Criticism of Attack Fails to Deter Israel By the Associated Press Undeterred by mounting condemnation from all sides of its commando raid on the Beirut airport, Israel yesterday promised retaliation for. any further Arab attacks. Premier Levi Eshkol declared Israel will defend itself against aggression “in the place where it is planned and carried out.” * * * “States which make it possible for the terror organizations to organize and perpetrate acts of terror bear the responsibility for aggression, a responsibility which they cannot disclaim,” he said. Eshkol and Israel’s ambassador to the United Nations, Shabtai Rosenne, said the Beirut raid Saturday night was in retaliation for the Arab terrorist attack on an El A1 airliner at Athens airport Thursday. Greek authorities are holding two Palestinian guerrillas who . lived in Lebanon in connection with the grenade and automatic rifle attack on the plane, which killed one Israeli passenger. The U.N. Security Council met in urgent session last night and appeared headed for a vote condemning Israel at another meeting tonight. U.S. Ambassador J. R. Wiggins told the council his government “strongly condemns the attack” and “is prepared to support prompt action by the Security Council to condemn this latest Israeli action.” Related Story, Page B-5 In Washington, presidential assistant Walt W. Rostow reported President Johnson considered the attack “serious and unwise." * ★ ★ The U.S. ambassador to Lebanon, Dwight Porter, called on Lebanese Premier Abdullah Yafi to discuss how the United States could help Lebanon 2 In Crew Give Accounts CLOSE LOOK ATTHE MOON-The National and Space Administration yesterday released th the moon, taken by the Apollo 8 crew. The large crater at 40-mile-wide Goclenius, marked by unusual lines across its center. (Related story, page A-2.) Pueblo Beatings Detailed “restore its commercial air fleet,” the embassy announced. There was no indication the United States would go back on its agreement to deliver SO Phantom jet fighters to Israel. Helicopter-borne Israeli commandos destroyed 13 Lebanese cargo and passenger planes, more than half the country’s civil airline fleet. They first cleared the parked planes of passengers. One casualty was reported, a guard who was wounded slightly. Yesterday, 12 hours after the raid, two Israeli jets flew over the airport to inspect the debris. Lebanese troops dived for cover. The planes made two low passes and flew off unchallenged by antiaircraft batteries or fighter planes based 40 miles away. ★ ★ * Lebanon claimed the aircraft were worth more than ISO million. Arab and Soviet bloc countries at the Security Council meeting demanded Israel be required to pay compensation. Lebanon’s U . N. representative, Edward Ghorra, demanded the Security Council take “effective measures under Chapter Seven" of the U.N. charter, which provides for economic, political and military action against countries breaching or threatening international peace. L PONTIAC PRESS PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1968 Home Edition —32 PAGES 10c Parley Set on GIs Release SAIGON (AF) - The U.S. Command announced today it will send five representatives New Year’s Day to a second meeting with the Vietcong in an attempt' to secure release of three American prisoners of war promised freedom by the enemy. U.S. head headquarters said a cease-fire would be observed around the meeting site 80 miles northwest of Saigon. .. Hf. * ★ “To ensure the safety qf the prisoners and the participants from the opposing side,” the U.S. announcement said, “a corridor to the meeting place, free of military action on the part of the allies from 6 a m. until three hours after the meeting ends will be established. The corridor will be about two kilometers wide and will run southwest from the meeting site in a straight line.” The cprridor defined by the announcement runs 4lrectly to the Cambodian border, about three miles away. This indicated a belief on the part Of Police to Be Tough on Drinking Drivers Area law enforcement agencies aren’t making any emergency preparations for New Year's Eve traffic, but all promise a tough attitude toward drunk drivers. Authorities at each department explained that widely expanded patrols aren’t necessary on New Year’s Eve as they are, for example, on Labor Day, because traffic volume doesn’t increase. However, all agencies agreed that drinking drivers are the bane of the holiday. Pontiac Police Chief William K. Hanger said he will put all available men on the road without canceling vacation or leave days. ‘TOUGH AS USUAL’ “We’ll be tough on drunk drivers as r*i In Today's | Press Campaign Financing Hearings likely on tax break to spur Individual contribu- tions - PAGE B-3. Public Schools Outlays in U.S. double in decade - PAGE A-3. Czechoslovakia Fate of parliamentary president arouses ethnic rivalries— PAGE A-t. Bridge ................. B-4 Ana News ............... A-4 Astrology .............. B-4 Bridge B-4 Crossword Puzzle ...... C-1I Comics ................. B-4 Editorials ............. A4' Markets ............... B-7 Obituaries B4 Sports ............ C-l-C-4 Theaters .............. B-8 TV-Radlo Programs ...C-Il Vietnam War News ... A-2 Wilson, Earl ............C-U Women's Pages ......B-l, R-2 usual,” he said. “The holiday is no excuse for endangering lives." Oakland County Undersheriff Leo Hazen indicated his department will have a few extra men on patrol to beef up the usual force and urged motorists to keep a sharp eye out for weather conditions. “Drunk or sober,” he said, “bad weather can ruin holiday driving.” Waterford Township police will, like the sheriff’s department, place a few extra men in the field, according to Cspt. Frank Randolph. SHOW NO MERCY “We’ll show no unusual mercy to intoxicated drivers,” he warned. Beefed-up patrols are also scheduled for Michigan State Police officers at the Pontiac post, according to Sgt. Ray Hoopengarner, post commander. * * * “We plan to blanket our area,” he said. Holiday Closings Are Set by Many Many Pontiac area stores and businesses will be closed New Year's Day. Pontiac State Bank, Community National Bank, First Federal Savings of Oakland and Capitol Savings and Loan will close tomorrow at 3 p.m. and reopen at their regular hours Thursday. * * * City and county offices will close tomorrow at noon and reopen Thursday on regular schedules. > Pontiac Motor, Fisher Body and General Motors Truck and Coach plants will be closed tomorrow and Wednesday. LIMITED MAIL SERVICE Pontiac’s main post office lobby will be open for mail deposits, access to locked boxes and purchase of stamps from machines. Mail will be picked up from deposit points on normal holiday schedules and processed. There will be no".regular window or delivery services. * ★ * All branch post offices will be closed. American authorities that the prisoners are being held inside Cambodia. The meeting will be held in the same open field in which U.S. and Vietcong representatives met for, 2% hours Christmas Day. That time they failed to reach agreement on arrangements for release of the prisoners. MEN ‘NOT AVAILABLE’ U.S. officials reported the leader of the Vietcong team said (jbe prisoners were not available for rSteitSe that day and he did not. have authority to state when they would be available. * * * The U.S. announcement today said a Vietcong broadcast Dec. 26 reported the three prisoners had been released Dec. 22. “In view of this fact,” the Americans said, “and in view of the previous use of the designated location for the Dec. 25 meeting, the commanding general, 2nd Field Force Command, sees no reason why the three prisoners can- __ not be produced at the meeting on Jaii. ‘ The three men all 21, are Spec. 4 James W. Brigham of Ocala, Fla., Spec. 4 Thomas N. Jones of Lynnville, Ind., and Pfc. Donald G. Smith of Akron, Pa. At the first meeting, U.S. officials said, the NLF delegates asked the Americans to sit at a rectangular table, presumably to strengthen a demand the NLF be recognized as a separate entity in the Paris peace talks. SAN DIEGO, Calif. (AP) - Two of the USS Pueblo’s enlisted men give the first detailed accounts today of beatings suffered by crewmen during 11 months of North Korean captivity. The intelligence ship’s commanding officer, Cmdr. Lloyd Bucher, has said the North Koreans made a “studied attempt to create terror among my men and myself." * ★ * Quartermaster l.C. Charles B. Law Jr. 27, of Port Townsend, Wash., and Radioman 2.C. Lee R. Hayes, 26, of Columbus, Ohio, will describe examples of beatings at a news conference, the Navy announced yesterday. Newsmen will; be allowed to question Law and Hayes, the Navy said. Law “took it Jbe worst of anyone in the crew,” an informed source said. ‘SUBJECTED TO TERROR’ In an interview at Midway Island, while he and the crew were en route home last week, Bucher told newsmen, “Every member of the crew had been subjected to terror of some kind or another. Whether it was actual physical beating or not is beside the point, • because the terror of expecting a beating js just as terrifying. , “The threat of a beating was always there. Every time they decided to beat someone it was done from an emotional point of view. It was always done from a studied attempt to create terror among my men and myself.” Bucher said the North Koreans avoided hitting him in the face because they wanted him to look good on camera. “But this didn’t keep them from caving in my ribs, or kicking me in the tallbone to the point where I was almost unable to walk for many weeks,” he said at Midway. ‘BEATEN BADLY’ Bucher said the North Koreans beat hardest those crewmen more physically endowed than the others. He said Engineman Chief Monroe 0. Goldman of Lakewood, Calif., “was beaten so badly it was indescribable.” The director of the U.S. Naval hospital where the 82 crewmen are staying, Rear Adm. Horace Warden, said last Thursday all of the men "have a history of physical maltreatment.” At the 121st Evacuation Hospital in Seoul, where the crewmen were taken after their release, Army doctors said 20 to 30 per cent of the crew showed “some evidence of maltreatment recent enough to detect.” They said one sailor, not Identified, had a broken rib. Others had bruises, scars and black eyes. Crash Clue Possible CHICAGO (AP) - The flight recorder from a North Central Airline plane which crashed Friday night at O’Hare International Airport will reveal whether the pilot was properly aligned with the runway, the director of an investigating team said yesterday. Hazardous-Driving Alert Is Given A warning of hazardous driving conditions late this afternoon and tonight has been issued by the U.S. Weather Bureau. Snow is predicted by mid or late afternoon, continuing during the night. In the southern parts of the state, some freezing rain may occur, the bureau warns. ♦ ★ * One to three inches of new snow is expected by morning. For tomorrow, snowfall is expected to slowly diminish to flurries with local snow squalls. Lows tonight are expected to be between 18 and 24. Colder temperatures are forecast for tomorrow. * * * In the five-day weather picture, temperatures are expected to be about 13 degrees below normal. Highs are expected to be 18 to 20 and lows 4 to 8. A nippy 14 was the low reading prior to 8 a.m. today in downtown Pontiac. The temperature reached 26 at 2 p.m. I Road Jams Concern DeLorean John Z. DeLorean, general manager of Pontiac Motor' Division and a General Motors vice president, is quoted in a new issue of a national car magazine as calling on the auto industry to help unsnarl urban traffic. “It's too big a problem" for the government, DeLorean said in the magazine Car and Driver Yearbook for 1969. * * * DeLorean called the urban snarl our “most serious” transportation problem and said that the auto industry “must develop a proper method of design and location of transportation systems, highways, parking facilities and all that goes with them.” He also called for an end to the proliferation of car models, the magazine reported. ‘MUST TAKE LEAD* The auto executive is quoted as stating: "It is Surely clear by now that driving in cities — New York, Detroit, Chicago — is difficult, and in rush hours, impossible, and obviously that makes the attractiveness of the automobile considerably less. It is a problem no one is JOHN Z. DeLOREAN working on from an over-ail standpoint today . . . Clearly the automobile industry must take the lead, show what’s required for a solution and then implement the solution. B "You would hope the govcrment would take the lead in this, but I really think it's too big a problem for them," he said. * * * Regarding the present increasing proliferation of car models, DeLorean said the industry must “reduce the total number of choices . . We have enormous proliferation of models . . . (this) leads to customer confusion . . . Ultimately for the health of our own business, we’ve got to reduce the total number of choices Each car must assume a much more specific character. The customer must know exactly what he can buy,” the magazine quotes him. * * * “Additionally, instead of seeking independent solutions, we've tried to be all things to all people Our ability to make solid worktte long-range plans must be improved . . ." he added. Trygve H. Lie, 1st U.N. Chief, Dies in Norway OSLO, Norway IB — Trygve H. Ue, first secretary general of the United Nations, died today In his Norwegian homeland. He was 72. Word of the death came from friends of the family. U Thant, the present U.N. secretary general, was informed In New York. The friends said Lie collapsed in a chair in Jhe dining room of a hunting lodge at Gello, a ski resort in central Norway. Lie’s health had been failing for some time. SERVED 1946-54 A former foreign minister of Norway, Lie was secretary general Dorn 1946 to 1964, when he retired and returned to Norway. Friends said he hoped to become prime minister some day, but the chance never came. WWW He was succeeded by Sweden’s Dag Hammarskjold, who wu killed in a plane crash In Africa in 1961 while on a U.N. mission. U Thant of Burma, the present secretary general, was elected after Hammarskjold’s death. As the first U.N. secretary general, Lie guided the organization in Its first critical years When It was radked by Russian vetoes, the cold war and this Korean conflict. TERM EXTENDED His five-year term was extended for three years. In a farewell broadcast in 1983, Lie said: "International politics are the art of the possible and practical. You have to make compromises that In the long run will serve the principles for which you stand.” * * * "The first duty of the United Nations,” he said, “is to maintain peace and create a new world In which all people could live.” Lie traveled thousands of miles in his efforts to keep peace and preserve the U.N., including a journey to Moscow, Paris, London and Washington in I960. In 1952, in an emotion-choked voice, Lie announced he was stepping down as secretary general at the end of his term in 1954 “because I hope this may help the United Nations to save the peace.” Top Defense Aide Is Named by Laird WASHINGTON (AP)—David Packard, a millioinairc California manufacturer of electronic instruments, today was named deputy secretary of defense in the Nixon administration. Secretary of Defense-designate Melvin R. Laird made the announement at a news conference. ♦ * * Packard, 56 years old, is the “outstanding administrator” that Laird several weeks ago promised would be named to help him run the giant defense establishment. The Weather v u-*- W«Wh«r Surtiu Forecast Colder. HtaMtt i»m4 » VOL. 126 NO. 280 ★ H m I A—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. DECEMBER 30, 1968 ifi J Panel Offers New Guide Wa Restraint - WASHINGTON (AP) - President Johnson’s top economic advisers have marked their last days in office by calling on business and labor to make “mutual short-term sacrifices” by accepting new guidelines for voluntary wage and price restraints. In a report to President Johnson yes-today, the Cabinet Committee on Price Stability recommended that the 6-year-old guideposts of 3.2 per cent increases be boosted in 1969 to “a little less than 5 per cent” for wages and that price hikes be kept at about the same level as 1968. The report also suggested that business absorb the first 1 per cent in costs without increasing prices to the consumer. Prices on consumer goods increased more than 4 per cent in 1968, the report noted. * * * There was no immediate reaction from business and labor, both of which generally ignored the 3.2 per cent guidelines set by the Kennedy administration in 1962. ★ ★ ♦ Ther future of the guidelines remains in doubt, anyway, since the Nixon administration may have its own ideas on how to hope with the wage-price spiral. A spokesman acknowledged the Nixon administration was not consulted on the guideposts proposal, which he described as essentially nonpolitical. The Republicans who will take over the running of the government on Jan. 20, he said, “are aware, as we are aware, that the biggest, most overriding economic, problem in the United States is the problem of combining prosperity with price stability.” Members of the committee instructed by Johnson last February to draw f blueprint tor a return to stable prices, were the chafrmen of the Council of .-Economic advisers, the director of the Budget Bureau, and the Secretaries of commerce, treasury and labor. LONG-TERM GOAL The long-term goal, toe Cabinet officials san, is still the 3.2 per cent standard because it approximates the year-to-year growth of productivity, providing a handy way of dlslbiguhniug in- flationary and nopinflationary increases. It would be “unrealistic” to expect the combination of tight management by the government and self restraint in toe private side of toe economy to yield price stability quickly, toe report said, a a a “Given toe recent history and the outlook for the cost of living,” the message said, “labor chnnot be expected to accept wage increases in 1969 limited to the trend growth of productivity.” What new guideposts can do if they are observed, a spokesman for the committee said, is to bring the economy “halfway back” to conditions in which 3.2 per cent goals would again seem feasible. a Wage settlements in 1961 toe report noted, have been running about 6tt per cent a a a 'Vvj President Johnson will, haws at least two opportunities to mention the |uide-posts in coming weeks when he presents his budget to Congress and delivers his economic message. $ 3 Yank Helicopters Shot Down by Cong SAIGON W —The Vietcong shot down three more American helicopters over the weekend, raising to 968 the number of choppers reported lost in combat in South Vietnam. As the American helicopter losses 3 Astronauts Start Debriefing SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP) -The Apollo 8 astronauts engage in the first full day of intensive debriefing on their flight today as space officials release part of the treasure they brought back—color views unseen before of the earth and the moon. Air Force Col. Frank Borman, Navy Capt. James A. Lovell Jr. and Air Force Lt. Col. William A. Anders are set to talk into tape recorders about their halfmillion mile voyage around the moon and back. ★ ★ ★ The trio, meeting with flight training specialists, will go over their mission “event by event in considerable detail,” a space official said. They will follow the same schedule for nine of the next 10 days, talking with groups tanging from scientists to fellow astronauts. More than 2,000 persons, shivering in 43-degree temperatures and a stiff breeze breeze, greeted the astronauts at Ellington Air Force Base near toe Manned Spacecraft Center as they returned home early Sunday. MET WITH EMBRACES The wives and families of the astronauts met them with embraces. * * * Their spacecraft was taken to Honolulu by the Yorktown where it will undergo . Navy tests before being flown to the North American Rockwell Co. plant at Downey, Calif., for closer examination. ★ w ★ Twelve pictures taken by the Apollo 8 crew en route and around t h e moon—part of the scientific treasure they gathered in their six-day flight— were released yesterday by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. climbed, thousands of U.S. and South Vietnamese troops pushed ahead with 60 offensive operations, Ignoring the start of a New Year’s cease-fire proclaimed by the Vietcong. * * * All three helicopters were shot down before the cease-fire started. One was hit about 30 miles north of Saigon Saturday, killing two Americans and injuring two others. Another was hit Sunday In Tay Ninh Province, northwest of Saigon, and three men were injured. The third was shot down in the northern sector of the country, near Quang Ngai City, and one crewman was killed. CONG BEGINS TRUCE The Vietcong broadcast a n announcement that Its forces began observing a 72-hour cease-fire at 1 a.m. Saigon time but warned they would strike back if attacked. South Vietnam and the United States said they would not observe a New Year’s cease-fire this year because of alleged Vietcong violations of the 24-hour Christmas truce. South Vietnamese headquarters reported five enemy attacks on government bases after the start of the Vietcong cease-fire. * * ★ The U.S. Command said five 107mm rockets hit a base camp of the U.S. 25th Infantry Division about 40 miles northwest of Saigon this morning. if if if The U.S. Command also announced that it would send five representatives New Year's Day to a second meeting with the Vietcong in an attempt to arrange for the release of three American prisoners of war who the Vietcong announced before Christmas it would free. Lifer's Term Commuted LANSING (AP) — Gov. George Romney today announced approval of the commutation of a life sentence for first-degree murder being served by Arthur J. Gamache, 68, formerly of Detroit. Gamache, now eligible for immediate parole consideration, was sentenced in 1929 for his role in the fatal shooting of two Detroit police officers during an attempted armed robbery of a company payroll. The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VIOINITY—Today cloudy’and somewhat warmer with light snow flurries developing. High 28 to 30. Light snow or flurries and turning colder tonight. Low 6 to 12. Tomorrow: snow flurries and much colder. High 10 to 15. Wednesday outlook: very cold with snow showers likely. Winds southeasterly Increasing to 10 to 20 miles tonight, IS to 22 miles tomorrow. Probabilities of precipitation, 50 per cent today and 00 per cent tomorrow. Dlrtcllon. touthMil 1 On* Y**r a«o In Pontiac Wtafhar ~ P lur r let li 'ii Detroit a 76 13 Duluth 1 23 11 Port Worth J Mouqhton L. 22 lowest temperature Mean temperture Weather, Saturday, Hlchast and Lowe This Data If Sunday, cold parol f I Yoart Blenwck Cincinnati HMat 41 47 )3 24 Ch. 80 47 20 -11 Milwaukee 20 * uskrqon 27 13 New Orleans 42 43 1» -4 New York 44 2S 22 10 Omaha 21 3 II I Phoenix 5f 34 » ti Pittsburgh 32 24 R « LSr 11 »-§ : rra % ti 17 (i SMttl* 17 7 11 1> WMhlnglon 49 >7 Birmingham Weekly Paper Joins Merger With 2 Firms BIRMINGHAM - Birmingham’s weekly newspaper, 'Hies .Eccentric, has announced its participation in a three-way merger involving a Grand Rapids broadcasting company and a New York radio chain. The new organization, called Basic Communications Corp. will locate its main office in Birmingham. The Eccentric and its printing affiliate, the Averill Press, will join West Michigan Telecasters Inc. of Grand Rapids and Basic Communications Inc. of New York in toe merger. Henry M. Hogan Jr. of 400 Dunston, Bloomfield HlUs, principal owner, copublisher and editor of The Eccentric, will serve as president and chief executive officer of the new organization. West Michigan Telecasters operates WZZM-TV and WZZM-FM. Basic Communications Inc. operates radio stations in Atlanta, Ga., Birmingham, Alh. and Wheeling, W.. Va. VANCE, SAIGON NEGOTIATOR MEET - Cyrus Vance (right) meets with South Vietnam’s chief negotiator to the Paris peace talks, Phan Dang Lam (left); Saturday at the South Vietnamese delegation headquarters in Paris. Vance, deputy chief of the United States delegation, returned to AP Wir.photo Paris Friday night after consulting witK President Johnson and other officials. There was no indication that the meeting between Vance and Lam produced any new Allied plans to break the peace talks deadlock. Others in the picture are unidentified. Formerly of Area VdnCe, S. VietS Ex-Kresge VP's Wife Dies Confer on Talks BLOOMFIELD HILLS - Cornelius VanderWheele of 5501 Lakeview was recently appointed plant manager for toe Industrial Products Department plant of American Standard in Dearborn. He will have total manufacturing responsibility for fans, blowers, air pollution control equipment, variable-speed fluid drives and heavy-duty heating coils produced at toe Dearbpm plant. VanderWheele, who joined American Standard in 1966 was assistant plant manager prior to his new assignment. A 1949 gradutate of Western Michigan University with a Bachelor of Science degree, he is a member of the American Society of Tool and Manufacturing Engineers. Former Bloomfield Hills resident Mrs. Christopher E. (Ceclle W.) Holzworth, 74, wife of a former S. S. Kresge Co. vice president, died Saturday in Charlottesville, Va. She and her husband had been hospitalized after fire broke out early Thursday morning in their Charlottesville home. Her death was attributed to a heart failure. ★ ★ ★ An invalid, she suffered burns over 40 per cent of her body in the fire which reportedly broke out in the bedroom of their 140,000 ranch home. Service was to be at 3 p.m. today at Christ Episcopal Church, Charlottesville, Va. A private burial service was to follow. HUSBAND RECOVERING The condition of her husband, who suffered face burns and smoke inhalation, is reported as improving at toe Charlottesville Hospital. Holzworth had nearly 47 years of active service with the Kresge Co. and served as vice president for 20 years before his retirement in 1954. He later served as a special representative of the Pepsi-Cola Co. with offices in Detroit. ★ * * Also surviving are a son, Wendover P. Holzworth of Darien, Conn.; a daughter, Mrs. W. L. Clover of Charlottesville, Va.; her mother, Mrs. Jessie B. Wendover of St. Louis, Mo.; two sisters; nine grandchildren; and two great-grandchildren. Lansing Fire Kills 3; Yule Tree Blqmed LANSING (AP) — A house fire early today on Lansing’s north side killed a family of three. Officials withheld Identifications pending notification of next of kin. * * * m Firemen said the flames apparently ................ began at the family Christmas tree. The fire destroyed the family’s two-story house. ★ ★ * The body of the father was found downstairs, and the bodies of the mother and their son were found upstairs. PARIS (AP) — The negotiators from Washington and Saigon confer today on toe deadlock still blocking the Vietnam peace conference and on a common front to present when the conference finally begins. The session was the second between America’s Cyrus R. Vance and South Vietnam’s Pham Dang Lam since the U.S. negotiator’s return from consultations last week with President Johnson and other U.S. leaders. *' j* ★ A meeting Saturday produced neither a new bid to break to-; procedural stalemate with the negotiators from North Vietnam and the National Liberation Front nor an end to the persistent differences between Washington and Saigon over tactics. ★ * * South Vietnamese diplomats made plain over toe weekend that they still favor a firm stand toward their adversaries^ even during the present preliminary argument over table shapes and other status symbols at the proposed four-party conference. ‘STOP THE DILLYDALLYING’ Vance reported Johnson’s view that, as the President put it, the U.S. government desires substantial progress toward an honorable peace and wants “to cut out all this dillydallying” about table arrangements and the like. HESS VANDERWHEEL FRANKLIN — Dr. Howard M. Hess i 32355 Susanne, professor of electric engineering at Wayne State Universit; has recently been appointed associa dean for administrative affairs at t! school’s College of Engineering. The announcement came from WS President William R. Keast at to month’s Board of Governors meeting. U.S. Helps in Airlift GENEVA (AP) — Eight larg transports, made available by the Unit* States to the international relief airlift may make it possible to feed an a ditional one million people or more famine-threatened Biafra, relief offlcis said today. “It is a very big help,” said a spokesman for toe all-Swiss Internation Red Cross Committee which will get foi of the cargo planes. Hope: GIs Deserve Chance at Good Life NATIONAL WEATHER — Snow is forecast for tonight for the central Rockies Groat Lakes region. There will be rain from the southeastern area of Texas toe Gulf Into the Mid-Atlantic states. LOS ANGELES - Bob Hope, back from his 18th Christmas with U.S. servicemen overseas, says, “I may go to the moon next year — but they told me they don’t want any fat astronauts.”*; Hope, at >5, was his usual bouncy,, wisecracking self yesterday as he sprung off a plane from Vietnam, reeling of a string of topical comments. Then he became serious. “I Just hope that make another trip,' about 100. “I just hope something good comes out of these Paris peace talks, and I Just hope this is the last Christmas trip,” HOPE’S LAST ARTICLE Hope, in the last of a series of articles HOPE don’t have to he told a crowd of written during his holiday tour of 16 U.S. bases in the Far East, dwelt further on what he saw at the war front. He said: “Our blacked-out choppers lifted off the pads at Cu Chi, Vietnam, and we saw the Jungle fires burning not more than a half-mile away and heard the bombardment of artillery. WWW “It struck me that within hours we’d be starting back to the world but that toe 15,000 or so youngsters of the 25th Infantry Division for whom we’d Just played would be remaining in that steaming insect-infested jungle to fight a vicious, elusive enemy. For us it had been just a stopover but for them It was their grim daily routine. “I thought of some of the .other guys we’d met. The River Rats of Dong Tam, the Dust-Offs at Cu Chi, the Jolly Greens and the Sandys at Nakhon Panom, Thailand, and the Marines at Da Nang and Chu Lai, the fighter pilots on toe USS Hancock, the gunners on the New Jersey and the Hundreds of kids in the hospitals for whom the war is over. LIVES ON THE LINE “They all lay their lives on the line every day. You can’t ask for more. I don't care how many times you've seen the war on television or read about it in your newspapers. “You can’t have any idea of what it’s really all about until you’ve felt the heat, tasted the dust or sloshed through the mud and sensed the menace behind every clump of trees of innocent-looking jungle foliage. “These are the facts of life for 500,060 of our finest young men in this the most frustrating of all wars. I can tell you that they’re meeting this challenge with fantastic courage, resourcefulness and good humor. * * * “This was a tough trip. The flu bug felled many from writers to stagehands to performers, but despite nimw, fatigue and travelling under the most arduous conditions every show went on right on schedule. ★ ★ ♦ “We just couldn’t disappoint them and the enthusiasm and the gratitude with which we were received made it all worthwhile. It was more than en- thusiasm. * * * “At every show a kind of affection from toe audience was reciprocated from the stage. It was the sort of audience-performer empathy you don’t find on television or in theatres or nightclubs anywhere In the states. It was show-business at its finest. “I say this every year and regretful! I must say It again. W0 pray that this will be the last of our trips to Vietnam. “We can only hope that reason and compassion will prevail among those in Paris who are trying to bring this conflict to an end. These kids deserve a chance at the good life.” | THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1968 A—3 Outlays lor Public Schools Double in Decade WASHINGTON (UPI) - Outlays for the nation’s public schools have doubled in the past decade, with average spending per pupil jumping from $351 W $680. And while inflation has eaten away considerable b u yi n g power, the increase still shapes up as the biggest single boost for public school education in history. * * * This was the report yesterday from the National Education Association (NEA) in a year-end statistical summary. Figures showed that annual expenditures for elementary and secondary schools alone have increased from $14.2 billion to $34.7 billion since the 1958-59 school year. LBJ PROGRAM Most of the gains were registered during the five years of the Johnson administration in which broad new federal aid programs have been enacted. The federal outlays come to only 7.3 per cent of the total, but they have generated heavier investments by state and local governments. In the current school year, the NEA estimates, the federal government will have pumped $2.4 billion into the schools, state governments $13.7 billion and local and intermediate governments $17.4 billipn. The local share of education, long the burden of property taxpayers, still provides more than half of school revenues. But the local share has shrunk from 57.1 per cent in the 1962-63 school year to 51.9 per cent this year, the NEA said. Classroom teacher salaries have reached an average $7,908 year, compared to $4,797 a year 10 years ago. Grade-school teachers’ salaries have improved at the greatest rate, 66 per cent, and now are within a year of high school teachers’ rates. STATE DIFFERENCES Wide disparities still continue among the states, NEA said. Soviets Laud Courage of Apollo Crew MOSCOW (AP) - Pravda today had more praise for the “great courage” of the three Apollo 8 astronauts but emphasized that the American moon mission followed a trail blazed by the Russians. The unmanned Soviet spacecrafts Zond 5 and Zond 6 took the “first big steps ... by flying around the moon and returning to earth,” a Soviet scientist wrote in the Communist party newspaper. * ★ * “The success of Apollo 8’i flight is an outstanding achievement of American space science and technology and of the rageous astronauts Frank Bor; man, James Lovell and William Anders,” the article said. The writer. Dr. Boris Petrov said the Zond experiments were preludes to moon flights by Soviet cosmonauts but' he gdve no hint when the Soviets might try to match or surpass the Apollo feat. “Further big problems in the exploration of the moon and planets will be solved by automatic (unmanned) means,” he said, “but this does not exclude manned flights.” Per-pupil expenditures range i $380 in Alabama to $1,140 in New York, although part of such extreme differences is explainable. Here is a state-by-state rundown on the NEA’s estimates for the current year’s expenditures, per-pupil outlays listed first and total expenditures last: WWW NEW ENGLAND: Connecticut $702, $470 million; Maine $826, $120.7 million; Massachusetts $763, $700 million; New Hampshire $624, $83.5 million; Rhode Island $756, $121.6 million; Vermont $660, $61 million. MIDEAST: Delaware $726, $79.7 million; Maryland. $703, $534.8 million; New Jersey $846, $1.1 billion; New York $1,024, $3.1 billion; Pennsylvania $682, $1.4 billion; District of Columbia $862, $114.1 million. * * ★ SOUTHEAST: Alabama $376, $296.5 million; Arkansas $448, $185.2 million; Florida $563, $684.7 million; Georgia $494, $493.3 million; Kentucky $475, $302' million; Louisiana $596, $461.5 million; Mississippi $364, $196.4 million; North Carolina $464, $517.9 million; South Carolina $454, $274.3 million; Tennessee $461, $382.9 million; Virginia $552, $524.1 million; West Virginia $500, $194 million. * * * GREAT LAKES: Illinois $683, $1.3 billion; Indiana $611, $675.9 million; Michigan $617, $1.; billion; Ohio $384, $1.2 billion Wisconsin $702, $581.1 million. PLAINS: Iowa $640, $395.4 million; Kansas $596, $282.6 million; Minnesota $649, $535 million; Missouri $585, $509.7 million; Nebraska, $487, $151.7 million; North Dakota $547, $77.6 million, South Dakota $541, 4.7 million. SOUTHWEST: Arizona $687, $245.9 million; New Mexico, $617, $154.7 million; Oklahoma $474, $265 million; Texas $475, $1.1 million. * * ★ ROCKY MOUNTAINS: Colorado $610, $291.5 million, GREETINGS Our business offices will be closed December 31st and January 1st. The Appliance Sales Department in Downtown Pontiac will be open until 5 P.M. on December 31st. Consumers Idaho $516, $86.8 million; Montana $684, $109.4 million; Utah, $501, $111.3 million; Wyoming $712, $57.2 million. * * ★ FAR WEST: California $686, $2.8 billion; Nevada $676, $70.5 million; Oregon $715, $303.7 million; Washington $649, $478.l| million; Alaska $927, $59.2 million; Hawaii $651, $103.4 million. Simms Bros.-98 N. Saginaw St. X rays were discovered in 1895 by Wilhelm Konrad Roentgen, a German physicist. Having A New 'At ^ Years Party? vMake Your First Stop at SIMMS for all your Needsl 13-0z. Tin ‘Party Treat' Fresh 1 Mixed Ni mixed! Spots,! 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Reflex viewing. Drop-In Instant load. Automatic and zoom. Includes 1 KA-464 film and batteries. $1 holds. See Our Line-Up of Fentons MOVIE CAMERAS—STILL CAMERAS AT LOWER DISCOUNT PRICES! SIMMS"! | FIO%tj | WS^KSSmmfM THE PONTIAC PRESS AmJUrns MONDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1968 - A—4 Macomb Crash Kills State's Weekend Toll Is 9* By The Associated Press Three men were killed in a headon accident at Macomb County's Clinton Township near midnight yesterday to raise the weekend traffic toll in Michigan to nine. State Police attributed the lower than normal number of weekend fatalities to the snow and rain which kept many motorists indoors. * * * The Associated Press weekend traffic Utility Workers Pushing to Restore Service in SE State fatality count began at 6 p.m. Friday and ended last midnight. The victims: Roger Marcell Berbeke Jr., 17, of St. Clair Shores, William Edwin Tomkins, 18, of St. Clair Shores and Edward Boston of Mount Clemens, who were involved in an accident on 15 Mile road at Macomb County’s Clinton Township at 11:40 p.m. Sunday. SOUTHFIELD DEATH Michael Yates, 13, of Detroit, who was riding in a car that hit a tree in Southfield Sundafy. Richard W. Free, 18, of Novi, who died yesterday of injuries suffered Friday night when his car hit a utility pole on Plymouth Road near the River Rouge Bridge in Detroit. ★ * * Gene Nankervis, 39, of Ferndale, hit by a car Friday night while walking in the Detroit suburb of Hazel Park. Epidemic 50 Years Ago Took a Big Toll in County By ED BLUNDEN Those who feel the current flu outbreak is bad should have beep around the Pontiac area in the, winter 1918-19. It the Hong or Asian then p-; it the Spanish fluenza and was a real er. Information the era is a sketchy, but a day-by-day examination of The Pontiac Press of the time, then named the Pontiac Press Gazette, reveals fascinating and tragic details. Because the events occurred 50 years ago, exact details are hazy in the minds of those who were around at the time. But ail remember the period and many lost a friend or relative. It was such a chaotic period it’s no wonder the impact of the epidemic was so little regarded. The “story” of the epidemic didn’t get much play either in The Press or in dispatches carried on the International wire services. It woii)d appear news facilities were strained to the utmost and short of personnel due to the war and its aftermath. Stories that appeared in The Press were shoved to the bottom of Page One or on an inside page and seldom were given more than one-column headlines with five or six inches of type even though they concerned the death of numerous persons. Some of the events that captured the attention of the times included: ★ ★ ★ The war was ending, prohibition was being approved; the League of Nations was being born, women were seeking and getting the vote, a civil war was still raging inside Russia, American troops — many from Michigan — were fighting the Russians in the far northern provinces, the International Workers of the World (Wob-blies) were staging pitched battles with police in the Western States; and much of, the newspaper space was devoted to column after column of Americans killed in action. The Press editors of the time must of had their hands full. To their credit, almost every day, somewhere in the paper, was at least a brief story on the local situation. ★ * * From the stories it was evident that Pontiac had an excellent health department and its methods of combatting the epidemic were copied statewide. According to state health statistics, 148 persons in Oakland County died of influenza or resulting pneumonia between Oct. 12 and Dec. 30. Deaths continued after that, but at the normal rate. ★ ★ ★ In the state during that period, October through January, some 8,295 died in the epidemic. In Detroit, 1,692 dead were counted. In the U.S. almost 600,000 died, and in the world an estimated 22 million were victims of the flu and its complications. The accuracy of these figures could be challenged as records were poorly kept, even in the U.S. Death from all forms of disease was much more common back then. In The Press obituaries, alongside the flu victims, are scarlet fever and tuberculosis victims — almost unheard of today. IRONY, TRAGEDY The stories revealed a mixture of irony and tragedy. The Press and health authorities would report one day that it was believed the disease was under control, only to have to report the following day of three or four deaths, with numerous others stricken. ★ ★ * Just when the city seemed to be coming out of it and some quarantine restrictions were lifted, the war ended (Nov. 11) and a huge celebration was held in the streets. In the following weeks more died (73 in Oakland County, Nov. 16 to Dec. 19), most apparently from flu caught in the street celebrations. ★ * ★ As the disease swept the state, headline writers called it the “Spanish Influenza,” then the "Epidemic,” and later the “Plague.” In stories and histories of the epidemic as it occurred worldwide, the disease took its first huge toll in Spain and \yas thereafter called the Spanish influenza. FIRST AT FORT It was first designated an epidemic in Michigan on Oct. 5. It entered the state at Fort Custer. A story in The Press said the camp had 567 cases and a quarantine was placed on the entire Army installation. * ★ * Two men had died. Camp authorities denied the deaths were caused by influenza, but said it was pneumonia. On Oct. 3 it was announced 12 men had died in 24 hours ht the camp and that ended the denials. (Eventually 674 men died at the camp and 10,000 caught the flu.) ★ ★ ★ As time passed Hie Press stories indicate a sad, but perhaps understandable, development — deaths from flu became so ordinary they didn’t seem to rate much attention. The same attitude might be attributed to our present-day acceptance of a certain number of traffic deaths. By The Associated Press Hundreds of Lower Michigan families remained without power and telephone service last night as utility workers sought to repair downed lines in the wake of a severe ice storm that swept the area over the weekend. ‘ ‘ Many Sanilac County residents faced another night with no electricity, heat or water, and Detroit Edison said it expected crews to be on the job through the night to repair hundreds of isolated circuits serving Brown City and Minden. * * * Many electrical circuits in Tuscola, St. Clair and Sanilac counties were not expected to be repaired until early today. Sanilac County telephone service was hardest hit by the iced-up wires in Snover, where 200 families reported loss of service. ★ * * Consumers Power Co. reported a 46,000-volt transmission line had been knocked out near Ashley, cutting off electrical power to about 900 customers. Altogether, about 24,000 customers suffered electrical power disruptions for varying periods. The utility said it hoped crews would have full service restored to 1,500 customers, in Saginaw and 1,000 in Flint who still lacked electricity late yesterday' afternoon. George Henderson Jr., 28, of Grand Rapids, hit by a car while standing alongside his stalled auto in Grand Rapids Township Saturday. TWO-CA RCRASH Thomas Raquetaw, 19, of Detroit, whose car collided with another vehicle in Detroit last night. Raymond D’Alesio, 8, of Dearborn, who was struck by a car at Dearborn Heights yesterday. Wixom Firm Names 2 to Key Executive Jobs WIXOM — Perkins Engines, Inc., of 27575 Wixom has announced the appointment of Thomas J, Noteman as personnel manager and Edward J. Wagner as manageij of manufacturing. Noteman joined the company from Massey-Ferguson Inc. where he was employe-resource specialist at the North American tractor, transmission and axle plants in Detroit. ★ * * Wagner was formerly plant manager for Industrial Tetonlcs Inc., Ann Arbor, and manufacturing manager for J.A. Otterbein Inc. of Middletown, Conn. Snowmobiles Will Compete KEEGO HARBOR - The Winter Follies Festival, the weekend of Jan. 26, will feature snowmobile races on Cass Lake. Hie Festival was created recently by the City Council with the idea of making it an annual occasion for communitywide outdoor winter-sports activities. The major event will be a snowmobile race sanctioned by the United States Snowmobile Association. The event is being sponsored by the fledgling Keego Harbor Snowmobile Association.- CASH PRIZES, TROPHIES There will be cash prizes with trophies. Racing will be In five different classes. There will also be modified cross-country and drag races for snowmobiles of any horsepower. Contact the Jordan Marine Service, 2175 Cass Lake Road, Keego Harbor, for additional Information and entry requirements. Applicants must comply with the USSA rules of dress and safety. Unite Postal Setup, Urges Shelby Chief SHELBY TOWNSHIP - An attempt is being made to obtain formal designation of the Utica Post Office as the official office for the entire township. Supervisor Kirby Holmes has written Utica Postmaster Erwin Clippard and US. Rep. James G. O’Hara, D-12th District, to request the change. * * * The township currently is served by the Utica, Rochester, Mount Clemens and Washington offices. In some cases, according to Holmes, one street is served by two offices. “My office Is receiving many complaints on this subject. I think it is time for a community of approximately 26,000 residents to have its own post office,” the supervisor concluded. Water Everywhere ... Ground-Breaking Soggy WALLED LAKE—A brief ground-breaking ceremony for the new water system was held in the driving rain Saturday. The more than 18 miles of water mains should be In operation by June 1969 according to city officials. ★ * ★ The cost to the taxpayers will be an $18 service charge every three months. The system is being financed by 32.2 million worth of general obligation bonds sold by the Oakland County Department of Public Works for Walled Lake. The 30-year bonds have an Interest rate of 5.38 per cent. The Mike Harbidean Construction Co. of Troy Is contractor on three sections of the water system, while the George A. Odlan Co., Royal Oak is contractor for the fourth section. ★ ★ * Lane Northern Co., Lansiqg, is responsible for development and construction of the wells, buildings and pumping supplies. * GROUND-BREAKING—Walled Lake City Manager Royce L. Downey (left), Mayor Wendel G. Kellogg Jr. (center) and R. J. Alexander, director of the Oakland County Department PwiIlK fmi Photo of Public Works, ponder whether to go ahead with Saturday's scheduled ground-breaking ceremony for the new water system. A brief ceremony was finally held in the driving rain. Pontiac Spanish Flu Quarantine Plan Adopted by State as Disease Raged The following are excerpts of stories and headlines about the great flu epidemic of 1918-19 as they appeared in The Pontiac Press Gazette: Oct. 10 — An Associated Press story called the influenza statewide. * ★ * Oct. 11 — The first death in Pontiac from Spanish Influenza, MrS. Ann Bladik, 25, of 178 Quick. Oct. 12 - City Health Officer C, A. Neafie called a partial quarantine and canceled ail lodge peetings, dances and social events. CHURCHES CLOSED Oct. 14 — Churches and theaters were closed. The flu raged through Pontiac State Hospital with 50 persons 111 and the first death recorded there. Oct. 17 — Michigan had 41 deaths in 24 hours. In Pontiac a soldier home on furlough succumbed. He was Pvt. Harold Struthers, whose father owned a dry goods store on North Saginaw. * * * Oct. 19 — Press carriers were wearing masks to protect themselves while delivering papers. Huge air battles were NOVI - Novi and Walled Lake officials will appear before the State Water Resources Commission Jan. 15 with a progress report on their proposed joint sanitary sewer system. Hie system will cover the north side of Novi and all of Walled Lake. Novi was cited for polluting the Walled Lake branch of the Rouge River. Sewers connected to a storm drain running down Grand River and into the Walled Lake branch are causing the pollution, according to Village Manager Harold Ackley. * * ★ Plans for correction include extending a Wayne County trunkline sewer, which stops north of 9 Mile Road near Meadowbrook, through Novi Into Walled Lake. Ackley explained that the sewers would be connected into this trunkline. NEGOTIATIONS CONTINUE The Oakland County Department of Public Works Is handling the negotiations between Novi and Walled Lake and Wayne County for the extension of the trunkline. * * ★ The extension request has been denied to date because the Wayne system lacks the capacity to hold the additional sewage, according to Ackley. * * * The sewage from the two communities is treated through the Detroit city system and must travel through the Wayne County trunkline, which is not large enough to take care of any more flow. Timetable for the construction depends greatly on when the negotiations with Wayne County are successful. $S MILLION PROJECT Cost for the joint sewer system, which will cover all of Walled Lake and the forth side of Novi, will be approximately being fought over France and the Germans were fleeing Belgium. Oct. 23 — Headline: “Drop in Plague Cases for City, None Die.” MISTAKEN HOPE Oct. 24 — Four deaths, but health department states “perhaps the epidemic has reached its height and is receding." Oct. 25 — Headline: “Biggest Report on Influenza in City, 62 New Cases.” (Warm, rainy weather prevailed over the state and was said to be contributing to conditions for spread of flu). Oct. 30 — Three more dead at State Hospital. The city health officer was quoted as saying Pontiac was lucky in comparison with other state cities in the matter of deaths from flu. He attributed this to a firm policy on quarantine. Nov. 1 — City merchants protested the ban on crowds which was cutting deeply into business. EPIDEMIC AGAIN Nov. 8 — Headline: “Epidemic Again at Flood Tide in Pontiac, Three Deaths.” Nov. 11 - EXTRA - “Huns Give Up” “Pontiac Thrown Into Paroxysm of |6 million, according to Walled Lake City Manager Royce Downey. A federal grant of 31,001,000 has been received and the rest will come from general obligation bonds sold by the county. The county will be repaid from service charges. * ★ * The DPW is also investigating covering a portion of the sewer cost with a grant from the state bond issue passed last fall to fight pollution of lakes and streams. * * * Novi originally considered building a small treatment plant to take care of the problem for which the city was cited. “But it's doubtful that we can get approval for a small treatment plant to handle this particular pollution problem,” said Ackley. Father, 2 Children Saved From Fire TAYLOR (AP) — Firemen in the Detroit suburb of Taylor rescued a father and his two children from their burning home yesterday. * * * Carl McGeorge, 27, had already taken his 25-year-old wife, Ardith, to safety, and then tried to enter the smoke-filled bedroom to get the children. * ★ * His wife summoned firemen. One fireman, Arnold Mollett, entered the house and handed Carl McGeorge Jr., 5, and Tina McGeorge, 2, out through a window. He then helped the father to safety. * * * The father and children were treated at Oakwood Hospital and released. The cause of the fire was not immediately determined. Joy.”—It was estimated 5,000 persons jammed Saginaw Street in the celebration and 10,000 attended a huge bonfire rally downtown. (The celebration was the undoing of many). Nov. 14—Health Officer Neafie blamed the victory celebration for bringing the Spanish Influenza to a crisis in the city. Deaths now totaled 37, some 15 since the peace Nov, 11. A shortage of nurses was noted. - Nov. 15 — All stores ordered closed at 6 p.m. FOUR MORE DEAD Nov. 18—Four dead in city area. Nov. 20—Bay City closed all its public facilities, deaths hail reached 68 there. Nov. 21—Three city deaths. Nov. 22—Four more deaths. Health Officer Neafie now fears Pontiac is worse off than most cities in state in spite of the precautions being taken here. He complains that doctors aren’t reporting cases so that steps can be taken. SCHOOLS CLOSED Nov. 23—Schools Close, (this story had a page one, two-column headline, biggest given a flu story.) Schools stayed closed just one week. The Spanish flu mainly attacked the 20-40 group. Nov. 30—Record number of new cases in city, 64 in a day, three new deaths. A remarkable occurrence at Wilson Foundry in Pontiac was noted. An experimental vaccine had been given 700 men there and not a single man had contracted Spanish influenza, it was reported. ★ ★ ★ Dec. 5-Advertisement: “Stop This Epidemic! Take Hill’s Cascara Quinine . . . it's your civic duty." Dec. 6—One-paragraph item: 6,000 Dead in Samoa. STRICT QUARANTINE Dec. 7—Pontiac’s new policy of strict quarantine of the homes of persons afflicted has apparently resulted in fewer flu cases. However, authorities complain some doctors are calling the flu “hard colds” to avoid quarantining their patients. Dec. 13—Headline: “State Adopts Pontiac Plan of Fighting Flu” — strict home quarantines. * * * Dec. 17—City health department “well-pleased ... no deaths in 24 hours.” Dec. 18—Hie State Health reported it had 45,000 new orphans since the outbreak began, (no death statistics were given.) MIGHTY HIT, TOO Dec. 19—“Kaiser Bill has the Flu, So Has Charlie” (Charlie was Emperor Charles of Austria-Hungary). De$. 20—‘ Two Stills In County, Making Rum from Raisins.” * * * Dec. 30—No deaths over weekend. Temperature was 44. Weather official said fearm air was helping influenza and a cold wave was needed. Jan. 3—Zero weather hits Michigan. NO NEW DEATHS Jan. 13—42 cases reported in city, but no new deaths. Jan. 31—Two obituaries of flu victims, a grocer, E. G. Barnes, and a State Hospital attendant from Oxford, Clare Huff. (The epidemic appeared about over.) Feb. 22, 23 , 24—Eight-column headlines proclaim Board of Commerce men}-bership drive. (“Normalcy” had begun). Feb. 25—Eight-column banner: “Two Killed in Wreck near Oxford.’’ Novi, Walled Lake to Tell Sewer Plan l£i I » THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 30. 1968 A—5 Fur trimmed coats Sale $129-T69 Untrimmed coats Sale *69-$79 Hudson’s has exciting news for women who demand flawless tailoring in exquisite wool textures. We are presenting a grand new collection of elegant Shagmoor coats at exceptional sayings. Casual to dressy silhouettes, fur trimmed and untrimmed, are all designed with timeless traditional beauty. Shagmoor means fashion dividends for many seasons to come. This is your chance to enjoy a great Shagmoor coat at a savings now during Savings-Go-Round. Sizes 6 to 18 from Women’s Coats. I THE PONTIAC PRESS 48 West Huron Street Pontiac, Michigan 48056 MONDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1968 HAIOLD a. FITZGERALD Chairman of the Board Howard H. Fitzgerald, II HARRr J. Heed John A. Riley Secretary and Advertising Richard M. Fitzgerald Treasurer and Finance G. Marshall Jordan Local Advertising Manager It Seems to Me . . . Our Crystal Ball Reveals Banner Business Year Ahead Practically everyone engages in professional or amateur prophesying at this time of year. It’s expected. ★ ★ ★ Hence, your cautious scrivener thrusts his timid noggin upward to discuss our own area. Southeastern Michigan just happens to be an easier spot to appraise than many. We’re the home of the automobile business which is the bell cow of all industry—here, abroad and on the dark side of the moon. The big bosses in our district have come forward in various year-end meetings to appraise their own probabilities in 1969. They’re a unit. They’re unanimous. ★ ★ ★ They all believe the automotive industry will continue to move along at a swift and fairly steady pace. A “steady pace” in 'automotive circles is a whirlwind runaway in most pursuits, We, in this area, just happen to be forever lucky in belonging where we do. ★ ★ ★ The Pontiac district is particularly interested in the immediate future of our own segment of southeastern Michigan. It appears as though this sector will have i prosperous and busy 12 months in 1969. We don’t have to break a record every ten days to do wonderfully well. And just to reminisce quickly, Pontiac Motor Division has been doing precisely that amazing and incredible thing for an extended period of time. Long John De-Lorean’s announcements tell about shattered records so often we almost accept these as orthodox procedure. ★ ★ ★ Once Pontiac was seventh in the industry—and a wobbly seventh, too. Now we’re a fast, firm third. That’s progress. It’s amazing. It’s astounding. Yes, it’s breathtaking. Just consider the competition we faced. ★ ★ ★ And then we come to that powerful, magnificent GMC Truck and Coach Division which has progressed upward, upward and upward for years and which is still climbing. Someone may want to have me committed to that huge State institution on the northwest borders of the City, but I’ll hazard a guess. In the next decade, Truck and Coach will advance more comparatively than anyone in the automotive industry. Fact. That’s my estimate. ★ ★ ★ And Fisher Body must keep abreast of Pontiac, come what may, and what may come is simply a demand for more bodies more rapidly. With these three great internationally known and nationally famous institutions plowing ahead, what can lie beyond but the best? And look at those two great collegiate institutions: Oakland University and Oakland Community College. They’re two of the most progressive and rapidly expanding educational spots in the United States. The long • haul future looks very bright. ★ ★ ★ If the U.S. slows down somewhat -—and that’s not impossible—Pontiac will slow down less than the rest. If business has a general recession of sorts, we’ll have a lesser one here. And if things boom, bang and pop, well lead the parade as usual. What more can you expect, want, visualize or pray for? U. N. Voting Power... One of the utter incongruities in the United Nations lies in the voting power. Equatorial Guinea on Africa’s west coast, just became the 126th member. The population of this territory is 260,000. This is less than one-third of Oakland County. And yet this budding province has one vote -precisely the same as the United States or Great Britain. Russia has Okay, Let's Make Up Our Minds! David Lawrence Says: Apollo ‘Miracle’ Is Noteworthy three votes. Of course you’d expect these international highwaymen to outdistance everyone else through some devious machinations or shenanigans. ★ ★ ★ Why shouldn’t the voting power be in accordance with population, power, prestige and the payment of U.N. bills? And in Conclusion... Jottings from the well-thumbed ..............Overheard: "Very often notebook of your peripatetic re- the fellow who’s so awfully quiet porter: simply doesn't know any more Those new GM transmission keys than that.”...........London that lock the steering column as well gambling clubs will be reduced as the mechanism are a big step in from 1,200 to 250 and the 250 reducing automobile thefts. You will have to undergo searching can’t even tow a car away when you exams and investigation..... can't steer it............In a re- ...........By and large, local side- cent strike of street cleaners in Italy, walks in the residential areas the hordes of rats that swarmed arc the slipperiest they’ve been everywhere raised pandemonium and in years consternation............Frankie ★ ★ ★ Sinatra dropped $37,500 the other night in a blackjack game. Well, he . Overheard: “You're getting old has it to lose.............Two of when you want your new calendar the outstanding collegiate basketball j() nigger numbers instead of player, this year are the U o( D.'s nl|d JJfo..................Colored Spencer Haywood and Niagara s , ,, , , .. , , Cal Murphy. The former 1, 6 8 and ballMns afe official highway signals the latter 5-10. in New York State. Flying a ted asks ★ ★ ★ for emergency medical aid; a green Catherine one asks police assistance; and a blue Deneuve, 18- one asks for fuel or mechanical help, year-old London jSr other states are watching with inter- :S“m^en Mm es,...................... Overheani: "An after most beautiful ' dinner drink is what you need when girl in the the waitress brings the check." . . . world.” Shucks, HRIHH ......................Dept, of Cheers and Jeers: I can pick doz- then’s—the Holiday Season; the J's ens^our area —the icy walks and streets. completely... . CATHERINE —Harold A. Fitzgerald WASHINGTON - What was really the big "miracle” in the voyage of the American astronauts to the moon and back? Some will say it was the 500,000-mile flight — the orbiting of the moon and the safe return. But all this could have happened and the rest of the world would| not have witnessed the dra-| matic arrival of1 the astronauts LAWRENCE aboard an aircraft carrier in the middle of the Pacific Ocean or the pictures sent from outer space for several days if it had not been for another great feat' of science — transmission of television and radio from artificial Satellites direct to every continent of the world. ★ ★ ★ Millions of people not only heard but saw the astronauts speak from the deck of the ship. During the six-day trip, moreover, pictures of the earth were transmitted direct from the capsule in which the astronauts were traveling around the moon. It can be assumed that hutftlreds of millions of people watched and listened as one of the astronauts prayed for peace on Christmas Eve from a distance of 230,000 miles away from the earth. PUBLIC UNAWARE? How was this contact accomplished? Many persons who don't follow scientific matters too closely perhaps are unaware that the United States six years ago began sending into orbit a series of satellites, two of which have been traveling 22,500 miles above the earth ever since. Each is about the size of a big barrel. These satellites, of course, are unmanned. They have enough power to remain aloft for at least six years and are equipped with an apparatus enabling stations in America and other countries to beam signals to them for relay to a large receiving station. t * * * The one located in the state of Washington picked up the happenings in the Pacific and put them Into telephone cables for instantaneous transmission over the television networks of America. It is certainly astonishing that a news event in the middle of an ocean now can be transmitted to an object 22,-500 miles above the earth and instantly flashed by a system Verbal Orchids Mrs. Mattie Jackson of 2566 W. Walton; 91st birthday. -* Mrs. Daisy Daley of 863 Sarasota; 88th birthday. Mr. and Mrs. P. P. Anderson of Holly; 58th wedding anniversary. of relays on the ground to various parts of the world. TRULY MIRACULOUS One wonders whether a truly miraculous use of such inventions eventually could somehow help peoples to speak to each other — to get all the news and not what dictator- ships distort and give their citizens. A sincerity of expression and recognition of mutual interest by the spokesmen in government, chosen by well-informed electorates, could lead to the establishment of peace throughout the world. 1.1*«, Syndicate) Bob Considine Says: Apartment Yule Gift List Something Like Iceberg Voice of the People: Reader Submits Views on 'Observing Christmas T Why shouldn’t our schools and public offices display scenes of the nativity and celebrate Christmas? We are a Christian nation. We ask God to bless our homes, food, public events, etc. Our nation has prospered and grown through the efforts of men of great capacities. These men, almost to the man, were Christians or believers in God. ★ ★ ★ The recent religious agitation has been wrought by those who would have us believe they do not accept Christianity. They are a minority and must accept the actions of the majority. We do not force them to participate, nor should they think they can force us not to celebrate. It would be gratifying to hear just one voice from the human powers that be, advocating Christ be put back into our public lives. ROBERT L. BUCHANAN 5180 JOANGAY ‘Aid Mail Delivery by Keeping Dogs Tied’ I appeal to the citizens of Pontiac and surrounding cities. This being the busiest season for the post office, please tie up your dogs. We want to give you good service but it’s kind of hard delivering mail and fighting off the dogs at the same time. On behalf of the mailmen and mail ladies, give us some consideration and put the "pups” away. A MAIL LADY ‘Some Union Literature Was Misinterpreted’ During the election the union made many distributions of literature to its members. Now some of the Wallace supporters are misinterpreting some of it as not being factual. Literature was distributed stating that Alabama was the highest Ot any state in the Nation in murders and fourth in the Nation in aggravated assaults. This was taken from the U.S. Department of Justice, F.B.I. Uniform Crime Report. * ★ ★ The article that appeared in the local paper compared states as they were rated for over-all crime consisting of burglary, larceny over $50, and auto theft. It is the Union’s obligation to provide its members with the facts and encourage them to exercise their rights as citizens and vote their convictions. THAD BYRD 290 Evanston, Union Lake Youth Enjoyed Seeing Hand-Carved Creche My family went to see a creche on Iriquois Road. The man who carved this creche lives up north. I loved that 114-piece creche. I think the man who made this crib should get a lot of graces. PATRICK NACKERMAN AGE 9 CONSIDINE NEW YORK - Everybody knows that it is more blessed to give than receive. But must receiving b e so damned organized? We live in one of those generally im-personal-ized apartment houses that help form the jagged teeth of the New York skyline. This Christmas, as In the past, we received a list of employees from either management or the superindent. There was no direct appeal for gifts, of course, just an astonishing number of names, the positions the men hold, and their seniority. ★ * * A friend of ours in a Park Avenue cooperative got a somewhat longer list which gives names, positions, seniority and salary. He learned to his dismay that two of that swank building's doormen were paid only $90.77 a week after 38 years of unbroken service. He tips them very well, even outrageously when he’s stoned. But the revelation of their salaries moved him to doubling the usual Christmas offering. A Christmas list at an apartment house is something like an iceberg. Only about 10 per cent of It is visible. The rest is buried beneath the surface. We know and greatly admire the visible employes — Joe, Sal, Johnny, Louie, Jesus, Paul, Rafael, let’s say. HALLMAN? SECURITY? But we don’t recall seeing "hall man and elevator relief," “north elevator,’’ "north 'service elevator, days,” "security,” "front vacation relief-and porter,” ‘Incinerator porter,” "incinerator and service elevator relief.” God bless ye merry gentlemen, and come by the apartment for a drink. We’d like to meet you. Apartment life in New York is as far removed from brotherhood and the spirit of a holiday season as one of the craters on the moon, really. One longs to be able to rap on the door of the family that lives n^xt door — separated by a couple inches of plaster — and say “happy wassail,” or something as touching as that. But one knows that if he tried it, the family would call a cop. One would wish he could send his children through the halls singing carols, but “security” would be summoned in a jiffy and throw a net over them. We wish we could meet the boy who delivers the newspapers at our door each day. I’ve always thought of him as a tousled, apple-cheeked renegade from Hal Roach's "Little Rascals.” Alas, we received a printed card from him just before Christmas. It read, “Merry Christmas. Don’t forget your newspaper deliverer.” But instead of a little boy’s wavery signature, the names of four gentlemen were printed on the card. At the bottom was printed a tender little message. It read, “Mail check to 1313 First Street.” Question and Answer I dialed a Detroit number direct but an operator asked for my number, anyway. Aren’t all numbers on direct dial equip- REPLY Yes, but very infrequently at peak periods the automatic equipment cannot handle all the calls, and the operators take the overflow. Question and Answer What can be done to change divorce laws and custody regulations in Michigan? HAPPILY MARRIED MOTHER OF TWO REPLY It’s difficult to change laws, but if enough peoplf want them changed and enough work on their elected representatives, they can do it. A good strong pressure group, even small, can sometimes accomplish a great deal. Have you tried letting your State Senators and Representative know how you feett Encourage everyone who feels as you do to do the same thing. As you become more active in this effort, you will find more and more ‘'sympathizers.” It’s a lot of work, but laws can be changed. Reviewing Other Editorial Pages Farm Land Memphis (Term) Commercial Appeal Ever since World War II, there has been a trend toward higher farm prices in the United States. Many factors have been responsible for this, including such things as growing population that increases demand for farm products, the need for larger operating units to reduce unit costs and the growth of cities and highways and airports. Now there is growing concern over whether the farm land boom can continue. * * ★ One reason is that the cost of making short-term capital gains on land has Increased because of the increase in the price of land. Even if the price of land should continue to rise $25 an acre each year, for example, the gain of $800-per-acre land now will be only half what it was a few years ago when the land sold for $400. * * * A second} reason is the rising need by governments for increased revenues, which means higher property taxes. Other factors of immediate concern are high mortgage interest rates and rising costs oL production which reduce the possibilities for increased net incomes. The trend toward higher crop yields in itself is self-defeating in terms of land values because Increasing crop yields in face o f stabilization of demand means lower returns from the |pnd. There is the possibility that monetary inflation will continue to be a factor. Signs are, however, that there will be strong pressures next year to stifle the inflationary trend. Lindbergh Speaks Newsday Perhaps nobody has done more for aviation and space technology than Charles A. Lindbergh. Certainly, nobody Is better qualified to appraise the results. When he spoke not long ago to the National Institute of Social Sciences, it was in sorrow rather than triumph. ir it it For, as Lindbergh said, aviation instead of bringing people closer together has driven them farther apart because its powers o f destruction have been so highly developed. And the rocket, which explores outer space, Is most cherished because of its ability to wipe out civilization overnight. We have, in other words, made the worst use of the best Inventions. * * * There is an answer, in Lindbergh's words — to do “more for ourselves and our descendants through genetics than through medicine; more through sociology than through technology; more by merging with the ways of God and nature than by attempting to replace them.”’ He calls as we see it, for a return to the old simplicities and the basic ethics. We desert them at our peril — for science can either ennoble us or it can ruin us. % THE PONTIAC PRESS, AlONDAV, DECEMBER 30, 1968 The Year That Was - 6 Robert Kennedy's Death: History Repeated Itself an out-of-the-ordinary eulogy,: said, his voice breaking: “My brother need not be idealized or enlarged in death beyond what he was in life, to be remembered simply as a good and decent -nan who saw wrong ami tried to right it, saw suffering and tried to heal it, saw war and tried to stop it." * ★ ★ Then a slow funeral train took the body and specially Invited mourners to Washington, where the senator was buried in the National Cemetery at Arlington alongside his brother John. On that same day, while the world was honoring one victim of assassination, James Earl Ray, accused in the assassina- t By JOY STILLEY £ Associated Press Writer Unbelievably, history repeat-e$ itself. For the nation, another assassination of a political leader For the Kennedy family, another son tragically lost. -;|tfter a speech celebrating his victory in the California presidential primary June 4, Sen. Robert F. Kennedy was shot. Despite a brain operation that lasted nearly four hours, he died early June 6. * * * A 24-year-old Jordanian, Sir-han Bishara Sirhan, who had come to America with his family in 1957, was indicted for the murder and for assault against five others who had been shot but survived. , ^ This new act of violence i ofJDr i?ln*’ was arrested brought forth in a nation hardly at L®™*011 Airport, recovered from the impact of,POOR PEOPLE’S MARCH Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s as-1 King’s followers, now led by sassination a flurry of demands1 his successor, Rev. Ralph David for gun legislation. President] Abernathy, carried on the Poor Johnson urged, “Let us, for Peoples Campaign in Washing-God’s sake, resolve to live un- ton. More than 50,000 of them der the law. Let the Congress I took part in a mass march from pass laws to bring the insane the Washington Monument to traffic in guns to a halt." With|the Lincoln Memorial, marking congressional consent, he as- Solidarity Day June 19 signed Secret Service agents to A^ts ot 87 members of the S™"1,, other presidential campaign followed a sit-in at candidates. [the Agriculture Department MANY MOURNERS June 20, and on June 24 the Rev. At the Requiem Mass at St. Abernathy and 260 others were Patrick’s Cathedral in New arrested when they refused to York were not only the Presi-|teave Resurrection City after dent, but the men who were their camping permit expired, campaigning for his job—Hu- * * * bert H. Humphrey, Richard M. There was other news in the Nixon, Eugene J. McCarthy,!area of law violation, stemming Nelson A. Rockefeller—and hun-] from an indictment that had dreds of others of the nation’s been handed down in January great and renowned. !by a federal grand jury in Bos- Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, in ton. Dr. Benjamin Spock, author and pediatrician, the Rev. William Sloane Coffin and two other defendants were convicted in a Boston federal court of cin- THE WORLD IN 1968 The Pontiac Press, Pontiac, Michigan P.O, BOX 66, POUGHKEEPSIE, N.Y. 12602 Enclosed is $v.....Please send.......copies of The World in 1968 at $3.64 each ind. tax to Name........................................... Address........................................ City and State................................. Zip No......................................... Send gift certificate to: Name............................................ Address......................................... City and State.................................. Zip No.......................................... I would olio Mm to Of dot: Tho World in 1963 (S3.121.... Tho World In 196* (S3 111 Tho World in 19*7 (S3 *4) Tho Torch I, Potiod (S3 OS).... Tho Worron Sopor ($156) lightning Out •( Iftrool ($2.0$) Triumph ond Trogody ($3 13) spiracy to violate the draft law. | what President Johnson called:measure included a 10 per cent crisis seemed to come none too stayedj“one of the most crucial legisla-jincome surcharge in exchange]soon, as the government ended: (Advsrtlsemcnt) For temporary UIUAH relief of... IVIIRUlf SORETHROAT dut to a colds there it ■ gentle refreshing, yet potent oral antiseptic that really works. And, tt't a great pending appeal. CRUCIAL TAX HIKE The month saw the passage ofleral tax hike. The compromise jtive measures of the decade’’jfor a $6-billion trimming of the, the fiscal year on June 30 with bIrf.nt SELL, TRADE---USE ■ 'when Congress agreed to a fed-federal budget. {deficit of $25.4 billion, the big-lpr,NTiAr precc want inci The action on the economic ]gest since World War II. | pkess waini AUb. Club Robbed at Stadium NEW YORK (AP) - Three; men made off with $20,000 from' an exclusive bar in Shea Stadium several hours after the] New York Jets won the Ameri-i can Football League championship before 62,500 people. Police said five employe’s were in the Diamond Club, on the top level of the stadium, Sunday night when two armed men and a companion staged the holdup. * * * The $20,000 represented the I club’s receipts and not any of: the gate receipts, police said. The club seats 250 and is open' only to season ticket holders and their guests. 1 “DID YOU REMEMBER PHICKENDELIGHT 1302 W. Huron - Call 682-3800 500 N. Parry - Call 334-4959 IMirvrv 4 mllaklr RENT, SELL, TRADE - - - USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! f APPLIANCE CO. \\ 2 TODAY TOMORROW days) MONDAY TUESDAY 11 QjS?/- OPEN UNTIL 9 P.M. 10 A.M. to 5 P.M. Mil 3&S&3* trio chond'»» cost, »o$» price. These two days wo don’t need profits. Extra profits would only put ut in higher tax brackets. Our purpose is to reduce our year-end inventories and to freate good will by saving you soma money! "V»Tln.; • |5 '("• Tox.ioi, want to clearouT 'utl marred and the Eveiything goes movers, crate- one-of-a-lcind -I, /or «ome, first served. 10 MONEY DOWir NO PAYMENT UNTIL MARCH INSTANT CREDIT! YOU ARE SAVING EVEN MORE RECAUSE ALL PRICES ARE LAKE-WITH PRICES! WATCH THE BOWL GAMES IN COLOR! COLOR TV Portables :hoo.o from names such as RCA, Oonorol Electrh !en.th, Admiral, Panasonic, Westinghouie, Ime PRICES START AT $159 ASSORTED GROUPING BLACK/WHITE PORTABLE TV boos# from ZENITH, RCA, PHILCO, MOTOROLA, DMIRAL, GENERAL ILECTRIC. ARVIN, PAN-SONIC, SYLVANIA and Symphonic. All with UHF/ HF. floor display models priced accordingly. PRICES START AT $49 WATCH THE BOWL GAMES IN COLOR! COLOR TV LOWBOYS Choose from RCA, OENERAL ILECTRIC, ZENITH, ADMIRAL, PHILCO, PACKARD RILL. MOTOROLA, IMfRSON, PANASONIC ond SHARP- All screen sites, all with UMf/VHF. Free 10 day homo trial. .. 90pj,j£g^^TARTAT *249 STEREO CONSOLESoHI-FI eORGANS B/W CONSOLESe PORT ABLE TV COLOR TELEVISION SAVINGSI SI 68 O.E$ Stereo cor •ions frith AM-FM Beautiful walnut Wide eon eel oe. Brant in factory cartons. binotion with AM FM, FM wood cabinet.............. $22.97 ARVIN Portobls $125 $25 $220 *16 $395 ZENITH circle s. AM-FM, F o. 140 watt, luxe model. While 23 I MAGNUS Electric $199.SB ZENITH circle *325 $4J£ loeL BIg sieVings .77.7."’ ZENITH 22- lowboy TV eoti mm UHF/VHF. Deluxe footvroi 9|1J Hurry for those floor model 1 9* Battery operated or plugin TV's. Can't mention name. Hurry while they lost. You'll *80 f369.99 ADMIRAL Color TV combinations. With *475 *90 199 95“ RCA. 20“ wolnut *140 ZENITH IB- portab * — — ^ sets UHF/VHF. Hand > I QQ antenna. Few to go.. $599.93 OLYMPIC Color TV combinations. With stereo hi ft. AM-FM radio. UHF/VHF. Only floor modols *320 •799.93 RCA 23" 1399.95 RCA 1BM po Color TV's. Built-in tonnos. UHF/VHF. Un RCA PORTABLE UHF/VHF. Doluw *107 $399.99 COLOR TV *266 ZFNITH 23- Color TV low- - ---- 159 —-------------|SI - __ _|ISj boys. UHF/VHF. Deluxe lea *77 *149 *402 PrA VICTOR 30- Color ZFNITH 20- Cdlor TV it UHF/VHF. Doluxo. Fi *393 table ** *313 *359 *370 STEREO HI-FI C0RS0LES oose from ZENITH. RCA, GENERAL ELECTR tCKARD BILL Assortment of sterna consol d combinations. Most combining stereo with AM-FM. FM-storoo radio. Many furniti las and finishes. PRICES START AT *70 Pf ASSORTED GROUPING | PORTABLE AUTOMATIC DISHWASHERS Choose from ADMIRAL. HOTPOINT end WHIRL-POOL. Front load jmd top lead AM with automatic f§ | PRICES START AT 1 *80 | WASHERS • DRYERS • DISHWASHERS | ASSORTED GROUPING GAS and ELECTRIC DRYERS Choose from WHIRLPOOL, HOTPOINT ond PHILCO. Service Free by Utility Co. over life of dryor. While PRICES START AT 80 $249.95 HOTPOINT, 13 I HOTPOINT 394 lb. upright $289.95 HOTPOINT, 14 \ 2 -door COMPlETEl FRijR- refrigerators . *109 *173 *139 $400 ADMIRAL 20 ft Sid *266 *120 •130 *100 WHIRLPOOL 2 spool •135 “ *145 WHIRLPOOL. Completely frost-free upright frooiers. Eli E $E Deluxe features. Sole Priced JL I *8 *67 BARGAIN BONANZA! T$bl$ Radios........S4.50 AM-FM Radial........$7.00 AM-FM Olaok Radios.. $10.00 Hoavar Upright Vacs. 141.00 Wastinghousa Vaei... $10.00 ONI TO * CUSTOM!* APPLIANCE BARGAINS! Sunburn Clocks......Sl.1l Hair Curlers....... $0.10 QC. Staaai Irani....$0.11 Sunbaam Tiaitan.... $0.00 Rimington Men’s Shaver $11.00 ONI TO A CUSTOMie HOTVOINT 30- < *175 H *175 |119 93 HOTPOINT 30'' •165 $249 93 WHIRLPOOL JO- ~ *100 *130 ASSORTED TOP BRANDS AUTOMATIC PRICES START AT *100 WIDE ASSORTMENT LARGE 2-D00R REFRIGERATORS Select from HOTPOINT. ADMIRAL. WIITINGHOUIE, WHIRLPOOL. PHILCO. FROST QUEEN end DflMON ICO. All with large top froarers. Assorfed fleer medals and new in crates Hurry far those. PRICES START AT $140 ASSORTMENT OF GAS and ELECTRIC RANGES Choose from oisertmenl of DfTPOlf JlWfl, SUN RAY, MAGIC CHIf, HOTPOINT, PHIlCOond WHlRl - PRICES START AT $75 INSTANT CREDIT Highland makes credit buying easier than ever. All major credit cards, bank cords or store charge plates honored at Highland (or immediate credit. NO MONEY DOWN NO PAYMENT TILL MARCH NO MONEY DOWN • 3 YEARS TO PAY PONTIAC MALL SHOPPING CENTER TELEGRAPH RD., COR. ELIZABETH LAKE RD. OPEN DAILY 10 TO 9 PHONE 682-2330 OAKLAND MALL IN TROY 1-75 at 14 MILE RD. OPEN DAILY 10 to 9 PHONE 585-5743 1 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 80, 1968 Anti-American Opinion Solicited by Official U S. Ad in Brazil Draws a Small Response RIO DE JANEIRO Uh—Brazilians who don’t like Americans appear reluctant to talk about it, or maybe they don’t read the classified ads. Whatever the reason, only seven persons have replied to ads in four Rio newspapers urging “anti-Americans” to come forward and explain why they don’t like Americans. Anonymous replies were specifically encouraged. * * * Of the seven replies received, two were from writers curious to know what the survey would show, and one was from a teacher suggesting that anti-Americans should talk to pro-Americans and not with each other. In fact that was the philosophy which lay behind the ads published in the Brazil Herald, Jornal do Brasil, Correio da Manha and 0 Dia. The man behind the ads was John Mowinckel, public affairs counsellor at the American Embassy here. He thought he might get enough replies to provide an insight into anti-Americanism here. Of the four letters critical of Americans one was from a young Brazilian chemist who claims he earns substantially less than his supervisor “only because I am not in American and I do not know the people in New York. I could help them, myself and Brazil, but I feel I have no chance. The other three critical letters were less personal, deal- ing primarily with such factors as the U.S. role in Vietnam and American economic penetration of foreign countries. Racism and a lack of interest in Brazil were also among the reasons mentioned by the writers for their anti-American feeings. “This is why I am anti-American. ” ‘EXCLUSIVE CLUBS’ One respondent criticized Americans in Brazil for “locking themselves up in exclusive clubs, not being interested in local problems and subjects, knowing nothing about things that are not American and not even bothering to learn Portuguese.” GENTLEMEN: Your Formal Wear Needs For The Holiday Season Will be Quickly and Stylishly Fulfilled With a Rental From Harwood. Wf a ANOOIPH * MUtWB< Ciatom Tailors-Clothiers-Uniform* Men'* and Boys’ Formal Wear Rentals 908 W. HURON at TELEGRAPH, PONTIAC FE 2-2300 1 -Junior Editors Quiz on A&P Says Happy New Year With These Holiday Favorites ... Semi-Boneless Hams Fully Cooked—“Super-Right” Quality Whole or Half Rams QUESTION: What makes the big dipper appear at different angles in the sky? ANSWER: Study the diagram at lower left and you will realize that the earth continually spins from west to east on its axis, an imaginary line going through the earth from the South to the North Pole. It Is represented in the drawing by a peg with a pointer on top. Notice that the pointer points in the direction of a star higher up. This is Polaris, the North Star. The axis of the earth is always pointing towards this star, which is actually a great deal further from the earth than it looks here. As we look heavenward on starry nights, Polaris is always there, always In the same place. But, because of the earth’s continual rotation, the cither stars seem to rotate very slowly around Polaris. This will show why Jimmie, in the top two pictures, sees the group of stars called the big dipper in one position, and then, a few hours later, finds It higher up in the sky, while Polaris has remained in the same place. ♦ ★ * In both positions, a line from the two other stars of the dipper’s bowl would still reach Polaris. The ancients named the constelations because of fancied resesmblances to figures and animals, as in lower right. (You can win $10 cash plus AP's handsome World Yearbook if your question, mailed on a postcard to Junior Editors tn care of this newspaper, is selected for a prize,) Dress up your party tray with low-calorie shrimp ’Super-Right" Quality Smoked HAMS ^ 40* {-52-59* k-65J PORK CHOPS 65? 9 to 11 Chops in Pkg. Cut from Vs Pork Loins Ends and Contqrs Mixed PORK LOINS 7-RIB END PORTION l LOIN END PORTIONS c Ik 39! 49 ••fUPKIt-VtIQHT" m A# BOSTON STYLE BUTT m Chuck Steak.................................Pork Roast. ............................................ *59* 10 TO 1S-L0. SIZES 4* 4k. CUT FROM BOSTON BUTTS _ A, Turkeys............................... ">39* Pork Steaks................................................<>69* YUKON CLUB—CLUB SODA OR GINGERALE m. Plus Deposit Gulf Kist Shrimp fresh from the Gulf Coen, homo waters for nature’s tastiest shrimp Oulf Klst captures all of the succulent and delicate flavor of shrimp from the sunny Quit. No pooling, no waste. Already cooked tor you. Qood cooks keep several cans handy—ready for good eating any time. Ideal tor weight watchers—only 170 calories in a whole can. Economical, too, one 4-1/2 oz. can is equal to a 10 oz. pack of frozen unshelled shrimp. SULTANA SMALL STUFFED OLIVES 69* 9Vi-OZ. 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AAP—OUR FINEST QUALITY Tropical Fruit Punch 4 at 900 CANS ■ t f THE PONTIAC PliKSS. MONDAY, DECEMBER, i 30, 1908 Fate of Parliamentary Chief Stirs Czech-SlovaRivalry DL!iAG.YE rSHFV r ll?1* ‘fetation, sent by theiSlovak party that a Slovak be of the Chamber of Peoples one Parliamentary President JowflKremlin last _ August t o name(] to one of the three top of two houses in the new federal parliament. Since the Czechoslovakia,1, Clock Repair Antique Clock SpecialitU Sales & Service attme&ljnp ISIS. Bales, Birmingham 646-7377 ICY SCENE—Icicles dangle from the railing of an overhead bridge spanning a highway interchange west of Port Huron Saturday after a freezing rain and sleet storm Ice Storm Batters Northeast struck Michigan's Thumb, snarling traffic and downing power and telephone lines. Several Sanilac County towns were cut off by the storm. Smrkovsky today saw the trade1 ‘ normalize __________ , ... n a r 11» m » n t unions and regional legislature .spent Sunday touring threestate offices_ No voice yet has federalization law provides that “f Slovakia turned against Wm'factories and talking to party suggested that either llpt and his supporters branded as.officials in industrial areas. other two government leaders jn )hp rh„„. _ dissidents who brought «i chaos1 The delegation visited the President Ludvik Svoboda or Peo > cmrknv«irv wnniH r*. and political crisis. factory town of Moravia shortly Premier Oldrich Cernik give up 2“; The eruption of official Slovak!after 40,000 steel workers there their positions to Slovaks. pointed out ^ support for a Slovak to replace'endorsed Smrkovsky. The Slovak newspaper Pravda However Smrkovskv would Smrkovsky, a Czech, in the new The secretariat of the Slovak echoed a report circulating in b d thp „hairman „f ,hp P™| i equalized Czech-Slovak federa- Trade Union Council yesterday party circles that Smrkovsky p’Va" SwS Room Lots tion changed a controversy over supported the demand of the would be demoted to chairman “ 0j tbe tQp four natj0nal leaders. Observers said they Giant- Room Lots SALE 2.98 Numbing Cold Hits Northwest I from the Soviet-bloc August in-By the Associated Press 1 The mass of cold air spread peratures in the northern plains vasion. He said they were Numbing cold gripped the eastward after dropping tem- to record lows Sunday. The in- “stirring up chaos, political Northwest again today while the|' Northeast shivered and slid in; the wake of a destructive ice! storm which tore down power lines and froze water pipes. I Cabin Burns Five Dead; him to rivalry between the twin peoples of this Soviet-occupied nation. I Gustav Husak, regional. Slovak Communist party leader,1 also made the crisis a progressive vs. conservative battle when he charged Sunday that [“rightist forces” - the worst SAN DIEGO, Calif. (AP) - 70-year-old Roman Catholic epithet in Communist lexicon - The director of Boys Town, prelate said after Sunday’s had not learned their lesson Neb vjsite(j one 0j gradu-jmeeting at the U.S. Naval hospi-ates Sunday and declared he isital. “But his strong character! “kind of thin.” still comes through.”’ Msgr. Nicholas H. Wegner * * * stayed 20 minutes with Cmdr.l Bucher’s wife, Rose, said" of| Alumnus Bucher 'Thin/ Boys Town Chief Says doubted this .lower post yvould ! satisfy the dozens of groups who have issued resolutions and dispatched d e 1 e g a tion $ to Smrkovsky’s office to demand he remain in top power. or Lost — None Higher Stock Paper from 10< S.R. ACME PAINT 3 N. Saginaw—Downtown Ghosts 'Evict' British Family tensity and extent of the cold air crisis and panic. mass are indicated by early Until now, workers, students,,., ., ... . morning temperatures of 17 be-intellectuals and other groups ®°cher, skipper of the the meeting, “There are no low at Spokane, Wash., and 30 had rallied to prevent Pueb,°’ who was released words to describe Pete’s feel-below at Williston, N.D. Smrkovsky’s demotion because w‘tb Ms crew last week after 11 fogs. you just had to see his it it it they approved of his pro- anonths in a North Korean pris- beaming face to understand A A ^ Windblown snow caused haz-gressive leadership andon- .what the visit meant to him.” C/gnr /VWS$/nQ ardous traveling conditions in resented diplomatic snubs * * * Bucher is receiving special WORCESTER Mass (AP)- the western mountains as the handed him by the Russians, j Bucher, who Msgr. Wegner caw(for physica and mental ex- wuKUkbibit, Mass- (AP) . .. ...............The Slovaks had a virtual described as an “all-around haustion as well as an upper assist from a high-level Sovietlboy” and “quite an athlete” as j respiratory infection. He was delegation touring the country a youth, graduated from high wounded when the ship was tak-j in a apparent effort to win sup-1school at the famed community en last Jan. 23 and he reported port for Soviet policies, said tolfor homeless boys in 1946. beatings at the hands of his! include Smrkovsky’s demotion. “He looked kind of thin,” the | North Korean captors. | Five teen-agers died Sunday Arctic air pushed south and night and eight others were|eastward-missing in a fire that swept a| Freezing temperatures ex-crudely built cabin in an isolat- ] tended across the entire northed area of the Indian Hill sec e™ tier of states with readings CROYDON Fnvland mtpii ‘ion, Police said. |dipping near zero in the north- A mother and her two diildren| F.ir.ehme,l “arching ** nTw YoS Kew ErTgla^81* have moved out of their 80-year>a,d‘he eight may have fled the New York and New England. old home Rullt over a 300-year- bul and been P,cked “P by SNOW FLURRIES old burial ground of plague motorists- j Snow flurries dusted the area victims. They claimed a ghost flre chief stePhen KeI!ehe^ from the Great Lakes to the Ap-molested them. said ,our y°utbs were inJured:paIachians as aftereffects of Mrs. Mary Wild 30 said and taken to hospitals. Sunday’s storm which left parts yesterday shl was thrilled to ;■ * nura® at st feS# Hospi- of western New York State with-move Into the house with her “ quot®dcl°"e 0f,othe, *"lured- out power, daughter Janet, 10, and son Raymond Slater, 18, of Worces-j Heavy-snow caused havoc in Charles, 2, *twt it soon turned ter’ as sayin.g abo“‘ a d°“n: parts of the Midwest Sunday, into a nightmare.” persons wore inside the building stranding motorists north of it * it j when the fire started. Chicago and collapsing'the robfj “During our first night there Pollc* said another of the in- 0f a century-old opera house in Janet heard footsteps and cattle1^ aa attempt- Adams, Wis. into bed with me,” she saidJf*1. 1X111 h,s brother from tbei Only the southernmost fringes “The something pulled the|bu‘ ,ig’ . . . of the nation escaped the icy sheets off us — and Janet was PoUce I Firemen said the victims ap- Some other morning tempera- Mrs. Wild said she had heard Pfared, & been throvm, tures arid conditions were Bos-previous tenants had Xed out tbr°Ugb 0,6 Walls °f ** W00f • Y°* Cit,V 26 of the house “after staying only Stracture, PWladelPb>a 24 clear, a few weeks ” j Some of the survivors walked|Washington 32 clear, Atlanta 35, one-fourth mile to the nearest:clear, Miami 65 partly cloudy,! HEARD FOOTSTEPS jroad for help, firemen said. Detroit 20 cloudy. Chicago 20 j She said she stayed a month Slater was reported in poor,cloudy, Minneapolis-St. Paul 10| during which time there were condition today with burns over snow, St. Louis 30 cloudy, Kan-footsteps and sounds of someone 20 per cent of the upper part of Isas City 25 qloudy, Dallas 57 dragging a sack.” his body. I partly cloudy, Denver 8 partly She added that in the house “! Residents said the hut wascloudy, Phoenix 39 clear, Los a clock ticks even though we used by teen-agers as a club-'Angeles 51 clear, San Francisco haven’t got a clock. There was house. 46 partly cloudy, Seattle 10 part- a barking dog sound, screams! The victims—all believed to ly cloudy, Anchorage -1 fog, and vases turned upside down.”|be boy*—were not identified. Honolulu 61 partly cloudy. "YOUR HEALTH" SEVEN DANGER SIGNALS 1. Incurring haodochat 5. Backache or lag pom 2. Neck pain or ‘crick’ O. Narvout tension ond/ 3. Grating and popping or dixtinati noita whan turning 7. Ganaral body mutclo hood taniion 4. Pain bofwaon thouldar bladat WARNING If any of thoso symptoms persist CALL YOUR CHIROPRACTOR Hr. H. If. Alexander 1028 Joslyn Ave./kE^oi 11 BUY! SELL! TRADE! USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! BOSKS TONIGHT AND TUESDAY ONLY! We’re still loaded with Inventory and we want to be clean for January 19 1969 - Great discounts for those who can get It out of here by Tuesday night! Come See!! Come Save!! Easy terms -90 days cash! 1075 W. Huron St Phone 334.9957 H Ym Daa't Boy From Us. Wt Botk Lost Many! TRUCKLOAD PRICES FOR ALL! GENERAL ELECTRIC Portable TV 72 ALL CHANNELS ONLY lOtt LBS. 9 ONLY TOASTMASTER STEAM & DRY Iron $066 NEW MODELS Aluminum Shoe 15 ONLY EUREKA Electric BROOMS *18 Vt H.P. MOTOR DISPOSABLE BAGS 7 ONLY HOOVER UPRIGHTS HEAVY DUTY VACUUM *53 BEATS AS IT SWEEPS AS IT CLEANS - 6 ONLY REALTONE AM-FM RADIO *22 Long Distance PickUp Tone Control 6 ONLY CERAMIC TILE 4V4X4'/4 ALL FIRST QUALITY 100% Continuous Filament KITCHIN CARPBT NYLON CARPET 0 SOLID STATE PLAYS ALL RECORDS 13 ONLY GENERAL ELECTRIC i-Door, 14-Ft. Refrigerator *222 Big 133 Lb., Freezer Choice of Colors 13 ONLY *RCA 23” WALNUT COLOR TV $449 COMPLETE WITH STAND ALL CHANNELS 3 ONLY GENERAL ELECTRIC PORTARLE DISHWASHER *121 15 PLACE SETTINGS DISPOSAL 3 ONLY PHILCO 2-SPEED WRINGER *109 HAS PUMP, ADJUSTABLE WRINGER 2 ONLY WHIRLPObL Electric DRYER ALL TEMPS. *122 BIG CAPACITY NEW ’69 MODEL 3 ONLY GENERAL ELECTRIC 12-Foot Refrigerator *163 BIG FREEZER PORCELAIN CRISPER 5 ONLY 30" RANGE Pull and Clean OVEN *179 SPEED BURNER Clock — Look>In Oven Door ^4 ONLY GENERAL ELECTRIC Automatic WASHER *143 All Porcelain Tub - bi<; CAPACITY 2 ONI.Y HAMILTON (JAS DRYER Al.l, TEMPS. *154 HEAVY DUTY STAINLESS ZINC DRUM 2 ONLY OPEN TONITE TILL 9:00 ^5 GOOD HOUSEKEEPING OF PONTIAC 1 W. HURON FE 4-1555 NO MON£Y DOWN \ 1 j v. A—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 80, 1968 PONTIAC MALL SHOPPING CENTER • GLkNWQOD PLAZA SHOPPING CENTER • MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER • DIXIE NWYt AT WILLIAMS LAKE ROAD 0 NORTH PERRY AT ARLEN I DELICIOUS POINT CUT lorned Beef FARMER JACK’S IS THE PLACE TO GO FOR LOWER PRICES ON MEIGS! ^_ Really Fresh Hamburg DAIRY FRESH FARM MAID LOW FAT DUTCH I Chocolate Milk PLAIN OR PIMENTO Kraft' Velveetal AMERICAN OR PIMENTO! Choose Slices % GAL, CTN. LB. | LOAF FARMER JACK’S IS THE PUCE TO GO FOLLOWER PRICES ON EVERYTHING! PRICES EFFECTIVE THURS., FRI.&SAT. 2,3&4 MOST STORES OPEN DAILY 9 A.M. • 9 PM. SUN. 10 AM.-6 PM. FRESH,SOLID FRESH. TASTY Cabba«< Slaw FRESH N' GOOD THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 80. 1968 Om ... -m A—11 Maxwell House Ground Coffee YOU SAVE AGAINI LB. CAN TDT USS IN CASSEROLES SCHAFERS Hillbilly Bread BEEP, MUSHROOM OR CHICKEN 10)1 OX. | Franco Amor. Gravies NESTLIS CHOCOLATE ' 1UL mm Kveroady Cocoa Sf 59< 11 x 0-3/8 JUMBO 150 CT. I Northorn Towols ROLL 13x 13 ONE PLY 200 CT. 9g*t Town Pride Facials It1 SPECIAL LABEL MEDIUM Flash A Bya Diapers KAL KAN CHUNK Beef Baf Feed KAL KAN CHICKEN PARTS Tasty Bee Feed 22* IN SPRAY CAN Lysal Blslnf actant 49* H9* 68* Stow Bee Feed * ,”7'" ! i ■ PRICES EFFECTIVE fHURS., FRI & SAT. JAN. % 3 A '€ 3K0Z. WT. Papsadant ToothpasteUBEi Childrens Cough Syrupy OT REOULAR OR EXTRA HOLD 13.7 OZ. I|J|A Adorn Hair Sprny can fl*? KILLS GERMS Laver Is Mouthwash 99* CHUNKING 30Z, Chaw Main Needles cwan CHUN KINO S OZ. Water Chestnuts cm INPOILPACK 30 ci Alien Saltier REFRESHING 16* 39* 83* REFRESHING j OZ STL. 6000# 100 MwrthwagliW* 1 FT. MOST STORES OPEN DAILY 9A.M. -9 P.M. SUN. 10 A.M. - 5 P.M. DOLE FINK DRINK 1 OT. Pineapple 6rapefrultcA°N CLCARASIL Vanishing Formula DELICIOUS Welch berry Drhik ASSORTED VARIETIES HI C Fralt Drinks ■■26* Spry Shortening . Basket and CasePrices al Farmer Jack's Buskel and Case Prices at Farmer Jack's PONTIAC MALL SHOPPING CENTER • GUNWQOD PLAZA SHIPPING CENTER Adv.rti.ing Co. 1008 \ • MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER • DIXIE HWY. AT WILLIAMS LAKE ROAD • NORTH PERRY AT ARLEN 77* 46* 29* ' \ THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 80, Easy-care snowsuits in girls’ sizes 4-6x. Dress and casual coats; wide selection; &4S. 1 JUVENILE BOYS coat sets; wools, wool/synthetics; 4-7. Sal* 11.88-24.88 8-pc. sets; coat, hat and leggings; 4-7. Sal* 21.88-28.88 Suburban coats; some with pile collars: 4-7. Sal* 10.88-28.88 Winterweight durable jackets, 4-7. Sal* 8.88-28.88 Snowsuits in great assortment; sizes 4-7. Sal* 11.88-24.88 Pramsuits; warm; lightweight; 12,18,24 mos. ' ^ SaU8.80-17.88 Snowsuits; patterns, solids; sizes 2^3,4. ^ ^ Girls' and boys’ coat, hat and l FOR OIRU AMD Dots Waterproof plastic “Water Poofs"; 6-8. Sal* 8.87 Outerwear |H| Shop Monday: Hudson's Downtown open till 8:30 p.m.; Northland, Eastland, Westland, Pontiac, Oakland and Dearborn, Lincoln Park, Madison Heights Budget Stores are open till 10:00 p.m. HUDSON’S Tuesday: Downtown, all Branch and Budget Stores Open till 5:30. All stores closed New Year's Day. $ AP Wlrephot* Ann Lois Dames, daughter of Detroit industrialist Edward, R. Davies, will marry Willard Mitt Romney, son of Gov. and Mrs. George Romney, in an early spring ceremony. The engagement whs announced Sunday by the bridd elect’s parents who live in Bloomfield Hills, Miss Davies is d sophomore at Brigham Young University. Young Romney, just back from a two-year missionary stint in France, has had one year at Stanford University. MONDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1968 B—l Include Title of Addressee on All Mail By ELIZABETH L. POST of the Emily Post Institute Dear Mrs. Post: When my husband addresses envelopes to his ex-wife and children he leaves out the “Mrs.,” “Miss,” or “Mr.” After urging on my part he addressed his daughter’s envelope “Miss...” ★ A A He said that the only reason he did this was to flatter her. I can’t seem to make him understand that this is the correct way to address the children. I would appreciate it if you would let me know the correct forms of address. Mrs. C. A * A Dear Mrs. C.: It makes no difference whether a woman is divorced, single, or widowed, she has a title. Unless a divorcee returns to using her maiden name, she is always addressed as “Mrs.” It would be inconceivable to address a woman with children as “Miss.” * * * Unless your husband’s son is very young, letters to him are addressed “Mr.” and your stepdaughter should be “Miss”—not to flatter her, but because it is correct. DATELESS Dear Mrs. Post: I would like to go to the Rainbow Grill to see Frank Sinatra, Jr. and I have no one to take me, or anyone I could ask. Would it be proper for me to go alone to see the early show? —Cynthia A * A Dear Cynthia: I’m afraid I can’t help you. A young girl cannot go alone to a night club at any hour, for whatever reason. In fact, I doubt very much that a respectable place like the Rainbow Grill would let you in unescorted. Give Gentle Reminder to Thoughtless Teacher It's not known what Suzy wore to the victory party at Bachelors Three, the East Side Manhattan pub the flamboyant Namath owns with two other athletes. But it’s pretty common knowledge that she’s Joe’s most durable girl friend so far. By ABIGAIL VAN RUREN DEAR ABBT; What do you think of a teacher who asks her students to stand up before the whole class and tell what they got for Christmas? Abby, some children are lucky to get an orange and a, few pieces of candy in their stocking. And you know how Children are—if they didn’t get much they sometimes are so embarrassed they make up things. A MOTHER DEAR MOTHER: I’m sure the guilty teacher meant no offense, but I’U print your letter as a gentle reminder for next year. You make a good point. * * * DEAR ABBY: Please lambast the utter conceit of people who send mimeographed “newsletters” to friends as a special “Christmas treat.” They all sound like this: "Dear Friends, George is now chairman of the board, having passed the presidency of his company on to Melvin, our new son-in-law, who won the club golf championship last year. Mel was so proud of our Peg when she was elected treasurer of the Junior League that he surprised her with a new Mercedes. Our little beauty, Judy, was runner-up for Homecoming Queen and also made National Honor society. “Timmy was accepted at Yale, Har- - The children of Maj. and Mrs. William A. Anders; Gayle, 8; Eric, 4; Gregory, 6 and Glen, 10, are a curious bunch as newsmen interview their mother at the family home near the Manned Spacecraft Center, Houston, Texas at the end of the successful Apollo 8 mission. LOOKS SERIOUS Just a few weeks ago, a good friend of Namath’s, former Jets’ co-owner Sonny Werblin, was quoted as saying, “It looks like Joe is getting serious with that little blonde.” And Werblin added, “She’s a lovely girl.” Suzy was one of hundreds of Jets’ wives, friends and hangers-on who lammed into a Shea Stadium reception area after the game to wait for the players to emerge from the locker room, ww* Holding court in one corner was Coach Weeb Ewbank’s wife, Lucy, a short grandmotherly type In a blue doubleknit suit. “I wasn’t all that confident that we'd win,” she confided. AH Mrs. Janet Johnson could say was: “We’ve been waiting for this for 11 years! It was so exciting I wasn’t even cold in the last quarter.” she is the wife of punter Curley Johnson. vard, Dartmouth, and Princeton, but he thinks he’ll go to a little junior college up state. I took the part of the mother in “The Graduate” fpr our Annual Hospital Charity show. We got a director in from New Yqrk and he said I was as goo4Ju Ann Bancrpft.” Blah, blah, Mah, nothing but bfag, brag, brag, it’s nauseating! Next year, Bob rad I are going to send these bores our own Christmas letters, and it will go like this: “Hi, Everybody, well another year has passed. Grandpa fell down the ceUar steps and broke his hip. (Good thing we kept Bob’s crutches after his ski accident.) Our Bobby tried to get into the peace corps but couldn’t make it, so I guess he’ll be going to Vietnam. Susie’s boyfriend called off the engagement and we don’t know what to tell people. My sister’s daughter didn’t go back to school this quarter. They claim it's mononucleosis, but she has suddenly put on a lot of weight, and looks slightly p. g. to me. Buddy, my brother’s pride and joy, was kicked out of school. Tn«y said it was on account of his hair, but I think he was one of those who were caught smoking pot. Looks like Bob will have to borrow on his life insurance again to pay his taxes. Well, things could be worse. If his mother sells her house and moves in with us, I’ll kiU myself. Gotta run. Hie whole family is down with Hong Kong flu, and guess who the nurse is? Merry Christmas! Bubbles, Babble Follow Victory as NY Jets Capture AFL Crown By SHEILA MORAN Associated Press Sports Writer NEW YORK - Joe Namath’s girl friend comes across as a practical sort. While the other New York Jets’ fans bubbled about Sunday’s 27-23 victory over the Oakland Raiders for their first American Football League championship and looked ahead to the Super Bowl, 21-year-old Suzy Storm was thinking about the evening’s partying—specifically, what to wear. “What ate you going to wear?” she asked Mrs. Jim Hudson, the wife of the Jets’ safety. "Is it dressy?" * * * But Wendy Hudson, whose husband made three* standout defensive plays to help the Jets win, was already thinking about Miami. “It’11 be nice to have a suntan In January," she said. Suzy, a senior at the University of West Florida, flew in from Pensacola for the game In a green corduroy coat and checked pants tut with no hat to cover her long, blonde, knifestraight hair. Barbara Gale Hummel, daughter of the Charles Hummels of Birmingham, exchanged Saturday vows in Kirk in the Hills with Dr. Kenneth Wellman Nill, son of the Kenneth A, Nillsof Oceanside, Calif. MRS. KENNETH W. NILLS Sophia Gives GENEVA (AP) — Flowers and congratulations poured in today for Sophia Loren, made radiantly happy by the birth of her first child after four miscarriages. ★ * * After 11 years of marriage to film producer Carlo Ponti, the 34-year-old star gave birth by Caesarean section Sunday to a 7-pound 11-ounce boy at the Geneva State Hospital. Mother and son were repbrted in perfect health. ★ A * The baby was named Carlo Jr. “Thank you for my babv/’ were Miss Loren’s first words after she recovered consciousness and her gynecologist. Prof. Hubert de Watteville told her of the birth. Then she telephoned her mother in Italy. * * * Ponti, 55, had a look at his son before his wife woke up. AW* “He is beautiful—dark blue eyes and light brown hair,” he told newsmen. European television viewers saw the baby briefly Sunday night. “He looks exactly like his father,” said a Geneva housewife. Because of her previous difficult pregnancies, Miss Loren had spent the past six months in a Geneva hotel suite, under constant observation by De Watteville. He is an Internationally known specialist on difficult pregnancies. Miss Loren came to him after her last miscarriage, in January 1967, and he gave her special treatment before she became pregnant again. A A A De WattevlUe told newsmen he felt that the role of nutrition was decisive and that he made sure that Miss Loren Birth to Son received the correct balance o f hormones, vitamins, and minerals. A A A Miss Loren is expected to stay in the clinic for about 10 days and is likely to. remain in Geneva for another month or? so for regular examinations by De Watteville AAA She is scheduled to resume her movie career in September, costarring in "Giovanna” with Marcello Mastrolanni. The film will be shot in the Soviet Uniqn and tells of an Italian woman in search of her missing husband after World War II. AS Wlrwhots Italian actress Sophia Loren gave birth to a 7 pound, 11 ounce baby boy Sunday at a hospital in Geneva, Switzerland. Mother and baby were reported in “perfect” health after the premature birth. Miss Loren has had four miscarriages, the last one early in 1967. Bride Selects Lace, Net Gown Kirk in the Hills was the setting for late afternoon vows repeated Saturday by Barbara Gale Hummel of Cambridge Mass, and Dr. Kenneth Wellman Nill of Lexington, Mass. A gown of Ivory Alencon lace with English net, fashioned by Priscilla of Boston, was selected by the bride*, daughter of the Charles Hummels of Birmingham. AAA A matching ivory lace shoulder length mantilla completed the bridal look, along with a bouquet of miniature white roses, Sharon Foster was maid of honor with attendants, Mrs. John Street, Mrj. Thomas Watkins, Toledo, Ohio, and Mrs. Monte Courier of Starrs, Conn. Leslie Winter, niece of the bridegroom, was flower girl. A A A On the esquire side was best man, Dr, Richard Spann, Lexington, Mass., with ushers, Dr. Peter Crooker, Watertown, Mass., Dr.. William Hackett, Morristown, N.J., and Gary Hummel, brother of the bride. ★ ★ ★ Following a dinner reception in Bloomfield Hills Country Club, the cout pie left for a Caribbean honeymoons They wil) live In Lexington, Mass. Dr. Nill is the son of the Kenneth A. Nills of Oceanside, Calif. The new Mrs. Nill is a graduate of University of Michigan and Tufts University. Her husband holds BS, MA and PhD degrees from Massachusetts Institute of Technology. BeouCifij tjou/b konte/ f(yv tke* kofotcujdf RECREATION ROOM SPECIAL! VINYL ASBESTOS TILE U"*ll"or9"x9” •560 Per Carton 45 Sq. Ft. Inlaid LINOLEUM •i” Sq. Yd. Many Patterns INLAID LINOLEUM TILE 9”x9” ACROSS from HUDSON’S PONTIAC MALL 2255 Elizabeth Lake Rd. FLOOR COVERING- £pemfo at THE FLOOR SHOP! ARMSTRONG BKOADLOOM CARPETING Genuine J VINYL RUBBER TILE 19ea. 9”*9” Withstand* Any Traffic! BATH A KITCHEN Vinyl WALL COVERING 54" Width 59Cr. Many Color* Genuine CERAMIC TILE 4V*"x4V4” from 39lr, VESTIBULE REAL VERMONT SLATE $Q50 First Quality PLASTIC WALL TILE each Phone 682-4421 FRONT DOOR PARKING Open Monday and Friday 9 A.M. to 9 P.M.; Tues., Wed., Thurs., & Sat. 9 A.M. to 6 P.M. B-2 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1068 Mr. and Mrs. Williajn H. Lehmann of Longford Drive, Avon Township, announce the engagement of their daughter, Peggy, to Lance Cpl. Daniel B. Johnson, USMC, Vietnam. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Homer 1 Johnson of Rochester. A I fall wedding is being I planned. Mr. and J. Huston Mrs. William Sr. of North- field Street announce the engagement and upcoming July vows of their daughter, Marianna, to Chris A. Hirneis-en. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Chris K. Hir-neisen of Lansdowne Street. Troy Scene of Vqws Attired in a princess gown of brocade, Peggy Jane Wolfe was escorted Saturday to the altar of I^orthminster Presbyterian Church, Troy,- where she became the bride of Jerry W. Kerr. To complement her ensemble, fashioned with mandarin collar of irridescent jewels, the bride wore a matching brocade trimmed pillbox with veiling. Her bouquet was comprised of Eucharis lilies, Stephanotis and daughter of Mr ■! Mrs Henry C. Wolfe of Devonbrook ATTENDANTS ; Drive, Bloomfield Township and Betsy Walfe was m a i d of the son of Mr, and Mrs. Norman honor for her sister With Cathy (I. Kerf of Middletown, Ohio, Kerr of Middletown. Ohio, Ann were feted at Devon Gables. Katzman of Oak Park, Linda Following a honeymoon trip Cohan of Detroit and Linda to Tampa, Fla., they will make I Harness as bridesmaids. 'their home at Albion. Thomas Kerr was best man for his brother with ushers James R. Wolfe, Ivan Thompson Of Dayton, Ohio, William (Hark of Kalamazoo, Douglas Alder of Middletown, Ohio, David Noyes and Dopn Van Schelvez of Otsego. Laura Thompson and Jeff Alder of Dayton and Middle-town, Ohio, respectively, were flower girl and ring bearer. Spatter Effect Is Achieved You can get many new and kits by varying the way in different effects with antiquing which you apply the toner, says the National Paint, Varnish and Lacquer Association. A spatter finish can be achieved by using a stiff bristle brash — say an old toothbrush — to apply. Dip the end of the brush into the paint and spring the bristles with yotir finger to throw a fine spray of toner over the undercoating. ★ ★ ★ Practice first on a piece of paper to check the desired effect. But be careful. Too much toner won’t make spatters — just splotches. Best Christmas Present Is Daddy The engagement is announced of Peggy Lee Sword and Lee Allen Hathcock. Their parents are Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Sword of Frembes Street and the Rayford Hathcocks of Forest-dawn Street. Area Resident Takes Bride Central United Methodist Church, Traverse City, was the recent setting for the marriage of Barbara Ann Lowry and Michael F. Harroun. d Insured Disability Benefits Increase NEW YORK - Last year the nation’s insurance companies paid $1.2 billion in disability income benefits, reports the Health Insurance Institute. Ten years earlier they paid $740 million. The Increase in the amount paid stems from the fact that an estimated 57 million Americans now have the special kind of private protection known as disability insurance. This pays weekly or monthly benefits to help replace wages lost when hurt or sick. Attended by Sandra Brown of New Troy, the bride wore an Empire crepe gown and her bouquet was comprised of red and white roses with holly. David Hecht was best man for the late afternoon nuptials with Thomas Lowry of Spring Lake as usher. * * * The son of Mrs. Frank Harroun of Troy and the late Mr. Harroun and his bride, the daughter of the Franklin J. I^jwrys of Traverse City, were feted at the Holiday Inn. Inside-Outside The cardboard roll on which paper toweling is wrapped makes a handy container for mailing a paper or magazine. Add an addressed label to the outside and your mall arrives in good shape. SAN DIEGO, Calif. (/PI — “I like this Christmas best of all — my daddy’s back,” said Janice Lacy, 5-year-old daughter of CWO Gene Howard Lacy. And several other children of Pueblo crewmen nodded agreement. ★ ★ ★ Neither Janice nor her sister Melissa has missed the pretty presents that lay unopened under a Christmas tree in their home at Seattle, Wash. “I like my necklace,” Melissa shid Friday of the jewelry Lacy bought Christmas morning in the San Diego Navy Hospital store. "I like being here with daddy." Of the 400 relatives who arrived for a Christmas Eve reunion in San Diego with the freed Pueblo crewmen, only nine families had left by Friday. The Pueblo men are undergoing medical tests and debriefing following their 11 months as captives of North Korea. Their families came Home Therapy for Drug Addicts NEW YORK (UPI) -Providing comprehensive carel for addicts in their home communities is a new concept in the treatment of narcotics addiction. | * * * i Community-based treatment programs will be established in New York, Albuquerque, Chicago, St. Louis, Philadelphia and New Haven, Conn., through grants from the National Institute of Mental Health. The programs aim to reduce the number of ex-addicts who return to the drug habit. from as far as Japan and the Philippines. ★ ★ /* Elaine Wood, 4, skipped across a carpet in the playroom set up Thursday by Red Cross volunteers in El Cortez Hotel, where most of the dependents are staying. Elaine’s 11-month-old sister has seen her father, Elton A. Wood of Fairchild Air Force Base, Wash., for the first time. ‘‘I missed him,” Jimmy Bouden, 7, said of his father, Ralph Bouden of Washington, D.C. Jimmy is spending his school’s Christmas vacation in San Diego hecause "I wanted to see my dad.” Sonja Peppard, 10, of Bremerton, Wash., said she would have stayed home ‘‘but I missed my daddy.” Sonja’s fa- ther, Donald R. Peppard, is a communications t e c h n i cian first class like Jimmy’s dad. ★ ★ ★ Is daddy different from when j they last saw him? Michael Lacy, 11, brother of j Janice and Melissa, said with a j grin, ‘‘He’s kind of skinny.” i Carl Announces THE NEW YEAR’S FLAIR! MON., TUES. A Ptrmaneal Wave for $10 COMPLETE (Heir Cl * Set led.) Coma In or Call Early X Beauty Shop Riker Bldg., FE 3-7186 SWhMMNlMtNHW JXeumode A child's rubber ball may be kept from rolling off a toy shelf by gluing a rubber jar ring to the shelf. Place the ball in the ring. PIANOS BALDWIN ORGANS YEAR SALE END Largest Distributor • Band Instruments • Guitars • OPiN EVENINGS 'TIL 9 P.M. Smiley Bros. MANAGER: ROBERT E. LILLEYMAN Calbi Music Co. NYLONS PANTY HOSE stretch nylon seamless, micro stitch with nude heel and demi-too $1.49 pair FAVORITE SHADES FOR ALL COLOR complements FIBERLOCK or WHITE COLLAR GIRL lockstitch, plain knit or micro $1.00 a pair Oimmode JCosierjy Shops 82 1V. Suginuw Si. Enjoy New Year’s Eve DINNER AT fetfe OPEN UNTIL 4 AM. Sunday Breakfast Buffet 9 A.M. ’til Noon Friday Night Shrimp Fry 5 P.M. ’til 10 P.M. in Bloomfield Hills WOODWARD AT SQUARE LAKE RD. FE 4-6630 CLOSED NEW YEAR’S DAY Even gridfer savings on your family's shoes in eur big ffimUBT CLEARANCE ■ DISCONTINUED STYLES A COLORS THOUSANDS OF PAIRS SALE PRICED 1 LADIES' SHOES hush puppies Valu„ to 14 99 DRESS or CASUAL MISS AMERICA DRESS LIFE STRIDE DRESS NATURALIZER CASUALS NATURALIZER DRESS Values to 14.99. Values to 15.99.. Values to 15.99. Values to 19.99. 7.90 8.90 11.90 11.90 13.90 MEN'S PEDWIN Valpts to 15.99 9 90 MfW'S SHOES HUSH PUPPIES Values to l 1.99.... 8.90 PORTAGE, ROBLEE Values to 20.99.... 12.90 PORTO-PED Voiv.i 1.26.99... 16.90 ALLEN TEMPLETON vou.2699 16.90 NUNN BUSH Values to 33.99.... 19.90 CHILDREN'S FAMOUS BRAND SHOES Discontinued Styles and Colors BUSTER BROWN HUSH PUPPIES ROBIN HOOD IJ90 Bloomfield Miracle Mile Shopping Center Red China Em in India Is NEW DELHI (AP> — About 400 screaming Tibetan refugees, most of them women amt children, stormed into Hie walled Communist Chinese Embassy compound today and smashed windowpanes, flowerpots and street lights. The demonstration began as a peaceful protest against Peking’s latest' nuclear explosion and the reported intimidation of Indian editor Frank Moraes by Chinese road technicians in Nepal last week. * ' ★ ★ - The refugees burst through a police rope cordon and poured through the Compojwd’s opep iron gate. They attempted ft* lower the Chinese flag but were thwarted by police, who dragged many demonstrators from the compound. The police arrested 47 Tibetans and M. t. Sondhi, a mem- ber of parliament from du nationalist Jan and the organizer of the stration. Sondhi similar 'isiege of >assy in June mistreatment of mats in Peking. * * * Moraes, editor of the Express, newspaper group, an American Marilyn Silverstone, reported they were insulted and threatened last Thursday by Chinese technicians as they drovfe along a Chinese-built highway^in Nepal. The two escaped ^unhurt mid the Indian government pro, tested Chinese.interfedetfce with the Movements of an pupai tional in Nepal. '%< i j-•?. • ; r. 1! A reeent survey Vindicates that about 10 per cent of this nation’s high school students have smoked marijuana. Boston Armored Car Hit $800,000-Hold up Clue Sought BOSTON (AP) — The FBI ex-jmanacled him in the back of the amined a key and police visited truck, drove several blocks to a Shampoo & Ml**, r....m...work * im KILLER LEFT THEM MOTHERLESS-Ten Elizabeth, N.J., children eat a sad breakfast at St. Elizabeth Hospital Saturday. A crazed gunman shot their three mothers PUNSIGHTW POUNDS WASHINGTON (AP) —H plan to encourage more individuals to contribute to political campaigns by giving them a tax break' apparently will get a hearing after Congress reconvenes next month. ' The Committee for Economic development (CED) Sunday proposed that the federal government give an outright credit of SO per cent against income tax on political , contributions up to $50 for eapb taxpayer, $100 for couple filing a joint return. ★ * * Rep. Wilbur D. Mills, chairman of the powerful ways and means committee, says the panel will listen to the plan put forth by a business-backed re- underworld hangouts today for a clue in the robbery of som $800,000 from a Brink’s armored car Saturday four blocks from the scene of the $1.2-million Brinks robbery in 1950. Two men used a key to open the door of the parked truck, surprising a guard, Richard E. Haines, 43, of Tewksbury, who was alone in the vehicle while his two teammates took a coffee break Police said the robbers could not have entered the truck if inside bolts on the truck doors had been latched. None were in place, investigators said. A key was found later at the scene of the robbery. Company' officials said it was not issued by Brinks. AUDIT STARTED Felix A. Savage Jr., manager of Brink’s Boston office, said, “As near as I can ascertain the total (taken) will be in the area of $800,000. I An audit was started Sunday I to determine how much of the : loot was in cash. I * * * The robbery was the 13th of a money express truck in eastern A financing also is favored by par-i political spending, termed 0bso-|MfIss®chuseUis ®Lince J®50 ty chiefs outside Congress. lete and unenforceable, should A spokesman for the Republi- be repealed can National Committee noted |________________ vinnnr»TrrffYTt$ rirrrrrrinpnr parking lot near the Registry of mo t or Vehicles, transferred the money into a vehicle driven by a third man and fled. WORKED WAY FREE He was disarmed, but police .said they found his gun and those belonging to the other guards in the truck. Haines told police he worked his way out of the handcuffs and. walked to a nearby police sta1^ tion and reported the holdup. * Police said the truck haCI made about a dozen pickups', from downtown department stores and was en route to a ' counting house. The loot wa£ in three metal cases and 50 canvas money bags, Brinks officials said. to death Friday night before turning the gun on himself to commit suicide. They were being cared for temporarily at the hospital. Hearings Seen on Tax Break THE EASY HOLIDAY HEALTH SPA WAY CALL 682-6040 NOW OR DROP BY FOR A FREE TOUR Haines said the robbers, who I wore ski masks and gloves, I handcuffed Haines’ wrists and that Chairman Ray Bliss a! ready is on record favoring aj tax break on contributions. FAVORS CHANGE Democratic Chairman Lawrence O’Brien wrote in a party publication last week in favor of changing the campaign financing laws to make small campaign contributions tax deductible. Party leaders were less willing to comment, without further studv, on other proposals by the CED. One is for a presidential search group designed to cope preference primary to be held with the spiraling costs of major in all states on the same date Another is to scale down the number of delegates from the present thousands to about 550 at each convention. “I am inclined to think that is a little extreme,” Byrnes said of the proposal for a sharp cutback in the number of convention delegates. Seats at the convention are a traditional reward for faithful volunteer party workers. GOVERNMENT AID The CED report also recommended that some election costs should be met by government at various levels. It also said the “equal time" rule should be repealed to permit broadcasters to schedule political programs freely. Both corporations and unions campaigns. Without committing himself to the particular plan put forth by the committee. Mills, an Arkansas Democrat, said that “We must find a better way to fl nance campaigns. Some way or another there has to be a mean-1 solution to these ever-in-creasing costs." HAS MERIT’ The senior Republican on the ways and means committee Rep. John W. Byrnes of Wisconsin, commented that the suggestion has merit and some version of it ought to be considered. I can see possible complications,” Byrnes continued ‘There would be problems ol proof, for example. But we have to focus in on some method of fi- should be barred from using nancing campaigns.” | company funds or union dues The idea of a tax incentive to for political purposes, the report broaden the base of campaign said, and the present ceilings on id DON’T JUST STAY AT HOME! Han At Least (hit Evening Out A Month). SUBSCRIBE TO Pontiac Travel’s Theatre Tour For 1969 0 Attend 8 different performances at the Fisher Theatre ft Dine at various fine restaurants before each perform ft Round trip transportation ft lips and services of tour All This For $140 f or r„ni|,/,-!«. Itrlnih SofflW PONTIAC TRAVEL SERVICE, INC. Ill Pontiac Mall Otfica ltd.. PHONE 682-4600 ISULAJLSJUUUUU^ Pontiac Mall Beauty Salon 682-4940 ffolikg (Hotffttrrs Now is the time to got your hair in stylo for the busy entertaining season. You’ll look so elegant oil through your demanding social whirl with an exciting, vivacious coif styled in our Beauty Salon. HOLIDAY PERMANENT With $g$l FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH ™ES0™G Joe Talley Muiic UJtttc -A Mcuojt NEW YEAR'S EVE SERVICE 8 P.M.-12 Midnight Dec. 31st See! Hear! THE TALLEY TEAM Announcing the 5% Diamond Passbook that keeps your money handy. And your cheeking free. The nice thing about passbook saving is that your money is more readily available. That’s true of our new 5% Diamond Passbook, too. But, there’s more to it than that. Because we continuously compound 6%, you get the highest possible earnings on bank savings programs available. And your money’s still hahdy. During the first ten days of every interest quarter you can withdraw, without notice, any funds that have been on de- posit 90 days or more. You can add to your savings in deposits as small as $60 anytime. Your opening deposit of $600 or trfore qualifies you for free checking with no minimum checking balance requirement at all. Add it up! Availability of funds plus the highest earnings plus free checking. The 6% Diamond Passbook—well worth looking into. Stop in soon and see us about it. BIRMINGHAM BLOOMFIELD BANK • Golden Trombone • Electric Steel Guitar • Piano • Organ • Banjo • Accordion THE PUBLIC IS INVITED THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER B—3 BOX 100. IIRMINGHAM, MICH. . I. MAPLE ADAMS • MARTIN OATES • W MAPU IAHSIR • WOODWARD BINNAVUU • W000WAR0 MAPLE • WIX0M HO.. WIX0M • ASSETS C Ovtr 25 Affiliated Studios Coa»Mo~coa»t and World Wide 3432 West Huron St. Jy.t Wait of Eliiobath Lk. Rd. of Highland 682-5040 P.0. i i THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 80, NORTH 30 *Q543 ¥732 ♦ Q54 *1085 WEST (D) EAST AK1096 A 72 VA1054 VQ86 ♦ A 10 ♦J8763 *A73 *942 SOUTH A AJ8 VKJ9 ♦ K92 *KQJ6 Neither vulnerable West North East South 1* Pm Pm Dble Pm 1A Pm 1N.T. Pm Pm Pm Opening lead—A 8 By OSWALD AND JAMES JACOBY Oswald: "Our telephone bridge match against Mrs. Claire Stone and Mrs. Clar-ency Bailey of Champaign, 111., represents a first in bridge history.” Jim: ‘The idea was that of Dick Baker of the Champaign-Urbana Courier. All pairs in the area competed and the winners played an eight-hand telephone match against us. “The match was not intended to prove anything because we simply played eight hands, but a large audience in Illinois watched the ladies put up quite a game against us. They actually beat us by 280 points but they had somewhat the better of the cards and we don’t feel disgraced.” Bridge Tricks From Jacobys I shift the hands so that South bid in spite of only 15 high will always be declarer.” card points.” , •; [ Jim: ‘‘Mrs. Bailey and I were! Jim: “We’ll never know what 'sort of left out of high cards; would have happened had Mrs. [on hand No. 1. Mrs. Stone Stone made this bid. I am not j chose to open one club instead going to embarrass you by ask-Jof one no-trump and as a re- ing what you would have done suit you wound up playing one if one no-trump had been ino-trump.” passed around to you** Oswald: “Mrs. Stone had to lead something and she made! jthe slightly unfortunate choice I of the six of spades. “Had she opened a heart I, ! would have been held to two Ino-trump. As it was, I managed to make three odd for what would have been a very I good score at match point duplicate.” msmsm Jim: “The hand turned out I to be a series of end plays ! You kept putting Mrs. Stone lin and she never had a decent lead.” Oswald: “Let’s leave it to our readers to work out the whole play. The bidding is[ quite interesting in that many: trump. They would consider! three 10s and one nine enough j extra value to warrant this Held Man Wanted in Death of Girl BATTLE CREEK (AP)-Bat-tle Creek Police report they want a man being held on a rape charge by Albion police for questioning in the stabbing death of Nancy Fleece, 14, of Battle Creek. The girl’s body was discovered Dec. 12, 12 days after she disappeared, in an isolated area along 1-94 near Battle Creek. Held by Albion police on a charge of raping a teen-ager the day before Christmas is ROBIN MALONE By Bob Lubbera .THE BERRYS By Carl Gruberl By United Press International Today is Monday, Dec. 30th, the 365th day of 1968 with one to follow. The moon Is between Its first quarter and full stage. The morning stars are Mars and Jupiter. The evening stars are Saturn and Venus. On this day in history: In 1853 the United States bought 45,000 square miles of land south of the Gila River from Mexico for $10 million. It now is the southern parts of Arizona and New Mexico. ★ ★ * In 1903 fire swept the Iroquois Theater in Chicago killing 588 persons. In 1947 King Michael of Rumania abdicated, claiming he was forced out by Com- In 1959 President Eisenhower.called off the ban on American nuclear tests. M0TUIM6 THERE FOR ANi THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1968 January U.S to Europe Not Test o f Speed, Says Army HEIDELBERG (AP) - The commander of the U.S. Army in Europe said today that tiie airlifting of. 12,000 American ground troops back to West Germany early next month will not be a test of speed. “While we are always interested in speed in committing forces anywhere, we won’t race the clock this time,'’ said Gen James H. Polk in a statement issued by his headquarters. TUESDAY SPECIAL! PONTIAC LAKE INN 1890 Highland Road PHONE 613-9988 M0N.-tUE9.-THURS.-FRI. at ItN and OiN NEW YEAR'S DAY at ItSMilMiH DIRECT FROM ITS SENSATIONAL RESERVED SEAT ENGAGEMENT NOW FOR THE FIRST TIME CONTINUOUS PERFORMANCES ...REGULAR PRICES *the most joyous “Our emphasis will be on the orderly disposition of forces and the procedures and techniques of deployment. We do not wish to unduly interfere with normal air and ground traffic, there will be certain artificialities which will ektend the exercise time beyond the time which would be consumed hi an emergency situation.” * * e ‘ The statement appeared aimed at countering any attempts to compare the speed of the U.S. airlift with that of the Soviet occupation of Czechoslovakia last Aug. 39-21. The U.S. exercise, named Reforger, will wind up with a maneuver at the Grafenwoehr training area near the Czechoslovak border Jan. 20-Feb. 4. The airlifted troops, including two brigades of the 24th Infantry Division, are slated to return to their bases in the United States at the end of the exercise. Four Air Force squadrons are flying over from the United States for a related aerial exercise, named Crested Cap. * ★ * Polk said the troops would “take extra time to assure that the weapons and equipment we have prepositioned in Europe for these troops are in first-class condition and ready for battle.” “The best way to do this,” he continued,” is to move to s neuver area to test-fire the weapons, calibrate the communications equipment and inspect the vehicles and equipment. * * * “In a wartime situation, this would be done at or near the storage site. Obviously, we can’t | be tiring tanks, artillery, machine guns and rifles around I Mannheim, Karlsruhe and Kais-I erslautem. so we will go to Gra- SHIP GETS BATH - The USS Wichita, first of a new line of Navy fleet oilers, washes herself with ocean water while on a trial run from the Quincy, Mass., ship- yard where she was built. The pumps spray the 659-foot vessel with 5,000 gallons of water per minute in a system devised to clean the ship after possible exposure to radioactivity. Birthrate Cut, City Life Tied DALLAS, Tex. (AP) — A U.N. crowding.” Without challenging scientist said today the world- her views on possibly beneficial wide trend towards urban living'effects of crowded living, var- poses possibilities for curbing the planet’s population explosion because “crowded living” tends to encourage birth control. Dr. Ulla Olin of the U.N.’s development program said that, for example, a newly urbanized family having “five children already in a very small apartment” is apt to practice "family planning, where it might not in a rural area * In a report prepared for the 135th meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science—amplified at a ious other scientists on the panel said use of animals under enforced crowded living conditions suggests a grim picture of what humans may experience in crowded cities. For example, Dr. Kenneth Myers of Australia’s Commonwealth and Scientific Industrial Research Organization said recent studies among rabbits produced new and strengthened evidence that crowding in mam-1 malian populations produces Making 14 knots, the liner was “profpund changes in behavior!expected to reach Southampton and physiology " j Thursday. The repairs are ex-| He said adult rabbits showed Pect®d to at *east increased sexual and aggressive wee^* anc* Sir Basil Sm***-peice, Cunard’s chairman, canceled a warm-up four-day cruise Jan. 10 and the new Queen's British Furor Grows Over Liner's Faults ABOARD THE QUEEN ELIZABETH (AP) — Britannia’s! newest ocean pride, the liner! Queen Elizabeth 2, steamed homeward at half speed today amid a growing uproar over heri trouble-filled shakedown cruise. The Cunard Line announced it had refused to accept delivery I of the 66,000-ton ship, which cost 969.8 million, until the builders cleared up “thermal expansion" problems in the ship’s two turbine engines and completed their work in the passenger and service areas. Lloyd's Mulls Beirut Claims LONDON (AP) — Underwriters £L Lloyd’s, the insurance; firm, met today to consider1 claims totalling a reported 20 million pounds—948 million—for the Lebanese planes Israeli commandos destroyed Saturday. The insurance men were also discussing whether they should curtail their coverage because of the Israeli raid. * ★ * The 13 Arab aircraft stroyed were all insured; through Lloyd's. Financial! sources said the underwriters! would have to decide whether it could continue to insure planes against this type of aggressive action. * * ★ The sources said such at-; tacks might be construed by in-j surance firms as an act of war! not covered by the “all-risk’’ policy. “Higher premiums may be a solution to situations like the attack on an El A1 aircraft at Athens, but Lloyd’s is unlikely to accept the risk of full-scale raids like the Beirut counterattack,” financial writer Beery Ritchie wrote in the Times. Lebanon’s Middle East Airlines, which lost eight aircraft valued at 934.8 million, said it was confident the insurance money would be paid. YOU MUST BE 18 12 NORTH SAGINAW IN DOWNTOWN PONTIAC MATINEES DAILY Open 11:49 A.M. Show Starts 12:00 Noon Continuous — 334-4436 ENDS TUESDAY 2nd Hit "SATAN'S REP” OPEN NEW YEARS' DAY - 3:45 - CONTINUOUS 'HAPPY NEW YEAR TO ALL’ STARTING THURSDAY, JAN. 2nd, OPEN 9:45 A.M. EVERY DAY - CONTINUOUS r JRLj[Littlc Joe Special” BUilfcAfclHJW the RIB EYE STEAK a as wPTfflW PIT* °reen Saia* Qft £ UilMM Texas Toast, Baked Potsto • JUt FEATURING TUESDAY ONLY Kmart Glenwood Plaza North Perry Street — Corner of Glenwood 338-9433 Dine-in or Fast Take-out Brian Keith ‘With Six Ym Get Eggroll” Wi.lt MiyJ' ^t Golden Horseshoe Revue St 1:41 Only BUY! SELL! TRADE! USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! news Conference—Dr. Olin said behavior, heightened activity of the univrsaK trend toward ur- “stress” hormones, reproduc-banization has special impllca- tive abnormalities and “patho-tloos for curbing birthrates in logical consequences involving developing countries. kidneys, liver and other organs This is so, she indicated, be- of the body.” cause the change to urban living ryer Funeral Home with bu- Perry Mount Park Cemetery. £lujjln* Mrs. Jack Dickenson, I rial ^ Center cemetery, Mr. Ferrel died yesterday. |jubyMahan, MrsV^nonOd- Towsnhip. den and Mrs. Arthur Odden, all, Mrs. Lake died Sunday, of Pontiac. j Surviving are her daughter, T- _ ki c_i w Mrs. Graham (Marian) Died- Tma M. Salvatore! rich of Davisburg and two grandchildren He was an electrician at Pontiac Motor Division and a member of Roosevelt Lodge of Pontiac. Surviving are his wife, Dot; a son, John M. of Rochester; two grandchildren; a sister; and a brother. Allen R. Harmon Service for Allen R. Harmon, 76, of 260 Dick will be 2:15 p.m. Wednesday at Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Burial will be in Ottawa Park Cemetery. Mr. Harmon died yesterday. A retired farmer, he was a member of F&AM No. 134,1 Holly. Surviving are his wife, Mildred; a daughter, Mrs. Gerald Ward of Linden; two grandchildren; four sisters, Mrs. Lloyd Adams, Mrs. Elmer Puckett and Mrs. John Puckett, all of Pontiac, and Mrs. Marvin Puckett of Waterford Township; and two brothers, T. L. Harmon of Winchester, Ky., and H. R. Harmon of Milford, Service for Tina Mane] Memorials may be made to Salvatore, Way-old daughter of|the Michigan Cancer Founda-Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Salvatore tion of 3534 Elizabeth Lake, Waterford Township, will be 2 Mrs. Charles Robinson p.m. tomorrow at the Huntoon Funeral Home with burial in1 H0LLY _ service for Mrs the Oakland Hills Memorial Cemetery. Surviving are her parents. Teens Take Car-Insurance Rap DETROIT (UPI )' — Many group, young drivers are the I most accident-prone of any group. Ironically, the same statistics show that the parents of the Of every 100 drivers under 25 years old, 40 of them are involved in an accident. Drivers in the age group that motorists spend a dollar a day on their car, every day of the year, before they even turn over the engine. That’s $365 a year. Some spend even more. Protection is the name of this, item of automobile expenditure.' safest drivers on the road. Insurance against what might] ★ * * [numbers. Those in the 35 to 54|to get out of it, be staggering costs if a motorist! As soon as a teen-ager gets a aRe group represent 'about 40 Norval Reamer, underwriting cent of the drivers, but the manager of the Insurance Ex !heAaf ITT,’ betWT represents the parents of these the ages of 35 and 54. are the j •___r._________ . young drivers, however, have reasons why the young have more accidents. They’re likely to have better reflexes, but they have poorer judgment. They take chances that an experienced driver would not. When they get in a the best record based on their|jam, they lack the experience causes an automobile accident, license to drive the family The biggest spenders of all in'insurance rates on the this category are teen-agers and] nearly double. car parents who have teen-agers driving the family car. STATISTICS CITED Here’s the reason, from insurance company statistics on automobile accidents all over Parents of teen-agers may T nabon: “ \°° milli and tbe of 604 Hartner will be 2 p.m.lcompanies plac*. such h®avy I cent are under 25 years old. L *^ie Automobile Club °/ Mich-1 results can be seen, he said. Complete Stock • SKI EQUIPT. • SKI CLOTHES Vi Price SNOW SH0VJELS SNOW PUSHERS 19 lib 151 Oaklaid An. FE 4-1594 STOCKS are our stock in trade. See us for data and • advice on the corporate stocks we think are best suited to your investment program. For informed investing, . see the specialists at FIRST First of Michigan Corporation 742 No. Woodward Birmingham. 647-1400 I tomorrow at the Dryer Funeral' *nsurance penalties on the Mrs. John O. Smith Prayer service for Mrs John O. (Chloe) Smith, 66, of 193 W. New York will be 7 p.m. today at Voorhees-SIple Funeral Home with burial in Wiley Chapel Cemetery, Dunmore, Ky. Mrs. Smith died yesterday. Surviving are her husband; I ■■ y ligan, and its associate, the De-| They are. In automobile ac- Home, Holly. with "buriarTn!young drivers- ?ut insurance]'ONE-THIRD OF ACCIDENTS |troit Automobile Inter Insurance cidents. — ’-----------------companies operate on statistics > But they are involved in one Exchange and Motor S t a t e ~---------------—————--------------------- ; ]— and statistics show that as a 'third of all the accidents. I Insurance Co., offer some Cau5e No- Mrs. Fred Harroun Service for Mrs. Fred (Kate) Harroun, 85, of 587 Markle will be 11 a.m. tomorrow at Harold Waterford Man Robbed by 2 in City Restaurant A Waterford Township manl Rostow Denies Cabinet Rift, Sees No Early Viet Pullout Pontiac WASHINGTON (AP) — Spe-j immediately to reduce the levell STATE OF MICHIGAN—In the Probate Court for the County of Oakland, Juvenile Division. In the matter of the petition concerning Gerald Lee Coyle, minor. TO: James Coyle, father of said minor, child. Petition having been filed in this Court, alleging that said child comes within the provisions of Chapter 712A of the Com-* piled Lews of 1948 as amended#. In that the present whereabouts of the father of said minor child Is unknown and said He UtCUt id the lurltdlctlon of this Court, in tno N»m« of th« People of I of Mlcfitaen, you art hereby notified that tha hearing on said pet............. at tha Court House, Oakland County .... ,i Sarvlc* Cantor, In the City of Pontiac In But McGovern said Johnson s County, an the 7th day ot January ara hereby commanded at said haarlng. actlcal to make personal _ daughter, Mrs. Auston Adler |was robbed at, a pontiac of Pontiac; a son, John B Wei !restaurant yesterday by two bom of Dayton, Ohio; three youths he to be armfd brothers; a sister; seven|poIj^aS repor e to ontac|cial presidential assistant Walt]of war deaths. (Manila proposal for withdrawal — grandchildren; and six great- Co) of ^ Dover W. Rostow has sharply denied “Having made the judgmentiof U.S. troops within six monthsiTt1 Doing imp, grandchildren. {told officers he was stopped by,reports of vietnam policy differ-jthat there is no victory ahead,” after hostilities and violence]3uu$w!S,SX.•rf’.l&J Mrs Jesse Arnold lthe bandits when he attempted ences between key Cabinet McGovern said, "and that we subsides in Vietnam is a call]pLiT'pXm.'T£^p£."£iStJS 112 to leave the H o 11 y w o od;members and says he expects are going to press instead for a for surrender by Hanoi. c,w“t£l? ^"hUSSmo'eugon# Arthur di OOMFTFI n TOWNSHIP _ Restaurant. 1001 Orchard Lake, no U S. troop withdrawals until i negotiated settlement, why not * * * ^“ontrt &d“coum7Un SB BLOOMFIELD TOWNS I P about 4:15 a m. Hanoi is ready to negotiate reduce the loss of American life, The senator said the United lot o«#mb«r a.d. wSl R. Davis Funeral Home, Au-i crv*ce or r8, eaa* * ra| He said he did not see a them. the loss of Vietnamese -life dur- States also has long sinceL^^- fenoa.MpoRe, burn Heights, with burial In A.) Arnold 95 of 1569 Sodon weapon but the tWQ degcrjbed ! 1 M| u k f afnpn rh-inpi 'Wdllam 8ll8ht-bullt youths about 20,1 Rostow Sunday called reports Jlons are pending Mrs. Harroun. a member of at Bell Chapel of the William lhreatened to shoot him. Lf differences between Secre the Auburn Heights American] R. Hamilton Co. Funeral Home.j Coley WflS forced lo ^ „t a *ry 0, state D^an Rusk and with burial In I orest Lawn service counter while 11 ing this period when negotia- moved beyond the Manila pro-] posal and has Indicated “we are ; (Seal) a trua copy Judge of Probata Legion Auxiliary, died Saturday. Surviving are eight children, Mrs. Pearl Avery of Middle-ton, Mrs. Grace Martin of Beloit, Wls., Mrs. Lucille Cech- Cemetery, Detroit. Mrs. Arnold died yesterday. She was a member of the Christ Methodist Church of Detroit, the Ladies Senior Citizens Club nel of Homer, Mrs. Edriajand the Birmingham Com-Knechtges of Rochester, Clare munity House. Harroun of Waterford Town-| Surviving are her daughter, ship, Leonard of Mendon and,Mrs. Richard E. Harris of Fred and Claude, both of Pon-|Bloomfield Hills; a son, Owen tiac; two brothers; a sister; w. of East Detroit, five grand-29 grandchildren; 33 great- children; nine great-grandchil ... tbe Secretary of Defense Clark M. assailants took $260 from his Clifford a “rather strained ef-wallet. hen fled on foot, police fort of the press to pump up the war between the members of the Cabinet.” Apollo 8 Capsule Gels Tests by Navy to negotiate withdrawal of U.S. He also said the United States McGovern appeared on NBC’s “Meet the Press.” He said he believes Clifford agrees with him that the United States should reduce troop levels and move into a defensive stance but that Rusk favors mutual withdrawal of both U.S. and grandchildren; three JSSS® »»Sft f™m « great great grand Mrs. G. Howard Lane* Christopher D. Dick North^Amerkin* Rowell Ca ' plant at Downey, Calif, for clos- Servlce for Mrs. G. Howard HIGHLAND TOWNSHIP er examination. (Tassa A.) Lane, 83, of 5471 — Service for Christopher D.| The capsule carried astro- Elizabeth Lake, Waterford Dick, 3-month-old son of Mr. nauts Frank Borman, James A. Township, will be 1 p.m. and Mrs. Larry W. Dick of 1681 Lovell Jr. and Willlilm A. An- Wednesday at Donelson-Johns Lombardy was to be 1 p m. ders to a splashdown in the Pa- Funeral Home. Burial will be]today at St. George Episcopal rifle Friday. has made clear it, John. 'sSth Vtotnam^rt ™ HONOLULU (AP) £ The Vietnam but that Hanoi refldy tQ negotiate wlthdrawal McGOVERN’S VIEW Rostow was interviewed on about tbe situation,” he said CBS’ “Face the Nation.” ]“is that they have not yet come | to the point, in Hanoi, where „ . _ _ they are ready to bite Into these But Sen. George S McGovern,LrlUcal lssues of 8ubstance.” D-S.D., said he believes there_______________________________ are differences between Rusk and Clifford—and said U.S.| troop withdrawals should begin! THEY WALKED AWAY-Colin Cook (left), A sailor from Wausua, Wls., and Bill De-Groot of Sioux Falla, S.D., walk down a hallway In a Chicago hospital after they apparently uninjured Friday when a North Central Airlines plane on which they were passengers hit a hangar at O'Hara International Airport. The crash killed 26 persons. has not responded. Rostow said he believes there is no plan by President Johnson to reduce the U.S. troop level in Vietnam before he leaves office Jan. 20. of troops and that Hanoi could have picked up the proposal any time since. POINT NOT REACHED “The simple fundamental fact willing to make considerably greater concessions.” Rostow also said Johnson considered “serious and unwise” the Israeli attack on Arab planes at the Beirut international airport even though the United States understands Israel’s concern over the earlier Arab] commando attack on an Israeli! airliner in Athens. Asked if the recent U.S. decision to supply 50 Phantom jets to Israel would not spur a U.S.-Soviet arms race in the Middto East, Rostow said the U.S. de# sion was made reluctantly to prevent Arab supersonic plane superiority In the future. The U.S. aim, he suggested, was to prevent an arms imbalance “that would tempt anyone to start a war.” Juvenll* Division December 30, 1968 —for a now concept in life insurance! M. E. DANIELS District Representative 553 W. Huron FI 3-1111 MODERN WOODMEN «' AMERICA Hogne Office, Rock l.l.iul. III. JL CEMETERY MARKERS Monuments from $196 Markers from $35 Monument Builders In Pontiac for Over 73 Years INCH MEMORIALS, INC. 864 N. Perry 335-6931 Bronte Plain for Memorial Park Cemeteries at Below Cemetery Price* Foreign Students Take a Look at Baltimore Slums j BALTIMORE, Md. (AP) -! After a group of foreign stu-1 dents toured Baltimore's slums Sunday. Hanna Bangbret, 18. of Korbach, Germany, said it was “embarrassing to see humans living in such conditions in this] country with the highest living standards, the best technolo-| gists and the astronauts.” But Christina Migiwa Ebisa-wa, 19, said she had seen worse slums in her native Tokyo. * e * Tore Thomassen of Stavanger, Norway, said he was awakened to realities he had read about but not felt. The students were weekend gests of the Calvary United! Methodist Church which arranged lectures on inner-city life and took them on the tour. 1 Entate Planning ... ... is the mark of a thinking person. The time It takes is certainly a sound investment. Your attorney, the trust officer at your bank, your tax consultant and your funeral director can give you helpful advice. 'Phone FEDERAL 4-4511 Patlcinq I On Our U lack of supporting bids rather than heavy selling pressure accounted for the loss. RALLY HOPES Before the market opened, hopes for a rally were based on news of a big inflow of orders for machine tools, an111 per cent gain in construction awards, the large jump in consumer prices and the prospect of increased steel production in the first quarter. Fears of tight money and high interest rates and the determination of the Federal Reserve Potatoes, 50-lb. bag Radishes, Black. to Squash, Acorn, Squash, Hubbard, to-bu. .............. 2.00 Turnips, topped, bu.....................2.00 LBTTUCB-SALAD ORBENS Celery, Cabbage. dz.......,22.50 Lettuce, Bibb, Hothouse, 5-lb. bskt. W. 2.75 Lettuce, Leaf,. Hothouse, 10-lb. bskt. 2.75 Board to dampen the economy counteracted these items, analysts said. Prices were irregularly lower on the American Stock Exchange. Trading was moderately active. Associated Oil & Gas paced the list on volume, gaining a fraction. Among other heavily trading issues, Four Seasons Nurseries lost about 7 points, Asamera Oil 1V4 and National General warrants (new) 1. Rath Packing gained about a point and Astrodata was off nearly a point, both in active dealings. Exec Seeks Group to Determine Cost Gap CHICAGO (AP)—A top Ford Motor Co. official Sunday proposed establishment of a perm anent National Goals Institute to keep track of America’s needs and its ability or inability to meet them. Arjay Miller, Ford’s vice chairman, told a combined session of the American Finance The New York Stock Exchange Poultry and Eggs DETROIT EOOS DETROIT (AP)-(USDA)-Egg pr paid per dozen by first receivers (including U. S.): Grade A lumbo 49-54; extra arge 49-52%; large 48%-51%; medium Mve poultry: ... _.-22; heavy typ 25-27; broilers and fryers white Exchange — Butter buying prices unchanged to 1 lower; score AA 66%; 92 A 66%; 90 B 89 _C 60Va; cars prfcS M Vr; •• better grade A whites standards 41; checks 21%. CHICAGO POULTRY CHICAGO CAP)—(USOA)—Live poultry: wholesale buying prices unchanged; roasters 24%-26%; fryers 19-21; few ducks 30, 30-32. NEW YOR K(AP) - New ■Hi ‘seted n Sales (hds.) —A— IS 70 MV, 70 63to 52 41 2OV4 20 Exchange selected noon prices: Net Low Lest Chg. 70 + to Admiral AetnaLIIAC 1 AlrRgdtn 1.50 AlcmAlu 1.10 AllegCp ,20e AllegLud 2.40 AllegPw 1.20 AlliedCh 1.20 Amefada 2 Am Alrlln .20 AmBdcst 1.40 Am Con 2.20 ACrySug 1.40 AmCyan 1.25 AmEIPw 1.50 A Enka 1.50o Livestock heifers steady; cows scarce# mosfl ^laughter steers; choice 900-1.200 78.00-29.50; early choice 29.50-30.00; sales average to high Atlas Ch ' ed good and choice Atlas Corp .50-27.25; slaughter. Avco Cp i I 800-950 lbs:Avne! Inc I Avon Pd I 25.50-27.25# lota" choice 24JD0-2S.50; 42.00-44.00; choice 38.00-42.00; good 32.0 38.00. Sheep 400; scattered loads and lo choice and prim# 90-110 lb wooU slaughter lambs 28.00-27.00. CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO (AP) - (USDA) - Hoot 4,500; butchers strong to 25 higher; In* stances 50 up on weights over 250 lbs; active; 1-2 200-225 lb butchars 20.50-21.00; 170 head sorted at 21.25; 2-3 190-240 tte 19.75-20.50; 2-4 240-260 lbs 19.25-20.00; 1-4 760-270 lbs 18.75-19.25; 3-4 300-310 lbs 17.25-17.50; sows steady to 25 Maher, the advance on weights 500 lbs and down; active; 1-3 330-400 IbS 15.75-16.50; 14 fi | Beth Stl Boeing l.j BoisCas ^ BorgWar ' Brist My Brunswick BucyEr 1 irely steady; cows slaughter throughout, prime 1,1 steers yield grotto i mixed mjh choict i .5# lbs < mixed got ■ high ch laughter ,025 Ibo hulls atflve. ful- ly steady slaughter 30.2f3l.00i mixed Mjh^chol GEM UN 21.25-2*. 50; Prime tSb-lJM Ibo yield erode, 2 to 4 'nod end choict ■ 21.25, mixed high choice tnd grime ... Llt.Ot, choice I50-i,02ST ibt yield orodo 2 to 4 27.25-2t.2lt mixed wed and choke 24.15-27.25; good 24.0M4.25, commercial cowl 4.S0-1BJM, utony 14.75-lto#, high- ylold-ing utility l&M-IMOl conners end euttori 7 JO. 15 50-17.5 lombe 25.50-24. a American Stocks NEW YOR K(AP> - American Stock Exchange selected neon prices: tetoe . i (hds.) Mltjh Lew Lest Cl ArkLGas I.) Asemera C AssdOII A G 1740 **» Ito *4* AtlasCorp wt 115 444 44e 440 Barnet Eng 7 SM0 Wit 3344 BraziiLtPw 1 4* Itto 17’. 17*0 — to Brit Pet J7e 117 20*4 204* 2044 14 Mto 10 tfto 47 Mto 15*4 1144 31 1144 12*0 12*0 — to ” 1*44 1044 IT 25 1*40 l*to 1*1- ■■ Campbl Chib Cdn Java" Cinerama Creola 2.4 Data Coot Dixilyn Corp Dynaiectm EquitCo .05r Fed Resrces Felmont Oil Gulf Am Cp HoernarW J8 Husky O .38» NewPark Mn st.thom hot 5ynttk Cp JO it* tito in* in* ■ * 22V0 12*0 22*0 — to 12 1140 llto llto IT 12*0 12*0 12*0 I N 1#** llto llto + to «|T*o in* llto .... IUO io*o ig*o —to 51 14*0 2440 24*0 — to - 1 Mto M Mto + to 15 Mto Mto Mto 10 Mto Mto Mto M ir*o ifto 17V0 11 jOto 10 ji 11 ML- ^ 10 14 llto itto — 4 *to *44 *44 1} (44 (to (to 41 ft 47 4710 -140 41 3to 3340 33*0 — to 1 14*0 14*0 14*0 + to M llto llto llto — to H isto iivo itto - to it ij*o lito llto — to 15 lOto Mto Mto—Ito mo — i 4f/4 Mto ... Mto Mto-to Stocks of Local Interest Elec rip 10 IIPtaoNO litre Cp 1. Efner El 1.1 fndJohn* . . Si ■ Elhyl Cp 3 change throughout the day. Prices do EvantP ,401 ............... I Eversherp 0urSV/;,%H«N?W,.r,K:Kr' Quotations from the NASO Of* rep- eal Plnanl CampRL ,45a CampSp 1.10 Canteen JO CaroPLt Ml CireTBT S Carrier d DlaSham 1.41 f>«r»Lln#JC DowChm 2.4C markup, markdown or _ Truck . Engineering Citizens utilities ... Oetrax Chemical Diamond Crystal Kelly Services Mohawk Rubber Co. ietren Printing Scrleto ........... Wyandotte Chemical PptrghC .50* Fadders JO PedDStr M Plttrol 1J0 Plreetne 1 JO MUTUAL PURDI U ”J PMC'S FoodFalr .98 16.61 18.13 L'-SK 9.75 10J4 170 6.79 7.4I| !2l! IMWi-ii >•» 13.30 16.46jGan Elec 2077 22J8|Gen Fds 70 Vd 70% 91 20% 20% 20 48 21% 20% 20% — | National Goals Institute Urged I Helping Others Tops Resolutions for 1969 By LISA CRONIN | “If we all resolve to listen AP Business Writer m0re carefully to what the NEW YORK — Competition'other fellow is saying— in and making money took second,business, in relationships with place to help^g others when a other countries, with our group of business and financial children and young people, with leaders were asked to suggest our disadvantaged and disaf-New Year’s resolutions for fected fellow citizens-we’ll everyone. [have a better year in 1969,” “I would hope that everyone siad Louis F. Laun, president of resolves to do his utmost to see Celanese Fibers Marketing Co. what private business can do to Uniroyal Inc. President and help further the cause of equal Chairman George R. Vila tack-opportunity for black people led what some people consider and other underprivileged peo- the nation’s top economic pro-pie in the United States” saidiblem. Hobart Lewis, president of the * ★ ★ Reader’s Digest. | “if the average man will Muriel Siebert, the only,resolve to make his efforts in woman ever elected toji969 just five per cent more I ... .... , membership in the New York productive than they have been, Association and the American stock Exchange, urged people he will make an extremely Economics Association such an to “sit down and realize where valuable individual contribution they started from and help other people get somewhere.’* There are two things—making money and leading a good life," said this self-made woman. Part of leading a good life is helping people institute could issue annual reports listing goals, what they would cost and pointing out “the gap between the total cost of our goals and our ability to pay.” * * * “General recognition of this gap,” he said, “would be valu able because it would open the eyes of those who believe that our problem is over-production or that everything is possible in what is sometimes called our ‘economy of abundance Miller called for the institute to be staffed by permanent full-time professionals from such fields as the behavioral I WASHINGTON (UPI) — sciences, economic^, engineer- There is evidence of an easing ing, urban planning and medi- off of inflation which threatens to cause the biggest yearlong cost of living increase in 17 years, according to Treasury Secretary Joseph W. Barr. He cited, among other things the current balance in the na tion’s budget and President Johnson’s hope that a small surplus might be shown in the fiscal year starting next July 1 to the fight against inflation,” he said. * ★ * “Time is running out on us” warned Paul Hoffman, who heads the United Nations I Development Program. The Treasury Chief Sees Easing of Inflation FEDERAL MONEY As put forward by Miller, the institute would be paid for by the federal government. “Certainly its reports would be made directly to the President and to the congress and given wide public distribution,” he said * * ★ Miller added that reports by the institute would have “no binding force or direct authority.” Individual members of its staff also would be free to differ with institute opinions and to add their own comments to basic reports. * * ★ “Our concern jg not with absolutes” Miller said, “but with choices—with the kind of information we as a people must have if we are to be able to see clearly the various alternatives open to us and choose rationally from among them.” RB Trans' UMC Imt .72 Un Carbide 2 Un Elec 1.20 UnOIICal 1.40 UnlonPaclf 2 Unlroyal 1.20 UnltAIrLIn l UnltAlrc 1.80 Unit Cp Me Un Fruit 1.40 Unit MM 1J0 US Borax 1 USGyptm Se K'U40 uOPIyCh 1.50 Uf Smelt 1 US Steel 1.40 UnlvOPd .80 Upjohn 1.60 43% 42% 76% 73% 16 15% 15% 12 15% 35% 35% — 64 44% 44% ~ 152 35% 34 —u— 51 26% 25% 25% 180 45% 45% 45’A 62 52% 52 52 - % 111 60% 58% 59% —2% 149 44 42% 42% -1% 69 66% 66 66% — % 7 15% 15% 15% + % 87 84% 84% 84% ... 17 36% 36% 36% — % 33% .... 32 82% 81 82% +1% 84% 84' 36% 361 13 34% 33% 33% 32 82% 81 82% _ 126 32% 31% 31% — % 28 37% 36% 37 7 83% 83 83 J7J 62% 33 57 56% 55% 55% —1% —V— 56 34% 34% 34% — % 22 31% 31% 31% — % 109 29% 28% 28%—1% Varlan A »,c# _W—X—Y—Z— War Lam 1.10 it 58% 58 58 - 11 24% 23% 24% - 8 42% 42 42V. - 15 42 41% 41% 64 43% 42% 43 172 65V* 67% 47% - 60 N'/4 04 84«/4 • 15 56% 56 56 40 46 45% 46 - 26 35% 34% 34% - 204 35_ 34% 34% - 40 267% 266% 266% - WaiWat WettnAIrL 1 Wn Banc 1.20 WnUTel 1.40 Weetgii 1J0 Weyerhr 1.40 Whirl Cp 1.60 oj2p istSht Yngsttht uo 102 ZamIBR 1.70a M aav» am ^ Copyrighted by The Associated Brest 1HI nl-snnual declaration. Special or dividend* or, peym*nte net .designs regular art Identified In the ig footnote*. so extra or extra*, b—Annuel rate lock dividend, c—Liquidating dM-d-Declarod or eald In IM7 glut dividend, a—Declared or paid to l In 1*67, estimated cash value an ex-divtdend North Branch Without Power More than 1,000 persons in the northern Lapeer County community of North Branch were still without electric power this morning following a wind and ice storm early Saturday. Keith Hunt, Lapeer district manager for the Detroit Edison Co., said the company hoped to resume power transmission to the village today. The storm knocked out 40,000-volt lines both north and south of North Branch, Hunt said. Many residents left town to stay with neighbors after the power was interrupted at about 8 a.m. Saturday, cutting off heat, according to village mayor Gilbert O’Dell, 3819 W Mill. TRIED TO STAY WARM However, O'Dell added, some stayed, attempting to get enough warmth from fireplaces and stoves. A spokesman for the Lapeer County Sheriff’s Department Asked about the spiral in prices, Barr said: “I think there are some signs that it is easing off. Certainly we in the federal government are moving appropriately ... We are not going to be adding to any demands on the economy that it can’t fulfill.” * ★ * The secretary, filling out the term of Henry H. Fowler who has resigned, discussed the economic outlook on a joint television interview yesterday Pilot Is Killed os Homemade Plane Crashes 130 Occident .00b ~ ldl» Ml GE 1.00 69% v 45% m 44% 9 46% 46 46% 2 46% 46% 46% 209 47 46% 46% - 21 29% 29% 29% 03 23% 39% 23% 5 23% 23 47 44% 43% 44'< 1 33V* 33% MV; xIO 52% 51% 52 27 37% 37% 37'; _ _ _____ibution date, g—Paid lett year ... Declared or pew efier stock «lwMn(r m*action Red Cross workers were in denid *r p.i**L*fl!‘ng resit*ents to the American tien dot*. ^ ^ Legion Hall for food and shel- cid—cVned. x-Ex dividend. »-tEx divi- ler for the night. luiL Xdi»-Mx diairibu-j The Red Cross supplied 40 cots in the hall, the spokes-daiivery. _________ "Iman said, and all were used MOUNT PLEASANT (AP) -Lavigne Aibar, 33, died today of injuries sustained Sunday when his home made airplane crashed on takeoff from a field west of here. Aibar had been taken to Central Michigan Community hospital for treatment of head and internal Injuries and two broken legs. * * ★ Aibar had christened his homemade plane, “The Aibar Puddle Jumper.” It was equipped with snow skis, and Aibar had flown it several times pre Vtously. Three witnesses of the crash | reported the plane left the ground and banked to the left, then hosed over and plunged to the ground. Aibar was pinned in the wreckage for about 15 minutes before he could be freed. * * ★ The three who witnessed the crash brought Aibar by snowmobile to a nearby road, where he was picked up by an ambu-ance. Secretary W with Labor Willard Wirtz, JOBLESS RATE Wirtz expressed concern that there might be some slackening in the drive to keep down the jobless rate as an expedient to ease Inflationary pressure: Barr discounted this possibility, saying that a Social Security Tax increase early next year will take about $3 billion out of circulation, that another $4 billion wilt be absorbed in April due to delayed effects of the 10 per cent income tax surcharge I 9 it So I think,” he said, “there is a gradual move to take a little of the steam out of the economy without getting the unemployment effects t h concern secretary Wirtz.” “Unemployment need not up," Wirtz said, “It is not ta evitable that it go up, it Just must not go up.” REAL QUESTION Wirtz conceded that “the in flatlon question is a very real IB,” but added: We don’t have low unemployment now because we have an Inflationary economy We have low unemployment now because we have ourselves to see to It that unemployment is low as i matter of priorities.” * * * Meantime, the Johnson Ad ministration continued during the weekend its efforts to persuade the incoming policy makers of Richard M. Nixon to continue stressing self-imposed price and profit restraints to fight inflation ormer Marshall Plan chief called 1969 a crucial year in “(he war on poverty of opportunity.” Proper self-management was stressed by Charles S. Jensen, president of C.I.T. Corp., industrial financing and leasing subsidiary of C.I.T. Financial Corp. “Every businessman should resolve to strike a proper" balance among his various esponsibllities—his business, his family, his community and his other obligations,” Jensen said. Cartier Inc. President Joseph Liebman resolved to “humanize our business in such a way so that our customers will feel how grateful we are for their presence." It’s elegant enough just to be human," the head of the Fifth Avenue jewelry said. BE DEMANDED’ Cecil L. Wright, president of J.C. Penney Co„ urged consumers to continue to be demanding in quality, fashion, and service." “This will help keep us on our toes,” he said. “In case we fall short of our goals, we want to know about it.” *44 A similar thought came from Stuart Perkins, president of Volkswagen of America Inc., who suggested businessmen continue to emphasize conscientious service both to the product and to the consumer.” Brokers stressed a reasoned approach to the market in their resolutions. “Have confidence and courage to stick with the stocks you have confidence in,” said John C. Hayden of Eastman Dillon, Union Securities & Co. Most of the money is made by, sitting on the stock you believe in and not by trading.” Don’t try to outguess the economy, but rather try to determine what the particular fortunes of a company will be,” said Robert Welngargen, senior vice president of Scheinman, Hochsttn & Trotta Inc. “Disregard tips, hunches and other unreliable sources and fall back on reasoned investment decision,” said Walter Stern, vice president and research director of Burnham and Co.. Treasury Position WASHINGTON (AP) - TBe ce.h peal-•Ion of the Treasury Oac. 74, 1*6* comired lo Dec. a, 1*67 (In Boiler*); Balance „ 6,670,70*J6*.*1 7,561, *11,*03.36 Depoalli flacel veer July 1 »2,4MJ1 71,010,016,637.75 *7,662,57?,3/7*14 66,261.614,077.62 760,117,ig6,121.75 245,217,127,717,5* lasts 10,266,*42,746.14 It,427,70,4*1.06 .. 620.234.306 55 debt not sub- lecl lo statutory limit. Withdrawals tlacel year _ “ ‘: ),777J4 Total S Compiled by Tb. AaeeelatsB Press BOND AVBRAOBS 7 ha... Net chenoe —.1 Noon Mon. 43.7 Rrev. Day 43.* Week Ago 64.3 »r3riij wag-:#} 1967 High . 73.0 1967 LOW . 64J w»v I 35* 34to 344* 344* 4 4Jto 42 45 it 103 into into >- 3 43% 42% 42% — 1/4 ParPwi i ta j «to jo** {{to - to jg 2 52% 12% 81% — %: PftnA&ul lifi 23 26% 25% 2J% - % Sn7m 4© Z a! P»cOEI 1 ■Eisiil —p— 45 30% 30 » 29% 38% 135 25% 24% —F— 22 03% 03% 03% . . 55 22% t1% 21% — % 13 31 30% 30% — % 73 92% 00% 90%—2% 10 04 33% 33%-% 15 40% 47% 47%-% 20 61 40% 40% ... 22 36% 35% 35% - % 10 91% 31 01 — % 12 41% 41% 41% + % 12 67% 67% 67% — % 41 37% 37% 37% -1% 11 31% 22% 31%... 150 53% 53 53% - % IS 34% 34% 34% — % 61 40% 42% 43 — % 10 39'/4 38% 39’b Pftnh BP MO 4 23 22% 2231 31 23 22% 23 15 34% 33% 33*j 29% 29V ruptcy or recelverihlp STOC KAVERAOES Chiang Receives U.S. Archbishop By ROGER E. SPEAR Q—Please comment on U.S. Lines’ merger with Welter Kldde Co. I’ve held USL for yean with good dividends until ■ell?—L. D. A—I surmise you'd prefer receiving more good dividends to waiting for Kidde's growth potential to mature. Therefore, I suggest switching into one of your home state's public utilities — Iowa Electric Light or Iowa Public Service. Both, offering 5 per cent yield, have increased dividends annually for some years. Service areas show good gfowth possibilities. Armco Steel's |3 dividend subject to call by the company for redemption. 4 4 4 Q—I'm an 82-year-old widow anxious to make what little I have last me through. Cash ■avlngi are down to f1,000, Social Security pays only $87 a month, io dividends — 50 Portland General Electric, 80 Sun Oil pfd. and 231 shares of Affiliated Fundi — are important. Could I get more from something else?—L. M. A — Possibly you could but net results might not justify either the effort or expense. From all sources you now average more than 5 per cent if you're taking fund distributions in cash. TAIPEI, Formosa (AP) - yielding 5^cen,,s-wejirY. "might fare somewhat 19o8 s estimated {better by selling securities and ceived Homan Catholic Arch- coverc(j bishop Terence J. Cooke of New earnjngg j5 11 27% 37% ParkeDtvit 1 x48 30% 29% 29% PonnCen 2.40 109 M% 63% 63% - = PtftnDIx JOB 37 33% 31% 32% —I •2 45% 45 , 45% -11 31% 31% 31% + 1 PePwLt Polaroid .32 PPG lad a ProctrG 2JO PubOCol i 06 PuBIliInd .751 319 60 65 67% +2V 29 75% 75% 753/4 + '/ 21 31% 31 31 - ' 17 65% 65 65% - i 36 74 73*4 73% 4 % 5 64% 64% 64% — V 177 116% 114M 26 41% 41V 163 07% 07 Tho Attoclotod Pi M II 19 Ind. RoHt Util. Stock* 1 513!o 2%:? 157 0 spokesman 516.0 211.1 157J 359.1 j last night. I The village's wafer supply I YwlT^hiii"mnimiiri0 *B| , HHI - ----------H-------------- 'was restored yesterday when * * + | ^ Increasing its share of the relying on Medicare and your a portable generator supplied! archbishop who is mili- i8tecl nJarket» has broadened savings reserve for emergency. Iby a Hadley Township firmLary vjcar 0f ^ UbS armedi MCarn n*8 *>a8C* A reliable life in.surance repre- was connected to the village’s!for£M art\Ved Sunday froml 1^alional SuPP*y VM*'™ pro- sentative could advise you on 'electric pump, according to the|Manila and )eft for s/oul an important stake in oil- this. #67.) >11.5 145.6 )».) 5)1.1 717.4 160.4 MM 15*4 IMS 792.6 afternoon after a 21-hour visit. field equipment. 1l5to _I>V DOW-JONIS AVERAGES 414. - to t STOCKS IT*. - to M Input 2SH + to 120 Della FIRE DANGER EASED He is paying a Christmas visit Resumption of the water to U S. forces in the Far East. J supply eased the danger of fire, O’Dell said. A house fire broke out Saturday night on Huron Street. It was extin-1 guished with water from the News in Brief My other suggestion Is to use the capital required to gain admission to a good retirement home for your remaining years. Pickens of Q—To you this may seem a I trivial question but to me It’s Important. When holding con-1 (Roger Spear’a 48-page Guide Ivertlble preferred stock, It it to Successful Investing (recent-convertible at my option or the ly revised and in Its 10th print* 487 company’s—N. N. |ing) It available to all readers h 10 Higher grads* 110 lecond grade 10 Public utilitie *#*,3(L-*.2i]village fire department tanker,jCalifomia told Pontiac, police! A—You are privileged tolof this column. For your copy, D7,)to,2* O'Dell said. yesterday that someone broke make this decision according to send $1 with name and address MU2-IJ0'---------------| into his home through a rear the conditions set by the com-1 to Roger E. Spear, The Pontiac sltj+omI **"4*y'* D,v,4r?J. Itk'^rtev. |door and st0,e a Golor tc,cvision P“ny *t time of issue. You may,Pre«s, Box 1818, Grand Central 7/o2~-oio r.SS'lVr^ rt,, 8Ct and 8 ra<"°' va'u«l at a have confused convertible pre- Station, New York, N.Y. 10017.) *o.**-o.« Ennit euw eorms .1* o 7 D ] i total of more than $700 ferred with preferred issues^ (Copyright, 1988) B—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1968 AP Wlrtphoto EYING THE GUESTS—Donna Tinney, 4, of Plymouth Meeting, Pa., keeps an eye on goldfish which were left with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Tinney, to care for over the holidays. Donna’s really keeping an eye on them as the picture would indicate. Fire Guard for Londons Landmarks to Retire (EDITOR’S NOTE - Fred Cockett’s job for the last 10 years has been to safeguard London’s famous landmarks from fire. He retires at the end of the year —to become a fire prevention officer in a bank.) By GLENN GOODEY LONDON (AP) - St. Paul’s Cathedral has been a great worry to Fred Cockett over the past decade. Cockett has been responsible for keeping the famous London landmark safe from fire. * * * One day Cockett may be clinging to the cross atop the cathedral, 500 feet above London, The next he may be hundreds of feet underground, in the labyrinth of tunnels under Sir Christopher Wren’s masterpiece. BIG FIRE RISK Cockett comes down to earth for the last time at the end of the year when he retires as a fire prevention officer with the London Fire Brigade. Like any big city, London has an extremely big fire risk, and fire prevention officers regularly inspect the massive - office blocks, public buildings and factories. * * * Cockett’s beat includes West-minister Abbey, many museums, art galleries and St. Paul’s. For the past 10 years, his main job, and biggest worry, has been the cathedral, built on the ashes of a London flattened by the great fire of 1666. The fire began in a wooden house in the East End of London and burned for three days. It consumed 13,000 houses, nearly 100 churches, four prisons, three city gates and four stone bridges. ETERNAL NIGHTMARE Six persons died and the total loss was valued at $26.4 million. Cockett’s eternal nightmare is a second great fire. “It could, happen, I suppose,” he said. “But it’s not very likely. We have the most modem fire-fight-1 ing equipment in the world.” For the past 300 years Cockett’s predecessors have kept St. Paul’s standing. It has survived two world wars, while everything else around was blasted by German bombs. “N’ot many people realize the cathedral is built' mainly of wood and only the facade is stone,” he explained. “Vast areas between the ceiling and roof are a mass of wood which could easily be set alight by spontaneous combustion. J’And the walls are riddled with tiny passageways that for some reason were included in the original design. They don’t lead anywhere. The general public only sees half of the building and what they don’t see is by far the most fascinating.” It was on one of these regular inspections that he scrambled over the dome. “I thought I’d take a look as it’s virtually all wood with a thin lead covering. The whole dome was covered in scaffolding, so it was quite safe.” Any suggestion of danger or risk about his work Cockett casually dismisses with a shake of his head. “I’Ve had a fascinating life, but not a dangerous one,” he said. Cockett has always kept his work entirely separate from his home life. “My wife and children have never known exactly what I’m up to because I don’t tell them. That way they don’t worry,” he said. WON’T BE IDLE His two children, Michael, 32, and Hilary, 30, left home many years ago and both are married. Fred lives with his wife, Bebe, in their suburban home in South London. , * * ★ And retirement doesn’t mean an idle life in the garden. “I’m joining a bank as a fire prevention officer,” Fred said with a grin. \ “It’s in an advisory capacity dnd the pay’s marvellous.” Deadly Beans JACKSON (AP) — Nearly 600 of the highly poisonous jequirity beans were turned, in to Jack-son-area authorities over the weekend. Friday three residents surrendered a total of 526 of the beans which they discovered on necklaces and other jewelry. Saturday Mary Sheperd of Horton turned in 60 of the beans to Jackson County sheriff’s deputies. She said she had become suspicious of a brownish-red necklace after hearing publicity about the deadly beans. Cats Can Teach People Lessons on How to Live NEW YORK (AP) - Every man lives a dog's life part of the time, but I think that if I were to be reborn as a different kind of animal I’d prefer to be a cat. For one thing a cat has nine lives — so if at first it doesn’t succeed, it can always try, try again. my years I have been a dog lover, but the older and wiser I get the more I respect cats. A dog is usually a clown, an exhibitionist, a show-off, a crowd pleaser if you will, who spends most of his time on earth wagging his tail and appealing for applause. A cat, on the other hand, is a prime example of enlightened self-interest. She meets life strictly on her own terms and rarely asks or needs a pat on the back. My mentor in feline psychology is a cat named Lady Dottle, a fugitive from some suburban alley who has been a nonpaying guest in my home for more than 10 years. A black mustache on but appears to enjoy It. her face gives her a weird re-1 * * * semblance to Adolf Hitler, but She loves to sit in the window | she has none of his ranting fa- and watch the tnes puff up and! naticism. jdown the East River like busvj She Is, however, a dictator but;beetles on quaint errands. But if a quiet and, on the whole, a be-{a police car goes by on the ex- :———-—----------- jnressway. its siren screaming,! Ladv Dottie shakes her head at I such hurlv burly, and goes away and takes a nap. Everything; within our apartment interests; her. but the mighty world outside is just one big fat yawn to I her. I How pleasant our own human | lives would be if we could adjust, OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — It ap-jso comfortably to the compro-pears that Midwestern girls justjmlses our destines demand, aren’t interested in joining the DON’T COME FREE boys - at least in the Boy Cats don.t come for freo u takes time to cater to them and, nevolent one. She does not pay the rent, earn an income by the sweat of her brow, empty her sandbox or even cut up her own beef kidney. * * * All these things she has taught me to do for her and, like any member of royalty, she takes them for granted. To her they are not favors extended but privileges accepted. It would never occur to her to wag her tail in gratitude. Lady Dottie is a fine lesson in how one can live a life differently than nature intended and still retain a total and beautiful dignity. All her life has been spent in a four-room eight-floor apart- j ment. ENJOYS FATE She has never pawed a fish-head out of a garbage can,! climbed a tree, fought or run! from a dog. caught a bird, or made love on a fire escape under a tawny moon. No, such feline delights have never been for her. But while her chaste world lacks certain fierce freedoms, Lady Dottle remains unimprisoned of soul. She does not rant against her fate, Explorer Scouts Can't Lure Girls Into the Troops Scouts, that is An invitation fqr girls to join the Boy Scouts’ Explorer Scout program has been out for 5 Mi months as a result of studies on how to best attract and hold boys aged 14 to 18. * * ★ Robert M. Browning Jr., director of services for the Mid- it takes money to care for them. I figure that over the last decade Lady Dottle has cost me at least $1,500 in food and veterinarian bills. She has also defaced or disfigured at least $2,000 worth of living room furniture. What have I got in return for HHPUPmPHIIIPImy $3,500? After all, Lady Dot-Amertpan Boy&out Council, Ue, won’t jump through a hoop, says no applications have been retrleve thrown sticks’ or s,t up received. But the council hopes there will be some girls from 14 through senior high school age becoming Explorer Scouts by early February. About 5,000 of the more than 35,000 Nebraska and Iowa Scouts In the Mid-American Council are Explorers. and beg. Well, perhaps the fact she doesn't do any of those things is the reason I have gotten my money’s worth from Lady Dot-tie. Her life is a lesson in philosophy. She has shown it is possible to win your way In this world witliout having to perform shabby tricks to please anyone. HHS SEMI-ANNUAL CLEARANCE OF FAMOUS MAKER CLOTHING That's one of the best things about a sale at HHS: it features clothing by such excellent makers—at such exciting savings. This group, for example, includes 1-, 2-, and 3-button suits in many style variations; topcoats and outercoats in raglan, split raglan, and box coat models. Many of the fabrics are imported; the tailoring is superior; and the selection is very wide. SPECIAL GROUP OF SUITS BY GGG AND LOUIS ROTH Luxurious imported woolens tailored by two of our best makers. An excellent assortment at substantial reductions. .............129.75 to 199.75 SPORT COATS IN FALL AND WINTER FABRICS: A LARGE GROUP AT SIZABLE SAVINGS There are two-button, three-button, natural shoulder, blazer, and shaped models in plaids, checks, solids and distinctive patterns. Many are by famous makers. It's a wonderful time to add a sport coat or two to your wardrobe at an excellent price reduction ...............39.90 to 109.90 A LARGE GROUP OF DRESS SLACKS IN MANY FABRICS.. .15.90 & 19.90 SUITS AND OUTERCOATS BY HART SCHAFFNER & MARX, EAGLE, AUSTIN LEEDS, HAMMONTON PARK, ALPACUNA * 94.75 J19.75 CURT’S APPLIANCES Factory Authortmod Whit* Dealer 6484 WILLIAMS LAKE ROAD OR 4-1101 Our Pontiac Mall Store Is Open Monday to 10 P. M., Tuesday to 5:30 - Telegraph and Elizabeth Lake Roads ii if f I I Matte Scores Three in Colts' 344) Triumph .CLEVELAND (AP) “Z was in New York, you know. I heard a lot about Joe Namath and the Jets. I am anxious to play against him.” Ear! Morrall, Baltimore’s rags-to-riches quarterback, waj talking in the Colts’ locker room Sunday after they had vHjped out Cleveland 34-0 to move into a Super Bowl date with the New York Jets on Jan. 12 at Miami. ir ft itr ■ It was Morrall’s happiest day, capping many years of frustration by adding the National Football League title to his own Most Valuable Player honors after bouncing from San Francisco f o Pittsburgh to Detroit to New York to Baltimore in 13 years as a pro. AWAIT JETS "It should be interesting to play against the Jets and against Namath,” commented linebacker Mike Curtis, who Intercepted a Bill Nelsen pass in the rout. “I won’t look at him any different than I do any other quarterback.” Bubba Smith, the huge defensive end Who blocked a 42-yard field goal attempt by Don Cockroft, was asked if he had received any last minute adviee from his mother, an avid fan. fans at Cleveland’s snow-fringed “She told me to hit ’em high, hit ’em tow and get ready for the Super Bowl,” said big Bubba, who suffered a sprained left ankle in the first half but cante back for the second. Coach Don Shula of the Colts, who lived four years with the humiliation of the Pint downs . 27-0 beating by Cleveland in the 1964 title » game, was on cloud nine. 5?l£! STRONG DEFENSE 'In addition to shutting off Kelly, who gained more than 100 yards seven in 14 regular season games, tile Colts had Interceptions by Rick' Volk and CurtlSj a blocked field goal by Bubba Smith, a fumble recovery by Don Shin-nick and four smears of the Cleveland passer. * ■ Ordell Braase, a 35-year-old defensive end in his 12th year as a pro, was in on all four dumps of the Browns’ passer. He got Nelsen once and Frank Ryan once and teamed up with Millar on two other jobs on Nelsen. All in all, the four smears cost the Browns a total of 35 yards. Things got so bad in the end that , Blanton Collier, the Cleveland coach, had Ryan to take over for Nelsen, who cqm-pM*d 11 of 26 but had fore picked off It was not one of Morrell's great passing days. He hit with only 11 of 25 for 169 yards, but his play direction was superb. The Colts, known primarily as a passing team, ran for 184 yards with Matte and Jerry Hill doing the heavy duty. Baltimore, which shut out three opponents in regular season and allowed a league low of 144 points, blanked the Browns for the first time in 143 games, a streak running back to a 1958 Eastern Conference playoff game in New York. THE PONTIAC PRESS MONDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1908 Defensive Back Aids Joe in Victory Over Oakland “I feel just wonderful,” he said. “We’ve been a frustrated team for a long time but we’re not frustrated now. I am looking forward to playing the Jets. I am particularly happy for Weeb.” Weeb Ewbank, coach of the Jets, was the Baltimore coach when the Colts won their last previous NFL title in 1959, Shula played for Ewbank from 1954 to 1956. MATCHES RECORD There was concern in the locker roSn about an injury to Tom Matte, the ’halfback who tied a playoff record by scoring three touchdowns on runs of one, 12 and two yards. He matched the record set by Cleveland’s Otto Graham in 1954 and equaled by the Browns’ Gary Collins in the 1964 game. W-s “I caught a knee ik the back and felt weak for a minute,” said Matte, who was near collapse in the locker room and wds attended by Dr. E. J. McDonnell, Uuj, Colts’ physician. * * * An examination conducted in Baltimore Sunday night showed Matte suffered a mild concussion and a contusion of the tower back. X rays of his rib cage were negative and doctors reported no apparent damage to his kidneys. Matte, a former Ohio State quarterback, ran 17 times for 88 yards and caught two passes for 15 yards and a total offense of 103 yards. The Colts’ complete defense simply blanketed the Browns, whose only offensive spurts were marred by penaltjes. Leroy Kelly, the two-time rushing champ of the league, was shackled with 28 yards and that just about tells the story Of the game watched by 80,628 chilled B4tt~MlctiMli 24 yard " " run (Michaels kick) m — it kick) kick) 12 run Bift'-fSTk^ScIa “iiT x&s&far kw“ . iNDjyiOUAL LEADERS Rush Ino - Baltimore, Man* 1704, Hill 1140. gackav, Vl, grown >1>, Coin 3-14, Morrall l-nona. ClJWUnd. jkatty 13-20, Harrawav ML Green 1-2. rotelylnu—Ball.lmore, Malle J-IL Orr 2-33, Rlchanlaon 3-74, Mackey ML Mitchell M, CoS 1'ii Cleveland, Warfield. MO, Marin 3-41, Kelly 3-27, Herraway 4-40, Collins M3. . Passion—Baltimore, Morrall 11-23-140-1, Ward 0-0--------------------- U-24-133-F Ryan 2-4-12-0. DEJECTED BROWN — Jim Kanicki of the Cleveland Brqjyns reflects the feelings of his teammates after losing, the National Football League championship to Baltimore, 34-0, yesterday. The former Bay City Central High and University of Michigan star played most of the contest at defensive right tackle. . NEW YORK (AP) - The New York Jets, their first American Football League championship consummated by 'the proper champagne celebration, will arrive in Miami for the Super Bowl Thursday night, four years and one day after Jim Hudson outpassed Joe Namath in the Orange Bowl. Hudson and Namath are on the same team now, but on opposite sides of the line. Namath, a quarterback a t Alabama, has remained at that position. Hudson, a Quarterback whose 69-yard touchdown pass helped Texas beat Alabama in that Orange Bowl game, has switched to safety . MOVE OBVIOUS The reason for the move and the nonmove was all too painfully obvious to the Oakland Raiders Sunday as they watched their chances of a second straight title get swept up in the swirling wind at Shea Stadium. The Jets, fired by Namath on offense and Hudson on defense, trimmed the Raiders 27-23 and vaulted into the Jan. 12 Super Bowl against the Baltimore Colts, who whipped Cleveland 34-0 for the National League Crown. it it it That means Werb Ewbank's present team will run into his old one. Ewbank coached the Colts for nine years and won two NFL titles with them, making him the only coach to win championships in both leagues. The Green Bay Packers won the first two Super Bowls, beating Kansas City and Oakland, and the Obits will be expected to keep the NFL streak going. But Dave Grayson, an Oakland safety, isn’t so sure. NO BREAK DOWN "New York has molded Into a very good team,” he said after the Jets halted Oakland's nin»-game winning streak. "They have always been good, but they used to have times when they broke down. Today they played a great game.” ‘The Jets have a good chance to win the Super Bowl. There’s not that much difference in the leagues now. And Joe Colt Garbageman Picks Up Honors Colt Fans Greet Arrival of Heroes BALTIMORE (K> — Thousands of fdot-hall fans turned out to welcome the Baltimore Colts at Friendship International Airport Sunday night, but only a fpw members of the National Football League champions were even spotted. ★ ★ * Wary of a repeat performance of the near-riot which occurred in 1958, when the Colts won their first NFL title, airport officials diverted the arriving plane to a stop aboqt a one-half mile from the terminal building. Capt. Carl Kunaniec, head of airport police, estimated the crowd at 8,000 or there. Kananiec said end Tom Mitchell and defense end Bubba Smith, who came into Hie terminal building on personal business, were surrounded by well wishers and signed autographs.' CLEVELAND (AP) - Tom Matte has been labeled a garbage runner and now he’s finally cleaned up. The Afoot, 200-pounder cleaned up all honors Sunday when he proved himself the hero of Baltlmores’ 344) victory over Cleveland, picking up bits and scraps of yards every time he handled the ball and scoring a record-tying three,touchdowns as the Colts won the National Football League championship. And Matte, best remembered as the gyp sheet quarterback of Baltimore’s 1965 team, may finally have established his credentials as one of pro football’s outstanding ground gainers despite the fact he suffers with bleeding ulcers. ANOTHER STORY "The only time anyone’s ever heard of me,” said Matte, when he finally' was able to talk after collapsing in the dressing room, “was when I played quarterback. When I played running back it’s been another story. 4r * * “All I’ve kept hearing is that our running game was zilch. That gets to a guy. It bothers you all the time when somebody says you can’t do it. But you try not to mouth off — just do the job and try to show you can.” Matte has tried to do that ever since 1965 when he replaced the Injured Johnny Unitas and Gary Cuomo a t Quarterback and with the game plan taped to his wrist and led Baltimore into a Western Conference playoff before they lost to Green Bay. * * * His efforts under those circumstances gained him national recognltlor^but have always seemed to have overshadowed the performances he has turned in as a running back, despite the fact he gained 662 yards rushing this season and cracked the top 10 for the first time. TOP PERFORMANCE But nothing could overshadow his performance against the Browns as he carried 17 times for 88 yards, grabbed two passes for 15 more and scared on bursts of one, 12 and two yards before leaving the game with a back Injury. NO ROOM TO ROAM — Cleveland’s Leroy Kelly (44), the National Football League’s leading rusher, found little running room against Baltimore yesterday. He kept running into a wave of Colts — such as this play — gild' netted only 28 yards during the title contest. Mike Curtis (32) and Dennis Gaubatz (53) led the defensive charge. Seattle Exec Makes Pitch for Boston 1J SEATTLE (AP) —i Late Lane, president of Puget Sound Sports, Inc., said 'Sunday he has offered to buy the Boston Patriots of the American Football League for |8 million If he gets all of the voting stock. Lane, a Seattle mortgage banker, operates the Seattle Rangers of the Continental Football League through Puget Sound Sports, which he controls. Pick Wrestling Head NEW YORK UP - Harold Nichols of Ames, Iowa, was named general chairman of the AAU National Wrestling Committee Saturday by Jesse A. Pardue, AAU president. Rozelle in Support of Astro Turf CLEVELAND (AP) - Football Commissioner Pete Rozelle said Saturday that in four or five years artificial turf on all fields probably would resolve any problems about playing championship games in cold weather cities. Rozelle, at an informal conference, said the Mareh 17 joint meetings in Palm Springs, Calif., would mark the first step toward a resolution of the realignment of the National and American Football Leagues for 1970. * * * Rozelle said the six man realignment committee was expected to report at the league meetings and-he hoped the problem would be resolved before next season. He said the two solutions proposed probably would be 1 remaining with the current set up of 16 NFL teams and 10 AFL teams of 2 complete realignment of both leagues. In response to a question, Rozelle said the leagues would “go all,the way and vigorously fight to preserve our current draft” set-up. * * * O.J. Simpson of Southern California, the Heisman Trophy winner, has been quoted as saying he Hiay attempt to biick the draft if he is chosen by the Buffalo Bills. Buffalo has the first pick in the combined draft. Namath is as good as any other quarterback in pro football." * * * Namath was not as accurate Sunday as he’s been most of the season—he completed only 19 of 49 passes. But he got the ball in the end zone when he had to, throwing touchdown passes of 14 yards to Don Maynard, 20 yards to Pete Lammons and again to Maynard for six yards and the winning touchdown with 7:47 left in the game. * ★ * Hudson's defensive moves didn’t add any points to the Jets’ total, but they prevented the Raiders from getting at least eight and possibly more points. FIELD GOALS New York was leading 13-10 in the third quarter—Jim Turner had kicked field goals of 33 and 36 yards—when Hudson bolted into the Raiders’ way. On four consecutive plays, he pulled Warren Wells down at the Jet six-yard line after the split end had caught a 40-yard pass from Daryle Lamonica, stopped Charley Smith with help at the three, stopped .Smith again at the two and then Jarred Hewritt Dixon to the ground on third down at the one. * * * Instead of getting the touchdown, the Raiders settled for one of George Blan-da’s three field goals. Early In the fourth quarter, Hudson knocked down a Lamonica third-down pass to Dixon at the goal line. Again a Blanda field goal instead of a touchdown. DEFENSIVE PLAYS Finally, after end Verton Biggs and linebacker Ralph Baker had made clutch defensive plays of their own, the Afoot-2 210-pound Hudson came up with the play that sealed the victory. With 30 seconds left, Lamonica passed on fourth down to Dixon,, who gained eight yards to the Oakland 47 before Hudson knocked him down. The tackle stopped Dixon one yard short of a first down and prompted Namath to call it the turning point of the game. ★ * * “That offense can score anytime it has the ball,” the quarterback said. "I remember the last game in Oakland.” The game he'referred to was six weeks ago, the infamous Heidi affair in whlcfl the Raiders pulled ot a 43-32 victory by scoring two touchdowns In nine seconds. Hudson, incidentally, was ejected from that game for something he said to an official. The Raiders did some pretty fast scoring this time, too. * ★ ★ Blanda's 20-yard field goal after Hudson knocked down the pass to Dixon cut the Jets' lead to 20-16, and on the first play after the kickoff, comerback George Atkinson intercepted a Namath pass on the New York 37 and raced to the five. Pete Banaszak burst across for the touchdown and a 23-20 lead, Oakland's first and last of the day. NOT WORRIED “When we got behind,” Ewbank said afterward, "Joe said, ‘Don't worry, we’ll get it back,’ and bang, we did.” It was more like bang, bang, bang. The first bang, or pass, went to George Sauer for 10 yards to the Jet 42. The second carried 52 yards to Maynard to the six and the third put the ball In the end zone. * * * Atkinson, codefensive rookie of the year who had given up 10 catches and 228 yards to Maynard In that earlier game, told about the 52-yarder. ‘ Maynard made a hell of a catch,” the cornerback said. “1 followed him step-for-step down the sideline and saw the ball good. But the wind was blowing crossways and carried the ball over his Inside shoulder and he turned and caught It.;”' ♦ * * The Raiders had no such luck. Lamonica completed only one of his first 13 passes, and although he wound up passing for 401 yards he completed only 20 of 47. XT" ’&urs K". EE** DOWNED JET — Oakland's Willie Brown (24) downs New York Jet split end George Sauer In the third quarter of yesterday’s AFL championship game. Sauer had just caught a pass from quarterback Joe Namath. leaping to avma contact is Oakland's Dan Conners. Coming up on the play is Dave Grayson (45) of the Raiders. New York won, 27-23. Ram Supports Coach GREEN BAY. Wis. (AP) - Defensive lineman Roger Brown of the Los Angeles Rams said Friday he is ready to quit the National Football League club In protest over the dismissal of Coach George Allen. c—a T11B PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, DECEMBER 80, 1068 Walled Lake Captures Wrestling C#l Faltering Wings Tied by Bruins DETROIT (AP)— The Detroit1 Prentice* and Ron Harris and an Red Wings lost their head of early third-period counter from BUSY SCENE—This busy wrestling scene was captured by the photographer using a “fisheye” lens during the semifinals of the Oakland University Holiday Wrestling Tour- Steam and were almost railroaded to defeat by the Boston Bruins Sunday night. The Bruins stormed back from a three-goal deficit in the second period to tie the Wings in the National Hockey League game at Olympic Stadium. nament Saturday morning. Five bouts were in progress at the same time. Walled Lake won the event. ! Detroit, which has only won one of its last six games, got , first period goals from Dean Haywood Sharp as U. of D. Romps Titans Capture Tourney Title Spencer Gains Award as Oustanding Player Team Proves Coach Isn't Always Right DETROIT (AP) — Spencer Haywood rightfully can be called a one-man opponent-demoralizing machine and at the same time a Titan confidence builder. He was both in the Motor City Basketball Tournament John Wooden might be a little can stay within 40 of the Bruins disappointed with Lew Alcindor, In tonight’s final but not Lou Carnesecca, who “The only way you can score home would get him up, but he thinks his St. John’s team haslagahut them is when the big about as much chance against'guy |g called for goal-tending,” Alcindor and UCLA as it did i Carnesecca said, referring to the against North Carolina. Idomineering 7-foot-ltt Alcindor ■PI______________ Before the Redmen met the in the center. He blocked nu- Friday and Saturday nights ss second-ranked Tar Heels, Car- merous shots against Princeton he led the University of Detroit nesecca told a friend he only and was called six other times to its second straight touraa- hoped his team didn’t lose by. 40 for goal-tending, ment championship'and ninth w points. Then St. John’sj »i>ve a mug disappointing years. - went out and pulied off one of_-------------------- * * * college basketball s upsets of The llth-ranked Titans won I the season Saturday night by the championship game 87-78 beating North Carolina 72-70 in over Temple University as Hay- the wmlfinais of toe Holiday wood scored 82 points, grabbed Festival in New York 26 rebounds and continually blocked Temple shots to frustrate toe 50-odd Owl rooters in the stands who journeyed from Philadelphia lor the tournament. Miami of Ohio won toe consolation game 76-56 over Mississippi State. BLOCKING SHOTS “Blocking those shots is more than just blocking,’’ said U. of D. Coach Bob Caliban in the Titan locker room. ‘It demoralizes the opposition.” Haywood played much the same kind of game in U. of D.’s 86-62 thumping of Mississippi State Friday night. He scored 32 points (his average for toe year) and picked up 29 rebounds. His 55 total rebounds set a tournament record hasn’t seemed to be. Maybe the fact that he’s been booed has bothered him.” Two other Top Ten teams, Kansas, No. 8, and Santa Clara No. 9, will be gunning for tournament titles tonight against up-set-minded foes, while David- son, No. 3, captured the Char- °ne of the biggest at Olympia lotte Invitational Saturday with in tlu,te a while. I After watching top-ranked UCLA follow with a methodical 83-67 victory over Princeton in the other semi as Alcindor scored 40 points, Carnesecca is hoping now that the Redmen INDIANAPOLIS Ind The University of basketball team li High-Scoring Michigan '5' Rips Butler (AP)- Spartans Play Doormat Role Michigan State Five Drops Two Contests the century mark four times this season and goes into its New Year’s eve encounter against Davidson with a 6-2 record. Michigan’s latest victory came Saturday night 101-79 over Butler University at Indianapolis. The Wolverines were in charge virtually all the way and led 52-44 at halftime. Dennis Stewart paced Michigan with 25 points while Rudy Tomjanovlch was right behind with 24. Butler’s top scorer was Clarence Harper with 22. -------- suTtaa NEW YORK (AP) - Michigan State’s Christmas spirit spilled over beyond Christmas and into toe Holiday Festival Basketball Tournament at Madison Square Garden in New York. The Spartans were generous and allowed their opponents totational by beating Evansville use them as doormats to bigger 86-74. Michigan’s and better things as MSU lost! La Salle, No. 17, will meel ' Friday 61-61 to St. Johns and South Carolina for the Quaker ed in his play in New York,” Wooden said. “I thought coming Garry Unger to take what appeared to be lead. But Boston's talented center Phil Esposito set up three straight Bruin goais^ ^IfO Ofi them by Ken Hodge, to spark the comeback and keep the1 Wings mired in last place in the league’s Eastern Division. MAKES SAVE Detroit goalkeeper Roy Edwards made a finis save on an Esposito drive, but Hodge poked in toe rebound at the 5:28 mark of the second period to start the Bruin resurgence, the goal came on a power play and was Hodge’s 12th of the season. ★ ★ ★ ' ... Just 27 seconds later rookie Grant Erickson, called up from Oklahoma City because of a string of injuries to regulars, scored his first NHL goal by backhanding the puck over a mob of fallen Red Wings. Esposito also assisted on that one.. The tying goal came at 12:47 of the period when Esposito and Hodge worked on a two-on-one breakaway, with Esposito feeding the puck across to Hodge who laid it in for a picture-play goal'. The three points enabled Esposito to tie Detroit’s Gordie Howe for second place in the league’s scoring race with 48 points. Pete Stemkowski picked up assists on the Prentice and Harris goals. A crowd of 15,000 turned out, MAT CHAMPIONS—Bob Mott (left) and Rich Baker picked up individual titles Saturday night as Walled Lake won the Oakland University Holiday Wrestling Tournament. Mott took honors in toe 165-pound class, while Baker topped the field in the 175-pound division. a 98-76 triumph over Texas. ★ ★ it Kansas, a 60-55 victor over Colorado in the Big Eight semis, takes on Oklahoma State, which beat Kansas State 60-52. Santa Clara jolted Hawaii 81-59 and meets Columbia, 7674 upset winner over 18th ranked Purdue, in the Rainbow Classic title game. Several other highly rated teams took home tournament crowns during the weekend while others gained tonight’s fi-Detrolt, No. 11, won the Motor City title with an 87-75 decision over Temple; I2th-ranked Illinois whipped Miami, Fla. 8676, for toe Hurricane Classic crown, and New Mexico State, No. 15, took toe Evansville Invl- OTHER GAMES In other Sunday night action, New York defeated Montreal, 6 Oakland clipped Philadelphia 61 and Chicago dropped Los Angeles 61. In Saturday’s action, Montreal whipped New York 5-3, Los Angeles stopped Toronto 4-1, Boston bombed St. Louis 62, jchicago tripped Minnesota 62 Oakland nipped Pittsburgh Don Marshall was toe hero for the Rangers, scoring a pair • p U Hoyt 9 4-6 14 IcMlf 12 0-0 24 Marpar 5 4-4 14 Norrte 2 4 5 I Naat 0 0-0 5 SjrOln" ms 0 0-0 |dwrd. A (worth Nlckslc « 491kM 111 rotate Michigan foulod out Butler, Herger Total foult -Mlchlgen If. Bullei The 6foot-8 Olympic star was rewarded with a standing ovation as he was presented i trophy as the tournament’s outstanding player, an award voted by sports writers covering toe event. Although Haywood only tempted 18 field goals he hit on 12 of them, compared with 13 of 22 Friday. * * * “I thought our outside shooters did a tremendous job,” Callhan said. “With Spencer be ing double-teamed, their defense concentrated on him and helped toe others to score.” Guard Jim Jackson added 12 points and forwar Vem De-Silva 10 in a balanced scoring attack by Haywood’s teammates. * * * John Baum paced Temple with 23 points and was named to the All Tournament team along with Haywood, forward Walt Williams and center Ray Loucks of Miami, and guard Dwight Dunlap of U. of D .Loucks is a 6foot-10, 246 Western Michigan proved to be mund senior from Battle Creek, the lemon of the Citrus Classic “Baum Is a great basketball basketball tournament over the player,” Caliban said. “We con- weekend in the land where pentrated heavily on him but he oranes can be mistaken for still came up with 23 points.” basketballs. ' He scored 46 for the two The Broncos lost to Northern games to finish second behind'Illinois 87-80 in the consolation Haywood’s 64. game Saturday night after los In the consolation game, Mi- ing Friday night's encounter Saturday 75-66 to VUlanova. Vlllanova’s victory allowed the Wildcats to meet Holy Cross today for fifth place in the annual tourney. MSU made a determined bid to catch up to VUlanova after trailing 4627 at halftime. Lee Lafayette and Harrison Stepter each hit four points as the Spar-ans outacored VUlanova 11-1 at toe start of the final session and pulled within four points at 4639. But the Wildcats scored six straight points after the score was 51-45 to win eas- Western Michigan Fails in Tourney i»ml got off to a quick lead. Mississippi State tied it 1612, then the Redskins from Ohio pulled ahead to stay. Loucks topped the winners with 23 points while Donnie Black was past for the Bulldogs with 16—14___ them coming in the second fog half. {X* * * * ’ vwSU U. of D. was scheduled to meet Minnesota in an away iff game tonight then travel to 5m* Wisconsin for a game Jan. 4 '""Ifarquette. I1 against Moorhead (Ky.) State 10693. Moorehead State won toe championship by beating host Pan American 8674. WRkTIRN MJjCHy 7 41 “ B£N t l-J 14 3 0-1 114-MM Toni, 11 n-1117 TotaJ fsulr W. Michigan If, «'*h ..JtlOft O'Man In llim Smith I H 1> Copland I 2*4 II Gibbons ! 0 Lafaytt 4-4 14 Ward 2-2 4 I 04 I 0 0-10 4 ft if 4 M li E, Mf»r, «•»«*» tHB. McMfan stata n n—u City championship after tripping Indiana 10688 in the semis whUe the Gamecocks beat 8t. Joeeph’s, Pa., 64-58. e/KAgAttfi How ilia top ja loan Pre»» collaga Baikal TVa. 7-0, boat Providence 74-41 boat Princeton 33-47. T North Carolina, 7-1, boat Vlllanovi 4741, lo*t to St. Jotin'l, N.Y. 77-70. 4. Kentucky, 4-1, 4-1, loot to I hloan Stata 1 Ico, 43, Mat I. Kama,, in, boat Colorado 40-JJ 7. Santa Clara. 7-4 boat Ooniaga 0441, bant Waal Virginia 77-“ 1—* "T^1‘ ** 11. Detroit, 10-0, 04-47, boat Tample kr-ra. 17. illiiMtla. 7-0. beat Creighton 70-77, boat Miami, Fla. 04-74. 13. St. Bonavantura, 47. boat U. ot Pa elflc 7143, loal to Duquaana 77-70. 14. ImmvIIIo. 7-0, gw not stay. 15. Now Mexico Stata, 7-0, boat Tennoa aea Tech 0047, beat Svanevllle 54-74. bMt Fwmwr ** ■mbm? State SaH, bait Tui ft. Tanneeaee, 41, of goals in toe final 10 minutes for the comeback victory. Vic Hadfiekl hit an empty net for toe final Ranger tally. Yvan C o u r n o yer’s second-period power play goal had given Montreal the lead. The Rangers, despite their long bus ride because of the weather, peppered Montreal goalie Tony Espoelto with 50 shots and tagged him with only his second loss in 11 games. The Canadiens had 35 shots at New York’s Ed Giacomln. Defenseman Carol Vadnals TIED UP—Ken Haller (foreground) of North Farming-ton looks to be in a bit of trouble here but he came out of this predicament to post a 4-0 decision over Dave Long of Birmingham Seaholm in their semifinal bout of the 96pound class Saturday morning. Referee is Leo Smedley of Lansing. Haller’s success ended there, however, as he dropped a 60 verdict to Russell Cunningham of Warren Lincoln in the finals Saturday night. N. Farmington Off Target; Southfield Cage Champs When a basketball team runs up against a good defense and then can’t make the shots when it finally penetrates, the usual result is defeat.* That’s what happened to fired a 55-foot power play goal North Farmington Saturday in toe hint period, giving ni£ht in the championship game Oakland its victory ovarof the Northwest " Philadelphia. Dannls Hull scored his 19th and 20th goals of the season, gunning Chicago past Los Angeles. Brother Bobby, playing with a helmet and face mask to protect his broken Jaw, scored his 23rd of the season. The two goals gave Dennis Hull 13 in the last 10 games and the victory made it six in the last seven starts for Chicago and moved the Black Hawks into a fourth place tie with idle Toronto’In the East Division. Just five points separate the first five teams In the Beat race. Tournament at Bedford Union. Southfield took the crown by handing toe Raiders their first setback of the season, 69-53. North Farmington, which Trent into the game with a five-game winning streak, hit only 24 per cent of its field goal attempts. “A lot of the shots were underneath the basket,” said coach Dick Wilson of Raiders. “It was one of those games when the ball would do everything but go in.” EARLY LEAD The Blue Jays, who jumped to After Tourney Triumphs Wildcats Enter in Title Picture CHICAGO (AP) -Illinois and Northwestern, rating as no more than dark horses in preseason estimates, now rank as contenders when the Big Ten basketball race beglna Saturday. Undefeated Illinois and once-beaten Northwestern climaxed highly successful preconference activity last week by invading Florida end coming off with the only tournament champlonshlpe toe Gator Bow! trophy Friday with a 77-68 victory over Boston College. It marked Northwestern’s eighth straight victory aft-a season opening loss at Stanford. EARLY 8UCCE8S All this early success has vaulted Illinois and Northwestern into Big Ten title contention along with Iowa, Purdue and Ohio State in what could While Illinois wee grabbing toe Miami championship, Purdue was upset by Columbia 76 74 in Honolulu and Wisconsin lost a 5658 overtime decision to Marquette In the battle for the Milwaukee championship-Michigan scored a in-78 triumph over Butler in a regular game and Minnesota recorded a 7688 consolation victory over Mississippi In the Dallas tour- garnered by Big Ten represent-!be one of the hottest races In atives. {conference history. Illinois roiled to its ninth! * * * straight triumph with an easyi No Big Ten team to date has 8676 triumph over boat Miami i anything less than a .500 record Saturday to capture the Miami as the conference posted a 57-Classic. Northwestern annexed! 25 record against outside foes. NEW ORLEANS (AP) - Felix Johnson of Prairie View AfcM shaved nearly two seconds which also features Wichita and °* ^ meetrecord Sunday to didn’t fare too will out East. The Boosters were beaten 106 88 In the Philadelphia tournament and MSU, was dumped 7666 by VUtatiova In the New York festival. headed, made the Raiders work hard for their shots and was instrumental in the final outcome. Roger Ovink led Southfield with 21 points and Dave Chalmers added 16. In consolation games, Berkley iwned Walled Lake, 6 Bedford rolled over Farmington, 6670; and Livonia Stevenson whipped Livonia Bentley, 7656. John Benning pumped In IS of 23 shots and finished with 32 points to lead Berkley. Walled Lake, now 1-5 for the season, had trouble finding the basket for toe second straight game and made only 16 of 68 shots for 25 per cent. ft<# "•"’vm 44 II Dougin I 41 44 3 KllkM 1 43 47 31 Comstock 4 41 3-3 14 HnlV I 44 ■ 41 3 Ttiomoa * 44 Chelmer* 7 4. .4 Mgel * > H 19 13 f1~#t It 17 i Strong Finisti Brings Victory Catholic Goi^ral TiBl; Pontiac Cdrttral^ m Walled Lake’s VUdnp.«ai6e up with a strong finish SafodAy night to capture the GelQpl University Holiday Wiua(§|k Tournament. Hip Vikings, frailing Defrmt Catholic Central going into' the final session Saturday evening, came up with two individual champions and a pair of third place finishes to squeeze past toe Detroit squad. TIGHT FINISH Wailed Lake wound up with 58 points, while Catholic Central claimed second with 62. Ferndale, which also produced two individual champs, placed third with 62. Warren Lincoln (61) was fourth and Warren Fitzgerald (49) fifth. •k It k . Mired in toe No. 12 spot with 27 points was pretournament favorite Pontiac Central whidi last week was named toe top Clan A team in toe state wrestling poll. Pontiac Northern finished a rung ahead of Centt'M with 29 points. MG WINS Bob Mott and Rich Baker came up with the big wins for Wailed Lake. Mott, after breezing to easy verdicts in hb first .two bouts, gained a referee’s decision in the semifinals and earned M»e championship with a similar decision against Avondale’s Drift Souhever. “ * * * In taking the 176pound title, Baker turned in one of toe best performances of the tourney. In four bouts, be pinned three opponents, and he gave the hikings the edge they needed by pinning Catholic Central’s Norbert Olind in 4:40. • SPARKED FERNDALE ' Dan Repress (112) rind (heavyweight), an all-county football selection, won titles!or Ferndale, while the Gonzales brothers — Berney (120) and Mike (145) - took Individual - crowns for Madison Heights. WWW Russell Cunningham of Warren Lincoln won the 96pound title, Bill Davids of Hazel Park reigned In the 106pound class, Doug Wilier of Berkley took the 136pound title, Dave Liberate of Warren Fitzgerald set toe pace in the 136pound class and Roger Duty of Royal Oik Dondero prevailed in the 154-pound battles. The two third-place flnljjtea for Walled Lake were posted by Tim McFadden (120) and Randy Hyde (127). . Ovink Prouor H 1 iij Wandla ftkfltv tlMl Total! l! 14-14 n TMejs ?l a tCORR IT QUARTERS S« Bomb Havaa Frinct *!j° Missouri in the Gator Bowl touchdowns Saturday. { 2 7o But he had no t r o u b 1 e,Fir»» downs 5 *° describing the game. « _ j 4*0 ‘‘They beat us every wayjpgjgft yara*9® iSo known to man” he said. STheyifj^* L out-everythinged us.” j v.ra« pmainad aw He tried to shoulder the'Alabama Ho blame for what he fixed as thej Aia-s'Jnon1*?! } K turning point — i.m terception that turned a still 3-40 respectable 14-10 score into a 2.9o Missouri waltz. 2m Bryant said he sent in the play. “ “I never thought I’d see that happen to Alabama” he said. “We didn't expect anybody to 'handle us like we were a barbers college.” | Bryant has lost games before. I He dropped two this season by jone point and two points. But no team of his had been so humiliated on field and {scoreboard since he took over | downtrodden Texas A&M in 1954 land dropped his opener to Texas Tech 41-9. I NO COMPLETIONS | Missouri just crammed the ball down Alabama's throat — not completing a single pass and this against a Tide team that had proved its defensive |ren Armstrong leading the at- Mlaaourl Alabama tack. 40, 45 Elsewhere, Miami edged New JJ Orleans 107-106, Kentucky o*ji wi1 nipped New York 118-116 in ov-i o ertime, Denver topped Dallas 7 7*, 2,-jj 102-92 and Houston downed Los i run «sW„.r# kickl'* An«eles 93-83. paaa interception (Dtanj Saturday night, Oakland beat Aia-FG Dean M™" (S*nfl*'*r kkl° I Indiana 129-121, Denver whipped Mp-McMIII?n 3 run (Sunqater kick) LOS Angeles 127-112 and New mo—Pow 47Upa»a iiSereaption* (sang- Orleans subdued Houston 111-93 I in the only games scheduled. Enjoy the Beauty of a Suspended Ceiling INCLUDES PANELS Odouflfy your hem* now! Eapocially priced for 120 eq. ft. or more. 21 c sq.ft. JOHN R LUMBER 7940 Cooley Lake Road Union Lake Royal Eddie j Doc Roger! Rldgt Valley Oukr N.Y. Junior in Net Victory MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) C Da i Third ranked American junior OOCCer Postponed Dick Stockton of Garden City, N.Y., won the Orange Bowl LONDON (JPi — Snow and icy junior Tennis Championship grounds ruined the British Soc- Sunday by defeating Paul cer League program Saturday Qerkin of Norwalk, Conn., 6-2, and only two of the scheduled 11 6-0, 6-2. first division matches in the Patricia Montano of Mexico English League were played, won the girls title by defeating Altogether, 35 English League Emily Fisher of Bloomfield matches were postponed. Hills, Mich., 6-4, 6-1. Buick1 Now Face In Town. Grimaldi Buick wants evoryone to bo awaro of tho nowost concopt Buick-Opel Inc. 210 ORCHARD LAKE ROAD'*Just 2 blocks W6St Of Saflf»naW,’TELEPHONE 332-9101 2 FOB ’1911 k: * \ III immm ®n’ A year when, for aU the e !2 M I griping, controversy and fall- The nation and the world are iout the average television set still marveling at the way teto- wag turned on for almost six! vision permitted us to follow the ] hour(l a day. astronauts a quarter-million! '____________ miles into space and back. j DOCUMENTARIES Tilevision also presented thoughtful and thought-provoking documentaries on the problems of the Negro and the troubles of the cities. A report on ! . „ t , hunger in America was a shock-jfara“d ** stron8 winds off Lake er. Day in and day out we saw Michigan destroyed a summer the agony of Vietnam. And re*0* h®1®1 and foro«(l evacua-there was baseball, hockey, bas- ‘Ion of nearby homes Sunday, ketbdll, golf and football-and The hotel, owned by Mr. and more football, I Mrs. Martin Eichenbaum, was * * * * not occupied. A passing city po- There were some especially bceman spotted the blaze happy events on the entertain- ahort|y before midnight 8at-ment side; There was, for in-urday, and fire departments stance, that fine adaptation of from South Haven, Covert and| the stage play, “A Case of Li- Bangor battled through the, bel,” some absorbing original night to quell the Are. There drama, Including “The People were no injuries reported, and Next Door.” Vladimir Horowitz no estimate of damage was im-was presented in a glorious hour mediately available. Fire Destroys Resort in State SOUTH HAVEN (AP) - Fire Read the Details in The Pontiac Press World Series! Pro Football! College Games! High School Contests! Golf! Tennis! The Olympics! Swimming! Road Racing! You gat more sports news, in moro detail in the daily columns of The Pontiac Press because The Pontiac Press wants you to have the sporting news of the things in which you are most interested! Read our sporting pages daily. Quickly you'll see why The Pontiac Press is the pa per you should have in your home for sports and ALL THE NEWS! for daily home delivery ’Phone 332-8181 C—G THK PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, PECEMBER 30, 1968 Nixon Policy Instructions Will Contain Viet Aims KEY BISCAYNE, Fla. (AP) major business session of a 12-President-elect Nixon is' ex- day Nixon vacation, pected to dispatch written Viet-. LEISURELY PACE nam policy instructions to U.S. _ . . . . . « diplomats and military com-iDSur*lay; and again Tj’ the manders soon after he takes of- Qg relf™ed ** se* flee Jan 20 eluded, leisurely holiday pace. A top Nixon adviser said these1 N*on p,ans^ reDmain at his instructions would define the "?"h°me ™ B,“ay"e aims of the new administration g W,edna8day' ^ and outline specific measures required to achieve them. l football game in Pasadena. The aide said such messages ”6 is due ‘° &E8& would go to U.S. negotiators at F”day £a t<> Chicago to the Paris peace talks, to the|attend a ?lnne,r honoring two of U.S. Embassy in Saigon, and to the ^ he chose for to Ciibi- . ■ . military commanders in the "et’. Se6retary ° TTSury: "“T*1 editor °f 0,6 Chicag° fjeld designate David Kennedy and| Tribune. He succeeds W. * * * Secretary of Labor-designate’ D. Maxwell, -who retires NEW EDITOR Kirkpatrick, 43, Gayton has been To prepare for Vietnam policy George P‘ Shutz‘ decisions, Nixon has assigned |his top diplomatic and security, 260 Tr Wednesday. Deaths Seen aides to draw up an account various alternatives which could j be adopted. CAN SCAN POSSIBILITIES I That assignment went to Sec- QV6r HoHoQV retary of State-designate Wil-j / Ham P. Rogers, Secretary of Defense-designate Its Criminal in This Town' Death Notices Home. Interment in Ottawa Park Cemetery. Mr. Harmon will lie in state at the funeral home after 7 p.m. tonight (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) HARROUN, KATE; December 2B, 1968; 587 Markle Street; , age 85; dear mother of Mrs. Pearl, Avery, Mrs. Grace Martin, Mrs. Lucille Cechnel, Mrs. Edna Knechtges, Clare, Leonard, Fred and Claude Harroun; also survived by one sister, two brothers, 29 grandchildren, 33 great-grandchildren and three great - great - grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Tuesday, December 31 at 11 a.m. at the Harold R. Davis Funeral Home, Auburn Heights. Interment in Ferris, Michigan. Mrs. Harroun wiU lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours; 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) SPARKS, Nev. (UPI) - A CHICAGO (AP) ~ Some 200 Canadian couple complained to ,LANE, TASSA A.; December 29, 1968 ; 5471 Elizabeth Lake Road, Waterford Township; age 83, dear mother of Charles, Arthur and Dale Lane; also survived by 10 grandchildren and Defense-designate Melvin R (An - some zoo —■«*«■* WP W great-grandchildren^ Funeral KlTandTHenrykT&JL * » Persons will die in high- police that |things are a bit too, jffl be held Wed ger, Nixon s assistant for na- ^ay accidents during the "^sday, January jtional security affairs. hour New Year’» holiday period, that adjoins the gambling city i ttir National Safety Councilof Keno- Mrs. David R. The holiday neriod will begin1 McLaren ot Vancouver, B.C.,! Heathrow Airport from New York Saturday. The paper Paper, the aide said, Nixon gt ‘ Tuesday and run »aid they returned to their was legal notice of an attempt by two American business- |can scan all the possibilities he- midnight Wednesday, mote! room Saturday and found men to block a nightclub appearance beginning today. They |fore deciding on his administra- ★ ★ ★ la man prowUng around inside, claim to have an exclusive contract for her services until tion’s course *e w.r.ph.,o jtional security affairs. "our ™ar s nouaay penoa;;“-‘ BAD NEWS FOR JUDY - A private detective hands I After receiving those °Ptions- ^i2,°s“‘da^afety Counc i fMr and Judy Garland a high court writ as she arrives at London's !instead of a consensus-style pol-:1' L . he_in| McLaren of at 1 p.m the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Interment in Oakland Hills Memorial Gardens. Mrs. Lane will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) June. Miss Garland's plan to wed fiance Mickey Deans, who accompanied her, also has hit some legal snags. 2 Detroit Proposals The onlv way to achieve a saf-1 * * * * * er New Year’s holiday on the! “What are you doing here? 1 The adviser said he could not nation’s highways, John D.1 asked Mrs. McLaren, forecast to what degree Nixon’s Lawlor, executive vice presi-1 “Stealing, what else?” the Vietnam instructions would dif- dent of the council, said, is “for indifferent intruder replied fer from the policy of the American motorists to recog-, WENT FOR HELP ! present Democratic administra-nize the effects—sometimes fa- I |, , .. . I , . , . McLaren seized the man and1 tion, but he did say: ‘al-that e*cessive a,coho1 has,told his wife to summon help.I Certainly we want the nego- on driving She Sald the mote, clerk T • . Rations to succeed and we will Studies Indicate that morejed entjrely uninterested but told I rinnor I nnTrA\/QrC\/ make 8 major effort 1 develop than half Of the victims of fatal her ahe could cal, ,lce a shJ I I IUUUI V_LJI || I VJVw I Or policies to try to make the nego-1 crashes die in accidents in wanted to / tiations succeed.” jwhich alcohol is involved, Law- By the time Mr8. McLaren DETROIT I API— Police ood rebuild a large part .1 lb, JsTANDARD PROCEDURE ; ", “„,p|y j&Mj! ^ u health officials Saturday blast- ner city a i The preparation of sets of al- more than one ordinary drink hushanri and find i. __mSSm »nusoana ana nea. Flint Figure Dies ed proposals for limited legali- The Council must act on the ternatlves is to be the standard per hour,” Lawlor said, “will zation of prostitution and homo-recommendations by Tuesday Nixon procedure in shaping for- leave most motorists’ driving sexuality thatswere quietly pre- or miss out on a model cities ci8" policy. It was outlined at a ability undamaged.” sented to the Detroit Common grant in 1969. I five-hour Saturday conference!-------------------------I Council last week. | The two controversial propos-Jwhich brought Nixon’s top ad- w/ . r _ i oFLINT (AP)—Michael Ham- The proposals, drafted by a call for creation of isolated vlsers on diplomacy and seeuri- YYGieriOro DOuru ady 84.year.0|d founder of the 102-man citizens committee, I red-light districts with! health ty to his winter retreat at Key u f • Lx cl Hamady Brothers food store were among hundreds recom-contro's and for legalized homo- Biscayne. | HOS Light 0/Q16 {chain, died Sunday at his Flint mended for a federally financed sexuality between consenting The National Security Council: home following a long illness, model cities program that would adults. There is also a recom- will meet at least every twoi only two items are scheduled A native of Lebanon, Hamady gg&K&j&g IT** b6,weeks and ,0,l0W this format in for consideration on a holiday- the M store chain in j ' 0 a • advising Nixon, the aide said, i lightened agenda for tonight's the Flint area in 1911. His great-1 beloved husband of Rachel j OVER FIVE YEARS * * * meeting of the Waterford Town- nephew, Jeck, now is.president, Maginnis. Funeral arrange- David Cason, director of the “We want to avoid a situation: ship Board. • I of the firm. Funeral services ments are pending at the Imodel cities program in Detroit *n which the President is con-| get for the 7:30 p.m. meeting:™1! rea,68 and c,ose^ friends. Donelson-Johns Funeral Home j pointed out the red light dis-'fronted with a consensus paper at Waterford Township High°n,v. “ Tuesday, followed' where Mr. Maginnis will lie in trict proposal is not among 'and all he can do is say yes or School, 1415 Crescent Lake, are py b“rlaI "ear Flint^ Survivors | gtate Man Is Dead, Children III in Gas Mishap MAGINNIS, JOHN; December 30, 1968; 2631 Woodbine, Waterford Township; age 89; those to be implemented in the no,” the aide said. program's first year, j The proposed grant would 'give Detroit 8100 million over; GLENWOOD (UPD—Neighbors-five years. of Claude Eberhart in this, * * * small Cass County community' The citizens board which drewii missed seeing him yesterday up the proposals represents [f morning and got no answer j 125,000 residents of the affect-when they knocked on his door. «d inner city area. They knew he was supposed! Inspector William G. Hunn, to be at home and finally called j head of the Detroit police depolice, who broke in the door. Payment's vice bureau, de-i, + + nounced the proposals. “By le- Inside they found Eberhart. gal‘zin« P™81^10" 1 Hd.h in M. .nA !condont"* “ and consequen ly more girls go into it, he said. 61, dead in his bedroom and Lmr young children he been caring for unconscious In ‘WOULDN’T WORK’ their beds. The youngsters,' Dr. Richard H. Smith, direc-children of Mr. and Mrs. Rich- tor of social hygiene at Herman ard Cheney of Dowagiac, were Kiefer branch of Detroit Gener-taken to Lee Hospital in Dowa- fll Hospital said legalized pros-giac. titution would “never, never work. ‘They’ve tried it In France, Saturday’s conference was the van and a lot split request. People in the News bid report on a half-ton police inc,ude a daughter-in-law. tw0 grandsons and grandsons. Death Notices Cass County Coroner Rolla Schoff ruled today that Eber- By The Associated Press Cellist Pablo Casals celebrated his 92nd birthday in San Juan, P.R., and interrupted his normal daily routine long enough to go to a special Mass and accept congratulatory visits from friends. Casals didn't skip his daily practice, however. He started the morning with a walk along the beach, played the piano for a while, then switched to his cello. His wife, Martita, 32, said, “He's happy . . . He's in very good health.” CASALS . , . . . .. Holland, England and South .----- pll Tim* Honor‘ Apo"°8 Cr,w “ "M*n 91 v,or furnace m the basement of his istrat|on or inspeclions p&JS rural home. Il.s bedro(un was tutes wi„ evade authorities and dosest to the furnace duct. people w|„ bring the disea8e in. Schoff saW to the district.” CHILDREN TREATED * * * Judy Cheney, 13, whose bed- Dr. Robert Kincheloe, execu- room^ was "furthest "from “toe.,live TTT $ duct, was treated and released tan Detroit Council of Churches from the hospital The other al“ immedlate,y 0PP°*«d the Cheney children Richard. IS. Charles, 11, and Sharon, 6 — were kept at the hospital overnight for observation. idea “The idea itself is abhorrent,” he said. Catholic spokesman Father | Robert V. Monticello, head of w j the Archdiocese of Detroit De- friend of the partment of Soda) Service, also Cheney family and often cared, opposed the proposals, but hdd-for the children. He had taken,ed "It would be unfortunate to the children to his home late j isolate oue program” out of the Saturday night, Schoff said. hundreds recommended. Eberhart was Time Magazine, which named an aviator as Its first “Man of the Year,” has selected the three Apollo 8 astronauts as the “Men ol the Year” for 1968. Charles A. Lindenberg Jr. was named the outstanding Individual of 1927 by the magazine lor his solo flight across the Atlantic Ocean. BIGGS, OVIE CLIFFORD, December 28, 1968; 152 West Lawrence Street: age 74; dear father of Janice, Sharon, Robert, Norman Biggs and Mrs. Mary Jordan; also survived by seven grandchildren and five great-grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Tuesday, December 31 at 1:30 p.m. at Huntoon Funeral Home with Rev. Theodore Allebach officiating. Inter-ferment in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mr. Biggs will lie In state at the funeral home. three great- PALMER. CHESTER EARL; | December 29. 1968 ; 23 Lexington: age 50; beloved son of, Mrs. Blanche Mahan: dear' brother of Mrs. Jack (Oneida)! Dickenson, Mrs. Claude (Helen) Bamfield, Mrs. Richard (Norma Jean) Isles, Mrs. Vernon (Betty) Odden, Mrs. Arthur (Mary) Odden, Ruby Mahan, Lowell, LeRoy and Carl Palmer. Funral service will be held Tuesday, December 31, at 11 a.m. at the Pursley-Gilbert Funeral Home, 'nterment in Crescent Hills Cemetery. Mr. Palmer will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 9:30 a.m. to 9:30 p.m.) BORMAN ANDERS LOVELL Wanted Nurses Openings All Shifts Pontiac Osteophatic Hospital In citing Air Force Col. Frank Borman, Navy Capt. James A. Lovell Jr. and Air Force Lt. Col. William A. Anders, Time said 1968 will be remembered "to the end of time for the dazzling skills and Promethean daring that sent questing mortals around the moon.” Exiled Primate Publicized in Czech Press Josef Cardinal Beran, the Roman Catholic primate of Czechoslovakia, is now living in Rome. But the Communist-controlled press in Prague gave wide publicity to his 80th birthday yesterday. The articles, which included a biography, followed an open letter in the Saturday edition of the newspaper Lidova Demokracie asking the Ministry of Culture to invite the cardinal to return to Czechoslovakia. Cardinal Beran, named archbishop of Prague in 1946, was put in prison and later under house arrest after the Communist take-over in 1948. He was allowed to Jeave the country four years ago. SALVATORE, TINA MARIE; December 28, 1968; 3534 Elizabeth Lake Road; beloved infant daughter of Sue and Herbert Salvatore. Funeral service will be held Tuesday, December 31 at 2 p.m. at Huntoon Funeral Home with Rev. Rex Dye officiating. Interment in Oakland Hills Memorial Cemetery. Baby Salvatore will lie in state at the funeral home. DALBY, MINNIE A.; December 28, 1968; Riverbank Trailer Park; age 67; dear mother of Mrs. Blanche Hill; also survived by 10 grandchildren and nine great-grandchildren. Funeral service will be l)eM Tuesday, becember 31, at 3 p.m. at the Perry Park Baptist Church with Rev. Hilding Bihl officiating. Interment in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mrs. Dalby will lie In state at the Pursley-Gilbert Funeral Home. (Suggested visiting hours 9:30 a.m. to 9:30 p.m.) FERRE lTrALP H M ; December 29. 1968; 195 South Roslyn, age 65; beloved husband of'J‘Dot" Ferrel; dear father of John M. Ferrel; dear brother of Mrs. Thomas Dew and Dwight Ferrel; also survived by two grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Thursday. January 2, at ----r—t. 11 a m. at the Donelson-Johns “J™- Dumber 29_.j SMITH, AUSTIN; December 27, 1968 ; 270 Liberty Street; age 68; dear brother of Homes Smith; dear uncle of James, Harold, Arthur and Mrs. Helen Smith. Funeral service will be held Tuesday, December 31 at 1 p.m. at Bossardet Funeral Home, Oxford. Interment In Eastlawn Cemetery. Lake Orion. Mr. Smith will Ue in state at the funeral home. Dial 334-4981 or 332-8181 Pontiac Press Want Ads FOftFAST ACTION NOTICE TO ADVERTISERS FOLLOWING DAY. 6.27 11.40 I (.24 The Pontiac Press Ctastifiod Department From • A.M. TO 5 P.M. Cord ef Thanks 1 THE FAMILY OF Lawrtnca (Larry) Nichols would Ilka to exprus their klndnossoi recent bereavement. We would eepoclally like to thank GMC Truck and Coach, Building 25 Pontiac General Praia Mailing many friends, retativea. Mrs. ----- —..jls and Chile Larry, Sue and Mika.__ WE WISH TO E.XPRESS from' Room, neighbors am Marie Nichols flowers, help and Sympathy „ LEAHY, JACK S.; December! 27, 1968 : 8840 VanGordon,1 White Lake Townshto; age 54 j beloved husband of Peggy Leahy; beloved son of Mrs. Bertha Leahy; dear father of Mrs. Jeffrey (Cathy) Henry and Ted Leahy; dear brother of Mrs. Reihi Victor, Mrs. Theron Hicks and Mrs. Lloyd Algoe; also survived by one grandson. Parrish Rosary will be at 8 p.m. tonight at Elton Black Funeral Home, Union Lake. Funeral service will be held Tuesdav. December 31 at 10 a.m. at St. Patrick’s Catholic Church. Interment in Evergreen Cemetery,' Jackson. Michigan. Mr. Leahy will lie in state at the funeral home. The family suggests memorials may be made to the Cancer Fund. relatives. The Genella Street neighbors, the Pontiac Extension Study Group, the Fashion your Figure Club of Pontiac, and Rev. Orville Winded during the , Dec. 10, 1980. The Truman N. Lamphere and Family. In Mimoriam 2 IN LOVING >ther passed___________ ____ Little tribute true and tander Just to show wa still remember. memory st" Iwayt will. Children N LOVING MEMORY of Eva M Walters. Our hearts still acht with sadness Our eyes shed many a tear. Gad atone knows how wa mis 1= or* this ends the fourth sad year. And in our saddest moments. The happy thoughts hold sway, Wa will meet you mother dear. And be happy again soma swee day, ’ Sadly missed by her lovini daughter, sons and grandchildren. FOR. EXCITING NEW whole family and beautiful farm, oiy lunch room ' a cup of hot hocolate. Sleigh Ink $1.25 each, snacks and dinner mav ha purchased extra. Opan 11 i New Year's day only, 8 j North of Stoney Creak, and valley of returning to th In a bio barn splcii cider 01 ride tnd hot fed1; day only, Adams sign to the farm. UPLAND Hill FARM Corner of Indian Lake and Lake George.____ HALL FOR RENY. RECEPTIONS. Meetings, parties. FE 5-0316 aft. S. hall for rent, receptions. lodges, church. OR 3-5302. Ft 2- IT'S AT ALL lead call Debt Aid. 0 W. Huron Serving Oakland County best. Read Classification 1A-A all Debt A W. Huron Oak Ii Home cells by * BOX REPLIES At 18 a.m. today tbrre were replies at The Press Office in the boxes: 34 DRAYTON PLAINS C. J. GODHARDT FUNERAL HOMR tUgpo Hfbpr. Pti. m-MOO DONELSON-JOHNS ______FUNERAL HOME Huntoon SPARKS-GRIFFIN FUNERAL HOMS -ThOMBtiHul Un\cf F« amt VoorheesSipJe ANY GIRL OR WOMAN NECDING AVOID GARNISHMENTS Ogt out of d,bt with our plan Debt Consultants 114 Pontiac stal* Bank Building FE 8-0333 Mat* Llcanaad-Bondad ________Cloaad Saturday CLEARANCE SALE WI6LAND Mlracla Mila_________Ft 5-2453 WKj^kARJll*. Wlaa By Caldaron. LostandFouRd 5 TaHoraph Rd„ FOUND. WALLET ON Saginaw. Dtcambar lain. Muit Idantlly ..... (n4 contanli. Rtply Pontiac If found ■ Rp-FOR-fafurn~ot ST. larnard dog, balonging to VMnam wttran. Ratum Important. Call 3a3-4277 or 2104 Locklln Lana, JMII 3*1-3433 LOST REWARl il BERAN Funeral Home. Interment in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mr. Ferrel will lie in state at{ the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) HARMON! ALLEN R.| December 29, 1968; 280 Dick; age 71; beloved husband of Mlldrad- Harmon; dear father of Mrs. Gerald Ward; dear brother of Mrs. Lloyd Adams, Mrs. Elmer Puckett, Mrs. Marvin Puckett, Mrs. John Puckett, T. L. and H. R. Harmon; also survived by two grandsons. Funeral service! will be held Wednesday. January 1, at 2:15 p.m. at the! Donelson-Johns F u n e r all 1968: 193 West New York Avenue: age 66: beloved wife of John O. Smith: dear mother of Mrs. A u s t o n (Vernonsa) Adler and John S. Welborn: dear sister of Mrs. R. L. Dukes, Alvin, Morton and Irvin Joines; also survived by seven-grandchildren and six great-grandchildren. Prayer service will be held tonight, at 7 p.m. at the Voorheei-Slple Funeral Home. Interment In Wiley Chapel Cemetery,! Dunmore Kentucky. Following' the services here Mrs. Smith, will be taken to the Gary, Funeral Home. Greenville.! Kentucky for services and burial. LOST vlcli Maplcrldga SIAMESE I n »r Duck Lake, v pat, anawara to Suaan. 117- _»»jr H7-M70._______ _____ ___ LOST: TWO GERMAN SHEPHERD Poga, reward. 474-1101, (744X71. LOST, CHRMTMA( EVE, email gray and white tamale doe, vie, wti, kin* Laly. Reward. OR )NW, LOET: tTny BEIGE and white Peklngeie. vicinity oi Pina Lake Av»„ Keego Harter, IB4Wi Pontiac Press Want Ads For Action JUST CALL 332-8181 Lost and Fowwd j S LOST: BLACK MALE iCat wearing men cellar, Lotua Lake area, 473- U6tT: SHAGGY GRAY DOG, mala, vtc. of Wards Orchard, Pontiac, reward. 334-3172. T 15. PER HOUR,: experienced duct Insfalwr and girvlce man, time and V% fer overtime. O'Brien Meat- Ing, FE 2-2*19.7____^ - A MANAGSR'S fRAjMEE $600 par monttr wnilt training, if you qualify, call PC * 2-0212 or FE 2-2119, for cotnolttq details. Aga 21 A PART-TIME JOB We tteed* a dependable, mature man who wants to males extra monsy part-time. Call 674-0520, 4 p.m.-/ a.m. tonight. _ AUTO BUMPER AUTO PAINTER Contact Dick Stoat: Manager, Wlllaon-Crieaman Body Shop, 1502 N. woodward. Royal Oik, AUTOMOBILE SALESMEN NEEDED! —DEMO FURNISHED —hospitalization —retirement plan —PAID VACATION —REPUTABUtCOMPANY —OPPORTUNITY TO ADVANCE —MOVING TO NRW FACILITIES TRAINING PROVIDED IF inexperienced Only Career Salesmen should sp- HUNTER DODGE personsbls. Apply In person 12 noon to midnight, 1662 South Telegraph, Walker's Cue Club._ ADULTSTRART TIME,~bUlard room end recreation sale. Must be personable. Apply In person, 12 noon to midnight, 1662. S Telegraph, Walker's Cue Club._ BENCH ASSEMBLERS BENCH HANDS MACHINE BLDRS. JIG & FIXTURE BLDRS. TOOL MAKERS RADIO DRILL OPRS. LABORERS MACHINE HANDS Days or nights, both shifts opan, axe. rates and benefits. Apply: ARTCO INC. 3020 Indlanwgod Rd., Lake Orion BRICK, LAYERS, ell winter work. 334-2168.__ r-—G BRIDGEPORT MILL-* OPERATOR EXPERIMENTAL SHEET METAL FABRICATIOH AHD SOME LAYOUT ZYGL0 AND SHIPPING AND RECEIVING Benefits Include life Insurance, Blue Cross, liberal vacation, pension plan and advancement. McGREGOR MFG. C0RP. 2765 W. Maple Rd. Troy Ml 4-3540 CLERKS-FULL TIME, retail store, good working conditions, fringe benefits. A.1* Dammin Co., Bloomfield Plaza, Telegraph and Maple Rd. 626-3010._______ Carpenter^ Experienced Roughers Apartment projects in Pontiac area, call 67£l2$1, days. An equal opportunity employer._ evening 5-10. every third Sun. 10-4. Mills Pharmacy, Ml 4-5060. DESK CLERK WANTED. Appiy In person only. Auburn Hotel, 464 DELIVERY MAN, OVER 25 years. Week days 6 to 10 p.m. Saturday 11-3 p.m. Lee Drugs, 4390 Dixie i, permanent lob for good vorkCr, 647-0211._ DRAFTSMEN cutting tool manufacturers hi several openings In the to< engineering department. Located Walled Lake. A good mat background least 2 years of drafting experience With a growing company, good starting wage, an exc. company paid benefit program. VALENITE METALS 32*5 Haggartv Rd. Walled Leke An Equal Opportunity Employer DETAILER: STRUCTURAL eteef, experienced neceaaery, opportunity to dovtlop with growing structural atool fabricator. Contact Mr. Lombort bewoon ( 8 i. (47-4454. DRILLING-MILLING-BORING MACHINE OPERATORS* Second ahlft openings, must have shop experience. Steady employment end .good fringe benefits. Start the Nlw Year In llw exciting THE CROSS COMPANY 17801 E. 14 Milo Rd. Fraser. Mich. 4(024 Body Shop ul (40 Oakland only. _ Earn MOO to (10(0 par month Experienced and qualified service station mochanlc with management ability, must have own tools. 424-3887 or 626-2000.____ _ FITTlhS AND WELDERS For Jig and Fixture Fabrications and Custom Fabrications Excalltnt fringe benoflta, apply Artco Inc., 3030 Indian wood Rd., Lake Orion._____ GAS STATION XTTENbgNT, ax-psrlanced, mechanically Inclined local rel*roncn, full or port tlmo. Quit, Telegraph ot Mpplo._______ GUARD IMMEDIATE OPENINGS Fart tlmo and full tlmo Mt. Clemens and Detroit i_ ... Union tea la paid — Blue Cross, Utica, paid holldi Service, 441 E. Grand B Detroll. LO (-4130,____________ oas station a t t i n b XI GRILL MAN AND ASSISTANT TO THE MANAGER advancement. Apply Restaurant. Telegraph HUNDRED H E AD Must have experience Rd,, Oxford, Mich. 6»-l790. INSURANCE dibit 674-2271. __ IMMEDIATE OPENING, for i youno men, wilting to teem the vending business. Must bs neat end punctual hours 7 a.m. to 3iN p.m., Monday thru Friday. Fold Blue Cross and life Insurance. Ml 7-MM JANITORS PART-TIME MORNING Iffrt.^l^S KrT’ •"'V K- LABORERS, N O EXPVlIlENCR necessary; C02 Mlg Welders, exp. not., education rip barrier, rp quirements Include good work pertormonco end rtlloMllty, exc. benefits provided Steady Employment Folr management polklae Few vacations, hetldavs and li ,urine, uoT'Vmi^.u1 or E,yylnBw'5 48055 ’ ,C' An Eoual Opportunity Employer THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 80, 1968 C—7 JANITOR Part time Ing com Holiday! Janat Davis Claanara? M7-30W MAM POT. PULL YEAR AROUND emplovmant, largo hors* breeding and training (arm. Opportunity fa learn. Man for general care of Mraas and (tablet. Modern living duartara, avMjaMa for singly man. .MSMMb Fame, IMS Ray Rd., Oxford, Mich. 4M- 7 Wanted dealer ditlons, lot* MECHANIC r progressive new car Jpgd, _werklng con. I PR 3-943* ur apply In person. OAKLAND Chryslur-Plymouth 784 Oakland Needed at Once! Young Aggressive Auto Salesmen! Ff, who Intends i jos, nospltellzel ring, fringe ty n top profit i only, to N \ VMM Atl MECHANICS Cart and trucks* also halpars. Ap-I SERVICE NOW IN JUST 17 MINUTES FIND OUT HOW YOU CAN SAY GOODBYE FOREVER TO DULL LOW-PAY WORK Discover for yourself how you can easily, prepare for an oxcltlng high paying career. $6,000 TO $20,000 Per year If you meet our reguli It a.m. to 2:30 p. S3M41J______________ ism PART TIME STATION attendant, or 4 eve. wkly. Experlenc dependable, over 25. Bloomfield Hills Pure Sin., Square Lake woodward. Apply it e.m, to 3 p, PORTER lay or evening shin. Apply at Big Boy Restaurant. Dixie i Big . B Silt OUTBOARD MECHANIC, lull time work. v|«-Hf0 Parts manager- For Rochester Ford dealership. Good slery plus incentive v ' makes this a vary attractive tion to • quoliflod men. See McKenzie ot McKenzie Ford 215 Moln St. 431-4102. Hslp Wound F—nHs 1 FULL AND PART TIME RECEPTIONIST—SIC. wanted By: Mali Tax Service durini the tax lOPaon, JMCAto April I*. WORK IN PONTIAC MALL Those selected will aam TOP PAY Income Tax experience not “ no night work re (Detroit) 1-332-1428- FULL TIME LPN guaranteed 887-S87S. 3 WOMEN $600.00 MONTH GENERAL OFFICE , WORK, Taylor, Tuesday only * a. NOON, oitedab. LADY OVER 25,' we art pending, openings for full tin or second shift. Earn while ... loom, fringe benefits, plea tent surroundings rotates Sunday and GIRLS 16 OR OVER Wanted for part time Italp In snack bar, paid vacation. Bid* Cross benofln. apply to_p#r*on, aos Bawl, IBS S. Cats Lake Rd. GIRLS - OO YOU enjoy n. A HOSTESS AND ASS'T TO MANAGER Excellent opportunity for yourq lady Interenad in a career li restaurant supervision. Prevlou waitress experience preferred. Wi will tceln. Apt 23 to 40. Apply of: BIG BOV RESTAURANT Telegraph B Huron_____________ A TELEPHONE GIRL Earnings up to 12.30 per hour, 4-< ssuraa«ff. WIX8m ATTENTION HOUSEWIVESI GET those Chrlstmaa bills off your ...Sf A law ODUnino available rltories. Avon tosmetics. aval la l ritorie*. We train tosmetics. I Phone FE 4-0439 P.O. Box fi, Drayton Plains. BAR RESTAURANf7~Wettre$s, ax perloncod, days. 31.73. PE 3-9381. BABY SITTER-HpUSEKEEPER Troy Birmingham Area, lb 444-1924, after 4 p.m. BABY SITTER, $25 weakly. ____________FE 3-5180. BABY SITTER NEEDED, BEFO January 1st, from 4:30 to 4 p. BABYSITTER. MY HOME. Crescent Lk. area. 5 day weak. 442-4533. BABYSITTER IN MY home-No Saturdays. Drayton vicinity or own transportation. 473-0480 after BABY SITTER WANTED, live out, evening work. FE 4-2933. BABY SITTER IN MY homeT5 334-9480 otter 5. _______ BABY SITTER WANTED to live In. till 12. Coll IE IN or 2 p.m. 1 2 p.m., 335-4821 PARTS CLERK Must bo able to work 1 experienced preferred KEEGO S3_______ . Orchard Lake.,! ________ 2-3400.______ PART-TIME DISHWASHER, even- ,— — -------•----necessary. In- Rd. Troy or 549-4920. rapidly Expanding company NEEDS SALESMEN In rapidly expending Industry. Phono 442-947Q _____Mr. Behn RELIABLE FART TIME Auto 10(20-10 Insurance, m. and Saturday 0-opportunlty r Western Union, l| B06K KEEPING EXPERIENCE OVER Drugs, 4390 Plains. BEAUTICIAN FE 4-2378. CL«5/:TyPljfT. Young high yhool Center. Apply 1 763 Baldwin or phone 335-2200,_ CHILD CARE, HOUSEKEEPER, H«lp Wanted M. or F. t Ponni BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED l Positive At: RH Nag. with poalttva factors A-neg., B-neg., AB-nag . MICHIGAN CONUWJNITY BLOOD CENTER mtlae ■ FE 1342 wide Track Dr„ w. Mon., Frl. 9-4 Tuos., Wed., Tbura. 10-5 O-nog. to policy Open anor jan Insurance Agency BOOKKEEPER Person with oxparlanco In nJHP dealership desired. Excellent working ndltions. good Mnofits. Sand PONTIAC PRESS BOX C-4 COUPLE WANTED part tlmewii taking care of 5 horses and mow. fSniKSr SEE™!!* CLERICAL AND TELLER position! atato Bank. Apph young, have y. the public? A short weak wh convenient hours, f a.m. to 3 p.n 3 p.m. to 9 p.m.? If you at Mr Stic an WM IPms UNIFORMS provided I open Interview call Mtss < W. McNtchols, l-273-tm. HOUSEKEEPER TO LI mothartos* home, 2 chile , 140X1 HOUSE CLEANING, dapw lay once a week, Troy 280. Own transportation. able,any •a. 33+ HOUSEKEEPER, LIVE IN and care range fi 825-3945. children. Naw quale facilities g right person. Can day off. Rtferem HOUSEWIFE LPN'S UJO PER afternoon shift le, other frtoji* benefit!. Union MEblCAL ASSISTANT tor doctor Office, experienced. 482-8000._ MATURE PERSON, tor child cart, light housekeeping. S days. References. Excellent salary. Vic-nlty Oakland University. 451-4172. Medical Technician Needed tor Cardiac Catheter and Pulmonary Laboratories ai Wayne County General Hospital. Interesting wor' — — Contact Or, ■ Extension 4254. NURSE AIDES, will train, all Bercu. 274-3000, 4131. Lake trot. EM 3- FART-TIME SALAD OIRL, evenings Wry. Inquire Troy or 549 RN SUPERVISOR. 11 to 7 SHIRT FINISHER, EXPERIENCED or will train. Gresham CM 405 Oakland Ave. SECRETARY Woodwaid-Huntor aim The Trust division of our Birmingham office has a position avaltobto tor a secretary to work tor 3 bank offices. Excellent skills necessary. Salary commensurate with experience, good working conditions, and benefits offered. Call Mia* McNally at ZD-4411 "'MANUFACTURERS BANK Real Estate Classes Application* ara now being < tor instruction classes In prti tlon for too real estate saltan MATURE — BABY SITTING a P.m. Need transportation. 332-SECRETARIAL WORK. Person H wtorlol Service, 332-4117. WILL DO BABY SITTING. 334-7408. FREE CLASSES Men or womon wanted. Earn you loom. Wo have • offices* 200 salespeople who can't bo wrong. Call today. MILLER BROS. REALTY 333-7156 metis, Blue Cross. Coll 439-8021. kit For more information call 875-7580 collect In Detroit. LABORATORY TECHNOLOGIST progressiva 40 bed accred hospital. Soma "on call" Salary 8-9000/ ^ jtt Ax^Mtch. 1150 a week. FE LABORATORY TECHNICIAN, lege oegrae or equivalent training In Chemistry, Biology. Blochtr Istry preferred. Oakland Unlva slty, 330-7211, axf. 2380 or 2345. NEEDED AS SOON AS possible — Mature Lady for baby sitting ai light housekeeping, 2 school a Work Wanted FeokW ACREAGE. LOTS WANTED * i°?h^dr.AnNDMS|?i CWg HE In Oakland County. Immediate phone, 363-029&f ° ' ish Private. 1-541-1927* days. -L ^OOM^BATH* Garage. Adults. ____ -• Uteot SBlJAtS START THIS'NEW YEAR RIGHT .A. BENSON. LUMBER CO. AS IT HAS BEEN FOR OVER 47 YEARS ROCK SALT per 100 lbs ......* 2.00 Celdum Chloride* per 100 tbs..S 3.30 4x7 pro-finished mahogany paneling ..... .... .... .... $ 3.2C 4x1 pre-finished mahogany panel- ing ........ ..............S 3.65 Aluminum combination storm doors _ standard sties only*24.95 Basketball back boards only 1 7.50 Ufexli wide* flberglas Insulation V Celling tile close-out per sq. ft $ f 25 boxes 12x12 per sq. ft. 30 boxes ot 12xV2W ......$ . Cross'ties* each .. ........$3.50 M. A. BENSON COMPANY Lumber end Builders Supplies 549 N. Saginaw PHONE: 334-2521 OPEN » To 5 - Saturdays to 12 Cradit Advisors 164 A SYNDICATE! credit END WORRIES With A Payday Payment Let Debt-Aid, professional counselors provide you wli fidentiat money manage service that has helped Thousands solve their bill problems. Getting a big loan Is not the answer. You can't borrow yourself out of debtl Get the help you've been loo* i for by taking all your blits discussing your problems: Home Calls by Appointment DEBT-AID* Inc. 10 W. Huron FE 2*0111 Licensed £ Bonded Serving Oakland County Convalescent-Nursing PRIVATE HOME FOR ladles, convalescing with i care. Call 4934734, *35-2473. 361 Apartments, Furnished 37 Apartment!, Unhirwlthed 33 EMBASSY WEST US 1- end 2-bed room, 0150 $170. Mrs. Schultz. 67441569* 1 Having unlimited funds .to invest in tho Real Estate field hot employed their agent to acquire! I homo. Commercial tend contracts acreage. iiKsmi lor a cash sale. The ROOMS FURNISHED to elderly lady on welfare or one with pension. 334*4362._____ PRIVATE entrance. list your Realty Jlcete wot have to 2 ROOMS* _____________ _________ utilities, couple, quiet* 209 Norton, 3 BEDROOM, UTILITIES end parking funr ideal for working girls. y°u contact: 3 ROOMS AND bath, everything property nova fast or so n going through vo 1 lor on appraisal. *6ALTS»1 W. HURON 435-5802, H busy 483-5380 FAMILY: a nice hem*, or largo down payment homo. Agent, 474-4104. CASH For you interest In lane SISL0CK & KENT* INC. 1309 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. •9294_________________330-91 EFFICIENCY 2-ROOM, ed, good condl * rent $23.50 a __ p.m. call 334- LARG& LOVELY, I HAVE A PURCHASER WITH CASH FOR A STARTER HOME IN OAKLAND COUNTY. CALL AGEN1 674-1690 Moving and Trucking 22 A PRICE TO SUIT YOU. Heavy and light hauling basements and garages cleaned and odd jobs. Coll anytime, fra* estimates. 334-9049. _ uinting and Pttorafiug 23 PAINTING AND PAPERING next. Orvel Qldcumb, 6734)496,_____ INVESTOR WANTS HOMES - any condition* any location. Top dollar, 674-4104.________________| LOVELANDl LISTINGS WANTED Wa need listings In fh* Kasgo Harbor onto. For quick sorvlca soiling your homo please coll - Leona Loveland* Realtor 2100 Cass Lake Rd. , . . 612-1255 _ LOTS WANTED ft. or longer, any location. Cash YORK*- 674-0363 Pharmacist Uphohtgring EMPLOYMENT OFFICE Hudson's Pontiac Mall finMhar, full Should You MAKE AN EMPLOYMENT CHANGE NOW IS THE TIME Michigon Bell TELEPHONE SOLICITORS. FULL or port time. Work tram our office. Salary plu Call Mr. Bahn, 402- fumltur* have you? B & B B9 Dlxto Hwy. WILL BUY OR I RELIABLE AUTO MESSENGER, 13 or older, mutt have re and 18-30-10 Insurance, plus, fringe banaflts portunlty employer. Appl Union, I! South Perry. pmpmR _ Apply in pt Pvles Incorporated, 28998 Wlxon Rd. Equal Opportunity Empl, COOK, FULL TIME. 102 badr references. Bloom- TEMPORARY Factory Jobs Light factory labor of ell kinds These Jobs Are Free We are an Equal Opportunity Employer And not an Employment Agency EMPLOYERS Ttmp. Service, Inc. CLAWSON 45 South Main REDpQRD 14117 Grand ------ PERNDALE 2328 Hlltoi CENTERLINE 1541 E. 18 Tool Lathe Operators Layout Inspector Technician Turret Lathe Operators SET-UP EXPERIENCE REQUIRED Excellent benefits* steady ample M. C. MFG. CO. Ill INDIANWOOD RD.LAKE ORION AN EQUALolq-ORTUNITY .________EMPLOYER TV TECHNICIAN FULL OR FART TIME experience In color preferred, lop wages, paid COOK, LIGHT CLEANING. *75 weak, experienced, far 3 am children, other help, and benefits. Live In, own room, 341-7133 N.W. Detroit,____ COOKS. CURB GIRLS waltrpeaae. days and a van Inge. Super Chief, 332-4U1.,___________. COMBINED DISHWASHER AND Salad Girl, full time, uniforms and meals furnished, paid Blue Cross, Buffet. 4188 W Drugs, 4508 Ellz. Lake Rd.______ DELICATESSEN COUNTER CLERK Jtt. DOCTOR ASSISTANT experienced oratorn necessary. Call tor li 5rug st6re clerks, years, axparlancad prof evenings 510 p.m., and DISHWASHERS FOR PR IV CLUB, paid vacation, hoi sick time. Blue Cross. Appl Orchard Lake, Pontiac._ EXPERIENCED WAITRESS, EXECUTIVE area, par wlto good 434-8211. 442-5834. ___ SECRETARY, Holly jyoun^^woman WANTED: MEN 45 to 55 years old •nr porter work. Oey end evening •biff*. Apply efter 4 p.m. Big Bey ieateurent. 2490 Dixie Hwy._ YOUNG MAN* EXPERIENCED, to work with painting contractor. 673- youiSjg men YOU IN A RUT? DO YOU A CHALLENGING CAREER WITH AN UNLIMITED FUTURE? ARB YOU .WILLING TO WORK HARD 10B PER CENT Elias Bros. Big Boy Rtstaurants NEEDS: Waitress*! Curb Girls Ttl-a-fray Operators For evening shifts. Apply Telegraph £ Huron end Dixie Hwy. £ Silver Lake Rd. EMPLOYMENT CO UN IELO R Here’s your egnflj ‘ unlimited eernjnge feeslonel field. Cell 334-2471* Spelling £ i SECRETARY National Manufacturer needs mature Individual for full time secretary-epptltude for figures. Wa ara moving to new ■ Jefferson* Detroit, Solas Hslp Mala-Femalt 8-A SPARE TIME TODAY? MAKE IT PAYIII Profitable Temporary Work All Type* of Office work :ALL MANPOWER 332-838< TED'S Pontiac Mall Immediate opening for • gri cook. Excellent working " TEMPORARY Factory Jobs Llghf factory work, ores: operators, mi sc. labor of el) kinds Needed at once. Every Day Pay Day Report ready to work 4 a m.-4 p.m. These Jobs Are Free Wa are an Equal Opportunity And not on Employment Agency EMPLOYERS Temp. Service* Inc. CLAWION REDFORD FERNDALE CENTERLINE 65 $outh Mein REDFORD 26117 Grand River ■lliinr 2320 Hilton Rd. 8561 E. 10 Mile business school training desired Minimum 1 yr. typing and general office work. M. C. MFG. CO. 11$ INDIANWOOD RD.LAKE ORION 692-2711 AN EQUAL OPPOBTUNITY ______EMPLOYER_______ WAITRESS Full time evening won 5171 Dixie Hwy ’* Dreyts EXECUTIVE SECRETARY Vic* Praaldant of large suburban international firm needs a sharp 2ZSS8S WANT A CHAU CAREER WITH AN ....... FUTURE? ARB YOU WILLING TO WORK HARfidHT — OF THE TIME? ma^lto “’Jw‘oin^yw. with I ^ WM&d' to take full charg*. Good lory do. itoaral btnaflfs. Call Ml AN ISu^TopfBr^UNITY : x> eqiiNCBD bookkeeper will None \ $155 WEEKLY For personal Interview call MR. JOHNSON, 332-9742 bafor* 2:38 dally. !• 6 Hair Wonted Male FOR TEMPORARY OFFICE JOBS CALL OR VISIT 733 I. Adame plaza. Room 1347 RAILROAD SWITCHMEN Outdoor work-various shifts and rest days. Minimum height 5'6". Experience not necessary” — will train. Rote $3.48 per hour. Company benefits include free medical, surgical and hospital aenefits, plus life insurance, paid holidays and vocations. Good retirement program. Apply in person att _______ Yord Office Johnson Avenue and Railroad L9 I Pontiac, Mich. «-n-Lfc—Between the Hours of 8 A.M. and 4 P.M. Mon. Thru Fri. GRAND miNK WESTERN RAILROAD An Equal Opportunity Employer WANT A MAN'S JOB? TIGERS—18 TO 25 W* will hire eeverel eharp, elnala woman tfile weak, lor executive training program. You will toari personnel, management, ad vartlelng and die*lay. FaalMoni Involve Correlating and com munlcatlng promotional tachnlqua*. No Experience Necessary AM applicants mutt be neet, to grattlve, en|oy meeting end tawing with people and have a tlncan datlra to get ahead. Only them who feel above the overage neet $155 WEEKLY To arrange for personal Interview: CALL MR. LAWRBNCB 332-9742 BEFOB11:3$i DAILY -WOMAN FOR LIOHT~houaakaapinfl and tome cooking. I adults. 692 IMG or IB M61 WAltKeSS,~M. IUNBBAM Cffto* Shop, 881 Woodward, acre** from $t. Jot. Apply In peraen. WAITRESSES AND fRAY girls, full I time man pr< Uhlft 1 aScmng Wanted te Rent 32 2 OR 3 BEDROOM HOUSe, I floor. o*«t lido. 5 chlldron, FE 2-1301. GARAGE WITH ELECTRICITY end pqitlbly hoot, will aharo alec trldty, call 343-4f48.__ 33 ocoiatry. Bonus arrongemem. WARREN STOUT, REALTOR MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE 430 N. Opdyko Rd. FE 5-0145 there Living Quarters MALE COLLEGE GRAD there large t ‘ tame, 6S2-37S2 Salespeople REAL ESTATE Beautiful Spacious OFFICE Your Own Business Cards YOUR OWN DESK YOUR OWN PHONE LIBERAL COMMISSIONS Call Mr. Hackett HACKETT REALTY 363-7700 363-6703 363-5477 REAL ESTATE eXFERIENCE OR WILL TRAIN — FREE CLASSES Wo nood help ot our UNION LAKE offee - $200 Commerce Rd. Alto at our office at 3 3 9 06 NORTHWESTERN HWY. near Orchard Lake Rd.* good pay. C. SCHUETT __LI 7-6560 SALESMAN If you'ro Interested In a 5 figure 1ALESMEN 4 man tor aato* poaltlon 1 I PONTIAC HH^HtEALWniBflJ REALTY. 443-4238 _____ QUICK CASH FOR YOUR horn* Equity or land contract. Call Clark r ei - • — —- 24-A January Sale Prices Now on Oil Itock fabrics, up to 50 pet. off. Htvo your old furniture reupholstered now ot January price*. Call 335-1708 for Iroo estimate. Com'l. Upholstery. Wonted Household Goods 29 1 PIECE OR HOUSEFUL. ___________FE 5-7933 HIGHEST PRICES PAID FOR good appliance. Or what ■J»r1 MILLION Dollar* has been made available tc us to purchase and assume land contracts, mortgages or buy homos, lots or ocroago outright. Wo will glvo you cash tor your equltv. Our aopralaor It awaiting your call at 674-2236 McCullough realty fjghland Rd. (M-59) 874-123* HOMES 1 to 50 S. LOTS, ACROAOB CELS. FARMS, BUSINESS PROPERTIES. AND LAND CONTRACT. WARREN STOUT, Realtor 1458 N. Opdykt Ft 5-8143 Urgently need tor Immediate 1**1 MULTIPLfftTnNf? SBBVICi ALL CASH For hemaa enypiac* In Oakland county. Money In 34 haurt. YORK NO TR 09 9. TeSal LOVELY 1 BEDROOM waicomt. dap. Rtf. 332-58: NICE 4 I ROOM apartment, bedroom, refrigerator and 1 gas heat, vacant* dap. 625-1741 NE B E D R 6 O M APARTMENT near Oakland Community College, off Coolay Lake Road. Call 682-4333.__________________________ Apartments* Unfurnished 38 BEDROOM DUPLEX. Adults. $110 mo 628-1880. ___ BibROOM NORTHSiDE, 1100 a mo. Security dap. FE 3-7969. j BEDROOM, CARPETED, adults. $140. Clarkston. Call In A. M. or Aft. 7 p.m. MA 5-2576._ BEDROOMS, LAKE prlvfh $115 per “ mBMM plus $VI5_ AND 3 ro RAY PAYS CASH FOR Homes ALL CASH IN 24 HRS. We accept 30 day listings Guaranteed sale 674-4101 689-0760 OPEN Sundays ___ ___ EQUITY, VA. OR OTHER* FOR QUICK ACTION CALL NOW. H A Q 8 T R O N REALTOR, OR 4-0358 OR EVE NINOS. FB 4-700*. TRANSFERRED COUPLE WITH 85000 down desires 3-bedroom home In Waterford are#. Agent OR 4-1649. TRANSFERRED EXECUTIVE with all cash wants 3 bedroom home Pontiac, would Ilka possession soon as possible. Agent 674-4104. WANTED LOTS ACREAGE HOUSES In the Clarkston area Clarkston Real Estate furnished. Deposit required. West SPACIOUS to 8 i Garden Court Apartments 17-1 bedroom opts., _ fr 17-2 bedroom opts., .. fr_„. INCLUDING CARPETING AND DRAPES Stove* refrigerator, air garbage disposal, hot water neat, life Blocks from Pontiac Motor _ 191-195 W. KENNETT ROAD Rent Hoeses, Unfernished 40 2 BEDROOMS DINING ream, kitchen, living room with fireplace* full basement* 2 car garage* 3Vi acres. 6695 M-59. across from Pontiac Airport. Goodrich* 636-2270 3 BEDROOM HOME* Pontiac* 9TS$ $145 Plu* $70 security deposit. 391-1272. $165; 3 BEDROOM* NORTHSIDE gas carpet, stove. ROOMS AND BATH, private ROOMS AND bath, baby welcome, upper, downtown Pontiac. 835 a furnished, 75 Clark. 3 ROOM UPPER $135 FE 4-6606 ■ __ baby MiP ..............._J dap. Inquire 273 Baldwin Ava. Phone m ___________I !___ ids Washington W. CIsrksTon or call 636-1226. NEW APARTMENTS and 2 bedroom apartments, $160 up. No children or pets allowed Fireplace, carpeting, draperies* air nditlonlng, stove, refrigerator fur nlshed* pies all utllltlet except electricity. Cell after 5 p.m. 674-3603.! ROOMS, PRIVATE bath, $35 8100 deposit. FE 4-4226._ 4 ROOMS. Apply 154 N. Perry St. bath* pets. 651-9515. Airport, 692-3761. !Xj 830 security deposit. 338-6380 betw a.m. end 9 p.m._______■ ROOMS AND- bath smell baby Baldwin Ave., call 338-4054. SMALL ROOMS and bath* t heated, range end refrig., private near Expressway* The Rolf* H. Smith Co- sSHms. ‘ ATTRACTIVE 1 FAMILY dwalllng, partially furn.* oil heat, north-east Pontiac 692-4871. Brick Townhouses. 2-3 bedrooms* baths, $225 mo.. Includes utilities. 549-0853. NOW LEASING BRAND NEW-WATERF0RD CRESCENT Manor Apts, Individually controlled heat er cond. luxurious cerpetingi throughout, private balconies plenty of closet space, ground floor laundry facilities in every building, beautiful grounds overlooking the Clinton River. Rental Includes ell facilities except electricity. Ne pets allowed. CUSTOM CRAFTED APPLIANCES BY "HOTPOINT." SEE MANAOER APT. No. 107 12-6 P.M. only Dally by APP't. ____OR «lL 673-5050 _____________| ONLY $380 MOVES YOU IN Brick Townhouses. 2-3 bedrooms, children are welcome, 1337 Cher- rylewn, Pontiac. 335-6171._ SYLVAN ON THB LAKES Immediate occupancy, 1 and 3 bedrooms. From $152. Children welcome. Phone 682-9031 or 357- 4300._______......u:. VALLEY PLACE APARTMENTS 2-bedrooms—2 baths $177 immediate occupancy Separate Bldgs, for families with Children. OPEN DAILY 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Phone: 651-4200 _______ WEST SIDE, 1 bedroom, utllttl** and perking turn., Ideal for working girls. PE 2-3414. required, ROOMS, BATH, garage, working couple only. 692-6, 39 ROOM UPPER, $140 plus deposit.'2 BEDROOMS. 5 room lower. $150 plus dap. Heat and hot wator furn. 682-8417. 78 8 2997 * * AMERICAN HERITAGE APARTMENTS WISHES YOU* A MERRY CHRISTMAS AND A HAPPY NSW YEAR I ~ 673-ii6i ; APARTMENT IN 2 family Income at fifi B “ M ------ Street runs ^furi Rent Houses, Furnished I BEDROOMS, 2 CHILDRE "plus’ security deposit 2~BEDRObM, OAKLAND lakefront Prall (Prall Streets) suitable tor couple with 1 child, $140 ror month. Including utllltwa, ref. end dtp. required. Kenneth Q, Htmestoed* 2344W4. ARROWHEAD MALL APTS. 1 and I bedroom carpeted, heat turnlthed. See manager, apt. 189, 3,37 Elizabeth Lake Rd. horn*, 3108, 3 months 474-3434. ha'a until .--------- Tuff Rent Houses. Unfurnished 40 1 BEDROOM, carp*tad, tlraplac*. bullt-lns. garage, oes heat, available Jan. 15, Dixie Hwy., Drayton* $175. par month* 673-3944 after 2:00 security dap. Rtnf Rooms 42 ATTRACTIVE FURNISHED ROOMS ROOM FOR RENT entrance. FE 2- 405K__________________________ VERY ATTRACTIVE ROOM for a refined Gentleman. OR 3-7539. PRIVATE ROOM* HOME cooked meals, 335-1679.______________ PRIVATE ROOM 6,^ FOR men. In Shower. Good Southern Cooking. LARGE AREA* PLENTY of parking* raas. rates by the year. MICHEALS REALTY 627-3840 ___________ 627-2921 Rent Office Spec* 47 cleaning furnlihad. 2 SEPARATE OFFICES Open onto foyer, trend Paneled, carpeted. Heat, dltlonlng and cleaning Call John Slier, 67423136. 3 OFFICE SPACES, HgAT* light turn., 4540 Dixie, OR 3-1355. ___ AVAILABLl^iSw' lN ' owe OF Rochatlar'i lined and nawad ot-. Fee and commercial center. Medical suites, general off lea suTtaa and commercial loeces. Plenty of free perking. Phone 651-5553 Of 651-4576;____________ PRIVATE OFFICE WITH reception r00m‘ WILLIS^M. BREWER HI —ker r* ‘ 724 Rlker Bldg. ESTATE 1-5191 1-2073 Rsnt Buslntss PropBrty 47-A 1441 SQ. FT.,..building 48x91, parked al Rd. OR 4-3147. panaidon. Located at 1388 Craa- Apartments, Furnished 37 1 ROOMS AND BATH, Pdullt, utlllllai. dean, Ft 3-4991. 3 ROOMS AND BATH, cloa* to downtown, prefer 1 er 2 single men 332-4244 CLlAft R06Mi ADULtS. ‘ couple. FEE PAID OFFICE MANAGER Will train, experience not neces-! sery. toms £ Adams 647 8880 IMMEDIATE PLACEMENT Snelling & Snglling _ 334-3471 ________ POSITION FOR LOAN totarvlawar, will train, Mngt banal It, and creator* ancamtnt. 833 Far*. ^“RftipTiONISf $425 Inlay attic* area. Fa# paid. Inga i was> subui_________ .. INTERNATIONAL FBRIONNE.I US! S. WtoadwardT B'ham 443-434* fRAlNiE-TfLLl Rpc large credit poaltlon apan In ___________ _____ US F#r#roi».,i 451-8833. Instructisns-SchBels ATTBNTIOt w%hISlNI . OldMl T?*d< MicA. Oldest Trad* School *8 a y jJightTc HOOL' 14*8 W. FORT. DETROIT nma. ano lunen omy, poaitio's WO 34493 available. Good hours, pey endi>rr—v i--------- tips. Apply Mechus Adems squar# Wtrk Wanted Mali 11 6maN f6R TY/iNO* imd,generel a i CARPETNER. LARGE or smell office work. Write Post Office* Box (obs, celling tile, paneling, end 232, Pontlec, Mlchigen* giving' recreation rooms e specie Illy. 692- to M tormelly office work* type of,a ______ mm __ nigh graduate- 6129 Hlghlend Id. WANTED GIRL TO work In r daparl i 34809. rtnwnt. Sell Htlp WnntBd M. ur F. 117888 PLUS REGULAR BONUS tor man mar 48 In area. Tati* ahart 711, Fort worth, Taxat wToT." brIafAst AND LUNCH COOKS, «xp*rl*nc*d, day work, axe. work- ..... r Hfrvayi Ohito Hwy. » Oak Fait and cooks. ExcolWnt ditlons, top wag m i JOURNEYMAN I Is. All smA fuarantood In quollty and prlca. Bill Knr, FE 8-3198 Slat* Ilcans* No. JLI CARPENTRY WORK, rough or fin Mud. 473-851*. ________ ALL ROOFINO, SlblNO, repairs, llconsOd tog, calling tlla, rdtorgneas. 47>I375 "journeyman c> CARPENTRY I n t e r I e r remedelng. basements, befht, penel-formlcs work. ___DIckLynch. orc^nf Work Wonttd Ftmalt wages, Due"' Cress. " ~ * m A-1 IRONING. ONE day Mrs. McCewen, FE 4-3967. Colonlel ALUMINUM SIDING* WINDOWS; .fine Install II FB 4-3171 Bouts and Accsssorits BIRMINGHAM BOAT CENTER Starcraft, I M & S GUTTER CO. LICENSED-BONDED implato aavastroughlng aarvlc Fra* pat. 471-4844, 473-1443 Excavating Finish jjljydto^ ENROLL NOW In Our Winter Training Course CAREER OPPORTUNITY IN REAL ESTATE BATEMAN REALTY CO. ANNOUNCES THE ENROLLMENT OF ITS 1969 . . . "TRAINING COURSE FOR THE BEGINNING REAL ESTATE SALESMAN." Fundamental Salesmanship Preparation for Board Exams Real Estate Law Appraising THE COURSE WILL RUN FOR A PERIOD OF 4 WEEKS STARTING FEB. 3RD. CLASSES WILL BE HELD AT BATEMAN REALTY CO., 377 S. TELEGRAPH, MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY OF EACH WEEK FROM 7 to 9 P.M. FOR INFORMATION ON ENROLLMENT PLEASE CONTACT MR. JACK RALPH FE 8-7161 Cwywtry___________ » CARPENTRY - *nd roofing, fr** estimates. MA 8-43*1. * -1 CARPENTRY, NfW and repair, fra* estimates. 338-4731 ■ IpNtlfclbR ANO feXTin5T6T3 Family room*, rough or flnuned, dormers, porches, recrei Hot rooms, kltchon*, bathroom*. State licensed. Beet. Cell otter I p.m. 692-9649. Aboi r ibwi an6 Alt I ISfTSWlef any kind. FB 5-1331. ______ ^TY75UilhiYMBN Hornet* attics, betementt, geromt end any type concrete work. "No Job to big or to tmell." You get CARFlNtRV"ANtrClHIinrwerE •stlmatas. 133-1332. HEINRICH, TUISKU, HIBBLIN, INC ara leaking tor wark, all phf**s ---™ng, ne fab tee small er Spaclalltlng to ream ■ - 'iTrs 9MfR < day a, night, 731-3977, 349 5714 er 1*MI44.| iNTSJQbR fTnTih, iTTcjfi* paneling, 48 yasrs axparlanca, 3-1335.____ _ "KITCHEN!, MODIFIED Madarnlzad" Fermlca couplet tops, qtid^bmqtojImWW^^H 1 BULLOOZI Beckhoe. Bai 8-1381,____________________ BULLDoriNG - TRUCKINO, raasan-bla, rallabla. Free astlmatas. OR -1141. FREH MZIN4 WltH FILL, back CHAIN LINK AND wood. 1 1 service. FE 9-3796. pontiac nncnsr 5932 Dixie Hwy.* Witortord 623 floor Bending. FI * ^ -mwr md fInin _____ wur nBm formlaca* tile. Carpeting. ill ABOUND home rtpelr* estlmetei, OB 3-2935.___________ SLVJi TALBOTT LUMBER o3l:l*nd UL 1-1034. and exterior, storm repair, free estimates. FE i tcrei 4-5170. BLOCK AND CEMENT work. For tl*C( 391-1173. • RICK F*6WY3, »t6n1 War! Chimney repair. Day*. MV 3-3014. COMMVRCIAL, INDUSTRIAL 334-7477 8, MI-SOT)___ fTREPLACI*. f~S< C E L L V tfT workmanship. Written guarani**. ALTERATIONS, ALL TYPES, dr*ss*sJ**th*r co*ls. 481*339 lETTY J&i dr*t*makina, i Tlon* *nd wadding*. 4744784. Drivtrs Training APPROVED AUTO DRIVING school. ____Moving* Storogt SMITH MOVING CO. Your moving spec lei lift. FE A4964. __ Plano Tuning FI ANO TUNING BEFAIBINO Q9CAB SCHMIDT_______Ft ^51 A-1 FAINTING WOBK GUARANTEED. F 682-0620. A-1 f ainTTWo a»6 FAFEB HANOING THQMFION ■_______FE 4-8364 A O K. FaTntiNO. Quality work free eetlmetet, 693-1287._ duA'ufV w6BK AilUBtfb Pelnf p*J;4r 1'{JJi w<11 Washing. 673 PfaiUrlnf Sanrlca FLA8TBBING, NEW work o patching, free estlmefe*. 363-5607. Plumbing & Hooting CONDBA FLUMOINO £ HBATINO fewer, water ttnes - Ft 8-0643. G A L FLUMBINO AND HE At ING, let Oeoroe do It, 67»W7. OA| FUffeverege UH.~ A £ H $#!•*, 625-1501 or 674-4341. FILL SAND LOADING DAILY 50 cents per yard* 410 Wlllltms Lekf. Bd., Union Like* MA 4-4331 Ym; SEAWALLS estimate 1 winter prices. (BINS CON IT. CO. Snow Plowing A-1 - B£K SNOWFLOWINO. 2 trucks* rslleble. 3350064, 3394665* or 332-5024. - ANYflME DA^ bB night. Com-merdel or residential. 338-0211. clAP kifotT HbdFiNd. SNOW FLOWING. 6734297 6734197 PLOW i NO AND drlve-wsy sending* ilO up. Al2-to09.____ Troo trimming Sorvlco M TREE SERVICE BY B £ L. Free estimate. FE 5-4449* 674-3510. ?mffE idMVIti* ie If we tel Ba**m*nts amt add Job*, itlmatos. 314-98* 1 LIGHT MOVING. TRASH hauled •*«*on*bt«. PE 4-1333. >PtiCTTfS_»UIT yetir M**vy and BlgKl hr’-- -------r ’ 8*rapa* < fAOLINS" B9 ■ year prlca. Anytime, IHt HAULINSJ ' ATE!. 339-1244. LldHf MAULINO OF ANY I^INC. odd Jobs. FE 4-2347. _ LIGHT HAULING end MOVING, of any kind, roes. 314-9997. gsreoes cleaned. 474-1242._ CldflirAWrWAVY^«0fRm«5. rubbish, fill dirt, grading and |^v*l and Iram-and loading. FE 3- NEW >ICK-UF~TRUCK, will hale move or deliver anything, also short trips* FB 4-2074, gays. Truck Rtntul Trucks to Rent Vfe-Ton Flckypi 1»fe-Ton Stake TRUCKS — TRACTORS AND EQUIPMENT Semi Trailers Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. 82f I. WOODWARD FE 4-0461 FB 4-144] Open Dally Including Sunday Rftflng g______ wa" HOT TAR reeling In.I.IW Price, FE ltofc {HOT TAB BUILT-UP roof In LL CLEANERn Wells cleened. Rees. Satisfaction - guaranteed. guaranteed. 335-1419 EUctrlcal Servlets McCORMiCK ELECTRIC* retkk and cemmarclat* aHaraflena* remodeling, 24 hour service* NEW ROOFS FOB OLD. HOT ROQF Shingles, 24 hrt., free etf. Repairs. B. ftottgrt* Fi t-1725^ _____ Sacrgfariol Sorvlca TYPING, SHORTHAND, Notary* Woll Drilling WELL DRILIINO, POINTS h*n|z*d and pump* Mrvlcad, UL WATERWELlTbRiLUNG j, 4". . Ixparlano** era.i C—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1868 >—l lwliim PrBpgrty 47-A Salt Houses 2 BEDROOM RANCH NX* location, tamo living n utmt^ room, Baraga and can *'4 ATTRACTIVE HOME 3 bedrooms* large living room basement. $14*300. FLATTLEY REALTY 420 COMMERCE M3 5981 3 BEDROOM Brick and aluminum ranch, fancad yard, larga lot. COOLEY LAKE FRONT 2-bedroom atucco, 2 car garago, nice lot, price reduced for quick "'“COSWAY 4*14740 3379 ORCHARD LK. Waterford, 111,900, with *1000 down, land contract, Immediate possession, 451-4343. 4-H REAL ESTATE Clarkston Schools — Country atmosphere. 5 room bungalow. Nice corner lot. New gas furnace. Lake privileges to block on beautiful lake. Ideal starter home. VACANT. Quick possession. Priced $10*600. $1,500 down on land contract arms. 5844 Dixie Hwy. 623-1400 After • p.m. OR 3-0455 _____________OA 8-2678 $400 DOWN 5 rooms with connecting bath* full basement and 2 car garage* r ' room* owners agent 338-6952. kitchen end bath* full basement with automatic gas furnace. This home I o between Oakland Ave. and Howard St. Is In exceptionally ditlon. Newly painted Inside and outside. 2 car garage. Can purchased at $15*850 on FHA mortgage with $550 down and closing cost estimated at $350 tc qualified buyer. Immediate Possession. Kenneth G. Hempstead. 33*8284._________ ‘ A WORLD OF ELEGANCE For th* professional man IAVE FUN THIS BUMMER ON SYLVAN LAKE. Wt have a attar* all brick ranch liitl waiting far you to move In. Mat > bedroom, and poaalbty another 2 bedrooms upstairs. Ana new boat wan, brick barbaqba and 1 car garage. All far only *22,900, VA) *23.900, FHA. CALL RAY TODAY 4744101 RAY garage, 305' lake frontage. Scenic location. Only *43,500. Call today for details. A. J. RHODES, REALTOR FE *-2304 25* W. Walton FE 5-4712 HAROLD R. FRANKS, Realty 4 BEDROOM BRICK S year old cokmlol, 9 rooms In til, JO* family room, IV brick fireplace, formal dining room, 16' living room, gas hoot, full bast-monf, lake privileges. 2Va car flnlihed garage, nice landscaped lot 103 X 130\ Located In a nlc< area. Price *35,500. Mortgagi Everett Cummings, Realtor 2583 UNION LAKR ROAD newlyweds, with 3 bee carpeting* cute kitchen WOOd C ‘ ‘ ' $17,500. full basement, cabinets. Yours "0" down. CALL RAY TODAY 674-4101 RAY _P-22__ HOMES FROM $21,500 FE 4-0592; 623-0670 ROSS HOMES HIGHLAND ESTATE ROOMY BUNGALOW 3 bedrooms plus room for more. Basement* modern heat* garage, FHA approved. About 192 month. Owners's agent 674-1649.__ SPACIOUS 7 roomy rooms, basement, garage. TAYLOR ern ranch home located on re of land in West Suburban Includes 1400 sq. ft. of living area, fireplace* family room* 2 car arage. Immediate possession. Full rice only $19*950* terms to suit. J. A. Taylor Agency, Inc. 7732 Highland Rd. (M-59) DAILY OR 4-0306 EVES. EM 3-7546 TUCKER REALTY CO. 903 PONTIAC STATE BANK ________334-1545____ SHINN VACANT NOW “ * “ rdroom home ready for Land Contract end stop rent receipts. Make it This 2-b basement $2500 4-1698. 82500 balance. Owner'i •X Drive-In Is completely aSCHRAM GI SPECIAL garage* fenced yard. 826*600. FEEL THE PLEASURE Of owning your own home* Immaculate 2-bedroom ranch Huntoon Lake* has ell the comforts you $ouid desire. Rlch^ lu> carpeting 1 garaae, gas I neighborhood. 823*900. HAGSTROM, Realtor 4900 W. Huron MLS OR 4-0359 After 4 p. BY OWNER, NEAR Pontiac Motor area, 3 bedroom house, full t— mam, land contract, FE 2-3457 Sy OWNER NORTH bedroom, garage, lam *9,900. *3,000 down. 33S-1942. C^uM ^basement, gas heat, 3 and stove (lay — also living bedrooms, full dining room, lots oil furniture. Lako privileges 2 o room, FHA approved, Only *300 away. See It today I Only (11,000. down. Agent far Owner, 33*-4993. CALL RAY TODAY 474-4101 CLARKSTON AREA New 3-bedroom brick ranch, I'* land contract DELUXE COUNTRY LIVING 2 bedrooms down plus 1 large bedroom up* combination ” _ 12x21 Ing ling 12x V heat* large lot 70x120'. List Wth SCHRAM And Call the Van OPEN EVES. AND SUNDAY 1111 Joslyn Ave. FE *947 REALTOR ML Seryjng J>ontlsc Area tor 20 Years IDEAL STARliER HOME 1 bedroom ranch with carport* loft of space, carpeting In llvli_ _ bedroom, large closets, refrigerator K. L TEMPLETON, Realtor 2339 ORCHARD LK. RD. 4S24NB0 ‘faanagjfti RAY Investors Special bedroom Cepe Cod* full besemer work. $2*000 fake over S2*5< balance. Vacant. owner. OR 4-1649. Cosh For Your Equity HACKETT 363-6703 (Lose TO SCHOOLS AND FISHER BODY a 1 bedroom ranch with wall to wall carpaling In living room and new floor In kitchen, "ft" down will move you In. (1MOO FHA. CALL RAY TODAY 474-4101 RAY Singleton Realty 417 t. Paddock ________231-SI 14 LAKE ORION IS WHERE THIS ONE la located. a practically brand new aluminum ranch, with dll kind* «f extra* -floors, lot* of cupboard In vanity In Dtlh, 1 summer utility. ONE MORE THINOI Lake privileges on Lako Orion. S20.00 land contract. CALL RAY TODAY 474-410 RAY ______F*J9_____ LAZENBY rani. Oardon and fruit. Immediate . ryl Elwood Realty. 4S2-24I0. ELIZABETH LAKE E»TATE.~va-cant, newly dacoralad Inside and out, 1 bedroom oak floors, utility room, crawl apace under house, *14.500, Waterford Really. 473-1273. FOR LARGE FAMILY Bio 5 bedroom stone horns with full basement and 2 dosed In porchot, new qai furnace. Locatad on M-15, S. of Ortonvlllo. 014,900. 04,000 down. C. PANGUS, Realtors OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK *30 M-15 Ortonvlllo ____CALL COLLECT 427-MU _ Ev FIRST IN VALUft RENTING $78 Mo. Excluding faxee end insurance ONLY $10 Deposit WITH APPLICATION J-BBDR^OM^HOME LARoJ DININO AREA WILL ACCEPT ALL APPLICATIONS FROM ANY WORKERS. WIDOWS OR DIVORCEES. PEOPLE WITH CREDIT PROBLEMS AND RETIREES ARE OKAY WITH US. OPIN DAILY ANO SAT. AND SUN. 29?rw°KaniWtt Near Baldwin REAL VALUE REALTY For Immediate Action Call __FE 5-3676 642-4220 FAMILY TOO LARGE? HOME TOO SMALL? Probably the perfect solution Is this lovely forge f room homo with 4 bedrooms In o prestige area that has fireplace, formal dining room, gas hoot, full basement, garage and beautiful rear lawn all lor lust in,000. Ol or FHA terms. Immediate possession. WARDEN REALTY 8434 W. Huron* Pontiac 612 3920 GAYLORD HUNTERS SPECIAL. 14 room SUBURBAN LIVING Aluminum tided Ito story with full be lament* nr—----**-- —■ *---- living room* ........Tnlshed attic *rc...1 ird wlfh evergreens, very bath* lovely yard LITTLE DOWN OO down FHA, plus closing costs this 2 bedroom frame ran - ag fine lot, with got hoot, iter and sewer, near Oakland In the Village of Rochester MILTON WEAVRR INC. Realtori baiter buy anywhere. This one Is ‘ area on Dawson access to Cats, Lake*. All brick carpellno In living and dining room, new floor In kitchen, sandstone fireplace, sliding showei doors In bath, 2 large bedroom) with lighted closets. Possibly 2 more bedrooms upstairs, cyclone fencing, dog run, lull basement with cold storage. Another fabulous jjuj>A from Roy at only 111.900. CALL RAY TODAY 474-4101 RAY 3 bedroom ranch, full betemenf and family room at only 8)1.990* RHODES INDIAflWOOD LAKE* large bedroom home* ito baths* livi Nfi flrepr m I* full r lake Only 843*500. MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE WYMAN LEWIS REALTY 338-0325 WILL BUILD ON your lot or our bedroom, alum, tided ranch* betemenf* ito baths* pa doorwail* Insulated windows* call now to sea model — 816*500. MENZIES REAL ESTATE 9210 Dixie Hwy. Office: 425-5445 EVES. 425-2424 Y0UNG-BILT HOMES REALLY MEANS BETTER BILT Russell Young, Bldr. 334-3020 — »*to W. Huron SI. ZONED MULTIPLE 114 SEMINOLE Large, specious 5 ^bedroom, bal will consider trade. WRIGHT REALTY 302 Oakland Ave.______FE 2-9141 IRWIN TRADE 2 bedroom* mobile home. In _ tocefjon and really sharp, trade for NEAR PONTIAC MOTORS Sharp 3 bedroom bungalow wl brick fireplace In spacious living room* full basamant anr* fi garage. Full prlc# 817*500. RANCHER living room* uffiltSTVoom, _ I tached parage. Can be bought for 82*600 down to ---- end payments Including taxes GEORGE IRWIN* REALTOR MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE 8 W. WALTON_______FE 3-7883 > mortgac of $1X1 EASTHAM PERFECTION Is this 3 bi variant kltch decorate| garaae c CALL TODAY. MACEDAY CANAL this 2 bedroom •• 50x200' is* Clark irge sunn....... price 914*900. HU*RY ON THIS' evelleble. HURRY. Bill Eastham* Realtor WATERFORD PLAZA 920 HIGHLAND RD. (M-59) MLS 674-3126 335-7900 ANNETT' LOT-LAKE PRIVILEGE; 5 Rl bul TofwJSu! TEL HURON AREA 5 room home, dll good condition, enclosed porch 1x24* full basemen!, gaa he. car garaae, elec, door. Am fenced yard. Cloea to bus Near Sashabew, Waterford Twp. 135x300 ft. lot toned Com't 2. Income *200 par mo. plus owner's apt. Suitable for mesl any business. Lest than Si.15 per WILL TRADE REALTORS 28 E. Huron St Office Open Evenings 8* Sunday 1- 338-0466 ANNETT 2 FAMILY INCOME Wdlct's. Eac entrance 8* ,¥m3 $16,500 ON YOUR LOT aluminum ranch with 1*816 ‘ of living ^rea; ^Larjje ____MB MM master bath, Large 12x14 kitchen-dining with plenty of cupboards ftjjML Sliding off dlnln Eft noma can oe duiit on a smell lot. For more Information call— ART THOMAS OR FRED HYTEN _ IS,VON START The New Year In a beautiful 3 bedroom brick — family room — also den end dining room — full divided basamant, fenced yard on corner.lot — shade trees — at-tractive landscaping — close to recreation and shopping. Just off M-59 W. of Pontiac. *29,500. We'll try fo make a deal to suit you. Juir tell us whet you hove to work with. BUDGET Priced smell home In iH school area — Big Lake i block. New gas furnace and $10*600* $1,500 down. COUNTRY Clarkston and pump. barn — buy 537,500 - a *1,000 per acre. 100 ACRES With farm buildings with river to feed It — between expressway's Vi hour Clarkston. Only *550 per acre, hard to find even vacant lam ,hl*60 ACRES It's Ideal for a horse ranch, 1 room end hired men's quarter, also a large farm home that could be converted to a 2 fam. 62 more acres available 30 ACRES A-thlrd wooded — 4 miles N. of Clarkston, very private buildlna settings, *000 per acre, UNDERWOOlD 425-2415 425-3125 eves, or Sun. CARNIVAL By Dick Tamar iaia Houses_ John 1C IRWIN ilk. fo downtown — vacant. WEST SIDE: Lovely 3 bedroom brick home — tastefully dacoralad — suited for children — the excellent plus features In this home defy description — must be aeon to be X.r«iWeC*^rty*,to “d BUYING OR SELLING CALL JOHN K. IRWIN & SONS III West Huron — Since 1925 6 5-9444 After 5 p.m. 3340542 ■ w MIA. be. TM. 1. VS. ht ML “Tell me what your name is now... never mind what it's going to be when you get home!” TIMES Grovelond Valley Estates Year around recreation facilities are yours when you move Into this beautiful brick ranch. The golf course Is lust beyond the wooded back yard. Mt. Holly is minutes •way and there saiMHijjlilii privileges. The lovely 6 features 2 baths* fdri room, breakfast roor..* bullt-ins, plastered walls* beautiful MMp" '■“ipes, fr“ appointment ~onfy'T>so*' see thlsl 10 ACRES hardwoods. Locatad llv beared cabin and an oversized 2 car.. ?ari9* *nd more acreage available if you to desire. Offered on land contract terms with $5*000 down. Make your ght at Oakland University Isluit a ahort distance bedroom ranch wa ha.. . cluslvelv listed. Almost new home laaturas alurr I carpeting, oak floors. have lust ex >st new — thli natures aluminum aiding mortgage . Warm and Inviting Brick ranch In lha Waterford area Featuring 3 RMMMtiijjAdMj The owners are leaving the carpet, drapes and refrigerator and they hove put hours of tender loving care Into the beautiful landscaped lot. We know you will want to see this so moke your appointment right away. WHEN YOU SEEK OUR SERVICE YOU “JOIN THE MARCH TO TIMES'' Times Realty 5890 DIXIE HIGHWAY 623-0600 REALTOR Open 9-9 dally _ OFFICeOPEN SUNDAY 1-5 KINZLER TRI-LEVEL BEAUTY In beautiful Golfvlew Manor oh Commerce Rd. 7 extra size rooms, ito baths and walk-out paneled recreation room. Has built-in < range* dishwasher* d I diving board today. 10 FHA OR GI SPECIAL Someone Is passing up en axes value In this 4 bedroom 2 both glassed porch home end el good condition. $14,950 FHA with $450 down costs only to 01 VJ0HN KINZLER, Realtor 5219 Dixie Hwy. 623-0335 Multiple Listing Service ________Open 9-9 __ ARRO Rina Out The Old With A House For The iRRO Has One^Just Welting For IDEAL FOR LARGE FAMILY Nice 4 bedroom home with Ito baths* gas hea' | * * ‘ M attic* fenced i school* church end shopping. Cell yard. Close. details. NORTH SUBURBAN dus lot, 100x300 ft. w temporary ranch. 3 bedrooms. Well Aluminum Spacious lot* 100x300 v ranch. 3 carpeting, Extra large garage. Good location :lose to 1-79. PHONE: 682-2211 5)43 Cess Ellzabeth Road MLS REALTOR Sale Houses ROYER HOLLY OFFICE Start the New Year Right This cute 3 bedroom brick ranch will be lust right this year er many years to come. Loaded features that make It a once-in-a sliding glass door leading to .. S Lots of closets end cupboards* 7x12 utility room with washer* dryer i water softener. Extra flberglas landscaped corner lot lust 4 blocks Pleasure and Profit You con live In this 2 story Colonial homo In Itio Village of Holly for olmoit nothing. If contains two 2-bodroom apartments. One of which It now ranted. Both apartments Just radteorated. Separate gas furnaces and utilitlas tor each apartment. Next to village pork lust 2 blocks from shopping and churchas. i easily be converted Into 0 5 bedroom tingle family homo with over 2,000 aq. ft. of living area. 2 water and aewar. *23,950 on land WE BUILD-TRADE ROYER REALTY, INC. PHONE: 634-8204 Holly Branch Holly Plaza ROYER OXFORD OFFICE YMCA Extra thorp 2 story homo near ths YMCA. Made over Into 3, 2 family. Fireplace In downstairs apartment. Full basement. Gas heat. 2 car oarage with room upstairs tor a workshop. Really good value for only *14,500. Ask for 4M ~ A LOVE IN If you ere looking to expensive home that li neat as a pin* comfort! room with fireplace* fancy kitchen* sun porch and 2 bedrooms* easy terms* ask for 474 E. WE BUILD-TRADE PHONE: 628-2548 ROYER REALTY, INC OXFORD OFFICE *23 S. Lopoor Rd. 49|Mu House* on .re COMMERCIAL COMBINATION has a main floor, for business, plus 3 istalrs, and a fully downstairs, and 2 gas furnaces, locatad downtown Pontiac mar Sears. FAMILY INCOME Good condition* close to downtown, qos heat, good iiv $4,800 down on lend Wideman PIONEER HIGHLANDS BRICK RANCHER, on larga co Carpeted BEAUTIFULLY LANDSCAPED LOT Irontege on Sylvan Like access lakes, perfect piece for m . built to your specifications. Claude McGruder Realtor 1710 Elizabeth Lk. Rd. 402-11 Multiple Llstlno Service open 9-9 recreation morn. Pull at heat, garage, 'j bath In bost 17.90G CALL FOR POINTMENT. DRAYTON PLAINS ter, 7 rooms* ____s galore famHY 2to car garage* pafl and drapes, wj§|a| qarden soil. I TODAY. I. 0. WIDEMAN, REALTOR J2 W. HURON ST. *34-452 EVE. CALL__________________*35-544 Val-U-Way OFF BALDWIN wall hires itlnd* FAMILY-SIZED HOMES Bl-level on large fenced lot. Four bedrooms* Ito baths, two fireplaces* carpeting end drepfes* Incinerator* many many epeclel features. $32*900. SMALL TOWN LIVING at Its finest with this throe bedroom Colonial and yet lust minutes to X-ways. Large family room with fireplace* covered paflo* paneled enb tiled "rec" room. Don't miss this one. $36 *$00. FIVE ACRES with three bedroom BROOCK 4139 Orchard Lake Road At Pontiac Trail MA 6-4000 444-4890 MILLER AARON BAUGHEY REALTOR HERRINGTON HILLS 3 bedroon brick ranch. Carpeted living roon plus drapes end curtains. Bulltl-n oven and range* dinette. Full besmt ■Ml room, bar* family ‘ “1A BRIAN HOLLY HOUSE story bungalow with front ^ |>orch^ WATERFORD RANCH Locatad off Sashabew Rd. and dost to shopping and school, features 4 bedrooms, Ito baths, 2 V car garage, FHA (arms available. BRIAN REALTY Multiple Listing Service Weekdays 'til 9 Sunday 10- 52*0 Dixie Hwy.__________623-070 Val-U-Woy Realty and Building Co. FE 4-3531 $45 Oakland Ave. Open » to WHITE LAKE AREA — new 3 bedroom brick an ranch with full basement, clean Seth* thermo windows end screens iom. Large patio end carport. FHJ * GI terms. r DOWN* LIKE . NEW NORTH DE RANCH. Sharp) Sharp! Is the ord. Large carpeted living room* 3 “ Bid mm Anchor fenced Vacant north side "0" do BRICK front* 3 bedroom ranch large kitchen* large utility* fei rear yard* aluminum storms end screens. Just $14*450 FHA* lust dos- VON $500 DOWN IMMEDIATE POSSESSION exceptionally clean 5-room* 3-bedroom home. Full basement. Gas heat. All aluminum storms and screens. Garage and well landscaped fenced yard. LOTS Lot 120x200 — Beautiful rolling lot. Farmington Twp. 1 acre lot — lake privileges* Crescent Lake. Lake front lot - 92x322* Ideal bi-level home. Oakland Lake. VON REALTY 3401 W. Open Dally 9-9 682-5800 49 Sola Houses HALL aluminum . ______ent* clean featuring full ^ ceramic throughout, kitchen wl. price only $17, Don't wait on 4 FAMILY INCOME Pontiac* each epe rooms end both* ment. Building Is and offered terms with Call for more defails. LOT OWNERS - Use down payment and \ new 3-bedroom this i in good HR . ____ _ 16,500 on FHA with low down payment. will build dm. ranch Thermo windows end screens, price until Jen. l, 1969. Cell for more defells. LET'S TRADE B. HALL REALTY* REALTOR 6569 Dixie Hwy. 625-4116 ____Open Pally 9-9* Set. 9-4 STRUBLE WE TRADE SPREAD THE CHEER! no of par what could be nicer than ' A perfect place nt of a lolly In Ottawa fireplace. This pie, ha» a formal dining room — a neceseary for entertaining _ ——— and Ito baths. Thl. English Colonial home i Hills also features carpeting, full basamant and 2 car garage. SEE ITI Maybe I noma whore you'd Ilka to *23,500. CALL TODAY- NORTHERN HIGH Would you Ilka a 2 bedroom home In the Northern High area? here la that homo. It fa, alum, aiding, alum, storms screens, oil haat, part bat, prlca Of only *11.000 c " B — It won't la* terms. Call Raaltor 925 Highland Rd. (M-59) Naxt to Frank* Nurstrv 674-3175 ML* araa. Priced at *13.950. 5400 dawn on FHA farms. $700 Moves you Into this spacious 3 bedroom brick front rancher wltti full basement, gas haat, file bath Features a laroe 12x19 kitchen and dining area, beautiful hardwood floors throughout. Priced a 1 *14.950. Trad* in your present home. AVON TWP. Specious 3 bedroom home In "mint" condition. New well to wall get heat* tile bath, n and dining ar cupbaord space, A&G SOMETHING A LITTLE SPECIAL FOR YOU CUSTOM BUILT $17,490 ON YOUR LOT Ceramic tiled, sealed glass windows, complete screens, fully pafntad and stained Inside and out, full basamant, 1115 sq. ft., 3 bedrooms with extrs larga closets, l'/a baths, wrought Iron railed entry foyer and maturing our family size 21' kitchen and dining area. All aluminum aiding and mil' covered porch. IN JUST 60 DAYS You can move Into this brand bedroom ranch In with marble sills, 4' .... door, stove and hood, _ lighting ■ Ip kitchen and master wlndo: "Tndtt JACK’ Frushour REALTOR WE TRADE DESIGNED FOR AN ACTIVE FAMILY This 3-bedroom brick, ranch with recreation room In basamant has large fenced lat with patio and brick barbecue. Lo*. at room In the 2Vk car garbs* for car and rAMcfTr1" YES!!! ' YOU WILL LIKE. Ms 1 story brick horn* with 3 badroam*, dining room tun basemen?, plus garage. You need no manor oown If your a veteran — lust dosing MLS 674-4166 674-2245 5730 WILLIAMS LAKE RD,,..-.- FE 5-8183^ HPI WEST SUBURBAN ■■■ rpetlng, i i appoint) ANDERSON 8. GILFORD Building & Realty 35*1_Hlghland Rd. (M-59) 4(2-900 Sale Houses i garage, a Dour $: balance on FHA. PONTIAC Kl/OLLS Three bedroom frame, decorat) Tile bath, full I we will buy your equity for cash, Evas. Call Mr. Castell FE 2-7273N carpeting, _ _ . , large kitchen and dining area with • --- -■ - nb.ord space, alum. Locatad In the Avon Manor Subdivision on a larp* *0x150 ft. lot. Total prlca only *14.500. STOUTS Best Buys Today NEED COMMERCIAL ZONING?— W* hove th* Ideal setup with 100] feat of commercial frontage combined with modern 7-room and bath 2-story homo which has a basamant with GAS heat plus garage make this ottering a real , aya opener. Also 22 x 26 rental unit. Locatad In adlan area close1 to expressway and Oakland University. *27,750 with terms. YOU'RE IN BARGAIN COUNTRY compact 2-me Ideally and dry comer i out. Gas *700 down plus costs to quallflod buyers. CASS-ELIZABETH AREA- Newly carpeted ranch home with fresh aluminum tiding. Basement with gas heet. Includes 4 rooms and bath all In beautiful condition. Ideal for the smeller MS mm® REALTORS & BUILDERS "SINCE" 1939 and yot a little out. Largo Ml tinker In. Largo oversized con-soon os mortgage Is approved. Th* dock on GIS WANT TO MOVE IN A HURRY? A sharp 3 bedroom homo dos* In and vat a with an oversized 2V4 car oaraoe in tint,., i„ ner lot, vacant. You con Only 0500. down to GIs. ANTIQUE LOVERS Evan If you don't buy this lovely 3 Jove all fhe antiques displayed In t mantle of the natural fireplace In the Gim lovers will love wandering through tht I cedar lined closet. Guns of all discretions or* house also has ceramic both, attached 2Vk car 00 • ^Be 100x150 lot, in . very 509 ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD ACROSS FROM THE "MALL" TRADE YOUR PRESENT HOME ______ ,» bedroom ranch horn* situated on high aad lot with car WARREN STOUT, REALTOR 1450 N, Opdyke Rd.__FE 5-0145 AVON CLARKSTON LAKE FRONT HOME Immediate occupancy of 3 bedroom homo. 119' on th* lake, spacious living room, extra, large kitchen with dining area, Ito car parage, price 1s 022,500. CAPE COD Aluminum siding, completely Insulated, bast of condition, lorgo living room, formal dining room, ROCHESTER Immediate possession, brick ranch, fireplace In larga living room, dining room, 3 big bedrooms, landscaped and many many frees, drapes, carpeting, ceramic tile, many more extras, *34,900. AVON REALTY EXCLUSIVE SALES OF WEINBERGER HOMES OL 1-0222 OL 1-82261 WASHINGTON PARK-4 9 acres, 6 bedroom! P)jS HU Pj'09*f £0W ^OwnjcALL RAY TODAY adacorated and Ida. Hat 3 bedroom*, ft nent* new furnace, new vather end dryer. Walk Ping center. $10,508* FHA. an •RICK AND ALUMINUM RANCH HOME. 4 bedroom*, get heat, refrigerator* dlthwather built-in. Everything In top condition. •25*900. Cell MY 2 2021* FE •- 9693. GAYLORD INC, I 2 W. Flint St.* Lake Orion MY 2-2821______________ FB_$-9693 ““ GOOD CREDIT? That'* all ch with ft.. _____ room ranch with full beeement, ir garage* new furnace, plu rpetlng Owner* agent, 674-169$. HIITER Ito ACRES WITH THIS 5 roomi baft), aluminum siding, 2 garage, SIMM, farms. m ACRES NEAR M IS AND llv* stream, 5750 par acre. WE BUILD S BEDROOM RAN-CHERS with aak floors, aluminum 1 MM, S1MS0 an eyr M or we will (ME after a p.m. 4*2 4453. I RAY PONTIAC 3-bedroom broad front ranch — laroe utility — decorated like new — nice lot — vacant — 9450 move* vou In on FHA mortgage — for *r_Cohen ^ _ 871-0110 ■RANCHES COLONIALS TRI-LEVELS 3 and 4 Bedrooms I, l’/2 and 2 Vi Baths Priced from 514,300 lo 530.500 plus lot. Hove ■ new homo built on your lot or ours. Financing evoilobto. J. C. HAYDEN, Realtor 63-6604 10735 Highland Rd. (M-99) to Mile west ov Oxbow Lek Attractive brick home In excellent condition. 2 bedrooms end beth on!Tlrst floor, 2 bedrooms up. Large paneled rw -room In betemenf; «t»to. heat. Carpeting end drape* included. Close to W h 11 f I • I d Elementary school. 120,900. FHA terms. WE WILL TRADE REALTORS 28 E. Huron St. Office Closed New Year's Ev*. 338-0466 NEW YEAR'S SPECIAL Can move you In with no mo down, beautiful starter home iHHMUttoc | excellent condition. of. Avleleble on lend contract or Ol terms. CROSS Rtalty & Investment Co. Wo pay cash tor used homos. 674-3105 MLS IT'S TRADING TIME" SUBURBAN-CONVENIENT basement, largo Anchor fenced IN BLOOMFIELD HIGHLANDS th* Bloomfield Schol District. This sprawling throe bed-brick ranch wll slmpty taka your breath away. Slluatad wall landscaped corner lot with circular driveway. id recreation room ond a fireplace Full bfsement and 2to car garaga. everything you win! and prlcod right, too. SEYMOUR LAKE FRONT fired of being close? Went plenty of roorr Inspecting this brick ranch with Flenty of room to run end play for the'children basement, finished recreation car garage. Plenty of room -end e reel good buy I DO YOU WANT IT SOLD? OR JUST LISTED? Tired of welting more property for e reason I We're reason? WE SELL ITI Por action any of our qualified salespeople: E Dave Bradley, Emery Butler* Donne Harrell, Oleta Howard, Dick Bryan, out—end we're out tor a 1071 W. Huron St. AFTER 8 P.M. CALL MLS Kompetn or Elloan FE 4-0921 674-5940 TED'S TRADING 674-2236 R-47 For thl* attractive FHA TERMS sided ranch homo, full walkout with finished recreation room, largo fenced, wall-landscaped 3 generous had boat, carpeting and drapes s Included. FHA financing avallabla. Is an txcdllant value and should go R-16 HOME SWEET HOME First tlm* offered. ■ beauty that must b* soon to b* appreciated, the basement Is finished and offers delightful rolaxod living and th* additional storage space a family naads. Thera ara 3bedrooms, attached 2to-car garage, largo wolMondscapod completely fenced let, and laka privileges that combine to mak* thl* cozy ranch homt an outstanding valua at (24,950. Terms or trade. R-19 MAKE MINE SUBURBAN STYLE SUBURBAN LIVING: Thla axgltlng 3bedroom brick ranch homo offers suburban and community living *t g ark* you con afford. Full basement with finished recreation room, attached 2to-car garage, aluminum storms pnd screens, gas haat, 12X12 fin community water, paved efreat and drlva, carpal bullt-ins, walking dlstanca to achooli ond shopping. R-6 water* paved street end iking distance fo • ‘ ‘ 's trade equities* ZERO DOWN For this cut* 2-bedri _ lake prlvUagts, larga family room -----r. - Aluminum storm* and a knotty pin*, prlt full prlca SI2.9M, nothing oown lo Gis. R-20 PLUS TOUCH—LAKS FRONT MAGIC A 32'x7*' brick ranrli homo In Brandon Township whor* you can gaf th* moat for your »**—on a iM'x334' lot, a full basamant, attached 2-car garaia. 2to bath*, larga carpated living room with braathtaklng view, and naarly now, you can trad* so call u* now tor on appointment. , McCULLOUGH Realty, Inc. 5460 HIGHLAND ROAD (M-59) 674-2236 MLS REALTOR "ESTABLISHED 1930" THE MOST FOR THE MONEY Living space galoral In a Quad-Laval, brick and aluminum bum home In the Clarkston area. *27.900 Includes oak floor: YOUNG EXECUTIVE HOLIDAY HOUSE Outstanding brick and alum, ranch horn*, situ average lot. In vital young family are*, with t with a larger than Ineighborhood privileges. .A' UNION LAKE COMMERCIAL Lot If of commercial frontage and over ISO* deep with trees that mak* a nice cool sating. In this attractive 2* (ST? * ‘"J?11 Man* with gos float, currant for (125 month. (7,95bi Now form* avallabla. HELP US AGAIN PLEASE W* ar* again running low on listings. This year has boon yaar ond we want lo thank each and everyone of vou given us th* opportunity to sorvo you. Now pitas* ' ,nH. "•JpMKW'fc to w* may slock our shelves and sailing thalr property. DORRIS & SON REALTORS 2536 DIXIE HWY. MLS of shad* ronmonf ranting toll your frltndt FHA TERMS AVAILABLE for this 3 bed, loca» ... yard locatad In lha north tide ol Pontiac SIoWi'IT* home. CALL ranch home with full basement A well landscaped fenced ■Mf * f this Ideal family IN NEED OF REPAIR BUT SUBSTANTIALLY SOUND. Tht family handy-man who hoods a 5 bedroom homo should Investigate this largo Colonial IMP* located clot* In. A kitchen with eating space, * formal dlnltfd room, basement, aluminum storms and screens, got haat, will glvi U°u a PO°d start at becoming a home-owner on FHA form*. CALL THE MONEY YOU SAVE MAY BE your own I And this 3 bedroom fumlttiod homo Wll toko privileges on Elizabeth Lake, la a REAL MONEY (AVER i!V,.Morm»' ,IX) all furnishings plus appliance*, and to TO THIS OFF-you can purchase this homo on Lsnd Contract term with only *3,000 down. Total prlc* Is only tlliSM and you Ol DON'T BUY A PLAIN HOUSE when you uallty, 2 spacious bedrooms, 2 ceramic tlw baths, buliMnt, fl all on a wooded double lot. plant Mr your visit TODAY I living room, 2 fireplaces, unique id recreation room. 2 car garage cellenl farms available, to man* OFFICE WILL CLOSE AT NOON TUESDAY AND ALL DAY WEDNESDAY NEW MODELS OXFORD/ORION RANCHER: 3 bedrooms, Ito baths, family room with fireplace, custom-built kitchen, full basement, soaM-olas* windows, 2 cor attached garaga. and many extra features, ft-24, lust north of brahntr Rd. (between Orion and Oxford). OFlN SAT. KEYLON RANCHER AND TRI-LIVEL: family room with fireplace, 2 car garaga, all brick aluminum. Loaded with extras and custom feature furnished and deluxe all th* way! OPEN SAT. A *UN. or by appointment. Key Ion Dr. at corn— “ Cooley Lake and Commerce Rds.1. COLONIAL AND MID-LEVEL: fireplace, Ito ceramic baths, floors, 2to car attached features you “ ' Huron tnd appointment. dt. OPEN I PONTIAC 377 S. TELEGRAPH FE 8-7161 ORIONOXFORO THE PONTIAC PRESS, M6NflAY, DECEMBER 30, 1968 Sab Homs C—9 FE 5-8183 family room, Maamant. gas HA mbsff^sgs carno?lotf,*Ear& n. Priced to sail. Call BAST SID IANCH Three i—H area. Eve. cal} MR. ALTON 673-6130 Nicholie & Horger Co. A w. Huron St. ■ FE 54113 CLARK HEISHTS AREA: ich, with full basen oars, la roe kitchen _ upon c image G.l.s, NEWLY-WEDS: 5-room bungalow In good condition, largo living room with d|-’-“ | kitchen. shopping contort, only mortgage costs needed to 01 or ISM down FHA» Call before New Year's on | CLARK REAL ESTATE 1302 W. HURON ST. 0S3-M5H Open f-y —MLS O'NEIL WHY NOT TRADE? US HOWARD T KEATING FOR DEVELOPMENT 113 ACRES, WATERFORD TWP. w Tsrvr Lake. Lake frontage can be use for recreational purposes, not zoi ed for mobile homes. $1750 p< If Interested contact 446- C. NELSEY, SALES AGENT 313-625-3291 OR 434-9035 ______Evening Calls Welcome NUMEROUS LARGE PARCELS land, ranging from, 40 to 102 aci located around the Oxford area, north of Lapeer, call for particulars C A.,CWEBSTER, Real Estate Oakland 8-2515 MY 2-2291 A HOUSE IS A HOME enough for relax Mi...........tod In a quto'. thing iwlghborhood. built of rock brick to make upkeep a r duty, and priced at $35,900, excellent financing. This three- ORION — 3 ACRES, new home area. Perk, $2,000 par acre. GRElOCRES 1449 S. Lapeer Rd.___MY 3-4262 PINE KNOB AREA on Cllntonvllle Rd. N. of ar next year, about 2 dcrei $4,500 LADD'S OF PONTIAC 3744 LAPEER RD. , 391-3300 lived In lust long enough to ptove Its fine construction and to complete the multitude of extras one hat to add ed garage, 20-foot with fireplace. This MY GOODNESS—IT'S GRACIOUS— drive, blacktop street. Vacant and ready for new owner. Price $39,950. We’ll arrange your financing or take your home In trade. Call OR 4-2222 today to A FAMILY FITS THIS PICTURE— and Elliabetti i location o harming aluminum tided home "ad on a ---------------------- lot. It's Estates thermlr>_ hestled on ner lot. II Cheery built-plus Oxtra recreation. room. extra y at $27,900, No. 15-55 ELIZABETH LAKE ESTATES Brand new listing featuring four bedrooms, nice ll\' separata dining n basement, gat neat, two-car garage large landscaped lot. Carpeting drapes Included. Only $24,500. today: don't miss this .4-33 £ HOW ABOUT THIS ONE? SpIc ft apen — A rail family I In Waterfgrd area. Three bedr leparate dining room. With recreation room and fireplace Put of the City. Bus cto! conveniences. A real buy $19,1 trade. Sat No. 7-42 ROCHESTER AREA ■piftsot' ----- 852-5375. $12,500 NIX REALTOR. $51-0221: Sale KeasehaM Goods 65 BRONZE OR CHROME DINETTE sale, BRAND NEW. Large end small size (round, drop-leaf, rectangular) tables In S-, 5- and 7-pc PEARSON'S FURNITURE ASK FOR FREE CATALOG PARTRIDGE REAL ESTATE 1050 West Huron St., Pontiac Open nltes 1 WANT TO SELL YOUR BUSINESS? SELL YOUI Realtor Pai 1050 Sale Land Contracts L 1 MILLION Dollars has been made avalla us to purchase and assume contracts, mortgages or buy n lots or acreage outright. Wi . give you cash tor your equity. Our appraiser is awaiting you* cell at 674-2236 McCullough realty 5440 Hkjhland Rd. (M-59) ^ VLS will 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS Oppn Evp». 'til S i CASH FOR LAND CONTRACTS H J. Van Welt 4540 Olxla Hwy. OR 3-1355 Jl contracts. HAVE 5100.000 AVAILABLE RHODES INDIANWOOD. SHORES — Large lesites. details. A. J. RHODES, REALTOR FE 1-2304 258 W. Walton FE 5-6712 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE Sab Farms_____________ 80 to 800 ACRES In lowor Michigan. -Dairy, grain, baef or hogal Noma your farm poods, wa nava It at Dean's "Michigan's Farm Real Estate Headquarters," 220 N. Michigan Ave.. Coldwator, Mich. PH.: 5U-275-43W. Sale Business Property 57 1,000 SQUARE FEET commercial bufidlno. ideally located in city Salas, manufacturing, warehousing* zona industrial, by owner, FE 4- BLOCK HH built In 1961. Excallant JOHNSON 1704 S. TELEGRAPH RD. FE 4-2533 LARGE OR.JMALL land contracts. trick closMBc- Reasonable discount, arl Garrets, MA 4-5400 or nights Investors wishing to purchase land contracts. Soma discounts, if you t tract to sail - N_ _ We know wo can gat tlw top dollar tor you. Call Von Realty, Wanted Contracts-Mfg. 60-A 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS Urgently needed. Set us befor tizzy CHRISTMAS CLEARANCE Furniture, Stereos, Color T.V.'e NEW LEFT IN LAY-A-WAY Lovely sofa with Mr. and Mr Chairs, zlpparsd r o v a r s I b I cushions, 15 yr. guarantee on coi struction, sold lor $249, balant due $180 cash or $10 monthly. Color combination entertainment center, 22*' picture, AM-FM stereo* radio, aura. Maple bunk bed set, complete with mattresses, rails end laddi for $126, balance due $85 $10 monthly. console stereo, AM-FM records. Sold 6 speakerss, plays —js. i $148 cash Modem sofa and matching chair zlpperod reversible cushions, sold for $189, balance duo $125 cash or $10 monthly. 23" Colonial Color T.V., all channel, 2 yr. guarantee on picture tube, sold for $559, balance dus $423 cash or $18 monthly. Spanish sofa end matching chair, deluxe cushions, self decked, sold for $419, balance due $290 cash or $15 monthly. Mediterranean stereo console, AM-FM stereo, red! state, diamond ■gaiiiMir' ... $10 monthly. i nd matching chair, zlppored reversible cushions, sold for $319, balance do $195 cash or $10 monthly. Charcoal bedrooiri suite, doubt dresser, mirror 4 drawer chesl bookcase bed, mattress end bo: spring, sold for $289, balance do $224 cash or $15 monthly. Colonial sofa and matching chair deluxe reversible cushions sold for $349, balance duo $237 cash or $15 monthly. 18" color portable with si walnut grained cabinet, sold $379, balance due $297 cash or monthly. 5W stereo console, AM-FM, radio, $15 monthly. Provincial chair, • balance due $194 matching chair, sold for By Kate Osann MASSEY FERGUSON SKI Whit snowmobile new on hand, 17 and 23 horaa machines, Pontiac Farm and Industrial, $25 Woodward, 334-0441 or 334-1442. SKI DOO SPECIAL i stock ist mod oil, rag, t Pots-Hunting Dogs T9 HALF COLLIE PUPPIES. Frat to Good home. Mother AKC. 335-9054. registered litter. Call MIXED PUPPIES WANTED, we buy comptate litters. 851-0072. PUPPIES, SMALL MIXED breed, $5 to cover cost of shots, 6 wks. per case, now $6.9$. Now 1969 double s n trailers, tilt and swivel, capacity, New 19_. _________ _______ ... single snowmobile trailers, $119, In Travel Trallars IS WE CARRY and service Frankllns-Creos Fans-Streamline Skamper-Plea sure Matas Truck Campers 6 Used Travel Trailers and Campers MUST GO—at Year-end Prices. Holly Travel Coach Inc. 15210 Holly. Holly_____MB 44771 TRAILER RENTALS FOR Florida vacation. Goode 11 Trailers, 879-0714. TRAILERS—CAMPERS - COVER$, Goodell Trailer Sales, 3200 S. Rochester Rd., 852-4550. 1969 Shoreline model 450. wmoblle tr. j£ while they 10 to 9 REGISTERED CHIHUAHUA and toy poodles, stud service for FE 2-1497.________________ SCHNAUZER, MINIATURE PUPS, health guaranteed. PE 2-1590. Open 1 10 to 6, Sat. ft Sun. JIM HARRINGTON'S SPORT CRAFT VI ml. E, of Lapeer City llmiti ----- ...OriWWlte ‘ ' SNOWMOBILE CLEARANCE l.P. Tradewlnda, electric (tart, l.PL Tradewlnda — 22" track, ‘I read quite a bit — 1 have to do SOMETHING while I wait for the phone to ring!” Sale Household Goods WANTED OLD COTTON la HW, TV t, Radios 21" USED TV ... 8 I Walton TV, FE 2-2257 Opai 515 E Walton, corner of Joslyr 23" ADMIRAL TV 1966 model, 682-9654. ''________________ COLOR TV SERVICE Johnson's TV, FE 8-4569 ntir f 3 piece i sectional, z 1 p p a r a d reversible*-* cushions, sold for $329, Walnut bedroom suite, mattress, $239, balance HOUSEHOLD APPLIANCE 441 Elli. Lake Rd. 335-9203 (Near Telegraph Rd.) COLOR TV BARGAINS, LlfTLE Joa'i Bargain Houae. FE 2-4442 MANUFACTURERS CLOSEOUT” STEREO WALNUT CONSOLE BSR 4 speed changer $89 OR $5 PER MONTH UNIVERSAL 2615 DIXIE Dally 11-8 FE 441905 Sat. Zenith, For Sole Miscellaneous 67 TOYS, GIFTS, JOKES, novelties Liberal Bin's Outpost - 3265 Dlx USED AND NEW office desks, chairs, typewriters, adding M S795 16 H P, Bolens, 4495 EVAN'S EQUIPMENT 425-1711 or 625-2514_CLARK8TON POLARIS MASSEY FERGUSON Snowmobiles $595 and UP Perry Lawn and Garden 7615 Highland Rd. ___________673-6236 ;r A SNOWMOBILE . SPECIAL YUKON KING HUSKY 10 HP t2i GRISLY 15 HP 5141 SUPER GRISLY II HP Auction Saits , 80 & B AUCTION EVERY FRIDAY........ 7:00 P.M. EVERY SATURDAY ......7:00 P.M. TVERY SUNDAY........2:00 P.M. WE BUY - SELL - TRADE Retail 7 Days Weakly CONSIGNMENTS WELCOME CASH PRIZE EVERY AUCTION 1009 Dixie Hwy,_____OR 3-2717 Perkins—Sates, Service, Auctioneers PH., Swartz Creek______635-9400 TYLER'S AUCTION 6959 Highland Rd. (M-59) 673-9534 ^St€Cfc_________________ 13 5 YEAR OLD MARE, and 5 I _ old Filly would- appreciate a good home. Must Sacrifice. $350. Call 628-2085.___ .______________ PALOMINO FARM. 1085 Hill R< Now open for horses boarding, field board, box and standing stall. Milford 887-9743._______ Meats 83-A MEAT CUTTING. F i dratted meats. A Hand Tools—Machinery 68 1 i $995 $795 $1049 $859 KODIAC 20 HP $1149 1959 SNOW PONY 10 HP iOg OAKLAND SNOWMOBILE CENTER freezer. Cut and iS opan Hay-Grain-Feed HAY, ALFALFA BROME , no rein. 628-2056. AIR COMPRESSORS. luoricatlon equipment, hydraulic lacks. staami2434 Dl: non tlac* K?# MOO SNOWMOBILES University Drive. FE 2-0106. _ Clark 5,000 pound capacity high Priced from 1695 lift vale 4,000 pound capacity. Both- rnceu ^rum mm 1602 or SIS- PARTS in good condition. 542-1602 3660. __________ HYSTER FORK LIFT, l/ACCESSORIES KING BROS. lata modal, excellent ife 41662 FE 4-0734 ....H ........ PONTIAC RD. AT OFPYKE RD. SNOWMOBILE SKI DOO ftl DADDLER condltlor, SHOO. Blvd. Supply. 560 674-2234. construction. Located on Elliabeth Lake Rd. Land contract tortna or laaie with option to buy. Call Bob Bartlabaugh McCullough Really "BUD” SOUTH SAGINAW ST. ilding w ___ _ _ office, proxlmately 6,500 squari wxir* — mm DOWNTOWN BUILDING Contains approximately 6,500 square feet, zoned commercial, block bldg, with brick front, hot water hoot. Priced at $55,000, terms. COMMUNITY LOAN CO $25 TO I UNITY 30 6. LAWRENCE LOANS LOANS irlvote. FE 2-1 61 CLEARANCE 40" elect r Ic rani automatic wether (39.95; alecti SALE TO PUBLIC Large supplier telling of wood conaolt itereus RCA, Admiral, Phllco, ate. Choice ol maple Mediterranean, modern a woodt. '49 modell, from 579, d0*nABrWAREH()USE & ! ~--------- STORAGE GALLAGHER MUSIC CO. Dyke, 1 blk. S. ol 22 Milo I *710 TELEGRAPH. taw filing machine, FE 3-1302. Mu$icalGood$ 71 ALTO TENOR AND C meldoy sex; clarinet, $35/ trumpet, $19; trombone, $19; several upright pianos, $25 and up; 1 player piano, works good; 1 player piano as Is; H. R. Smith Moving, 10 S. Jasso. _ ARE YOU THINKINd OP BUYING A NEW PIANO OR ORGAN? GALLAGHER'S Is tha piece to shop New orgons from $595. Mortgage Loaas ir money for materials. Whatever iur home needs set: Voss & Buckner, Inc. 1406 Pontiac State Bank Bldg 334-3267 In Keego Harbor. Two bedrooms, room for tour I Newly aluminum tided, new gat furnace, basement. Only tft.950, 53.250 down and 1100 per month Includet your texet and Insurance. No. 1-43 TERRACE IN THE CITY | Two ttory, two bedroom brick. Gati heat, oak lloori platter walla. ck»e| to neighborhood (homing. Rant II or; )lv» In It yourtall. A* thla low price ot 54.000 on a land contract at only 140 par month or 55,000 cath. Call | today OR 4-2222. No. 1> p.m. FE 2-3370 lor used car HOUSEHOLD SPECIAL $23 A MONTH BUY$ 3 ROOMS OF FURNITURE - Consists of: ...... . v a 9-Plece living room outfit with 2 pc. list of Items you wish to Mv|n0 mnm «„lt* 9 etan fahlM. 1 and $1 service charge to. rnrkTi Box 4273, Auburn Helghtv n» « 48057. State Call OR Sale HoutehoM Goods_651 | Vi WHAT YOU'D EXPECT TO PAY 13 ROOMS D NEW FURR $297 BRAND NEW FURNITURE BLOOMFIELD HILLS corner lot of approx. 26.536 115 Long i side road. $5 par sq. Includes 2 $3.75 BRICK APARTMENT 2 UNIT complox loveiy iaxe view ana lane privileges, mint condition. Only 1180400k Land contract. Call EM 3-7700. HACKETT REALTY. Union Rd., 202 Offered ot lest ft. Tarme. HURONrTELEGRAPH AREA | Zoned c-i. ............. Huron, 241 sq. ft. of li 25,000 per growing ar it storage Annett Inc. Realtors 1344576 28 E. Huron It 50 OFFICE BUILblNG with apartmenl, ike 4quar ' commercial ----- Lake Rd., $35,000 terms, 602-9594. LITTLE JOE'S bargain house 1461 Baldwin at Walton, FE 2 6042 Acres ot Free Parking Evot. 'til 9; Set. 'tlljL EZ terms 1 NEW SOFA, $69; New dinette sets, from $39; spring and mattress sets, $39; Countryside Living, 1014 9'xl2' rug Included, iece bedroom suite with double irassar, chest, full-size bad with nnersprlng mattress and matching jox spring and 2 vanlN lamps. 5-pleca dinette sat with 4 chroma chairs and table. All for $399. Your credit Is good at Wyman's. WYMAN FURNITURE CO. 17 E. HURON_____________FE 5-1501 ELECTRIC STOVE, (25; GAS stovf, (35; Rtfrlgprator with lop Input. 149; Wrlngpr wpshpr. 546. G. Hpr-ris. FE 5-3766. KIRBY SWEEPER EXCELLENT CONDI 1 ION - 130 FULL GUARANTEE Kirby Service & Supply Co, 2417 DIXIE HWV 474-2234 LINOLEUM RUGS, MOST SIZjTL •349 up. Fpprpon't Furnllurt. 31* E. Plkp St.. FE 4-76*1. I ____ Oaktond Avp. 334-1569. I LIVING ROOMS, BRAND *21 ’i'00? 3-RUOM - (Brand naw turnltural to price, Llttlp Jop't, 1441 Baldwin. ........... 4219. Cash term., lay-awpy FE3 4S42._____________________________ Pearson's Furniture, 446 Auburn NEW FURNITURE — Living ri — FE 4-72*1. __________________ bedroom, and dlnattas. 2(540 4-PIECE BEDROOMS, brand new, cant oft. _ Jyla_r's Auction, 6959 (97. Little Joa'i Bargain H 2-4*42 Office Open Evenings A Sunday 1 _______SI 7 ACRES, WOODED, rolling, on Indian Lake, near Lake Orton. S1*.A6kYH6MES, J. L. Dally fe*___' KM 3-7114 Northtrn Property 51-A cant , good condition, *15. 333-1593. 9x12 Linoleum Rugs $4.95 Salto Vinyl Tlla 7c aa. . ■_____M par cant down. STATEWIDE REAL ESTATE -391-5M0_________ 3*5-594* Partridge "IS THE BIRD TO SEE" Dixie HIGHWAY M'xSOO' lot facing a 4 lahe t)usy highway. 2 buildings: No. 1 30 x40' camwit block. No. 1 S4‘x3»' storage building. Pia«da*lan an closing. Priced’ now at *20.000 cash lo ex l sting land contract of **.90«. Balance at *100 par month Including 4 par cant Into rest. Ns. I4-5MSCP. ASK FOR FREE CATALOG PARTRIDOE REAL ESTATE 1050 West Huron 61.. Pontiac 314-Uat • - . MS* ROYER GOODRICH OFFICE railroad flat. Will deliver. FE 9120.___ ANCHOR FENCES NO MONEY DOWN____________FE 8-747)! BRIDES - BUY YOUR WUfifciNO announcement* at discount from. For be*. 4500 Dixie. Drayton, OR 3- _9767.__________________; BUY THIS WEEK and tava tfr next Christmas up to 110 value tor box of 25 Christmas Cards, GRINNELL'S E! Downtown Store 5-| 27 S Saginaw _______FE 3-7168 Used Electric Organs ialdwln, Lowrey. Storey-Clark Hem dvotco — priced from 622: Close out on combo organs SAVE $$1 SMILEY BROS., MUSIC BROWNIES HARDWARE FLOOR SANDERS—POLISHERS ---PER STE Mill RE SHA6 A DAY re with bolt-and materials. HljCom'l. Upholstery. CHIPPED BATHTUlS, 120 12-9 til 9 p.m. ACCORD'ON. GUITAR. FE 4-4721 “HI LESSONS. 1-59 W. Store Iquipmont RESTAURANT EQUIPMENT sale. 682 3620. |______ __________ B I and Sporting Goods housahold Items. FE 5-7016._j " ^ ENCLOSE YOUR SHOWER bathtub with a beautiful gias* tub anclosura, aluminum frame, wjtn sand blasted Swan design, $21^93 __G._A. Thompson, 7008 M-59 W GARBAGE dTIpoSAL. W norse-power, 127.88- Stelnless Sleet Sinks, 32x21, 829.50. PF Sable Launa Plywood, 4x0xUi, TALBOTT LUMBER 1025 Oakland____________FI 4-459J 21 caliber automatic rMia,"beat otter. f« Uni WATER BASEBOARD 673-9534. Open 94, , | NECCHI DELUXE AUTOMATIC ZlgZag wwlng machine. Cabinet model. Embroider, blind hema,’ buttonholea, ate. 1947 modal. Taka! Jl0"* 0 A Thompaon, over ppymanta of: ~vl- —---------———- -- $5.90 Par Month for 9 Mos. H0J,, ^m.^A.T«, XStSl\ OR $53 CASH BALANCE | jgHjgg 1 Immediate dtilvory LAKE & SEA MARINE S Blvd. Floor Shop—2255 Ellzabetn Lake “Across From the Moll" ) INCH FRIGIDAlfcE Electric range, excallant condition. FE 2-1876.________________________ 1968 SINGER CABINET Zig Zag Sawing Machine, slightly used, saws on buttons, makes buttonholes, monograms, overcasts, blind hams dresses, tachments needed, p service guaranteed. Full price $62.60 or payments of $6.20 per _____ _____ month. For trot home demo, no Fully guaranteed. Terrific savings. Obligation, calf Capitol Credit Terms. Xl£r * pm " ,0" c-'t CURT'S APPLIANCE KA3.R9nn 44(4 WILLIAMS LAKE RD. 474-1101 500-8/UU Refrigerator in. apartm&nI gaa ttova 130, 21" TV (at, mjac^ 5. Harrla, PI 5-2704.________ SAVE PLENTY TODAY On all 194* floor qamplaa ol ranoaa. rafrlgaratara, waahara and TVa. Linla Jo0'( Bargain Houaa Ialdwln at Walton Blvd. FE 74(41 SINGER DIAL-AMATINC Zig-Zag sawing machine. I n HH|jM Makes M 59 1969 yUk6n King, 10 hor»e Husk la, rag. 1695 now $995. Car's Boats and Motors Clarkston Rd. Lake Orton 1968 T0UCH-A-MATIC New sowing machines, does fa stitching, makes buttonholes, i Sold for $124.50, balance only $3 or pay $1.to per weak. Gail dey night, 330-2544, imperial. Guaranteed UNIVERSAL SEWING CENTER 2415 Dlxla Hwy. _____44905 CHRISTMAS SPECIAL __ BOWS AND ARROW* -134 4.149 larTlIlc Valuat ^Alchlgan Fluoraa OENE'5 ARCHERY-714 W. HURON cent, 393 Orchard Laka, FC 4-1442 LAKE FUMPI, 1 horaapowar, tail-priming, Mf. Fall (mcIpi. O. a. Thompaon, 7005 M-59 W. NOW YOU COULD chooaa from naw Evlnruda Skaatara with la h.p„ to 25 h.p. twin cyllndar anginas, elthar tlto" or 20to" track. Try tha naw Evlnruda Bobcat with a 19 h.p. or 33 h.p.! angina. Taka a damonatratlon on tha naw anowmablla. tf'a lit In a atatlon wagon, anou^h fir two paopie an , TaCa M-59 ta W. Hlghlan Snowmobile $825 Up 84 Farm EqaijMNnt___________ 87 HAFFY NEW YEAR FROM Lavlt Machinery Co., your Homellto galore, from Orton villa, NA 1 FORD TRACTOR WIT^ SNOW JET MERCURY SNOWMOBILES Dally 94, Cloaad Sunda CRUISE-OUT, INC. 1. Walton FI 14402 SNOWMOBILES •Kl ROULE — MOTO SKI YUKON KINO - (NO PONY mm * into SEE THE NEW SNOW CAMPER OAKLAND SNOWMOBILE CENTER 3434 Dlxla 94 3344506 we 66f th4m in stock SCORPION SNOWMOBILES Tha Provan tnowmotalla. 15" and t(“ Trocka. Manual alac. itorta. 15 HP, UP. TRACK SIZE STACHER TRAILER SALES, INC. 3771 Highland (M-(9>__41 SCORPION SNOW MOBILES ZE IS. II, 33 Inc thru 35 horu i tuofl! SPECIAL SALE BACK BY REQUEST McCulloch Chain Sawa il Mac - IS with 15" bar and chain Regular Prlca, $129.95 Sale Price $109.95 KING BROS. ^ontlec Rd. at Opdyjto Mobile Homes B9 1 DAY ONLY- YEAR END SALEH! MONDAY, DECEMBER 30 OPEN 9-9 P.M. i All Coaches Drastically reduced! SOME IMS's left! PRICES ARE GOING UPI $20 holds any unit at salt price! WE MUST REDUCE OUR YEAR END INVENTORY! 1969 U'xSO' from $3,795, $400 Down. HAPPY NEW YEAR COUNTRYSIDE LIVING 1084 Oakland Ave. 334-1509 8x47' SUPERIOR, ON lot famished. 2 bedroom, meat sail. 681-0541. 10x50' RICHARDSON'S. 2 bedroom^ front kitchen, take over payments, $500 down 332-1657. IMMEDIATE occupancy; . :. 174* NEW MOON. 16 x 56. I bedrooms, partly furnished. 338-7381.___________ \ , HAPPY NEW YEAR TO ALL FROM MIDLAND TRAILER SALES 2257 pixie Hwy.________338-0772 Michigan Exclusive MARLETTE DEALER SPECIAL: 12x50 Marietta at 14995. Marietta Expandos on display delivery and sat up within , On Dlaplay at: Cranbarry L Village *"tton N . (M- . Lk. lid. batter way to tpand i in a naw AMERICAN tower th Christmas savings. 1945 CAMPER DeVILLE, •' 1941 LITTLE CHAMP truck ca. implata with everything. m?7li lacriflca. 4*3-3455._ 1969 STARCRAFT TRAVEL TRAILERS CAMPERS INBIDE DISPLAY CRUISE-OUT, INC. B. Wilton Dally 94 PI (4403 CLOUD SUNDAY* _j APACHE CAMP TRAILERS •ms 543-5294 _ 673-1191 PRE-HOLIDAY SALE ' to .. naw 1M9 DETROITER, ---------- KROPF. Pi Christ* 30 flooi Buy now and save, lifts Ask us about our lay-e-way plan. * Bob Hutchinson's Mobil* Horn* Solas, Inc. Open Dally *111 6 p.m. Saturday and Sunday ’til 5 DRAYTON PLAINS 43(1 Dixie Hwy. (U.6.-16) OR 3-12(1 ROYAL-OR-REGAL ACTIVE 2 or 3 bad noma ls'xif' living nm 36-Gal. gaa hot water heater tylon carpeting over rubber pad. TOWN & COUNTRY MOBILE HOMES, INC. Open Dally 1( a.m. to I p.m. Stay iff a.m. to 6 P.m. day I p.m. to 6 p.m. r tlmtt bY AppL____ Rant Trallar Spoct________90 NEW LOTI. IMS^^Br^wn Rd. N( and Travel ilecllon «' covers and campai mile east of Lai McClellan Travel Trailers, Inc. » Highland Rd. _______1744163 WANTED; 16 GAUGE tlngl* barral, ~ ■ 304773._______________ Sand-Graval-DIrt 76 Ar* you going to Florida? All 1968 Corsairs Gam Travai Trailars stock must b* told in D*c. Sal* starts Dac. 2. Ellsworth Trailtr Salas 4577 Dlxla Hwy.__________616441 gravel products, read gravel, filtered and fill aand, all areas delivered. 3744(42.__________ Wood-CoahCoka-Fuel________77 -I OAK AND HICKORY (aatonad, delivered. 3tl-2M3. FIREPLACE WOOD. 4W417I._______ SEASON HARDWOOD, will deliver, 371*17(4 30*6 Sa. Lapaar Rd, Pantlac ~ —gtoyr-J^wg.i'ipy WHITE BIRCH HREPI^LCE wood, split — dwlivarwd — stacked. $25 foe* cord. 651-4366, if no ans. 651-1051. D#|s__________79 I A OACHSHWftD PUPS. AKC, BSTE’. NglM KENNElt. 391 ill* A POODLE T3ROOM, puppies, (hot and wormed, stud service. Pi Chack our d*ol on -SWISS COLONY LUXURY TRAILERS FROLIC AliaUf ANC TRUCK I0PIR6 SKAMPER FOLD-DOWN CAMPERS 13 to it IT on display at - Jacobson Trail*r Salas 5490 wiltlama Lake Rd. OR 3(961 COMB I NATION afiAT AMD ulllily, r’ channel tfema, 6130. *52-2«45 " ‘'‘ffilir (Inca 1933. Guaranteed tor Ufa. •ham and gat a demonalratlon al Warner Traitor Yales, m* W. Huron (glin to lain ana ai Wally (yam's exciting caravans). CENTURY YELLOWSTONE LIFETIME MOTOR HOMES STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC. — Highland (M-19) 6*3444* freevaCSton XaADaCRIH(Jfi6lK;pa A kC • _________Pi 64536 AMERICAN EiKIMOt, Paklng-i, Poodlas, English Eulldogs. Monkey (very feme), Mon-lyne Birds, cenerles, Tropi- Myne Birds. Cenerles, * GROOMING Charlies Pet MP . . i, i Mile K. of Teiegreph 332- Cemplng or EVAN'S EQUIPMENT {j^xtoHwv. - CtorKjton OAKLAND CAMPER Midwest covert end sleeper steel freme Tour e home cat Seion, where tugh lun. 9 e.m.-io i 335-5259 Thurs. fhroui 2 PUREBRED SEAL I Kittens, melet, 7 wt 0296. 2 AKC REGISTERED tnowflaka right to lode Rd., complete welnut cabinet, Full pi 141.95. Frae lessons end pinking sheers wift. purchase. Cell Midwest Appliance, 9-9 dally, 334-2312. lots—Acrtof* ________________ $4 1, 5, 10 ACRE PARCELS wooded . rolling. EM 34613, 4*4-14(4, Fowler. 360 ACRES Northern MRhlgan, 7 cottages, 3 lakes, Idaa I for club or raaarl. Widow anxious lo sail. DIXIE HWY. 4 acres, earner ol Grange and Dixie Hwy. 0 $54 CASH In j OR $6 PER M0. PAYMENTS rummage sal afore,. Baldwin at Waitin': UNIVERSAL Te'wInG CENTER Royar Realty Upholstery. 0RT0NVILLE 2,700 sq. ft. commerclel building In, .UTy N»n downtown Orfonvlllt now housing I# r , stores. Excellent location near Post: ttf' re,rJ®f"5l‘' flSJ Office. Suitable for 5 end 10c eloro, Ijjgff bergRIne. Little drug stoee. offices, antique shop or Bs*„* you. Excellent terms on -------- m -----— — a HOUSEHOLD BARGAIN Igffig-ggfr i UufiL^.^'T'to'^ifsi Sssia ssS u- _____'---------SSfSS. ,^dr^i.:ri:pS51T V. " exCELLENT Condition, amrnm Opyutawtfda 59 bunk bjd - ^frlgar^^O. HaX FE lv», PSmT' 1 “UNCLAIMED LAYAWAY KAY FURNITURc New I960 Zlg Zag Sowing Machine, to K Mart In Olenwood Center Attention Housewives 'hem siitches. aunu TWP I ---- ■- i Highest prices tor used turnlfuralneef Adam* Read N. of Walfomlf acres. F00° 1^A* ~^”urnlh!r I Si iwr ^r"2LVST ^ *ch“1' A YEAR-END SALE |5?; ear acre, lorma. f|*fur« wlto pyrchasa optlon o^ ,n DuhIk pSdW SALES tipsico l, Jin._________ PEARSON'S PtfRNtTURR- HA* NOW MOVED TO. 646 AUBURN. PONTIAC. FE 4-7661. PLUMBING BARGAIN*! Tif¥i Standing toilet, *32.95: 30-go lion heater, *49.95, 7-piece r tray, r with trim. 639.95, MG SALES & SERVICE M7 Dlxla Hwy. Drayton 4734451 GUNS-GUNS-GUNS One of thf largest selections In Oakland County. Browning. Woathorby, Wlnchasfor, Remington, Uio oi.ie hwv Coll and Smith-Wesson pistols, 412.1135 ^SSP'wo'r*- 0wn AKC " oil(man ihEPmEBd Che**. 926-4403 SKC REGItTIRED Apricot Toy oodlot^ 5_wookt. 65l-*!34 aftor 7 All Breeds Grooming No oppolntmont necessary ill Conors, leads and swaalars, I par cant off. HOUSE OF POODLE SKI-DOO'S FROM $695 If to 45 H.P. IS", 11", end 20" track* Partridge “IS THE BIRD TO SEE" (59 95; laundry tray, rrlm, 519.95, v stalls Wlm trim, (39.95, 3- we neve sink, 42.95, lavs.. 12.95; lubs. ceaaorlas. -e up. Pipe cuf and threaded, suits, boors, n.™., »'»»* PLUMBING CO. *4 1 cu.lom colored trailers, single 0 m I73~ Sunder lend! 00T ™'* W,eKeN0' Rd. Mon.-Fr SAVE ALL PET SMOPr Jd Wilflem* FE 4-6433. Parakeet* end Himpitiri I AKC pdODLl' ftutiTiervIce, very amell, mo»f color*, roe*. Mu*f iat. 662-6533. AKC REOIIYMBD Lefcridor lL Retrlevtr*. Black, 3' j mot., shot*. ,f 623-1196. AKC MINIATURE tchneuien melt*, 363-1835. BOXER PUPS, few n Baldwin «t Colgate 135-0634 FREE - FREE COLOR TV WITH FIRST U^RDERS New SPORT TRAILER DELUXE HAROTOP CAMPER Sloops I. 61496 Ellsworth Trailer Sales 4577 pjXla Hwy.__ 425-4460 Michigan's Finest Selection 40 unlit In stock, travel tralla pick-up camper. In Dodge trucks. Del-Re Camp-Four. 5 year, Ing. Buy tha finest ana i LLOYD BRIDGES TRAVELAND % Tlits-Ante-Track_____92 4-100, 14, 5-6 PLY TIRES, 1166. 6*^ 76(9. REPAIR, MoUMT, an^beianc' lAao and enromd wheals. Naw and wad wheel*. MARKET TIRE, tof Orchard Lilia RdM Kaao*. Aot* StrYlct — R*palr ■ 92 MOTOR! FACTORY REBUILT, cert, truck*, 819 up. High Motorcycle Sale IPECIAl PRICES ON ALL MODELS Andsrson Salts & Service 1445 t. TELEORAPH PE 3-71(1 luzuki CYcLpi, m rt.i* w ct, Taka M-59 la W. Hlghla .. . SAL*I TIPIICO LAKE. Boati-Acc(S(orl*s *7 Chrysler and Johnson Boats and Motors PAUL A. Y0UN0, INC. OUO Dixie Hwy. OE 4 0411 __ Marin* on Leon Lab* aLASI>AE STiUEY MiNRO^arft boats, Gumman Cane*, Ray Oraan* Sailboats, Dolphin Pontoons, Bvlnrudo Motors, Famed Trallars. aka M'59 to W. Highland, right to Hickory Rldg* Rd, hi Damod* mm i£ t LAKE. SALE! i 629-2179 Merlne herdwere. Lerten Boelti Porpoise tell Beet*. lop). Ceb to cem^ei stIBl end Sporfcreft Mtg. * 623-0650. lieepert r bool. SUMP PUMPS SOLD, rented and Cliff Dr*y*rS I __________PUPS. 152-45(9. jwpajrod, conrs, fe i4442_______ Gun and Sports Center beautiful 9 week IUFER (TUFF, SURE nutl That's ,.,lt H.„y pd Holly, ME 44771 Blua Lustra for cleaning rugs and Open Dally and Sundays upholstery Rant electric sham- — -*—---------------------- pooar *1. Hudson's Hardwars. GUNS W»lton.-------------- j—_ I Yaar-and tloaNnc*. All duns "“C^'IRman PUF AKC id. Buy new end *eve. I not 4A2.I204 3476 Orchard Laka. 4*1-1 f19J5 .par 160.,. Wads J7,9I ^68 9&U Nftbpralartlangi Belgian tan, AKC Gorman Shephard lamala tor sal* 343-6359 [ BLACK F606lK, REGISTERED. ' travEl Trailers weIt wind wood lake BONANZA SPECIAL WINTER PRICES McClellan Travai Trailer* Inc , ,1*74.31*3 4130 Highland hoad , PIONEER CAMPER SALES I Trailers: Jubnes. Glob* Star Barth Compare Swinger, Mackinaw, Travel Ouaan, Cer'bou. Barth Covers:Stull Besrcar, Merit I I W. Huron 461-0730, PINTER'S 1370 Opdyke .94 PE 44924 (175 ef Un^trilty Ex if)_ T0¥fTMARINE ' POE JOHNSON MOTORS 2695 Orcherd Lk., Sylvtii Leke Wanted Cart-Tracks 101 EXTRA Dollars Paid FOR THAT EXTRA Sharp Car Sseaclally 4 »p*»"> and eorvdtto*. ’Check tha real, inan gat th* beat'* at Averill's >( 7-9171 302* DI«|* PRj!4**4_. Mansfield AUTO .SALES 300 l». adlllacs. p< or owfdMti ’MANSFIELD AUTO SALES Ponllac, Olds and (10.95 l BATEMAN ese fixture* with pureneae om«on q-.. $335 me. Cteen modem bldg. $275'^° i ftara'a the eetlesf end quickest , trofifeble business ! Rd. INVESTMENT ft COMMERCIAL CO. 277 S. Teiegreph “ ‘ 338-9641 arwwr11 -,- SPREDSATIN PAINTS. WARWICK lUjjply - - ______ THE SALVATION ARMY Is-v'oUN*’"™ '....... 726 W. Huron! puppy, housabrokan, cent rots, I ,”0 *^iw«NC*'*T I NEW SAVE $$$ iff?TrttoCtl»nato,. husky, guararn overcasts, blind to mtort kwr naads 17W h.p. tkl Daddlar. S795 '•Jf ,J?V?s7 . cSShC/W^BmiSSs 76 h.p.ptk7 Daddtor. ml wv. M2 54*r. ■MuMMwWM||li|MU||m|l|^ — — - ----- -- - - — u too lor,' call botoro 7:10, ma e-i»*#. p. Ikl Daddlar "'MoMMAN IHlFHEPOS, , Ski Peddler. $1,061 951 M6S6J Demo Ski Deddler, 8128 » ta.J . USED SAVE SSS «OL«N retrieve* pup Dlxla Call Capitol Cradltl 563-8200 WASHER PARTS Smith Corona Ski Daddler DOBFRMAN Wide Track EPjTPRJf CATALOG ■ (STATE PARTRIDGE RI IE 334 3551 Appliance, 24173 W. IS Tatograph. 10-S.I USED'COLOR T V SET*, 71*9 95 SWEET'S tfeel, i 965 1759 BUNK BEDS. ABOUT T V5 prl In, FE 1 mamt. pi*--, wr* •d metel gerege doXk Ideal iignt, temp, ihede, etc, BOULEVARD SUPPLY I 8. Blvd. C. 33> ».p. -Shi 63 E. We I ton PE 8-4402! Delly 94, Ctoted Sundeyi hPPH *Ix,mp*rs, spar* lira carriers, auxiliary gasoline tanks. Lowry Camper Salas. 1335 5. Hospital Rd., Union Laka EM 3-3411._ __ % TROTWOODS | JOHNSON'S TRAVEL TRAILBRI **,; 517 e. Walton Blvd.-FE 4-5153 WINNEBAGO 4 ode it. Motet lekup coach •old. 3 deyi Let Vegas, D Raata end Dn CoORDON SETTERS AKC chemp1 hlfchet. tired, dual champ bloodlines, all: F. E. HOWLAND SALES shots. 1 waaks. MA 6-7293. 1255 Dixie Hwy., Pantlac, OR 1- STOP" HERE LAST M <& M MOTOR SALES Now at eyr naw location W* pay more for sharp, lata modal cars. Corvette* needed. l IS* 'Oafcton^jl viaduct TOPnrpOh CLEAN .CARS OR trucks. Economy Cars. 2336 Olkla. fQhTiCSTLAilk (OR SHANE, LOW MILEAGE AUTOMOBILE*. H. J. VAN WELT_OR 6-135* " "TOP DOLLAR PAID" GLENN'S FOR "CLEAN" USED CA»* lit W. Huron St. _ C—JO THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1008 Wanted Can-Tracks We w o u 1 d like to buy late model GM Can or will accept trade-downs. Stop by twkiy. FISCHER BUICK 544 S. WOODWARD 647-5600 Jank Care-Tracks 101 A 1-M JUNK CARS - TRUCKS, fra* AL^oYS»?u,r?Ej^.CA,,> ,n COPPER - BRASS; RADIATORS starter, and generators, C. Dlxsn OR MOW.___________________i WANTED: JUNK CARS Used Auto-Track Ports 102 1*5* PONTIAC ENGINE, 4-speed automatic* complil# with transmission. 682-0514._______ New end Used Tracks 103 Forei|o Core MIDGET, NS AUSTIN AMERICA, 1700 miles, warranty* radio* front wheel drive* disc brakes* auto. $1*190 or bast 194$ AUSTIN AM-FM radio* whitewall tires* optional guards. Only 1550 miles. Full price— $1995 Bill Golling VW Inc, Off Maple Rd. (15 Mile Rcfc) .....I m Ber Across From Berz > ONE GIRL OWNER* 1966 VW* 1300* sunroof* radio* white walls* new snow and front tires* exc. cond. 693-0117. ____ ^TOP QUALITY NEW AND USED IMPORTED CARS & JEEPS ARE FOUND AT GRIMALDI CAR CO. 900 OAKLAND AVENUE | New and Used Cars 106 'WE HAVE SEVERAL transportation ! specials that can be purchased New and Used Con 1M4 CHEVY 4 STICK, 1*64 CHEVY IMPALA 2 ■ d O O r hardtop, VS, double power, white with red Interior. RONEY'S AUTO, 131 Baldwin Ave. FE 4-4*0*. ___ 1*44 CHEVROLET BEL-AIR 4-door, 1061 Now and Used Cars « t t Metallic jjr 106 MARMADUKE By Anderson and Learning 621- 1*63 DODGE I Wagon. , r matching rack, Vf ■ and brakes. Radio, _______ wall tires, i Full price *2*3.0 weekly payment, $2.16. Cell Kin 1965 CORVAIR MONZA 4-do hardtop, auto., radio, haa itewalls, Ilka new Inside RONEY'S /-------- — ■ ‘ Ava. FE 4-4*09. out. RONEY'S AUTO, 131 Baldwin lf6TCHEVY“W TON PICKUP, ex.' T T J^j^Y AUTO cel lent condition, todey's tpeciel. w J. r\KJ IV line condition $1095 1965 CORVAIR MILOSCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 1*67 Chrysler Newport 4 door, VI, auto., doubio power, radio, whitewalls, blue with blue interior, *2,015. 677 M-24, Lake Orion. MY *66 DARK OREEN CHARGER, 303 cubic Inch, excellent condition, ixi: 01000, 647-5401. 1968 DODGE LAST CHANCE *5*5, 6*5 TOP VALUE MOTORS 313 Montcalm 335-4611 1*62 Ford F-600, 14' Flatbed with hoist, rebuilt rear end and transmission, new brakes, all let! year* *1550. Cell Eves MA 4-4400. 1*62 CHEVY TANDEM dump truck, straight air, equipped to pull trailer, *2500. 363-0905._ 1962 CHEVROLET V, ton pick-up. 30 to choose from. Mony $795 body styles, colors and Call FE 8-9661 j equipment. All new, used cheVeCW^a r~d~to>'Iand 68s reduced f°r year- .Sav? Nr," Mony 1966 CHEVY SPORt VAN station|SOld OT COST OT belOW. wagon, 3 sealer* radio* heater,; CHECK THESE omatlc* ready for any lob. $1188 NEW TRADES I prica* lust $88 down* $48.65 par 1967 Plymouth Fury III* 2 door* nth. One yaar warranty. hardtop* YEAR END PRICE $1695 John McAuliffe Ford soo. 4 door, year end SAVE MONEY AT MlKB SAVOIE CHEVY. WHO W. Maple Ml 4-2753. 1967 8ARRACU0P MAAOtOP raHHHB *550, dealer. 331-9237. 1963 FORD F-250-3/«-Ton PICKUP f-|, four speed transmission. West ;oast mirrors, rear bumper, heater, clearence lights. A real " “ - excsllent heavy duty unit Pr'C*‘ $895 Hillside Llncoln-Mercury, Oakland, 333-7*63._____ 1*63 FORD M TOM Pick- up. Bootless - $800 DEALER_________________________338*238 1964 CHEVY HALF ton pickup. 473-8659. ________ xcellent condition* ona ov °nlV_ $1795 BILL FOX CHEVROLET 755 5. Rochetter Rd. 651-7000 1*43 CHEV Y~i-ton, VI, 4 speed 2,000 lb. Tilt Mte. 1*07 FORD 1 ton stake 4 speed Call PHIL Strom 624-1572 LLOYD BRIDGES TRAVELAND _____1010 W.Maple, Welled Lk. ~ 1966 CHEVY Va Ton Pickup* with watt coast mirrors* dark green finish* A-1 condition I $1195 John McAuliffe Ford 277 West Montcalm FE 5-4101 3-2030 FE 4-1006 ___or_______FE 3-7854 AUTOBAHN YOUR VW CENTER In the greater Bloomfleld-Pontlac a e* FE 8-4531_________ 1965 BUICK* SPECIAL* 2 door* excellent condition. $795, Buy Here-Pay Here, Marvel Motors* 251 Oakland* FE 8-4079.________________ 1965 BUICK SKYLARK* automatic* power steering, bucket seats* low mileage, sharp* 81295. 334-5283. _ 1966 BUICK ELECTRA 4-door hardtop* air conditioning and full power, can be purchased with 8100 LUCKY AUTO 1940 W. Wide Track FE 4-1006_____or______FE 3-7854 1966 BUICK ELECTRA 225 hardtop. Full power. 839 down, payments $14.92. fuii aMMikiiaiMi 2. FUII DTK :s* credit n hardtop* 396 engine* transmission* take ovar 8-5:90* 197 S. Saginaw._ 966 CORVETTE STING Rav 427* 390 H.P. engine chrome* 4-speed, close racial* leather seats* AM-FM radio* power and antenna* new tires, custom steering 2236* never been In accident, 673- IMPALA* 2 door 1966 Y/2-Ton Pickup Pleatslde* pickup* 2 >mt body to only- $1095 Matthews- Hargreaves seed ise* free wheel hubs* coast mirrors* hydra-snow plow* haavy duty tires. $2795 John McAuliffe Ford 277 Wast Montcalm FI MIDI - LI 3-2030 \Hi OMC M TON PANEL, 4 whool drlvo, 4-tpood, mony oxtrot. 332- 5671. ____________ 1*67 CHEVROLET EL CAMINO pickup. 673-1659 _ 1*4* 50 »iRie», m ion, ti: .take 327 V-9, 4 tpood with * 2-soeei roor axle, 2200 mllo». *52 3231 GMC Factory Branch Oakland at Cass FE 5-9485 JEEP “ Sales-Service Over 23 Used Jeeps In slock — Reedy to go. HAHN JEEP 4*73 Dixie Hwy. Nsor M15 Clorkston__________MA 5-2635 Several New and Used FOROS-J^EPS-BRONCOS SNOWPLOWS FROM $795 John McAuliffe Ford 277 West Montcalm PU 6-3101 LI 3-2030 Auto liwuranctMorlne 104 Auto Insurance CAN YOU QUALIFY? *19.30 Quarterly tor Mobility. Full Coverage os low os *40.05 ANDfV 1044 Jotlyn Foreign Can SHELTON 1967 BUICK Wildcat 2 • d o o r hardtop* ell custom interior* one owner, and locally owned* like brand new. $2*495. PONTIAC-BUICK-OPEl 855 S. Rochester Rd._65M500 LATE MObeL CADILLACS ON HAND AT ALL TIMES JEROME CADILLAC CO. 1900 Wldo Track Or._FE 3-7021 1962 CADILLAC Hardtop, Block flnlih. Full power. $595 Call FE 8-9661 ____ Star Auto_______ 1964 CADILLAC SEDAN DEVILLE Full powar* factory air conditioned. I Vinyl top. Lika now. Suburban Olds BIRMINGHAM 860 S. WOODWARD Ml 7-5111 1964 CADILLAC FLEETWOQO. 4 door, full power, vinyl top. Con bo eoon anytime. Cell 473471*. 1964 CADILLAC Soden DeVille, lull power, foctory olr conditioning, •harp oe t leek. Only *1410 full prlco. Ju»t tin down and *57.49 par month. One yoar warranty. John McAuliffe Ford 630 Oakland FE 5-4l«| 1966 CADILLAC COUPE Otvlllo, autumn gold* am-fm radio* factory air, 647-2254.____ Cadillacs Year End Specials A Tremendous Selection of Pre-Owned Cadillacs ,LL STYLES AND COLOR COM-BINATIONS AND MOST ARE battery* axe. cond.* $1650. Call 332- 7477. _______ 1966 CHEVELLE HARDTOP. 4 spaed* radio and heater. $39 down* payments of $11.44* full price $1395. Call Mr. Parks* credit manager at Ml 4-7500. HAROLD TURNER FORD 464 S. Woodward___Birmingham 1966 CORVETTE with two tops* 4 speed* air condition. Call Phil fttrom at 624-1572 LLOYD BRIDGES TRAVELAND ___1010 W. Maple* Walled Lk._ ' MILOSCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 1967 Chevy 2 door, stick V8, radio* whitewalls* blue with blba Interior. $1695. 677 M-24* Lake Orion. MY 2-2041. 1967 CAMARO# 2 DOOR hardtop, gold* vinyl roof* bucket seats. 1967 Ford 500 4 door, YEAR END PRICE .......................$1595 1967 Ramblar 2 door* YEAR END ifiaf E • ...................$1095 Polara, 2 door, hardtop* YEAR PRICE 1967 F PRICE 1967 R PRICE 1966 Pc___ END PRICE 1965 Plymouth Fury YEAR END PRICE .. r. YEAR $ 995 ..„ 'olara 4 door, YEAR fete PRICE 1963 Cl PRICE 1963 Ch PRICE......................$ 395 AND MANY MORE SPARTAN DODGE SELLS FOR LESS 855 Oak tend Pontiac__FE 0-9222 FORD: Whan you ouy MARKET TIRE alvl II safety check. 2635 Orchard Lake Rd. Ki 1965 Ford PRICE ...... 1965 Polara PRICE 1963 Chtvy I PRICE .. 1963 Chew '/a YEAR END ....... $995 door, YEAR END ..............$ 995 2 door YEAR END ............ $495 on panel* YEAR END I960 FORD WAGON* runs 1960 FORD 1 ton* utility bad* * speed* excellent condition* $395, Bu\ Hera-Pay Hare* Marvel Motors* 251 Oakland* FE 8-4079. transportation* $129* Buy Here* Marvel Motors* 25 FE 8-4079. Now and Used Can "haW 1968 Plymouth GTX Avocado green with matching Interior. 440 cubic Inch engine. 4 speed, power steering end brakes. An exceptionally nice car. $2695 BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 2100 MAPLE RD. TROY, MICH. Phone 642-7000_■ mwodUeodCon 1S6 IMS & 1966 UMANS. As low as 0105. Call Mr. Freet credit manager at ***”' AUDETTE PONTIAC East of Birmingham In the Trey Motor Mall, acme (Tom Berz Airport. > _____642-0600 1*63 POHTlAC, Bonneville Moor automatic tranamission, brakes ant) steering, safely check. 3635 Orchard Lake Rd'/VeoBO. AND 1*63 PONTIAC 00 down m low at *3*5. Call Mr. Frost credit manager a 642-320*. AUDETTE PONTIAC East of Birmingham In tha Tro •ring wheel, ■* $1995. Call! 33Z-7477._______ I 1967 CAMARO Sport Coupe with V$* automatic* console, power steering* vinyl roof* cameo Ivory. finish. Only— $2195 Matthews- i Hargreaves Specials WHY PRICED SO LOW ? ALL MUST 60 BEFORE FIRST OF Y€AR “Pop, Marmaduke wants his bone back!” Nbw ond Ustd Cars 106 Nbw and Usad Cari^ ^ 106 NEW FINANCE PLAN, if you have boon garnlshoad or bankrupt, or had any cradit problems, Wo will fry to re-establish your credit again. Call Cradit Managar, Mr. LUCKY AUTO 1940 W. Wlda Track FE 4-1006 or FE 3-7854 1962 OLDS 98* good tires* all powar* $175. 334-9895. 1*66 CUTLASS HARDTOP. V9, power steering. Honduras maroon, black Interior.' Immaculate— $1495 Village rambler 466 S. Woodward, Birmingham Ml 6-3*00 1966 Ford 3-DOOR HARDTOP with V8r automatic, power steering, 3 to chooso from— 1 $1495 FLANNERY FORD (Formerly Beattie Ford) WATERFORD 623-0900 1*66 COUNTRY SQUIRE 10 Passenger Station Wagon. S3* down, paymonts ot S!£*2. Full prlco 916*5. Call Mr. Parks cradit manager ot Ml 4-7509. ; HAROLD TURNER FORD 1464 S. Woodward Birmingham 1967l=ORb FALCON, blue coupe* 170 cubic inch. 6 cylinder* 3 speed* 2 new tires* radio* body In excellent condition* $1*000. 624-3396. 1966 Toronado" Deluxe Full power and air conditioned. Like new. $ave Suburban Olds Birmingham 860 S. Woodward Ml 7-5111 1966 Olds Delta 88 4-door hardtop. Powor steering and brakas* automatic* radio and haatar. Whitawall liras. $1595 1 Suburban Olds BIRMINGHAM 860 S. WOODWARD Ml 7-5111 “ 1967 Ford GALAXIE 500 2-door hardtop* with Vf* automatic* balanca of now car warranty* power steering* brakes* vinyl roof* only — $1995 FLANNERY FORD (Formerly Beattie Ford) 1 WATERFORD 473-0*00 f HUNTER DODGE I WHERE THE HUNT ENDS! 1*67 DELMONT OLDSMOBILE, orlgl-nel owner, excellent condition, $1,609. FE 5-79*9. 1967 Cutlass 2 door hardtop. 8 automatic, powor steering and brakes. Turquoise finish. $1995 Suburban Olds BIRMINGHAM 860 S. WOODWARD Ml 7-5111;'. '"2. SAVE MONEY AT MIKE SAVOIE CHEVY. 1900 W. Maple* Ml 4-2/53. 1962 TEMPEST STATION Wagon, automatic* $195* 673-2419. Dealer 1962 PONTIAC CATALINA ^ good 2o792.°n' °U * pow#r' W$w md U—J (irt 107 TEMPEST COUP E,_____4 _SSSr............... 1*60 PIREBIRD 400 HO, 4-spaed, . fuii price abj-erjIep __ Pnoot manager at 642-320*. AUDETTE PONTIAC East of Birmingham Motor Mall* across Airport __________, 1962 PONTIAC VI stick* I j 1963 Ford Fairlane, 4 door, sedan, ;V8* standard transmission* excellent 1 transportation* only ,1 $495 Rademacher CHEVY-OLDS On US 10 at Ml 5 CLARKSTON Over 75 Other Cars to Select From! $495 Plymouth, 2 ( 1962 Pontiac* convertible, runs but needs a little love* today on $145 1964 Chevy Wagon, VI, standard 196$ CHEVELLE 2 door hardtop* VB, 11965 Mustang, automatic* double power, air con- automatic* re dltlon. only ...................$2,595 specie I* priced a 1964 FORD 2 door, VI. Stick. t 1*47 T-BIrd. loaded, silver with black vinyl lap, real sham. 1*66 Chavy Pickup, rad, 6 cylinder, automatic, a nice one. 1*64 Valiant, 2 door, automatic, green, priced right. 1*64 VW Bui, oranga and while, IMS Oldsmoblle Vista Crulaar Sta- Dodge Dart Conv at .4*5.4»» SOUTH Ml 7-0*33___________BIRMINGHAM 19*7 LTD HARDTOP. Air condition, ■ automatic. S3* down, f 015.92. ---- MAY GOD RICHLY BLESS YOU AND . YOURS THROUGH THE HOLIDAYS AND THE ENTIRE YEAR TO COME Your Friends at. •I BEST }| 0LDSM0BILE 1963 Grand Prix ir hardtop, full power. $695 Call FE 8-9661 Star Auto 1963 PONTIAC GRAND Prix* $795, good cond.; 1962 Tempest new paint* vary dean* $275. Call attar 1964 TEMPEST 2 door* 8 auto* $8.92 WEEK. CALL MR. PARKS, Ml 4-7900. Harold Turner Ford, Birmingham.___________________ GO! HAUPT PONTIAC 1966 PONTIAC Executive Sport Coupe fith automatic* power steering, •rakes, vinyl trim* and daytone lue finish. Only— $1895 Matthews- Hargreaves 631 Oakland Ave. 1M7 PIREBIRD, AUTO tranamieslon, power ah brakes, small down pa monthly poymonts. LUCKY AUTO i FE 4-1006 1940 W. Wide Track WHOLESALE SPECIALS »erl(t credit $2795 TaK “turner ford j Suburban Olds 464 S. Woodward__Birmingham1 196$ FORD TORRINO GT payments* 302 angina* auto.* PONTIAC Catalina 2 1966 CHEVY Impale 2 door hardtop j good* yot, automatic,' 12195. heater. $39 < $16.75. Fu VI* automatic, $1595 Oakland 1968 Eldorado Flremlst paint, vinyl roof. 1966 Sedan DeVille Full power* 6 wev seat, vinyl roof. Cllmeto control. Only 8*000 miles. 1967 Coupe DeVille Tilt end telescope wheel. Cllmete control. Vinyl roof* loothor Inferior. 1967 Eldorado Doaikln finish, bale* vinyl roof. Full powei, factory air. Iharp car. 1966 Coupe D«Ville finish, with while laathar Full powar. Ona owner. 1966 Sedan DeVille Chrysler-Ply mouth $14*51724 Oakland ____F E 4-9436 1*64 FORD 6, 2 door, rial good. 1*63 .CORVAIR Moma convertible, 93*5. 692-9223. Riggins Dir. automatic, radio, heater, only »**31 jMj MUSTANG COUPE . 5950. 1*65 FORD country squire 19 ?---------------------331-9239 passenger wagon V9. automatic, | 1965 MUSTANG Hardtop With V-9, automatic, only— $795 maroon flnlih. CHEVELLE wagon, $1395 automatic* power steering $1595 1964 OLDS 9$ 4-door, V-l* automatic*! BILL FOX CHEVROLET powar ataaring* brakas, only $1095 755 5. Ro^hastar Kd.____________ 651-7000 1*63 CHEVY Blscayna 2-don- u.m t»63 FORD COUNTRY automatic* radio* haator 1963 OMC Vi ton* with I ft. I V6* stick shift, only 1966 FORD % ton* with I ft. Park*, cradit manager at Ml 4-7500. HAROLD TURNER FORD 464 5. Woodward_Birmingham Fine Selection '68 Continental Trades Now at Reduced prices Bob Borst VI* stick* Only CHEVY ton* with I ft. TURNER FORD Birmingham 1965 FORD FAtRLANE 500 Coups. Automatic and powar. As low at $995. No $ down. Call Mr. Frost cradit manager at 642-3289. AUDETTE SAVE MONCY AT MIKE SAVOIE START THE NEW YEAR RIGHT Before buying you owo If to 1 our flno selection. to yoursolf to look ovar BIRMINGHAM 860 S. WOODWARD MI-7-5111 MERRY 0LDSM0BILE at N. Main ROCHESTER. MICHIGAN 1968 Olds 98 Holiday Hardtop Full power* Factory elr* vinyl top. Only 5.600 mllot. $AVE Suburban Olds BIRMINGHAM 860 S. WOODWARD Ml 7-5111 1 »T5 PLYMOUTH, G OO D KESSLER'S PONTIAC REMEMBER- The heart ol our business Is Ihal satisfaction ol our customers HAHN CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH ---**— ‘““P MA 5-2635 T9|Tr¥nau 1+bA U PH IN E bdtk with rad Interior, ju miiev Pfr gal. Pull price $379.12* weakly pi^mann *3il can King, m m2. V964 Vw7~iEA BLUE. Radio, gat heater. $500 or bo»t offer. OR 3-6839. _ 1965 VW Bus 9 passenger, with radio, hooter, on. ownor, BILL FOX CHEVROLET 713 » hochosler 651 7000 Ms VW 2~DOOP. No I down, paymonti of M.M. Full prlco 19*5. Call Mr. Parks, cradit manapar at Ml 4.7999. HAROLD TURNER FORD 464 (. Woodward _B!rmlngham 1*46 VW 2 door. Radio and hoolor Forest groon. 22,990 miles. I •amor. $995 VILLAGE RAMBLER 966 (. woodward, 1967 VW SEDAN. $1,200. 651-9157.__________ Pontiac Press Want Ads For Action air conditioned. Exceptional condition. 1965 Calais Sedan DaVIII* equipped. 6 wov seel, power window*, climate control. Extra nlca. 1964 Fleetwood Brougham •lock. tqui| MAh FRO Wilson Crissman ! CADILLAC I of Birmingham 1 Phone Ml 4-1930 , 1350 North Woodward IcHIV’Y; WHiN' YOU OUY It l*t , MARKET TIRB give It 0 tree solely Chock. 2635 Orchard lake Sd^koqgo. 1*95 CHIVY AS II. |_____Coll after 6:30. 336 *645 I960' CORVAIR $195 Call FE 8-9661 Sttr Auto_ 1*61 CHIVY. Ixc. condition. 9300. and 1*59 Chovy. host ottor. FE I-Jtm. ______ _ ______ 1*42 CHIVY BEL-AIR 4 door, 1409. dealer. 339 *237 Al HAN0UTE Chovrolot Quick On M24 in Lake Orion MY 2-2411 1*64 CHEVY BEL AIR 4-door «673 DEALER 339*231 1*64 CHEVY IS. 327, 4-tpood, gooi “00. 3&79~~ V'ijoor good condition. 99 I Soles end lorvlca MILOSCH Birmingham • frou. _____ 642-9609 1965 FORD 4-Door irougnouti $995 1965 CHEVY Impolo Convertible with V0, stick ■ Solid rod finish. Only $995 MILOSCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH I TAYT OR 1966 Chrytler 2 door hardtop, light) l gratn* groan Interior. VI* outo. CHEVY-OLD5 doubio powar. radio, whitewall* Walled Lake $1695. 677 M-24* Lake Orion, MY 2-2041. ___ _ ___ MILOSCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUIH ; 1967 CHRYSLER 4 door hardtop* •liver with a black vinyl top* auto.* power vant window* and windows, steering and brakas* radio* whitewalls* $2,195. 677 M-24* Lake HILLSIDE Lincoln-Mercury >™"...»*y«11250 Oakland^ 333-7863 1*44'mercury MARAUDER Pork Lone. 2 door hardtop. Mack with white vinyl top. Block loothor Interior. Bucket soots, console, V9 automatic, power steering, power brakas, radio, heator, whitewall liras. Full price 9491.32, poyms weekly »3.7f Coll Klng. 491-0902. 1*64 MERCURY COLONY Wagon. Power ond 1 down, poymonts of CLARKSTON 11*66 PLYMOUTHS 1 door ond | doors. Birmingham municipal cai n. Priced os low at 971 Porks credit manager HAROLD TURNER FORD 464 S. Woodward______Birmingham 1*65 PLYMOUTH 2-door ha 393 cu. Inch, lots ol oxtros, condition, 634-4309 ottor 5 1965 Pontiac Catalina 4 door. V-l automatic $895 Call FE 8-9661 _______Star Auto___ RUSS JOHNSON PONTIAC-TEMPEST On M-24 In Lake Orion MY 3-6266 Tom Rademacher CHEVY-OLDS On US 10 at M15 CLARKSTON Over 75 Other Cars to Select From) 1966 PONTIAC Tempatt 4-door hardtop* VI* automatic* powar steering* radio* heater whitewalls, only ... ** 1956 JEEP station '69 AMERICAN SURE-SAFE-SOLID 2-door sedan, 128 h.p. 6 cylinder. Radio, heater, factory rust profing. All safety equipment. Delivered on the road. All Taxes (Excise and Sales) DELIVERED $1999.80 Village Rambler 666 S. Woodward Birmingham Ml 6-3900 rev. 1*67 OLDS 443, 2-door herdt 1*66 TEMPEST LeMons with V-9. automatic* douMt powar —.. $1595 1967 PONTIAC Bonnavllla Brougham, Elect ra 225 2-door doubio powor* -....$2995 1966 TEMPEST Coup*, with V-l. 1967 FIREBIRD 2-door hardtop $1195 I, stick. Radio, hoatar 196$ OLDS 91 2-door hanftop* powor, comfortron air dltlonlng ...... ............ $3495] 1967 CHEVY Impala 2-door hardtop FINE TRADE-INS ON NEW 1969s whitowalls. Real savings on this 1967 FORD Galoxie "500" Two door hardtop. V-9, automatic, power (tearing, vinyl top. alt vinyl trim, radio, hooter, whitewolts. 1965 CHEVELLE SS Super Sport V-8* automatic* powar jteering and brakas* radio* heater* twotor. J1195 $1895 1966 PONTIAC Bonneville Two door hardtop. V-9, automatic, factory olr, power (tearing, broket and windows, vinyl top, AM-FM radio. 1965 MERCURY Montclair Marauder Two door hardtop. V-9, automatic, power (tearing and broket, vlnyf topsoil vinyl trim, AM-FM radio, hooter, brakot, radio, heater. whlfowellt. A tummer- 1966 BUICK LeSabre Custom convertible. V-8, automatic* powar ataaring and brakaa* radio* hoator* premium whitewalls. A lima car at a wintertime price. 1966 MERCURY Porklone Marauder Hardtop. Fawn baiga In color with matching velvet Interior. V-8* automatic, powor stoorl AM-FM radio, hootor, H $1195 $1895 $1795 $1695 $1495 HILLSIDE LINCOLN-MERCURY 1250 Oakland 333-7863 $695. Call manaoar at Ml Parks cradit anagar at Ml 4-7980. HAROLD TURNER FORD Me 4-4501 1965 FALCON STATION wagon, automatic* transmission, in really “• * T> “irlct $695. fine condition* full ill prici ROSE RAMBLER-JEEP. Union Lake* EM 3-4155. ___ _______ 1966 T-BlftD LANOEAU. Air condition, power ond automatic. 429 down* poymonts of $14.91 Full price $1895. Call Mr. Parks cradit mHarold Burner ford Birmingham 6NYER hardtop. Powar and automatic, down, payments ol 914.92. Full price 119*5. Colt Mr. Porks, cradit manager, at Ml 4-7599. HAROLD TURNER FORD 44 S. Woodwird Blrmlnghi 1*44 Olds' molIBay Uda Power and automatic... No S doe paymonts ot 95.99. Pull prlct 171 Coll Mr. Parks cradit managar mhar*old turner ford /CHEVROLET /j "SERVING THE N.W. OAKLAND COUNTY AREA SINCE 1938" VAN CAMP CHEVROLET, Inc. • New Sales Room & Service Facilities • Bumping & Painting "30 mins, from pontiac" • Auto Leasing M-59 (highland rd.) Large Selection - Just Drlvo Out West OK Used Cars on M-59 to N. Milford Rd., Turn Lift —Across From Milford High— or Drlvo Out West on I-94—00 North of City of Milford—On# Mila on N. Milford Rd. 2675 N. MILFORD RD. MILFORD | NOW AT THE i at 1 imm it ■ MM MAPLE ROAD (15 MILE) BETWEEN C00LIDGE AND CROOKS 2Va MILES EAST OF WOODWARD ACROSS FROM BERZ AIRPORT ONE STOPIM NEW-USED CAR SHOPPING 18 | f Audette Pontiqc 0 Birmingham Chrysler-Plymouth wm Bob Borst Lincoln-Mercury j MW1MM3 ® Bill Golling Volkswagen Mike Savoie Chevrolet All Brand New Facilities on 60 Acresl THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1968 C—ll -Television Programs- Programs furnished by stations listed in this column are subject to change without notice! Channels: 2-WJBK-TV. 4-WWJ-TV. 7-WXYZ-TV. 9-CKLW-TV. SO-WKBO-TV. 56-WTVS-TV, 62-WXON-Tv’ MONDAY NIGHT 8:99(6) «) (7) C — News, Weather, Sports (9) C —- What’s My Line? (SO) R C—Fhntstones (SO) What’s New — “The Staunch Tb Soldier,” a dramatization' of Hans Christian Andersen tale, filmed fit Scandinavia. (02) R- Sea Hunt 0:30(0 C - News -* Cronkite (4) C — News — Huntley, (t)RC-I Spy (80) R — McHale’s Navy • (50) Negro People — Dramatic readings from the works of Frederick Douglass, Booker T. Washington, W.E.B. DuBois and Marcus Garvey trace Negro history in U.S. f r o m Reconstruction to the end of World War II. Ossie Davis narrates. (02) RC- My Friend Flicka 7:00(2) C - Truth or Consequences (4) C — News, Weather, Sports (7), C — News — Reynolds (50) R — I Love Lucy (50) Voice of the New . Breed (02) R — Movie: "The Dalton Girls” (1057) After Dalton brothers are killed, female relatives continue outlaws’ reign of terror. Merry Andqri Lisa Davis, Penny Edwards 7:30 (2) C — Gunsmoke — Two small children turn bank robbers to help their poverty-stricken father. (4) C — I Dream of JeanMe — Tony’s put hi bind by truant daughter of general. Girl and pals take over Tony’s pad under threat of blabbing about Jeannie. (7) C — Avengers — Steed and Tara are after Remak, a mysterious murderer who not only kills but washes, sterilizes, dry-cleans and packages his victims. (0) R - Movie: “I’ve Always Loved You” (1946) Female protege of famed pianist-conductor studies tirelessly under master’s direction, concealing her love for him. (50) C — Password — Anne Jeffreys and Darrin McGavin guest. (56) Chicago Roundtable 0:60 (4) C — Rowan and Martin — Kate Smith and Vincent Price help “Laugh-In” ring out the old year. Skits include satirical look at the major events of 1968. (50) C — Pay Cards (56) Standpoint: Cavanagh 8:25 (62) Greatest Headlines 8:30 (2) C — Here’s Lucy — Carters launch gold rush when Kim and Craig bring home a valuable rock. (7) C — Peyton Place — Betty bids for the Pevton mansion; eccentric Maggie Riggs enters the scene; Rodney takes his first steps — against orders. (50) R C — Hazel (56) French Chef (62) R C - Movie: “The Black Tent” (British. 1956) British Armv officer in Libyan desert finds ' shelter with Bedouin tribe and falls in love with ~ chieftain’s daughter. Anthony Steel, Donald Sinden. 0:00 (2) C - Mayberry R.P.D. - High school coed has crush on Sam, so Howard gets bis psychology books out to find painless way ta curtail her interest. (4) C — (Special) Urban Crisis — NBC’s second “white paper” on ordeal TV Features WHAT’S NEW, 6 p.m. (56) NEGRO PEOPLE, 6:30 p.m. (56) ROWAN AND MARTIN, 8 p.m. (4) URBAN CRISIS, 9 p.m. (4) . BLACK JOURNAL, 9 p.m. (56) CAROL BURNETT, 10 p.m. (2) of the American city — filmed in Detroit, Boston and Rochester N.Y. — probes problems and progress important to ail cities. (7) RC - Outcasts -Bitterness of Reconstruction era catches up with bounty hunters during tragic incident at a remote way station. (50) R — Perry Mason * (56) C - (Special) Black Journal — Report of major news events of 1968 as they have affected black America. Guests include poet-playwright L e R o i lanes, Andrew Young of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference and Mrs. Kathleen Cleaver, wife of fugitive Black Panther leader Eldridge Cleaver. 9:39(2) Family Affair -Broken leg sends Bill to bed 'where he is victim of well - lntentioned, but hopelessly inept, attentions of family and girl friend. (9) C — Tommy Hunter 19:99 (2) C — Carol Burnett - — Nancy Wilson and Mickey Rooney join in the music and comedy. Cast spoofs Mickey’s vintage movie hit, “Boys Town”; Carol as outgoing first lady, gives her successor a tour of the White House. (7) C — Big Valley — Nick and two strangers are imprisoned by a fanatically jealous rancher who believes one of the men to be his wife’s lover. (9) C — Front Page Challenge (50) C — News, Weather, Sports (56) Joyce Chen Cooks 16:15 (62) C — Sports 16:30 (9) R - Danger Man — Capt. Ted Baker is on honeymoon in Far East when he is accused of . murdering a Chinese businessman. (56) C — Les Crane (56) Folk Gut|pr Plus (62) R-Star Performance 11:66(2) (4) (?) (9) News, Weather, Sports, (62) RC —.Moyle: “Running' Target” (1956) In Colorado m o u n t a 1 n territory, sheriff searches for four convicts. Doris Dowling, ArthurFram 11:19(1) RC to? Movie: “Black Gold” f 1947) Uneducated Oklahoma fr peaceful Hie is • n oil is i his land. Anthony Quinn, Katherine Do Mllll (4) C—Johnny Carson (7) C—Joey Bishop (9) R - Movie: “Frankenstein — 1970” (1918) Raron von Frankenstein is beginning to regret Ms decision to allow a television troupe to film a show at Ms castle. Boris Karloff, Tom Duggan...-t—■■ (50) R - Movie: “One of Our Aircraft Is Missing” (English, 1942) During World War H, group of planes leaves England on bombing mission over Stuttgart. Godfrey Tearle, Eric Portman 1:96 (4) Beat the Champ (7) Texan (9) C —Perry’s Probe 1:36 (2) C - Capture 2:00(2) RC - Highway Patrol (7) News 2:36(2) C - News, Weather TUESDAY MORNING 5:26 (2) TV Chapel 5:25 (2) (hi the Farm Scene 5:36 (2) C — Sunrise Semester 6:06 (2) C— Gospel-Singing Jubilee 6:36 (2) C - Woodrow the Woodsman (4) C — Classroom >.45 (7) C-Bat Fink 7:66 (4) C - Today -Features include review of 1968 by NBC cor-, respondent Ray Shearer, a nostalgic look at the Rose Bowl and a discussion of Montessori teaching. (7) C — Morning Show 7:16 (9) Warm-Up 7:16 (9) - News, Weather, Sports . (9) C — Bonnie Prudden 8:66 (2) C - Captain Kangaroo < (9) C — Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round 8:66 (9) Mr. Dressup 8:36 (7) RC - Movie: “The Mating Game’.’ (1968) Investigator gets more than he bargained for when he looks into rural family’s tax case. Debbie Reynolds, Tony Randall, Paul Douglas, Fred Clark, Una Merkel (9) RC-Friendly Giant 8:45 (9) Chez Helene 9:66 (2) C-Merv Griffin -Former Illinois Sen. Paul Douglas discusses his new book; talks about poverty and welfare in U.S. (4) C - Steve Allen (9) C-Bozo 16:66 (4) C—Snap Judgment (9) Film Real Estate Man Has Eye on Moon MANCHESTER, Englan (AP) — John Harrison, wealthy Manchester real estate man, has Instructed Ms lawyers to find out who will own the moon after a landing is made on it.. “This is not a frivolous inquiry,” he said. “People in the Bahamas are now multimillionaires because they bought what looked like tracts of Harrison said he thinks piece of the moon would make prod Investment for Ms grandchildren. His lawyers said they have written to the U.S. National Aeronautics and Space Administration for suggestions. N.Y. Sidewalk Cleaner Eyed NEW YORK (AP) - Special vacuum clearners may soon be cleaning the city’s sidewalks. Merrill Efsenbud file city’i environmental protection administrator, said Sunday he was looking for “some sort of • vacuum sweeper that we can take right on to a sidewalk and that isn’t going to make too much noise.” Landlords don’t do enough to keep the sidewalks dean, Elsen-bud said, and the city may do the Job for them and send them abffi.--- — Radio Programs— VJM760) WXYZQ 270) CKIW(«00) WWX950) WCAR(1130) WRQN(1 460) WJSKQ 900) WHri-fM(V4.7) 4tRA-WJR, Ntws wwj, Nm# iMrtB WXYL Newieope Claw# Ttrn Shannon______ WJBK, Nun Hank (yNtll M: <®"l#n rj. Today In Sevjtw 0:00—WXYZ, Dovo Dlltf Review, tmphe- WJH, Lowoll Thome,, Alrto-World foment WJBK, Mows. Tom Doan WCX# ” WJ«, WWJ, llltM WWJ. feomUne IR. Panorama, Minor- AS-Ttme MttoweeWit asA Saraa Bn- llielftj. NOW, BUR, New, II til—WWJ. Snort,Una WJR, Snorts tills WWJ. Ovarnioht WJR, mm Tin Dawn Hits — CKLW, CAartay van W&K Wayna Wilmpt WJBK, Nighttime wxvz. Nawo. JWI Davla wwj, Nawo CKLW. JMn Edwerd, WPOlLNaw,, KrJtoni WCAR, Nawo. Bill Ddtaetl ntw&r WPOM-Ciwdt warrwi •tfR—WJPt, Now* •ilf-WJft# •ift-WJlt, ffmk Hall S'SKflUe. Sill—WJR. Onon Hi 10 MOW. Oaod _ WCAR. Nawo, Rad MS WXVZ, Now, Johnny sS1 HiOS-wjr, Nawo, rorm mrsg'jssz 10:25 (4) C — News 10:81(1) R — Beverly Hillbillies (4) C — Concentration (7) C — Dick Cavett (8) C — Pinocchio 11:86 (2) R — Andy Griffith (4) C—Personality— (8) C - Wizard of Oz (50) C — Jack LaLanne 11:16 (2) R — Dick Van Dyke (4) C — Hollywood Squares (0) Trim Thirty (50) RC — Kimba TUESDAY AFTERNOON 12:66 (2) C — News, Weather, Sports (4) C — Jeopardy (7) R —Bewitched (9) Lunch with Bozo (SO) C-Alvin 12:36 (2) C - Search for Tomorrow (4) C — News, Weather, Sports (7) C — Funny You Should Ask (9) Bill Kennedy’s Hollywood (56) R — Movie: “Janie” (1944) Small-town editor and daughter disagree on whether or not Army should hold maneuvers in town. Joyce Reynolds, Robert Hutton, Ann, Harding, Edward Arnold, Rdbert Benchley, Alan Hale 12:51 (4) C-News (7) C — Children's Doctor 1:66 (2) C —Love of Life (4) C — Match Game (?) C — Dream House (9) R — Movie: “Toan-Age Millionaire” (1961) Young man Inherits a radio station. Jimmy Clanton, Rocky Graziano, ZaSu Pitts, Chubby Checker, Dion 1:95 (9) C-Fashions (4) C —Carol Duvall 1:99 (I) C - As the World Tunis (4) C — Hidden Faces (7) C — Let’s Make- a Deal 2:19 (2) C — Divorce Court (4) C — Days of Our Lives (7) c — Newlywed Game 2:99 (9) C - Guiding Light i (4) C —Doctors * (7) C —Dating Game (56) R — Make Room for Daddy 9:66 (9) C-Secret Storm (4) C — Another World (7) C — General Hospital (9) R — Real McCoys (50) R- Topper (56) Joyce Chen Cooks 9:96 (9) C - Edge of Night (4) c — You Don’t Say (7) C — One LU6 to Live (9) Lively Spot (SO) C —Captain Detroit (56) Mediation 4:06 (9) C—Lin Wetter Show (4) C — Donald O'Connor (7) C—Dark Shadows (56) German Lesson 4:11 (56) C —Social Security 4:91(9) C-News 4:99 (9) C-Mike Douglas (7) R C - Movie: “Rails into Laramie” (19B4) Army sergeant Is sent in-. to Laramie to Inveetlgate slaw-up of railway construction. John Payne, Mari Blanchard, Dan Duryea, Barton MacLana (9) C —Magic Shoppe (56) R — Little Rascals (56) TV Kindergarten (69) C—Bugs Bunny and Friends 1:19 (9) R C — Batman (56) R — Munsters (56) Misterogers (62) R — Robin Hood 1:96 (4) C-George Pierrot — “Leningrad, Moacow and Bukhara’’ (9) R — Gilllgan’s Island (SO) R — Superman (65) Friendly Giant (69) R — Leave It to Beaver i:4l (56) Storybook Miss Teen-Age America Explains a TeSnager Gap NEW YORK — The new Miss Teen-Age America, Melissa Babish, 16, of Pittsburgh, toured New York City and had some engaging comments about our megatropolis. The skyscrapers — wow! We have some tall buildings at home, too, but we know the names of all of them.” Did anybody recognize you as the new queen?” “Nobody looks at anybody else in New York. -S They just go along with blank faces. Oh” — ™ she corrected herself — “I did see some girl Wonderland 35 Dry, ee wine Cheehir* 36 Crescent 4 Bird that 38 Compass raced with ^P°in‘ Alice ~ SSImtgBO 8 “The March 42 Anointed, as _____» the hair 12 Kimono sash 6* Turkish inn 13 Son of «WtM Aphrodite convulsively ..ST writer 16 Paper tube of tobacco 16“Th.Mock g 20 Disencumber 58 Scottish “toejSSpie •****»■ 2 Leigh Runt «H Succession of choree' popes 3 Layer 52 "The Walrus 4 Reject and the ——r 56 New G tinea 5 Asiatic 6 Canine (Fr.) 7 Xhkers (geol) 33 Spies 37 Goes o 8 Noticed 9 Fit 10 Decoy 11 Mariner’s 40 Dozed 41 Cast of six in dicing 62 Through 31 Dessert DOWN 32 Devours 1 Early 84 Bend the head Egyptian the road to success. It’s upMU all the way.” — Today’s Homes. EARL’S PEARLS: No man is really successful until his mother-in-law admits it. Comic Rodney 'Dangerfiekl reports that for Christmas he gave Ms wife something imported: “The Hong Kong flu.” . . . That’s earl, brother. Debt Consultants of Pontiac, Inc. 974 NaNas Male Bate BMg. Ones PeSy U 6 M. to*, dosed Sal. ‘What did people ask you?” ‘About pot, I haven’t even been exposed to pot in Pittsburgh. It’s not typical of teenagers. Am I a rebel? I can’t tMnk of anything WILSON I’m against except the teenagers who cause violence on the street. There’s a gap between some teenagers and other teenagers. They can’t communicate. It’s not a genera tion gap, it’s a teen-age gap.” ★ ★ ★ “What way are you different from other teenagers?” “I don’t believe in going steady. At least at my age. It’s nice to have that sure date in advance when you go steady but you’re always stuck with the same guy. It’s a shame to waste your high school days when you want to meet a lot of new people, guys especially.” “Missy,” as they call her, laughed. “I guess a lot of teen-ri think I’m a square, A swinger I’m not.” THE MIDNIGHT EARL ... Well, I finally got my name on Ed Sullivan’s marquee — but it has “Jr.” after it . . . Labile Kazan held up the taping of Ed’s Sunday show for 20 minutes due to false eyelashes. She also had a special new bra air-expressed from LA ... Joe Kipneas, healthy again, is back hosting at his Kippy’s and ‘ 51. , Hollywood figures Jack Valent must have a bigger job waiting (since telling the film industry he’ll quit If he doesn’t make file new code work) — and wonders if this doesn’t mean Ntxoa’ll be sure that a Republican gets Ms job . . . Mr*. Otto Gnm, wife of the prize-winning jewelry designer, died of a heart attack. TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: Vic Perry, pickpocket-comic now at the Playboy Club, says there are thousands of other pickpockets working: ‘*Biit most call themselves politicians.” WISH IT) RAID THAT: Pricing some of the sturdy, expensive new gifts for tots, a parent said, “Nowadays people can’t break toys - but toys can break people.” . . . . .. REMEMBERED QUOTE: “You can tell when you’re on 2™!?? I-1TC road to success. It’s uphill aU the way.” - Today’s Homes. J*““Jh* 17 Be borne 19 Musical syllable 33 Make-ups (ooll.) 47 Writing fluids 49 Askew 50 Concent 5112 months 52 Crow’s croak 53 Malt drink 54 Operated r” r 4 5 7 T“ lo 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 r 20 21 24 26 27 2ft 29 r 31 35 ftft ! 1 3ft 39 40 r 44 45 46 4^ 48 48 60 51 52 53 s4' 66 58 ST 68 59 60 61 62 to Pin on Glamor There’s nothing as eyecatching as an Attractive pin to big, ornate or simply elegant— so long as It adds that extra something to your outfit. More than 1,702,000 Americans have glaucoma and half of them do not know It RCA-ZENITH Color TV LOWEST PRICES BEST SERVICES CONDON'S TV Salas and Service 730 W. Huron PI 4-9716 1968 REVIEW QUIZ PART I - NATIONAL AND INTERNATIONAL Give yourself 10 points; for each correct 1 President Johnson made an announcement on October Slat about a military move that he hoped would lead to expanded peace talks In Paris. What did he announce? 2 Widespread student and labor disturbances last summer In.....helped trigger a currency crisis there later. s-France b-Canada c-West Germany 3 Riohard Nixon beat Hubert Humphrey by a narrow margin of the popular vote In the presidential election. One factor In the oloae race was third-party candidate .... who won In five states. 4 Congress passed a law to forbid discrimination against Negroes in most sale#r rental of housing. True or False7 8 One big labor, newa story ooourred when the AFL-CIO suspended the.......Union in an organl- The Pontiac Press Monday, December SO, 1968 Match word clues with their corresponding picture* or aymbolfl. 10 point* for •ach correct Answer. ' I F tSiilKto*- HiL North Koreans seised ' ■* U. & Intelligence ship symbol of “Poor People’s March” b-United Steel Workers c-United Auto Workers PART II - WORM IN THE NEW! Take 4 point* for *«ch word that you c*n match with It* comet meaning. 1... ..gold a-many tried this tsotlo b-outflows bothered 9... ..pulsar U.A, Britain, FnteM 3... ..magnate o-prtoeereee d-thls word often used 4... .. confrontation la headlines about Mr. 6.. e-astronomloal find PART fll - NAMES IN THE NEWS Taka 0 points for names that you can coriica? match With the clue*.----- g...Bari Warren a-slain civil rights lead- er 2.....Martin Luther King, b-ohosen Prime Mlnls-Jr. ter of Canada 3...Abba Eben c-Chief Justloe put off retirement 4....Plsrre Elliott Tru- For1 IMVd C—12 ONE COLOR THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1968 Will ©,$. Be Buried in Discarded Christmas Trees? By Dick West WASHINGTON (UPI) - One of the saddest sights in all the world is a discarded Christmas tree lying at curbside awaiting the next trash pickup. Th sight is sad because it represents a major setback for “disposalism,” the economic theory of which I am an apostle. We disposaiists believe that future economic progress depends not upon man’s ability to produce the things he needs but upon his ability to get rid of the things he doesn’t need. Buying gifts, tor example, is no longer the main yuletide problem. Hie big challenge is getting rid of the wrapping paper, boxes and ribbons after the gifts have been opened. QUITE A PILE At high tide, wrapping paper, boxes and ribbons may become several feet deep on the living room floor. On Christmas morning in 1965, my three-year-old son dis- appeared in the pile and it took almost two days to find him. The disposalist movemept is dedicated to preventing something of that sort from happening to the entire human race. It is our theory that unless better means of coping with unwanted material are developed, whole continents may be engulfed by trash and debris. The approach We favor is creating new uses for rubbish. Some notable successes havei been scored, such as the use of refuse to build new ski slopes. TREE A STUMPER But Christmas trees have us stumped. The founders and leading theoreticians of the movement have never hit upon a practical use for second-hand Christmas trees. And time is growing short. It is estimated that by the year 2000, one-third of the eastern seaboard will be covered with) The same is true of chinning discarded Christmas trees Last year a plan was developed forshorteningthe branches and using the trees for hat racks. That works pretty well, but it cannot be called a long-range solution. Christmas, unfortunately, is) I hope this problem will.re-an annual ewent, and after a ceive urgent consideration by few years thefhat rack quote of the Nixon administration. Per-any given household nears ful- haps Spiro T. Agnew can save fillment. / lus. bars. When nailed to an attic rafter, the trunk of a Christmas tree makes an ideal. chinning bar. But once each member of the family has his own chinning bar, satiety sets in. Elderly Reminded of Tax-Relief Affidavits LANSING (AP) - The Michi-] gan Commission on Aging re-' minds eligible senior citizens' it's nearly time for them to' apply for their property tax reductions under the state homestead tax exemption law. Michigan residents of more than five years, age 65 or over,' are eligible for the exemption if. their homestead and real prop-. erty tax value does not exceed $20,000 and their gross income does not top $5,000. * * * Eligible Michigan homeowners must file an affidavit at their local assessor’s office for the reduction in their 1969 taxes.1 Those who applied last year must file again, the commission said. Applicants may file between Jan. 2 and sometime in March, set by each local office. When filing the affidavit, homeowners must supply a deed, land contract or mortgage, a birth certificate or other legal proof of age, a recent tax bill or bills for all real property owned and Social Security numbers. Hie commission said home-owners also should be prepared to give the true cash value pf property owned out of the state and a statement of income. WWW The homestead act last year meant an average saving of $104 each to 184,000 senior citizens the commission added. NOTICE! CREDIT UNION holiday hours ', OPEN ’TIL 12 NOON TUESDAY DECEMBER 31ST CLOSED WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY JANUARY 1ST AND 2ND Seasons Greetings GMTC FEDERAL CREDIT UNION 939 Woodward Ave. And PONTIAC CO-OP FEDERAL CREDIT UNION 156 West Huron St. Pueblo Crew Prefers Duty i on Land Now SAN DIEGO, Calif, fAP> None of the enlisted men of the' USS Pueblo, back from 11) months captivity after their ship! was seized by North Korea,! wants his next assignment to be1 at sea. A survey by the Navy showed that all of them requested land-1 based assignments, except one) man who said duty aboard ship! was his third choice. Enlisted men in the Navy rou-, m finely list three choices for their i $ next assignment. The Navy said) it would make every effort to! give the ship’s crewmen their |! Jp first choice, if such an assign-' ,\ ment is open. One In every four of the Pueb- ^ lo’s enlisted men asked for assignment outside the United States, mostly In Europe. The rest were scattered around the v; United States, predominantly ln{ mm. the West. $ ENLISTMENTS EXPIRED The Navy said the active duty ^ enlistments of several Pueblo &|| crewmen expired while they fgp were In North Korea. The Navy ||f said it extended the men’s en- bSII llstments so they could undergo p*4 medical testing and debriefing. tt; During the extension these men |p| are*being paid a 25 per cent bas- pi* lc pay bonus. The Navy said Friday back pay of more than $250,000 has M been made available to the L V; Pueblo crew members. This In-1 L : eludes about $208,000 held by the! j government for the captured iS5 a crew, plus Interest of about! $3,500. The men were paid about $4,000 In cash after their arrival In San Diego Christmas Eve. I the Navy said this was part of the pay and allowance due fori December. The Navy also has honored) $21,647 in claims for loss of per-1 sonal property. 49 WERE PROMOTED The Navy said 49 of the 74 enlisted men of the Pueblo were! promoted while in captivity. 'Buffalo Soldiers‘ Will Ride Again in Rose Parade PASADENA, Calif. m - The all-Negro "Buffalo Soldiers," famed Indian fighters of the 1860s, will ride again New Year's Day in the Rose Parade. Fourteen Negroes Interested In black military history will ride in the parade dressed in the uniforms of the 10th Cavalry. The all-black regiment served | In the West from 1866 until World War II, when It was renamed and reequipped as a tank and mechanized Infantry outfit. The present members of the historical-equestrian group are! veterans of the Army, Navy and j Marine Corps and many fought In World War II and Korea. HERTFORD, N.C. (AP) -Al- W tart R. Benson, 37, of Houghton' M Lake, Mich., was killed Sunday, when his car ran off a curve ji while traveling at high speed! I four miles south of Hertford in I northeastern North Carolina, po- m lice said. I aVfelOQMmiii