Schii Bailey 3 3-4 9 Votl Stepter 4 4-4 13 Kldr Heims Ini Hun Copelsnd 1 0-1' 3 Vndi Gelstler 1 0-0 3 , Totals 31 14-33 71 Tots Michigan Stata Tfaftarn Michigan Foylnd out—Nona. Total fouls—Michigan S Alt*. 14. Attendance 9,300. . WESTERN MICH, r G F T I Lacefield 4 7-9 19 held the lead throughout the game, and expanded it to 24 points, 76-52, with six minutes to go in the second half. * ★ * Jerry Reese of Pontiac and Steve Johnson each scored 14 points to lead Central, with Terry Walker adding 12 and Bill Collins 11. Micky Phelps was high for Calvin with 18 points. ■i it * ★ Central is 2-3 for the year, Calvin is 2-2. Red Wing Hockey CHICAGO 8 p.m. Tomorrow Olympia Stadium 895-7000 ABA SCORES Wtotam Division Houston Anaheim . Kentucky 113, Minnesota Today's Game. New Jersey at Denver Oakland at New Orleans Minnesota vs. Indiana at SERVING OAKLAND COVNTY OVER 35 YEARS Lnzelle Agency, Inc. iub/ W.L.j ALL FORMS OF ^fb' INSURANCE zjJjL* 504 PONTIAC STATE BANK BLDG* Closed Saturdays—Emergency Phone FE 5-0314 Phone FE 5-8172 ATTENTION! TRADESMEN—SPORTSMEN Caps or Covers For Pick-Up Trucks All Sixes for ALL TRUCKS • Insulated • 12 Volt Light • Paneled Interiors • Aluminum Exteriors • Locked Tailgate Door Priced From *179*0 Bank Financing — Wa Take Trades Dodge Cars LLOYD BRIDGES I RAVELAND BMW 1010 W. Maple - Open till 8:30 P.M. Daily WALLED LAKE — Sat, till 6 P.M. 624-1572 NOW AT OUR BRAND NEW LOCATION ... 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TAX 7.00x13 BLACKWALL Other Sixes Sale Priced LIFETIME ROAD HAZARD & QUALITY GUARANTEE WHITEWALL $3 MORE PER TIRE TUBELESS BLACKWALL ___SIZES WAS PER TIRE SALE PRICE FEDERAL EX. TAX H SAFETY STUDS AVAILABLE AKMCO TIRE GO. TIRES SALE PRICED FOR 10 DAYS ONLY D~4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1967 Over 350 Ducks Killed in Novi Brown Death Breaks Loose; Lays Waste to Fish, Wildlife By DON VOGEL For bettor than a day, the brown death lay dormant; pooled behind ice blocked culverts. At * * Warm weather and rain eroded the ice. Finally, the natural gates were down and the brown mass began to foove. Over 350 unsuspecting ducks fell victim. Five small ponds were Stripped of fish. ★ ★ ★ A few muskrats, either trapped in their dens or unable to swim out of danger, became casualties. Although it doesn’t show, trees and other vegetation probably will pay the ultimate penalty. A lake remains on the danger list, Tired, oiled-covered Conservation Department workers were in no mood to pull punches. “Unnecessary” and “senseless” were the two words they most frequently used. They are fighting a battle that was lost before they went into action. Over 3,000 gallons of No. 2 fuel oil had already laid waste to a stretch of tile Bassett Drain in Novi. Department Efforts may save Meadowbrook Lake. Phln-nix Lake and the upper Rouge River are put of danger. The fuel oil was lost when one of two tankers being hauled by a Guardian Oil Co. (Lansing) tractor tipped on its side at Novi Road and the 1-90 interchange Monday, Dec. 4. The oil collected in a drainage ditch because culverts along the ditch were blocked by ice and debris. It stayed there, according to conservation workers, until warm weather and rain combined to melt the ice; Sometime Tuesday night or early Wednesday the natural dams gave way and the oil flowed down the ditch and into the Bassett drain. The Novi police department was notified late Wednesday that dead ducks were turning up along the drain. Conservation officers were contacted. Measures to intercept the oil, trapped along the drain by ice in a couple of the ponds and in swamps, got under way Thursday. As the warm weather con- tinued through the weekend, more oil flowed. Filter dams of straw were erected along the drain and board skimmers moved into place. As the oil piled up on the surface of the water behind the boards, it was siphoned off with pumps. The drain flows through Mead-owbrook Lake, into Phtonix and then the,Rouge River. 'This should never have happened,” said Glen Mertens of the water resources division. “All somebody had to do was call the Conservation Depart- ment Monday and we could have had that oil pumped out of the ditch before it got loose. 7 “What an unnecessary waste, v ★ a Howard Greene, district game biologist, who estimated that 350-400 ducks perished^ charged that it wad “a senseless waste because it could have been averted.” He said most of the ducks were wild mallards. WWW Panfish and black bass were killed, according to Keith Rubin, fish biologist from Rose Lake. “Indications point to a complete fllcny the Outd Trail with DON VOGO-Owtdeer Uttar, Pontiac Press Ohio Backs Camp Perry NR A Shoot Deer Kill Sixth Largest on Record The National Rifle Association says it will hold its annual rifle and pistol championships at Camp Perry, Ohio, next year, even though the Army won’t help sponsor them. About 2,000 competitors are expected, some 5,000 less than last year. * ★ ★ Franklin L. Orth, executive vice president of the 900,000-member organization, said the state of Ohio will cooperate/in staging the August matches. The Army last month said was withdrawing its traditional support “to reduce expenditures and limit spending to only the most essential programs,” primarily because of involvement In the Vietnam war. Orth said the Army agreed to let the NRA use the Camp Perry facilities for the month of August. In previous years the Army supplied about 11.1 million in free ammunition and logistic services to the NRA for the marksmanship matches. "We feel it is extremely portant to the national defense to hold the championships, although they must be conducted next year on a reduced basis,” said Orth. "The war in Vietnam ip a rifeman’s war, and the more training and experience that can be given to our young marksmen, the more effective they wfll prove in the military service.” Tentative plans call for the newly-designated NRA Rifle and Pistol Championship to begin during the first week of August, mid to continue over a period of several weeks, but complete details, as well as the exact length of time during which the championships will be conducted, are still to be resolved. A preliminary kill count by the Department of Conservation shows that firearm deer hunters took 103,400 whitetails this year, the sixth largest kill on record. The department said the kill was 12,000 deer or 13 per cent greater than in 1966. A final count will be made next spring in the annual postcard survey of licensed hunters. ♦ * * At the same time, they will be able to get a count on the number of deer shot ii chery season. The preliminary count of the kill by firearm hunters was made by counting the animals moving on vehicles along major north-south highways. The preliminary figures show 65,000 bucks and 37,900 antlerless deer were killed, about 6,-000 more animals in . each category than a year ago. Hunters in southern Lower Michigan set a new high for the region for the seventh year running by killing 11,900 deer, 1,000 more than in 1966. In the Northern Lower Penin- sula, hunters harvested 64,800 animals, up 16,350 from last year. As the department predicted, the kill in the Upper Pensinusla was down. Hunters killed 26,700 deer, about 1,500 fewer than in 1966. The department has not yet compiled figures on deer license sales and the hunter turnout. The firearm season stretched from Nov. 18-Dec. 3. Archers hunted in the upper part of the state in October and November and may continue to hunt in Southern Michigan through this month. Salmon Hurdles Rocks on Williqpnette River Hatchery Fish Mold Key to Future Wet Weather Cut Fire Losses. LANSING (UPI)-Wet weather at the right times and in the right places combined with prompt preventive action held forest fire damage in Michigar this year to an all-time low. The Conservation Department said 871 fires were recorded during the season with damagr extending to 2,819 acres, the total, best since record-keeping began in 1871, is 66 acres fewer than the previous low set ir 1965. Another low record war set in the extent of damage per fire at an average of 3.2 acres In contrast, the tinder-dry summer of 1966 saw 18,891 acres gutted in 1,672 fires. Dams Impede Western Salmon Runs By MIKE DOAN PORTLAND, Ore. (AP)-One of nature’s most amazing rituals, already gone forever in most of the United States, has been drastically altered by the Northwest’s many dams. For thousands of centuries salmon made their voyages up the nation’s rivers to lay their eggs and die. But when man built water wheels and dumped, wastes into water the fish no,longer were able to swim in most Eastern rivers and became practically extinct there. In the less populous Northwest, salmon still are able to hatch in a mountain stream. Driven by 'some compelling force, they travel down the Columbia River to the ocean, often ,000 miles away. The salmon disappear into the vastoess of the Pacific Ocean, but from two to six years later, in one of those mysteries that nature creates, they reappear, now fullgrown. Desperately, compulsively, at way upstream each year, al- least 1.5 million fish fight their ways seeking the place they themselves were hatched. Biologists say they use a variety of sense to do so, including navigation by the stars. But they mostly use their sense of smell to find their place of origin. ★ ★ * • There the female fish lays thousands of eggs. The male covers them with his sperm. Their job done, they wearily start back downstream. They do not complete this journey. They die. But thousands of their offspring make the trip later instead. OBSTRUCTION BUILT All salmon were bom this way for thousands of years. But in the past 32 years, 24 dams have been built on the Columbia and Snake rivers, two of the prime sources of Pacific salmon. The result is that half of the water in the Columbia system is no longer accessible to salmon. More and more of them are produced artifically in hatcheries. The schedule of Solunar Periods, as printed below, has been taken from John Alden Knight’s SOLUNAR TABLES. Plan your days so that you will be fishing in good territory or hunting in good cover during these times, if you wish to find the best sport that - >ch day has to offer. ifanger* Tima f nar’Malar MinerMalar a is it ii 30 10:05 4:10 0:4$ 7:16 10:35 6:16 11:30 0:0$ toil ’?;8 Jackpot Singles Every Thursday, 9:30 P.M. U)mmuuL 80% of) 200 MuA 70Z of, 200 G«t Entry Blank* at Countar Per Mere Information Cell ’AifuilOU-touted, 4(25 Highland Rd. (MU) (74-0425 There the female’s eggs are i greeted by sports fishermen, removed with a knife. They are I and Indian fishermen with gill-dumped in a bucket and a male nets who do not honor the fish’s sperm is poured over states’ fishing seasons, them. The eggs are put into wa- >pj,e fjgj, again must navigate ter to hatch, and the dead fish oVer dams Scientists have de-are sold for food at state institu- fjgj, ladders that allow tions or for fertilizer. the salmon to leap from one lev- The odds against the newly el to another in pools of water hatched salmon making it to the until they are over the dam. ocean are great. At least eight'Grand Coulee Dam does not per cent are killed at each dam going through the electric gen-Some of them go through nine dams. Years later as adults, on the way inland to lay their eggs, they meet many , hurdles. First they have to get by the ocean fishermen. The next hurdle is on the lower Columbia near Astoria where fisherman have their nets ready during a strictly controlled fishing season. The Oregon catch alone in the Columbia is worth $3.2 millibn year. Farther upstream the fish are have these, and there will never again be salmon in the upper Columbia, which winds into Canada and down to western Montana. Once the fish have passed .{he ladders they must find their way through the deep water behind the dam to the next dam. Between 27 and 41 per cent of the salmon which climb Mc-Nary Dam never make it to the next dam. Scientists do not know how many were lost before the dams were built. , The Columbia has fared bet- ter than some rivers in keeping salmon. * * * In the early part of the century the Atlantic salmon dwindled , and now the only regular salmon fishing in the East is by sportsmen in some rivers in Maine. Today most American salmon comes from rivers in Alaska, Washington, Oregon, California and Idaho. fish kill along the drain and in the ponds,” he said. Mertens estimated that oil and residue trapped in pockets and in the swamp grasses will to show up “after every rain for the next year. I’m sure there will be some fish kill in Meadowbrook,” said Rubin, “but it shouldn't be too great. Vegetation in the ponds and along the drain killed by the oil may eventually wash down to the lake and, being decaying material that uses oxygen, could set the stage for a winter-kill; not this winter, but in two or-time-years. 'Then, again, it might not.” NEARLY CONTAINED Department Workers had most of the oil contained above the Ten Mile bridge by yesterday. it woulcij have been to pump it out.”" ' Bruso had three oil and water soaked jackets to show for his weekend activity along the drain. ^ “We- didn’t realize, exactly what happened to 11 (nil),” said Novi police officer George Biggs. “There was nothing we could do.” Water resources workers said that similar mishaps involving oil have happened^ other communities withstmilar results. “If only the police or someone would contact us When something like this happens and a waterway or lake is threatened,” said Mertens. “Oil in quantity lays waste to everything: it comes in contact with. It can only be pumped out and dumped in some wasteland 'It really makes you mad,” said District Law Supervisor. - 1 George Bruso, “when you think °r burned, of that oil just sitting in that Neither happened in Novi unditch for over a day. How easy | til it was too late. "l Windsor Raceway ,4lh-5950 Cond. Pact ; 1 Mile: —U-lvonl» Bey 2.(0 1.15 2. I. C. Rainbow 9.30 5. Nick Adloe \ , • 1. 7th—SHOO Cond. Poet; 1 MHoi Mil,. A.tr. 11 An ion A TONIGHT'S SNTRISI --------- POCOI 1 MU Ho^Joo C. Oulnollo 2-1 Paid 554.15 Lively KM II. San Juan Pralghf Cleybrook Van 9th—SUM Claiming Pact; 1 TUESDAY'S RESULTS HI—MOO Claiming Pact; I Mila: ---- Crlckett 40.M 12.1 Iretden Prlnca 14.60 7.30 2.50 17.90 7.60 . 3.60 Mr. Kurykrwka 4NI-4000 Cond. Pacai '-'llnawood Boy _JI loo .Boo Tommy Chips *“• -4900 Cond. Pacoi 1 Mila: WHj'Boy 11.71 .50 1.00 5.00 SALES Consultants "Placing Salesmen Our Only Business” We have • working relationship with many of the "FORTUNE 500” Compa- Sales and Management positions available In the following fields . . . • ENGINEERING • MEDICAL • BUSINESS • CHEMICALS • PACKAGING • COSMETICS • ELECTRONICS • FOOD 398-5000 14650 W. Eight Mile Rd. Nr. Xway by Northland It one# happened, ef all pieces. In , f the deciding gome ef the Stanley | Cup pleygffi . . . Detroit and . | Montreal were tied 2-3 at the and I | if ef regulation time . . In the . I v •udden death avartlme, Henri | 13 Richard of Montreal wot tripped . J | ... At ho wet tripped, ho foil on I | a loote puck and olid right into . the Detroit cage, taking the puck I [.j Tuesday, December 19th Bogbmlng at I1i55 A.M. t«.»T> By Order ef the Owner: Genesee Foundry, Pattern & Engineering Co. G-4070 South Dort Highway, Flint, Michigan BAND SAWSt Tennewltt 42"l Oliver 34"; RoIMn Metal Cutting TABLE SAW: Delta Milwaukee Crescent 12" Tilting Arbor, S/N 640JA SWING SAW: Sk-To-M 10", S/N 4i9 PLANER: BOfcfrCrOM 12"»4" JOINTERS: Oliver Modol 144, 14", S/N 223441 Delta 4" DISC GRINDER-BANDERS: Matter 24"; State IS"; 2—Delta 12" SPINDLi SANDER: Doll* IV' ‘ iSWWy. c.c----1--In"-1 w".*!?#!'. 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Shop, Victory and Office Bqulpmmt W Deposit of 25% ICoth or Certified Chock) Required it Time of Salt' INSPECTION! Monday, December 15|h, 9 e.m, to 4:30 p.m. Por Free lllutiroted end potoltod Circular Write or Cam NORMAN LEVY associates, incoppopated 3143 GUARDIAN BLDG. • DETROIT • WO 2-6182 AUCTIONEERS LIQUIDATORS APPRAISERS MOOT. 1U0IIU DISTIUEES CO.. BTC. CirT WRiPPtOAT NO IHM 4MST THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1967 1)-~S Break Up Bureaucracy—Prof LONDON CAP) —* The man finds governments today getting who propounded the Parkinson!too far away from the people, Law of expanding bureaucracy I bringing democracy into a de- cline. His solution: Redraw tbeftnto pufilic administration; By map, with a myriad of small 2195 the entire working force HURON ^MAGNIFICENT! .. — CHICAGO AMERICAN "BREATHTAKING!” MIOES THIS ENGAGEMENT — TORONTO STAN WTt to *____- \ J*COSIWUTHW mstNTS JPLre ANDREWS-MAX VON SYDOW-RICHARD HARRIS ADULTS NITES’ *UNMY ■»< HOLIDAYS...I......... sewwkio W|0f i#- MTt matinees......iS WtO.-S4T.-MN. •( t!l*_4 NEXT ATTRACTION! “THE BIBLE” FREE COFFEE FOR OUR PATRONS 12 NORTH SAOINAW IN DOWNTOWN PONTIAC! I MATINEES DAILY OPEN 11:45 A.M. Show Starts 12:00 Noon Continuous—334*4436 NOW SHOWING FOB MATURE ADULTS ^BEHINEDTHE SCENES LOOK state* inside federal systems. He cites the United States a> a hoddl. The world of George Orwell's IBM” creeps nearer every year, says Prof. C. Northcote Parkinson. ., * h h ■ ' ‘When the tail of bureaucracy bejgins to wag the dog of government it leads to some form of totalitarian {government or die-tatorship—that seems to be the fashion of the day,” he tokfan interviewer. Europe, he indicated, could provide a powerful impetus in the other direction or the Common Market will never develop into a united political and economic force. It will be smothered by bureaucracy and wracked by bickering under the domination of West Germany, he says. DRAWING ATTENTION With a recent article in the Daily Telegraph Magazine and a new book, the 58-year-old author, journalist and former army officer is again attracting attention 10 years after his original “law” was published in the United States. It goes this way: “Work expands to fill the time available.” He gives a mass of figures demonstrate the truth of his prophecy of 1957 that civil servants multiply as their responsibilities shrink. NEW BOOK book called “Left Luggage” blames Socialist governments for escalations in the number of public employes. The mushrooming ranks of government employes and the lists of companies dependent in . - some way on government, he domination of one country over says, threaten the freedom of others-somethmg the other • ..... \ countries are not likely to ac- cept readily. Britain could prepare Itself for entry into the Common Market—which I don’t think will be for sometime, incidentally—if it started to break itself down now. This is the real preparation for entry into a united Europe.” PREDICTION Will this happen? “It would be rash to predict. The rate of progress is directly in proportion to the threat to the West from the Oriento-at the moment, China. As anxiety grows the thought of it brings people together and makes them tackle problems or unity. “A small example of this is the way the Christian churches are talking about unity: the little churches are frightened an oriental religiQji will swallow them up. * . ★ ' w “There is nothing inevital about the situation. The pfi lem is not-superhuman. “It is a question whether humans are intelligent enough to do something.” will draw its pay from the gov. ‘Tile high public payroll can keep rising to a point at which it has virtual control,” he warns. IMPOSSIBLE POSITION’ ‘The position will then be impossible. People win vote as citizens lot their own conditions of service as employes. “Parliamentary government —already living in a dream world too far removed from the people—will then have to head for dictatorship of some form. “Britain is one of the few instances of an attempt being made to govern 52 million people from one headquarters. ...— “Prance is trying to do something similar—but it has resorted to an individual. 'Government must be broken down into provinces or stats so it is close enough to the people to give them influence.” LAST HOPE The nationalist upsurges Scotland and Wales provide the pointer, he says. Both have elected nationalist representatives to the London Parliament. This, believes Parkinson, is the one ray of sunshine, “Europe can set up local legislatures,” he says. “The model must be the United States—the biggest example in the world-where we find 200 million people divided into 50 states, giving an average of 4 million persons each.” At present, he says, wouldn’t think a united Europe can come into existence. / Is France going to have control, or Germany? I think it would be Germany. There can only be Term Gommuted LANSING (API—Gov. George Romney has commuted the life sentence of former Detroiter Thama McDaniel, 5?, who was convicted of first-degree murder by Detroit Recorder’s Court In 1951. Romney’s action makes McDaniel, an Inmate of Southern Michigan Prison, eligible for Intmediate parole. Crash Helmet or Crown of Thorns? HUTCHINSON, Kan. (Ap) -Mrs, Juanita Sttvey, who said the “helmet of salvation” offered through the Bible was the only protection she needed, has lost her court fight to avoid wearing a motorcycle, era s h helmet. The housewife had been fined 110 in Municipal Court for riding without a helmet. She filed a test case, contending the city ordinance was unconstitutional. Judge J a m es .H. Rexroad ruled the ordinance was constitutional. “It Is a privilege and net a right to operate a vehicle on the public streets, and no individual can be permitted to be the judge of his duty to obey lawi enacted in the public Interest and welfare,” the judge said. Parkinson predicts that by the year 2145 half of Britain’s working population wil lbe absorbed 'Aggression' Eyed by U. | 50 Nations Debate Need for Definition UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. W-One of the roles of the United Nations, under its charter, is to take collective measures “for the suppression of acts of aggression or other breaches of peace.” But the United Nations, like the League of Nations before It, has never been able to agree on what constitutes “aggression.'* More than 34 years ago the Soviet Union asked the League of Nations to define it formally. It has asked the United Nations to do so, several times, Initially in 1950. This week more than 50 members of the 122-nation U.N. General Assembly debate a new Soviet proposal, declaring there Is a need to define It. DICTIONARY SAYS: One dictionary calls aggression a “first or unprovoked attack or act of hostility,” but it Isn’t that simple, politically speaking. Soviet Deputy Foreign Minister Vasily V. Kuznetsov said the United States is waging an aggressive war in Vietnam, ww* Ceylon's Naiana Marikkar says a definition should not have specific criteria making it necessary to prove Intent on ths part of the state in question. U. S. Ambassador Arthur J. Goldberg suggested any definition must “mean the same thing to all of us regardless of ideologyor power or political interest.” Sears! Christmas Gift SALE Save *7! Craftsman %-inch Heavy-Duty Electric Drill Regular 21.99 14" Motor develops Vi-H.P.... ball bearings at heavy wear points for long, dependable service. 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Downtown Pontiac Phone FE 5-41 71 D-*0 facility in Georgia Just for Handicapped WINDER, Ga. (UPI) — Most Americans ’ take outdoor recreation for granted, but a state park's trails and facilities often present problems for the handicapped. Georgia, aided by a $642,243 grant from the Department of the Interior, is building a state park designed solely for handicapped persons and their fam-i tiles. The park, to be located in the 1,680-acre Fort Yargo State Park in north-central Georgia, will feature braille direction signs, wheelchair trails and special equipment to make fishing, boating and other outdoor activities easy for the handicapped. Now in the design stage and several years from completion,! the park is expected to cost more than $1.3 million. * * * Many states have made their parks accessible to the disabled, but Fort Yargo will be the first park especially designed for the] handicapped, according Georgia part officials. BUND IN MIND All facilities will be ■tructed with consideration of the convenience of the blind, those confined to wheelchairs and persons with partial or no ... use of their arms or legs. The facilities will include trails, playground equipment, outdoor games, swimming, picnicking, fishing, boating and bicycling. The park will be structed around a group camp and a family cottage area — a unique feature of the project offering vacation style rental cottages to the families of the handicapped. t. Lake beaches will be equipped with easy-access ramps and even the boats will have special apparatus to able wheelchairs to be brought aboard easily. THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 1*. 1967 Fire Total Up Last Month in Waterford Reported -fires in Waterford Township last month exceeded the totals for November 1966 and October of this year, according to a monthly fire department report submitted to the Township Board. The report showed that 35 fires occurred in the community last month, compared with the previous November and" in October. Eighteen of last month’s fires happened In buildings, seven in motor vehicles, six were classified as miscellaneous and four were of die brush and grass variety. The number of fires through November this year stands at 389 as opposed to 497. for the same period of 1966. * ★ ★ However, direct fire damage this year totaled $224,078 after 11 ' months compared with $179,775 from January through November last year. 49 ALARMS Including six rescue and! emergency runs and four accidental alarms, township fire fighters responded to 49 alarms last month compared with 45 for the preceding November and! 42 this October. The total number of alarms answered by township firemen this year stands at 604 after 11 months against 739 for the same period of 1966. Reg. 1.46, 8-Pk. Hand-painted 25/«" Bolls...... Reg. 59* 6-Pk. 25/." Round Gloss Ornaments. • • Reg. 69<, 10-Ft. x 3" Shiny Tinsel Garland .*•••• Our Reg. 42< Pkg. of 18" Lead Foil Icicles Our Reg. 2.5/ String 50 Tiny Imfoor Lites. Big Continuous Rolls 44 Feet of decorated paper on a roll or 15 feet of embossed foil gift wrap. 26" Wide. Many designs. || 8-Roll Pk. Gift Wrap* Each roll is different and distinc- MM five. 26" x 60" (total 40 feet). M A 4-Roll Luxury Package, WiJ Jj ^ 200Tags, Seals, Cards Sparlde, mosaic and snow-frost de- signs add a special glamor touch. Mm M^mj Deluxe Pod of 72 Curds. Mm 14" Polyethylene OJLt Christmas Wreath.............70* 18" Polyethylene W 00 Christmas Wreath...... f •00 22" Polyethylene 0 QW Christmas Wreath .... .JL • 7# Glittered Nylon Pine 0 90 Needle Wreath w/Holly JL•00 White-flocked Nylon 0 MW Wreath with Gold..*.. ile4/ Nylon Boudoir Bonnet Nylon tricot bouffant boudoir bon- MM | nets in soft pastels. Made up in frilly, feminine styles. In acetate gift box. Curler Bog or Bonnet | Both made of nylon in a choice of MfMkLm M each ..... designs, including "water color’' H print, lace, candy stripe, pastels. Gift S boxed. Women's Gift Box of 2 or 3 Fancy Handkerchiefs | Lace, linen and fine cotton hankies 9 beautiful with applique and embroi-defy. White on white, dr color on white. 100 RCA Camden ’Stereo Monaural Nedr Christmas LP's A fine Selection of your favorite carols, hymns, organ music, chimes. 'Design* Christmas LP’s, 9 9* 36 x 12” Shelves, 37" High 3-Shelf Steel Unit Jr.M/ss Gift BoXed/MetalFrame Continental Clutch Long-wearing plastic in a variety of finishes, all resembling fine leather. Clutch Bag and Kay Cast Sat.. 2.99 J99 Women’s Acetate/Nylon 086 Glove Suede Handbags.....JL 16-Pc. or 5 3-Pc. Din netware New"Colorama"ln Four Subtle Shades 333 1299 53-Pe. Set A four-color set of fine earthenware dishes in sunny shades specially selected to go together: gold, avocado, tangerine andblue. Dishwasher-safe finish. In AHighFashionPaisleyPattern 3 Days Only - Boys' Reg. 2A37 3-Piece Luggage Set Western Style Shirts Shelves are adjustable at 1J»" inter-J vals. Sway braces and ribbed posts give added rigidity. Gray. Soft-side, steel-frame, zipper-J closure bags with locks. 21", 181*", 171k'. Blue, red, green. J Rugged washable cotton in a choii of plaids and iridescent weaves. With button-cuffed long sleeves. 6-16. Yule Tree Sale Is Under Way The annual Christmas Tree sale at Camp Oweki, which is under the joint sponsorship of the Pontiac Area Council of Camp Fire girls and the Men’s Club of the Church of the Resurrection, Is now being held, Families can select and cut ’the trees of their choice. Trees may be purchased be-tween 10 a.m. and 5 p.m. on; Saturdays and Sundays through December 23. All trees are $3.50, Camp Oweki Is located near Clarkston off 1-75 and Waldon R Womens Lace and Ruffle Trim Nylon Petti Pants J86 Women’s Fancy Panties, 5-8 ... 99t Exquisite with lace and ruffle trim at leg openings. White, pink, blue, red or black. Sizes 5 to 8. I Enchanting trim on ’ white, pink, blue, beige, maize, black, red. 5-8. Filmy nylon coat over acetate tricot gown. Pink, blue, tangerine, violet, red, black, white, nude, maize. S-M-L. Lighthouse Light Lost TOKYO (UPI)-There’s nothing quite so useless as a lighthouse that can’t be seen. That’s what’s happened to the 100-year-old lighthouse, one of Japan’s oldest, on Jogashlma Island, near Tokyo. ★ ★ ★ A new four-story hotel has risen in front of the lighthouse. At night, the light can’t be discerned because of the lights of the hotel. Authorities are planning to move the lighthouse to another part of the island. Oblong ar Oval Perfume Trays Gift-boxed 3-Pc. Metal Dresser Sets 2.76 3.88 Filigree metal trays to Comb, brush and mirror, enhance precious per- Blue, rose or gold back, fumes. Gale Poinsettia, Ornament Corsage 48* To give...to wear...re-, fleeting holiday gaiety. Larger Corsage... 68‘ Art Dasigns and Prints Deluxe Cosmetic Bags in Gold-tied, 3-D box. 4x7"., Unbreakable DuPont Nylon Combs of All Kinds to Tuck in Every Stocking .. v D.|e«$th I Girls' 1-14 5r®f *•* *•** 4.66 5.66 Misses' 10-18 Rag. 7.99 3 Days - Women’s Reg. 2.17 Floral Lace Mini Slip With nylon satin applique on mm m jm ront. White, orange, wedge- , ^3 vood, mint, shocking pink, royal B 3M3M >lack. S-M-L. 1 B Women's Sleepwear Lacy nylon tricot gowns and ace- IW tate tricot baby doll pajamas in M a galaxy of high-fashion colors. ^M ~ 32-40. Mm Women's"Nylcrest"Slip Tailored for the new silhouette. ^3 ^M Pure White Acele® acetate tricot B M with a front shadow panel. 32-48 B Feminine Peignoir Set 496 Girls’: fluffy acrylic pile, checked quilted cotton or * quilted nylon tricot with Kodel® polyester fiberfill. Misses’: quilted acetate satin,.nylon tricot or floral nylon chiffon puffed with Kodel® fiberfill. Also, superbly soft acetate nylon "CuddleflufP’ in solids. 3 Days Only - Misses’ Reg. 8.99 Elegant Long Robes Ultra feminine . . many styles, 3m 3m including quilted robes warmed ^^BBRWRW with Kodel® polyester fiberfill. | 10-18. ^Eastman Corp. T.Af. Gift-boxed Christmas Jewelry ^3 ML For small girls...dainty 33 l/V bracelets and pendants K K with cultured pearl or B - simularrfl arm*. •OCil Locket Pendant with sparkling simulated hirthstone on fine chain. In velvet box. Jr. Miss Gift Boxed LOO "Pearl” chain with discs or mesh with stone trim. Girls Treasure Their Birthstone! 3-Piece Jewelry Set Yellow gold-color bracelet, locket and ring, each set with a brilliant manmade birthstone. All months available. 3 Days Only - Women’s Reg. 2.93 Fine Jewelry Boxes Spacious, lined, compartmented jewel boxes of simulated leather in ivory br black. 14" x 8" x 3 3A". 287 Chocolate Bells and Balls in Foil Wrap 761 3 Days-Rtg. 8H Lh. Solid milk chocolate in Gift-boxed, Beautifully Made Pin-and-earring Sets Brushed or gleaming yellow or white gold-color metal \.. tailored styles or Boxed, Exquisitely Designed Broaches or Swingers % Swinger-Style earrings suspended from polished top on slender wire. Beautiful broaches, tailored 'r mUGi n" - At All KRESGE Stores ALL • . 1 DOWNTOWN ^ 1 PONTIAC - J [ TEL-HURON 1 1 . CENTER | 1 DRAYTON PLAINS 1 ROCHESTER 1 PLAZA { 1 BLOOMFIELD | MIRACLE MILE [SPECIALS Kiwi PRICES Reg. 69c lb. mm DUCHESS CREME DROPS Delicious Chocolate Drops REG. *3.47 MEN'S FUU. CUT - WIDE COLOR MIKE CORDUROY SHIRT $257 PLASTIC SEWING BOX W/Compartments $317 Reg. $3.99 PONTIAC DOWNTOWN TEL-HURON DRAYTON ROCHESTER MALL PONTIAC CENTER PLAINS PLAZA Shop without cash- "CHARGE /T" AT HRESCE'S —Pay only once a month FAMILY PAYCHECKS BUY FAR MORE AT KRESGE’S DISCOUNT PRICES LARGE HEAVY DUTY TREE STAND $]52 THREE DAYS ONLY FOR “HIS” CHRISTMAS Reg.921.95 13 TRANSISTOR AM-FM RADIO $1833 > IDEAL CHRISTMAS GIFT FOR HIM THIS YEAR. 1 13 TRANSISTORS WITH BOTH AM & FM, PLUS UNBREAKABLE CASE. OUTSTANDING VALUE AT THIS LOW PRICE JR. MISS NYLONS FOR THOSE YOUTHFULLY SLENDER LEGS THREE FLATTERING SHADES FOR YOUNG STYLES "CUDDLE MATE" SUPPER Reg. 97e "THIN ON THIN" HOSE "OVER THE CALF" D-B THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, ^967 STEP Now, mort than ever, this wnk • • • next week • . and every weak • . Kresge’s is the store to shop first for a greater selection of specials at new low prices. Thurs., Fri., Sat.... At Pontiac, Drayton Plains and Rochester WARM DECORATOR COLORS THERMAL BEAUTY BEDSPREAD Reg. $5.96 SUPER SPECIAL JOHNNY ASTRO REALLY FLIES-NO CONNECTIONS Reg. $9.96 $496 FULL SPACE CRAFT COHTROL TAKE-OFF • LANDING • MID-AIR FULL SPACE CRAFT CONTROL TAKE-OFF • LANDING • MID-AIR YOU GET: • control center • 3 SPACE VEHICLES • ASTRONAUT and • CAPSULE Launching station LADIES’ SWEATER FEATURES TH^ NEW 1968 “SKZ” LOOK Reg. $9M WHILE QUANTITIES LAST fW THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY DECEMBER 13, 1007 D~Q The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets of Friday. , Mart Snaps Back Produce AppIm, Cortland, bu Appltt, Jonathon. Apples, Cider, 4-ga AppIm, Rad Delicious, bu. Apples, Golden Dellclaus. bu. . VEGETABLES Seels, topped, bu. ..... ...... Cabbage, Curly, bu............ Cabbage, Red, bu............ Cabbage, Standard Variety bu. Carrota, Cello Ppk, 3-dt. ..... Onions,'dry, 50-lb. bag .. Parsley, Root, di. belt. . Parsnips, Va-bu............ NEW YORK (AP) — The stock market advanced early this afternoon, snapping bade after four straight sessions of decline. The Dow Jones industrial average at noon Was up 2.25 at i»o;883.55. Jjj Gains outnumbered losses by s-ooia ratio of nearly 7 to 4, ....us * * * Gold mining issues back-• J-Jf tracked from the gains of Tues-i.5ojday. They, reacted to reports of 3.*oo: determination to keep the U.S. j oo dollar at $35 an ounce and to the jS;new seven-nation agreement to lisoiprotect the dollar. Speculative interest was m drawn to an assortment of moderately priced stocks. Computer stocks received a good play both on the New York and American stock exchanges. AVERAGE UNCHANGED Thp Associated Press average of 60 stocks at noon was unchanged at 315.7 with industrials up .5, rails off .4 and utilities off .1. Homestake, the biggest U.S. gold producer fell nearly 4 points following its climb of 5% Tuesday. Among other gold stocks, Ddme Mines and American South VAfrican lost about 2 each, McIntyre Porcupine more than a point and Campbell Red Lake a fraction. * * ★ Prices were generally strong on the American Stock Exchange. California Computer rose 3% to 45% on ah opening block of 20,900 shares. Data Processing rose more than 2. Up a point or more were Bun-ker-Ramo, Aeronca, Computer Applications, Esquire, Hitco, Varo Inc. and Potter Instruments. Spending'for health, labor and. welfare jumped from $29 per capita in 1948 to $190 in fiscal 1967, Canada Asking U.S. Peace Try Institutional Trading Eyed Stock Study Suggested By JOHN CUNNIFF | Funs ton as president of the New AP Basiness Analyst York Stock Exchange just a few NEW YORK — Pressure has weeks earlier, endorsed a pro-built up strong in the past few posal for a joint industry-gov- * weeks to study the'impact on f I stock prices of institutional trad-I ing, especially | by the perform-Viet Gamble Urged ance of go-go , mutual funds. A belief exjsts that the enormous blocks of] ~ shares owned, n bought and sold Before NATO Council BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP) Foreign Secretary Paul Martin of Canada called on the United L yjk e s e States today to risk as much in wealthy institu-l a gamble for peace in Vietnam jtions — funds, t it has risked for war. banks, insurers, ________ .* * bring disorder to the market, The appeal took on additional'causing unusually sharp price importance because it was1 changes! made in the presence of 14 for- magnifying glass on the go-go funds, which hereafter must re port their daily,- weekly or monthly trading in a stock even if they have eliminated the holding by the erul of the quarter. # ♦ h It woulda Iso be a start toward developing the information needed to outline the boundaries of the study, which will require not only masses of statis-• . - j - , . - J tics but some very discerning that the SEC alone carry out the judgments to be made of them. “My I Perhaps also it would lead to * * * ]better informed share owners; Even the president of one of!very few investors today know the largest mutual funds, How] the power and role of insiitu-ard Stein of the Dreyfus Fund,|tions. Even mutual funds share felt compelled two weeks ago jo owners know relatively little break a long public silence andjab°ut their fund’s buying and warn of the growing cult of per- selling j form a nee. GROWTH NOTED ernment study. This is the first time-the exchange has gone on record for such a study. * * * | Early this month Reps. John Moss of ‘California and Hastings Keith of Massachusetts, who have long studied performance activities, formally proposed LPttuct, bibb, hothouse, 5-lb. t The New York Stock Exchange Poultry and Eggs DRTROIT POULTRY DETROIT (AP)ISOA) — Prices P0H»«vy°rtype hensTl??0 cents) roe heavy type. 26-27; broilers and h whites, IP-21 j ducklings, 33i light ducss TEST! j, 19-20, grease. 31-32; turkeys heavy 'VP AlrR«3tnI young W 24*5. IakESuSib DETROIT EGGS DETROIT (AP)-(USDA)—Eggs prices ^er dozen paid by first receivers (lnclud-1 "white Grade A lumbo, 31-43 cents) extra large, 36-39'/d large. 34V5-37V); medium, 37-30V4) smell, 20-22. I CHICAGO BUTTER, EGGS CHICAGO (AP) — Chicago Mercantile Exchange: Butter .fully steady; •'^aajfJ AA 683/.; 92 A 66V4; 90 B 6794) cars 90 B 68V11 (9 C 47te. Eggs - ------- , ening attempts at* a military s lution.” HELP OFFERED Martin offered Canada’s "unrestricted help" in the execution of any useful formula for ending the war. Rusk and Martin have had two meetings on Vietnam in Brussels this week and are ex-_ _ pected to have another Thurs-J — w (day before they both leave for home. +.,’*] Soviet Union. eign ministers in the Council ofi Of chief interest are the ac- . i the North Atlantic Treaty Or- Uvities of ^Sma^futei, mSiion^mvgs^ grows gamzation, including Secretary which chum their portfolios jni, spet“ ,Von’ tow no of State Dean Rusk'. - ■ I quest of short-term profits so as|an audience of Harvard Busi- daiy, ! alwavs to show the flashiest re- ness School graduates. He en-8rown from about $88.6 billion gulls or performance at anv'^rsed the idea of a study ln assets in 1945 to more than Rusk spoke after Martjp, but' ? ’’ * PORTFOLIO REPORTS $565 billion now. a conference source said he did ^ 1 . . \ . Not .all this financial power is not respond to the Canadian’s Manuel F rnhen chairman ftf .. NoW lh? S?Crha! als° de.clde^in stocks, of course, but the roie 'statement. - mutual fund investmentLf institutions will continue to I • | the Securities & Exchange Com- companies must report all theirLrow insurance comoanies now ■ P1® has cof"e;” Martin mission, has now suggested that portfolio transactions, not just'|re planning to torn? their own ■« KV'fhP faid' “to risk as much in a gam- a broad study be made of insti- their position ih securities at the'mutual funds John Hancock in I iff i JaiSSlH " T SJSsfi N° «* m -»' 501 2499 239* J4H1 * j would be a gamble, as has al- now exists, although the cult of The old regulation often permit- this week « |u — ready heen risked ip ever-wid- performance is spreading^ ted much in-out trading within! * * * In mid-November, Robert the period to go unreported. .Haack, who replaced Keith However, it hasn’t been the ^Auiuiauuii auu UUUI UllldllUll ui ; „ A .___ plans for getting along with thejLe8,on Ha“' rules may put aig^ ai0ne that worries analysts. jThe furious trading pace, the in-out trading, the speculation . and the sudden unloading of vast numbers of shares are perhaps even more worrisome. Not only has volume on the exchanges soared to 'records, but in some areas of-the market, volatility has increased ' WASHINGTON (AP) - ThelsharPly' Stocks have had sharp - Clyde H. Reid of 724 Bates, Justice Department may even-j™n'uPs and shariperM?PS Birmingham, will be installed tually find itself defending ‘"h^vT failed * to recognize that comber of tho Vettra»S of coor. an action by dr.fl chief PERFORMANCE CULT result1 As the performance cult WWIVets Will Install New Officers Suits on Draft Snarl Policies The ministers were meeting commander of the veterans of court an action by J* today to consider prospects for Wor*d War * Barracks 49 at- Lewis B. Hershey with which it ;r B !("T '^making NATO a forum for the their din,Ie,l meeting^at 1:30 disagrees. J*u i7j* 47zS — 491 exploration and coordination of the ^America” The situation could Other officers to be installed are Hayward Gullatte, Senior] from several suits-the princi>Preads- colleges, tnunicipali-pal one filed by the National\^'***' banka’ colleges and _ ~ . ... fnunnatinnc aro hppnmino mnrp 'Student Association—challeng- Much depended on how far ajSSfej Ue Quick ^ French Foreign Minister Mau- Jr vice commander; John H. T ripp f.nnvp r\t> MiirvillP was . . _Ix. ___i... a____ mendation that Ideal draft foundations are becoming more interested in activating their portfolios. “Many of these people don’t K t* “« "> 8» Miller, chaptoin; Charles W Wsmlneni portfolio manager so/2 tl'/d1 ANNUAL MEETING Phipps, judge advocate; Guy c. | inductmg process. He urged the this week “Eventually they’ll The foreign ministers of the 15 p°PPy- adiutant: Samson F. hoardsito declare such^persons simpiy be trying to outguess .ft 3T Si 5 Trustee; and Antonia-^ delinquent, malung themU,, oUier/. li *.»«±8 their annuel .Inter «*£?+/»**<*• *rgeteittetterma. |auhiect te pnont, mduction Info) _______________meeting to-r wS lw4 + w day and Thursday after two] Auxiliary officers will-be In-l mia MiA-vkj^ 0f military meetings by stalled at the same meeting. the service. the defense ministers and’ mili-|The new auxiliary president |g| It was this policy announced tary chief of staff Mrs. Helen Shindorf of 3170 Lex- by Hershey in ah Oct. 26 letter lington, Waterford Township. to draft boards, that brought im ca.ni«te him into conflict with Atty. Gen. Mrs. Mary Carls is SemorL „ . vice president; Mrs. Willianf|Kamsey tlark' Jens, Jr., vice president; Mrs-Florence Schingeck, treasurer; After President Charles de Gaulle withdrew France Jrom the military organization of the alliance, Belgian Foreign Minis-! ter Pierre Harmel proposed that'Mrs. Ayers Miller, chaplain; the members examine what it Mrs. Hayward Gullatte, guard; could do in the future. Its main Mrs. Eilene Ault, secretary; job remains to act as a shield Mrs. Leo Mineweaser, trustee; „ against Soviet aggression, but «nd Mrs. Gertrude Hersee, con-sTii sihi 5?w + vj'many Europeans are convinced ductress. 2S L z’lA^fh^ is no longer so necessary „ * . * ... . 37 mh 36w - 9% land want to put the emphasis on! Number 3 flag bearer will be 3449 35* 3M9 + * re with frlM Beach, and^num- ber 4 flag bearer Mrs. Martha Nevertheless,'hot everyone is I endorsing the concept of such a study. The new president of the Investment Bankers Associations, Francis R. Schanck of Chicago, has disagreed with Cohen’s suggestion, ’If the owners can’t run their n business,’’ he said, "it is doubtful that the government can do better." SHORT-TERM TRADING However, with such currents Justice Department officials have said Hershey’s proposal is both unconstitutional and contrary to Selective Service law. COURT ACTION The department is said to that if an individual is guilty,ofLJ ^ lt might a crime such as destroying a answer ^ tion whet^er draft card or interfering with Bloodmobile Set in City Monday “We can all give — blood," said Dr. Frank Ellis, director the draft, he Should be prosecut-Boelter ed in court rather than subject- J_______________ ed to immediate induction. The National Student Associa-. • . , \ a i’ll ti°n, with campus units at 335 Accountants Will U S. colleges, is seeking a federal district court injunction in Meet Tomorrow Washington to prevent Hershey or local draft boards from en- The Oakland County Chapter ]forcin« his directive of the Southeastern Michigan , ™ * y= . p f] Red Cross Blood Program0/ fcSfifeSt 11 in announcing December blood- Accountants will hold its Decern-, t w mobile Hates tar 8eneral membership meet-||;; short-term trading is necessary for greater profit, except to brokers*. It is remarkable that in a speculative market a mutual fund with perhaps the greatest gain this year, an increase of more than 100 per cent, literally warehouse of long-term, fundamentally sound, unglamo-rous stocks and bonds. mobile dates. Locally a Red Cross bloodmobile.will be at the Elks Temple, 114 Orchard Lake, on Monday 'between the hours of. 2 and 8 p.m. ing tomorrow at 7 p.m. at Devon | Gables located at Long Lake||j| and Telegraph, Bloomfield]-s| Township. The featured speaker Nt for the evening will be John B. I Watkins. Successful investing # «* 1 «* # Watkins, By ROGER E. SPEAR i issues as Commonwealth Edi-Q — I am married, retired son; Delmarva Power & Light: vice president^of]and own 4,000 shares of Ralston U.S. Shoe Corp.; Consolidated Rate rlod Racard INCREASED Commonwllh G ... m REGULAR Bk o( Southwell “ “ .425 Q 12-31 m ....i»ii«a Salran Printing , ...... Wyandotte Chamlcal . MUTUAL FUNDS Aftlllatad Fund ........ Chamlcal Fund .......... Commonwealth Stock ..... Keyetone Income K-t .... Kayitone Growth K-2 ||—. investors Growth :----------i fruot .... DenRGW 1.10 . I.S (.4 patHdlt i .4o . 11.4 14.2 Dat Steel .4t 6.2 4.5 ptemAlk 1.40 M j M'°&in30bS« Rid Aikad gowChm 2.20 1,52 9.a Praatlnd 1.25 19.00 20.77 Duka Fw 1.20 10.41 11.44 Dumtlil .50 15.21 16.40 duFont 50 ♦ If >0 02 P««l Lt 1.44 7.07 By"* Am .4# 25 site livi Site X V9 I 54'A 50te ate .. 25 v* in fliz’z I 2999 2994 2999 Mats. Investors T Putnam Growth .42.9* 14.20 {« !5 S Eott Air . ’Is u:g ISSIyo’/ US sgag to 2)Vj _ te Wests El 68 Vs +199 Weverhr ■! im«hi I2JV4 I24V4 -f 2Va Whirl Cp ai% 21% + 1 —N—» 'j5 43V4 42te - te XtroxCp 1.40 303te 301 301 + 94 I Net Change * »4 spa 4- 14 YnostSht 1.80 43 »3?H 29 29% “ ’ • Noon WacT. .. I3M4 lMte +|teIZenlthR 1.30a 97 5t 57V, 57te + te ; Prev. Do? ... Ijuse !«/. -rivi Copyr|ghleo by The Associated Fro»t 1967 week Ago . Month Ago Solee figures are unofllctol. ---- *~ Vfcrthe Detroit Bank and Trust Co., purina. i would like your opln- Foods; Walgreen; American ■ 'will discuss the economic Uut-uon on whether I should dlversl- Telephone; Stewart-Warner. i,j loolt ^or jfy. If so, what percentage should * * * f;V i 11 hold? We also own General q _ i took $5,000 of my capi- Motors; DuPont; Warner-Lam-j tal and invested in a mutual bert — in smaller amounts. If fund, Bondstock Corp., at $7.25 we do diversify, what stocks a share. In the two months I’vo would you recommend?|-J.C. had it - the stock has gone A - I congratulate ypu onldown 5® ■ *ha''e- The | News in Brief ' 9 Frozen food valued at $50 wq,s taken in a break-in at Dob- 34 13294 13094 132V4 + 67 3499 3394 34 + 33 3894 38’/a 3SVa - 11 3499 2499 2494 + 181.3 143.1 315. Bar. 7960 Cooley Lake, Wa- holding a large block of a very nocks terford Township, it was r e- fine stock, but in a sense you ported to township police yes-!have answered your own ques- Treasury Position End Johnson ENoLock RR Ethyl Cp .40 WASHINGTON (AF)-l DOC. I, 1947 S 4,540,444,511.98 Dxpotltl 60,054,107 300.44 Fod&Str Tt» Wl^r*W».74"r-7«33,7»m53!E|^r ' “ 13.300,33( t*l Ufbt— 345,044 351 Allitx- id Moa 1.8 _________________ 1.40 329.883,454,545.721 FilChr* l.ltl pnlkote j 19 Flo Pow 1.44 33 3299 3294 3294 94.Pl8 54te 57 4 ”5594 55te ijte NeNQi," 73 2899 2794 25te + 94 ! TCi. wPtr+ft'BaB ,118 1! w i a Era 44 34 3394 3394 — 41 3594 25V. 2599 + 19 1899 1799 1199 + -F- 100 93te 92*9 -92V, ft ghtoEdii 1*30 17 «te 2|te «te + te 8k . Sil l J « Jj;* - J4 ykloNoi 113 a |te ffte+M 4799 Site f Ite 13V9 13V, + te I 29% 29% 29% T % ____ ...Idend. c—Liquidating d—Dxflarod or paid In 1967 flui Itock dividend, e—Paid loit yoar. - Payable In stock during 1967, aetl-----. —miya «» —-dividend or ox-' •ccUmulotlvo li 17 73te 73 4 j* if ffln ,____________ 3i tite ins tote 'FMC Cp .78 . 45 Mte 13.3 309.4 159.1 543., 4494 — te' mated cash value on ex-dlvle site distribution date, o—Declared 29 far thli year, h—Declared or Mte +|te 'tloek dividend — y| 1 17V, f ite or paid thli -with dTvIdeni ikerT'af Itit' dMd*^ 1944 High or P4ld jn^teM^plu» 1944- Low BOND AVERAGES Compllod by Tho Attoclated Fret> 20 IB - 10 10 10 Rail. IM. Util. Fon. L.1 ■* Change —.2 WacT 44.9 04.6 7A.1 89 6 71 jterday. Robert Moore of 3084 Airport, Waterford Township, reported to township police yesterday the theft, of tools valued at $250 from'his garage. Rummage Sale, Thursday, 9:30 3:30 p.m. Congregation B-Nai ” 3 Israel, 143 Oneida, corner Me-i3 i'nominee, rear door. —Adv. Lodge Calendar tion. You have almost $100,000 in one situation and I certainly recommend that you diversify. I believe that no investor should have more money ln any stock than he can afford to lose, sine all stocks contain an element of risk. Ralston is financially strong and I don’t believe you should sell without first talking with a tax consultant to determine your capital gain tax tia-ibility, if any. The stock has , made little progress recent lyears and is close'to this year’s decline dealer said I bought it at a high. Is this a reliable stock worth holding? — A.S. lt certainly is. The decline you mention is probably attributable in large degree to the sales commission. The fund invests mainly in common stocks and convertible bonds and the most recent offering price I have is $7.45 a share. I advise you to hold your fund and give it more chance to work out. (To order your copy of Roger Spear’s 48-page Guide to Sue* (-cssful Investing (now in Its 8th printing), clip this notice j and is ytiu 65 Stocks BONDS ......R .. .40 Bonds Bankruptcy 10 Hlghar !K|sctCh|oC°ln* ijj RSm?wfllilSs^1 .03 534 * 23 Pontiac Shrine No. 22, Oop|low becausc of u u^.ine ><• send „ w|th „ame aBd Dmrter- 6:30'‘ stated, meeting 8 earnings for fiscal 1967. Depend- addre8g Roger E. Spear, cam mi.51+p.ii ip.m., Wed., Dec. 13. Christrrtas ing on your tax man s advice, - — - . 75.o4-o.o7 Party and exchange gift, $L 22 I would eliminate all blit 200 “te St. Devota Stitt, WHP. shares of Ralston Purina and . ' . —Adv. I put the balance into such strong of The Pontiac Press, Box 1111, Grand Central Station, New York, N,Y. 19917). (Copyright, 1947) THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 18, 1967 Youth Guilty in Fight Death! Fatally Ipjured Teen on Royal Oak Street: A Royal Oak teen-ager was found guilty of manslaughter, yesterday for fatally injuring! another youth in a street fight a year ago. An Oakland County Circuit Court jury deliberated about three hours in reaching the verdict against Robert Quinn, 17. He had been charged with the more serious offense of second-degree murder. * Quinn was convicted of causing the death of Gregory Barrett, 18. Barrett died of respiratory failure Dec. 26, five days after suffering a fractured neck in the fight. Hearth-Switch Patient Sits Up in His Bed CAPE TOWN, South Africa (AP) — Louis Washkansky con- 'VC Tried to Hide Massacre' Percy Mulls Cause of Attack SAIGON (AP) — Sen. Charles’Bay in a U.S. Army turbopropr He said the problem of wheth-H. Percy add today he had been plane. jer the Saigon government could subjected to a Vietcong mortarl * * * maintain the loyalty Of the attack because the Communists | He and his party had drawn South Vietnamese people “is a tinued to make “satisfactory ....... _______________________________ Iprogress” today, his doctors re- were trying to cover up a horri- Red mortar and small arms fire great question." .........| flj— **“ ------- on an unescorted visit Tuesday This was the fourth day of Chartered helicopter to Percy’s second visit to Vietnam. fjiugicss luuay, ma uuttuis nrr ”* w ■ aswn- |ported, after sitting up and dan-1™6 crime, the Dakson massa-Igling his legs over the side of,cre- . his hospital bed for the first | The Illinois Republican, 48, time since his historic heart expressed that belief as be re-transplant 10 days Prarlte Village, during lunch yesterday aboard the ajrcraft carrier America in the Norfolk Naval Shipyard. Deaths in Pontiac,Nearby Areas KANSANS CHAT - Miss America, Debra Quinn testified that he h a d Dene Barnes, chats with another Kansan, acted in self-defense, but six Air Controlman 2nd Class Grant Montross of witnesses for the prosecution! said that Barrett had quit flght-|,«».*,».v»»~.,w. « Ing and was walking away when Quinn grabbed him in a full-nelson wrestling hold. BOTH FELL According to Assistant Prose- pitched °forew^^ j Mrs. Henri Appart ') .Mrs. John W. Knecht | J“teT^yapel Memorial Ceme' on top of Mm. Requiem Mass for Mrs. Henri' BIRMINGHAM — Service for. Surviving is a brother. _ ,, ,L . , , „ l(Marguerite M.) Appart, 68, of Mrs. John W. (Elizabeth) The fight started in a hall at 32 N Francis ^ be 11 a.m. I Knecht, 65, wiU be 2 p.m. to-Dondero High School, where: Friday in st Vincent de Paui morrow at the Bell Chapel of h^8. ;attended. and then catholic Church with burial in the William R. Hamilton Co. Washkansky will probably leave his bed later in the week, the doctors said. ft ★ ★ Dr. Jacobus G. Burger, medi-I cal superintendent at Groote Schurr Hospital said a second ' heart transplant planned for 'early 1968 probably will be filmed. I American television compa-Hi nies are reported to have offered hundreds of thousands of dollars for a film of the Washkansky operation, but none was made. Dakson, where a Vietcong bat-Regarded as a: possible GOP . ______ talion killed some 200 Montag- candidate for prtsfcteit, he is on turned to Saigon from another nard tribesmen in a raid with a world study touT. Whereas he swing over the countryside, this grenades and flame throwers went to Dakson in Civilian clothtime to Da Nang and Cam Ranh Dec. 5. ling, he wore fatigues and com*x ~ ---- “There were many visitors to bat boots for his latest night. Dakson after the massacre,* ; * * » r. ai § * Percy told newsmen. “So why Young Dennis Smith had A FA a l>irA ( hi at! were we suddenly attacked? I .steered him to (safest under the MIUQ I II U V*l 11 Vs I think it was because the VC enemy Are at Dakson. It took Irealized they had committed a three tries, but Smith finally got -crime so horrible that, when him headed away from the Viet- “Had we foreseen this we would have arranged to have the operation filmed—and it is more than likely the next one will be recorded on film," Burger said. William B. Michel Couple Given Son's Posthumous Medal Is Hospitalized:! Cong. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond F. Elmy yesterday received a postil u mo us award, the Armed Forces Honor Medal, second: they saw people coming in, they | decided they would try to scare future visitors away. This is the Waterford Township F i r e reason we were subjected to the Chief Lewis A. Goff became ill J mortaring.” shortly after noon yesterday and'NONE HIT was rushed to Pontiac General] None in the party was hit. The Hospital where he is listed in senator and four men aground satisfactory condition in the hos-jwith him were rescued by U.S. pital’s intensive care unit. (Army helicopter gunships sum-Goff, 49, of 118 S. Tilden was moned from a nearby base by home for lunch when he was his wife Loraine and their heli-stricken. [copter crew. * ft ft - r Percy said Married and the father of proved that the Vietcong were and Western and the Chesapeak three sons and two daughters resorting to desperation tactics. and Ohio Railroads is permitted all married, Goff has been em-| * * ★ without certain condMons, ployed with the department Asked if this meant he be- spokesmen for the five firms since 1950. lieved the allies were wihning told a federal examiner yester- Asst. Fire Chief Russell See ^ war> h® 381(1: 4,1 don’t think day. will serve as interim chief in!"1 a few days anyone can come Goff’s absence. *“ **“**■ w*“l of | ■ Rail Merger Plan Harmful, Says 6TW WASHINGTON (UPI)- Five Midwestern railroads would lose rail traffic and income if a promortaring P08*1 merger .of the Norfolk LAPEER — Service for Wil- continued later across the Gre^nw^Cem^™ of 266 C^ar , f I I ■fcv*ysaid- v. . .jThe Scripture service will te tery. She died yesterday. SJ5 fOT ** ^ ^ MiChael KPniPHPP o?ifrk Tin ^j!amS wlU 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in Sparks- Mrs. Knecht was a npember of !Lh h . , . M . „ r i LTulmy' ... ' sentence Quinn Jpn. 10. Griffin Funeral Home. ~ | the Piety Hill Chapter of toe™tb 181,131 at Mount Hope Cem- The presentat.on was made at] Mrs. Appart, a member of St. DAR and the Village Women’s'6 J?’ Mi . . ^*auty Baye Salon, 219; Vincent dTPaul Church, died Club. IwaTa mtmiJr oMh St’ • ’ by Captaln John Ec‘ yesterday. | Surviving are her husband; Methodist church. He'as anrey[ Surviving are a daughter, two daughters Mrs. J Gilbert'^ lumber and m Mrs. Jenny Andrews of Pontiac; Tisue of Los Altos, Calif., and L \ .......... Military Trial Set to Start for 36 on Greek Island two grandsons; and a brother. iisue V,u>s Alios, v,a.u dn j I her of the Masonic Lodge No. Mrs. John C. Pierce of Grand M and the of the ESastern Rapids; two sisters; a brother; lla H. Gates Service for lla H. Gates, 70, of {85 W. Rundell will be 1:30 p.m. KHANIA, Crete (AP) - A military trial of 36 persons, including three former members tomorrow in Donelson-Johns Fu-of the Greek Parliament andjneral Home with burial in Perry two journalists, is scheduled to Mount Park Cemetery, begin Thursday in this Greek is-j Mr. Gates, a retired employe! and six grandchildren. Memorials may be sent to cancer programs or charitiejs. Andrew McQuifton ORION TOWNSHIP — Service for Andrew McQuilton, 80, of 124 the Order of the Eastern Star No. 146. Surviving are his wife, bel; one brother; and two sisters, including Mrs. Lucy Hos-ner of Oxford. | Margaret M. Newby KEEGO HARBOR-Margaret —o—------■'“"j *** w mi. uaica, a iciucu cuiuiu^Ci-. . .. .... __ _ nuouv unnov/rv—maiEdlCl land capital, it was announced of CMC Truck & Coach Division, » a.m, tomorrow M Newby 28, of 3116 Cass Tuesday. idled yesterday. ’{at Allen£Funeral Home Lake;Lake died y;ste;d 1 Orion. Cremation will be «* - ■ ■ - All 36 are charged with violating a 1947 emergency law against communism. Seven are also charged with setting off explosions last October in Irak-lion, Crete. The three ex-deputies, John Valirakis, Menelaos Xylouris and Tilemachos Plevris, all of Crete, are former members of ex-Premier George Papan-dreou’s Center Union party. Hie defendants can get maximum sentences of 20 years if grandchildren, convicted. Everett Green Service for Everett Green, 74, of 304 Howard McNeill will be 1 p.m. tomorrow in New Bethel Baptist Church with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery by the Frank Carruthers Funeral Home. Mr. Green died Sunday. He Fisher Freeway's First Section Open DETROIT UR — A ribbon-cut- Surviving are her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur H, Newby of Keego Harbor, and a brother, Arthur J. of Pontiac. Joseph J. Sadauskas PONTIAC TOWNSHIP - Re quiem Mass for Joseph Lump in Sofa Was a clestone of Warren. Dr. Milton SANTA BARBARA, H. Bank, minister of the Cen- (AP) — Yes, Mrs. Manuel Va-tral Methodist Church, was also lencia, that lump in your living to that kind of a conclusion. 2 Jam certainly encouraged by the ; dedication of the men I have I seen here. Certainly the effort is working in some areas." For example, He said, “The Vietcong are trying in every way to kill and murder the peo-1 pie who are participating in na- Commerce Commission. Calif ^on building in this country.^— * * representing the Chicago and Northwestern, the Milwaukee Road, the Missouri Pacific, the Chicago Great Western and the Grand Trunk West> em railroads testified before Edward L. Boisseree, hearing examiner for the Interstate present. Pfc. Elmy was killed in a helicopter crash in Da Nang Bay, Vietnam, in May 1967. He was a graduate of Pontiac Central High School. Waterford Twp. Republican Club Reelects Head room couch probably did shift as you suspected. ★ -a ★ After a week, Mrs. Valencia and her family grew accustomed ot the lump and hardly noticed it at all. The lump was gone Tuesday.! Then, her husband discovered it coiled under the refrigerator, a barber says he Fleeing Cubans Swim 3 Miles 7-foot boa constrictor. Frank A. Lane was reelected president of the Republican Club of Waterford Township last night during the group’s annual meeting and election of officers at Pierce Junior High tfUJGAU maoo 1VI 0OUCIU9~ I « < . kas, 78, of 3590 Joslyn will be 10 a.m. tomorrow at St. Vin- Lane, 65, of 5801 Crescent, Blood Buys Less Work was a member of the New Beth-'ting ceremoney y es terdayjcentde paul catholle Church' Waterford Township, will serve el Church. 'marked (he opening of the first|with burial in £ ^ , a one-year term. Surviving are a stepdaughter, I section of Fisher Freeway and Memorial Cemetery Trov bv A,s0 c,efited to servrtffie-year Mrs. Elizabeth Jones, and two the 400th mile of freeway in the the Voorhees - Stole Funeral terms during 1968 were ..... metropolitan Detroit area. Home Buchanan, vice president; Mrs. ■ I.** v I The Rosa^ will be recited at ?arba” Gilm,er’ 8ecret’ry: andI „ , The 4.3-mile Fisher Freewayi7 _ m .. Leon Grogg, treasurer. Mro. Sandy Myers will cost |50 million. This uajgg today in the funeral Service for Mrs. Sandy (Geor- Mr- Sadauskas, a retired gia A) Myers will b/l p* Saturday in New Hope Baptist Highway De^artment Church with burial in Oak Hill ^pt Mayor Jerome Cava-Cemetery by the Frank Car-nagb and members of te State ruthers Funeral Home. iHighway Commission and Mrs. Myers, a member of New w a y n e County Road Commis-Hope Church, died Monday. sion participated in the opening Surviving are two sons, Lee ceremonies. Roy and William H., both ofJ Ambulance Takes Patient 700 Miles Pontiac; six sisters; and two brothers. A wake will be at the home of Lee Roy Myers, 98 Crawford. Floyd E. Tody LA Pays $5,000 for Experimental Electric Sedan ALBANY, N.Y, (AP)-The Albany Medical Center Hospital is fostering the spirit of holiday giving by giving its 2,000 employes time off with pay in exchange for donations of blood. A hospital spokesman said each employe giving one pint of blood to the Red Cross would be allowed two to three hours off. Blood supplies in the area are low. L0r,JFl0yd E„TPdy’I2, LOS ANGELES (AP) - The VillnriArc C|AA 0 158t^ Baldwin will be 2:30,Qty of Log Angeles has paid Villagers hlee pm. tomorrow at Voorhees-Si-!about ,5000 for an experimen- VIENTIANF i / Api p e Chapel, *ith burial ln perry|tal, electric-powered sedan that ah STiJf ’, n S JAP- , ~ Mount Park c«metery- can travel 60 miles an hour. £ T f Btn Bo^1,]age Mr- T°dy. a mason, died Mon- a spokesman for the Depart- MuZ uZtf'Z haVC fln in antici-Baptist Church. I present the premiere of Paddy Pation notes for the City of Pon- Surviving are his wife, Elea- chayefsky’s new play, “The La- tlaC-nore; a son, Charles of Nor-'tent Heterosexual,” on March! The funds will be used for op-folk, Va,; seven daughters, Mrs.|i2. erating expenses and capital ! Norman Largent and Mrs. Wil-\ liam Tipton of Rochester, Mrs. ; Gerald Spickenagel of Birmingham, Mrs. Gene Dean of Pon-: tiac, Mrs. Delbert Maloney and j Mrs. Donald Tessman of Utica |{and Mrs. Howard Tessman of 11Madison Heights;- a brother; A spokesman said stage and improvements, screen actor Burgess Meredith] ' * would be guest director. ! The notes are necessary baft * * 'cause of a sortage of operating Meredith directed a play at:cash at the beginning of the the center during its first season]year, officials said. ' in 1960. He was in Dallas over , While Pontiac’s fiscal year be-_ . the weekend conferring with gins January 1 the majority of [three sisters; and 34 grandchli- Paul Baker, Managing director funds cannot be collected until i dCen. of the Center I July when tax bills are mailed. LATEST CHOPPER-The U.S. Army’s newest aerial warrior, a winged helicopter developed by Lockheed Aircraft and called the AH56A Cheyenne, made Its first public flying demonstration at Van Nuys, Calif., Aft Wlraahala yesterday. It wiU “ride shotgun” for troop-carrying helicopters In Vietnam. The craft has more firepower and speed—250 miles an hour—than copters how in the war area. Senator’s files. Dodd says he can be awarded |1 million in compensatory damages if the court finds in his favor on this charge. Dodd acted after Judge Alexander Holtzhoff of U.S. District court denied a motion that Dodd be awarded a summary judgement in his favor. CALLED VICTORY Pearson and Anderson said they regarded the withdrawal of the libel charges as a personal victory. “Dodd is a hawk on Vietnam but a dove on libel,” Anderson said. “He’s been dropping this libel suit by degrees almost since the day he filed It.” ★ ft it Dodd asked for $6 million in damages when he filed the suit May 6. He later reduced the figure to |2 million. He claimed he was libeled in a series of Pear-son-Anderson columns. Dodd said one reason he dropped the libel charges was because “under recent Supreihe Court decisions requiring proof of malice it is almost Impossible for a public official to win a libel suit even when he has been seriously maligned.” TACTICS CHARGED He said he changed legal tactics to limit the case to the lesser charge “in order to obtain a prompt decision on a purely legal question as to which there Is no factual dispute.” Judge Holtzhoff scheduled hearings on the Dodd suit for Jan. 9 Dodd was censured by the Senate June 22 on a charge of using political funds to pay personal expenses. THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 18, 1967 QUESTION: What is fog and what causes it? V .*■* ft ANSWER: To Understand what log is, think of a' cloud. resting dose to and touching the ground. Walk through it and you’d be walking through fog. If 'you could easily see through it, however, it would be called mist. ; In the picture, Billy’s father is about to explain the cause of fog. The moist warm\air coming out of the kettle, he will go on to say, is striking^the cooler air of the kitchen. This causes the water vapor in the warm air to condense or become visible as steam or fog. House Passes Tax Recovery for AMC WASHINGTON (AP) - The House passed legislation Tuesday which will provide a $20 million tax recovery for financially ailing American Motors Corp. The vote was 273 to 104. The measure, a Senate rider to an unrelated Hoqee bill, Would allow a company. In American Motors' situation to cariry back losses for tax purposes fivp years instead of three. The company, fourth largest U.S. automobile producer, has incurred heavy losses in recent years, although its sales are now reported increasing. Chairman Wilbur D. Mills, D-Ark., of the ways and means committee, said House conferees agreed to the Senate amendment “because it would preserve desirable competition in the automobile industry,’’ In the same way, fog air (lower left) blows from over snow or ice. This is i formed when moist warm and over a colder ocean or ion fog. On clear nights, fog may be armed another way, as heat from the ground radiates or e apes into the cooler, upper air (lower right). Still another way fog may formas when, in clear weather at night, light winds blow cool air along the surface, mixing it with the warm air and causing the w^ter vapor to condense as fog. WASHINGTON (AP) - The free-spending American tourist is giving Uncle Sam a bigger financial headache this year than ever before. He’s already forced the Johnson administration to launch a new program to attract foreign visitors to the United States in hopes of offsetting some of the billions now spent annually for foreign travel by Americans. ★ ★ \ ■ Officials expect American tourists will have spent about $2 billion more in pther countries than foreign tourists have spent here this year—a record travel gap which compares with a $1.6 billion gap in each of the two years. This is almost as large as the total dollar drain—in excess of $2 billion—expected for 1967 a whole. Peace Definition HILLSDALE (AP,)- Some 150 students at Hillsdale College heard Peace Corps Director Jack Vaughn define peace Tuesday as “something to do with communication, tolerance, love, service, learning and teaching.” Vaughn, who hails from Albion, was to address students at Olivet College today. U.S. Starts New to Attract Foreign ogram urist The task force’s first formal meeting is set for Jan. 16 with Vice President Hubert^1. Humphrey expected to take * ★ ★ Officials said the aim of the new program is to narrow' gap. They said there’s no ' of eliminating it entirely. The Vietnam war is costii _ the United States more than $2 billion annually in its balance of payments accounts—the more formal description for the dollar drain. The travel gap is believed to be the second ' drain.. si TRADE BALANCE Such dollar drains are partly * offset by inflows of dollars from, for example, the favora- ® ble trade balance under which * exports have historically exceeded imports. I The net flow of dollars over-RULED OUT I seas represents a potential Administration officials have drai" °n U.S gold, pis govern- ruled out any head tax on dp-parting Americans to help close the gap. They are concentrating instead on a new presidential task force which will draft a plan to increase foreign travel to the United States, already at record levels. Poor Attendance Likely at Meeting SPARKS, Nev. (AP) - Mayor Bob Stone expects a lonely City Council meeting on Christmas day. A city ordinance requires a meeting on the second and fourth Monday of every month. Stone doesn’t expect anyone but Clerk Chloris Goodwin to attend Dec. 25. ADVirnSBMENT FOR BIOS Jbbfw •hip Board, 2040 Opdyke Road, Pont Michigan, will —Sim ■■ “ INSURANCE f merit of Pr— if Pontiac Tom I Board ^reserves ment guarantees a foreign government the privilege of exchanging its dollar holdings for gold at $35 an ounce. ★ ★ Last year 2,975,000 Americans traveled overseas and government officials expect a 10 per cent increase this year when the final figures are tallied. This doesn’t include visits to Canada and Mexico where figures are complicated by daily trips across the border by the same persons. Through the-first 10 months of this year, the Commerce Department counted 1,301,170 foreign visitors to the United States, also excluding Canada and Mexico. This was 30.3 per cent higher than the same period last year. 1 to id inclusive, Avon Township, cou — Michigan. MTjH •lOa'kiendVTtate Daily Almanac JUMP United Press International nSeSMfinS Today is Wednesday, Dec. 'iTim? hSTI 13’ **» 347th day of 1967 with L—. ---- — n — 18 to follow. The moon is between the first quarter and full stages. The morning stars are Venus and Jupiter. The evening stars are Mars and Saturn. * * * On this day in history: In 1642, New Zealand was discovered add named by Dutch navigator Abel Tasman. In 1118, American soldiers attached to the 3rd Army crossed the Rhine River at Coblenz, Germany. In 1941, the Japanese demanded that Britain surrender Hong Kong. The British refused and the Japanese started a concentrated air attack on the croWn colony. WWW In 1948, James Petrillo’s 11 Mi-month ban on recording phonograph records by members of his American Federation of Musicians ended. .iereby given tha i*y< Dec i. mf town 1:30 a.m. to fiW i.m. and an Saturday, Daoambar t, IM7 from 1:30 a.m. toliU p.m. and on Friday, December IS, 1M7, lad day,) IM ama of na person but an ACTUAL INT 61 mo praclnct at tha lima oi registration, and entitled under too Constitution. If remaining such resident, a* vote at ilia next alactTon, ahall ba an- rWffi.5CcER. v ■ trrviw Death Notices PART, MARGUERITE hold Thursday at 7: p.m. at tha Sparks-Griffln Funer Home. Funeral service will I held Friday, December 15, at -- - — Vincent de r-.Interment k Cemetery I funeral t Catholic Church. .Interment 3 to 5 .T^atod visiting gah&iwuphipiipipiiiip 15 West Rundell; age 70; beloved husband of Stella Gates; dear lather of Mrs. James Boyd and Ossie Gates; dear brother of Ellard t the Donelson-johns > GREEN, dVERETT; December 1 ..I,. —..-------■ McNeill Strep by one steL grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Thursday. Darember 14, et 1 p.m. at Bethel Baptist .Church dating, interment I Cemetorv. Mr. state at the Frank Carruttwrs Funeral Home after 7 p.m. to-night. KNECHT. ELIZABETH A.; December 12, 1M7; 1330 Norlhlawn, Birmingham; age 65; wife of John “' Knecht; mother ot Mrs. J. — Tlsue and Mrs. John C. sister of Mrs. Robert ..._, Mrs. Noyes Wilson and Ssmuel A. Anderson; also Sllbatt Summing1 Thursday, December l p.m. at the Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home with Rev. Btnel McLain officiating. Interment In Devlsburg Cemetery. Mrs. Ransler will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours' 3 to 5 and 7 to t.) SADAUSKAS, JOSEPH P.i December 11, FM7; 3950 Jotlyn Road, Pontiac Township; age 78; dear brother of Mrs. NOIIIe Zlckls. Recitation of the Rotary will be tonight at 7 p.m. at the Voorhees-SIple Funeral Home. Funeral service will be Mid Thursday, December 14, at 10 a.m. at tha St. Vincent da • Paul Catholic Church. Interment In White Chapel Cemetery. Mr. Sadaykas will lie In state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to « and STILLWELL, LEE.A.; December u, Gl»g»lw Ro»d' Oxford; ago <7; t Stillwell; Rgllir Injiswortt n Oxford ( d of Lottie ih, ™Mrt. Marilyn ir and Charles Stlll->thsr of Mrs, tula Mrs. Ethel Conrad >, Oxford. notary. Mr. srmwvi late at the funeral 1.1L thIut, 6ofc6THY j„ 10. 1967; 98 East Iroquois; beloved wile of DenaM * beloved daughter of Mr. Roger J. Bearn; dear mother ot Deborah, Donald end Daniel Theul. Recitation of the Rotary will be Wednesday et I p.m. at the Donel-son-Johns Funeral Home. Puneral service will be held Thursday, pecembdr 14; at 10 a.rri, at the funeral noma. Interment in Mount Hep* Cemetery. Mrs. Theut will lie In itato at too funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 (Deanna) Cghoon, (Jenyth) Banfleld, NM brother, tour sisters and ft orand-n. Radiation at the Rotary * tonight at I p.m. at tea , Wlnt Funeral Hama, :hlldri wilt b S?aiyAttj fSbV, FLOYD B. (BUD); Docam-bar 11, 19*7; lJtto Baldwin Ave-nuoj.^ag^ 4jN beloved husband of l!*r "Esihef^lbbel; Daniel Tody; Mai Clfffortol,L*C*wrflarl .... .... Wheatley, Vsrn and Louis Tody, jfjmerai. service will be held Thursday, December 14, at 1:30 p.m. at the Voorhees-SIple Puneral Home with Ray. Dorr w. PgCklar officiating. Intermant in Perry . Mount Perk Cemetery. Mr. Tody will, lit Jn state ai the funeral home. (Suggested visiting tiovrt PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED ADVIRTISMO Ravlsad June 3t, TNI NOTICES Cord of Thanks.............1 In Momoriam .............. 9 Announcements...............3 Florists..................3-A Funeral Directors ........ * 4 Cemetery Lots.............4-A Personals ...............4-B Lost and Found............ 5 EMPLOYMENT Help Wanted Male...........6 Help Wanted Female.........7 Help Wanted M. or F. .... 8 Sales Help, Male-Female...8-A Employment Agencies........9 Employment Information ...9-A Instructions-Schools .......10 Work Wanted Male .......11 Work Wanted Female.........12 Work Wanted Couples ... .12-A SERVICES OFFERED Building Services-Supplies... 13 Veterinary..................14 Business Service ..........15 Bookkeypiitg and Taxes..... 16 Credit Advisors.........,16-A Dressmaking and Tailoring ..17 Gardenina ..................18 Landscaping..........,,.18-A Garden Plowing ......... 18-B Income Tax Service.........19 Laundry Service ........... 20 Convalescent—Nursing ......21 Moving and Trucking.........22 Painting and Decorating....23 Television-Radio Service.....24 Upholstering..............24-A Transportation .............25 ' Insurance.............. .26 Deer Processing.............2F WANTED Wanted Children to Board. .28 Wonted Household Goods...29 Wanted Miscellaneous.......30 Wanted Money ..............31 Wanted to Rent..............32 Share Living Quarters......33 Wanted Real Estate.........36 RENTALS OFFERED Apartments-Furnished.......37 Apartments—Unfurnished ...38 Rent Houses, Furnished ....39 Rent Houses, Unfurnished...40 Property Management....40-A Rent Lake Cottages.........41 Hunting Accommodations 41-A Rent Rooms.................42 Rooms With Board.......>*.43 Rent Farm Property.........44 Hotel-Motel Rooms .........45 Rent Stores................46 Rent Office Space..........47 Rent Business Property...47-A Rent Miscellaneous.........48 REAL ESTATE Sale Houses ................49 Income Property..........,50 Lake Property..............51 Northern Property........51-A Resort Property ..........52 Suburban Property..........53 Lots-Acreage ............. 54 Sale Farms ................ 56 Sale Business'Property ....57 Sale or Exchange...........58 FINANCIAL Business Opportunities.....59 Sale Land Contracts........60 Wanted Contracts-Mtges.. .60-A Money to Lend.............61 Mortgage Loans ............62 MERCHANDISE Swaps ....................,63 Sole Clothing .............64 "lale Household Goods......65 Antiques ................ 65-A Hi-Fi, TV & Radios.........66 Water Softeners..........66-A For Sale Miscellaneous .... 67 Chrlstnras Trees ........67-A Christmas. Gifts.........67-B Hand Tools-Machinery.......68 Do It Yourself.............69 Cameras—Service ............70 Musical Goods..............71 Music Lessons............71-A Office Equipment..........72 Store Equipment............73 Sporting Goods.............74 Fishing Supplies—Baits.....75 Sand-Gravel—Dirt ...........76 Wood-Coal-Coke-Fuel .... 77 Pets-Huntipg Dogs ........,79 Pet Supplies—Service.....79-A Auction Sales...............80 Nurseries..................81 Plants-Trees-Shrubs .... 81 -A Hobbies and Supplies.......82 FARM MERCHANDISE livestock ............. Meats.................. Hay-Grain-Feed ........ Poultry................ Farm Produce........... Farm Equipment......... AUTOMOTIVE Travel Trailers........ Housetrailers ......... Rent Trailer Space..... Commercial Trailers..., Auto.Accessories Tires-Auto-Truck ..... Auto Service ......... Motor Scooters......... Motorcycles ........... Bicycles .............. Boatl-Accessories .... Airplanes.............. Wanted Cart-Trucks ... Junk Cars-Trucks........ Used Auto-Truck Ports New and Used Trucks .. Auto-Marine Insurance Foreign Cars........ New and Used Cart ... .. 83 . .83-A ...84 ...85 ...86 ...87 ...89 .. 90 ,.90-A ...91 ...92 ...93 ...94 ...95 ...96 ...97 ...99 ..101 ,101-A ..102 ..103 ..104 ..105 ..106 Card of Thanks THE FAMILY •Of THE LATE MRS Merlon Mortimer* art extremely grateful tor the help end act* ot klndnete of nolghbort and frtonde. Eepaclalty to patter John Huntar of Sllyercrett Baptlet Church, Bath-any Tabernacle, the Plxtey. Funeral Home and ' the chriitien Memorial Eitltaa Cemetery. The’ltav. Frankllne Racine end family. ________• InMeuiBrieiir ’ 'f ANYONE INTERESTED IN TAlONO over Holiday Health Club Member- eblp, pleeee cell 4734127,__ blit AID, INL., fit RIKIR BLDG PE 2 0111, Rater to Credit *4-vltart. it-A GUINN'S BANGUET HALL’ - BUSI-nett meeting, parties end reception facllHlet. Accommodating 225. Call 334-7677 or 391-2671. tiALL 6B Bent, RCCiPtioNi, tody**, church. OR 3-5202, FI 3 HUDSON'S OPTICAL SERVICE Pretcrfptlone tor eysgleitti filled with pinpoint precision, , Including aspherl, eelarse and plastic lenses. Many stylet In fremet and eyeglass accessories In greet variety; also a large1 selection of tunglettei. Wo do not examine eyet. Optical service, Pontiac, lower level; alto downtown Detroit, Northland, East-land, Westland, Dearborn end Lin-coin Perk. | BOX REPLIES | s At 10 a.m. today there \ were replies at The Press | Office in the followiag j boxes: ci, a, c4, Cl, C12, CIO, C20, C22, C42. FunBrul Directors 4 COATS FUNERAL HOME DRAYTON PLAINS_________674-0461 DONELSON-JOHNS Huntoon years FE 2-01 FUNERAL HOME Serving Pontiac for 50 79 Oakland Ave. SPARKS-GRIFFIN FUNERAL HOME tut Service" PE 6-92M Voorhees-Siple FUNERAL HOME. 332-8376 Estebllthed Over 60 Yeert Cemetery Lots 4-A 4 SPACES, 2 VAULTS, 1 MEMO-rlal marker, Oakland Hills Mem-orlal Gardens, 771-6525. Personals 4-8 ANY OIRC OR WOMAN NEEDING a friendly adviser, phon* ns 2-5122 before 5 pjii. Cant a plan you can afford, DEBT CONSULTANTS OP PONTIAC, INC. S14 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. PE 80333 *tate licensed-bonded GET O 1 OF DEBT ON A PLANNED BUDGET PROGRAM YOU CAN AFFORD TAILORED TO YOUR INCOME SEE MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELORS 702 Pontiac Stat* Bank Bldg. ________ Fe 8-0456 Michigan, PLAN NOW FOR OE LIGHTFUL old fashioned sleigh rid*. Ideal outing for your club or group. Occasions of all kinds. Lovaly club room and dining araat. Daytime or evening parties for groups of 20 or moro. Just the spot for your holiday party. Call for reservations, 626-1611. UPLAND HILLS FARM VIRGINIA: JANET ILL, SHE I MEDIATELY NEEDS YOU HELP. PLEASE CALL. PHOTOGRAPHY ______I color. For free call 336-9079, anytime. Lost and Found LOST - C white un 3-0785. I BLACK KITTEN# ’ chin and stomach# i. old. Pitas# call OR SIAMESE CAT, Tvlew Sub., Welled I 6, #34-3735, black, female, Dryden,__________________________ LOST: 7 MONTH OLD GORMAN ----- Haired Pointer. u**“ ' REWARD. 363-3353. LOST: BLOND PERSIAN l Doc. 6. Vicinity Lochavon j Cooley Lk. Rd. Call 363-8773# • Help Wanted Mol* 1 DEPENDABLE man Over 31# married Call 334-3771 tonight_ $400-1600 FEE PAID MANAGEMENT TRAINEES In office, finance, retail, salat Ag« 21-32, tom* collage ^INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL^ $500-5650 PLUS CAR ~ . SALES TRAINEES 010 W. Huron________334-4971 r~lf6,000—$14,000 ACCOUNTANTS ^V^NWloSfiff*pTrTSnNEL Want Ads for Action Walp Waatadl Bjalt j $7200-112,000 FEE PAID COLLEGE GRADS—ENGINEERS Management positions In ell fields ' Thternational personnel A PART-TIME JOB Amerried man, El-34# to work 4 hours per evening .Call 4744)520, 4 p.m. to I p.m. tonight. $200 PER MONTH ACCOUNTANT, FOR PutURI EN-glneerlng co. Exc. benefits profit sharlra 69,500 .call Helen Adams. 324-2471, Spelling 6. SneMIng. ATtRActlVd sALHk" AlfO ssAv-ice opportunity. Salary, bonus "and commission, no axperjonc* necet-ssry, will train, 674*2272. ' AUTO MECHANIC ’ Experienced only. Many fringe benefits; no Saturdeys, and -plenty of Rochester Rd„ Rochester, Michigan aJT6 OLASS INSfALLEft, PART ----Ingt and waekendl f good parcantaga, Dra AUTO BODY PAINTER, 5-6 A V week, benefits, steady work, 43933 VanDyke, “•*— AUTO MECHANIC TUNE-UP MAN 3150 weak guar ant**, full benefits and retirement. Contact Mr. Olu-llanl. Ml 4-tWO. __' partments, very (i 1 par salat da- AUT0M0BILE Mechanics Body Men. Porters Bob Borst Lincoln Mercury Sales Birmingham, Michigan BAKERS HELPErt THAT WANTS to rise and make dough, 16,500 call Mlk* Clark, 334-2471, Spelling BROILER MAN, DAYS, MUST BE experienced, oft Sundays, Holidays. Apply In person. Bedell's Restaurant, Woodward and Square Lake Roads._______ CAB DRIVERS FULL OR PART time, FE 2-0205, CLERKS $400 up Many Interesting positions, advancement to management and tales petitions. Many fees paid. Mrs Plland. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 1880 S. Woodward, B'ham 442-8248 COMBINATION BUMP-PAINT MAN and helper, full benefits. Downey Oldtmoblle. 550 Oakland Av*. 3M-81D1. Company Rep. Trainee $6600 car, no fee, 2130, some college preferred, National Growth Corp., Mr. Fnr, 151-1050. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL .5722 W. Maple Rd. _________Orchard Lake COOKS First clots broiler man and night chefs. Apply Machus Red Fox. 6676 Teltgraph. COST ACCOUNTANT Excellent growth 'Opportunity In small Western Michigan city, a complete charge, degree plus 2-3 years experience, gocxl salary, resume and salary regulrements WOL VE B l*N E** WORLG^WI DE INC. Rockford, Michigan An Equal Opportunity Employer COUNSELOR. IP YOU ENJOY orklng -------------' I DIE DESIGNERS ELLIOTT ENGINEERING DETROIT MUTUAL INSURANCE COMPANY No oxp. necessary, will train right man, 11,000-410,000 possible first year. Vacation, ponalon plan, group Insurance Included. Good car necessary. Call Mr. Schartchun, 33*-4650 Mpn.-Frt. 1:30 a.m. to 10:30 a.m. Positions open In Pontiac, Flint and Detroit. DISHWASHER AND BUS BOY, flight shift only, good wages plus all benefits. Ella* Bros. Big Boy, Telegraph and Huron/ DISHWASHERS. EXPERIENCED Pontiac Trail i DRAFTSMAN, FULL TIME FOR light appliance manufacturer, no rnllttory obligations. Call Mr. Frltch, Skuttla Mfg. Co., Milford. 604-1415.___________________________ DRIVER, PORTER, UENfflAL utility man for business located (n Southfield, good fringe benefits-Pleas* writ* giving experience and salary desired to Pontiac Press DRUG CLERK 5 DAYS 40 HOURS. Must be willing to work 9-5 Mon.-Fri, Apply In person Franklin Drugs. 32940 Mldtf-—" Electronics Trains* $5000 INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 5722 W. Maple Rd. —" —d Lakr Orchard Executive Trainee $400 Fe* paid, ag* 21-28, H.5.O., earn while you learn Mr. Fry, 851-1050. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 5722 W. Maple Rd. Orchard Lak* Excellent opportunity for man praparad to work on o variety of assembly and aqulpmant building problomt associated with semi-conductor device manufacturer. The successful applicants background will bo In oloctrlcol mechanical assembly. Instrument mak Ing or tool making: Soma electrical experience would bo desirable. Good salary end excellent -fringe benefits. Energy Conversion Devices, Inc. 549-7300. EXAlRilNCYb rulRlt LATHI operators. Crescent Machine Company, Inc. 3501 Williams Drive, Pontiac. EXPERIENCED REAL BiTSTl talesmen needed for Immediate opening Inquire Warren Stout, realtor, 1450 N. Opdvk* Rd., Pontiac. FE 5-1165 tor Interview. EXPERIENCED SPLINE GRINDERS 51 hour wook. Excellent rates, pension. Insurance J WHO benefits. If you ore well qualified Apply et Personnel Office DETROIT BROACH & MACH. CO. 950 S. Rochester Rd., Rochester 651-9211 Opportunity Employer Ip sell Chevrolet, Bulck end Pon-tfacs. AH fringe benefits. Apply to Everett Ernst, Homar Hlght, Motors Inc., Oxford, Mich. (Apply In Person Only). 8 XPERlBNCl D MAITOTWaHCB men needed to Work In expanding plastic operation. Day shift only. EXPERIENCED AUTO CLEAN UP man wanted, lull time only, 3501 Rochester Rd., Royal Oak. 385-5*83. CjfOTTT f WAfiKRmr* IttHhfifid# will train to cut car-pat 6. drivt Hi-Low# call 353-1060. Help Wanted Mol# Factory A Workers. tlm# after 6 a#*n, , 7 % Employers Temporary SbrvicB Radford 26117 Orand River F I N A N C E TRAINEE: HTg~H school grad. 20-24 yr*. old. Experience preferred but not necei-»*ry. Career opportunity. Con-F*E M502CI,rl( ” Mr~ Wlthln8t°n. GAS STATION ATT8NOANT, 8x. perlenced, mechanically Inclined, local rat., full or part time. Gull, Telegraph and Meal*. <*« STATION ATtENDENT, EX-parlanced. Full tlm*. Bee's stand- GIASSMAN WANTED, UNION ^••'• Gless, 2602 Union Lak# Rd., 363-4129 evening 424-2091,_ YAlLj. MAN, HOURS OPEN. EX- Bufer" WMI ,r*ln- OSbUNDS KlEPER ANb LlGHf gteltdjnB melntsnance, year around pMltiim with liberal benefits. Businas* located In Southfield. Pleat* _£19. I lucsisu in souinrioid. Pleat* V to8 Vo^?“p^,W1?o*x* guarB for Utica, Mt. Clemens troll area. Top Union a Blur Cross- Vacation (toy benefits. Call us collect. Bonded Guard ^Servjces _ — xsi LO 6-4150. HANDY MAN T LIVE IN HOME. nun vincr |op gays. MA 6-7810. immediate openings por~me‘n r hour plus tlm* JANITORS — OAKLAND UNIVERSI-Iv accepting applications tor custodial work, Dacomber * > benefits. Both enlng shifts s Iverslty, Rochesti Manager Trainee Head Cashier to start Immediately Sentry Acceptance Corporation Call Mr. Morley ___________674-2247 MACHINE OPERATOR — TO Operate oncer twister#.midnights, we rat* after 60 days, 63.02 MACHINISTS, part time. FULL TIME OR Experienced or up- welltole^d lnc- «■> w»> MAINTENANCE trainee# material handler Sleedy work with average of 53 Opportunity for a career with feet growing concern. 404 E, IB Milo Rd., Ploosnnt Ridge. MAN WITH % TON PICKUP FOR port time, morning work tor build-,r'.. cl0** 10 Pontine, S3 hourly, call 336-2925 from 8-4 p.m.______ MANAGER TRAINEE THIS POSI- manager trainee, gAOwiNo corp. wonts salts minded young man no oxp. 85,800 call Kathy King, 334247), Snelllng 8. Snelllng. MECHANICAL ENGINEER FOR MEN WANTED Aga over 26, 814150 weekly, plus doubletlm*. immediate full tlm* lobs available near your home, wo train you to teach driving and pro- cont Med'T "I * tomp,*'*|y By*1 customers. FE IW444. EXECUTIVE OFFICES ___7 A.M. - 10 P.M. 15032 GRAND RIVER AVE. 3 DEPARTMENTS OPEN Men accepted will b* trained fi a career position. Mutt be nei appearing end i" ' Opportunity tor : _____ merit. Above average etartlng pey of $112.10 per wk. Transportation furnished. NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY. MUST BE ABLE TO START WORK IMMEDIATELY. Call Mr. Fox 7 a.m. 3:30 p.m„ Office Manager Trainee* $7200 fee paid, eg* 21-30, degree, no experience necessary. Mist Schuler, 151-1050. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL *>22 W. Maple RdT Orchard Lake OPPORTUNITY MANAGER WANTED H and R. Block, America's largest 'Income lex service, wants to locate; * person capable of handling a volume Income tax tervlce to Pontiac. Excellent opportunity For r Satals**’write WH- ^amt V°R: Block, P. O. Box (SI, Flint, Mich. 4*501 or call Mr. Edwards, 767- ORbER DESK AND 5TEADY OF-flce work. Induslrlol. For .man over 30. Send complete resume and pay Information to Pontlec Pros* Box No, C-11, Pontiac, Mich. PLAIT 1C MOLb ENGINEER. TOP notch man to help design, follow up, try out an debug ln|ectlop mold Top salary, benefits, bonus. Northland Industrial Plastics. 1955 Stephenson Hwy. Troy. PLUMBING AND REPAIR SERV-jc*. Port time, l-l p.m., 338-0960. PRESSER 851 SlMLITV DRY ctoantog, apply 534 w. Woodward. Birmingham steady, paid holidays and vacations.____ Public Relations Trainee $6000 21-31, H.S.G., Ideal training pro-gram for ambitious men, Mr. Fry, (51*1050. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 5722 W. Maple Rd. Orchard Laka PUBLIC RELATIONS 2 yri. college and degree# many 'Interfiling positions, most faa paid. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 1110 S. Woodward# B'ham. 642-8368 PURCHASING DEPT. pltal work, °*prt!ar mature man, axparlanca helpful. Deceiving stock. Reply to Pon-Jlac_Pr#iiBoxC2J _ REAL* ESTATE SALESMEN. >enlnps are available, prerarrad. Generous Exparla homes, l)U."*C"HAv'd'en. ’’jS-MoT Real Estate Salesmen Sell real attota at the Moll. One ot tha hottest locations In Oakland Co. Lois ot loads - tots of contacts - lots of buslnoss. Will train. Call Von Realty, t*3-Saoov RETIRED TOOL" AND DIE MAKERS Capable of working on email dies producing porta. .050 to .)M I" alia. Supplement your Social Security with a tow hr*, each Weak. Apply Connolly's Jdwatora. earner of Huron and Saginaw Streets. D—12 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 196T Holp Wanttd Malt PRINTER. MAN WHO CAN vertlcle MM ofniM prijr . call Mina Clark, *35*471 *7,om. Ca mailing * borers, pole type . SALESMAN, W H 0 L E S A L E, Hslp Wanted Mab 6 Help Wanted Mab IMMEDIATE OPENINGS FOR SKILLED TRADESMEN Tool Makers Electricians Machine Repairmen (Journeymen or equal experience) ELDON AVE. AXLE PLANT 6700 Lypch Rd. Saturday, Dec *th, t to 4:30 — Saturday, Dec. 16t CHRYSLER CORP. ' SALESMEN HELP! WE NEED YOUI EXPERIENCED AND TRAINEES SOMETHING SPECIAL waits the Individual we are-continued (powth appointment EL 6-9178 PERSONNEL SPLINE AND 0. D. GRINDERS I Machine Co., 11434 TOOL AND FIXTURE BUILDERS, — tool and fixture i. Rate S3.71 -Including cost Fabricators. 23444 - PR 5-1414, COMPUTER OPERATOR Outstanding opportunity available for ambitious young man with potential to grow with progressive data processing installation. Some operator experience desireable. Salary commencerate with qualifications. Liberal benefits program. Apply or send resume to> LEO ROLLINS, Personnel Mgr. Hoover Ball 6c Bearing Co. Bearing Division 5400 S. State Road, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48106 liberal bonus ..... ....... 1st, Parry Pharmacy, Me. Blvd. Equal Oppor- You Could Be One! We are expanding our new car sales staff. To do so we need— Two Experienced Newx Car Salesmen right away. These positions are pertinent with a fast moving dealership, They provide many advantages including all the fringe benefits, Sincere, steady men really self-starters, will find their earning opportunities more than ! equal to their efforts. Please see Mr. Fred Drendall, Hillside Lincoln-Mercury 1250 Oakland. EVES. MO P.M. $3.34 AN HOUR Call David Housa, FE i-0339 bi TOOL AND DIE MAKERS FULL-PART TIME Days-Nights Help Wanted Femab 7 Irature woman for babysit- tlne, S days wtak, 7:30 to 4 p.m., own tranip. 334-2213, eft. S p.m. MEDICAL SECRETARY, NORTH Wopoward area doctors office, die* * ^ p. $ day uft. Lnffir 6:30 A.M. to 5 P.M,. Report .tq 123 N. Saginaw . Rear Entrance WE PAY DAILY KELLY LABOR DIVISION Equal Opportunity Employer Cd0AfmmU|2 X E S AJ° Ro» ****£] , 334- $60-$80-$ 100-$ 120 GENERAL OFFICE-TYPIST SECRETARIES-BOOKKEEPE RS Age 21-30. Very good skllli. INTERNATIONAL personnel eo W, Huron___________334-4971 ATTENTION neat woman for parY-tim! counter clerk. Hour*1 from. * ‘~ 4. Apply Pontiac Laundry cieantn, $43 S. Telegraph. NEW tYPISTS $70 " Orchard'toko ** Help Wanted M. #r F. » MONEY IN A CAREER IN REAL ESTATE Opening ter aaverar eeP*”—1” No experience needed NURSE ANESTHETIST Full lima p e a 111 o n avelli Progressiva hospital presently pending from 330 to SCO bads. ... offer an excellent salary, exceptional call schedule and new fringe benefit program Including paid Blue Cross-Blue ------ ‘ Ufa Insurance. Press Box C-41 ORDER TYPISTS Expansion of operations has created several open-J- ^EEC£D|ings for fast, accurate working conditions^ typists. Good salary and ____________i. Mo-rocs.____excellent fringe benefit 'AVON IS CALLING" — IN YOUR npAn,fim Aonlv hptwppn Neighborhood through TV. Be the Pr09ram- MPH'7 OBTWeen ^•«r7Unr.V0|l^!S.h; 8 a'.m- 00(1 1°°" 0" c»ij fe.4-0439 or write) Saturday, December 16. THE VALER0N CORP. 130 W. 11 Mile Rd. Berkley An Equal Opportunity Emplot— TRAVEL AGENT, i Orion. BABY SITTER FROM 6:30 A.M.-lerred. Own transportation. 333- BABY SITTER, CRESCENT LAKE a. 682-4475, after 3:30 p. BABYSITTER FULL TIME. 5 DAY veek, 7:30-5:15, own trans., Bloom-ield Orchard subdivision, start BABY SITTER, LIVE Punch Press , Employers Temporary Service 63 S. Main, Clawson PUBLIC RELATIONS yrs. collaga and degraa, mah lerestlng positions, most fe ,—ld. Mrs. Hoppe. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL i DAY,IMP S. Woodward, B'hi Y SITTER NEEDEO, t o*ur home, Clarkiton a person preferred, m Pontiac Press Box Number C-H SECRETARY, EXECUTIVE. THIS ■ st long $375 call Kathy •3471 Snelllng 6, Shelling. e Mile. Duties 609 College Perk Station. Detr L TIME, MUST BE CHRISTIAN WOMAN FOR SALES Apply In person. Bedell's Restaurant, Woodward end Square Lake SECRETARY Experienced In office wo be able to type. $70 wee office. 625-2674. SECRETARIES - OAKLAND UNI- STEN0S $400 UP Shorthand (0-100, typing 30 w Many Intersting positions. M fee paid. Mrs. Tanner. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL WmWIPepMRpi MO you If you ere Interested In making —-—. Call Jack Ralph — PC at Bateman Realty Com* I CLASSES STARTING—LEARN is CONCESSION i ihlera. Apply attar 6 Drive-In Theater. 2431 HELP 2433 Dlx- eke an employment chan NOW IS THE TIMEI Michigan Bell AAA-1 CALIFORNIA CAR DRIVE YOURSELF CARS WAITING. TO 3-5700, Detroit, 1901$ Woodward WANTED: DRIVER TQ DELIVER — —— Beech - • —i--2 Dec. 20. ere. Excellent opportunity, selar benefits. Apply Blrmlnghan -nfield Bank, 1025 E. Map Birmingham. An Equal 0| VLY THOSE ling Intemr pply, subm oureou, voyager mn, 401 Detr “ Street, Flint Michigan. 48302. Sales Help Male-Female B-A $18,000 IS NOT TOO MUCH _________ men over 40, with car, to take short auto tripe near Pontiac. Air mail J. R. Dickerson, Pres. Southwestern Petroleum Corp., S34 building ( "ve comn irvlew ■0306, Eves. EM 3-7546. CURTAIN AND DRAPERY SALES, top salary, downtown Birmingham. Irving Key's Draperies, 644-S2B0. REAL ESTATE SALESMEN Bon Reel Estate needs 3 more, talesmen tot the Utica office. Ex-| perience not necessary — will train. Hospitalization and t»i $130 p-A||uiL|y Painting •ad PeceraHitg 23 AGED FURNITURE Reupholstered, better then no* half the price. Big savings on carpet and draperies. Cell 1700 tor FREE estimate In i Apartments, Unfurnished 11 ROW eH utiMHes Included. 612-0063 er M3-«3«4. ■ ■- BIO ROOMS. $100 PER MO. PLUS dep. end utlllles. Oood ref. No more then 3 children. FB 3-3*78. ROOMS AND BATH. AbULfS only. $30 o week. 311-3363. ROOMS AND BATH, BABY WEL- AAA Auto Driveaway Drive our cert to Lot Angi Sen Frenclsco, Seattle, De Denver, New York, Florida, .... zone, lows, Virginia. Ship your car Insured, ICC Uceneed, 2316 vld Stott BldB. Detroit. 963-3436. BEDROOM. $25 WEEKLY m utilities, “ “*■ “ 363-3294.___________________ CLEAN ATTRACTIVE 3 _ ROOMS, IIS Elizabeth Wonted Household Goods 29 HIGHEST PRICES PAlO'FO* tt have you? B & B AUCTION 9 Dixie Hwy.________OR 3-2717 Wonted Miscellaneous 30 BRASS! RADIATORS! n, cell 623-0107 or 335-1743. WANtEp:' GOOD TABLE TENNIS Hdef Reasonable. OR **“* y RAW FURS Ed Herrington, ______________________OR 3-3030. WE BUY RAW FURS AND DEER Mich. 32] CONVENIENT LOCATION M T’depos*. quantity of antiques. FE NEARLY NEW 2-ROOM AND BATH efficiency, glassed-in porch, park-Ing, nice. MY 3-2*80. NICE EFFICIENCY APARTMENT lust right for working person or teacher, very nicely furnfehed with ell utilities Included, 3139 W. Hur- on, 330-2343 or 411-0343.______ SMALL APARTMENT. ALL utilities. Adults. 332-7333. TEL-HURON AREA 3 ROOMS AND ieth, FE 2-9930, - ■ g| 1 -- Apartments, Unfurnished 38 1 BEDROOM UPPER, STOVE, 9 frlgerator, utilities, carpets, adul OR 3-7617.___________________ -BEDROOM 5-ROOM 2-BEDROOM. NEW. NEAR M und conditioned, heated. Rec. om. Adults, no pels. From S133. E 3-1313. impbell. 731-11 SALES TRAINEES AGE 18-25 Wanted to Kent 1 PERSON: UNFURNISHED 2 I m2d |XtE L?h*l°00 'or r. prof 11 sharing 852-4131. 1880 S. Woodward, B'ham 642-8261 NG AND CHILDCARE. Aluminum Bldg. Hems A PLUS D'LUX ALL +RIM JC inum. Call Johnny On The JRH Division of the John S. Veorhees. Call between • end 6 Mon through Friday, MA 3-2674, Aluminum siding, roofing stalled by "Superior" - ' authorized Kaiser 3177. . FE 4- Boots and Accessories BIRMINGHAM BOAT CENTER Your family boating headquarter!. Stercraft aluminum and liberates Shell Lake and I.M.P. flberglas. 1265 S. Woodward at Adams Road. Ml 7*0133. Sno-Moblla sales, serv-d storage. Brick A Block Service Building Modernization REMODELING AND NEW .HOMES. Family roums rooms, kitchens, bethroomi licensed. Rest. Cell a— 682-0648. tARPENTRY, NEW A— .... Free est. 3334329, 335-7383. Wood art — interior de* tlon, family rooms, cabinets, bathroom vanities. 673-3976. Cement Work ALL TYPES OP CEMENT M Cement and Block Work Guinn's Construction Co. Ft 6-7677 Eves, 391-36 Dressmaking! Tailoring Electrical Contracting V I R I NO OF HOMES, GARAGES,!bIG BOY DRIVE-IN, DIXIE AT etc. New or old. OR 3-9329 or OR ||bg| 1 ■*— - •'*•——»•>■' * U“'M 4-0273. Excavating ,LL CAST IRON SEWERS, .. . tor strvlcts. Condre. FE 84)643. ND LOADING DOZER WORK, tepMc fields, dry will. FE S-lMl, RENT FLOOR CLEANING AND polishing equipment, heaters, ~‘— 62 W. Montcalm. 332-9271. SEPTIC FIELDS. DRY WELL, TRENCHING. WATER LINES S. Luces Waterford Sewer Const. __________6724)240 -1 NEW, REROOF — REPAIRS — Cali Jack. Save the lack. 330-61 IS, OR 3-9190.___________________ NEW ROOFS FOR OLE R5T Floor Sanding L. BILLS SR., NEW AND ----"‘~T- FE 2-67*9. FLOOR TAYli '1. FE 5-0392. Floor Tiling l. Porry, re 2-4000. QUALITY_ ROOFING. NEW AND 682-7314. Holiday Portias HOLIDAY PARTIES lurch groups, banquets, parties for 23 or left. Cell ter reservations. Jontiorial Services JANITOR SERVICES. TALBOTT LUMBER :e — Telftirephe I Rental Equipment Sand—Gravel—Dirt I BULLDOZING, FINISH------ grade • fop toll. Max Cook. 6>2-6143 WILL ROTTEfD COW MANURE, 83 -A SNOW PLOWING, BY JOB OR season, 332-4993 or 8S2-2B72^ SNOWPLOWING 472-3642 SNOW PLOWING AND TOW SERV-Ice. FE 3-7633._____________ Tree Trimming Service -1 TREE SERVICE BY BS, Free estimate. FE 5-4449, 474-3510. CAB TREE SERVICE, TRIMMING removal, — day dlHMBHIIIIBI *~e dependable. 626-0914. CLERK TYPIST FOR THIS GEN-—1 -"’-1, exc. hours, diversified I call Fran Fox, 324-2471, Spelling, COOK TO WORK PART TIME. ' p.m. Hourly nformatlon call DRY CLEANER •xperlenct necessary. Will n. Paid vacations, holidays. et Davis Cleaners, 647-30"" EXPERIENCED BAR MAID, DAYS 4313 Baldwin Rd. _____________ EXPERIENCED BILLING CLERK kehyeen 25 antf 33, must be ac urate with figures, good typist nd telephone operator, good eel rv plus working conditions, vl Inlty of OaklancT-Ponllac Airport EXPERIENCED GIRL FOR GEN-—' cleaning Fridays. Own trens-Orchard Lk. Maple Rd. Area. 831 2375. STEN0S TYPISTS CLERK-TYPISTS DICTAPHONE OPERATORS Good Pay and Bonus 869-7265 or 642-3055 WITT SERVICES, INC. 725 S, ADAMS ROOM 136 ADAMS PLAZA, BIRMINGHAM rest to learning operation of buslnees. Experience not necei_.. 6 DAY WK. SALARY $112.50 Call Mr. Pafford 9 a.m.-2.p.n ___________FE 8-0339_______ Instructions-Schools 10 ATTENTION GI'S AND NON-GI'S AUTO MECHANICS CLASSES START DEC. 24TH ENROLL NOW. START TRAINING Auto Body Collision ACETYLENE ARC WELDING DAY, NIGHT SCHOOL APPROVED UNDER Gl BILL WOLVERINE SCHOOL MICHIGAN'S OLDEST TRADE SCHOOL 1400 W. Fort________WO 3-0692 Share Living Qnnrters CHRISTIAN WORKING LAC GIRL OR WOMAN NEEDING TO WORKING GIRL WILL SHARE epertmi I FE 8-851 YOUNG WORKING ,GIRL WANTED . Pontiac General i TELEPHONE SOLICITOR furnace company, 30 yre. or age and up, experience preferred, hourly wage plus commission, 334- Md*1 TYPISTS $325 UP Wanted Real Estate ^Lroom and 2-room apt.. erly people preferred, no TOr^ no children. 238-1315.______ DU 3 ROOMS. PRIVATE, 2333 D almost In Pontiac. F k 4-2131. ENROLL NOW Day or evening cleuee Accounting Stenographic Federal Income Tax Licensed By Mich. State Board of Education MICHIGAN SCHOOL OF BUSINESS LEARN BULLDOZERS, GRADERS, 7427. Gl spp. Work Wanted Male A-1 HAULING, ODD JOBS. CALL WAITRESSES AND DISHWASHERS Experienced help only, apply in person between 3 p.m. and 5 p.m. The Great Dane. Northwester- — Middle Bell In Farmington. CARPENTER WORK ROUGH AND Bowl Lounge, 2325 Elizabeth L WOMAN TO HOSTESS AND SUPER-' - dining room, we need a me-woman who hat the ability pervlse, good wages plus brne-Blg Boy Restaurant, Teie-—1 Huron Street, Inter* [WOMAN WANTED FOR GENERAL r OR HEAVY HAULING. I enow plowing. 672-1770. MARRIED MAN, 32 YRS. OLD. Id like part time lob, very I at painting or any handy c. Available from 9 *.tr *-m, 332-3366, ask tor Jim. Alert lady for typing and general WOMAN WANTED sy'^.lvMkbu,^redv;yt,,nd.y-[ ?5,lcye.ar,or.vffi SNOW PLOWING. REASONABLE ipltellzallon. Apply GENERAL OFFICE, WILL ■ here, top co. needs a shar $260 call Kathy King. 31 Sntlllng 6 Shelling. GENERAL OFFICE ’ $325-5425 Receptionists, typists, accounting clerks, many varied positions. Many fee paid. Mrs. Hoppe. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL , Sundays, and avt- Young Lady Over 40 $275.00 Exparlenced as bank tellar, or bookkeeper, work In new office, lust completed, peacetul pleasant surroundings, no parking problems. Mr. Fry, 831-1050. INTjERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 5722 W. Maple Rd. Tracking LIGHT MOVING, Iding and Oakland Pointing ond Decorating A-1 PAINTING AND PAPER HANGING THOMPSON FE 4-8364 1 PAINTING. WOltK OUTRAN-teed. Free estimates. 682-0620. ______________^__________________ iT-l OUAUTY PAINTING. REASON- BLOCK AND CEMENT WORK.I able. 628-4623. Pontiac, 391-1173. 1FXPFRT PAINTING AND PAPER hanging. Call Herbie. 673-6790. PAINTING, PA PE R I NG, WALL cleaning, paper removal. B. T. Sandusky. FT 4-8548. UL 2-3190. QUALITY WORk ASSUREO. PAINt-j ing; papering, wall washing, 673- ! Photography LIGHT HAULING AND MOl ot any kind, reel. FE 5-7443. LIGHT HAULING; BASEMENTS, Trucks to Rent WTon pickups lWTon Staka —exs ------- BETTY JO'S DRESSMAKING ___Waddings, allaratlohs. 474-3704 , bRBSSMAKlNG AND ALTERA- t Drivers Training ] ROVED AUTO DRIVING)'' s H8.S DONOVAN. 832-23 __________DrywaH DRYWALL SERVICE, MBS GUTTER CO. COMPLETE 673-6864. Licensed - bonded BUALITY WokK, GUARANTEED, license, free estimates. Spring-field Bldg. Co., 625-2128. Plastering Service I PLASTERING, NEW AND RE-Her. 3353702. PLASTER REPAIRS steady per wee! ply*Ponriac Purest Boxnc-23?ni' ** HOUSEWIVES - MOTHERS Need Christmas money but have only 2 to J hours dally? Pick up end deliver Fuller Brush or-ders near home. Earn S2.50 up hourly. I. ^oMW5* phone^Mr Kretz^ 334-6401 IMMEDIATE“0>ENlNG FOR COM-puter operators, choice ot shifts, ma|or firm. $347 call Fran Fox, 334-2471, Snelllng 5 Jnelllng, KELLY'SERV'ltES*. 442-9630 ,M N S*°'n*W 331-0331 An Equal Opportunity Employer KEY PUNCH, THIS BUSY FIR needs you, full co. benefits, ex opportunity $433 call Fran Fo 334-2471, Snelllng ‘ All RH Positive BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED CASH 48 HOURS LAlto CONTRACTS—HOMES WRIGHT X Oakland Avs.__PE 2-9141 LING DONE REASON- Work Wanted Female IRONING. DAY SERVICE. ‘>fe— IRONINGS AT MY OR 3-6380.___________ IROjilNGS — EXCELLENT WORK. Building Services-Suppllee 13 HUDSON'S HOME IMPROVEMENT CENTER I7jg PROOFING EXPERIENCED EXPERIENCED PRODl In person Dietary departm tenton Hospital, Rochester._ HAIR STYLIST ASSISTANT, FULL ■ timt. Appl^ In par ~ i. Woodward TRUCKS ......M AND EQUIPMENT Dump Trucks — Sami-Trailer* Pontioc Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. 82$ S. WOODWARD KEY PUNCH GOOD EXPERIENCED OPERATORS'KITC.HEN. HEL.P_ PeLiSA'S .B. for temporary end long term at- ,na restaurant, Rocnester. est-m 'LADIES, MEN. COLLEGE STU- Coll MANPOWER 332-8386] Jwi'EiVhTSS: t__An equal epportunlty employer 338-2468._ LADY FOR WAITING ON CDS- LIMOUSINE DRIVERS WANTED, tomers, marking —• ----------- ka -- ----- —' Ogg Cleaners. 379 HEATING & COOLING BATH MODERNIZATION ' KITCHEN MODERNIZATION WATER HEATERS and many other home Irrtprove-mente. Convenient credit terms; cording to city CM tension 342 or 343. I. 682-3232! ex- •Hudson's PONTIAC MALL BEDROOM HOUSE, WATERFORD School area. 682-8225. 33 •BEDROOM, STOVE, REFRIGERA-tor, air-condltionlng, balcony ovor-looklng lake, adults, no pets, con- vsnlant location, 62S-177S.______I I BEDROOMS IN PONTIAC. CALL OR 3-3831, after 6 p.m venlencee, eerporfe end allJtHMHw Included In rent. Re children or P*1*334S Wetklni Like Ro»V..t4. Onager on Premises ___ 473.316* 86 LIBERTY, DUPLEX, VII* month. FE 6-2321. BLOOMFIELD ORCHARDS APARTMENTS mTnoham^area? !2xuBr?T'*.nd,,,£ bedroom, apertmente available tor immediate possession from $135 per month IncludllM < carpeting. fes 'trtsras-s detail ot luxury has been ever-' looked In Bloomfield Orchard Apts, located on South Blvd. (» Mlto Rd.), between Opdyke endl-7S«x- ESSTi,'3r.j!,my'FV0.«torPm,2: tlSm VUN i038f. Mgr. 335-3670, FE $-0770. ELIZABETH LAKESHORE APTS.-I Bedroom, 1 year Neae. *'« JJ?p. Boat well, sandy beach, electric heat Included. Adults. No pets, 5373 Coolev Lake Rd. EMBASSY EAST APARTMENTS One bedroom, alr coridltlonlng, $130 Rd., Watortord Twp. ________ HILLVIEW VILLAGE ^ *Pbedr«)ms, r,lr^p*C,*'ce’i''1 carpet- hS! 6W>75l."r'____ . . LARGE UPPER, PARTLY FUR-nlshed. $83. Adult*, no pets. De-posit FE 2-2622. LOWER, 3 ROOMS AND BATH, Pontiac School District end pro- teselonal people, 39I-2S6S.___ NEW 2 BED{rOOM,|fDRAPE^iCAR. 2 _ bedrwms 1 682-44 iretaker Oak Grove Apar 2 BEDROOMS. HEATED, ALSO bedroor I HO *“ 2 mles Farm • Rent Housas. Furnished 39 l-BEDROOM . TRAILER., CLARK-1-BEDROOA ROOMS, STOVE, REF or, utilities paid. 333-3275.___ 3 ROOMS AND BATH, NJCE,_ _R_E- shed. 363 33 ____ BEDROOM MOBILE HOME. 3-BEDROOM, NEW, I No pete. S73 mo, UL 2-3115. CLEAN 4 ROOM, BASEMENT, GAS heal, adults only. FE 2-7780. _ COMPLETELY FURNISHED^2-8ED- TrucS* A Coach, ^ecudty d«iosil and references required. Sislock & Kent, Inc. n 10 MINUTES »r forclosure. Agent. 527-6400. ALL CASH jr home* any I a c • In Oaklar YORK >r profe Adults c CELS, FARMS, BUSINESS PRoS ERTIES, AND LAND CONTRACTS ftr nrofannltmal modi* WARREN STOUTe Realtor 450 N. Opdyke Rd. FE 5-8165 Urgently need for lmfr-|Hfw||jiy Pontiac >100 dap. FR 4-4365. I, >127.50 !l after ROOM UPPER. GOOD ___________ tlon. Near General Hospital. Heat and hot water furnished. 682-0341 bet. 10-12 noon. _________ APPLICATIONS^NO^BEING ^ ntown^ apartment r| q|r conditioning HAVE CASH BUYER FOR SMALL HOUSE Need not be modern. ELW00D REALTY _________6*2-2418 I HAVE A PURCHASER WITH CASH FOR A STARTER HOME IN OAKLAND c6unty. CALL AGENT YORK AT 674-169* Disposal Freezer^ Compartment TV antenna Ceramic tilt Plenty of dottle No children January occupancy Prom S12S per mo. 12 noon. EM 3-0134._____________________ NEW HOUSE TRAILER, 2 BED-room, baby welcome. S133 mo. $100 deposit. After 5, 628-1402. t JAN. 1 TO furnished 2- UNION I Rent Houses, Unfurnishsd AO 1 BEDROOM HOUSE FE 4-2288 I AND 2 BEDROOM HOUSES, 17T $90-8110 In Pontiac. 427-3840, eves. cell 385-2018. _____ 2-BEDROOM HOUSE, S30 A WEEK, 1 child welcome, no pets, dep. 2 BEDROOM. ELIZABETH LAKE area, S12S. 628-3180 after 4:30. 2 BEDROOM, GAS HtAf, NEAR I-73 end Joe lye, 6100 mo.. *30 dep.. Immediate possession with reftr-encee. FE 2-623Q. 3-BEDROOM, $133 MONTHLY PLUS “rl'v^sblSb. rr- BEDROOM. IN LAKE ORION, gas heat, closed beck yard, $125 monthly. Coll after 6 p.m. 628- Apartments, Unfurnished 38 Apartments, Unfurnished 38 LAKE FRONT meol end 2-cer garage. Will go up to $35,000. Coll Tva Nichols rep. DORRIS S, SON. REALTORS. LOTSMIVANTEO IN PONTIAC Immediate closing. REAL VALUE REALTY, 643-4330 Heyi»ece«hUbuyer, Value»?M423l07UR DEBTS problem* by prowMpai managed, organized progri US CONSOLIDATE YOUR WITH ONE LOW PAYMENT YOU CAN AFFORD. NO Jlmlt ot tp amount owed ond number of credl-tort. For that# who realize, "YOU CAN'T BORROW YOURSELF OUT • OF DEBT . LICENSED AND BONDED Hem* Appointment Gladly Arroneod No Coot or Obligation for Intervlowe HOURS 9-7 P.M.-SAT. 9 5 p.m. DEBT AID 7)1 Rlker Bldg. FE wnj Mevfng end Tracking 22 LIGHT HAULINO _____________492-1119. LIGHT HAULING OF ANY KIND', eleo ot »ond end grevtl 62S-9497. Painting and Decorating 23 I ftDOM BACHiLQR. NORTH "--------C-A- Fto S-4274. .. . perun. FE 4-4002. OR 3 LARGE CLEAN ROiDMS,1 carpeted, adults, 'no drinkers, FE 55112. ________________ AND 3 ROOMS, til AND 122 weekly, edultii 75 Clerk, ROOMS AND BATH, VERY NICE, good Wetteide tocatlon, carpeted, utllttlee furnlthod, 130 weekly, $23 PAINTING. CARPENTRY BRICK ROOMS S BATH, UTILITIES .furnlihtd. refrigerator S stove, UL 2-4637, Auburn Height!. ___ ROOMS AND hATH, S2J WEEK- - ,74-1634. LAfioi fiOOMS AND IaYh. Everything furnlthed. 334-3396, af- 3 ROOMS AND hAtH. AOULTS only. 43 Thorpe. 3 ROOMS ANb . lAtH. only. Ml 6-1456. ‘ ROOMS 01*7 ’a6ults PIfosiT, Rb drinkers. FE V9571. > AoSm, FhlVATI/ iAYH, 1M- - Irene#, FB 50446, 111 Unlutrilty. DARLING COURT New Luxurious AIL-ELECTRIC APARTMENTS Awarded the Gold Medallion by Edison for excellence in All-Electric Living 1- and 2-Bedroom Apts, from $165.00 per month Including All Utilities PLUS '# Clean Eloctric Heat • General Electric Kitchen Including Weihtr/Dryor, Dlih-weshor. Garbage Dliposal, Refrigerator, Range and Oven , . . Plenty of Formica-Top Cupboards, Lazy tuian Pantry. • Insulated Soundproof Walls • Central TV Antenna • Private Pavtd Parking • Central Air Conditioning • All Rooms Fully Carpeted Including Spacious Living Room, Dining Room, Kltctwn, Bod-room., Hallway, and Ciooot*. • Storage Area in Each Unit • Close to Xwdyt and Pontiac Mall • Furnished or Unfurnished * Immediate Occupancy OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK - 1 P.M, TO 6 P.M. 3440 Sashabaw Road (South of Walton Blvd.) Waterford Township . 674-3136 D—13 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. DECEMBER 13, 1967 McCullough realty ANNETT iKAMPSEN iWest Side Terrace mt with full9 bpsement, gas I 3 rooms with 2 bedrooms S. full bosomont, newly decorated. Close to Moll shopping center. Immediate possession. SI .000 down to responsible i baths, jvtovi refrigarator 'IT'S TRADING TIME" CLARKSTON AREA CLOSE TO OAKLAND COMMUNITY COLLEGE with privileges on Union Lake, handy to shopping I, 43951 Von Dyke, Utica, BY OWNER. 3-BEDROOM HOME I "»ar St. Michaels, living and din-I room, carpeted, gassed front wlta. Can be p contract. StSOO at Waterford / 25,200 SQ. FT. Two adjacent bldgs, across i Osteopathic Hospital. Will ran to suit tenant or will provide building with parking an site — 140. Contact Bruct Annett personally Annett Inc. Realtors ft E. Huron SL 331 Oftlca Open Evenings t Sunday payment, *12,950, land 'contract, I tell &« 10,000 SQ. FT. BUILDING WITH tl ft clearance, and railroad si*1-1 Ino, O'Nall Realty OR 4-3233. AubOIH HEIGHTS AREA, 6 rage, 2 stalls, approximately l -----------1 in-mfot n :ar garage. Exes 129,300. 363-5370. r OWNER. NEW COMMERCIAL OR OFFICES. LOW rant, 2,000 sq. ft. Orchard Lk. »■* —‘i parking. BY OWNER. 3-®S*3h<>m* | Rent Miscellaneous BY OWNER — CASS LAKE CANAL. 2 bedrooms. Carpeting --------- " (m ------- Baathoi 1, 3 OR 4 BEDROOMS, NEWLY decorated. 149 down. Art Daniels Rooty, 31000 Ford. KE 7-7300. KE 7-7M0. ________________ 3-BEDROOM BRICK RANCH IN Drayton, new carpeting, nice kitchen with lleHt-ln appliances, 2-car garage, large cyclone fenced lot - 116,300 — Terms. MENZIES REAL ESTATE 023-3403 9230 Dixie Hwy. 023-3013 I BEDROOMS, NO BASEMENT, large 300 ft. lot.. 1430 DOWN. RED BARN VILLAGE SUBDIVI-SION. 333-3000, Builder. 3 Bedrooms ..LOW DOWN PAYMENT NO MORTGAGE COSTS MODEL OPEN CALIFORNIA REAL, ESTATE CHET HILTON 828 S. Atlantic Blvd. Monterey Park, Calif. CLARKSTON GARDENS — '0400 Church. 3-bedroom brick with 3tx-20 family room and basement, well kept up. Fireplace, air conditioning, 019,300. Monthly payments, 0103. Our equity 07,300. MA WEST0WN REALTY FE 0-2743 days After 7:30 P.m. — LI 2-4477 IBEOROOM BRICK, PONTIAC side, prater trade up or down house on largo lot In lake a Price Is 023,300; FE 2-7010, fROOM HOUSE, ON SOUTHEAST side, 1 block ofi Auburn Avo. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. Biassed in front porch, all new aluminum Siding, storms, screens, roof and gas between *** owntr- c,n FE 0-1297, 3 BEDROOM RANCH One of the nicest of America's most puputar home styles. This comfortable clean rancher near, Waterford High School features a large kitchen, > over-sized garage and a fully par ------ 3 BEDROOM no a half. Full base-leat. Shown by ap-0-0 p.m. FE 2-0203. 2 BE&ROSm COT i Southeast side. FE Boathouse. 013.31 LAKE FRONT 3*bedroom brick ranch type bungalow with larg# carpeted living i room, fireplace wltn bar-tvque covered patio, overlooking i id Lk. Priced at 122.950. < GEORGE IRWIN. REALTOR MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE 29$ W. Walton_FE 3-7953 SCHRAM .IKE LAKES? Access to 2 of Oakland County's most popular lakes. 3 bedrooms, largo livings room, big 2-car -- FHA terms. J. RHODES, REALTOR 1 / FES-3304 258 W. Walton FE 5-4712 KEN “-WORTH - V , -WJjkT^LE LISTING SERVICE, | "J™ rng ROCHESTER SUBURBAN - 3 Realtor . Go- ROYER SERVICE IS OUR BUSINESS WATERFORD REALTY 4540 Dixie 673-1273 Multiple Listing Service | I WATERFORD TOWNSHIP ig for only $15,900 loaded with e re*. Call: - YORK pletwlv cyclone fenced yon bon drive and paved siree proxlmately $1600 down to Ino mortgage with paymoi PHONE: 682-2211 5143 Cass-Elizabeth Road OPEN DAILY AVON TOWNSHIP I purchosor. 4 Br. Brick Ranch ur,nsvrnB.iM Extra large family room with fireplace, 1V3 baths. Nicely landscaped lot. $2200 -tea homei JUST LISTED bo, bul*t home all on I floor. Outstanding! 3 bedrooms, fine carpeting and rogef'paSo,* giant' 200 *foot<< deep; lot. Quick possession. Municipal »•»,««, wrms. sitlsoo I?1 th?wfotai Spfice0,sE*EjWestvSid® Brick attractive home I :pndltlon having i*"i Horse Lovers mlc, rolling >m modorr fruit trees west of Dixie 'lea, 013,900. DESIRABLE-ESTABLISHED CONVENIENT We offer for QHWmRUPlH three bedroom homo located I •ho doelrable section of Pioneer highlands. Large porch of roar is tcroenod. The marble flroploco In the living room Is Jutf right for the children to hong balfl stockings. It's k ' ‘ Ins and ova* | only t)9,S3l NEW HOMES IN SEARCH OF A FAMILY Two distinguished colonials, fsnrv -tre WE BUY foncoif. tew Q*-VW u cor garage w‘“ u r opener, plus many CHRISTMAS JOY For family buying — this 3-yoor-old, 3-bedroom ranch, with full buyer. SIS,300. Phone 451-0501 to Shorporid Real Estate, Inc. Crestbrook MODEL OPEN DAILY 12-8 3-bedroom, family room and 2-cir garage, priced at only St4,400 plus lot. Located In now sub with povod streets, curb, gutter, sldawalks and city water. Drive out MS* to Cros- GIROUX ly penbli. ....- beiemint. Fenced reer sjn Highland On paved elr**t ™.l -------=— to 121,300 wH REAL ESTATE fenced yard. Only OPEN EVES. AND SUNDAY List With SCHRAM And Call the Van tin JOSLYN AVE. PE 5-9471 REALTOR _________MLS IF-YOU HAVfc 10000 AND WANT an Income property 2-bedroom We Trade 628-2548 bungalow furnished « - —— -lelghbr-'-— -5412. Large Family? Then you need o largo homo. Sot what you can get for your money In this older remodeled village homo containing 9 rooms, 2Vk baths end basement, 4 bedrooms, p room, large living room and d room. Paneldd kitchen with b fast bar, paneled family room beths dawn ore paneled with SAVE A BUNDLE _ Do a Little Cleaning Pontiac North side, 3-badi fenced roar yard, city water, or and gas, lull price $4900. BRIAN 623-0702 5904 Dixie Hwy., Waterford Spacious Nbw Homes By ROSS Save at todays prices Ranches Colonials WELL BUILT 3 BEDROOM HOME, located close- to Oxford, nice' kltch- Wideman rge garage. IMMEDIATE SSESSION. WEST SUBURBAN Lorge family homo, 5 bedrooms, L °gas Va v Split Within easy walking distance to churches, schools end shopping. 119,300, $3,000 down. C. PANGUS INC., Realtors OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 630-MI 5 Ortonvlll* ----COLLECT NA 7-2115 Lauingfer CLARKSTON VILLAGE - 7M30> 473-70371 levels FROM Warren Stout, Realtor N. Opdyke Rd. FE 5-0145 wm........'tip. m FE 5-8183 ONElL MADISON JR. HIGH ± N J_IX-L_i on0; WHY NOT TRADE? te.*{! first Time offering of this attractive 4 bedroom ranch with two complete bath*. Illy activity room. 2 car ati •edecorated. Priced •Z financing /MADISON JR. HIGH Three bedroom homo loco nice corner lot. Garage. to woll carpeting. Auto. SOUTH SIDE j»t saav bath, vacant with terms. ™h' raneeormeo. FOUR BEDROOMS homi *wllh “fill?1 bjse*mont'‘*gSs| CENTENNIAL HOME heat, garage. Hardwood floon.i An#l ^ - hllfMlr Excellent condition. Term*. fbuyaX waiting 7»or one* like tl SUBURBAN ' telephone0 rliftV now and cal? V Thr..k.4mnm '■»'-»• •>*"** <2222 to be thy first to 188 this lovi century old/ home. Believe me they are tare at only $18,9< NO. 10-22 TAKE YOUR TIME— But /Hurry 11 bedrooms bath with saparata stall shower on second floor. Full bate- rage/ Xuto. sprinkling system & other outstanding features. Reduced to $27,500. forms. WILL TRADE I REALTORS 28 E. HURON St. Office Open Evenings I, Sunday 1-4 338-0466, • bath, dejor ed'and* vac Val-U-Ways --• More Is your opportunity k Mattingly MOVE IN FOR CHRISTMAS THE FOLLOWING HOMES ARE VACANT READY FOR IMMEDIATE FOSS. BEDROOM COLONIAL, Borage, Rochester, J43.9O0. n Washing-13 I sra . Also i P COME SPRING YOU t TODAY. I. 0. WIDEMAN, REALTOR REDUCED TO $12,500 This homo features 3 bedrooms, carpeted living room and dining room, partially finished basement with 2-cer garage. Close to storos The Roife H. Smith Co. I i Sheldon B, Smith, Realtor , 333-7141 144 * Open 9-1 4 bedroom Colonial, by oWTi- er, family size kitchen, dining room, iVt ear 'garage, lake prlvl-leges, reduced for quick sole. 3SJ1 Percy King, Waterford or coll 474 oxtri largo let, nice neighborhood, gas hoot, Price 1)3,700, approx. 51,330 down oaxm|Bll 094 mo. Includas tat 1444 Dixie HWY. 423-1 APTBR 5 P.M. OR 3-0453 EM 3-0144 OR >2 $11,590 brand NEW. 3-bedrm. ranch, your tot, full Itasomont fully SULATED, lomlly kitchen, money down. MODEL. UNION LAKE - NEW 3-BEDBM. ranch basement! targe temlly-i on, oxetllm location b Lot 120x100.----* ____YOUR CHILDREN the prlvl- EXTRA *M2iL mss, ■war 1-year-old, 4-bedroom brick colo- 00e of these homes. \ nlol. 2W baths. Large family room 2-BEDROOM - Walk-nut basement with fireplace. Pitted tor gas logs, take front, 2 extra lots. Only term 'patio *w?tlF'docorollvo° poo* MI,S0#' L,nd coh*r*c' or end wotortoll. Carpet end drapes. OWNER SAYS SELL — This 3-Well decorated. Spotless condition bedroom lake privileged homo with IMMEDIATE POSSESSION. 143.- ,„)ra |0) wood mill Lake area. *00. ,fc Only 112,300 on lend contract. aquietcouItI With lovely trool.'Wolk to « — -— — schools. Three- . 4740319 473-2141 brick Pintry q 900. BRIGHT, CLEAN, HAPPY Brick ranch with throe bodrooms and full basement. Convenient to all schools. Walk to ehoHteg. — Ing space M kitchen. Fenced < with potto. Aluminum storms - --- hoot. 2V3-cor . immediate possession Thrtfr-twtfroom brick ranch, Ing room with bay. Racroa m room. Surface swimming pool i filter. Walking distance to schi ,* shopping, and cliy park. $22*500. OFFICE OPEN 019 » MODEL Ktroom and aluminum ranch, 1W baths, full bosomont, 1 cor ga-■ lor custom finished, 'w^dX-VM: ■ “•sjp«i»i of wiV off Soshobow. ........ Open Thurs- Idey from 4 to I and id lundoy from I to ' ippolntmsnt, 471- $28,700 INCL. BASE LAKE PRIV. LOT LAKELAND ESTATES On U.S. 10 (Dixie Hwy.) just 4-10 Mile North of Walton Blvd. Phone 623-0670 | START THE NEW YEAR IN A NEW HOME ’ In HI-HILL VILLAGE, our VlL-i L AGE ft model tor only $31,930.00 complete. ug| LADD'S OF PONTIAC 3677 LAP1BR RD. 391 TUCKER REALTY C0.~ 903 Pontiac yta Bank ^ 334-13451 Si Iverbal I KINZLER COLONIAL STYLING air of classic ologoncs. Hoi ovary, thing to bo desired — kitchen with rich cabinets end bullt-lns, 1'T deluxe baths, 24' recreation room, with fireplace In walk-out basement end much more. Pluih car- t pertitloned r end Msle/ modeled kitchen, I QUICK POSSESSION ir $2300 or make a ARTHUR ST. PreoWned completely .race like, new super »h*rft 3 brick tench. Full dry l I BEDROOM RANCH, Wain) 3 BEDROOM, 1 living. Featuring tawr generous bedrooms, Vh baths, formal dining room, kitchen has built-in appliances. Dinette next to the kitchen, paneled family room with wood burning fireplace, roar patio, full basement, attached two cor garage, sealed gloss windows, marble tills. Priced at (33,930, Just Trade your old homo In. A phone call will stort yodr dreamt coming true. THINKING OF SELLING OR TRADING HOMES — GIT OUR ESTIMATE BEFORE YOU DEAL — Call Ken Hell, Loo Kampsen, Thurman Witt, Watt Lewie, Dick Bryan, Elaine Smith, Bob Harrell or Dove Bradley for —PROMPT, EFFICIENT SERVICE. 1071 W. Huron St- MLS FE 40f21 AFTER I P.M. CALL 401-0923 "Buzz" BATEMAN "Says" EQUITY IS CASH TRADE YOURS r garage. Clow Huron Shopping I at $18*600 to tr0NLY $400 DOWN fha TERMS and Just a a lump from F — I ai HE CRINGED WHEN HE r PICKED UP I his rent receipt —end why not? He I paid more than a monthly payment - would bo on this cozy 3 bedroom ® j Wot* tide bungalow with full bate- J'lpeled living room, cReery kitchen, I COLONIAL RANCH l It one of those populi sr brick end frame raised r___ inlels. 4 delightful rooms andpCAlTnP baths with meny extras odd i'lmliv/i\ ler than new. Hat highlight 343 Oakland R. J. (Dick) VALUET f FE 4-35311' I home, off Dlxli EASY TERMS OR TRADE (TTINGLY m___OR 43544 - _ Times' range. 119,950 w Directions: S Ion Blvd. on* On Pomardy day and PrM OLlF” replace, v *fe^Ty' room*I 3-bedroom tete" em------■ t largo ft l, walkout fete costs. Also hovt 2-t -.--j—— ... Union Lake area. Coll telion Bide. Co.. OR 3-11*1. privilege*. Too li pellnjh ^draperies $2,000 down piu> costs. JOHN KINZLER, Realtor . 5219 Dixit Holy. > 423-0333 Acrott from Pecker* Store Multiple Lifting Service Open Full »lze bo gorogo. to' In secluded DOWN OR 1 t room. aperies, -___.... ought ‘ l, attached 2- Frushour PRICE REDUCED $1000 on mil North, City 7 room story home. There are 3 tx j NO DOWN PAYMENT SNYDER €§ KINNEY & ’ Y0UNG-BILT HOMES taFMKrPTT LLY MEAN* BETTER BILT J_JJ_|1 n X N J_I X 1 Russell Young, 3343*30 • 1 BUILT HOME AND RIALT' * w.*W,wl,l* juellcato our model Located among rolling hill* trees wliti Wellers Lake i llegest Clerkslen school dill near Clorkston Goll Course. F oi house and lot $19,400. 6 •Ions: Clorkston Road 10 E YOURS. WILLIAMS LK. RD. OVER I ACRE. Only TATIR FRONT GILES MOBILE HOME Approximately *900 move* y< Into Ihl* 4. bod room 12‘xSO7 1* modal Richardson Ardmore m eluded. Low menlhly payment OFF BALDWIN t'i car garage. *13.900 — your house Tn trad*. IMMEDIATE POSSESSION. end you can TRADE YOURS MODEL HOME . . Tent can buy this homi closing costs only will move y “-eve Ino key. con show an spacious lots that on and landscaped, also o possession. %e hove th this axcoptlonol but lot 730 with only closing cc to qualified vetaten.' DO V0U !med?alo .‘mW 10-FT.AN, V wooB*fl h OFF OAKLAND r Gl. Preston , BUILT HOMES AND RIALTY , 673-8811 Kcfng**: C. Schuett i f. SEE OUR MOOELl FOX BAY MODELS OPEN I SAT. 8>« Mario Drive. Priced from! onge, jpg mclucftno choice lot. „ LIST WITH O'NEIL REALTY, For 3 Good Reosons 1 of Ooodl** r * e Ve^rit^hore i Clerks?on ®scl on the but I LAKE PRIVILEGES WITH NO DOWN PAYMENT If o|you art a qualifying veteran. Reel if; nice convenient Lotus Lake area. 2 end this 2-bedroom It lust 13 years - old. Just closing costs moves you In . and priced to tall quickly at *12,30^ Largo 100^ ft. wide lot and 6n°loy. C^UL*T^DAvT * y°^ W , NO. 55 . > BEVERLY 1$UN0 ON THC WATIJti 4-bcdroom brick Ctpt Cod bum In 1961. 2Vfe baths, beautiful family roam with parqutt floors ond full-wall flroploco, oil ! bosomont, •vortd boat w >m family roo WANT TO MOVE IMS. A wonderful location wonderful property, 'Priced OO with oxcollonf terms, y appointment. CALL TO- . h*rv.nch MODEL HOMES siding,[COLONIALS, TRI-LEVELS lot, end ^NCHERS “ 1— — EM 3-7188 t2i Bold, 10 COMMIRCI RD, UNIQJf LK. 'Multiple Claude McGruder Realtor TODAY. JACK FRUSHOUR, Realtor 3730 Wllll.m.^Lsk.^ ML r Tireless Efforts ‘ - " iu Glad Y* RAY O'NEIL REALTY 3320 Pontiac Loko Rood OR 4-222 MLS EM 3-0531 •OR 4 2222 MIS EM 3-0331 WHEN YOU SEEK OUR SERVICE "JOIN THE MARCH TO TIMES" Times Realty custom siojuroti m...nent fen# open .5 p.m. Coll for appointment. YOU CAN TRADE BATEMAN REALTOR—MLS Pontiac Orlon-Oxfori olograph HI ir Ir. PPMpi', 730 S. Roch. Rd. 0171 a .3 P--14 -. -lyWE Fropgrty • ,, 59 4 FAMILY. OOOD INCOME. 0000 furnace. *5000 down. B«l. on ' N*Ct.THf Owner, 4KHU41. » EASTHAM So bought — ra taws uwr?ss RCA DISHWASHERS AT COST. Floor samp lot, Little Joe* - Bald-win at Walton. FE MSP. WIG, WAS *190, NOW *75 OR BEST 47-1 SpftfBf Seeds n JOHNSON'S SNOWMOBILE AT TONY'S MARINE POLARIS SNOWMOBILES Ferry's Lawn B Garden, 7*19 High-land (M-W). MM.____ SKI-DOO SKI-DADDLER Snowmobile buy now and savei. CRUISE OUT INC. «] E. Walton Polly M FB S-4SDI FOUR Uf Brick apartment approx. SUB ■— cash to mortgage. 16 UNIT Located lust Sv seven years ox., scaped and In^ Open Sundays 1 to 9 1-A DACHSHUND PUPS. AKC. E5TEI HEIM KENNELS. 391-1009 1-A POODLE SALON , 1 BY "ARLEEN" - FE HW V DACHSHUND PUPS. AKC, *10 * JAHEIM'S KENNELS. FE AKC FEMALE POODLES. *IL-ver, 7 wks.. toy, S7S. 473-1414. CFA REGISTERED SIAMESi males. 10 weeks old. 1 lylac point. 1 chocolate point, S35-S50. 151-747*. 2 FEMALE CREAM Toy Poodles, S months old, 363-4700. pert, *50. Will hold till Christmas. 4*2-9943.__________ '■ A BEAUTl“FUL LIVE CHRIStMAS —• AKC tiny |r , SPECIAL MALE TOY POCDL*. WURLITZlR^ND fHtiMAS ORGANS AND PIANOS INSTRUCTIONS AND INSTRUMENTS. JACK HAGAN MUSIC MS Elizabeth Lake Rd. 337-0 1197 Cooley Lake Rd. 363-5... YES, WE RENT INSTRUMENTS FOR SCHOOL BAND AND ORCHESTRAS S10 for Saxophones MORRIS MUSIC S. Telegraph Rd^ NORWEGIAN ANE-SCOTCH PINES.I"”—^ A^^^^^^TWlKS dyke Ms §35* h!®?.-?- 0p-ACCORDION. GUITAR LESSONS iMljgSF and**Csdar°*roping!* Tom’ r£S£?j VHIy. WfrilOI.__ AKC MINI SCHNAyZER PUPPIES, 'OfficB Equipment 50. Also bundles ol plnej BLOND OAK OFFICE DESKS! with__plata glass tops and leather! - Females, males . 2 BEDROOM RANCH Possible 3, fireplace, gas oHi I large lot on canal. Blacktop street, living room I6'x77‘. $30.- UI ELEC. FLATTLEY REALTY -----------------—1jSt^sY Commerce Rd. 363-6981j Exceptional term va si a 2c?«,ns» ?or.:.Tt« ryslda, Farr Northorn Property FURNISHED CASH FOR LAND CONTRACTS. C. PANGUS INC., Realtors w,lt' EE26R, VERY NlCl, 21 CUfllC i located in Moniv to Loan MHHhln. 775 ./______ .._____ SETS CB RADIOS, f MONITORS. Good shape. 44SO.________ I" USED TV ■miPIMR Christmas Tree Fermi.PRINTING PRESSES-OFFSET >970 Dixie Hwy. 435 1933._,5433 Dixie, Waterlord 433-0300 ___________1 scotch piNiTVoOR choice.'5t»rB jEquipment 73 A?mniaim.Mu «,50..Co!orgdo_B.u._SpruC., S5 to * - X" " 'l*t?££!L.1UELV% ASSEMBLED! AKCHBLACK Vjg J^J"»i^R»«^j«-74W- _ ! 4436. Will ho ##’D Sporting Goods 74 LAROO H.o. TRAIN SET, ALL.I.W ,,^*,.1,*, iu SUOOESTIONS. LAB E L| ngW^SSi_______________________I Exc m^I™ utw) gun,.'— sllvar. will hold. 4*2-1 I...........Inas.^ofl!* ^Cw^tPL4e3t34V4LVB"' >LACK i*POLL0 *h^,T^0«f .A??!'■■®J*TM«q_TaY POODLE. ■r Hamai H0 TRAINJSET. S ENGINES.| Ralchla Buckle bools. 'MA 4.5749! ARROW S-334-4349~ REGISTERED POOLE,* 2 _____it. S7*. 473-5114. HURON. 334-7*51. AKC POODLE PUPS, BLACK OR , many other Itemi y assess. 483 0554 -1 WORK — I NORTHERN PEN-In on Old Highway. iSg*; jix ill cash acceptable. LOAND TO $1,000 FE 2-9206 FREIGHT DAMAGED B'lEDPOOMiL BEAUTIFUL. 50" LONG WALNUT, J9*' and tlvlng rooms. Sava almost halt! console s ereo. Floafing turmlabla' ►en-f. 4 M . choose from, tea. 4JS| B-r^T7*._____ $39 vs Go Cart wb«30, extras. Open 94 ... . . MAHOGANY | el** ______ 1*65 Ford LTD., 1314. evenings 333 3975 BASSMAN AMP. 1947. USED WILL BUILD YOUR] GENE'S ARCHERY-714 wThURON — -nr *hlp—PE 3j030.. BOYS SKI BOOTS. SIZE 5’rb 611 •3345_between 5 and I p.m |AFGHAN. HAT COVERS, PILLOW 0470 Grey carpeting. mahoGany i cos#*£?J2S*' d,v* Lots—Acraogt SW-1* ACRES. 30 MINUTES PON-1 K HA I I |\| ( 7 j OAKLAND LOAN CO. ilee. Horae* allowed. New home I* t X AX o V-4 | jot Fontlec Stele Benk B EE- B*ioch* BdrT,43“im>EPXlMI AT Iswi®' LOANS Sals Buslnsss Property 57 [ ssstosi.ooo ^—■—;------I COMMUNITY LOAN CO. , 34.000 SQ. FT. BUILDING wHfl IS 30 B. LAWRENCE ““ *' i. FE 2-7530. 5 and 10 acr* Parcels I Rochester Rd. i ■ Oryden. 5 ACRES- Geod looking parcel will) 145 ef frontage on M15 end lot lust north of Clsrkston, . right tor the elbow room you been ^Ibokln^tor, good terms, ROSE TOWNSHIP- ftoMIno 19 acre aarcat that par fact and contains 456 f« O'Nall Raatty, < Beauty Shop And Home Lovely brick ranch home with n modern beauty salon attached. Located on mein artery. Includes 3’J acres of 1 lend. Doing exceller business. Ideal location. Will se reel estate, business and aqult mant or will divide. Call J. i TAYLOR, REALTOR, OR 4-0304. | DIXIE HIGHWAY bldg, cintanlng St Space could be LOANS S2S to SI .000 Insured Payment Plan BAXTER 0. LIVINGSTONE ' Mortgog* Loans 62 MONEY tO LOAN - FAST ! 24 HOUR SERVICE First and Second mortgages tor everyone* even if behind. Widows, $. HOUSE, Baldwin at Walton, FE * I _ 6842.___ FR161 DAI RE REFRIGERATOR. 2 | veer*} old' l7°- 19 Lincoln Apt. 4 F RIG IDA I RE REFRIGE R A FOR Dr 15 Cu Ft Top freezer. Enc. ! condition. FE 8*0269.__ ' GAS STOVE. REFRIGERAfOfc, Dl-l nette set, 625*3312. GAS STOVE, FULL-SIZE, COPPER^ tone, used * *’** fk 4 I ( Thompson, mouiih6ld fuWtW^. 1 LMtfo !'i room, dining room, bedroo- ,4^ | Glen wood. Sylvan Village. ■ JSEH . jNTH 4ITURE ■piece living room outm won n living room tu’tt, 2 step tablaa, cocktail table, 2 table lamps a -piece * bed r oom^sujte** with double | Ipnerspring mattress and Matching}! irage GROCERY STORE FIXTURES,| t $186.40 month. 335-9283, BLOND GE COLOR” Joe's_______ „ , . _ HEATMklT 32 W. STEREO AMP I Appli* ____vt^6nIolI, $25 | 6234346_________I I . I BARGAINS, LlTfLB i Bargain House, FE 2*6842. Hi FE 8-79 tween 2*5 p.r __ HAND PAINTED Q let and glass. mM i. 541-6867. GUNS-GUNS-GUNS Ona of tha largasf salacllons Christmas *lft,| Ojtolarto County. Browning. Waat rural. ■ mos., $75. 473-7094. REGiSTEREO TOY POO6CS 1 vvvPlas, stiver, vary good podl-O'aa. *75. Will hold fill Chrlatmas. EM 3*2847. AKt ^SiLYEIt POODLE PUPPIES, AKCMI Ni AT U P E_SdHNW«ijl7“> CERAM-' slutted 1 r, SI35. 4 B.P.R. L^M*UadJoTB|?hE0'l * dua**onlyA 1144*0 1. 335-9283, Hous#- Record player needles- arbv Winchaslar AKC'~S A>RIC0f~P066l.fi - ________^ I ZS SmlitwlltL. Colt hold for Christmas - 433-0041. HANDMADE *"8^1*.^^^ own !SMl|40f* vou b“T ®" °ur ranga. A>r GERMAN sHEPHERG PUP- HOT'WAfiBrt HlAtBR.'JO OAL16N »RIY3SRW1CJC FOR CHRllTMAl,'All types o( archary aaulpmant I Cnfistmmf'iJa.TSM * h0m* ,0r gas. Consumers approved, SS9.S0- *145. S5 down, SS monthly. 343-, BROWNING BOOTS-ALL *“’*• ' -•* . voluo, 539.95 end S49.9S, morrod. 7400, Dlst. ________________ __ Also eloetrlc and boltl# boofers, CHIHUAHUA PUPSi * ' WEEKS*.I Cliff Drever's these are terrific valuta In quality 1 AKC 11117 civda Rd., Highland. _ vC“BI * heaters. Michigan Fluoraacmt, 393 - AKC‘ "B7 Clv" RO-' 8 - - 1 ' * Lk., PE 4-S442 —j4. r m LOVELY 8' phot. old. 4-spaed r< ditlon, B« cash or $1 .... hold Appliance. find? ve most an i FE 8-4569 ...........near Baidw! _____ _______________ . _ , i'STERIO COMPOffiNT ^SYSTEM ~ 3 LIONEL TRAItfi AMERldAN FJE 5-1449. HOT WATER BASEBOARD RADL ators. *1.39 par lineal It. ,r Thompson, 7005 M-99 W. LAVATORIES COMPLETi *34'» ....... g|4.9s, plwi hathtuh*. toilets. r stolls. 1107 Clyde__________________ COINS, STAMPS AND SUPPLIES largo selectln. lay-o-way. Coin* and stomps wanted. Double E, 100 South LoRoy, Panton, MA 9-3M1. boUBLI NECK SfBBL OUltAR, cost, and .amp. S1S0. Naw double —o .. —. - -trlr^ “— 1, FE 4-1443. — 1. 1 75 tape $30. 0 amp, Stromberg h *“ lunar $135. with la conditioner. 1 I39I-79 $7s!wo, Swaps Annett Inc. Raaltors 128 E. Huron St. SSS-OaSS^ Office Open Evenings S Sunday M JiWiY, FLf^* .. 1 PI 1-2144. L. GARAGE. SOW ON BALDWIN. 333-042. gOwYMAN*n'*‘ FURNITURE CO. E HURON. ____ FB S-19C KIRBY SWEEPER EXCELLENT CONDITION $50 FULL GUARANTEE .BpiLDiNG material for~set Kirby Service & Supply Co. WAREHOUSE SALE OFEN 1 C $,n and nJwStorofa TV* s and stereos. Must ov sou.i iry Item discounted. Scratched f DIXIE 2234 A AND SI66 DE- LATE MODEL SCHOOiT iEWINO For salt or swap. I machine trade-ins. ‘ Ml I I Curt's. 474-lttl. . OF TELEGRAPH S. Roger drum sat, $95. gar GMC bus tor M---- r, *395. OR >.272*. ELECTRIC LIONEL Tl glnes, 3 transtormari lions. 41' track, kw loader. $45 OR 4-1137. 6lRL'S'EALL BEAhINO "ROLldR ■ | skates. SUa JVk with steal case, £' AM SC E LLAffiOUS CO INC 6CL EC- sis. Alto Girl's 24" Hawthorn* -bl- 1 Hon. Bundy flut*. 1 aquariums, cycle, txc. condition. S20. 333-3394. completo. Couch and chair. FE ----'”£W6CHft¥6156iLTlS------ ------------------------ | BH4w MOVING. DINING ROOM SUITE.!—---------i-------------\----'~“ i?**1?." .Provmeial. AJ9i’/!«n by GIRL'S FIGURE SKATES WITH Marllnsvlin, never used. Cost >70b pJr CUFFS, SIZE 4. NEVER oom suite WORN. Ill VALUE, WILL SELL! mottre$s. POR *7. CALL 43S-4044 AFTER 4| aw wish- p u Fu]rtixf| ‘ $25W End teV LIONEL ELECTRIC TRAIN. 166-,1? er-t snare drum, 4S3-013L fwsS6~lLl|Tfic; ROASTER, S20i " r alcohol > beat cooking >, Ilka naw. FB 2-1160T Gun and Sports Center AI“L ebautiful champion 10210 Holly Rd. V Holly, ME 4-4771 Whlt.^black 'Sro*?^ aiS oorlcot' p.T*indbl4s!^ oJa.ir' sST'Si HEADQUARTERS & K for Rupp Sno-Sport 3*11443 or 493^37$.______ SC0rP'0n Hrrio,T.V.N.!A4^7^ SNOWMOBILE kranDAHui poa», m"bw. „ , . . win hold, days call MV 1*1994, Buy eorly ond sovt »tt*r4:»p.m,mys-iiw. 10 DOWN, EASY BANK TERMS PINRHER MG SALES & SERVICE /UPi. CHAM* All snotmi&bii* 5on b100** Una. Alto cula W, Poo- am snowmobile accessories die pup« Ee 4-2791. OA S-1IS3. 4447 Dixie Hwy. Drayton Plaint A1ic RiOffTMlD POODLli. 103 E. Momcoim Pontiac Only 3 lafl, *40. 4S9-399I._ . LADIES OOLP'CLUBS WITH BAG AIi,' AKC, rk - MAfiClBAU bold‘til Chrlstmea. term*. 474.327s' HALF -------------11 - --- ad — will dellvtr tar Christmas — cal! 642-2361 attar S p.m. 81lft4»T rUp! is. WiLL M6ld “IBMSiBffifr___________s I CARlAOOR SPRINGEh SPAN lltfT> UPS, ;»• 17* OR 3-00*0, altar 4:3 Will hold ““ --- 'MSI! imiAss. * RID TOY POODLES ■Rittany puppies, liver whlto, from • axcellant huntinn it, AKC, 040. FB 3-7*4). Ietoiever PUP-AKC, hunters, pets, —~~i »■ »■■»», ■—rantaad. Ml 4-4311. TOT 1 ***>-,SETTER. II MON ms. REGISTERED BEAGLE PUPPIES, tamole*. Mt-iui. REGISTERED tOY POX Til-; •-liAMEiE~l(TfYENC itAMisi ' STUD SERVICITGUA'R-“‘wd, also Siamese kittens, we ver. §914979._____ Dec. 7-Dec. 22 Poodles riers trimmed, bathed and dipped,, A B r„, HB nails, aland* done. SI Cali cn-~1 6 weeks old, rest. FE 4-9933. FE 2-0281. MIXED COCKER It SETTER >UF- Christmas pupp^s noW—or - »' w- An" Arbor, Jm- -HI hold. Smooth Fox Terriers.1 0521 a Schnauter and Dan-"I AKC rag. Shots “* *‘mont. K.C.. 33$. P COCKER PitPplES, 7724._____________________________ &llIe Puppies akc, bred~for gantlanass, tatallloanca and beauty., males and tamales, S7S. MY 3-1*7*. COLLIE PUP$, AKC. SABLES, rarawhltaa, shots, wormed, guar Christman PART BRITTANY SPANIEL PUPS. S10. OR 3*044.____________ PEDIGREO WEIMARIENER PUP-plas, 4 tamalas, *20; 4 males, US. Good hunting bread. Must sail. 4031 E. Holly Rd.. Holly. OR Purebred, O' Williams. Wllhavan K SILVER-BLACK GERMAN gentle. UlTsSSO. ST. BERNARD Wi 1 si ,,w„ , appointments I 7f«A j livestock._____________S3 ,HET p—it E AND E ting. SJ-SIP. . JPP—___________ iKWISITt PQQOI.E TRIMMIN# l'«rand Slr*.t*».fpB *4m, •£& J!“*! IP1IRTff^wfl~BIC6r const- axoarMnc- ( PARMALL CUB LOBOY ■ SNOWBLADB, HYO, LIFT. ELEC. WEIGHTS, TIRES I MaMS— Cholca < PPIEl, RfeADY MCC, Wilt' 74-7142) a 1-2-3 Santo Auctions Auctloniand racalvad 3 truck* ol Christmas merchandise t r o rr freight company and other source* that cancelled ardors due to Itrfii talks, We- are auctioning this mar chandlse tar whatever you bid We guarantee you epn't go wrong. Christmas Hams Include: Christmas card, — trees; lights: -.—,-sm, compasses:' games; roc- Sunday, 4 p.m., Dac. 17 AUCTIONLAND 1300 Craacpnt Lake Rd. FOR SALE: HAY AND STRAW. _ 4141054 iY AND sYRAW IS CENTS PE% bale. North of Rochastar Rochastar ltd; 421 t. Quail Peultry FREEZER CHICKENS UP TO S LB. AND OVER SO CENTS PER HEN IN LOTS OF S AND OVER. 2330 BALDWIN___________ 444-107$ ettoe an 6 ducks,JJvh And ~tssad. Ortonvllla, 427-1774. Barling weimaraner puppy, ' lemala, AKC 14 wks. old, wormad, parmanant snots, 423-1041._ BobERman pinscher puppies, AKC, $ wteks. Champion Stock. AnirArbor. 74M1SS. ST. BERNARDS AND ORE Dints. Torms. 4*3-113*._ | TOY TERRIER-FOX TERRIER! EVERY FRIDAY ... EVERY SATURDAY . 'EVERY SUNDAY ... English springer pupptaa, »». 234-0721. ______ English setter puppies^ F.O.S.B. ISO. 1-7744*3*. M POODLE PUPS, AKC CHAMPION stock, block ltd., oxc. abggi — tactlvo gantia. 424-3$». 1 oft Oakwood. Ortor POODLE CLIPPING AND ' SHAM-PdOIng. by appolntmont. FE >-40*5. POODLE} |30. AkC, ~ - 461-5022. Exquisite, purebred-collie pretty k itt e ........ ........... .... mai 423-0959. houiebroken. _______M?ir9.________________ THOROUGHBRED BLACK FEMALE SOStToixia' “Livestock Hutchings, | RETAIL 7 DAYS WEEKLY MriMM CONSIGNMENTS WELCOME PRIZE EVERY A WANTEO: WHITE MALE GERMAN shaphard tor breading. 3*1-3234. FIRST LESSON FREE. KLBNTNER WEIMARANER PUPPIES FOR1 Hiding Academy. 343-0009.__________ akc Champion slock.! HORSES BOARDED. TIE AND ixoaruhdp tiler A “TsttV- ANO SfjkAW. WLCV- Travtl Traitors 8 14' HOUSE TRAILER, ________4BM4S7.__________ l»47 CHEVY PICKUP WITH I O' E! dorado camper. Ilka new, *00 M mutt tall. 441-9444 before 4: p.m., 4*1-4011 attar 4:30. AirSTlEAM LlSfftWEliSHY-" |_____17 D MACHIN- CLEARANCE SALE N USED TRACTORS AND SNOW ELAOES - AS LOW AS $150 large selection to choose from. KING BROS. E 4-1442, FE 4-0734 Pontiac Rd. at Opdyka Rd. . ARMALL TRACTOR, MODEL H with front and loader. TR *-4140. ROAD GRADER, TANDEM, GOOD L^>M^S2,750, owner. 47S-14II. 871 Travel Trailtrs W. UNIVBRSI DOWNTOWN '0 POV IRSITY PIONEER CAMPER SALES BARTH TRAILERS E CAMPERS TRAVEL QUEEN CAMPERS MERIT FIBERGLASS COVERS SALE MARLETTES S0--43' tong, 12' to W wido. American, Traditional or Modern Space available In 4 Star Park, r "**ra charga. aim see ttw famot ghtwelghl Winnebago Trallar. OXFORD TRAILER SALES OPEN *■$, CLOSED SUNDAYS nlla south of Lakit Orion on MS MY2-0nt Rant Trailer Specs 90 large lots, natural gas PONTIAC MOBILE HOME PARK. Auta Accessories 91 W- M«ron (Plan to loin one Wally* Byom's excltlno cerover _ tor pickups j! PHOENIX AND WINNEBAGO {{ REESE AND DRAW-TITE HITCHES 1! Sold and Installed. HOWLAND TRAILER SALES .... . and. RENTALS I 1253 Dixie Hwv. Pontiac OR 1 CENTURY YELLOWSTONE ^Wl'^LEFT^llVER?*^ Yellowstone Capri with it. * A.M. to S P.M. Closed tun. STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC. Wanted Ctw-Tracia 191 , Wanted Sharp CarsI We Pay Top Doliarl Immediate Cash I All Mskte and Modal* WE WILL -TRADE DOWN SPARTAN DODGE IS3 ■Oakland ' F« Hta We would like to buy (ofe model GM Cars or will accept trade-downs. Stop by today. FISCHER EXCEL PAINT ANO BUMP. 1 BUICK Jacobson Trailer Soles 95 M *4*0 Williams Lako Rd. OR 3-59*11 OH/-3QUU 0ff,n.«riloi4Tu^.PvT;_ | *LICT",c Junk Cars-Trucks 101-A PICK-UP TRUCK CAMPERS h“»°^3«»CvC.n^.® '. * Junk carsItrucks. frer Over 25 dittarent models to chooso 4412._ ’ tow onytlmo. eS 1-1444. VIHBI .........’’ ' 1 SOME. BILL COLLER Fall Inventory Reduction i______I________ [; ... ...........*] 4« Tires-Auto-Truck Trovolmostor ............. *3,595 •olos-Aoro SSJ7S K*i All oro self-contained TWO^ TRUCK CAMPERS iper (told J— Frolic, S.C. SEATS.FOR PONTIACS, I* NEVER USED IRES. r Ford, r Skamper (fold-down) . _____1-1703 oftT 7 p.m._ USED TIRES. 13.95 UP. B F. GOOD- .M-HOmr " i"«* t these values TOOAYi Auto Service - 93 S used campers and 00 miles, ORJW024._________ CHRIST MAS SALE Mini Biices; Go COrts Michigan Banl__ MG SALES & SERVICE MINI BIKES Candy paint* chroma ,fender*, 3Va h.p., safety throttle $149 with $5 down. MINI BIKE KITS - $119. ANDERSON SALES B SERVICE H45 S, Telegraph______ "__FE 3-7102 Winter prices SPECIAL REDUCED PRICES on all motorcycles A few '47s left at huge savings. ANDERSON SALES\ SERVICE 1445 S. Telegraph - FE 3-7102 Bicycles 96 SCHWINN BICYCLE, 24", *23. Boots-Accessories 97 BUY NOW AND SAVE Trojan's OWENS slickcraft Inslda Display FREE WINTER STORAGE LAKE & SEA MARINE™ ward at S. Blvd. FE 4-95 INSIDi WINTER STbRAGE KAR'S BOATS 8. MOTORS 405 W. CLARKSTON R~ LAKE ORION - M _ GLASSPAR, STEURY, GW-INVAD-I ar. Mlrrnerafl. boats,_ Grumman 1-A Beauties to Choose Froml ,o*^wsoS's''SiLtS », Ties RICHARDSON DELTA UkKE p8£e «*-21W MONARCH DUKE ----- HOMETTE LIBERTY SANTA'S BOATHOUSE COLONIAL MOBILE HOMES Nautical gifts for the boat own Fishing tackle*; guns; OPDYKE 5430 DIxTeI sporting goods; snowmobiles. .... - - waterlord Johnson and Chrysler motors bedroom-tifAVELor iM-J PAUL A. YOUNG, Inc. * Drayton, MUST SELL LEAV-!_______Open Mon.-Sat. * 4 n,_424.3457. , __ SAVE W6w - ACf ELCAR ON LOT. BOXED, PINTERS 'Quality Marina Mtrchandlsa" -TARCRAFT-THOMPSON-MFG JOHNSON MOTORS-SNOMOBILES STORAGE-TUNE-UPS 1370 N. Opdyka *-4 FE 4-092 (1-75 at Oakland University Exit), ; 1966'TRIUMPH* 650 CC, llW mlTei,'AL'J'AYS BUYING , iafilon* . Cg-©lx- sun, vx a-jpgy.____ JUNK CARS WANTED. FREE TOW WANTED JUNK CARS OR TRUCKS - 1 or 100, Call 332441*._________ Used Auto-Trock Parts 102 *43-327, 340 H.P. CHEVY MOTOR, IH'i 1*41 343 ANb TRANS. *71. PE 4d«7_______ FALCON SPRINT MOTOi, nsmisslon,' '35,000 actual ml. bast oner. Rochester, 152-4447 after 3:30 USED" ENGINES, TRANSMISSION, reer axle, trl powers, tell housing. body parts, die. H ( H Auto Salas. OR 3-5200. • VW ENGINES AltO PARTS MY S-14S2 WANTEO: RIGHT FRONTfINOE* lor 1*45 Chryslor, Newport, 341-4713. New and Used Trucks 103 3V, TON, 4-WHEEL DRIVE, 1*44 Ford, with Moyers Electric snow-plow, 2*,000 miles, St,03t, *07-4377. * WHEITWmP TRAILER. $1430. FI *-3100. days. FI *-S*4* eves. 1*3* DODGE PICKUP. 5 NEW tires. Good condition. 0130. MY 3-1302._________________ 195rCHeVROLtT % T6N PICKU^, $75. 363-7579. 1957 FORO ^ TON PICKUP, BAR- gnln. 3434)011._____ ; 1961 FORD 1-TON WRCCk^F* % 1962 scout* 4 wMtfl bFiVf, good condition. 6734659, 1963 FORD ECONOLINE, |JOO. Tt 5-6943 liffr 6._______________ 1963 FORD Pickup Vi ton PANEL* NEW Pontiac Airport.. OR 4- Wanted Cari-Truckt 101 ADKINS AUTO SALES. NEEDS —nspartatlon cars now. 73* Oal d, FE 14220, ova. 33*4414, EXTRA EXTRA Dollars Paid FOR THAT EXTRA Sharp Car I th bo t" ,h* r>< Averill AUTO SALES ___ 2020 Dixit FE 4-6E HELP! 1*44 CHEVROLET Vk-TON, 14.000 GUARANTEED ACTUAL MILES, *"”■ COOPER'S Extra Clean Used Cart Drayton Plain* 474-2237 42(7 tlaca, Olda a.„ state market. Top dollar paid. MANSFIELD small”ADl IUT SiO^P R I CT paid for Iota modal cars. Gale McAnnally's AUTO SALES Baldwin_ FB *43! STOP HERE LAST M&M "TOP DOLLAR PAID" * GLENN'S TOPS PAID (Downtown Store Only) for all sharp Pontiac* | AND CADILLACS. We a I prepared to make you a better offerll Ask for Bob| Burns. WILSON CRISSMAN ' CADILLAC 1350 N. Woodward _ Ml 4 19 WB'LL nOK1~96u'a Bfftljl ‘liar on your used cor -- SEE DOWNEY 0LD|. INC. Illf llIM 1.VB *> ■ 111 $595 1*44 GMC, V-4 Vi TON PICKUP, dean, equipped for pickup camper. call bet. 4-4 p.m, 413-5534 19ft~CMivV Vi TON VI, *ADl5 | t. box. >750. 651-4549. 3344173. neeisiae* 4 cyllnawr. ciaan, n rust. Bargain at $995. UL 3-2171. 1*44 JEEP CJ-5, WINCH, SflOik fory',( cab. PETERSON JEEP. 444- LUCK Y AUTO- , dolly 1968 JEEPS Largo stock of all modola hand. IMMEDIATE DELIVERY, Quota to meet, to_RVaVBNNH >1 our tromondoua price reductions, GRIMALDI JEEP *0* Oakland __________FE 3-*421 CHEVY TRACfOR, taMi FIFTH Wheel, air brpkes, low - mileage, FE 2-4351. JACK LONG FORD Mlchlgan't Fastest Growing Truck Ooeler Vb-ton, M-ton, pick ups; and camper apactali. Gat the L-O-N-6 Deal 1-9711 215 Main St, Rochastar ‘ JEEPS - GOOD SELECTION OP new-used chock our prices, PETERSON A SON, JEEP, Lapaar. 444-4311.________________ SPECIAL 140 GMC Heavy Outy Dump GMC Factory Branch ' Oakland at Cass FE 5-9485 tanoIm-MfslTC-buw>; ffl ) MPSC x 72, h Auto Insurance-Marine '104 AUTO INSURANCE Terms Available CALL TODAYI, ANDERSON A ASSOC. ^1044 jqslvn ave. 105 Fortigii Cart r, con. - Oakland. $450. full prlca. 1963 VW* SUNfeObF* i IKR NlW. 1695. 339*3514 Daalar. _ 1964 SIMCA. FE 4-4344. 494 Fourth FULL PRICE 4795, ABSOLUTE' LY NO MONEY DOWN, AMuma waekly paymantt of 16 M. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Farki at £ HAROLD TURNER FORO. Ml _ 4 7b0° 1965 VW Full prica^l 193, only $49 down and! weakly payment! of 910.92. HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 444 S. WOODWARD AVE. Birmingham mi 4-7M* i tM 'vwrirsTbbm' f a (rrisv e * - paymants ol W a month, 343-M3*. 1,47 VW! SUN ROOr. BLACK? 1250. 647-6768. New AL HAN0UTE Chevrolet Bulck On M24 in Lake Orion MY 2-2411 1945 CHEVY IMPALA SUPER S^.TnR'Wdo'wT&H^ HARGREAVES, 431 Oakland Al(h FE4 1945 CHEVY IMPALA 4~0 6 O R 631 Oakland Ava. it Cats Ave. FE 4-4547, __________ ^ CH E V ROL ET 1865 ^ SUPM ^PORTj ^Sharg.^Accent trade. 2-DOOR HARDTOP, Kent condition, RON-Baldwin, FE CHEVY BISCAYNE 4 DOC sedan, with stick shift, rad heater, factory warranty, ally blue. 31795. MATTHEWS HA GREAVES, 431 Oakland Ave. Cast Aye. FE 4-4547. 1947 CHEVROLET 4 DOOR. 4 CY CORVAIR MONZA. SHARP. 473-1391. Stranahan. CORVETTE, 1947 CONVERTIBLE, marina blue, 435 horsepower, fuliv equipped, axe. condition. 945 MONZA CONVERTIBLE. RA dio, healer, whitewalls, auto. I BARGAIN. 5550. 334-1485 aft. 5:3 144 BUICK LaSABRE. 4-DOOR, - #n* ° KEEEGCTPP0NTIAC :4efl0 Harbor___ 4820400 144 BUICK LESABRE 4 D O O R| 4-38441 1965 CHEVROLET el Air 2-door coupe, automatic, cylinder, very clean. SAVE BOB B0RST Lincoln-Mercury Soles ■9 5. Woodward Ml 4-4531 $1595 BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth 848 S. Woodward * BUICK ELEC+RA 2-DR. private, 335-1714. 7 BUICK ELECTRA CONVERTI-ile, full power, air conditioned, -way seat,, tilt wheal, low mileage, pedal tires, air lift shocks, $3500. LATE MODEL CADILLACS ON HAND AT ALL TIMES JEROME 1957 CADILLAC. 2-DOOR. 942 CADILLAC COUPE. EXCEP-tlonal appearance,^condition. White, windows, prlvate. 444.0f74. CADILLAC, 1947, COUPE DEVILLE. power. Signal staking radio, air, 18,080 ml. One owner driver. Clean 1947 ELDORADO, LOADED MIKE SAVOIE Troy's New CHEVROLET DEALER 1900 W. Maple 2 Miles East of Woodward Ml 4-2735 | 957 CHEVY. ENGINE RECENTLY Rebuilt. Needs very little work. Price $20. Ask far Bob. FE 5-6393. 958 CHEVY, REAL GOOD $75 1965 Chevy Impalo Super Sport raring, brakes, burgundy In color •’•'Save! HOMER HIGHT Motors Inc, PONTIAC-BUICK-CHEVROLET On M24 in Oxford, Mich. OA 8-2528 1964 CHEVY BEL AIR, 327 CUBIC CHEVELTE jT indard shift, ver I., $1175. 682-6460. 1965 CHEVY 4 DOOR BILL FOX CHEVROLET Rochester OL 1- 1965 CHEVY IMPALA CONVER-cket seats. 644-1100, 1966 OtEVY- THE PONTIAC PRESS. VVED^ESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1967 iMARMADl KE Now and (bed Cart 106 4 CAPRICE SPORT COUPE, omaltc, 394 angina, power l ng cameo Ivory finish, town. MATTHEWS HARGREAVES .....LIBU SPORT COUPE. with 327 angina, stick, marina bluo finish, 89S down. MATTHEWS HARGREAVES, 431 Oakland Ave. 947 BISCAYNE 2DOOR Vl. glide power steering, radio, _I factory warranty, gold finish, S1893 MATTHEWS HARGREAVES, Oakland Ave. FE 4-4547. 1968 CHEW BEL AIR , 2-door, maroon, tlntad wind-■Id, AM-FM radio, 2200 ml. cad to sail, 12,425. 731.7852. MIL0SCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH Small Ad—Big Lot 50 CARS TO CHOOSE FROM buy or will adlust your pa nents to less expansive ear. M-24, Lk, Orion MV 2-20 1966 CHRYSLER lowporl 4-Door, automatic, with pow $1995 BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth 40 5. Woodward____Ml 7-321 Kessler-Hahn CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH RAMBLER-JEEP By Anderson and Iteming “Well, what followed you home today?” New and Uaed Care 106 New and Used Car* FORD 9 PASSENGER wagon. VS, automatic i EW?' hTrGRBaVesTmI Oak- fake’trade. Call B IMPERIAL 1947 4-DOOR HARD-; HASKINS AUTO SALES 1944 FORD Country Sedan. . .. automatic, power steering, brakes, only S109S. at 4495 Dixie Hwy. Clarkston, MA 5-3112.__________ 144 T-BIRD HARDTOP, WITH AU tometlc, radio, heater, power steer jng, brakes, windows, beautiful Ivj id S49.84 par month. JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 630 Oakland Avt, FE 5-411 1966 MUSTANG, BY OWNERi $1400? call FE 4-6784.____; California, good body e Box 15, Rochester. 48063. iT^fHor^lo.' KESSLER'S DODGE DODGE LANCER. 4-DOOf ry good condition, body, motoi es. 5280, 1173 Charrylawh Dr HASKINS AUTO. SALES .6 DODGE Charger gfj VERY GOOD. DOOR. I960 FORD FARLANE. V-8. . V-8, automatic, radio, $250. UL 2-2512. 3040 Avalon, St. red wtfh bfack interior 1961 THUNDERBIRD Pretty Ponies 1965 and 1966 MUSTANGS SEVERAL USED MUSTANGS TO CHOOSE FROM CONVERTIBLES . HARDT0PS FULL EQUIPMENT Priced From $1295 As Low As $39 Down And 39 Per Month HAROLD TURNER FORD,INC 444 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM__Ml 4-750 THIS CAR I.S QUITE SPECIAL -1944 MERCURY Colony Park passenger wagon. Factory Air, I brakes?’alx°way power seats, power windows, all EZ-Eya glass, chroma luggage rack, premium whitewalls, wnaal covers plus all standard factory equipment. This Florida car definitely not rur the mill because It Is an captlonaMj^ fine automobile. hard* to duplicate. **249?.* HI? Lincoln - Mercury, 1250. Oakl New and Used Care 10* I: Auto-d heel- ””and weekly ^payments ot "HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 444 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM *“ New end Used Cer* 106 944 PONTIAC EXECUTIVE SPORT mr.:Wfewh-#Mrrrffift HARGREAVES,M«1 Oakland Ava. 1447 PONTIAC CATALINA *PORT> Coupe, automatic double power. r2Sl0'MWfrE«Mvlfc 431 Oakland Aye, FE 4-4547. _ 1944 MERCURY MONTEREY 2-DOOR. POWER STEERING. RADIO. HEATER, ETC. EXCELLENT. 11395. 1947 MERCURY COUGAR, POWER steering, vlhyl lop, 4980 milts, -----------—„ 32600. Owner. 482- 1966 PLYMOUTH iFury II, 4-Door, radio, heatar, i malic, blua with matching Into $995 * BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth ssr ‘ MERRY OLDS M0 DEAL MERRY OLDSMOBILE 528 N. Main ROCHESTER, MICHIGAN PONTIAC, ir. Excellent tor 5, 425-4997, 1941 ®LDS, 4-DOOR, HARDTOP. AM-FM radio, double power. 425-4057, BUY HERE! PAY HERE! 1941 OLDS convertible, beautiful black finlah. with spotless Interior, automatic, radio, haater. power steering, brakes, S5 down, S4.4C weekly. Standard Auto. Soles 3400 Elizabeth Lake Rd. Vi Block West of West Huron (M99) 681-0004 g interior, 18 down, $59.8 >r 50,000 mile 1963 Olds luxury sedan, f FE 8*2102, after S Il947 CATALINA 2 DOOR HARDTOP, auto., power steering, whitewalls. I 32,200. 625-5207.__ GO! HAUPT PONTIAC CHRISTMAS SPECIALS 1967 Pontiac Bonneville Hardtops 4-door with automatic, power steering, brakes, factory official cart I Marvel Motors I 1967 Pontiac 251 Oakland Ave. FE 4-4079] CatolinO Hardtops PONTIAC STAR CHIEF,, glass, 3795. 4 PONTIAC CATALINA 4 DOOR hardtop, automatic, power steering brakes, red finish. S95 down. MATTHEWS HARGREAVES, 431 Oakland. Ave. FE 4-4547. 1963 BONNEVILLE 4 DOOR HAeD-—i, with automatic, double power. f!wSV HARGREAVES?' *631 *Oak-j IMS PONTIAC 2 DODR HARDTOPJ Ilka new. Full price buy HEREI - PAY HEREI , 1963 PONTIAC trade, s^iarp and reasonab money down necessary. 900 Oakland f. One year i ....side LIncoln-J eland, 333-7863. DOOR LANDAU •r steering, I ful midnight b w with a beauti-finish, matchii ... .. _,_. fyiTM. JOHNaMcAULIFFE ford 438 Oakland TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS 944 Olds 98 4-door hardtop, full tower, radio, heater, whitewalls, ne owner new car trade sharp US 18 at MIS, Clarkston, MA1, -5071. ______________________ 1 5 OLDS BLUE 98 HOLIDAY SE-lan. Air conditioning. Power seat, windows, trunk lid release, new Ires. Exc. condition, $1495. Phono 82-2424._____________ 15 OLDSMOBILE F-15 4-DOOR, vlth V-8, automatic, radio, boater, «wer steering, brakes, snowshoe GRIMALDI CAR CO. 980 Oakland; ^ ^ ^ r- SHELTON | $2395 HAUPT PONTIAC Marvel Motors I 14 TEMPEST CONVERTIBLE, EX-1 set lent condition, 333-7378.___3 4 PONTIAC VENTURA, VERY! 1 :lean. >1,295. 338-3514. Dealer. I 2 RAMBLER AMERICAN $125. I -7679. 3 RAMBLER WAGON, CLASSIC, lood condition, $600 FE 4-8644. c. condition, 628-2482. 1964 PONTIAC VENTlIlRA. fig . - brakes. G« 332-1795. Marvel Motors BUY HERE! PAY, HERE! pay S4.40 waakly. STANDARD Auto. Safes 3400 Elizabeth Lake Rd. v% Block West of W. Huron (M59) 681-0004 162 CHEVROLET WAGON, V-8, STEERING AND POWER BRAKES. S495. COOPER'S Extra Clean Used Cars 4271 Dixie Drayton Plains ------- ~ daily 474-2257 isl800 On US 10 5-5071, ; TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS ranspor tat Ion”spec lal Star Auto WE FINANCE 1966 CORVETTE CONVERTIBLE, 4- 4-2735. 2 miles East ^ Oakland Ave. 1966 BISCAYNE HARGREAVES, 6 steering, caifneo ivory 895 ck MATTHEWS HARGREAVES Oakland Ave. FE 4-4547. CHEVY IMAPLA THEWS HARGREAVES, 6 land Ave. FE 4-4S47. f 1963 CORVAIR 708 Coupa, Radio and haater. $688 Fischer Buick 545 S. Woodward TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS 1963 Chevy Impale 2 door hi top, V-8 automatic, power sti HASKINS AUTO SALES 4 CHEVY Super Sport Coi '8 automatic, Only 81095. Dixie Hwy. Clarkston, MA _____ MIKE i. ROLET, Ml 4-2735, V Troy, Michigan. 2 r MANSFIELD AUTO SALES 1104 BALDWIN AVE. FE 5-5900 FE 8-8825 1967 BONNEVILLE la, white, black vinyl top, a ibla power, factory air, 9,000 1967 BONNEVILLE la, blue, black vinyl top, i ible power. 1967 CAtALINA 1967 CATALINA 1966 BONNEVILLE Convertible, blue with white top, Pull power, air, low mileage. 1966 tHEVY Impale hardtop, V-l, power i 1966 TEMPEST^ PONTIAC RETAIL STORE University Drive FE 3-7954 >1 THUNDERBIRD HARDTOP, POWER EQUIPPED, WITH AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION AND RADIO, HEATER, WHITEWALLS) FULL PRICE S595. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Assume weekly payments of S5.92 CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Farks At HAROLD TURNER FORD. Standard Auto. 189 East Blvd. (S.) I Oakland. 333- 1 MUSTANG GT HARDTOP, rlth V-S. 4 speed radio, hoofor, ■nary yallow with black vinyl ip. Join tha llva onas at only I4SS full price, SSI down. S50.58 ninthly. J yaer or 584188 mlla naw ■r warranty aballabto. JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 438 Oakland Ava.________FE 5-4181 6-CYLINDER LUCKY AUTO 1967 FORD GALAXIE 588 2-DOOR! -ardtop with V-8, automatic, pr steering, brakes, beautiful r n(^$77.05 per month. 58,008 it John McAuliffe Ford |t967^Ford^ Fairlane 500 Hardtop S43.35. ■IIP John McAuliffe Ford ■££>'*30 Oakland Ava. FE 5-4181 4 OLDS LUXURY SEDAN, ALL ower, air conditioning, vinyl lop, BWH|r- •* awnar. *2500. POW-1 DIO, HEATER. RUNS GOOD -- 1 con-|1943 RAMBLER STATION WAGON. V-S. OVERDRIVE, WITH RADIO -VEN- AND HEATER .......... $343 Ideal 1783 RAMBLER. STICK, WITH RA-I DIO AND HEATER S39S i 1945 RAMBLER AMERICA, AUTO-UIDER, WITH RADIO PPAS-iitoj’RAMBLER AMERICA, AUTO- c, MATIC. 4-CYLINDER. V 624-397S._____ • 1966 OLDS^ Toronado deluxe, full powc II | and telescopic fn,V $2995 SUBURBAN OLDS 635 S. \ GREAVES, 631 Oakland Ave. FE 4-4547. 1965 PONTIAC CATALINA SPOtiTSI —ipe, with automatic, doubla — . maroon finish, 81695 / THEWS HARGREAVES, 631 PONTIAC CUSTOM » "326" V-8 automatic, powar ring, radio, haatar, brand naw whitewalls. One year warranty. Sti *K!- —. 81295. Hillside Line-1-1250 Oakland. 333-7863. ,AND HEATER $2295 BEATTIE FORD 'Your FORD DEALER Since 1930" ON DIXIE HWY., WATERFORD 623-0900_____ CAR TOP. 1945 MUSTANG CONVERTIBLE. 3 1942 FORD 9 PASSENGER STATION wagon, 6 cyl„ auto. S495. 331- 1545 FORD LTD, 2-DOOR HARD-1 3514, dtalar. |TOP - TOP OF THE LINE. POW-| •il FORD FAIRLAINE 500. AUToJfR STEERING, BRAKES, VINYL only $495, Adkins, FE 2-4230, Tiuvan r. TRANSPORTATION SPECIALS 2 FORD Falrlana 4-door ... 2 CORVAIR 2-door ..... _9 CHEVY Impale hardtop ... 1960 MERCURY hardtop ... 1961 FORD 2-de“ 1959 CHRYSLER 1957 CHEVY 2«L 1959 CHEVY 2-do 1958 PONTIAC 44 81395. 682-0661. 1965 MUSTANG 2 DOOR HARD-top, with V8, automatic radio, heatar, power steering, gold finish, 895 down, MATTHEWS HAR McAuliffe Ford 630 Oakland Aye. FE S-4101______ FORD CONVERTIBLE^ 93, JTOMATIC, WITH P O W F fig TE BRING AND POW I IAKES. $795. COOPER'S Extra Clean Used Cars 4278 Dixie Drayton Pit. .. Open 9 to 9 dally ___674-2257 l FALCON* 2-DOOR, AUTOMAT-1C TRANSMISSION WITH RADIO, HEATER, WHITEWALLS, FULL PRICE 1595, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Assumo weekly payments of $5.92. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parkr g| HAROLD TURNER FORD. 4-750Q. 1965 Ford Galaxie 500 4 door redle, heater, rad with rad vinyl $1395 BEATTTIE FORD "Your FORD DEALER Since 1938" ON DIXIE HWYl IN WATERFORD 623-0900 LEAVING COUNTRY—MUST SELL “16 Mustang. Vt, 213 Standard, id with black vinyl top. Radle. later. Low mllaaga. Whitewalls, jst sacrifice. 682-4914 attor 7 T' l966*F0RD Galaxie 1948 WILLY" dltlon,'*52-2451 aftorS p.m’"”" ' 1963 LINCOLN mtln.nt.1, BOB BORST Lincoln-Mercury Sales 9 5. Woodward__Ml 6-45: 1965 CONTINENTAL mvarflbto. Full power with a ondltlonlng. Radio, heater, whit tails, full price. *2295, only C -iwn, and waakly payments i HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 464 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM____Ml 475C Birminghom BUYlTERE! PAY HERE! 1962 PLYMOUTH wagon, with beautiful yallow finish, with Mato les* matching interior. Autom power steering, radio, haatar, price *497. Ony *5 down, ! weekly. Standard Auto. Spies 1250 Oakland. 333-7863. Itos PONTIAC intura 2 door hardtop. Ilka AM-FM radio, full power TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS Plymouth 2*door r. FE 2-082$. 1963 FAIRLANE 2 DOOR, V-8 spaad, $100 In naw pahs, no rui $450. 682-5817 after 4 p.m. 1963 FORD COUNTRY SOUlRE passenger wagon. A one owr beauty with ,r352" V-8, automat radio, heater, power steering. O of the nicest we have had. O $1095. Hillside L coin-Mercury, 1350 OakU 7863.____________________„ , 1963 FdRD SQUIRE WAGON, AU-T O M A T I C TRANSMISSION, RADIO, HEATER, WHITE S, FULL PRICE 8795, AB-TELY NO MONEY DOWN. f $6.88 Parks SOLUTEL 1966 Ford Country Sedon Wagon 6-pessenger with 390 V-8, automatic radio, haatar, only — $1895 BEATTIE FORD "Your FORD DEALER Since 1930" ON DIXIE HWY., WATERFORD 623-0900 I COMET, RUNS GOOD, NEW *63 S-55 MERCURY. LOADED. Bast price over $850. Call 651- 1966 MERCURY PARKLANE CON- mSchinyA Mr,gjVn?d|^ar H M Islde *11 ncol rv Mer c u ryTTji land, 333-7863._____ 1966 MERCURY •door with breeze way window ;hltewalls. Automatic transn HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 444 S. WOODWARD AVE. IRMINGHAM Ml 4-7501 $895 BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plumouth 848 S. Weedwerd ' THE NEW AUDETTE PONTIAC NOW SERVING ■ay—Pontiac—Birmingham Ar Maple, acrou from Bari Air 1963 PLYMOUTH Convertible OAKLAND CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH ----- - T FE 5-9434 1944 4-000R BONNEVILLE, 15,000 miles, lull power and air, $2400. 681-8339.______________________ 1944 TEMPEST STATION WAGON. Real claan. Overhead Cam 6, auto, radio, haatar, 1 owner, HIM. 424-3739.__________' 1944 PONTIAC CATALINA. 2-DOOR hardtop, vinyl roof, power steering, brakes, auto., FM radio, naw tires. 338-9494 or 527-7911. I 724 Oakland Ava. HASKINS AUTO SALES 1963 PLYMOUTH 2 Door h lf 8795 at 6695 1966 PONTIAC’S - LUCKY AUTO' Village Rambler 666 S. Woodward Birmingham 646-3900_______ 1945 RAMBLER CLASSIC 2-DOOR hardtop with V-l angina, euto-i matlc transmission, radio, htat-ar. power brakes and steering. Tutone paint, whltowell liras, original 11400 miles, p—--- ROSE RAMBLER, EM 3-4155. 1965 AMERICAN Convertible Automatic. 4-cyllndor, radio, heeler, with bucket teats. Christmas rad. Village Rambler 666 S. Woodward Birmingham 646-3900 1945 RAMBLER CLASSIC SfAtlOti - ‘ cyllndtr angina. haatar, whitewall liras, htad rest claan and priced to rail. ROSE RAMBLER, Union Lake, EM 1966 AMBASSADOR 990 ftA(t6t6^ coup#, two-toned, sharp. $1498. KEEGO PONTIAC Keego H JAVELINS IN STOCK AUTOMATICS 4-SPEEDS V-8 AND 6-CYLINDEJt LL READY FOR DELIVERY GREAT SAVINGS Village Rambler 666 S. Woodward Birmingham 1964 Valiant 2 Door sedan with 4-cyl. engine, stick shift, rt W',hr*,r$895 BEATTIE FORD Your FORD- DEALER Since 193C DIXIE HWY., WATERFORD I COR VE TTE 1964, I 6695 Dixie Hwy..! Ytow;'*spe®5;! ^condition. A________ TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS 4 CHEVROLET/ PASSENGER ower steering, red y. SI295. Hillside Li 1258 Oakland. 31 PWl RADIO. HEATER,. AND WHltEWALLS. FULL PRICE $795, ABSOLUTEL**\NO AAONEY DOWN. Aaaume weekly pey menta of $6.88. CALL CREOI. MGR. Mr. Parka et HAROLD TURNER FORD. Ml 4-7500. 64 IMPALA HARDTOP . . . $1095 . . . Opdyke Hardware, FE 8-6686. 64 CORVAIR MOnIa COUPE, * automat let. RONEY'S AUTO, J1 Baldwin, FE 4-4909. ___ 1964 CMfcVY BEL AIR STATION wagon, VI. automatic power steering, turquoise finish, (95 down. MATTHEWS HARGREAVES, 43V Oak lend Ave. FE 4-4547. •44 CHtyV BEL AIR 4 tK50R sedan, j/a, automatic, power steering, tvrqUolM. ftolsh', *95 down. MATtHEWS HARGREAVES, 431 Oakland Ava. FB 4-4547. 1962 BONNEVILLE ! power, taetory ah^M.OOOm'!' MANSFIELD ! AUTO SALES 1104 BALDWIN AVE. FE 5-5900 , FE 8-8825 ONLY 8 1967 DEMOS and EXECUTIVE Cars Left! 1967 PONTIAC Bonneville Hardtop -door with Hydramtllc, power steering, brakes, windows, M Radio and AIR-CONDlTlONlNGl 1967 CHEVY Caprice 4-Door Power a tee ring, brekea; automatic, V-8, Radio, Heater, AIR CONDITIONING $2888 1967 PONTIAC Grand Prix@Mardtop lh Hydremetlc, power sleertog,^brakesradio, heater, w 1967 PONTIAC Bonneville Brougham or hardtop, with automatic, V-8, power eteerlng, brekea, v Hydremetlc end AIR-CONDITIONING. WHY NOT SHOP & COMPARE AT PONTIAC'S ONE-STOP TRANSPORTATION CENTER? 1966 PONTIAC^Custom Tempest .............. . $1895 1963 BUICK Wildcot[ . ................ b kti ?1095 1965 T-BIRD^.....................................$1995 1963 FAIRLANE^ ^................... . $695 1965 AUSTIN HEALEY .. $895 "Sprite." Has 4-speed trensmlsilon and Is In real flna condition. A raal cut# car. 1966 OLDS :[....................................$1995 Dalta Hardtop. Automatic, radio, hoator, power. Extra clean. Sava todaylp 1965 OLDS, Delta .............................. $1495 Hardtog^whti automatic, full power, radio and haatar, whltawall 1965 FALCON .. ................................. .$995 Futura with atttomailc transmission, radio and hoator. In tip-top condition In and out. 1964 OLDS ...................................... $895 M Convertible DOWNEY hOLDSMOBILE, INC. ■ 550 Ooktond Ave. ^ FE 2-8101 VANDEPUTTE BUICK USED CARS:N0W UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT BY Henry (Hank) Schlaefer 1*43 OPEL 2-door with very outstanding solid rod finish, and a luxury looking red interior. Whltowalis. A perfect second bar. Only IMS 1*45 PONTIAC Grand Prlx, 2-door hardtop. Midnight blua with o black Interior. Power steering, brekes, and while-wells $17*5 1*44 BUICK Btoctra 225 4-door hardtop, with whlto finish, beige Interior, full powor, 4-way pow> er seat, and whltowalis. Now Only (14*5 1*45 BUICK 2-door hardtop, with whlto finish, black custom In- Autometfc'** ^ow* V,ntt*afl ’ 1*43 PONTIAC Grand Prlx, * door hardtop. Midnight bluo, blua Interior. Automatic. Power steering, brakes, end white-walls ***5 1*44 PONTIAC Catalina Sedan. peon* Interior. Automatic, power steering end whitewalls SIMS 1*45 BUICK Special sedan, with an outstanding dark blua finish, £533 Only * V < *Tt t *i 1*43 BUICK LeSabr* 2-dnor hardtop. Beige ftolsh. cloth In- 1*44 EUICK LeSehre 2-door hardtop. Light blua with bluo Interior, black top. Automatic, powor Steering, broket, and whltowalis 123*1 1*44 BUICK Btoctr* 4-door hardtop. Dark bluo finish, blua Cloth Interior. Air conditioning 1*41 BUICK Btoctra 225 4-door hardtop, wtth burgundy ftolsh, beige Interior. Full powor, 4-woy soot, and It a nice family «er. Only «M5 1*47 BUICK Special V-4, ?door with light blue finish, and an outstanding vinyl Interior. Pow-Wtd 1*44 BUICK Wildcat 2-deer hardtop, with rod finish, and bucket teats Consol*. Automat-whlffweMt ****rlne' hreket.^wto 1*44 BUICK V4, 4dqor wtth • sparkling white finish, with • blua cloth Intorlor, and vrhtta-wells. A perfect ear Mr th* wWal Only S1MI 1*44 PONTIAC Bonneville Cen- gr*enl*)lnTth? brtr» 1*i4 OPEL Station Wagon, with a glowing rad finish, rad Interior, and 4-speatl. A real nice wagon throughout! Now your* VANDEPUTTE ‘ BUICK-OPEL 196-210 Orchard Lake FE 2-9165 4 ■ i THE/PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 18, 1967 D—17 —Television Programs— Programs fumishod by stations listod in this column aro subject to change without notico TONIGHT i 0:00 (2) (4) News (C) (7) Movie: “The M a g i c Carpet” (1951) Lucille Ball. John Agar. (R) . (B) Pat Boone (C) (50) Flintstones (R) (C) (56) Friendly Giant 1:15 (56) Mufflidand 1:30 (2) News — Cronkite (C) (4) News—Huntley, Brinkley (C) (50) McHale’s Navy (R) (56) What’s in a Word J 7:00 (2) Truth or Consequences (Cl ’ (4) Juvenile Court (C) (9) Gilligan’s Island (R) ' /c2 . (5J I Love Lucy (R) (56) News 7:30 (2) Lost in Space,,— Dr, Smith turns the Jupiter 2; into an orbiting resort. (C) (4) Virginian — An obsessed, black-clad gun-fighter tries to goad Trampas into a showdown. (C) (7) Ouster — Custer takes off on a long and dangerous Journey. Agnes Moore-head guests. (O) (9) Movie “Tarzan and His Mate” (1934) Hunters try to have Jane persuade Tarzan to reveal the location of an elephant burial ground. Johnny Weissmuller, Maureen O’Sullivan. (R) (50) Perry Mason — “The Ominous Outcast” (R) 1:00 (56) International Magazine — Gas warfare in Yemen and the spirit of Christmas in different countries are examined. 1:30 (2) Beverly Hillbillies — Jethro mistakenly thinks he has the lead in a new TV series. (C) TV Features I KRAFT MUSIC HALL, 9 p.m. (4) ‘SEPARATE HOURS,’ 9 p.m. (7) FESTIVAL, 9:30 p.m. ANDY WILLIAMS, p m. (4) Imnm (7) Movie: “The Postman Always Rings Twice” (1946) Lana Turner, John Garfield. Part 1. (R) 1:30 (2) Dobie Gillis (R) (4) News (C) 2:15 (7) News TOMORROW MORNING 6:90 (4) Classroom 6:20 (2) News (C) 6:36 (2) Sunrise Semester (C) (4) Ed Allen (C) (7) True Adventure (C) 7:00 (2) Woodrow the Woodsman (C) (4) Today (C) (7) Morning Show (C) 7:55 (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round 8:00 (2) Captain Kangaroo (9) Barney Boomer 8:30 (7) Movie: “Comrade X’ (1940) Clark Gable, Hedy Lamarr. (R) (9) Bonnie Prudden (C) 9:00 (2) Merv Griffin (C) (4) Gypsy Rose Lee (C) (9) Bozo the Clown (C) 9:10 (56) Let’s Read 9:30 (4) PDQ (C) (56) American History (7) Second Hundred) 9:55 ( 56) Spanish Lesson Years — Luke, an old 10:00 Snap Judgment (C) abolitionist, “frees” a go- (7) Girl Talk (4) Doctors (C) (7) Dream Girl (C) (50) Topper (R) 2:45 (56) Spanish Lesson 2:55 (7.) News 3:00 (2) Divorce Court (C) (4) Another World 1(C) (7) General Hospital (C) (9) Marshall Dillon (R) (50) Make Room for Daddy (R) ffl (56) Social Security I 3:15 (56) Mathematics 18 II 3:30 (2) Edge of Night (C) I (4) You Don’t Say (C) I (7) Dark Shadows (C) I (9) Swingin’ Time (C) *8 (50) Captain Detroit (C) 4:00 (2) Secret Storm (4) Woody Woodbury (C) (7) Dating Game (C) (56) Skiing 4:30 (2) Mike Douglas (C) (7) News (C) (9) Bozo the Clown (C) (50) Three Stooges (R) (56) What’s New 5:00 (9) Fun House (50) Little Rascals (R) „ (56) Misterogers 5:30 (4) George Pierrot “North From Paris” (7) News (C) (9) Dennis the Menace | PLANE WRECKAGE RECOVERED—The mangled wreckage of a plane that carried singer Otis Redding and six others to their deaths near Madison, Wis., Sunday is hoisted from Lake Monona yesterday. Two bodies still were missing when the plane was recovered from about 40 feet of water. (R) (50) Superman (R) (56) TV Kindergarten Science Center SPRING ARBOR (AP)-Con struction of a $750,000 center for Spring Arbor will begin in the sprii college announced Tuesday college, located in a small munity near Jackson, rep< that the new building will general classrooms, laborator-jies, research facilities, a computer room, and a continuing education center. Chief Gods ACROSS king 1 Chief Greek god member • Chief Roman „ ___ rod » Gum* (aoat) 12 Valley In Italy U Alike In pitch ~ {?•****■*!■ (mimici « Mantle export 14 Motorlet'i Norn god hoetelry « Kind #f ero*» 15 Extreme 44 Body.poUtk . nervoutneii EverUettng IS Candlenut tree* j® Not thl* one 17 Small hoiue* 47 Sbakeepearexn sssr*™ 30 Trivial humane „ ITS ,f*l”hood* , 12 Biblical m 31 Ub«ryemploye 1 Moved withe 17NaUveofl 22 Feminine name , loud hunt 20 Certain 34 American , 2 landed property Europe am i dogwood 3 Shush (mean 21 Scabiee 2S Completion Indiana 23 Compoaer, SbainipppretB 9 Digital feiturt 29 Tangier cottvulxivel 2 3 5 6 7 B 9 10 IT 12 It u 15 It H if ■ IB It ■ po ■ r zr ST ■ r 2b F 29 29 ■ 31 P r SB 35 a ■ r 1 39 ■ F ■ F & 43 1 F 4& r 1 47 L 11 QUEEN MEETS CAST-Queen Elizabeth II talks to William Dix, who plays the part of Tommy Stubbins in the film “Dr. Do- little,” after she attended the premiere of the movie last night in London. Actress Joan Collins is in the center. (9) Mr. Dressup . 19:10 (56) Of Cabbages and Kings 16:25 (4) News (C) ) I (2) Green Acres — Two 10:30 (2) Beverly Hillbillies (R) carpenters delay work on (4) Concentration (C) the Douglas home when (7) Family Game they refuse to work to- (50) Yoga for Health gether. (C) (9) Friendly Giant (4) Kraft Music Hall - 10:35 ( 56) Geography “A Taste of Funny” stars 10:4J (9) 0ntario Schools Dick Cavett, Burns and H:Q| (2) Andy of Mayberry (R) (4) Personality (C) (7) Temptation (C) (50) Dickory Doc (C) ' 111:05 (56) Art Lesson . 111:15 (9) Canadian Schools ,|il:25 (7) Children’s Doctor home by three escaped i11:39 jfiVan I^ke (R) convicts. George Segsl, (4) Hollywood Squares (C) Arthur Hill and Teresa (7) How’s Your Mother- Wright star. (C) in-Law? (C) (50) Combat! - Saunders 111:45 (9) Chez Helene must contend with trouble 11 :#° (56) Arithmetic for on all sides. (R) Teachers 9 25 W News 10 061 Re8dy TOMORROW AFTERNOON 1:30 (2) He and She - Oscar 19:00 <2> (4) News (C) insists that the Hollisters Everybody’s Talking move to California with (9) Take 30 the “Jetman” crew. (C) (50) Dialing f^r Dollars (9) Festival — In “The 12:25 (2) Topps in Fashion (O) Paper People” a film 112:30 (2) Search for Tomorrow go dancer from her cage — and is hunted for kidnaping. (C) (50) Honeymooners (R) Schreiber, Soupy Sales and Groucho Marx. (C) (7) (Special) “Desperate Hours” is the TV adapts-1. tion of a tense drama; j .about an ordinary family ^ held captive in their own!1 maker is disenchanted when she probes into the life of a popular artist. (C) (56) Ski School 10:06 (2) Dundee and the Cul-hane — A thief uses interest in a banker’s daughter to rob the bank. (C) (4) (Special) Andy Wil- (C) (4) Eye Guess (C) (7) Donna Reed (R) (9) Movie: “Lonely- hearts” (1958) Montgomery Clift, Robert Ryan. (R) (50) Movie: “So Little Time” (English-German, 1952) Maria Schell, Marius Gorins* (R) ,, - . , j 1.2 i uuniir. i n. f ian!? ~~ and h“ 12:35 (56) Tell Me a Story family and the Osmond « Gujdine Li ht (C ®, W:50 ( 56) Let’s Read 12:55 (4) News (C) 1:00 (2) Love of Life (C) (4) Match Game (C) musical Christmas special (C) (50) Movie: “The Fountainhead” (1949) Gary Cooper, Patricia Neal. (R) (56) Observing Eye 10:30 (56) Yopng American Musicians 11:10 (4) (7) News (C) (9) News 11:30 (2) Movie: “The 39 Steps" (English, 1960) Kenneth More, Taina Eig. (7) Fugitive (R) 1:10 (56) Sets and Symbols 1:25 (2) News (C) (4) Carol Duvall (C) (56) Geography 1:30 (2) As the,World Turns (C) (4) Let’s Make a Deal (C) 1:55 ( 56* American History (4) Johnny Carson - John 2:96 (2) Love Is a Many Splen-Glenn is guest. (C) dored Thing. (C) (7) Joey Bishop (C) | {gj Dav* of Our Lives (C) (9) Wrestling (Cl (7) Newlywed Game (C) 12:30 (9) Window on the World 1:00 (4) Beat the Champ People in the l By the Associated Press Timothy Leary, onetime Harvard lecturer turned LSD advocate, took a bride yesterday. Leary, 47, and Rosemary Woodruff, 33, were married on the 2,500-acre estate of William Mellen Hitchcock, 28, son of polo star Tommy Hitchcock. Leary rents the estate in Mill-brook, N. Y. 1 The couple, reportedly had been married previously in a California desert but held another ceremony for “the family.” Both the bride and groom were in white. Miss Woodruff had flowers painted on her face. The ceremony was performed by Bill Haines, described as the guru of the Neo-American Church. Also present at the ceremony was Leary’s son, John, 18, who is free on $1,500 bail on a narcotics charge. Both Leary and Hitchcock surrendered Monday on charges growing out of a narcotics raid Saturday at which young Leary was arrested. Leary, free on $2,500 bail, was not at the estate during the raid. No Holy Communion for Bikini Wearers Bishop Emilie Tagle Covarrubias says holy communion may not be received by Catholic girls who wear bikinis on Chilean beaches. The Roman Catholic bishop of Valparaiso Issued his directive yesterday as Chile neared the prime of the summer season. Capote's 'Private' Premiere Crowded Maybe it was a private showing, bat just about all of Truman Capotels intimate' friends showed up. The occasion yesterday was die premiere of the movie “In Cold Blood,” based on Capote’s best-selling book of the same name. “It’s not, a party at all,” protested the author who has thrown some ol the town’s flashiest gatherings. About 50 of his show business and socialite friends were at the Columbia Pictures building on New York’s Fifth Avenue for the showing. They included two of the Kennedy sisters, Mrs. Stephen Smith and Pat Lawford; William F. Buckley Jr., columnist and editor; and the David Sussldnds. Revives Intriguing Story on Birth of Popular Song By EARL WILSON | NEW YORK — It happened about 1911 ... ! Irving Berlin was a skinny kid of 23 who’d already written I "Alexander’s Ragtime Band.” j ! The late Broadway character Wilson Mizner I told him a touching story about a derelict who 9Q|BCJj!i died in a Chicago flophouse leaving a strange Berlin found the story in a popular book, Jnj. it 1 | but In this version, the testator, Charles Louns- ' Inspired by this story, Berlin vainly searched ' for more information about Charles Loonsbury JhT then wrote a song dedicated to the memory I of Charles Loonsbury titled “When I Leave the World Behind.” WILSON A1 Jolson made it a smash hit, million-copy seller, 1914: a ★ a A lot of years passed — about 50 — and Teresa Brewer happened to sing the song at the Latin Quarter recently, commenting on the beautiful lyrics. I mentioned this to Berlin. . “Lpt me tell you the rest of the story,” he said. “I wonder if we could dig up a copy of ‘Heart Throbs’ published about 1913 that had the rich man version. The will mentioned meadows, butterflies and the appurtenances of squirrels.” I wrote of Berlin’s search for the book. And we received hundreds of offers from kind readers, and found the story in the second edition, "More Heart Throbs,” and — sure enough — the word “appurtenances.” + ★ * smiled Irving Berlin, “when Alexander Woollcott wrote my biography, he researched the Charles Lounsbury story. Alec was a good researcher. I don’t know whether he was right. LEARY TAKES A BRIDE—Dr. Timothy Leary and his neW| “Woollcott concluded that there never was such a will. Nor bride, the former Rosemary Woodruff, sit before their wedding any Charles Lounsbury. yesterday in the style of the Neo-American Church at Leary’s “He decided that the story was a piece of advertising copy headquarters near Miilbrook, N. Y. CAPOTE Musicians' Local Is Hit by Charge in Muskegon written for a bank to lure people to come in and get their wills drawn and become customers of the bank.” THE MIDNIGHT EARL ..." Author-entertainer Ronny Graham, in alimony Jail sincet Sept. 19, was allowed out for 24 hours to attend his father’! funeral. . . 20th Century-Fox will shoot a TV pilot film, “Mama's Man," with Diahann Carroll. Lena Cantrell, starring at the Copa for the first time, said she’s glad to be closing the show this time: “This way I get to stay up late.” The young Australian singer’s a hit . . . Secret Stuff: A famed actor's hitting the bottle — and the bottle is beginning to hit back. WISH I’D SAID THAT: We doubt that those TV soap operas are true to life. Did you ever have a crisis that was interrupted for a commercial?1 REMEMBERED QUOTE: “Vanity, of course, may be what call ojher people's pride." — Coco Chanel. EARL’S PEARLS: Time was when $10,000 bought a house and lot. Today it doesn't buy a lot. Bob Orben has decided to change his name legally to Occupant, “and then I'll get everybody's mail!” . . .That’s earl,, brother. 2:21 1561 Mathematics for You Leaders has filed unfair labor 2:30 (2) House Party (C) I practices charges with the Na- Radio Programs— WJk(760) WXVZO 270) CKtW(800) WWJ(95Q) WCAR(1130) WPQWQ 400) WJSKQ 500) WHH-FM(94.7) i*. n»w*. Muii« h*d ( WJBK, Spirit i AJTi, Ntwi, Sunny tide 1~wSr, Newt, Htrrlt VUXYZ, WCAR, Newt, Jack Itndti WPON, Ndwt. 4mm WMF I, Uncle J»v Show 4iN CKLW, Newt, Music . wwj, Today to levie* TiH-WWJ. Mows. I ports lit**—WJR. Ntwi, Keleldo- WWJ. Ntwt. Neighbor WXVZ. Npws, Danny Teylee MUSKEGON (UPI)—'The Na- tional Labor Relations Board 'tional Association of Orchestra against Muskegon Musicians’ Local 252, which has blacklisted and is picketing the Muskegon Heights Polish Falcons and the Eagles lodges for employing nonunion musicians. The complaints contend the union committed an unfair labor practice when it blacklisted and picketed the two lodges because they refused to sign an agreement calling for union1 shtiar musicians to be used for any {events planned at their club i rooms. P* | The association claims such an op** agreement violates Che closed t shop provisions of the National Labor Relations Act and further muiic charges the musicians' union with Violation, of the rights of . g . Hdpfiiy - orchestras which are not meiti* wjbk! muJic."pip# hers of the American Federal h.T lh,nnon Of Musicians. SINGING SISTER WEDS-Christine McGuire, 41, one of the singing McGuire Sisters, married Fort Lauderdale, Fla., financier Robert H. Spain, 42, last night at the Desert Inn Hotel in Las Vegas. It was the second marriage for each. Her sister Phyllis was matron of honor, but the other member of the trio, Dorothy, was in Canada and couldn’t attend. AVOID GARNISHMENT ich ill your bills . . . wt cm tit OKI PAYMENT you cm ifford. Call 338-0333 or stop in Homrn of the Hoilomlesa Cup of Coffoo Open Daily 11:30-9:30f Fri. and Sat. til 10 P.M. ELIZABETH LAKE RD., OPPOSITE THE PONTIAC MALL ChlltU* Portion* Available ft D—-18 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. DECEMBER 18, 1967 Carols Are Called 'Meaningless ' IPSLEY, England (AP) ->e Rev. Frederick Foreman thinks Christmas carols are “meaningless twaddle.” A A A They are sung with “great gusto and without thought,” he wrote in his parish- magazine, published Sunday. A A . A “There’s ‘God Rest Ye Merry, Gentlemen’ where ‘merry’ could be interpreted in more senses than one. “And 'The Holly and the Ivy' is difficult to understand. “Then there is all this sentimentality about the baby Jesus and carols, like that. We don’t pray to a baby, do we? ’There is very little tion. events as they appear in the Bible. It is often just sentimentality." But many of the carols the rector complained about will be A Bank Note ATHENS, Ga. (AP) — An Athena bank received an unsigned letter Tuesday, with ISO in cash enclosed, which read: Respiratory Disease Americas By Science Service NEW YORK — A chronic In- 'A few years back, I allowed an fection of the respiratory tract 'call scleroma, which is often fa-tal, is spreading to the Western Hemisphere. Increased travel from Europe, Asia and Africa, error on the part of one of your tellers to go uncorrected, which of $50. i you.” where the disease has' been primarily confined, is blamed. “Approximately 171 cases have been reported in the United States and Canada,” a team of physicians at Columbia-Presby-terian Medical Center here re- ports. Forty-seven of the victims were native tb North America. The increase is much greater in South and Central Americas. BUY, SELL, TRADE - - - USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! Sale Ends Saturday ••• Rag. 19.99 1597 Regular MS 2097 Gift Ideas Men’s Leisure Jackets with Suede Fronts Traditional favorites for casual wear with club collar and raglan sleeve styling. Fully lined with rayon. Choose the husky, masculine look in tri-colored square design • or the classic front panel model. Available in sand tan or antelope brown. Men'a sizes 36 to 46. Mfn'i Sportswear Dept. Men’s PERMA-PREST All-weather Coat A great poplin fabric of Dacron® and cotton shakes off wrinkles and washes with ease. Jnst tumble dry and wear. Smartly styled with raglan shoulders, slash pockets. With warm Orion pile liner, attached rayon satin sleeves. Without zip liner, regular 29.98 .... 19.91 Mtn'i Dress Clothing Dept. Reg. 29.98 for Him PERMA-PREST no-iron Sport Shirts in Ivy, Classic Styles Put no-iron convenience pins fashion under Ms Christmas tree this season. Select smart ivy style with button-down collar and long tails or the classic full-cut model with epread collar. Both atylee in blue, green and gold; classic also in navy. Choose solids or plaids. Small, medium, large, extra large • Girls’ Matching Tops and Pants nylon otretch pants Stitched down .elf fahrle ttirrap.. M.ckla. wa.k.kl., O QQ Bri.hu, ba.tcL Sim 71.14. di.-/3/ 7 to 14 otretch tops i-eion ran rial on top. of .tr.trbr nylon and polymer. Solid, and strip.. in ii«*. 7 to 14. Boys’ Gift Sweaters Double Breasted Cardigan a. Reg. 5.9S knit link stitch in wash-acrylic blend... the fash-look of the year. Bine, n or copper. 6 to 12. V-neck Pullover Fashioned in acrylic blends, popular links stitch. Ribbed enffs, bottom. Bine, green or copper heather. 6-12. b. Hog. 1.19 337 Student Cardigan 6 - botton acrylic sweater in alpaca stitch. Choice of fashion-wise colors. Sixes 32 to 36. #. Reg. 7.9# Winnie-the Pooh Playwear for Boys Belted slacks of tMck and thin eordnroy have the mod look. Boldly belted with two curved front pockets, gripper waistband. Navy, forest green, golden pnmpkin. 3-6x. Team them up with knit shirts, !-8x...........2.80 Sears Children'. Dspt Slacks *4 • Wool and Wool Blend Shirts Give the man on yonr Christmas list a rugged sportshirt. They’re great for outdoor activities because they have all the warmth and resiliency you get only from fine wool and wool blends. Colorful block plaid patterns. S-XL. Sears Men's Fumtehlngs Daph 3-6x Corduroy Slacks, No-iron Shirts 2.99 PERMA-PREST ivy shirts feature button down collar, ^*UP ® ****** tapered body, long tails. Polyester-cotton blend. $3 d M corduroy slacks with mod styling . . . extended front 4 waistband, suffices bottoms. Pumpkin, green, navy. 3-6x. A ||e|| War* 11.99 697 "Satisfaction guaranteed or your money back" SEARS Downtown Pontiac Phone FE 5-4171 AP Wirephoto BILL STUDIED—Democratic Sens. Coleman Young of Detroit (left) and Roger Craig of Dearborn (center) confer informally with Assistant Senate Majority Leader Charles Zoliafr, R-Benton Harbor, yesterday as they consider the proposed open housing measure. Senate Republicans later rejected a proposal that the Senate take up the controversial measure while the House worked on lower court, reorganization. Senate Republicans Refuse to Take Up Open Housing LANSING OF) — The open occupancy bill remained the exclusive property of the House today after Senate Rqgubli-cans refused to take up the oonApprerstai pleasure. • ; ;,i. •. Despite apparent lack of support, among Senate GOP ranks, the bill's bi- See Mated Story, Page A-2 partisan bankers in both houses.still expressed hope for its passage during the t remaining days of the special session. Meanwhile, House Speaker Robert Waldron, R-Grosse Pointe, said the House will try to finish the complex lower court reorganizaton bill today or tomorrow “and get to work immediately” on open occupancy. The open occupancy, or open housing, bill would bar racial discrimination in most real estate transactions. * The Senate move Tuesday was a slap* at Acting GOv. William Milliken and the majority Republican leaders of both houses, who had agreed that the Senate should take over open occupancy while the House worked on the court bill. But the Senate GOP caucus voted not to support a proposed resolution to allow 2 Brigades Airlifted to Viet n a Roars Approval of LBJ Speech SAIGON (AP).'»- The biggest airlift of the Vietnam war pushed U.S. troop strength in South Vietnam to about 475,-000 todayymore than the peak of 472,-800 American fighting men in the Korean war at its height 14 years ago. '* * * The U.S. Command took the security wraps off the transfer from the United States of two more brigades of the U.S. 101st Airborne Division,. World War II’s Screaming Eagles of Bastogne. About 7,000 of the"'paratroopers have been flown across the, Pacific since Nov. 17, and another 3,000 are due by Dec. 29. Wearing combat fatigues with a .45 revolver and dagger tucked in his belt, the 101st commander, Maj. Gen., Olinto M. Barsanti, snapped a salute on his arrival today at Bien Hoa Airbase and reported to Gen. William C. Westmoreland: “The 101st Airborne Division is present for combat in Vietnam.” * * ■ * Westmoreland, now commander of all U.S. troops in Vietnam, was the Screaming Eagles’ commander from 1958 to 1960. TO RECEIVE TRAINING The new paratroopers are not expected to go into combat immediately and will receive some training before heading into the field. Then they will join the division’s 1st Brigade, which has been in Vietnam since July 1965. When completed, the airlift will have involved 373 transpacific flights, which after discharging men and supplies generally took off within 15 minutes on the 9,783-mile flight back to 101st Division headquarters at Ft. Campbell, Ky. U.S. spokesmen said the airlift is the longest and largest ever staged direct from the: .United States to Southeast Asia. * * * The U.S. Command also removed the security wraps today from a new American infantry operation 28 miles northeast of Saigon and said 52 Communist troops had been killed in six days. Total U.S. loses for the period were put at two dead and 25 wounded. introduction of open occupancy la the Senate. *' Both houses would have to approve the special resolution. Both GOP and Democratic leaders had said ear Her that they would not object to the move, V The secret' ballot in thq GOP caucus reportedly was 11-6 with 18 of the 20 seniate Republicans attending. One senator reportedly abstained. Some ‘legislators interpreted the vote as an indication that there are only six solid supporters of the bill among Senate Republicans. Others felt it was a procedural vote and was not indicative of how the Republicans would vote on the bill itself. If minority Democrats could come up with 10 votes for the bill, the Republicans would need another 10 to ensure the 20 votes necessary for passage. Estimates by party leaders on how many votes each has for passage change from day to day. Pressure from both sides of the open housing issue.reportedly is increasing. New Attitude on Crime Asked Oust Regime, Says Greek King ATHENS, Greece i/n — King Constantine, evidently backed by part of the army, called on his people today to oust the' military dictatorship and restore democracy to this land where it was born. " His appeal raised the specter of civil war in the wake of withdrawal of part of Cheek forces from Cyprus in the face of Turkish demands. , The king repudiated the military coup of last April. Shortly before he spoke troops and tanks took up positions around key buildings in Athens, and the state-run radio said the government was ready to defend itself. The 27-year-old monarch declared leaders of last April’s coup were only a segment of the army. “A spirit of revenge will not prevail,” he said, “but X will not accept any disobedience Iran now on and it will be crushed mercilessly. There will he no compromise.” i He referred to the Communist-led civil wai* of 20 years ago and asked the people to assist him, follow him and Weather Satellite Rockets Into Orbit CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP)—Beaming back strong-signals to earth, a robot “interplanetary weatherman” named Pioneer 8 rocketed into orbit around the Sun today to help weave a network that could warn astronauts of deadly solar radiation storms in space. En route to the sun-circling path between that of earth and Mars, Pioneer 8’s fiery Delta bodster rocket successfully kicked a radio-relay communications satellite into orbit around earth The king spoke by radio from Salonika, the major city of northern Greece, i* * *, There were reports that the 3rd Armored Corps in Salonika had rebelled against the military dictatorship. The leader of the corps is a Gen. Peridis, known as a strong supporter of the king and an opponent of the April coup. The Greek Embassy in London said the Ministry of Information in Athens reported a coup had been attempted by a group of army officers. Greece is a member of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization but the ' United States showed its displeasure with the April coup by cutting off arms shipments. Inquest Sought in Teen s Killing V ' A petition requesting an inquest into the death of Jimmie King, 17—-shot by police attempting to escape airest early last Thursday—was filed yesterday in Pontiac Municipal Court. Although Oakland County Prosecutor S. Jerome Bronson ruled Friday that the killing was a justifiable police action, a number of civic leaders and organizations last night asked the suspension of the two police officers -involved pending outcome of the inquest. Mayor William H. Taylor Jr. said the requests were somewhat unexpected. Speaking at the city commission meeting, he said the commission will review the case and reach a decision on the suspensions next Tuesday. Albert Shaw, a Negro leader and executive vice chairman of an interracial group known as Voice of Oakland County Action League (VOCAL), told (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 3) to be used for testing America’s man? to-the-moon tracking network. The double payload blasted off at 9:08 a.m., EST. The tricky two-in-one shot closed out the 1967 launch schedule at Cape Kennedy. Scientists refer to the Pioneer family of spacecraft as “interplanetary weathermen” and said sensors aboard Pioneer 8 could provide the best information yet on how great a danger radiation storms emitted from the sun pose to astronauts. * * ★ Working with other craft previously launched, drum-shaped Pioneer 8 could possible lead to a foolproof means of predicting when dangerous flares will erupt on the sun — just as earth-orbiting weather satellites help forecasters predict climate on this planet. Manned space flights then can be scheduled around them, officials said. RELAY STATION 42 i Meanwhile, the eight-sided communications payload — called TTS for test and training satellite — was to act as an orbital relay station to exercise America’s Apollo man-in-space global tracking network. Scientists packed the TTS in the enr gine compartment of the three-stage Delta’s second stage so 'it could spring free into Earth orbit while the upper stage propells Pioneer 8 into a sun-circling path. TTS was designed to receive Earth-to-space signals on the same radio frequency used in Apollo manned flights, while returning signals to ground tracking stations on frequencies which will be used to report spacecraft and astronaut status during an actual mission. Pioneer 8 was to team up with other radiation-studying spacecraft already operating, including Pioneer 6 located 144 million miles ahead of Earth and Pioneer 7, which is trailing this planet by about 68 milion miles, to study solar events from different points in space. MIAMI BEACH, Fla. i/R — President Johnson says he will not be deterred, influenced or inflamed by his Vietnam war critics “regardless of my polls and regardless of the elections.” Departing from his prepared text in a nationally televisied and broadcast speech to the AFL-CIO convention here yesterday, the President said: “I am going down the center of the road________ doing my duty as I see it — for the best of my country.” The representatives of organized labor roared their approval when Johnson said he would always be ready to hear and act on any proposal for ending the Vietnam war. And their volume increased when he added: “But in the meantime I want you to know — and I want all Americans to know — that I am not going to be deterred. I am not going to be influenced. I am not going to be inflamed by a bunch of political, selfish men who want to advance their own interest.” The President also had harsh words for congressional Republicans, terming them “wooden soldiers” warring on progress. ASKS LABOR’S HELP He asked the representatives of the 14-miliion-member “house of Labor” to help Democrats elect a “great Congress” in 1968. About 2,000 convention delegates, officials and guests frequently interrupted Johnson’s jibes at the Republicans with cheers, applause and laughter. “The people know that the old Republican buggy can only go one way —■ backwards downhill,” Johnson said. “That old Republican buggy has been colliding with us all year long,” he said of GOP efforts in Congress to block or alter his proposals on education, anti-poverty, medical care and Social Security. Forecast Tonight Is Snow Flurries Christmas shoppers will be scurrying around town in the midst of a few'snow flurries instead of rain and drizzle tonight, The weatherman predicts, cloudy and colder tonight with flurries likely and a low of 25 to 30. There’s a chance of snow or snow flurries with continued cold temperatures Friday. Winds southwesterly at 15 to 25 miles per hour this morning will dimmish a little tonight. » Precipitation probabilities In per cent are: 30 today and tonight, 40 tomorrow. TEMPERATURES An above freezing 35 was the low temperature prior to 8 a.m. in downtown Pontiac. The meraury had edged up to 43 by 12:30 p.m. In Today's Press Deadly Slick More than 350 ducks killed by oil in Novi drain—PAGE D-4. Appalachia t Boy’s Christmas wish for a fire wagon is tempered by poverty of family — PAGE A-16. Kidnap Plot Fails Police nab California pair; victim unhurt; ransom recovered — PAGE B-11. Area News ....... ....... Astrology ............... Bridge Crossword Puzzle ........ Comics .................. Editorials ......... Food Section C-4; C-17, Markets ......... Obituaries Sports ..............D-l- Theaters TV and Radio Programs . Wilson, Earl Women’s Pages ...... B-l- Yule Stories ........B-6, Michigan Atty. Gen. Frank J. Kelley, , addressing the annual Oakland County Law Enforcement Association Conference at the Pontiac Elks Club last night, called for a new attitude toward law eo-£ forcement to combat the nation’s rising fcrime rate. t * * , Kelley told a gathering of some 150 i representatvies of more than a dozen„ * county law enforcement groups that “ev: j| eryone says they’re for law and order, $. . but few are apparently willing to pay the price.” lie cited three primary areas where this change In attitude shonld manifest itself: • In the provision of funds for police ... agencies at the local level. • In the concept of the police officer. • In the approach of private citizens % to the law. ? STATE SUBSIDY f Kelley suggested slate subsidy of local ' law enforcement '“in support of local £ funding.” ★ ★ ★ | Kelley urged better recruitment pro-1 grams, pointing out that private industry has recently absorbed the vast ma-f jority of potential college-educated law 9 officers. I “Better pay Mid a revised system of entry into police ranks would facilitate jg this goal,” he said. For 'Ohs' and 'Ahs' Unusual Items Plentiful (EDITOR’S NOTE-This the eighth in (< series on suggestions for Christmas gi;u available in Pontiac Area stores.) By JUNE EIJjUlT ; ' If you enjoy shopping^for gifts that are a "bit different,’’ a little looking will reveal lots of Hems to draw surprised "ohs" and “ahs," The dieter will be delighted with a gold-finish saccharin scuttle and tongs for a little over a dollar. For those easy-going souls who always keep their cool, how about a game of “Frustration?” Keep the steel bail riding uphill on the rods and gain1 points for steady hands and keen judgement. $7.50. The teen party miss will be delighted With a jeweled slipper-shape purse just large enough for lipstick and "mad"-money, with instep zipper closure. About $2. A wild pHnt is combined with psychedelic colors to accent freedom in a lounging culotte for the lady of the house. Available in sizes 10 to 18 at about $12. The party hostess will enjoy owning a cocktail-pick tree to add a touch of glamor to her buffet table. It comes with 12 hors d’oeuvre picks with green ball heads in a flower pot base, at $8. Chess buffs could fill a tot of traveling time with a compact set of tiny pieces in a zippered leather case. Imported from Germany, it has a magnetic board to foil spills. Only 96.50. LEADING LAWMEN—The top-ranking law enforcement oflioers of Pontiac, the state and Oakland County—(from left) Police Chief William K. Hanger, Michigan Atty. Gen. Frank J. Kelley and Sheriff Frank Irons—go over the schedule for last night's county law enforcement conference in Pontiac. Kelley was the main embroidered on the lace-trimmed back speaker at the meeting. — packets, in siczs 4 to 6-7 at $2 a pair. | To go under the little misses' mini-dresses, how about some pretty panties SHOPPING DAYS TO w . CHRISTMAS ^ The Weather •/. 0,1. WMlIwr Bur,HU Forecnil Snow Flurries (0*1 till P*gt 1) - VOL. 125 F& NO. 206 THE PONTIAC PRE * * * * * PONTIAC.MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 18, 1907—70 PAGE! I m mm. Poverty Fight Spending Is WASHINGTON (AP) - Con-| ’ • Bolh Senate and HrLuis ej gress, clearing its decks of most passed and sent to President! major money measures and Johnson legislation lor a $3.41 aiming for weekend adjourn- billion, three-sfVp pay rais“ af-ment, has okayed spending bil- feeling 5.5 million federal work-lions of dollars for government ers and serviceniert. The legjsla-paj> raises and to fight poverty tfonj also includes a hike in post-' while endorsing a $4.1 billion j£| rates, raising lo t> eorts the -over-all spending cut. f. cost of mailing a letter Congressional action Tuesday * * * included these developments? I Romney Plan Finds Favor Britons Like Idee Neutralize SE Asia PHK^ PONTIAC PRESS, WjEDNESDA V, DECEMBER 13, 1907 • The House passed and sent; to the Senate a $1.61 billion ap:J piopriatioiClnlWor the Otlice of. Economic Opportunity. i370 mil-j lion .less than Congress alreadyj has authorized lor the antipoverty program. •' I • The Senate passed and sent; to the President i b’1!'requiring ■||>st lederal agene'e,-. to out most spending bv 19 per-cent—a i $4.1 bil- Fair-Housing Bill May Die' Sen. Kuhn Sees Link to Court Reform Issue!] The cost of $1,722 per site for 50 homes was approved by the' j With approval of the special assessment roll of $86,140, sani-Itaiy sewers for the central , Sen. George W*Kuhn of West of Colonial Estates sub- Bloomfield Township predicted I <**vls,on are oa w®y to today, that fair-housing legisla-]comPletIon in about four, months, tion will be a dead issue at the current special sesson of the lawmakers if another major is-[Township Board Monday after sue — court reorganization ffilH fails to pass the House this week. “The will not be nearly enough i time to debate the fair-housing | bill in the Senate,” said, the Republican senator. “The whole) session Mil be abortive.” Birmingham Area News Sewer Assessment Roll OK'd BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP —j public hearing. Construction! At the; first public hearing work is expected to begin in about one month, according to the township, building department. v The second public hearing to confirm the assessments for the sanitary sewers in the southern district of Colonial Estates is Jset for Jan. 8 at 8 p.m. Kuhn was one of 11 Repub-1 lican senators out of 17 present j 'esterday who rejected a reso-■ 10 States Account for Half of Battle Deaths in Viet Monday, the board approved the need for the $31,376 project to serve about 18 homes. Several objections'were heard. 1 Approval was also given to an increase in fees for township licenses, permits and inspections. SCHEDULE OUTDATED The building department, which recommended the hike, reports that it has been operating under an outdated f e e schedule which is below the standard in the area. BIRMINGHAM - George Vi-hos, baked In Birmingham, was the only Michigan artist to win Tenjly ahead of Ohio as the No. 5jone of the' coV-| s to take up BENEFITS BILL Today the House a Social Security bill ihal would | boost all benefits by at least 13 per cent as well as hike Social ■ Security taxes. The bill provides for minimum monthly benefit lyesterday Who rejected a reso-] WASHINGTON (AP) ‘"m —wi In tion that would have intro- states topped by California acrtstate. eted Tiffany (luced open occupancy on thejeount for more than half the California also tops the non-,Foundation U.S. battle deaths after 81i hostile death category with 227| awards, months of Vietnam fighting, a'out of an over-all total of 2,705 Vihos, who Pentagon tabulation shows. [dead through September. TheLas a stlKjj0 ajf Leading in war deaths accord- non-hostile tabulation includes ^ pjerce re-| ing to computer records are such causes as accident plane cejvetj $2,000 foT California, the most populous crashes, truck wrecks, e*plo-[ hjs work' Tithe current $44. President Johnson i; lo sign the pay-rais ernmeni employes LONDON (AP)—Gov. George, Romney was reported Tuesday to have received favorable reae-j tions in London on his idea of I neutralizing Southeast Asia- „ . , , f, . _____j payments of $55 comp; help end the war ir> Vietnam ^ f] The Michigan Republican, first declared candidate for his party’s presidential nomination, id m Mk-wr, lour that jPSSpH take him to Moscow later this, rhricimnc rp‘r,.fii week and Saigon during Christ-1 creases from last (let 1 mas. He began the tour m;cost the raises bvl9(i!) France and Britain. a„ ,stagps arp * _ ... .... . , ■ ./mated at $5.4 billion l! Romney has identified h.mselfi ive a, • ^ with the idea of changing Amer-L^, other goverMncnl lean objectives in Vietnam^ a 4 5 (;ent hiki, through keeping all the big pow-iicemen k 5 g ccn( boo; ers out of Southeast Asia and; * * * allowing the countries in the. SAYS body ISN’T HIS SON—Fred Hettieh, looking at a picture of his son. CpI. Donald Hettieh, says the body of a soldier killed gf*Vietnam helicopter crash and shipped to Sarasota, Fla . lor burial is not his son. Army officials, who first backtracked on the identity and agreed it was not the 19-year-old Hettieh, now contend it is. They say the elder Hettieh does not want to accept the death. Reports of a fingerprint examination and supporting data are being de-livercdito, the Hettieh 1'amilv. floor of the Senate. "J think there were a number of general reasons for the mass rejection of the resolution,” saidh] Kuhn. „".F,rst!’ihere ,s.P/’ionty* saidistate, with 1,289, New York 988,|sions, fires, drownings and oth-j f j e l d of Daint-Ku.^n, The special session was Pennsylvania 814 Texas 789 ander incidents not connected with ing Thirty-two called specifically for the lower nii /antivitips ing. imriyiwo called specifically for the lower court reorganization and notj open housing.” id S Illinois 703. Rounding out the first 10 are| Orio 699, Michigan 584, Florida! 459, New Jersey 397 and Indiana! Sponsor of Court Bill May Vote No On It LANSING ,.K The chief low’s amendments removed. If “Then there is the constitutionality of the fair housing act. I There are a number of senaeors] These states combine for 7,099 who like mvself have grave of lQe natlon’s 13-634 deaths llst‘ doubts that it'is legal and would !ed as a result of hostile a9tl0n in[ like to see pending cases mvilv- Southeast Asia between Jan. ’ ing the civil rights commission 1961 and last SePf, j*?-resolved in the State Supreme comPuter run availahie. Court first.” TOTAL DEATHS If neither piece of Icgislati is adopted before A proposed of iast Saturday adjournment date of Dec. 22, ,. the last Nazi Murder Suspect May Testify Today Vihos is Visual Arts Coordinator for the Michigan State Council for the, Arts; and instructor 'of drawing and painting at Arts and Crafts in Detroit. His resi-I dence is in Royal Oak. ARLINGTON, Va. (UPI) —] John C. Patler, accused assassin! War deaths stood at 15,265 as 0f American Nazi Party leader j George Lincoln Rockwell, ,„r"k sponsor of Michigan’s court ^ he failed, he said, he wo„,d Z’SSSS SSHWbM $ ^ first. 10-^expected to 'take,thestand today; ^organization bill says he may urge defeat of his own bill. 4 The pay-.f such a policy could be achieved. been to get different viewpoints] on it. SOME OPPOSITION A source close to Romney said he had received many favorable comments on the idea of neu-!2875 cents to 3.5 cents and lo 4 tralization, although some of cents in Julv 19^9 But th- ; provisions for h iftmg p. <.Hal [rates designed to b ring in an i ad- ditional $900 mdli» nmuSin&i Next. Jan. > f i -egular i mail stamps will go.fron \ Situ 6 ct ■nts., airmail from 1 hi 10 (T'it Jj! post' cards from 4 to 5 < ;cnts arid M mail cards frorirfi; o 8 centv THIRD CLASS MAIL Third class mail will go 1 rom they to '* vjuc ag^hstlU himself as a In countios of linder 25i000 resul of amendments passed by According t’o Swal- luded,the House of Representatives low s plan. existing probate yesterday. judges would assume duties of Approved with tour votes to the district judges which the or-spare were amendments by Rep. lgjnai bill would have created. Joseph Swallow, R-Alpena, de- * * w signed to insure that in the low-; Holb.rook s proposed svstem er court system the bill would would* combine groups of the /*■* • /»*. establish, each of Michigan’s smaller counties into Single dis- L.OSG IH V- / / V •ounties would have at least tricts with two judges each He me judgd. said that under Swallow's onc-^H Rep. Donald Holbrook. R. county, one-judge system, many 'Army Projects Shape Politics' Exom Begins in Kidnaping more men to the conflict. Lase in hi„ murder trial duced when the Legislature re- ah the other states also have! Frank “the Holy Father”1 WASHINGTON (AP) lconvincsJan.lt), posted losses ranging down to!Smjth ap ex-convict and close military-industrial complex has Alaska’s IQ. . ' friend'of Rockwell, was a ehar-lbecome a mai°r Poli«cal force * t * u , acter witness Monday for Patler. jfrough such steps as locating Vietnam combat deaths also] 4 . defense installations and plants are listed for Guam, the Virgin Smith told the Arlington Cir- jn the home districts of key con-islands and Puerto Rico, cuit Co"rt j“ry the s,ai» Nazitgressmen, Sen. J. W. Fulbright The basis for determining leadcr thought of Patler as “al-^aid today, state losses is the serviceman’s most a son• *ie sa'd ®ne month Each new project creates “a home of record, which may or before the Aug. 25 sniper slay-|constituency that will strive may not be his birthplace, in *n8> Rockwell confided to him[mightily to protect” it, he said, most cases this is his native tbat be *eared f°r b's and! adding that a politician wants to The preliminary examination .home but someservicemen list “suspected treacnery from] preserve “the good Will of his of Donald C. Olmsted, accused]as homes of record their par-within the Par‘y " ••will b- disagreed. Disagreement!mailed i| seemed to come trom those who cents, supported present U.S. policy in. Second-class rates, Covering Vietnam and were convinced itjnewspapers and magazines, will, was working, the source said, jgo from 1 cent to 1.1 cents next1 Noneconomic a Issues Divide r, • rr,nnrn . .... Tv iudfMXi in iho vmallor nminiicc ,as nomes ot record tneir par- r«v constituents by helping them to .ate iTinTn 9890f the Dec- 5 MRS 6f his!ent’s current home or the ^ Smith also testified he saw a get what they want.” the governmental officials he [or thc f,rs- 2r)0000 pieces man. )°^ thf ‘,(,urt. b'll. said he would have little work to do. ex-girlfriend from her Pontiac I tary bases where wives remain.'German Mauser pistol belonging y o ay o \e . wa - LAWYER-JUDGES EYED home, began in City Municipalj por all practical purposes the to party member Robert Lloyd yesterday with testimony (home-of-record system is re- In Richmond almost one year ie victim and hen, 24-year-]garded as relatively accurate in after Lloyd testified he loaned old roommate. [indicating the various state loss-]the murder weapon to Patler Judge Cecil B. McCallum,|g8 , land “never saw it again.” wbo raised Olmsted’s bond, There has been only a slight House Judiciary Committee had I™™ $4 00° to $10,000, adjourned| change in the ranking order of; hoped all duties of the district states with the largest num-jP-------------............ ... courts would be performed by jintla McConaghie, 24, testified] her of deaths since the first Rockwell at a suburban Wash-1 It was prepared for delivery lawyer-judges. ^ O^ted forced her from j jast spring. Illinois moved bare- ineton shopping center. ! in the Senate. Meanwhile, Holbrook •ame unde al- LAWYER-JUDGES EYED home. He also noted that in 13 of the 34 counties which Swallow’s Vj amendments were intended to!0 ^■the probate judges are! hot attorneys, Holbrook and the ! home at 1265 Featherstone and took her at gunpoint to ai again from p0ntiac Township motel. Wayne County Auditor Richard Among those Romney sawlyear under the minimum Tuesday was Sir Alec Douglas- then to 1.2 c'enls in 1969 and I Home, former Conservative!cents in 1970. prime minister. He favors neu-i This legislation also includes tralizing Vietnam, with the big a provision to ban any more hir- QA/ IIA\A/ powers guaranteeing its neutral-jing of relatives by cong-essmen. v r ” ity in the cold war through the federal judges, postmasters and U.N. Security Council. other federal offi-clmiders. DETROIT lUPIi - Only non- Upon his return home nextl The $4.1 billion spending-cut economic matters separated ne-monlh, Romney has no plans tolproposal approved by the Sen- gotiators for General,Mo t or "from* Wavn^' rZZtl a room at the King Motel, 1300 unveil any Vietnam “peace) ate is an outgrowth of the hassle [Corp. and the United Auto anH VhTm Vs N. Opdyke, after poUce and plan” irthiediately but the [earlier in the session between Workers as they prepared the Oakland County sheriff’s depu- source said he believes that if] the White House and House resume bargaining today bn a mLdhUle ,nJls present lorm. ^ stood by fof more than an the republican party and its;Ways and Means (omnevtpe. new contract—with less than 40 .. ,. , , ,, hour, presidential candidate criticizeiThe committee said tne admin-'hours remaining before the Austin said the proposed court President Johnson’s handling ofiistration would have to come up! deadline set for'a settlement, the war during next year’s cam- j with spending cutif bilorc it The UAW has set midnight paign, they also will have to out-1 would consider the President’s tomorrow as; ithe (leadline to Fulbright, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and a long-time critic of administration Vietnam war policy, comrtiented in the sec-★ ★ ond of two appraisals of the ef- The prosecution alleged that I feet of the Vietnam war on the used the pistol to kill nation. The victim was released from South Africa Under Fire in U.N. UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. their government, and attempts ernment had “no intention of (AP) -*■ South Africa, which for to remove the mandate over abdicating itsresponsibilitiesto-nearly two decades has frustrat-! South-W^st Africa have had ward the peoples of South-West system would impose an “un- Before the testimony began,[ed U.N. attempts, to change its much the same effect. [Africa.” fair and unwarranted financial McCallum cleared the court-)racial policies, faced fire on two Last December, the assembly] Ireland Foreign Minister burden” on His county. He esti-room spectators at the re-' scores in the'General Assembly voted overwhelmingly for a res- Frank Aiken told the assembly line an alternative polity of their proposal for a 10 per own for the voters to choose, (come tax surcharge,* The Weather i- reach agreement on a- new three-year pact for the 406,000 workers at the giant of the auto I industry Bui it has vowed noT to strike until after the new GM said it regards tomorrow’s deadline as a strike ultimatum. mated the County at $2.5 million Wayn quest of Oakland County Asst.'today. olution saying that South Africa this week that South Afric^s at- Prosecutor Rick Schmidt, “due] The 122-nation assembly was no longer had the right to gov-jtempt to hold onto South-West to the nature of the Case.'* j to discuss first possible ways of ern South-West Africa, which] Africa was “a challenge to the Graham Cancels All Engagements Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Cloudy today with\a chance UAW lies idem Walter of a few snow flurries or light sprinkles of rain. Highs 36 to 42. Reuthcr and GM Vice presi- ATLANTA, Ga. lAIU — Evan Cloudy and colder tonight and Thursday with snow flurries dent Louis G. Seaton and theiri®6*.*®1 Graham, undei likely. Low tonight 25 to 30. Winds southwest to west 15 to 25 teams of negotiators huddled str‘cl orders *rorn bls doctor miles today, diminishing a little tonight. Friday's outlook; Snow behind a news blackout for bas canceled all engagements— Defense Depart or snow flurries likely and cold. Precipitation probabilities; 30 about nine hours yesterday.’*.nr*uding MH&H j— —*.1 «u«. ««~ ienforcing its decision last yeariwas mandated to it by theiUnited Nations.” in custody in Oakland County [to end South Africa’s control'League of Nations. ^ ★ Jail in lieu of payment of bond.[over neighboring South-West Af- * * * Aiken urged the assembly to i rica. For the first time in its histo- be realistic, however, and ret- Later in the day the assembly ry, the United Nations had de-!ognize that the “Council for was to make its annual demand|cided to take over a country.!South-West Africa is incapable that the government of South But it soon became apparent jot carrying out its mandate." Killed in Viet 'Africa abandon its policy of that the world organization! The assembly, he said, should IHC7U v c I apartheid, or race segregation, could not enforce such a drastic 'place the matter in the lap of [and lift the restrictions on its ll*step without going to war. the Security Council as thc only; The|million blacks and 1.5 million. The assembly set up a 14-na- U.N. organ with power to deal Olmsted, a Flint resident ; 3 Michigan GIs WASHINGTON (AP) tent has citizens of mixed blood. tion “council” to recommend with it. The council has enforee- per cent today and tonight, 40 per cent Thursday ■nib* ' April 1968. >rd leaked out ho is had progressed. GM, the Atla . Ims already .said JSs the action o accept the $1 02 per sultation )s(s in wages and Iringe physician. Hie union hammered evangelist Fmfl Motor Co. and Graham rusades—until announced the names of three The Debates highlight the fu-'ways of administering the terri-'ment powers under the U.N. Michigan servicemen tility of repeated attempts by torv, but South African Foreign!charter and used them last year action in Vietnam. All the United Nations, prodded by Minister Hilgard Muller dial-: in calling for mandatory eco-other African members, toJenged the right of the United.nomic sanctions against the Tvat ...... of his more killed were in the Army, Quoting Dr. Waiter H. Smith,] They are Sgt. Richard G.|bring South Africa to heel. Nations to end his nation’s man-white minority regime •aharn’s director of crusades,Isherwood, son of Mr, and Mrs.) Attacks on apartheid have date from the League of Na-Rhodesia. But the sanctions mber said,Richard E. Sherwood of Jack- only helped to make the white tions. haven’t overthrown the Rhode- after long dm* son; Cpl. Robert J. Bawal, hiis-1South Africans rally around Muller declared that his gov- slan government. Half l ith Dr Graham’s band of Mrs. Jaqulyn Bawal of; who is treating the Marine City; and Cpl. Randy E.j ] i Jamaica,*' Dillinder, son of Mr. and Mrs. ! is recovering from Harold D. Dillinder of Dear-] born Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. Weather—Sunn/ | Give Luggage—It’s Sure to Please Inquest Sought in Teen's Death j C- ^ Luggage 'Conilimed From Page One) -CiiinmiissiorH'rs that Bronson's decision \wc fiiacfc on grossly inadequate facts ” lie sauffgUspension .of police officers un olved in a death until cleared of any viispicion of wrongdoing is standard procedure in most municipalities, and one Hiat should be followed in Pontiac. TOD SEVERE Although those speaking in favor of the suspension did not specifically accuse Hie officers of a deliberate malicious act they unanimously indicated that shooting a( a person fleeing a stolen car was loo severe an act lor the transgression in- NATIONAL WEATHER - A large band of precipitation In thn south-central states is forecast for tonight. Snow flurries are expected all along the Rockies and in thc Great lirtlll fTjjltm Warmer weather is predicted along the Last Coast. Clan I Barnes, executive director of Pontiac Area Urban League, said that rumors about the death were sweeping through the Negro community. Milton Henry, a former city commissioner and a Pontiac attorney, who filed I Uic petition for a coroner’s inquest, said f the same two officers—Travis Lively and 1 Dennis Mutrynowski—had arrested King during the previous week. others asking for the two suspension* were Mansfield Sumples, chairman of VOCAL; James McNeely, executive director of the Oakland County Commission of Economic Opportunity; James Dyer, an NAACP official; Donald Bau-drr„ regional director of the Michigan Civil Rights Commission, Hubert Price Jr. vice president of the Black Organization of Pontiac Youth; Rev. Fr. Frederick Klcttner of St. Vincent^de Paul Catholic Church; and Rev, Stanley Ste-fancic, of the Birmingham UnilitriatL... Church, a VOCAL member. Resistant Vinyl You are sura to moke a hit with this matching set of molded lug-gago that is aluminum reinforced with podded linings and unbreakable handles. The vanity cose has d mirror.’ With heavy duty locks and keys and comes, with matching luggage name tags. Your choice of red or blue. 14-Inch Matching Train Cate with Mirror 98 N. Saginaw Straat SIMMS™ Luggage - Basement Level TROY — The. school board plans to meet next Monday to set up a millage elction after approving another deficit budget last night. The approval is contingent upon the opinion of the schools’ attorney on the anticipated $233,000 deficit' for the 1967-68 school year. This deficit will be added to the $375,000 deficit from the last two school years, making a total of $608,000 (cash basis) in the red. The tentative verbal opinion of the attorney, said Supt. Rex B., Smith, is that the deficit budget is legal if the budget includes a provision of borrowing pn next year’s state aid and local taxes within die legal limit. ★ ★ w. With the deficits, the district is financially “approaching a dangerous point,” stressed Smith. He recommended that the millage proposal to liquidate the deficit and provide for operational needs for the next five years be put on the Feb. 19 ballot. PRIMARY DATE This is also the date for the possible city primary and the city request for a half-mill tax increase for the new library. Smith suggested that the district still have the election even if the city doesn’t have the primary because teacher hiring begins soon after February. The superintendent emphasized that the board and administration together set the amount of the millage to be requested so that the proposal becomes “a true board proppsal, not a ‘Smith proposal’ or a hurried citizens committee proposal.” District voters have twice this year defeated requests for 7-mill tax increases for one-year terms. The June 12 election was motivated by the school administration and a citizens' committee. Only a citizens’ committee pushed for the Sept 11 election. ★ ★ if After the June defeat, the board made 27 cuts in the educational program. CURRENT BUDGET This year’s budget lists expenditures of $3,587,713 and income of $3,354,736. About 88 percent of the budget goes for salaries and fringe benefits. The three master agreements with employes completed in October delayed the finalizing of the budget, said Smith. The remaining 12 percent of the budget finances fuel, utilities and supplies. Although income is up $432,638 over last school year, state aid is $40,000 less than the maximum hoped for this year because enrollment was about 200 less than expected last spring. LOCAL INCOME The superintendent also noted that Detroiter Arraigned on Marijuana Charge DETROIT (UP!) — A Detroit man was arraigned here yesterday on charges of concealing and transporting .107 kilograms of marijuana worth an estimated $220,000, the U S. District Attorney said. Some of it was reportedly meant for Oakland County. Hockey Stoup, 25, had also been arraigned Dec. 6 on a charge of possessing hashish, mescaline and marijuana, all hallucinatory drugs, worth an estimated $30,000, federal agents said. Ross Ellis, district supervisor of the bureau of narcotics of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, said the haul was the largest made by federal agents in the area over the last 30 years. Stoup allegedly shipped 107 kifo bricks of marijuana from San Francisco to Detroit in three footlockers, Ellis said. this year local sources will be paying about $440,000 more and state\ources about $6,000 less than last year: He explained that locally derived income is up because of an increase in the state equalized valuation of property. Expenditures are up ..$387,755 from last year due to increased costs of salaries, instruction, plant operation and transportation. Smith added that although the “salary schedules are quite competitive with our neighbors . they are more than the present tax rate will support.” ★ ★ ★ The budget was approved unanimously except for the dissent of Harold A. ROMEO — Sharp cutbacks in school services for the balance of the current year and a new election Jan. 29 face residents of the Romeo School District. The board of education voted Monday night to pare about $35,000 from its anticipated $100,000 deficit by cutting back ii\ teaching and maintenance supplies and in transportation services and purchases. The combined action was the result of a narrow defeat Nov. 27 for a renewal of three mills and an additional five new mills for the operating budget. The vote was 345 to 338. School Supt. T. C. Filppulla in announcing the decision for a new, election recalled a closer margin of victory in 1956 which built the town's new high ‘PARKS NOW’—James L. McLaughlin, an official with the National Park Service, spoke to the Downtown Pontiac Ki-wanis Club yesterday at Fortino’s Steak House. He stressed the importance of ob-tairyng land for future parks and cited the dangers of pollution due to urbanization. Janes who said he wanted more time to study it. ’ After hearing an enrollment import, the board indicated that after Christmas it will be faced with a teacher Shortage in the Hill, Troy Union and Big Beaver elementaries. Principals of these schools have reported that enrollments haVe been increasing weekly since Nov. 10. After the board approved payment of current expenses for stadium use, it commented that revenues aren’t near expectations. While the district has been able to pay bond principal and interest, it hasn’t put any money into the stadium replacement and stadium suplus funds. school. That issue, he recalled, passed by one vote. The new millage, if approved, would not be levied until the December 1968, tax bills, Filppula said. DEBT RETIREMENT Three of the additional five mills sought are earmarked for debt retirement and the other two for additional maintenance, the purchase of six new school buses, plus some remodeling and salary adjustment. The increase to the average property owner would amount, according to the superintendent, to, about $40 a year of $5 per $1,000 of state equalized valuation. “We are hopeful — and very much in need — of a favorable vote,” Filppula said. Renewal Funds Resolution OK'd OXFORD — The Village Council last night approved a resolution opening the way for payment of $198,492 in federal government Title I funds to cover the cost of surveying and plans for the Central Business District Urban Renewal project. The resolution will be forwarded to the Chicago office of Housing and Urban Development, according to Robert Smalley, village manager. A report by Robert Pearl of VHIcan-Leman Associates of Southfield, in regard to the project, revealed that letters will be sent to about 100 residents of the involved area asking for information. He said the letters, in the form of census questionnaires would be kept anonymous. The council gave Smalley approval to negotiate with Chester Bushman of Bushman Disposal Co. in regard to payments on village refuse pickup. Bushman had asked that either his contract which runs until May be canceled or that he be given an additional $100 a week until that time. He said he was not breaking even on the operation. THE PONTIAC PRESS Area News WEDNESDAY. DECEMBER 13, ]9«7 A—4 School Cutbacks, Ne\y Election Face Voters in Romeo District POPCORN FOR VIETNAM—Junior high school students ai» wir«»hot« In Lansing bag and package popcorn to be mailed to American n[ (he grain, and the students volunteered their time after a troops fighting in Vietnam, A popcorn company donated a ton# local newspaper suggested the program. Township Board Confirms Need for Sewer Setup ' FARMINGTON TOWNSHIP — The Township Board decided affirmatively on the necessity of a $74,520 sewer project for Medbury, Middle Belt and Hemlock streets in Supervisor’s Middle Belt Ten Mile Plat No. 2. The decision regarding the system to serve 52 lots came after a public hear ing on the project Monday. The second hearing on the project’s cost will be held in about two months when the assessment roll is drawn up, said a township official. In other action, the board approved three subdivision preliminary plats. They are: • Independence Commons neat Halstead, 11 Mile and Drake roads, being developed by Thompson-Brown " Co. • Wedgewood Commons on Farmington Road near Briar Hills subdivision, also being developed by Thompson-Brown. • Philip Judson Gardens North, on Drake Road south of Guy R. Polley subdivision, being developed by Leah-ner Associates, Inc. AP wirmhoto NEVER FORGETS—Not even a pre-Christmas costume party makes Mrs. , Donna Barry of Rockford, 111., forget It’s feeding time for her 6-month-old son, Jason. Decoration Entry Deadline Is Friday In Pontiac Twp. Junk Car Complaints Heard LAKE ORION — Home owners here have until 6 p.m. Friday to enter their homes in the Christmas decoration contest sponsored by the Orion Area Jaycees. Anyone in Orion Township is eligible to compete, according to Donald DeLong, Jaycee official. The club has received only five entries to date, he said. ★ ★ ★ Judges for the contest will be Village President Wallace Crane and Councilmen Arlie Reed and Fred Cole. Subdivisions Get Preliminary OK in Oakland Twp. OAKLAND TOWNSHIP — The way was cleared for construction of nearly a hundred new homes here last night as the Township Board gave preliminary approval to plats for three new subdivisions. Some 67 acres are involved in the new Coach Lamp Hills Subdivision being developed by Oakland -ftochester Development Co. of Rochester. Located adjacent to Oakland Valley Subdivision on N. Rochester Road, the development in its first stage will contain 30 homes. The board also approved preliminary plans for Oakland Valley No. 7 In the same area and gave fiirst approval to. the development of 40 lots by George Knorr of Rochester to Knorrwood Estates located in the area of Lake George and Orion Roads. The board voted $50 a month subsidy on a six-month trial basis to Fleet Ambulance Service. That amount with the $500 voted by Avon Township and $300 voted by Rochester is expected to keep an ambulance stationed in the area. It was pointed out last night that Oakland Township is also served by ambulances from Lake Orion, Oxford and Romeo. State Man Is Killed ASHLAND,.Wis. (AP) — George Paulsen, 30, of Ironwood, Mich., was killed Sunday in a two-car crash on Highway 2, 10 miles east of Ashland in the northern Wisconsin village of Odanah. PONTIAC TOWNSHIP - Junk automobiles and rising taxes occupied the Township Board Monday, Petitions from residents of the Taylor-Giddings roads area protested the alleged spread of a car-dismantling operation owned by Sam Gottesman on Taylor Road. Supervisor Roy Wahl announced suit has already been brought against the owner. Gottesman will be requied to show cause Monday in Circuit Court as to why he should be allowed to proceed, Wahl said. Counsel Studies Romeo Zoning ROMEO — A new zoning ordinance formulated by Dryker Associates of Birmingham with the village planning commission has been referred to the attorney for study. Clerk Norman Engel said the new ordinance provides for stronger and more enforceable zoning laws than the village presently has. Three trusees, John Keglcr, Kenneth Smith and Stanley Ludtke, were appointed to a committee to negotiate with the police officers’ union on salary. Patrolman James Reid was promoted to corporal. The council voted to cover parking meters from Dec. 14 to 26 for free parking for Christmas shoppers. A bill of $6,0Q0, for construction of a sanitary sewer adjacent to the Ford property, was approved. Brandon Schools Okay 2 Clinics BRANDON TOWNSHIP - Permission to build health clinics in each of the two .elementary schools was won b y Schools Supt. Henry Versnick Monday night at the Brandon Board of Education meeting. Versnick said he would solicit bids on s l e e 1 partitions to create permanent rooms for use by the Oakland County health nurse. The district owns most of the equipment accessary to furnish such rooms, he reported. Objections tp rising taxes were taken up by Wahl after the meeting. Township figures reveal that new lax bills are up 27 per cent over last year in the Pontiac School District and 21.88 per cent in the Avondale School District. INCREASE MAGNIFIED Clayton Lovelace assessor said a slight increase in millage had been magnified by the 11.82 factor with which he was required to multiply last year’s valuations. The factor was needed, he said, to meet the state requirement for a 50 per cent valuation. In other business the board passed a resolution backing the Oakland County Protective Service branch in Pontiac Township and tabled a request for new radio equipment needed by the fire department. Holly's Council Gets Petition to Annex 238 Acres HOLLY —'A petition to annex 238 acres of mostly vacant property to the village was received last night by the council. .Jack Albright, Holly surveyor representing Fred Barton, the ownelr, asked that the council consider taking in 175' acres to the north which contains a trailer park on 63 acres and 67 acres to the south which is vacant. The matter was referred to the planning commission with a decision due Jan. 9. Advantages under village government would include refuse disposal, water, added police protection and a lower insurance rating. ★ ★ * Barton is reportedly Interested in becoming a part of the city mainly for the refuse pickup that would be afforded his trailer park. The park already has a water and sewer system, according to vijlage officials. In other business last night the council approved a replat of Holly Bush Shores Subdivision No. 2. Previously the Wier Subdivision, It has been sold to Nicho-lie-Hudson Associates of Holly. A discussion of the present water system enlargement and a street improvement program also occupied council members. Bill to Prevent Disputes Okayed Senate Acts on 1-696 Snarl LANSING (AP) — A bill designed to untangle the dispute over proposed 1-696 expressway in Oakland and Macomb counties and prevent future snarls over route locations received Senate approval yesterday. The bill, approved 25-3 and given immediate effect, provides lhat communities, which now have veto power over Interstate highway routes, must submit to binding arbitration in route selection. The measure, already passed by the House, provides that once the State Highway Department has certified the need for arbitration in picking a highway route, the affected communities have 30 days in which to act. They may agree cither to a route or l:\ 7 &!. r4, pjj to a rb i I. r a I e d choice of a route voluntarily. If they fail to do cither, Ihe American: Arbitration Association would submit a list frorh which the communities could select a three-member arbitration board to settle the dispute finally. UNABLE TO AGREE Should they be unable |o agree on board members, the governor would be empowered to appoint the board, which would reach a binding agreement on the highway route, The provision allowing voluntary arbitration was inserted by the Senate to overcome possible Constitutional restric- tions, which reserve to local units Of government the right to “reasonable” control of their streets and highways* The completion of 1-696 has been held up for months by the failure of six southern Oakland County communltloa to agree on a route/, “We've reached the end of the road on voluntary commurilty agreement on a road," said Sen Sande$ Levin, D-Berkley, “and either the legislature acts or 1-69$ will never be built. “I think the vast majority of the people in the metropolitan area say they want the highway.” hei added. The bill now goes b$ck to the House for concurrence In the (amendment. 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Think of him. Think about a Zero King Corduroy coat. Warm and comfortable — fully lined with Orion acrylic pile and pile collar. Sort of warms your heart just to think about it. Thick and Thin Corduroy Wale in comfortable, all-weather colors: Antelope Tan and Cocoa Brown. Sizes 36 to 46, just $45. See Osmun’s wide selection of weather-proof coats. If you can’t give him warm weather, you can at least give him Osmun’s. a part of Christmas since 1931 SMUN’S FREE PARKING at ALL STORES' I Downtown Pontiac Open Every Night 'til V I Tech Plaza Center In Warren Open Every Night 'til 9 BUY! SELL! TRADE! ' USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! \Another on NY Mayors Team STORES FOR MEN &. YOUNS MEN NEW YORK (AP) —‘When he i search. Af the end of his first top executives in recent months i alleged shakedowns and promo-ior Robert Price and Press took office Mayor John V. Lind-year in office, he said one of his does the city no good and can tion payoffs in his department, retary Woody Klein, say recruited a breed of bright major accomplishments hadU tivel ^ the The j^year-old sanitation chief Price, 33, Lindsay’s lyoung men he called “urbgn- been the installment of “compe-L r ,.£«»■ .. .. ■ T7 ... i ' tots" and assigned them key I tent young men-the •urtanJswJtlon“ of the8e agencies- was not personally mentioned In political adviser and manager posts in his .administration. that new breed of nonpolitical First to leave the Lindsay any charges. of his four successful congres- But their turnover has been government Specialists—in key[team was- SanitaUon Commis-j Within days after Periconi’sJsional campaigns and his may- top Lindsay, appointees have re-sighed—some under fire, some in anger, some with regret and some with relief, The latest to leave, Water Commissioner James L. Marcus, one of Lindsay's top politi-ral advisers, resigned Tuesday] municipal positions of responsi-|s^°ner Joseph F. Periconi, whojdeparture was announced, Lind* oral campaign, left his pm**1 bility and judgment. However, the rash of resignations since the Republican mayor’s appraisal—seven since February—drew sharp criticism Tuesday from City Councilman Edward L. Sadowsky. “The firstj-equirement for the iwhile the district attorney’s of-1 successful operation flee was investigating a com-!agencies is for administrators to [plaint about his activities as an {stick with their job,’,’ the Queens [investment counselor before he‘Democrat said. “What appears joined the city administration, -to be a precipitous departure of i Marcus, slated for a top job las head of the Environmental Protection Administration, one [of the mayor’s proposed super-I agencies, fit the Lindsay specifications perfectly. LONG HOURS At the time of his nationwide {talent search, close aides said the mayor was looking for a 'Kennedy-type" administration, [meaning "young, brainy and vigorous.” Selection, they said, I was based on a man’s ability to work long hours and his absence of political affiliation, j Marcus,! the 37-year-old son-jin-law of John Davis Lodge, for* jmer governor of Connecticut, was graduated from the Univer-, sity of Pennsylvania, spent sev-j era] years < in business, joined 'Lindsay as a mayoral assistant' land began a steady climb to the — top of the Lindsay team. | His surprise resignation was announced as political leaders, [speculated on the status of;, Health Services Administrator \ Howard Brown, who is in the hospital with a 'case of infectious hepatitis. It has been rumored that Brown had also handed in his' resignation, but Lindsay said1 Tuesday he would make no' 'comment until Brown leaves the1 hospital. • Lindsay was initially pleased by the success of his talent; VNiBL SlREATEST TV VALUE EVER! NEW! Big 79 Sq. In. # % NEW BIGGER PICTURE * • (12" diaR. picture) full rectangular picture tube lots you see more of the picture because it’s as rectangular as a TV scraan can be! BILL PETRUSHA & SONS TEL-HURON SHOPPING CENTER F£ 3-7879 PONTIAC 1550 UNION LAKE RD. 333-6 86 UNION LAaE I T-HK PONT I AC, PItKSS, WKDNES.D A V, DKCEjV’lWTCIt 18. 11W OPEN DAILY 10-10 SUN., 10-7 ’ul your l><*yt iiHil forward ll dtriMhia- with fabulous sin or the family front Kmart! “MENAGERIE” OF SUPPERS romping in pin. A “CORRAL” OF COWBOY BOOTS Our Reg. 5.97 — l)i*count I’rirn ___ a H. Black leather ImnN Cor childirh. Hip top ainl, i|e>fi(;‘u’ive riit« li'inp. A||| MEN’S CORDUROY CASUALS “IN-LOOK” MOCCASINS OurRrg. 8.ft? - ,1 1). ('.Ohio nnimith li. FLUFFY, COMFY SLIPPERS CRESCENT TOE DRESS PUMP f. With how. It lack peuu tie black, brown, blue patent i “CORSAIR” TYPEWRITER 36“ rallFs SMITH-CORONA . GIFT BOXED VU-LIGHTER AND BALL POINT PEN Our Rrg. 44.74, 4 lhty* 84-character keyboard, pi acl tabulator, more. Discount Price ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER 107” Charge It Handnome gift act with \n-lighter and de|icniluhlr hail point pen. Boxed for gift giving. f Our Rug. 126.74,4 Ifny* Famous name Rift walche with expansion band*. Lady Ronson Gift Shaver |CLEAN REMINGTON £ Men's Remington 1 Selectro Shaver l l®96 Our llrg. 21.lilt, t Ihiyi Afljn>li«ltie hliavinu brails 4 shaving, positions. *0 Men’s Narelco U Flip-top Shaver I I466 Our Keg, 15.OH, 4 Day « m riniUinr brail electric sh.r ;3p cr, flip-open cleaning WALTHAM' Men’s, Women’s 7-JEWEL WATCHES 1288 WOMEN’S 17-21-JEWEL WATCHES 2288 17-JEWEL SKIN DIVER’S WATCH 14“ GIVE DEPENDABLE TRAVEL ALARMS 333 Pendant Watch, Necklace, Earrings 7” Gin BOXED, BUNKER WATCH 14.66 IHwuunt Vrler,Charge It Waterproof,* electronically little teHied. Charge lb' "Waterproof m long at com, crown end Our Rug. 3.9b, 4 Duy* Folding travel alarm v radium hands, square j«j Our Reg. 8,44, 4 /tor* Pendant watch, necklace and earring* in gift box. , Our Rfg. 6.96, 4 Day* Blinker pendant watch i variety of dainty atyles. name gif) atrlier with dainty bands. Save Every Day at Smart. . . America’s (greatest Family Store The comfy stitch slipper comes Sapphire Blue, Forest Green Gold. Sizes 5 to 10. Men’s Dress Shirts Van Heusen and Bentley offer their best for Christmas gifting. In oxford or broadcloth fabrics. Perma-press of Men's Neckwear man who doesn't welcome e tie (or two) —especioHy >m a man's store. ’2 *. *4 jr Men’s V-Neck Pullovers Our fine classic lambswool sweaters come in a host of colors for perfect Christmas gifts. Sure to please any man. Toa/tA ftyv qarland makes all the different Lambswool Coordinates A wonderful selection of soft cuddly gowns in lovely soft pastel colors to delight any little lady. Sizes 4 to 14. fine imported lambswool spun super-soft. Perfect V-neckline with the beautiful drapeability of a saddle shoulder for wonderful fit. Wonderful colors to brighten your days and nights. Sweater Pants PRINCESS GARDNER “SNOWDRIFT” Accessories Bright voricoior underlay petals with gold-marked stems and. nailheads on Buffalo Calf. Fashion colors. A. French Purse........ B. Registrar* Billfold..... C. “Continental' L Clutch........ Ladies’ Leather Gloves From the very button lengtr lined styles. Also available: Key Gard* Case Eyeglass Case.. Cigarette Lighter Cigarette Case . Handbags The comfy stitch slipper comes Sapphire Blue, Forest Green Gold. Sizes 5 to 10. Little heel, rounded toe, and a bold buckle that shines out, make this the shoe to wear with thjs season's shorter skirted suit. Black, or brown calf and black patent. Sizes 5 to 10, AAA to B widths. Ygung Men’s Blazers Blazers make the holiday scene in a big way. Classic three button styling with patch flap pockets and contrasting buttons. Bronze or navy Hopsack. Van Heusen and Bentley offer for Christmas gifting. In < broadcloth fabrics. Perma- Harmonizing slacks in tatter-sail checks and plaids. Men’s V-Neck Pullovers Knit Pajamas ^ Our fine dossic lambswool sweaters come in a host of colors for perfect Christmas gifts. Sure to please any man. Munsingwear knits a fine balbri pajama of 100% cotton rin a variety of colors. Sizes 8 to 20. If Always W ' a Perfect ’ Gift- A Lion Store Gift Certificate SHE COLOR THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 18, 19C7 ■ . M t' 'ikfal:/ fed ag FRESH LEAN 9-INCH LOIN END 7-RIB END LOIN CHOPS oo»69* DELICIOUS Kroger Oatmeal.... • • 2-OZPKC 25* BIROS EYE FROZEN Chopped Broccoli ..2 »<%“/« 39* INDIAN TRAIL FROZEN WITH ORANGE Cranberry Relish......<."■"«33* BROWNULATED Domino Sugar............«* 29* BORDEN'S NONE SUCH Mince Meat............»-»*,<« 57* FROZEN BANQUET BUFFET SUPPER Spaghetti & Meatballs2«=89* BANQUET FROZEN 4 VARIETIES Cookin’ Bags............V»«22* FOR CAKES i PASTRY Velvet Flour..............5»«59* COOLRISE Robin Hood Flour.... 25 .m*!** Senate SeWi slSPjocial Security Snag THE PONTIAC PEESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13,1967 Increased Access to Capitol Sought KC Officials Win Vote :. WASHINGTON (AP) — Easy go up a maximum of $52.80 in ■ House passage and Senate ap-^ 11968, more jh future years. ’3 proval after a that's the Houf« cqnferees generally , .. . . w ■, prevailed when they met with; far Senate counterparts on dif-|v But there'sjfc move in the Sen-: ate to defer%lnal action until * next year and meanwhile try to | work out a new compromise increasing Social Security bene-1 ^enrvrrsionr'Ms^^y’ the,closer to the Senate’s expressed! fits and taxes. — ~ ■* two chambers. The final prod-[wishes, The House takes up today the jUct cut baek sh ly hlgher ben. measure boosting a benefits at |efu and tax figures voted b the lrast IS per cent^f he minimum ,Senate * monthly payment would go from $44 to $55 a month and the! HOUSE OK EXPECTED maximum from $142 to $160.50. j So the compromise, very Wives over 65 would, as now, lmuch like the bill the House ori-i i get 50 per cent in addition. ^ jg^ally passed, is expected to be * * * ! approved there without much The Social Security tax would I ado. i It appears, however, that Con-igress’ urge to get a Social Security bill on the books before adjournment, hopefully set for this weekend, would prevail. Senate] Democratic leader Mike Mans-I field said he expects to call up the measure as soon as possible! after the House acts. * I Much of the controversy over [as many aid recipients a the bill is; centered outside the file into paying jobs.. actual Social Security provisions.. : * * * RELIEF OUTLAY| Some senators have talked of The omnibus measure also trying to separata and pass now contains a section designed, to!ffie Social Security provisions, ............. „ .. . keeping the, controversial wel- slow the swift growth of reM [are secyong for further nego-outlays f^r families with MB tlation, But that move appeared Ipendent childreh. It would set.a L bave chance of success. pendent c [limit based on the present proportion of aided children to the; total number of children, in the I One of the oldest preserved state (forts in America is located in Also included in the bill is Beaufort, S.C. Ft. Frederick what sponsors term a work in-1was constructed by the British! centive program designed to put1 to ward off pirates and Indians. LANSING (AP) - The State I Capitol would be open to the [public seven days a week instead of the present five day [under'terms of a concurrent {resolution, introduced in the House Tuesday. The resolution, sponsored by Rep. Matthew McNeely, D-De-troit, calls on the State Depart-] ment of Administration to provide public access-to the Capitol each day of the wedk, at least from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. The only days exempted would be ['Thanksgiving,£ Christmas and 'New Year’s day. KANSAS CITY (AP) - Kansas City’s reform city government, in office since 1963 and reelected this spring, won another decisive vote in a special election Tuesday, Voters defeated by nearly three-to-one' a proposal which would have shortened the terms of elected city officials from four to two years. I ★ ★ ★ V I The unofficial vote against the proposed city charter amendment was 32,963 to 11,275. Only 23 per cent of the registered voters turned out. I Had it been approved, the charter amendment would have forced another municipal election of council members and municipal judges next spring. FIGHT WITH FIREMEN Leading supporter of the proposition was Fire Fighters Union Local 42 which has fought with the city administration over wages and hours the last 18 months. Stanton M. Gladden, president of the local, said its aim was to “get rid 'Of the,people in city hall today—all of them.” Firemen circulated petitions which prompted the special election. 17177/1 LOW LOW WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. PRICES AND ITEMS EFFECTIVE AT KROGER IN DETROIT AND EASTERN MICHIGAN TNRU SUN., DEC. 17, 1967. NONE SOLD TO DEALERS. COPYRIGH7 1967. THE KROGER CO. SPECIAL LABEL NORTHERN TISSUE S mm ' * s, BORDEN’S SHERBET COUNTRY CLUB CREAM *LL PURPOSE FOR BAKING OR COOKING JEWEL Shortening 3*44 VALUABLE COUPON I WITH THIS COUPON AND I 15.00 PURCHASE OR MORE , BORDEN'S SHERBET OR [ COUNTRY CLUB ICE CREAM I FIRST A , H-GALW Valid thru Sun.. Due. 17, 1967 at Kroger Dot. A Eout. Mich. ib35 SECOND1 V* GAL WITHCOUPON AND S5 PURCHASE -sg|| GALLON-® si••jf B JAr' GOLD MEDAL FLOUR NEW LOW, LOW PRICES! SAVE EVEN MORE PLUS YOU GET TOP VALUE STAMPS! KROGER BRAND EVAPORATED CANNED Pet Milk......... CHOCOLATE Nestle Morsels KROGER BRAND L 1C< AN 19 ' 3Q< FOR SALADS OR SANDWICHES French’s Mustard.. TANGY FLAVOR Kroger Catsup....... SEVEN SEAS ITALIAN ALL PURPOSE Wesson Oil*1 DOMINO LIGHT OR DARK BROWN OR 10-X Sugar.....Wi‘ IS4 Cake Mixes.:. PURE GRANULATED EATMORE GOLDEN Pioneer Sugar..5Lc49* Roll Margarine.. Si OFF LABEL KRAFT PHILADELPHIA Haadi Wrap....«Si"39* Cream Chouse.:. SALTED COUNTRY CLUB ROLL BUTTER A02EN Salad Dressing. KRAFT SALAD DRESSING Miracle Whip... HEINZ Whita Vinegar. 1,16* 19* 29* 48* FOR PIES COMSTOCK Sliced Apples........... ,-«*m24* OCEAN SPRAY WHOLE OR STRAINED I it Cranberry Saace......’«»* 22* KROGER BRAND Grapefruit Sections • •CAN 24* KROGER FRESH WHITE GRADE 'A’ LARGE EGGS REG. OR HARD-TO-HOLD LANOLIN PLUS SPRAY 44 FOR ORAL HYGIENE LISTERINE Antiseptic HELLMANN'S FLAVORFUL Mayonnaise................"'59' BUTTERY FLAVOR- Wesson Oil...............X,T66« WELCH’S Grape Jelly........38* CLOVER VALLEY SMOOTH OR CRUNCHY Peanut Butter........2 A*, 69* BRISK FLAVORFUL Lipton Tea Bags.....'”‘”99* IODIZED OR FREE RUNNING Morton Salt....... r0-QZ*PKG 11* FRANCO-AMERICAN Spaghetti...................14* DINTY MOORE Beef Stew.............c‘<«49* LA CHOY Bean Sprouts........ • •••CAN8 13* CHUNK STYLE K5jG ORCHARD PRIDE Applesauce asm mnsM i KROGER BRAND Mandarin Oranges...^1m 21* FOR COOKING-PLAIN l-LB Contadina Tomatoes.« 28* YELLOW CREAM STYLE 21* I® -CAMPBELL'S Pork l Beans...........S,* 13* ■J GREEN GIANT 9 Sweet Peas.............« ?m 22* 3 KROGER BRAND Pork lBeans.............tiP ll« SUTTON BAY 2 I Apple Juice.......... IS IS WELCH’S § <1 Grape Juice.......... | ;fj KROGER BRAND 1 Pineapple Juice.... RECONSTITUTED REALEMON Lemon Juice......... CHICKEN NOODLE Campbell’s Soup.......Hrili 15* CAMPBELLS Tomato Soap...,.......«"(»11* BETTY CROCKER Noodle Almoadine 1 is DRY OR NORMAL FOR INDIGESTION Brack Shampoo....if •!” Bromo Seltzer.......:,°ri“r 87* HAND LOTION PLUS WHITE Cora Hashers....' .V 77* Toothpaste.........48* 9NTN THU COUPON On Z' ' ANY TWO PACKAGES i COUNTRY OVEN • COOKIES 8 Yullitl.ru Sun., Due. 17, 1961 Kruger Out. A Butt. Mich. EKIElBE^a ■LBBBl BORDEN’S NONE SUCH Mince Meat.., 9-02 *«< FOR DISHES-MILD Ivory Liquid .Jo-r.TL 57* HEKMAN TASTY Club Crackers 1-LB 461 MORE SUDS FOR DISHES Joy Liquid.. VITA-BOY DELICIOUS Bacon Crisp 3-0/ 4A( ' BLUE RIBBON Ammonia., Vtgl“32* tITH THU COUPON ON $2.00 PURCHASE CHRISTMAS CANDY J COUPON ON ANY TWO PACKAGES BftowN N’ Serve ROLLS Volii thru Sun.. Due 17. 1967 83 or Kruger Out. k Butt. Mich. I FOR NORMAL OR EXTRA DRY SKIN ALSO MEDICATEb FOR CHAPPED HANDS Pacqein’s Hand Cream 2%-OZ WT JAR 60* FLUSH-A-BYES Disposable Diapers 24-CT PKG NEWBORN ■ MEDIUM TODDLE* 88* »r* Form Cheese Mixture into Wreath Deltoiottlr Samagl Carry Our* — 682-9811 Open Cvnin« PONTIAC MALL Ip Denmark, as In the rest oflpumpernickel round*, wrap In| Rind of Vi orange j" the world, sorpe of thq best dec- foil, and retttrfa to tile refrigera- 1 cup blanched almonds i 'orations of Christmas are edi-jtor to bepome very stiff. Cut 1 cup raisins • ’ I •We-. ,0:. jthe cheese roll Into slices. I Vt pound cdbe sugar -;,'v * II Cookip stars and reindeer are Shape a wreath around t h e| l bottie-Akvavit or brandy i invitingly arranged on tiered)border of a flat platterwithal-i Va orange sliced thin for gar-! epergnea, candy canes h a n g ternate slices of cheese and I nish from tne - tree, packages or robotopumpernickel,standing Empty the claret inta chaftngl sweet* are piled high in com-on edge. Press together firmly dish of glogg pot. Tie spices in a! potes, their gay wrappings giist-at the iniide edges to, hold the square of cheesecloth, adcl to! rCjebhahuJlb SatUUf' ■ ' '::S MEXICAN FOODS k AMERICA’S L ^ HOMES Write for free, exciting recipe* “MEXICAN FOODS FOR AMERICA'S HOMES" Gebhardt Mexican Foods Co. San Antonio, Texas Here Is an Excellent Christmas Gift for the Entire family A PA Pounds Choice Quality 1 MERRY CHRISTMAS WREATH - This wreath, fashioned of pumpernickel rounds and a rich and creamy mixture of tangy Danish Blue Cheese, butter, ahd minced r CENTER CUT BLADE £0 IHUCKC TEAK ^ • 10 Lbs. PORK CHOPS BB B • 10 Lbs. FRYING CHICKENS ■ t *10 Lbs. BUTCHER BOY M I m STEAKS B gjlhfc • 10 Lbs. CHUCK ROAST Hi 1 w;:! • 10 Lbs. REEF HAMBURG gdn) Cash and Carry. . . All Freezer Wrapped Pontiac Pride Spicy Ring Baby Link LIIV / HOFFMAN’S EVERY DAY LOW PRICES! " HyP Ik / 1 lb, 4 oz. loaves SLICED BREAD , . /T\,i Homogenized 1 % milk........... r^King of Roast Vj Creamed m BONELESS I cottage cheese ^FANCY ROLLED Gal. Carton Pound Carton MIN RIB ROAST TRADITIONAL EGGNOG —* Bdat six egg yolks and ’4 cup sugar until thick and lemon colored. Beat in two cups ligiit or whipping cream, two cups milk, teaspoon salt and two teaspoons vanilla. Beat six egg whites until they hold stiff peaks; fold into egg yolks mixture. Serve in chilled punch bowl; sprinkle with nutmeg. Makes 2% quarts of nonalcoholic eggnog. Our Own Pontiac Pride Sugar Cured - Hickory Yorkshire Style BONELESS PORK ROAST Your Choice Dress up your party tray with low-calorie shrimp Cottage Style PORK STEAK KING OF BEEF ROAST - FANCY When friends drop in during the holiday season, casual en-tertainment can be easy and enjoyable. Just plan ahead by having the necessary ingredients readily available for this; quick-as-a-wink punch recipe, I and by having an assortment of doughnufs Or cookies on hand. A fruit-filled holiday punch will add a colorful note to your serving table. Add a grouping' of festive angel figurines, sur-! rounded by bright green holly leaves, on a red table cloth to complete the holiday setting. Four-Fruit Holiday Punch 1 cup halved strawberries 1 cup canned pineapple chunks i 1 cup sliced bnnahas 2 lemons, thinly sliced 3 cups strong cold tea, 3 28-oz. bottles grapefruit soda Arrange fruit in bottom of punch bowl; cover with cold tea. Chill for one hour. Then fill punch bowl with ice-cold! grapefruit soda, (or Diet va-: riety for weight-watchers). | Makes about 30 punch-ciip servings. Helpful Hint; Always pour your carbonated beverages gently and slowly to retain maximum carbonation. ALL BEEF - CHERRY RED HAMBURG In 5 Pound Lots or More Letter amounts at counter price* PROOUCE FOR A HEARTY WINTER MEAL FRESH PARSNIPS ... 19 FRESH TURNIPS ... % 19 TENDER CARROTS .. .... 15' COOKING ONIONS . 3.^19' PRE-CHRISTMAS HOME FREEZER SPECIALS! Order Now — Just in Time for Christmas Delivery — No Money Down Gulf Klsf Shrimp SMOKE HOUSE SPECIALS t Smoked Rile 1 Polish Kielbassa 051 ib. g Ring or Chunk t BOLOGNA........ ***5 fb. I Charge It! DIO MONEY DOWN! fresh from the Gulf Coast, home waters, for .nature’s tastiest shrimp CUT - WRAPPED - DELIVERED Gulf Kist captures all of the succulent and delicate flavor of shrimp from tt^e sunny Gulf. No peeling, no waste. Already cooked for you. Good cooks keep several cans handy—ready for good eating any time. Ideal for weight watchers—only 170 calories In a whole can. Economical, too, on# 4-1/2 oz. can Is equal to a 10 oz. pack of frozan unsholled shrimp. Sugar Helps Flavgr J of Canned Soups There are two reasons why sugar is employed as an ingredient in canned prepared soups. Used in New England clam c h o w d e r, French-style petite marmile with beef chunks and vegetable*, split pea with ham soup, and others too, sugar both Intensifies and also blends individual flavors of other foods. I *»lf Kist § sBor.rak fj; 3 ■ 8 (RETAIL DIVISION) | I 8 A.M. tO £ 526 NORTH PERRY STREET, PONTIAC J 6 P M I Serving the Greater Pontiac Area.Jor Over 50,Years \ | ' ' 1 FR** PARKING IN REAR .., TELEPHONE 332-1100 NNGCMHPHMMMHmDHHBHMIMtttMMMlMMHiBBBBBiOHMHUMHMMMMMHMONMBHMHBWMHBEMB A „ ■ /' / l ' /■ C—*"®© THREE COLORS mwm 1200 FREE GOLD BELL GIFT STAMPS FILL A BOOK FOR THAT CHRISTMAS GIFT ARMOIMt CANNEDf1 HAMS | 5-Lb* Cans THE PONTIAC PRESS, WK1)NKSDAV, IJ»E( EMHER I;k 1tm7 fi i t Institutional Trading Eyed Finance > Stock Study Suggested ~j Early Trading Active | Canada Asking Stock Mart Prices on Rebound U. S. Peace Try The fallowing are top prices! covering sales of locally grown! produce by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots.i .... , ,u Quotations are furnished by the 1AP)---The slock the upside Among these Detroit Bureau of Markets us rebounded early today number of fairly low-price stocks points^ after four straight sessions of which gained fractions. These in- A mom'; mild decline Trading was ac-1 eluded1 Brunswick, General Pub- stake |1 live. lie Service, Amejjgim Motors qj $ 7 I GanilklSitTiumbereJ losses by and American Photocopy. Airway. > a ratio of about 5 tq 3. J Also among the volume lead- Prices s, The Dow Jones Industrial ers, Sperry Rand. American Air- IIoiRgstak:e,’lell in fore than 2 of Friday. Produce |penally f* t , pi'il'.riu ■ .it". Viet Gamble Urged an>i i TbSjfr’rh \i i i i H Ameri- , - new reports of determination gainers. J -^oHianySmelting shows li li.u Mntial 1<» maintain the dollar.at $38 an jpg; los-'es ..lavce cod ilc^riew sc\. M ... On 'I: i so' 7-hc r.i'-st a-i.vdy traded is-;gold agreement to protect the Ins a| i --- sues^howed* i 1 ig n joi ’'gqn li 'I : dipped mark record for such a study. * * * It wouida Iso be a start to* Lail, tins month Hep John ward developing the informs* m,.Moss of California and Hastings! tum needed to outline the bqtmd-I Keith _ ol Massachusetts, who] aries of the study, which «B If* have long j-tudi-vd performance'quire not only masses of statilr lactivitn s. formally proposed bcs but some very" discerning HPttiat the SEC alone carry out the judgments to be made of thettU W study. Perhaps also it would lead to, * * * better informed share oVftgtMK (j Even th’ president ,.t " ’’1 teim + avs' to show the flashiest, rt- n(‘ .. ' - V- .w* r.. 5^ 'lt J] 11, -net h'uii.m ‘L: i * M 'In i I ‘Oi (‘ontiietlfe '.ourca1 .said he did J * *- . Itj i.1 iJ by Canadian* Manuel E/.Coheh;’:thdU'inan of \jw.j feiieiit ^ r, Bft!i^e('urge's & K,m h.mge-( m i1 *t bs.'iihA "^1 i*!f~] , f' ..*Jnp,\ J^a^e * *i 1 a ., ■ (I m ■ * I. .,s lieu l| «^m- broil f stl i\ i,......... o' i . . V 1:a* ari.ie, and we |n*>\v it ■|r.nnn.' No sin study in Id be a '•amhi'*. as has at- now exists, alihnngh tiie co.t "l ’D,.. id;, been risk' d m mor-wid ^orman^|, sprec.Jm.^ ; ,| 1.1 ■ alii mpts at a milit..: \ u I1HC' ! i it compelled two weeks ago to "»"S know relatively little ;liarp price bre,lk jf| publi(, silence and;about Jbmg fund;s buying and ult of per- •S(-’lUng. GROWTH NOTED yof'the R’ (. m|i card 'IBM BEFDins w bo si i1 DETROIT LOGS A11 »*.g. p w, j\ CHICAGO POULTRY Livestock ■8 " 1 G ‘ ’ ” " ■ j.; I^L'Jv.'iu‘‘l ?§ o'. ‘ b" ' Us ... HELP OFFERED a ' : _ ; ;; .; ‘ ‘ 1 m ■1 76 a. 7>." • Raytheon iOT1* " iYt: 1./4 s■ Vi.i.^ijio’C•' . i.4 Reading % ■ Martin ot 11 ed Canada's "un- i jit i?’ a .. ' . ■ "* j ; . u teri help'’ in the execution ,it ; .* ■; ■. '"■9^ 'I S ,G- 'I1'1 ' . S m ; ' V' a. '■ ■ 1 ■; ; c 1: cfal lornmla lor ouilir.;'. ■: !;. ' k. d'a.,. ' ii, , IS' V...l' : ' yJ ' ;• r^"'Srd .J'*,*' 5. :«,Sc.>'':'s’<*V'ia/,i ., " K... s and 4aijtm have liad : ' ' . c- . n o 'i s; : i 4. ‘. V' ‘ ;■4 . , two meetings onlraetnam in a t ' ” f‘<> ' ■' - i.■■■ iv » ii V.',’ v"! J' 4 Bius-cls 11:■ week and an e.\- -‘I-.,;' , .-Ini 1 1 hav c anotIn r Tin:: s & \ ‘jjji n 1 v ia ioi 1* ihi4 li./.. 1 icav r 1 ,#r ni iL'f' J 4 ■ ; 1; : '7' * * ♦ * The filin'.-n*!- were meeting » today to i"ii if!* ^ $3 i pc, is tor iti.-il i ■ N Vi 11 .( 11ti'm11 im the c\plcr.it|. ii and cumdmalioii d | bin., i i ecitmg along u itii the ; Soviet r fe. WWI Vets Will Install New Officers l lyde I! itcid hi t Ik it Biriningfi:im.|Wll •><’ , mnmander ot die & ■1 t ans of " Wm Id War I Ban * i ■ Id m . .. iblUMT HI i t!:*;.*. I k'l n Sund,iv .;i I! '• .''iin n, ;,ii gion lla". 20'.; Viburn ■ I,, 'I be in.port;nice ol a study of in.*.tifiiliun.il investors grow* ■su<). daily, tor institutions have [sen- grown from about $88.6 billioit in assets in 1S*45 1o more thart * .n^h!Ve failed to recognize that urt an action by draft chief' ondiUong hav changed. "Wis !', llcr -.licv Uiih will! n ll PERFORMANCE CULT ,^ub As tije. performance Other miiee Ou sipB tailed \lu !i jii'iicli d i'J'c [ (b. . le / bUl LIVE VI C i, * J ^.000; butthers slpady to 25 high 190^230 lb itt.25*19.25, 94 head * 19.75; 1 3*220-240 lbs 17.75-1* 50/ M » 2 American Stock E^ch AtaK'Ma'jl ArkLGas V cult , , / ., niK.,_ spreads, colleges, municipali- 1 " . /' , ", ,' ’ . , „ , lies, states, banks, colleges and ,u. one ll Cd by the inundations are• tecemuj more ,• ..sot .a ion- c in i 8‘. interested in activating their .. . iimiuainlei 1 l.> I. 1 .’l tS ' ' . ‘'‘.“"J.jpomolios. Munster vice «-*mnn.*n:l--i. .mlm ll. . 1,1'* , 8,1 • -“Many of these people don’t dc Muryillmwas. w.il- Dauphin, quartern! > am". Ayr*;; befermems ‘ro”1 know bow ^ perform,” said one Millm chaplain• t aarlc. \, pm'sojis yvhc *1*1 'Mere with ibe prominent portfolio manager Phipps, imige advocate: Guy C. Hidiu ling 11oTe^ssj He urged the thjs week “Eventually they’ll Boppy, adnilan1: Sam mi F b .md . to tJni-iir .va n persons simply be trying to outguess' ■ -ionj , n | i alui c ANNUAL MEETING on h . h"Ui* tn (J,‘1 ...rv -- ■ 1 be lor, Ign in,luster .. toe 1,. T,.u.;U.p. Antonia|AdJSth Imaugil*. making them each other. 4 NATO countries are bolding ’oUa seroeant-at-arms. subject to priority induction into* *. ★ ★ • their unnu.'.l winter meeting to-jy „. ... . , the M*mci*. : Nevertheless, not everyone is ,'.e and Thursday after two Auxiliary offic^s wil' 'f * * * endorsing the concept of such a ' "S YV It was this poll! V. announced,study. The new president of the ' " Mrs. Helen Shindorf ot 3170 lu x- '» H i in n < j 26 letter Investment Bankers Association, Waterford Township. lojdit bo ids, that broughtihens, Prancis R. Schanckjif . lo, iissf : i pish ■ It'Dininr- 'him'>into conflict with Atty. Gen.|Chicago, has disagreed wtth 1 Alter President Charles de Mrs. Mary (art? is Senior jiaiTi:sfev ('| "i * 'Cohen’s suggestion. ■‘Gaulle wilhdiew Fi mee li tun vice * president Mrs. William ' “If the owners can’t run their ibe military organizalioo ol die .lens, dr . vice presiding Mrs. . * . , . own business.” he said, “it is alliance, Belgian Foreign Minis Finn n :Seliijigeck. treasurer: ' lA 1<( ' ,.U ' S .'doubtful that the government 'J ter Pierre Harmel proposed that Mrs. Ayers Miller, chaplain.; we sat • i.th t> s |> °f’“sa 8,can do better.” ' t!ii members examine what it Mrs. Hayward Gullatle, guard; u 1 uncons i u iona a shortTFRM TRADING . ,*• . ..... ,, ■ Mrc T’ii .r,i. Ault seeretarv Irarv to Selective Service aw. SHOKI-1EKM IKAUiNu ' eould do m the future. B:; m ini pi's tanne Aim, stueiaiy, . n,ir«ni9 ‘ dob reniaiTi to in a*i dneld M>' >-"•» Mm, v mser, tru-t*-; court ACTION a However,, with such currents 4 .. . i . nid Mrs Gertrude Hersec con- , . . , , , . moving through the stock mar- : «Kamsl .Syv,cl aggress,on. but .t , The dvpan,.a*:*,, is said to fee ^ a bstud certainly fi, in ’ ,,li,n-v ^ '"d are convHiccd ' * * * Umt if an >n I ideal is guilty of demand For one thing, it might * 'his 5s no longer so necessary 3 fl bea,,,. wil, be a crime such as destroying a ansWer tfie question of whether ■■ ml want to put the emphasis on M s Margaret ,,1(( num, ^alt interfering with short.^rm trading is necessary .* reducin'’. te.iMon with vloseow. ^ , (|J Mr,. „ ,ba the drill, he should be prosecut- for greater profit, except to bro- .nr|, . " ed in court r;,tl -r tli.ui subject kJj^ ed to lntmediate'uidui tin j t is remarkable that in a The Nati 'i,d Student Associa-ispgcuiativp market a mutual . , lien, will eami ' units at 335 fund with perhaps the greatest Accountants Will l ' , , ,; .Wking a leder- gain this year, an increase of ,i!>' (Ji“'neti (’hurt injunction in more th;m 100 per cent, literally Meet Tomorrow Washington to prevent Hershey i ,f warehouse of long-term, or In Tl; draft bonrd ; from cn-fundamentally sound, unglamo-i,ii . in" i.i ydfm’tive. rous stocks and bonds. ■ The Oakland Counlv ( liaptcr "4V" ' " '• “ " of I hi* N.ilienal Av.ii'i.V, nil ol Bloodmobile Set in City Monday 14We can all give blond, aid Dr Fran! Ellis, ilireelnij till* Si Hi! ll'*; I “ I (*1 II Mldlig,' Ik'd IT" .*, Blond Pro i! I'a * in .mum ;ur, I >ci ■ mbci l)|i oil mobile (laics 1 .ac ,|i !.'!,• *.: ’ 1 be ! I *1 i n e! ai d ■ between m * " !’ '»• Bel . nl ■; blon.|i"u a. Ti 1111) I *'. in Mm dm and li l Hill I; 11 it VV I I ll" d I: Dei* ;*. 'iicral menilii** ' ing ton iiw-ai 7 p'rn Stocks of Local Interest fl ftIqurgs ,ffob!Cudahy J~ | increased lin^IngiweHno <*nn Ut'liflet. WMi ChernlcAj MUTUAL BUNDS R^itiVfrk during ) .1 JONES AVER AO f. g Treasury Position WASHINGTON (APT-K&ondmg cDifo a vaar D«C. 1, 196? Balance - f 1t.M7,n?,07« M Drposlts Fltcal Ycar . 62.276.195,456.M Wllhdravxnis f'isr«l 3.405,(02,661.04 Fla Pnw I ■flVs45.17l.II35 23 1 '«T.*7i,i74770l‘.i5' 75,067,745.635 86 FortfMuY j 345J33.563.667 33 329,930.717,(01 .*♦; (i?iUi8ui J i 12,43.1,279,771.51 11,159.051,531 6(|Prl"'ht'* ■ X ■ mclucK* 1460,7(1172622 erbl nod lubjrtt -to ilahitory liaul. GAcctpt I X Tet/il C W 1 PUHIflla 2 60 . Advance Funds iji I WSIM; ( AI’i \ ll V a II C ,* " pa;, till nl . Ii eni the Mnlor \'c hide l!i;iivv,»y |*'uiiil "I eki.ooO' ' lor ('li.n lev’oix jjj'nimlv and $24, * 000 for Oscoda Counlv liave been ” • api'i o\ed" by lln* Slate 111■.!ivv ,y wj (aiunm ■ mu B",b i nonly lead ■ *■ roiiiim.'.smns said Ibev need the ',v '.didvances to. inml pay ml Is ^ pm km: Walkim a vie,* |>ie*.ul**n s |h,. fetenl Bank md Ti e .1 , u ill i|acn ■ 11a■ c hi,mi.,i look for IS68. News in Brief re " ii inod vivlm 7 . t $;i0 . I da u m a In "il ii al I i.'b • : i"ill 'I nun-,lnu , |nji 1, d I i lawn 11*11 ■ lerdny. Bdierj? Moore ni l \\ . 11 c T 1111 ; I Tawnebn '■ I'l’.ui 111; i ; " 11 <** * V, h 'll ■' lie II "I t"d i \al i *d 1'u ni lii .mi ape. ttumuiiii.'.c Sale. TliurvdiH ’ •" .0 11 cic'i c ; ^/ri ivjk I l.'t Oneida, ri.rimi ,! nominee, rear dour I Siru'.u I. '■ h ^ *» af< % j* H f v* $ H yS >' Successful * * ,'.*!■•» vb 09. $ «si v» 5? jJ* H #: #$. * By ROGIvR E. Sl'EAR 1 «ues as Commonwealth Edi-,‘would like your * (i|nn;;'f'o(iciv, Walgreen; American 11 finTi on whether I should diversi- 'leKailiune, Stewart Warner, iv. H mi, what percentage should * * * I I ild? W" also own Goner d y — 1 took $5,000 of my capi-Molurs; Diil’onl; Warner Lain- ml and invested in a mutual b‘ ii - in smaller aiiimuiK tl i.ntd, Bondstock Corp., at $7.25 *,i d<> divr.sil'y. what *.i<>ck*. share. In. the two months I've nmild\c., 1' miii n1".'.' .1. U. bad it — the stock has gone ■\ 1 niiii'i diil ili* uni 0,1 down 50 cents a share. Thq Ndealer said I bought it at a , . ,,,,, 111 “11 - Is this a reliable ilork . j . ,,UI1 ,,,,,,s worth holding? — A.S. ,.<11, y,.:i l ave .•iliimst $I00.,IHHI A II certamlv 1 . The de- ■.......... a., I 1 1' ri.imiy ijiTiel you mention is probably 1 1 I 11.1 di.ciMtv aiinbulable in large degree tn i b I il, ' no 1 , lo, bouId ihe sale:. eommi'.*.mii. The fund a,,'.. 1 ic an* lock invest. mainly m common I1:, a ! • ■ ,m aimnl la i-inc* docks ryid cmcilible iKinds • mi an .clement and the most mi ni offering al 11*:is Balslnn jfe financially pi ic(*i L b.iv.c 1 $7 V. a share. 1 .. • .md 1 (I"' 11 i"*licvc vou I .11 Iv 1 c \nu in bold your fund should sell wilhout lirst talking and i'iv it monj chnjTce to wild a lax consultant to di tn workout. dal * (To order y clipy of Roger Lodge Calendat iSf'ii* me Shrine No P'J I>i o|;i is. in t , 1 111 '• lo till , vc.l ■i* ol n ili*i line slock lias Sp<.ur*s .jx-page Guide to Suc- jU 1....ji cessful Investing tnow in its $th printing t. ellp this notire and , send $1 with youf name and { '"li nings lor fiscal 1967 Depend- addfess ,0 Koger E. Spear, cUfB i.ic "I', vour tax man's advice, (|j Tfce |>ontiac Press, Bo* lilt, i .....I climmale all hut 200 (5rll(Mj Central Station, New Imre;; ol ltalslon I’m mi and York, N Y. 1(1017). . put tlie«liidunoe into sucli strong icovyrigtii, \un ^