PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, i %■ Is Called For Ve^y Hard' , N.Y. Loader Formally Takes Reins of Office -for the Third Time ALBANY, N.Y. OB — Republican Kelson A. Rockefeller formally began his third term as governor of New York today by declaring his devotion to building what he called “a just society.” Today’s inaugural ceremony was staged in the Assembly chamber at (he state capitol to fulfill tradition. Actually, Rockefeller had taken his third-term oath at a private ceremony three days earlier in New York (Sty. At that time, he repeated the . declaration he had made repeatedly dining his uphill fight for reelection 7- that he never again would seek his party’s presidential nomination. ★ ★ ★ • In offering the “just society,” concept, he said: DREAM OF FREE MEN “And I sense the purpose — high purpose — because I have full faith in pur capacity for creativity ~r our common ■resolve with God’s help to build together the dream of free men of all ages: a just society.” * “This,” he continued,, ‘is the dream of a society where: “Government is courteous, power is benign, learning is abundant, prosperity is general, order is serene, law is honored, compassion is practiced and brotherhood is lived." He concluded: “It is our splendid task -to make this society no dream at all — but the world for our children to live in." SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — Ronald Reagan, one of America’s new political stars, became toe 33rd governor of California in a colorful ^post-midnight ceremony today and solemnly vowed, “I’ll try very hard;” Standing under the Capitol dome, the 55-year-old Republican placed a hand on a 400-year-old Bible-and took the oath that gave him the job of solving mounting fiscal and social problems of the nation’s most populous state, If he is successful it could assure a place to toe national political picture for Reagan, toe former actor who to his first try for public office defeated Democratic Gov. Edmund G. Brown. His expression serious, his voice quiet, Reagan recalled Benjamin Franklin once said, “If someone could take public office and bring to the public office the teachings and precepts of the Prince of Peace, he would revolutionize the world and men would be remembering him for 1,000 years.” “I don’t think anyone could ever take office and be so presumptuous to think he could ever do that or that he could follow those precepts completely,” Reagan said. “I am tell you this: I’ll try very hard. I think it is needed to today’s world.” A BIT OF HUMOR there was a bit of humor amid the inauguration solemnity, * - ★ ★ ★ As he stepped forward to .speak after taking the oath, Reagan turned to Sen. George Murphy, R-Calif., and remarked, “George, here we are on the late show again.” Murphy is also a former film star and toe tote evening movies often play films to which he or Reagan starred. TAKES OATH - Republican Ronald Reagan *r today became governor of California as he took Court Justice Marshall F. McComb in Sacramento, the oath of officefrom California State Supreme Calif. Jets Hit N. Viet;DMZ Soon After Truce Ends SAIGON, South Vietnam UP)—American jet bombers renewed their attacks on North Vietnam and the demilitarized zone (DMZ) today soon after the end of a blood-spattered, two-day New Year’s truce. A U.S. spokesman said American fliers encountered Communist MIGs during forays over the Red River Delta, but there were no in No Multiple Deaths , || .nigh County's Road Toll Cut Avoidance of multiple-death accidents which marked previous years is cited by Oakland County Sheriff Frank W. Irons as a key factor in reducing toe county’s traffic tpil for toe second straight year. Unofficial figures drawn from the sheriff’s department, local authorities and State Police place the death count for 196§ 151 In Today's Press *67 Predictions Famed seeress Jeane Dixon looks into future. — PAGE A-4. Top Newsmakers Honors go to President Johnson, Gov. Romney. — PAGE A-10. Vietnam Prospects tor 1967 point to still further escalation. -PAGE B-5. Astrology ............ D-4 Bridge ............D-4 Crossword Puzzle ... D-U Conies V......... D-4 Editorials $4 ttoriwto D-l-D‘3 Obituaries ........ 04 Sparta .......C-i-^C-l Theaters ....D-5 TV-Radio Programs D-U Wiboa, Eari . .. D-U WMflTi Turn fcfcftli the final figure fa 1965 was 161, a reduction of 41 over the previous year, when toe county toll set an all-time high. In contrast to previous years, no single accident to 1966 in Oakland Comity claimed more than two lives: Eight two-death Occidents are included in the final count. The reduction also came in toe (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) DeGaulle Hits U.S. for Viet Intrusion PARIS (AP) President Charles de Gaulle began toe new year this weekend with two stinging attacks on American intervention in Vietnam, which he says has brought on an unjust and detestable war that is spoiling the world’s chances for peace. '#> ★ ★ De Gaulle told diplomats at a New Year’s reception last night there were sighs after the world wars of a period 0^ peace and international cooperation “if this victory of wisdom ^had not been, alas, prevented by the conflict that one (nation) has unleashed and that one is cruelly prolonging, on Vietnamese territory.1” ★ ★ it Die Gaulle did not mention the United States by name. But in his annual New Year’s Eve television .address he pit all the blame for toe war on the United States. reports of planes shot down on either side. U.S. B52 heavy bombers unloaded high explosives in tWo raids during the day on North Vietnamese positions in the DMZ. The ground war to South Vietnam also resumed officially when the much-broken truce ended at 7 a.m., and U.S. forces reported light contact with toe enemy. * Off toe North Vietnamese coast, the U.S. destroyers Inger-soll and Manley dueled for two hours with a shore battery which fired on the Ingfirsoll from an offshore island near Vinh. ★ ★ * - Navy F4 Phantom jet bombers also pounded the Communist battery, but the results were not known. A U.S. spokesman said neither destroyer was damaged. 176 INCIDENTS The U.S., and South Vietnamese military commands reported a final total of 178 Communist assaults, harassing fire, ambushes and other violent incidents during the 48-hour ^New Year truce* The total far exceeded the 122 incidents reported during the similar truce over Christmas.. Woman Seen With Bar Owner-Vicfim A Detroit woman was being sought by Pontiac police today fpr questioning in the fatal shooting of a Pontiac bar owner. The victim, David B. Foster, 38, was found dead yesterday , at the bottom of the basement stairs in toe apartment building, where he lived at 473 S. Pad-dock. Witnesses told police that they saw Foster and toe suspect, Margaret Overton, 39, arguing outside toe building shortly before his body was discovered by another tenant. According to police Miss Over-ton is a former Pontiac resident, but her address in Detroit is unknown. ★ ** ★ Foster, the owner of Foster’s Bar at 335 Wessen, was shot once in the chest with a small-cajiber gun, police said. Police were called to the scene about 3:15 a.m. after receiving a report that someone had fallen down toe stairs and was injured. Foster was dead when police arrived. Flash SAIGON, (ffl - VS. Air Force jets shot down seven Communist MIGs over North Vietnam today in toe largest air battle of toe war, UJS. spokesmen reported. Muttac hw pw» W wi»W STABLE BLAZE — Some 60 bones were rescued from the Ktoptner Riding Academy barn at 6525 Willow, West Bloomfield Township, after it caught on fire Saturday afternoon. The West Bloomfield Township Fire Department wag aided by tankers from •it other nearby departments as they fought to control the blaze which wiped otit the main bum and one of its two wings. A valuation on thebaro^ formerly the old Livernois Stables, and its contents has not yet been made, firemen said. „ . / Auto Strike, War Seen as Only Clouds Urgtis Progress, Hits Overcentralization LANSING -UP) — Republican George Romney was inaugurated for a third term as governor of Michigan today and said “the time has come for the state to move ahead into a new generation of^progress.” Winner j)fa landslide reelection victory Nov. 8, Romney outlined goals for the next four years and told an inaugural audience that “Michigan’s ac-complishments of the past four years have laid a stronger foundation tor the achievement of these goals.” In his prepared inaugural address, toe S9-year-old Romney — considered by many as toe most likely candidate for Speech Text, Page D-H toe 1968 Republican'presidential nomination — blasted one 0 f his favorite subjects — oyereentralization of government. | “The people feel the stifling (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) “Continued growth” is fore- t cast for 1967 by Pontiac area business leaders. While 1966 was labeled a success, both toe merchant and hanker see the new year bringing more prosperity, viewing the local economy as healthy. —Generally, only two factors — are cited as possible clouds on the economic horizon. These are toe Vietnam war* and the possibility of an auto strike. Kenneth S. Miller, Pfcntiac Area Chamber of Commerce president, said he “is pleased with toe many accomplishments and uhequaled prosperity enjoyed by our area’s businesses and industries in 1966.” * ★ 4r Miller cited the expansion of Hudson’s Budget Store to a fullline Store, the addition to toe Montgomery Ward store, the expansion and relocation .of downtown merchants, the expansion , at Pontiac Motor Division, the ' ground breaking for the new courthouse addition, and completion of the administration building for the Michigan College of Osteopathic Medicine, as examples of advances made to the area. ‘FUTURE BRIGHT* He explained, “The Pontiac area has prospered along with the whole state In its growing economy. Unemployment was at a minimum and earnings at their highest in 1966.” Miller predicted that “even though things will probably level off to a more stabilized economy, the' future looks bright for asotiier good year for tots area’s businesses and industries.” 7 / . Wallace B. Schroth, assistant division manager of Consumers Power Co., said; “1966 has been (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) v . PontUe Pm» Photo Of Edwird R. MW* HOW DOES IT FEEL? — For many celebrants* the first New Year’s resolution is a tiny whisper inside that says, ‘Til never do it again.” Gently probing his still-pounding temples is this party-goer. His gay hat still dangles streamers, but his expression belies his apparel. With courage and a “pinch” of aspirin, he’ll be ready for work tomorrow . . , will you? Mild Weather May Unger Mild New Year’s weather, ac- of light snow or drizzle and companied by occasionaidrizzie muc^ dmage fa tonjpern- and fllirrtw, wfls expected 1 to £ *£££ *-* continue today. ‘ . .»»“'"*•* * s# warming temperatures plus pre- * ’* * cipitation, which when it froze A high of 32 to 37was fora- 4* about 19 P-m. last night made ^ te, ^ *ith a low* 27 driving hazardous in aopae ^ m tonight ■ ,reas- Winds are west southwest at • 7| Cloudy, occasional periods -• 6 to 16 miles. o . , •'** ' •'-y-’Mi If ;V THE PONTIAC PllESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 2, 1907 « slowly and ful the [ Jssacteted I Traffic deaths built u| this New Year’s weeks safety experts were ho; final toll would be/little more than that of a normal three-day nwkPTin / " The 1967 total stood at 346. ■ V* /jk 1 ★ - ) m Hie volume of deaths was running well behind last year’s record pace which resulted in i would not compare with other 564 traffic fatalities. . H holiday periods in which more On a normal three^ay week- lon* distance (Jiving is done. Dee. 9-12, the Associated Prtesp counted 391 deaths. EXPECT INCREASE A spokesman for the National Safety Council said the traffic, pace could be expected to quicken late today.. But he said it Teerf Is Held In 3 Deaths at Texas Home ORANGE, Tex. - Police lay Ronnie Lee Ozio, 14 stabbed his friend, shot and killed his father, his father’s fiancee and his grandmother early New Year’s Day. District Court Judge Eugene Hoyt said the -youth would be "charged today with murder with malice aforethought. ■ * * ★ * Police gave this account of the tragedy' at the Ozio home in an elegant apartment complex: The family and guests ushered in the new year with a game of checkers mid then retired. Ronnie got up eaHy. SOUGHT OTHERS He sought out the others and fired several pistol and 22-cal iber rifle shots at his grandmother, Victoria Qzio, 77, and at Bobby Mayberry, 35, of Foreman, Ark., a divorcee Who is engaged to Ms father. ♦ ★ ★ The father, John A. Ozio, 39, Sleeping on a pallet, was shot several times in toe head. A hunting arrow was plunged deep into his chest Craig Mayberry, 16, a friend of toe Ozio boy, sobbed: “I tried to stop him...I tried to stop him.” Mayberry was stabbed in toe back with a 10-inch butcher knife, and was hospitalized in critical condition. , UNHURT Debi Mayberry, Craig’s 14-year-old sister,, awoke to- her mother’s screams. She said she saw “Ronnie killing everyone. At first I thought it Was a joke hut then I knew they were real-ly dying.” Debi was not hurt. Ronnie, a 5-foot, 90-pound high school sophomore, then hid in a nearby lumber yard in early morning cold and mist. ★ it ★ , , - ' Presently be knocked on 'a neighbor’s door in the apartment complex and said, “Would you please help me? Pletuse call the police.” Police would not comment on a motive. ★ * ★ Ozio and Mrs. Mayberry had 'planned to be married before Christmas, but called off wedding plans for the time being. Ronnie was a guest of toe Mayberry family at their Foreman, Ark., home during toe Christmas holidays. NEW ROAD COMMISSIONER—Paul W. McGovern today begins a six-year-term as a member of toe Oakland Coyn-ty Road Commission. The 43-yCar-old mechanical engineer was appointed to the $11,000-a-year post by the board of supervisors in November. McGovern, 18630 Chelton, Beverly Hills, is a former member of toe board and the Oak Park City Council. In one of the worst -accidents of the weekend, five ]Boy Scouts were killed in a train-car crash just east of Kalamazoo, Mich. ★ it it in Illinois a young couple and a teen-aged boy were killed New Year’s Give when a car skidded on an icy highway and collided With another. The accident occurred just east of Harrisburg. Driving conditions were average for a winter weekend. Snow, mixed with rain, ice^ roads in Connecticut and Pennsylvania Snow fell over much of the Northeast and throughout the northern Rockies and toe Dakotas. Heavy fog hung over highways along the coast of central California and rain moved through the South. WEATHER CREDITED , Bad weather was given much of toe credit for holding down toe. death rate during the three-day Christmas weekend when 584 persons were killed. It was the first holiday in the last 10 in which a death record was not set. Hie ail-time record for a long holiday weekend . was set Thanksgiving when 748 persons were killed over the four-day observance., * it it it Last year 564 persons were killed during the three-day New Year’s weekend, the largest toll for any year-end holiday. The lowest New Year’s traffic toll since World War II was 269 in 1949. (Continued From Page One! face of an emerging new traffic hazard: motorcycles and scooters. Ten persons died on county highways in accidents involving cycles and scooters. At least seven times that many were seriously injured. The single largest combined death-injury accident accounted for the county’s first two fatalities of the year. ★ ★ it Sisters Lynette and Mary A. Wilson, 14 and 13 years old, died Jan. 3 when struck by ah automobile as they waited for a school bus near their home in Commerce Township. 8 OTHE RS HURT Eight others were injured in toe accident, including the driver of toe car, who ran a stop sign at Carroll Lake and Wise roads. The car struck a school bu\ broadside, careening into the Wilson girls -'and several of, their friends. The intersection itself became' toe focal point of considerable controversy over, traffic safety in the following months. At least six other persons suf- Average age of those killed was 31 years. Sixty of the victims were 21 or younger.' ★ * ★ Moist hazardous driving, based on Unofficial death statistics, was experienced in the county's southeastern ocrner, particularly in Bloomfield and Farming-ton townships and Troy. The three communities ac-j counted for year-end totals of! 16, 14, hntf ll deaths, respec-^ ,, , . .. D tively, than 25 per Sj™ ““2 >ZjZ IS of the countywide figure. Pontiac with 12 deaths, Com- The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Cloudy, occasional periods of light snow or drizzle and not much change in temperatures today, tonight and Tuesday. Wednesday outlook light snow, little colder. Highs today 32 to 37. Lows tonight 27 to 32. Southwest to West winds 8 to 16 miles today and tonight. Precipitation probabilities today 10 per cent, , tonight 20 per cent, Tuesday 40 per cent. : Tatty l* e*nti»c:...-...... Lowest temperature preceding 6 ».m. At I a.m.: Wind velocity 1 Direction: W-SW. Sun sets today at 5:13 p.m. Sun rises Tuesday at 1:01 a m. ,, One Year Aw In Pontiac MigKisst temperature .......... 43 Lowest temperature . 37 Mean temperature ..................35 Weather: Cloudy, little rein. 4 a m. 7 a.m. t a.m. » a.m. 10 a.m. Dewntewn Temperatures .......10 I! a.m. ... ........ 21 .12 m. 76 t p.m..... V 30 Niftiest'tod Lowest Temperature* This Date in 04 Years *2 m 1174 : —12 In 1(70 ~ weekend HnNntie* , . (as recorded dawn tew") “ Set. Sun. Highest temperature , „ ..... 33 33 Lowest temperature- ..., ... 16 28 Mean temperature ............. 25 30 Weather: Set.: Flurries. Sun.: Flurries. Sunday's Temperature Chert Alpena 34 37 Duluth 23 12 Etcanaba 33 1 Fort Worth 54 35 Gd. Rapids p. 20 Jacksonville II 51 Houghton 24 o Kansas City 41 27 P 30 Los Angeles 44 44 30 14 M. Peach 77 70 34 20 Milwaukee , 32 II 33 23 New Orleans 44 52 Traverse C. 42 27 New York 38 33 5. S. Marie 20 10 .Omaha 35' 17 Albuquerque 34 20 Phoenix Atlanta \ 44 40 St. Louis Bismarck 33 “24 Pittsburgh Lansing Marquette Muskegon Petston 54...301 20 27 44 30 73 45 30 24 S. Francisco 50 50 23 Seattle 44 37 34 30 Washington 38 30 Para Oram U.S. Wf AfWM OUMAU NATIONAL FORECAST Moisture will hit much of the nation today.. There will be'show flurries in New England, over the Great Lakes, northern Plains states and along the Rockies. It will rain in the Northwest and over much of the South. It will be adder in toe Rockies. * / , fered injuries in separate accidents in addition to several noninjury mishaps at the corner. Area residents picketed toe intersection, fathered at a public hearing and JfiEally succeeded in getting toe Oakland County Road Commission to install a warning flasher, signaling yellow for Carroll Lake traffic and red for Wise Road. One aspect of the grim highway death picture which remained, unchanged was the youthfulness of most of toe victims. AP Wirephete WHAT’S GRANDPA DOING? - A grandson of Michigan Republican Gov. George Romney holds his hand to his mouth as his grandfather takes toe oath of office Saturday as Michigan governor for another four years. The swearing-in was held in private at Romney’s Bloomfield Hills home with, his immediate family and a few newsmen in attendance. Circuit Judge Thomas Brennan administers toe oath Us Mrs. Romney and other grandchildren look on, Man Charged in S. Oaklan Fatal Shooting A Royal Oak Township man, charged with the fatal shooting of a neighbor woman early yesterday, is held without bond/in the Oakland County Jail. , ★ •* - ★ Charged with first-degree murder is Raymond. Bowens, 23, of 20824 B Court in toe Pasadena Apartment complex at Wyoming and Pasadena. Bowens allegedly shot Mrs. Evelyn Dillard, 23, in the head with a shotgun during an argument in her apartment at 20832 A Court. She was dead-on arrival at Beaumont Hospital. Bowens was arrested in Detroit at 11:45 a.m. yesterday by Detroit police. ★ * ★ Later yesterday he was arraigned before Waterford Town-: ship Justice Kenneth Hempstead' and stood mute. An examination .on the murder charge is scheduled Jan. 12. •k it it Police said that Mrs. Dillard’s (Continued From Page One) consequences of overcentralization, conformity, manipulated consensus and arbitrary.,, unchecked power, whether public or private,” he said.. t “The faltering of overcentralization, the solid accomplishments of. state governments in recent years, the expressed approval of toe voters, and the confidence of youth will give self-government, at toe state and local level a second chance to prove its worth,” Romney added. “As a state, the most important question Michigan can ask is, ‘are we ready to take full advantage of our second chance?’ ” he said, adding: “For if we fail to use It, toe people will have no choice but to turn back to distant federal power for toe services that state, local, private and voluntary effort can most effectively perform.” “If that should happen,” Rom-ney said, “our lofty vision ol tomorrow could crumble into Birmingham Area' News Adult Art Classes Start. Jan: 11 BLOOMFIELD HILLS — The I painting instructor at the Acad- second, semester of evening classes in drawing and painting for adults sponsored4 by the Cranbrook Academy of Art Galleries will start Jan. 11. Conducted by Donald Willett, Hedge on '67 emy of Art and a recent winner of a Louis Comfort Tiffany award in pointing, toe classes are for adults who have had some previous instruction in the basic techniques of visual art. Classes will be held from 8 to' 10 p.m. Wednesdays for 18 weeks in the room beneath toe Art Academy library. Students will proride thei-r own materials and will chose their own media. Officials of the three UAW locals in Pontiac held off on specific full-year employment and production predictions for 1967, stating that production scheduling woukT be up to the companies^ Two of toe union officials, BIRMINGHAM - Gold hunting and Alaskan campouts are featured in the latest Wauy Taber Safari Show to be shown at the Birmingham Community House Jan. 11 :and 12. The film wfll be shownaf 8 p.m. under toe auspices of the Birmingham Rptary Club. It features veteran Alaskan homesteader, guide aaif noted wildlife photographer C e c i I Rhode. Featured are fishing and high. adventure hunting and boating along file picturesque inland waterway. : »• * * * It also shows an Alaskan campoqt in which Rhode .and his wife and small son and friends live off the country, digging clams, catching .fish,- trapping crabs and netting skimpies. Editor to Judge NEW YORK W— Erank Angelo,* managing editor of the Detroit Free Press, has been named one of 40 editors who will serve as jurors for the 1967 Pulifizer Prizes in Journalism. three children were asleep in the dust. Our hopes for a new gen-apartment when the shooting oc-jeration of progress would be curred. = crushed.*’ however, expect production cutbacks in January and the other anticipates a good start in 1967. Bob White, president of Local 594, said that present coach contracts'indicate that GMC Truck $ Coach. Division workers will start toe year on a busy schedule. . John Maye, president of the Pontiac Motor Division Local 653, said he understands a slight cutback in production schedules is planned for January. it it it The president of the Fish Body Local 596, Donald H. Jol son, views 1967 as a slow ye LAYOFFS SEEN Johnson said , that, planned January cutbacks on Tempest body work will result in layoffs of some 500 people, or about 12 per cent of toe work force. The current U^tW contract with General Motors will expire in September, j , Representatives of the three locals will attend an April UAW convention in Detroit at, which demands for the new contract will be formulated. U. S. Is Probing Bomb-Halt Ifs WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Johnson administration wants. ;N. Secretary General Thant to ttempt to find out what the Communists will do in return if American bombing of North1 Vietnam is stopped. Secretary of State Dean Ruskj implied as much in a statement Sunday. Famous Beacon First Quality Sheet Blanket At Simmt Just P Genuine Beacon white sheet blanket, stitched bound, 70x90 inch size, all washable cotton. Takes chill off these wintey. nights. American Made First Quality Rayon nylon blend, fully washable blankets in bright Indian plaid .colors. With stitch bindirig. Handy in the car or at home. Rayon-Nylon Indian Blanket $69 299 64x76” Size 72x80” Size . M North ^define* SIMMS!*., Business Forecast Favorable (Continued From Page .One) merce Township with 11 and White Lake Township with 10 were other municipalities whose fatality counts went into double figures. 5 State Teens Die in Crash of Car, Train By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS THREE RIVERS - The bells of the New Year rang a tragic toll in the southwest Michigan town of-Three Rivers: Five of the town’s “f i n e” teenagers were'killed In a train-car crash five miles east of Kalamazoo New Year’s Eve. Dead are David Hanchoh, David Hag-erman, Dennis Lockwood and his cousin, Gary Warner, all 16, and Teryl Smith, 17. * * “They were all fine boys,” said Leslie Christophersoh, a gasqline station owner. ... ] The .five were Boy S c o-u t s. They were a c-t i v e in church’ work. They had jobs after classes at Three Rivers High School where they were all juniors.. TOBOGGANING OUTING The crash Occurred as t he boys -were on J jjeir way tp Echo Valley for tobogganing at the ski resort. One boy, David Hanchdn lived long enough to tell how it happened. He said the boys saw an east-bound train, but started to cross the tracks in plenty of time before the train got to the crossing. Jv ; V/.f ’j The boys failed to see an m.p.h. westbound, train. Witnesses said the second; train hit with such force the car was “fused*’ to the front of the engine. .* ’• , tiac division. Electric and natural gas sales to residential, commercial and industrial customers have set new records and we see no reason why 1967 should not feflect continued and comparable growth. , * * * “The .company will continue to make .large construction expenditures for new gas and Electric facilities and attempt to improve customer service, ^specially through increased use .of computers and electronic data processing,” concluded Schroth. SEES INCREASE Clifford Grovogel, managing director of Waite’s department store in downtown Pontiac, said that unless something drastic hajppens to change the financial outlook, 1967 should, show a 4 to 5 pgr cent increase over toe past,year. , “I hope it’s more than that, but you have* to be realistic*” said Grovogelr’T really think ' “The trend of late In' toe building business seems a bit more encouraging and it seems to be Business at White’s in consensus of opinion that this was only slightly up over .the business will be good in 1967, though a lot depends on what happens in Congress.”* “Generally, I think 1967, barring1 a strike and depending on file other two factors, will be another satisfactory year,” Cross said. will continue. UVCI ffUIC previous year; fib said. Marvin Talab, outgoing president of the Miracle Mile Association, described merchants’ outlook for 1967 as one of “chu-tioiis optimism?’ POSITION IMPROVES “Most people out here (at Miracle Mile Shopping Center^ wound up very well in the last week or 10 days,” he said. “Oar position in the retailing area ' is certainly much better than it was, for example, five years ago ... we plan for continued progress.” Mrs. Ruth Montgomery, resident manager of the Pontiac Mall shopping center, foresees gross sales in 1967 exceeding the 3^“ viewport forl96L over-ali 10 per cent increase ex-' James Clarkson, president of First Federal Savings of Oakland, said “1966 showed a tremendous tightening in the money market throughout the country and, as a consequence, the interest on loans soared to a new high. - it it it “Though toe war in Vietnam shows no signs of lessening and seems to be requiring more and; more manpower and the gov:j eminent expenditures show no; signs of decreasing, there is an! 4 Feared Dead in MAYETTA, Kan. (AP) Scuba divers planned to resume a search in a farm pond today for the wreckage of a plane in which four men were believed kilted. , - Hie plane crashed Sunday while flying fmm Lincoln, Neb., to New Orleans tor today’s Sugar Bowl football game. 1 Hie Federal Aviation Agency said the flight plan, signed by Larry GetcneU, 39, of Lincoln, showed he intended to take three passengers. Their names were -not listed. perienced by the 52 stores and service shops in the Mall in 1966. “The outlook, materially, is bigger and better with the opening of expanded Hudson and Wards’.stores this year and the addition of seven new stores in a fashion mall,” she said. “I’ve read what some economists say about business leveling off in 1967, but I disagree with them as far as the Mall is,concerned,” said Mrs- Montgomery. “Business was good in 1966 and will top that this year:” j ' Milo Cross, chairman of the board of directors of the Pontiac State Bank, said, “Three factors the course of the war in Vietnam, the negotiations for renewal of file auto workers’ contract and the activity in the home building industry - will probably be the primary fnfloeiices on the local economy ia 1967. BURDEN ON INDUSTRY V “The population is ever on toe increase, therefore requiring more and better housing for the general public,” c ti*ti t i n u e d Clarkson. “As a consequence, people - are in need constantly of- more general necessities of life such as appliances, automobiles, clothing, housing, etc. ; “These demands mate a ; heavy harden on Industry to provide these necessities of life. “Even though these necessities were needed as acutely to 1966, the obtaining of them was heavily curtailed by the tight motley market,” Clarkson added. ^ .r \ ^ * * . * I “It appears, however, that by virtue of.certain changes impolicy of the Federal Reserve Board and the Federal Home] . . . Loan Bank Boarm toe money “What happens in Vietnam, mar*tet toosmrup to 1967. escalation, peace or retention of] “We will then be provided Shop These New Arrivals In SIMMS Discount Basement Bonanza Style Warm Fleece Lined Men’s Jackets Cotton Suede* Hooded Water Repellent Popular pulloverstyle with neck lacing os pictured. With hood for extra warmth. Water repellent cotton suede with worm fleece innerlining. Sizes Small qnd Medium only. Poiyutgjihre with Nylon Shell Insulated Tops Nine scuba divers worked the states quo, will certainly j with additional monies for exseven hours to the ice-covered j have an effect. ‘ , ' pension of dew housing, etc. pond and found a piece of a, “The union contract always)We fed that to the Oakland wing and two parts of the fuselage. The water ‘ is five feet deep. * --I ■ • ' ■ •’ ’ has an impact on this area. Of {County area, 1967 will prove* to course, a prolonged strike wouldtbe a more iprosperous year than be the most dangerous factor: * 1966,” concluded Clarkson. I I. I y : \ \ 'vv : ■ \ THE PONTIAC PRESS* MONDAY, JANUARY 2, 196T A-«a SH 1966: Year of the Stillent By PHILIP WEEDELL Newspaper Enterprise Assn, NEWYORK -By any standard, 1W6 ‘has been the Year of the Student The action shifted away from politics to new concerns — the equity of the Selective Service System, the quality of the student’s own education ahd his freedom. • Student participation in civil rights has, decreased. The pas? sage of federal civil rights legislation fulfilled the goals of a large number of students interested in this area. The new “Black Power” philosophy of the Student Non Violent Coordinating Committee' (SNCC) has turned off many students and turned away many more. On . the other hand, student voluntary tutorial programs in underprivileged areas are to-creasing. ' A survey by the National Student Association recently found that dime are now 200,060 students Spending. seven million hours a year tutoring children in impoverished areas. • Student criticism of the Selective Service System has increased. Day' by day, student criticism of die draft has been mounting. , r A large number of campus-es held referendnms on the many issues involved. The returns are Just now being announced, but trends are already evident: (1) The vast majority of stu dents upholds the right of the government to conscript young people into toe military. ■COME IN TODAYl RE CONFIDENT ABOUT YOUR INCOME TAX Stand up for, your tax rights! Let SLOCK help you find alt your legitimate deductions and give you every possible tax advantage, service is quick, convenient and inexpensive. We're confident, tool ETURNS (2) Almost no Rtdtod ta com-pletely satisfied wjto the present system, feeling the soda! Inequalities of the deferment system are unjust and' the widely varyipg quotas and criteria of local draft boards create uncertainty to the point of extreme frustration. MPLETE W. guarant.. accurate preparation of ovory tax return. If WO male* any arrets that cost you any panalty or Intorait, w» will, pay tha ponelty or Interest. America's Largest Tax Sanded with Over 1500 Offices 2G E. HURON 2255 ANNEX PONTIAC MIRACLE MILE 4410 DIXIE HWY. 429 WALNUT ST. DRAYTON PLAINS ROCHESTER Workdays: 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.—Sat. and Sun, 9 to 5 — FE 4-9225 mo appointment meceiiary (3) A majority feels that the use of grades as a criterion for deferment increases academic pressure and severely distorts the true purpose of higher education. (4) Almost three-quarters of toe. stiidents favor a form of ah' tentative service in which service to the country in the War on Poverty or .the Peace Corps could be considered equivalent to military sendee except hi toe time of a national emergency. o Student interest and par ticipation in educational reform has increased. The newest and fastest growing movement on the campus is, without’doubt educational reform. “There wifi be1,660, students who take their fives this year, 9,000 others who will attempt to do so and 90,900 more who will threaten Suicide,” reported a survey by Moderator “One answer to this problem of student stress is to hire more psychiatrists. The other Is to give students more opportunity to participate in their own education. CHANCE TO FAIL “Hie first allows students to fail. The latter gives them an opportunity to discover. Both are necessary” toe study concluded. Students are responding responsibly to their own problems more this year: * The number and the quality of student course and teacher evaluations has increased. About 200 college campuses had such programs at toe beginning of the year. Since then, students on over 100 more campuses have course and teacher evaluation programs under Way, TREND DEVELOPS There is a strong trend away from rigid evaluation proce dures. ‘ Several studies were an- nounced during toe year, finding tout “tome is bu direct relationship between high grades to college and later professionalsuccess.” More than two dozen colleges and, universities have switched to some form at “Pass/Fail” plan this year. No grades, no ranking, and hopefully, not .as touch stress. Smith Coliege, Amherst College and toe University of Massachusetts announced plans for a joint experimental college in which tome would be no grades at all. • The great unknown of toe year has been whether or not student use of marijuana and LSD has increased On one hand, federal narcotics agents have been working hard to eortail the supply of marijuana and LSD on the campus. Dozens of students have been arrested. On the other hand, student interest in these drug stimulants has come out into the open. . Articles in magazines have talked abouj the pros and eons of drug use freely. ______ LARGEST AUDIENCES j Timothy Leary and other so-called “prophets” of the use of drugs have received the largest student audiences of the year on campus. And talk on campus is that the marijuana market is tight but open. LSD can be manufactured to any campus chemistry laboratory. # What does all this mean for the future? Student participation to civil rights will continue to lag as long as young Negroes push the philosophy of Black Power, but student participation in toe War on Poverty is likely to increase. Student criticism of toe Selective Service System hi likely to increase — unless toe President's Commission makes recommendations which acknowledge their complaints. Student interest in their own education will increase. If they are given toe freedom to experiment, they will likely fry to make a number of improvements for themselves. 2 FIL ’n’ White Prints Enlarged to SUPER-SIZE Sivo at SIMMS LOWER PRICE 6 hr Print Guaranteed perfect prints fcpm oil papa-[ far size films—enlarged to super size, dated and deckled edges ... . and you pay only for the good print!!: Simms, 98 N. 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SIMMS CLOSED TODAY Side Starts ce-a-year SIMMS Big JANUARY CLEARANCE Of PHOTOGRAPHIC NEEDS Its that time of year again when we take our 1 and 2 of a kind models—all new but demos or. the last of certain models .I; but again all prices at 30% to 50%' off and all carry new guarantees. Hurry— these specials for this week only** * Instamatic Color Film see Kodaeolor CX126 drop-in pak load film for, 12 picture* par roll. Limit 10 rolls. Fresh POLAROID 3wii)ger’ Film M North I Stginaw ^Street SIMMS1*. Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. Since 1934 You’ve Gotten More At SIMMS ,. and In 1967 You’ll Still IMMS G et Bargains •Here’s Proof, Tues. & Weds. Specials- 2nd FLOOR SPECIALS Swinger 20 jfiliri for the Polaroid Swinger camera. Take 8 black V white snaps per roil. Limit 10. Choice of ‘BAIA’ Super 8 or Reg. 8mm Movie Editor and Splicer Genuine ‘PRESTONE’ Brand S Spray De-Icer To melt ice and, snow off car windshield — , won't harm car finish. Limit 2cans. 59 Genuine ‘QUM-0UT’ Carbureter Cleaner 69* Pint size can — simply add to gas tank ,. • dean* out varnlth and gunk from fuel line. Limit 2 cans. , Methanol Anti-Freeze 77. 'Storm King' methanol antifreeze for winter use. Factory sealed can. Limit 4 gallons. ■ C GAL, 2-GAL Motor Oil • 'Royal Express' oil in SAE grades of 10-20-30-40 weights, factory sealed can. Limit2 Cans. 19 Permanent ANTI-FREEZE L29 0AL, *Permex' the permanent anti* freeze meets U.S. Government specification! Sealed gallon can. Limit 4 cans. . ** Instant Radiant and Circulating Heat Titan Vonus’ PORTABLE Electric Muter ,2 kinds of heat in .2 heat range ... instant glowing radiant and forced-air circulating heat front the powerful fan and ydu get 1320 watt or .1650 watt heats with the flip of a switch. Auto-thermostat control,, safety tip-pver switch, efficient ever cdol cdse. Famous BUCK ’n DECKER Electric Finishing Sander Outfit Model U-140K Designed for the homd* wood-worker-easy one hard control for finishing work on pH materials . ., sturdy orbital oction sander complete — sandpaper and. storage box. 23 amp, 4000 opm sander. IINorttl SIMMSIS, Take It 098 for Only XV The Bqja editor splicer has the action viewer, and splicer td make short reels into long shows. Choice' of Super 8 or Reg. 8mm splicers. $1 holds. SILVER LENTICULAR Sereins Movie 40x40-ln. $24.50 Vai. 188 IS98 18 50xSO-ln $34.50 Val. 98 For brightest ever projections' get the Silver lenticular Screens by Radiant, On handy tripod base. Folds compactly., $1 holds, - . KODAK ‘StarmHe II’ Flash Camera Sets 9D8 $12.45 Value . Easy to tjise snapshot camera with built-in flash. Take black and white' pictures plus color snaps and slides. Camera, batteries, film and bulbs. Boxed. ,$1 holds. Charge It! Major Credit Cards Honored KODAK INSTAMATIC CAMERAS 304 OuHfis $47.50 ■Value 34»* 'Drop-in load, no guessing—automatic ejectric eye- fof perfect shot*, flasKcube for 4 flash shots without changing bulb. Complete set, camera, cube, film and batteries. 404 Outfits Full automatic Instamatic camera, with electric-eye and motor film advance. Complete set. $59.95 value. ;___________________ Charge It! Major Credit Cards Honored ’BELL & HOWELL’ SUPER 8 * Movie Projector 6698 $94.98 Value Shows super IMikas,Automatic threading, reverie aitd still projections, Model 356, projector by Bell & 'Howell. $1 hatch,. . Charge It! Major Credit Cards Honored K01KK Instamatic 704 Automatic Flashcube Camera 7698 $104.50 Value* Drop-in cartridge loading camera with electric-eye control, extra fine fast facetting f2.8 lens, shutter speeds to 1/250 seconds. Flash cube Advances automatically. $1 holds.■ Charge It! Major Credit Cards Honored Automatic Threading-ZOOM and SLO-MOTION Super 8 Movie Projector $169.50 Seller First Tima Newest 1967 model—, D70Z projector with 'Zoom Lem:' for larger, brighter Super- 8 movies ... projections and sio-motion too , . . easy to operate, felly automatic threading. Famous Kodak guarantee loa $1 holds or use your credit card to buy this. SIMMS!*., ■User ■ •' Vj mm •' S T ' M 1 i THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 2, 1967 e "» . t C# ,1 >£l > > V *-ir Find dresses for all occasions. Your favorite one, two, three piece styles and silhouettes. See light, bright and dark colors. Quantities limited. ORIGINALLY 34.99 ;,... NOW 23.00 ORIGINALLY 29.99 ..._____.. NOW 20.00 ORIGINALLY 24.99.............NOW ITeOO ORIGINALLY 19.99 ." , . ....... NOW 14.00 — i HUBfi A Sale of hooded | % I ' —. ' ' - - ' ’ zip-outs Coat Sale! REO. 59.9.9-NOW SAVE 19.99 No better time than right now to get a top buy on a fine winter coat. Hurry, choose from wool boude loops, wool-fur fiber blends, wool meltons, Botany® polished wools; all with beautiful natural mink-trims. Wool interlined. Fashion colors, Misses' 8-18. e Hard .wearing melton with stitched ■ detail,^usually seen at higher prices , e Burgundy, navy, loden; misses' S,M)L Tops for go-go good looks and cozy comfort, this hoo ed benchwarmer that knows no special season . . . for the warm, full-sleeyed plaid lining with snug-fitting knit wristlets zips out when temperatures rise, three roomy pockets. Perfect for school, country or stadium wear. In rayon-linen-cotton-reprocessed wool, with plaid zip-out in cozy wool-linen blend. Hurry info Wards now and select yours at a savings. Another fabulous group of the season's be$t-seller$. Natural mink lavished coats In nubby textured fabric? in great variety-/-all rich woolens or wool-fur fiber blends. Taupe, brown, blue, beige or black. Wool interlined. Come, choose early. 8 to 18. More sensational coat values—rthey're sure to be snatched up quickly, so come early. This group includes wobl worsted Friezes, textured weaves, boude mohair loops with generous natural mink trims. Wool interlined. Lovely fashion colors. Misses' 8 to 18. Fur product labeled to show country of origin of imported furs. V ONTGOMERY •\ *» THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 2, 1967 A—« E Economic Picture Is Cloudier Than in Past Years By John cunniff AP Business News Analyst NEW YORK - A more cautious consumer attitude toward, buying and borrowing, a trend to easier credit, secure jobs for most, skilled worker^, some more price increases are iivprospect for 1967. A very ,.high standard of living will continue for most Americans. But tiie fear, if not the probability, of a recession does exist. A wide disparity in forecasts exists, and some economists foresee a rather sharp slowdown.’ • More uncertainties exist in the 1967 picture than in most previous years. Hie Vietnam war and toe question of taxes are basic to the 1967 economy.. They are also,- perhaps, unpredictable. Here’s a review of some economic highlights and the outlook in several consumer areas: it it ★ JOBS — A.continuation of stable employment for the skilled. Unemployment droppedto less than 4 per cent of the labor force during 1966. Most people who wanted jobs had them, and tjiat included teen-agers, women and most of the unskilled. UP employment for married men dropped below 2 per cent. One blight on toe record was a rise in the number id unskilled Negro jobless. New technologies and toe elimination of some low-paying jobs were blamed, This now is one of the nation’s most serious work problems, Otherwise, the/ generally good record 1 i k e1y will continue through much of 1967. Government civilian employment will' 'rise to 2.7 million, the highest singe the Korean War. Automotive employment might be lpw? /er. |There will be layoffs in some Industries where inventories are overly, abundant, and there will be regional differences in the i employment picture based on] the award or loss of government contracts. it ★ it PERSONAL INCOME - higher again. The nation’s personal income in 1967 will attain a rate in excess of $600 billion. About two-thirds of this will be in wages and salaries. The rest will be in proprietors’ incomes — shopkeepers, etc. — and in divi- dends, interest and miscellaneous payments. itoial Security checks will be'bigger and medicare payments will be made to more people. Business dividends may be about die same as during, toe past year—perhaps less if profits are squeezed. Some wage increases seem destined to be nearer 5 per cent than toe old 3.2 per emit guidepost. The new minimum wage law will raise base wages from $1.25 to $1.40 an hour Feb. 1, thus providing an increase fix' about 3.8 million' workers of the 30 million now covered by minimum Wage laws. ★ • LIVING COSTS - It* may be hard to make ends meet. ★ ★ * ■ Some consumer prices got out of hand during 1966, rising swiftly; and followed by o u t- There may be further increases cause of higher prices, partly because of» long-term trend to better .‘foods. However,, a con- in 1967 The 1966 i n c r e a s e was blamed primarily on food,fiut the cost of rytotog a house —. toe told,, toe taxes, the 'in-', terest payments, toe cost of some Ideis in some areas -■ rose also, and so did meto-cal costs and toe price of certain articles of clothing. As a result, toe American consumer’s discretionary purchasing power — the amount he had available for banking or spending after essentials were out of toe way — wasn’t much higher at the end of the year than it was at toe start. . Americans spent well over $100 billion for food in 1966, making the average for every man, woman and child much more than $500. /The food bill rose, generally, throughout the year. ★ ★ ★ Hie per capita bill could be picketing Consumers, higher again in 1967, partly be- sunter cautiousness that grew stronger as prices rose to 1966 might bring down Both prices and quality. Wholesale food prices were fading late to 1966, foretelling lower consumer prices on some food items. it it ■ - it ’ HOUSING - &uld get better after a dismal 19&. Housing was toe chief vie* ton of tight money to .1966, forcing housing starts to' toe lowest level In 20 years. Some analysts now feel this decline has created a pent-up demand for hoqsing that will make itself felt to the second half of 1967. Y: Many factors are at work. The federal government has begun pumping money into the housing market to make mortgages easier. Credit also may ease. And future home owners aren’t likely to postpone buying a house indefinitely. , ' ★ ★ * TAXES—A big question mark. At least one bright spot in toe 1967 tax picture will appear to April. Many Americans then are going to find they do not fate an additional, lump sum federal income tax payment. Hie reason: withholding of taxes was.greater to 1966. State legislatures during 1966 took action that may add as much as $500 million to state taxes during 1967. Social Security payments will be higher also. . ★ ★ The big questions, however, concern federal tax policy. Hie economy has slowed down some. But the need for funds hasn’t. With the economy operating near its peak, the administration certainly will continue to take day-to-day soundings — play it by ear — and attempt to remain flexible. CLOSED TODAY Shop Tue., Thui*., Fri. and Sat. Nites 'Til 9 Check Tuesday's Paper for Our Tabloid Section Then Shop Ouf JANUARY WHITE SALE *," "January BRA and GIRDLE SALE WARNER'S No clue is the first rule in robbery—and in covering up any figure deficiency. So get yourself a Little Fibber™ bra. You’ll never look padded—just naturally shapely—in fiberfill cups! (polyester-nylon-cotton) S22-46, White, A, B, C. Reg. $3. Now $2.49. The smooth getaway starts with the smooth shaping of Delilah™ pantie. North, south, east, west—your figure looks best in this panelled, no-nonsense slimming, (panel: all nylon,- elastic: nylon-Lycra* spandex) S545, White, S-M-L Reg. $9. Now $6.99. Also: S544Delilah”'girdle. Reg. $8. Now $5.99. S546, Delilah™ long leg. Reg. $11 Now $8.99. nr f- i ■ into the plan that will best suit your long-range need! $10,000 SAVINGS CERTIFICATES Earn the rate of 514% when held for a period of 12 months. $5,000 SAVINGS CERTIFICATES Earn the rate of 5% when held for a period of 9 months. $2,500 SAVINGS CERTIFICATES Earn the rate of 484% when held for a period of; 6 months. PASSBOOK SAVINGS ACCOUNTS The rate of 4V*% is compounded and paid quarterly; which Rives an ananai yield of 4.318, a high rate of return paid on regular insured passbook saving.. Every Dollar You Save Is Matched With Accidental Life Insurance (Up to $10,000.00) W. HURON STREET DOWNTOWN PONTIAC - CLARKSTON - DRAYTON PLAINS ROCHESTER-WALLED LAKE-LAKE ORION - MILFORD Reg. 2.50 Reg. 10.00 FORM,FIT ROGERS DRESS-SHAPER FAVORITE give* you a "naturally" lovelier look. In soft cotton broadcloth, with spun Dacron lined cups for subtle shaping. Great brftfgrsat buyl -Stock up nowl White. 32-36A; 32-38B and C. Style 0544. FORMFIT ROGERS PUTS "PRETTY" IN A PANTV GIRDLE and gives you the long, unbroken line you want- under today's fashions. Sleek shaping Lycra powernet molds and holds with firm, lightweight control; The lace front panel makes sure' your tummy keeps- .its place. White.' P-S-M-L (Dress Sizes: 7-15; 8-16). Style 0879. FORMFIT ROGERS SKIPPIES LONG LEG PANTIE shapes your shape With control plus comfort. 2" waistband gives you that all-important smooth midriff line and the zipper closing makes, it a joy to get Tn and out of. In firming nylon powernet with a lacy front panel, plastic back and side panels! White. S-M-L-XL-XXL. Style 0889. TRIC-O-LASTIC LACE THREE-QUARTER LENGTH * maiaentom AcAjtl J B, C, D cup* m $4.99' W Reg, $6 Value ; TRIC-O-LASTIC LACE WITH STRETCH ALL AROUND! V ' CONCERTINA GIRDLE* WITH ^ACTION-INSERT* B, C cups Rag. $4 Vaiua D cup $3.49 Rag. $480 Value .'Shimmer.. .-Second Floor $6.49—$8.99 Reg. $8411 ValM >3 t ■ A \ \ Yr ■Ml THE PONTIAC PRESS At Huron Street Pontiac, Michigan 48058 MONDAY, JANUARY 2, 1987 ' „ . Hums A. ntyeuAU mst ' — ■ h airmen of U>< Board Bowa*» h. PitaHMU, II Praeldent and PublUbar tagtiiriaw H*«r s. ha: Manatfnt Editor JOHN A. mu* Secretary and Advartlaln* Director Richa»» II. Pwadauta Treasurer and HMbm Officer . Amo lfoom* Clroulatlon Uanaftr o. lbuniu Jouu Local Advertlilnr Manager It Seems to Me . . . Area Can Greet New Year Witft Optimistic Outlook For many years, this department has opened the new year with an annual appraisal of business from the local angle. Recently, optimism has run almost unrestrained. We feel bptinds- , tic again this year, but there are some inevitable and obvious reservations. ★ ★ ★ Automobile companies have definitely announced modest reductions and these seem inevitable after the long string of upsurging seasons. We shattered all past precedents by a goodly margin and set employment and production records in almost every line of endeavor. ★ ★ ★ .A • All of the automotive organizations frankly state that they are inclined towards the opinion that-the next 12 months will not exceed the 1968 levels. If they remain where they have been — or even decline slightly—1967 can be a corking good year with fine general business and steady employment: ★ # ." ★ j Building trades sense a rather noticeable decline. For several years we have run past the million mark in new structures and even soared to a million and a half. The decline here is more than seasonal and we may have cut substantially into the backlog of new residences, plant expansions and associated activities. Any type of backtracking in the building trades adversely affects allied lines. New homes demand new rugs, chairs, bedroom furniture, etc., and new commercial enterprises require outfitting oh a substantial basis. ★ ★ ★ Residents in the Pontiac area can take considerable satisfaction in the belief that thejruck industry may not be affected adversely in 1967, judging from current reports and forecasts. The GMC Truck and Coach Division is a significant and powerful part of our everyday living. Employment there has been advancing steadily over an extended period and the organization plays a tremendous part in the economic stability of the area. * ★ ★ ★ The Pontiac institution had a banner year in, 1968, and national signs suggest a continuation. Heavy duty trucks seem to be in demand Specially, and right there the South Boulevard institution shines brightly. ★ ★ ★ Also, as you read the statistics, you find that Pontiac Motor Division is advancing more certainly than the others. It stands forth as an especially active and , assertive leader in automobile sales. Surely, in the immediate future, something positive must emerge from the Taubman plan and downtown should be on the way to better days. The delay has been longer than we wished, but the magnitude ' of the assignment dictated the countless details involved. Oakland University continues to grow at an amazing pace and we are annually finding a larger number of students coming in from outside areas. ★ ★ ★ Hence, as a summary of local conditions we’re constrained to / repeat a prediction we have been, making annually for some thne, namely: whatever happensin the Nation at large will find/rdntiac in the upper eschelon. If business flattens out or recedes slightly, - we’ll experienceit less. If busi-. ness holds steady, we’ll make an actual gain; and if things amaze tjte critics and continue to boom, we’ll be a front runner in the advance. Could you ask more? Happy New Year. Silence . . . U.S. outer space circles are puzzled by the Russian braggarts. Their Leonid 1. Sedov admits that they haven’t put a cosmonaut in oribt since October of 1965. The unmanned Luna 13 which made a recent soft landing on the moon, has been their only publicized space activity. , This'is quite unlike the inter-•: national blowhards. Many Ui S. authorities expect some startling - demonstration. Some think 'they’re aiming to crash-land a-. . capsule on Mara with returning signals. Mars is in a favorable position this month. Some think they’re about to break out with five men in a single spacecraft. And some think they’re simply bumping into calamitous reverses. ★ ★ ★ Right now it’s winter in Russia and Winter in Russia is winter with a capital “W.” But be prepared. They may astound the world with something sensational. This long dry spell leaves them looking like tyros in something in which they’ve been very assertive. And in Conclusion... Jottings from the well-thumbed notebook of your peripatetic reporter: „ Danny Kaye's TV show will be dropped after this season. He doesn’t rank in the first 75 today.. . .... .... Constant starting and stopping In traffic uses as much gas a$ 60 miles an hour on the open road...., * ^..... Some qf these blonde wigs— such as Feoov Lee wore the other nightmare positively grotesque and gruesome..... . .,..:. The Chicago police department js checking all residents who buy guns from mailorder houses. A. n* ; *a1 \ .-'i " Trusted scouts a d.v i s e * m e Teresa Wells dreervts men-' tioH as one of the area’s attractive young ladies . . . . . O v er hea rd:' “That *R* in, —— ‘Republican’ stands for Romney, Rockefeller and Reagan.” . ... >V I think Candid Camera is sliding down the TV hill so far that even that good looking Bess Myerson can’t save it. The underlying idea is TERESA Voice of the People: Area Mother Is Worried by Incidents of Youths Our boys aged 12 and 14 have always ta^en pleasure in roller Skating. Recently a smoker used the hood of a new jacket for an ashtray. Another boy took a dislike to a long haircut and threw a lighted match at one of my boys. The match landed on his neck and he was severely burned. A friend walked home in the cold with/ out a jacket, as it had been stolen. ★ ★ ★ i Recently, our youngest son decided to race his slot car. Before he had a chancel to race, his wallet (a Christmas gift) and $l(j (Christmas tips from a paper route) were lifted from his pocket. Can’t anything be done V about these things? „ DISGUSTED BUT WORRIEP WATERFORD TOWNSHIP RESIDENT Readers Suggest New Year’s Resolution As a New Year’s resolution, we can think, of nothing more constructive than to work toward the end of the war and for the rehabilitation of a society that breeds destruction. SAM AND RUTH HAGON PONTIAC TOWNSHIP Still Waiting Capital Letter: Faifted Seeress Looks at Future By RUTH MONTGOMERY WASHINGTON - Mysterious satellites and UFO’s, a “sixth column,” diabolical blackmail, a mystery woman in the Oswald case, Republican trials and D emocratlc t r ibulations all. share the spotlight in Seeress Jeane Dixon’s fore- , casts for 1967. Hath Although Montgomery Red China’s* Mao Tse-tung and North Vietnam’s Ho Chi Minh will soon die, she says, the Vietnam war will “continue unabated unto we settle on Russia’s terms, not ours.” / The famed capital seeress has one happy forecast: A cure for cancer will grow out of research interrupted by World War I. Here are Jeane Dixon’s detailed prophecies for 1967 and beyond, plus some phychic observations on previous events: • The Soviets will blackmail us into signing Vietnam and world peace treaties on their terms within three, to five years, by threatening to destroy nine major U.S. cities ' including Detroit. ‘ She says Moscow will be able to back up the threat by means of newly developed satellites. She does not, however, see the satellites being used. • Two hundred Soviet missiles are now secretly poised in Central Europe, their sights trained on Western Europe. Moscow will “use them as blackmail” to de-« fotfiKT the Surrender of free Europe. • Vietnam - is “a little ----------i----------;------: sound, ’but the performances get more boring and dreary each week . , . . . Insider’s Newsletter says Christ Was five feet^three but tfie average Palestinian then was only five feet even. bonfire compared to the/ greater combats that are .to come.” The arms for these conflagrations are already moving from the Soviet bloc to the Mideast, Africa and Latin America. • Since July, Jeane has seen ah object orbiting the earth. She says the object resembles tiie front of a submarine, has tubes that can fire atomic missiles, and bears the capital letters “MIRV.” Jeane insists that it has “landed several times recently” oh U.S. soil, being mistaken for a flying saucer. • The UFO’s are “real objects but do not come from outer space.” Jeane says they are unmiuined devices that are being tested by the U.S. and Russians. • President Johnson must guard against bad advice “... three men with the initials K, T, and H are getting him off the right track.” (Jeane emphasizes that the K and the H do not mean a Kennedy or Humphrey.) The Vietnam situation will become worse, “and many more Americans win die.” • Mrs. Dixon does not see Romney getting the Republican presidential nomination “unless he can achieve a near-miracle by overcoming a very difficult squabble” that will develop late this year between rival wings of his party. Mrs. Dixon Was asked to meditate bn three matters: The authorship of the Shakespearean classics, the controversy about the Warren report on President Kennedy’s assassination, and the murder of Sen.-elect Charles Percy’s daughter.. Here are her replies; • Francis Bacon was the chief author of Shakespeare’s plays, but he collaborated with another person whose identity Jeane has not yet been able, to determine, and to a lesser extent with Shakespeare. • Oswald had accomplices, , according to Jeane, who explains: “... I get that the key to the assassination plot is a woman; that investigators should concentrate on Oswald’s overseas travels^ with the role of the young woman thoroughly explored. “Oswald’s bullet killed Ken. nedy, but I see that a shinier highpowered rifle also fired a shot. Hie bullet that struck Gov. Connally had not previously passed through the President “Oswald’s actions were dic- was involved, although, he was not the other gunman and was not at the scene of the assassination.” • The person who Killed Percy’s, daughter “has a name that sounds phonetically like Stebbins or Stephens.” (She pronounces the latter like “Steffins.”) One of 'Jeane’s more curious psychic forecasts has to* do with a “mysterious sixth column which is working to take over the U.S. government.” Stressing that it is in no way related to communism, she declares: -★ ★ -k “This sixth column is a group of. men with a great deal of money which gives them the power to lure some of tne most valuable men now in government. Some have already left government to join this power group and more will follow.” Jean’s brightest forecast concerns a cancer breakthrough: “Great advances will be made in the field of cancer. Treatments will be perfected soon, which will effect a cure and also get at the cause. “The secret lies in correcting the vibrations of sick cells and bringing them into harmony with the .whole . . . some European scientists began work on this theory early in the century, but before achieving success their work was brought to an abrupt halt by World War I.” Calls Attention to Our Economic Picture Lately we read many tbli^s which people should take notice of—.the war in Vietnam, the rising economy and cost of living, civil rights movement-, and the pros and cons on safety. These all cost money. ★ ★ ★ The President is asking Congress for more money for toe war, we’re sending other countries food, money, etc., ‘the. Commission on Economic Opportunity wants money, and taxes are going up. Where is this money coming from? ★ ★ A Industries are talking of laying off men. These men are taxpayers. After they lay off, there probably null be more money tied up than circulating, these signs mean to America. - TROUBLED Then stoat? Think what Question and Answer Since toe load of Christmas mail is heavy, why' not have more mailmen? One day I got my mail at 5:30 p.m. One year toe Post Office had mailmen on twice a day and Sundays. RESIDENT OF PONTIAC REPLY More help was hired for the holiday load, hut with the temporary, inexperienced help, some slipups are bound to happen. Postmaster Donaldson tells us the Christmas mail operation went very smoothly, and every piece of mail received at the1 Post Office before Christmas was delivered before personnel went home Saturday. Under the circumstances, we feel the postal workers did a fine job. The Belter Half ‘Are you SURE dinner is COMPLETELY ready? ... . Yesterday you called me 30 seconds early and tricked me into filling toe salt shaker.” Reviewing Other Editorial Pages Promises, Promises The Fall River (Mass.) Spectator Politics: The most promising of all careens. ★ ★ ★ Overheard: .First Man: “Billy the Kid killed 21 men by the^ time he was ^ twenty-one.*’ Second Man: “Great heavens! What sort of a car did he drive?” .v........ Well, the Japs have raised us in this topless top business. They have feminine wrestling toted by a small group in Rus-. . . ... . .. sia, headed by a man whose matches now in this tradi- ^ „ S ^is was neither tion. . ... .'. .i Since Suslov nor Shelepin,:however. Sept. 15, New York City “A pretty, slightly-built has towed away 17,000 il- T?a? who was born J in Russia but now resides in legally parked pars and it the United States could clear costs the owners an aver- up-the whole plot. Jack Ruby age of $45 apiece to re-- A"A»^ , .A- • rT claim them.4*.... *,* « i n - « • j Dept, of Cheers and Jeers: V 61*031 UrCltldS the C’s — Ltt Cupid and Mr. and Mrs. Frank P. Wilson Happy New Year; the J’s - of Orchard Lake; —Drano’s current TV com- 55th wedding anniversary. twerHal* Mr. and Mrs, John H. Pohlman merciau. of 205 E. Berkshire; * —Harold A. Fitzgerald 62nd wedding anniversary. —' ----T- ——-* ' , ' ——A Drinking Facts * The (New Orleans^ Times-Picayune ' "Carrie Nations would have bten overjoyed. A new study on United States drinking habits Indicates that abstainers, those who either don’t drink or who drink only once a year, total 32 per cent of the population. ★ * A . Infrequent to moderate drinkers torn the bulk of * the population, or 56 per cent. And according to the continuing surveillance of 2,746 Americans above the age’ of 21, 12 per cent of the population is, labeled as heavy drinkers, but not necessarily problems to themselves or others. ‘ * * * Of the group labeled abstainers, two-thirds raid they never drink. This group broke into three types: the militant abstainers,'’ including the prohibitionists, the tolerant ab- stainers, and ,the alcoholics who had “dried out.”’' The study further showed that most of toe individuals under $4,000 a year in income are abstainers, and about half of the heavy drinkers gave among their reasons for drinking, escape ist notions such as a need to change mood or a ns to forget. -Nearly all the pollsters talked to recalled a time when they drank more than now, except the heavy-drinking group which is being increasingly joined by women as they continue to infiltrate the male power structure. it Sr ★ As a matter of fact, on second thought, maybe toe Carrie Nations wouldn’t be joyful at all. Money Problems The Hillsdale Daily News The 7-to-2 decision of the U.S. Supreme Court on the New Hampshire sweepstakes' gives voters h} the Granite State much to think about The court ruled that knowingly taking acknowledgement of ticket purchases across toe, state line violates the federal law, " /* ~ |' It poses a problem, too, for New York State, whose voters recently favored a sweepstakes in a referendum. T h e New York proposal, supported by Gov. Rockefeller, requires final action by the 1967 legislative sessiop. When ‘ New ' Hampshire’s case was argued five weeks ago it was claimed that the acknowledgements merely indicate a purchase and are not required to collect one’s winnings. Ibis cut no ice with toe high court. Now, presumably, Congress will be asked to make It all legal again. * ★ * Since its inception in 19i64, the New Hampshire sweep-stakes has earned only some $7 million in net revenue for public education, y * Total ticket sales are said to have dropped below those o( last year. Somehow it all seems to be a shoddy way to pay for the costs of public education: - th# AwseWM tan k wMW wcMwjr to tht m nr rawM- catk* tf H local now* printed M Oils nwwpapof o» «Mt M •* AP HOWS dlipotcho*. the Pontiac Pro** la dattiwwd bf carrier tar » cant* irwwiu wt*ra moiled In Oakland. Ganata* Liar tnoston, ■ MacamO. •. Lapeer and Wa*Menaw Count lae lib Ml* a vaarj elsewhere la Michigan and all other pleca* la JuT SH State* Skn a yaar. All mall *ut>-ecnptlun* payable I* . edva Paatag* tiat baan paid at Iha ctaai rat* .at w ---- Mambar at AdC. ft 'X / A • .... i 1 v\-; • * .. v: A '•* v > ? • A . \ 1 \ fvA .r . THE PONT! AC PRESS, MONDAY", JANUARY 2, 1967 A—T By WHITNEY YOUNG Executive Director National Urban League It is traditional at the start of a new year to look ahead at what toe next twelve months' wffl1 bring and commit ourselves to m a k i n g it a better year than the tost Tits central problem facing the n a t i o n in 1967 will be to YOUNG solve toe increasing decay and the bitterness in our cities. The htlimtiaM conditions of ghetto life and toe resulting frustration among young people who see themselves boxed in by a hostile, prejudiced society are symptoms of toe disintegration of urban life. homes, damaging to toe health and oppressive to, the spirit. , MAIN OBSTACLE While there are signs that government and private industry will explore hew ways to co-operate in building and rehabilitating low-income housing, racial discrimination remains toe main stumbling block to decent housing for Negro citizens. Unless these problems ard ■resolutely attacked, our cities are doomed to yearly bouts of civil disturbances. I hope that 1967 will see a more realistic attitude toward these problems. The traditional method of- offering token prizes like swimming pools or crash programs after a riot has occurred is unrealistic. LOCAL LEADERS I hope that painful message has finally become apparent to local leaders and that all Of our cities take immediate steps to alleviate the horrors of slum life. lie wide interest stirred by toe Senate hearings on toe “crisis of the cities” leads me to hope that all elements of our society will cooperate in attacking the despair which entraps millions of ghetto ' dwellers. An encouraging sign is toe greater interest in urban problems by private industry, foundations and other non- governmental groups. ★ ★ ★ Most important on the list of urban problems is housing. Millions live in deteriorating Ghettos exist because Negroes are rarely allowed to move into other neighborhoods. Unfortunately, the Civil Rights Act of 1966 which would have limited discrimination in housing, was killed, but toe President still has toe power to issue an executive order which would accomplish similar result*. I hope thaj 1967 will see such an executive order, for if steps are not taken to end housing discrimination, our cities are doomed and will perpetuate Negro ghettos ringed by a “white noose” of suburbs. WINS CUSTODY — Valerie Swindle poses with her 4-year-old daughter, Sharon, after she was awarded custody of toe child to Paragould, Ark., last weekend. She has been involved to a transatlantic custody battle with her ex-husband, Gerald. Mrs. Swindle is a native of England. CHILDREN OUTGROWN SKIS, SLEDS, TOBOGGANS. SELL THEM WITH A LOW COST PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED AD. TO PLACE YOURS, CALL 332-8181 PARENTS! Is Your Child Taking BAND Next Term? A Trumpet, Cornet, Clarinet, Flute, trombone, -Violin or Share Drum Kit Rent for as long as you wish! ' Unlimited return privileges! If you buy, all rental payments will apply! Conn and other fine makes!: ONLY A MONTH (Minimum 3 Month*) GRINNELL'S, Pontiac Mall, 682-0422 Downtown Pontiac, 27 S. Saginaw, FE 3-7168 mma « am ■ -V Sale of Recliners & Rockers Saxe *30 ^-Form' Hepatitis Challenged Doctor By Science Service WASHINGTON - A relatively easy cure for the liver ailment, hepatitis, was reported here by a New York physician Who says toe -supposed ^‘twq forms” serum and jpfectious — are basically one. J. - of Admitting that toe incubation and route of infection of the supposed two forms of the disease may differ, pr. Robert Freywann believes they are basically the same infectious disease — most likely-of virus origin. “TJiis logic is based on toe deduction,” h e explained, “that after ill, serum hepatitis; was originally caused by a needle or syringe containing toe germ-carrying blood or plasma/of a patient with infections7 hepatitis. “Once fhe illness is devejoped, ho difference cln be fdund in the two.” During nearly 40 years of practice, he said, he has never seen a direct Contact case of hepatitis developing within a family,to any reasonable space of time unless there was > a common source of infection. This is further documented by the fact that no recorded cases exist among doctors, nurses or | other medical personnel ever developing the infection by close association with, hepatitis patients, except by becoming the victjni of an infected syringe or needle, transfusion contact or germ-carrying food, he said. 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RD. \ \ ' 1 Mile North of Miracle Mile * \ -\ . \ * Opan Doily 9:30-9 - Open Sunday 1 FE 3-7051 f NO MONEY DOWfi - UP to 36 MONTHS TO PAY , §m h i A—8 MONDAY, JANUARY 2, 1967 "ff,Only That Dumb Cluck Hadn't Fired' cu By TOM TIEDE L Vietnam — (NEA)- , was’ reduced to spitting distance in any direction. The Viefctm§~guerrilla hasi ROUTINE MOVE prwed time and againi in. this; , ^ hg mattered War that he is by no means ^ ^ ywasn>t look. stupid soldier. ing for trouble at the time. * It But once in awhile he acts that^ a routine ^ ^ way’. plant. , - ! Mark Baruzzi can tell you. | The ^ wag ,a(e The men were relaxed. He was there recently when the idiotic actions of one pathetically -ignorant Commu- ■_______ _____ Then it happened, although nist resided'in the bloody an- it shouldn’t have. The convoy nihilation of an enitre enemy rolled right into and .almost squad. » (right out of what proved, to be _ i/i urn mo ithe campsite of 13 u nf r iend- Baruzzi, a l^year-old MfiO ma- chine gunner from Cleveland, J was riding in a noisy mechan-j They were sleeping. So sound-ized convoy when the incident: ly were they sleeping that Ba-occurred fruzzi’s outfit didn’t see them .at . • ' ir ★ ★ [first. They most probably would have passed them by completely, except. column of armored personnel SENTINEL PANICS eK “ His unit, part of the 25th Infantry Division, was aboard a carriers and pushing throug brush so dense that visibility ‘Except one of the dumb clucks woke up.’’ That one, a weary sentinel, panicked iminediately as he witnessed the U. S. vehicles clattering through his line of ‘feeble defense. He thought his position was being overrun. He screamed Something. He jumped up; A shot rang out. •k k ★ The guard’s bullet was futile. An APC-is Wrapped in an inch of iron and the shell piinked harmlessly off one transport’s skin. Automatically, however, every rifle bolt in the American unit snapped. GIS REACT . There was a brief moment of instinctive reaction. The vehicles lurched to a halt and rifle baucrels appeared at every opening. ' -* | Baruzzi, sitting atop one of the tanks, saw no8 one immediately but with a sweeping gesture he swung his hub to j oped fire. ij And so did everyone else. * ★ * I In moments steel flooded the B'VC camp. Baruzzi’s gun alone I ] pumped several hundred 3-inch-.1 (long bullets in the first 60 Sec-,* onds of activity. J DISASTER FOR VC J I Whole switches were cut in .> the walls of the forest. Vines * FIRM your face, bust, hips, abdomen and thighs. * GAIN 7 to 12 pounds apd add 3 to 5 inches on your hustline. 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THRU FRI. 10 A,M. to 10 P.M; e SATURDAY 10 A.AA. to 6 P.M. » SUNDAY” CLOSED • Facilities for Men! • Facilities for Women! Commended and Approved by U.G.A. I N. Petty St, (Comer Pike andPeny) THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 3, 1667' By MARY CAMPBELL ' AP Newsfeatures Writer ler of tiie year by editors of Associated. Press member news-president^ Lyndon B. John-Lapers and radio and television son has been ciiosen newsmak-|stations * ★ ★ ■I The" 58-year-oid President ; scored triumphs and met' disap-j pointments in 1966. He could I point to congressional imple-: mentation of Great Society bills money for higher education \ and the drive to lower pollution; raising the minimum j wage; requirements of safety | standards for cars and fair lab-: eling of consumer gbods; a new Cabinet department, transpor-1 tation. Bnt the administration civil TRUMAN CAPOTE rights bill and repeal of Sec tion 14B of Taft-Hartley died; Republicans won heavily in fall elections; wage-price guidelines were broken; polls showed LBJ’s popularity down. In October Johnson made a 17-day swing through Asia”, primarily to attend a two-day summit conference in Manila with six other chiefs of state and including a fast, surprise visit to Cam Ranh Bay, South Vietnam. ★ .vw ★ • He had an operation on his gallbladder incision and a benign polyp removed from his throat Nov. 16. HEALTH He was the year’s most prominent father of the bride As his daughter Luci married/Patrick J. Nugent Jr. on Aug. ft ‘ -Charles De Gaulle, 75,, presi- dent of France, pursuing his dream of Europe as a “fertile whole,” was selected by the editors as newsmaker of the year ip foreign 'affairs. He suddenly ordered NATO out of French' territory in April, thus limiting U.S. influence in European affairs. In June he made a 12-day Visit to Russia, where he was the first foreigner to visit a Soviet space launching • site. He signed a 10-year cooperative agreement on space research there, and a French-Russian declaration to collaborate as a force around which Europe would refashion itself. kkk De Gaulle left his intentions toward Germany open for speculation. OTHERS Other newsmakers in The Associated Press poll are: Dr. Michael E. DeBakey, science; Ralph Nader, business; George Meany; labor; Rt. Rev. James A. Pike, religion; Sandy Koufax, sports;1 ^htman, entertainment; Truman Capote, literature; and Indira Gandhi, woman ,news- Episcopal bishop of California •ince 1958, resigned to teach effective Sept. 15. On Sept. 30, Pike, who had been cleared of heresy charges three times since 1961, was charged with heresy by a Florida bishop, who said Pike confuses many of the faithful with teachings Contrary to the church. -On- .Oct. 25 the Episcopal House of Bishops voted 103 to 36 to- drop heresy charges but censured Pikelfor the manner in which he Questions church doctrine. ★ k k Pike, who says he is loyal to the Christian faith and wants to clear away nonessentials which obscure it, charged he didn’t get a fair hearing. Thq House of Bishops later ahnotinced i t would form a council to “help rethink, restructure and renew the church for life in the world today.”. combining reporting and literary shaken again wh$ii 200,000 dem-X rZi Blood ” a onstrated against a famine-al-style, with In Cold!leviatin^ proposal to slaughter January - published best-seller saCTed cows. about the 1959 slaying of farmer1 f and Mrs. Herbert Clutter and Holcomb, Kan. The bock also 1 PITCHING PRICE NEWSMAKER OF THE YEAR CHARLES De GAULLE maker. _ . With movie cameras recording, Dr. Michael E. DeBakey implanted the first partial artificial-heart in a human, during an operation on Marcel DeRudder April 21in Methodist Hospital, Houston. The partial heart, a left ventricular bypass, a plastic pump and two artificial arteries, successfully took over part of the pumping function of DeRudder’s heart but he died of a ruptured lung five days later. * I;* ' ★ W ‘The. 57-year-old doctor,- who has done more than 10,000 cardiovascular operations, implanted another partial artificial heart in May; the patient did not live. ★ ★ ■' ★ Ralph Nader, 32, made business news as the “gadfly to the auto industry.” A book by attorney Nader, “Unsafe at Any Lyndon B. Johnson Spurred by Nader’s book, the Democrats or the Republi-a Senate subcommittee held cans-hearings an auto safety in GUIDELINE • '/ March. Figures were made i Ry fhe t-me the ajrIjne strike public of possibly defective ‘s in ,ate summer, the 3.2 cars called back by manufac- ^ cent wage jncrease guide-turers - one in five since lhie was dead. 1960. A federal auto-highway safety bill became law Sept. I 9. The president of GM apologized during cotnmittee hearings if there had been any harassment of Nader by GM; Nov. 16 Nader, brought a $26-million invasion of privacy suit against the company. ★ ★ ★ George Meany, 72, president of the 12.5 million-member AFL-CIO, inveighed against the Pres- Rt. Rev. Jame* A. Pike, 53, Sandy Koufax, Los Angeles Dodger southpaw, held out through spring training; signed for $125,000; led the National League in earned run average for the fifth straight season; became the first National League left-hartder to win 27 games; with 317 strikeouts became the first in either league to register more than 300 strikeouts in three different seasons; won his third Cy Young Award as the majors’ outstanding pitcher; retired at 30 after the season be-cause of arthritis in the elbow of his pitching'arm. “ Speed,” was critical of autoiident’s unofficial wage - price DR. MICHAEL E. DeBAKEY, RT. REV. JAMES A. PIKE safety (especially the safety of the General Motors Corvair) and said crash deaths could be reduced 75 per cent by better design. guidelines in speeches and argu-ments through every major wage negotiation, threatening almost to bolt the Democratic Party, saying labor didn’t need -Entertainment .newsmaker of the year appeared on TV Jan- 12 with a “Baff,” “Pow” and “Zam” sujierimjposed on his daring, comtaued-the-hext-night exploit!. Adam West, Batman, and Burt Ward, Robin the Wonder Boy, were an almost overnight success in the ratings. * ,. ■their two teen-age children near | followed the investigation of the murders, the arrest of two men, their conviction and hanging. PAYMENT Film rights brought $400,000 and paperback rights $500,000. Capote threw a party Nov. 28 at New York’s Plaza Hotel I for 54ft—a hew “International social register. Indira Gandhi, 49, daughter of the hate Prime Minister Jawa-harlal Nehru, became prime minister of India in February, first woman to serve as chief of government of a major nation. * ★ - * Riots in Calcutta in March, caused by the critical food shortage, may have been intended, partially to embarrass her new government. In talks with President Johnson in Washington in March, Mrs. Gandhi received promises of resumed U.S. aid for economic development and nearly a million tons of U. S. grain a month for famine relief. k k ★ She also visited France, England, Russia, United Arab Republic and Yugoslavia. In July she called for Britain and Russia to convene a Geneva Conference to end the Vietnam War. On flov, 7 her government was BATMAN SANDY KOUFAX As they battled- fiendish villains/— Penguin, Catwoman, Mr./F reeze,. Ri^dler—the young thrilled, the older thought it “in” or “camp” and stars lined tip to beg for cameo roles, of-/ten sticking their heads out a window as Batman climbed the side of a building. . ; ■ k k RALPH NADER/ Truman Capote, 41, “in-vented” the nonfiction novel, WOMAN of the year GEORGE MEANY, INDIRA GANDHI Politics Dominates Michigan Scene DETROIT AP) - Politics was tiie top news story of 1966 in Michigan and politicians were the top newsmakers, a poll of Associated Press editors and broadcasters showed today. k k k The -landslide reelection victory that catapulted Gov. George Romney into the national spotlight as a strong contender for. the 1968 Republican presidential nomination was Nader, the controversy was often on front pages as it wound through Congressional hearings and culminated in the Highway Safety Act of 1966 that will require auto makers to meet certain safety standards by next year. k k ■»*„ Charges and countercharges between Nadei;' and the auto industry kept the controversy in the public eye when Congscs- judged the top news story, ofjsional hearings were in recess. ★- k k the year, \k k k 1 Romney also was a near unanimous choice' as top newsmaker. ♦ ★ " ‘ ★ ■ Based oh a system of 10 points for first place through one point for 10th place, the Romney victory received 299 points, including 18 first place votes. SEPARATE JUDGING He got 323 votes with 29 for first place in separate judging for the man who made the most news throughout the year. It k k k Republican Robert P. Griffin’sl campaign and his ultimate defeat bf former Gov. G. Men-nen Williams in the rape for a U.S. Senate seat was picked as the second most important story of the year. It received 10 first place votes and a total of 277 points. » “Marsh gas." That’s what a’ed in Benton Harbor where one as the top 10 included: a train noted Air Force scientist called; man was fatally shot. It was the derailment in November that Michigan’s Unidentified Flying only fatality of the summer al- Objects. But many of the hun- though at least half a dozen-Michigan town of Homer with dreds of people who saw mysterious lights in the sky last spring couldn’t buy it. ★ k k ■ The sightings'started in Washtenaw County and the fact that numerous reports were made by law officers seemed to give evidence to the story. As UFOs appeared from one end of the State to the other, the headlines started appearing, too. the Air Force sent Dr. J. Allefi Hynek, who has been studying UFOs for 18 years, who spent several days talking to the people who made sightings. J||| k k k Then, at a news conference in.Detroit, he-shot them Howfi.'election over the Republican, Just marsh gas, .he said, gen-'Griffin. erated by an •unusually warm DETROIT PROBE Griffin, the former congressman appointed by Romney to fill the unexpired term of the late Democratic Sen. Pat Mc-jNamara, defeated .Williams again by placing second as the top newsmaker in the state. it it it Griffin got 254 points in the newsmaker balloting to 222 for Williams. ... - auto safety Judged the third top story by Associated Press member news- One of the highlights of the continuing storY-came when it] was disclosed ,a private inves-jA Iur tigator hired by giant General _ Motors Nader’s 'past. GM APOLOGY GM President James Roche apologized to Nader while testifying before a Senate committee in Washington. The AP members also picked Nader as the fourth top newsmaker of the year. k k k The shooting of a Detroit Rabbi, Morris Adler, during a Sabbath service in February was tlje fourth major story of the year. Adler was gunned down before hundreds of horrified worshipers. Both he and hi& assailant, who . turned the gun on himself, died in the following days. * k ■ -k " k One of the major stories of the year, which broke after many ballots had been marked j |.ansing FRACAS end returned, was the, sinking „ ,, . , , „... Nov. 29 of the ore carrier Daniel wR«aminf>nados»f *"2/5 f Mnrppji \ . (Negro teen-agers clashed in ' -A afl Lansing late the’night of Aug. 8 LAKE DISASTER Twenty-eight men lost their lives when the ship plunged to the bottom of icy Lake Huron in a storm that concealed her people were wounded "in the Various disturbances across the state. ★ ★ k. The story was ranked sixth.. Teacher strikes swept ^ the state in early spring, closing classrooms to thousands of children. “Bargaining w en t on through “the summer and there Were some walkouts in the fall. AP editors and broadcasters selected the continuing story as threatened the tiny Southern tiie seventh most important dur-It was the top story in the 'nf* t*le ^*ar' * * for the Democratic senatorial nomination with Detroit Mayor Jerome Cavanagh was the eighth biggest story. Williams explosions and leakage of pois-, onous gas; a report by researchers at Wayne State University that they had achieved some success with a cancer yaccine; preparations by the United Auto Workers for hard-nosed contract bargaining, a. top national labor-economic stofy which the AP continued to cover throughout 1966 although the start of bargaining was^and still is many months away; the triumphs ami troubles of -the infant Ypsilanti Greek Theater; the discovery of ossible rich . new copper [afthe e in the upper., tragic death of a little girl who* fell into, an Upper Peninsula mine shaft; approval of Picture Rocks as a National Lakeshore; winter. k * k k Whether, they believed tiie people who. saw the objects or Dr. Hynek, didn’t matter to fhe state’s newsmen. They ranked the story No. 5, , ■t k k It had been a quiet? year hi Michigan racially and the summer, long and hot as it was, had frayed few tempers. Until August. Then it happened. touching off two (lays of spqr- The continuing probe by a one man grand jury in Detroit hit front pages frequently throughout the year, as some' police men resigned and others were, indicted. Editors and broadcasters judged it the ninth biggest story of the year. ★. ' k- _ k The auto industry, caught in the midst of the swirling safety controversy, saw the writing on the wall and hurried to nfiake many new safety features, available on its *67 models before tiie soundly trounced the youthfulj^nd the opening -of the Upper mayor-and by his showing was established the favorite to win Peninsula deer season. kkk The slain Rabbi Adler was fifth b e h i n d Ralph Nader in b a 11 o t i n g for the top 10 newsmakers. And tiny Judy Lynn Funfcch, the Flint tot who showed great courage ■ as she faced heart surgery, was sixth. ★ ',§? ★ An AP story about tiie plucky 5-year-old just before she underwent surgery at University Hospital in Ann Arbor late last winter brought thousands of letters and gifts from newspaper readers the nation over, including several of each from singer Frank Sinatra. WWW TOP NEWS SCENE-Gov. George Romney, who won a landslide reelection victory, and Sen. Robert-Griffin, who defeated G. Mermen Williams for the U.$. Senate seat, rank No. # ' AP Wirtphoto 1 and No. 2 in the top 10 Michigan news stories, for 1966 as jiidged by Associated Press, editors and broadcasters: * • u j u.:„i Jddy bravely clung to her [government could order this fm a nJormal?ife but ln August, as she prepared for her done. back on in Lansing, than fire-fate for 34 hours. There was onejbomb throwing broke out bn survivor of the worst tragedy Detroit’s East Side. 7 ’. on the. Great Lakes in eight f * * yeafs-. „ * . Ln tite following days there was additional tr«|ible in Ypsi-was the continuing controversy Most editors and broadcasters lanti and Muskegon. Police were over auto safety. ■ |who retorned- ballots after that reluctant1 to call any of the in-^ * ... k *■* Idate marked*the Morrell sink- dderits riots, but late iff the Sparked partly by a book ing fifth or sixth bqt there were month the National Guard had “Unsafe at Any -Speed,", byitoo .few ballots- to give it a'lo he called, out*when- tite.sum-Harvard-educated lawyer Ralph|ranking. , Iraer’s worst disturbance erupt- adic street scuffling in which In late September and early some gasoline , bombs were|October, the companies an-thrown. No sooner was the lid nounced new prices and, as bad been expected, much of the cost SEVENTH PLAGE first year at school, she suffered a setback. A few weeks later, she died. of tire new safety items had been passed on to the public. Within weeks, however, tiie industry bowed to mounting public criticism and its own competi UAW President Walter Reutfc-er was judged seventh top newsmaker and Henry‘ Ford II was named eighth: Gathojic Archbishop John Dearden of Detroit was conducted among tiie men and women who work to sbpply a majority of the state’s newspapers and broadcast stations with not only the top stories of the year but all tiie stories .that occur outside your tome town or state. ", kkk these are the members of the AP staff itself and here is tow they ranked stories and newsmakers: , * k.k Stories: 1. Romney victory. 2. Auto'safety. 3. Racial strife. 4. Griffin defeats Williams. 5. Teacher strikes 6. UFOs sighted over,. Michigan. 7; Morrell sinking: 8. Wayne State researchers report on cancer vaccine. 9. Rabbi Adler is shot. 10 Auto prices increased, then rolled .bdek. « ' . k . k k V; ‘ ■ I ■ Newsmakers: i. Romney. 2. Gt^in. 3. Nader. 4. Henry Ford —Mainen Williams; 5. Reuiher live needs and rolled the prices 13s-ninth and the. General Mo back. . « president, James Rneto, ft* 'A'./* : iifc. ’ The AP ihembers judged itj ‘ . k * k . k. . the 10th top story of 1966 Separate balloting on the top Otoer .'stories receiving votes 110 news stories and personalities Top W in Sta DETROIT (P — Here are the top 10 news stories and newsmakers of 1966 in Michigan as judged by Associated Press editors and broadcasters: ’ TOP 10 NEWS STORIES 1. Romney wins landslide re-election victory. 2. Sen. Robert Griffin defeats former Gov. G. Mennefi Wti-liarris for U.S. Senate seat. . * k k • “ 3. Auto safety controversy. - 4. Rabbi Morris Adler i6 gunned down in his Southfield (Eds pote: The sinking fit-the ore freighter Daniel J. Morrell qpcUrred Nov’.29, after most ballots had been marked and returned. It was judged fifth or sixth in most of the few ballots returned after, that date)! ’ TOP 19 NEWSMAKERS 1. George Romney. 2. Republican Sen. Robert P. Griffin; «' * * * a| 3. 'G. Mennen Wpams. 4. Auto safety critic Ralph 6; Judy Lypn. 7. Robert Evans! synagog. - , Ndder. 5. UFOs are sighted over 5 Rabbi Morris Adler. Michigan. 3 J 1 « * ★ * , „ . * 6. Judy Lynn Funsch, 5-year- . ®vRacla , ,strde Rve old Flint girl who died after Michigan cities. heart surgery. *■ i 7. Teadher strikes. '.0 ”■ * ' * ‘ ■:- 8. G. Mennen Williams] 7. Auto workers presideat trounces Detroit MayOr Jerome] Walter Reuther 8. A. Gordon Wright, the Negro who broke Grosse Potato’s color barrier. 9. Father CoUghHn, radio priest of the 1930s who re- Cavanagh ta ^Democratic pri- tired-this year. 10. Rabbi Adler, rolled back mary race for U.S. Senate torn*' ination..^ 9 Detroit grand jury probes. 10. Auto prices increased, then 8, Usury Ford H. — * * . k'.\W 9. Archbishop John Dearden of Detroit j :\ ■ % ' - 7' / 10t James Roche, president of General Motors. 1 A 11 A-' 'Bug'Teacher EAST LANSING (AP)-Ih the class of the future, possibly the first thing the student will have to do is plug in the teacher. ] Michigan State University has such a “teacher” now—a typewriter console that gives tests with such questions as what mode of travel did Columbus use in his journey to America. If the student decides to test the’ teacher by typing out “in three airplanes,” the teacher replies: /‘Remember, this took place a long time ago. Be realistic!” * . If the student really is stumped, he may type “hint,” and the machine offers a hint. TELEPHONE LINE The typewriter console is connected by telephone line to a computer at Science Research Associates in Chicago. MSU is using it for demonstration purposes in its Learning Systems Institute. But computer-assisted instruct tion at. MSU soon will go beyond the demonstration stage, said Dr. Norman Bell, associate director of the institute. Rather than replacing human teachers, he said, computers will keep them busier by enabling them to seek new- and creative means of teaching, MSU’s current electronic “teacher” tests its students with word games and then rates their performance. * * ★ If only a few answers are wrong, the computer replies: “A respectable showing." If a student needs many hints and commits several errors, the teacher remarks: “Your performance was Taif.-Perhaps you need practice.’" Camel on Ice Takes Lumps at Ohio Zoo ■ COLUMBUS, Ohio- (AP) J Ever see a camel on ice? Now it’s Clyde the crippled cancel after his encounter with the slick stuff. Clyde Jr. 9-month old dromedary at the Columbus Zoo, came bouncing out of his stall Thursday, slipped on ice and broke a bone in his right hind leg. An 18-inch steel pin was inserted in the leg during a three-hour operation at Ohio State University’s veterinary clinic Friday. Assisting Dr. Richard Rudy, assistant director of the clipic, and Dr. A. A. Gabel was Dr. A. K. Bhorgana, a veterinarian from India. ★ ★ * Dr. Bhargana, author of a book on camels, .is" considered an expert on them. Because of Clyde’s youth, his chances of complete recovery are considered excellent. Grave Digger Strike Not Off the Ground NEW YORK (UPI)-A strike by grave diggers at 32 New York metropolitan area cemeteries was delayed until tomorrow, because the mehrefused to walk out on their regular holidays.. They were scheduled to walk out at midnight Saturday when their contract with the cemeteries expired but refused to begin the strike during the two-iay New Year’s holiday. Negotiations were scheduled k> continue today. “YOUR HEALTH “NERVES” *‘ItV_j«Mt w»y n«rv«». I’ve ulway* be on thin way.” So many patient* offer thiit eomplaint to their doctors, and receive .sedation and tranquilizer*. Many rf*ort, to alcohol just to “relax.** Take tithe right now to rearh up and feel the musrles of your nerk. and shouldeff. (Ihanee* arc they are tight and painful to the touch. Remember, nerve* go to every Organ, tnuacle and gland ill the body. I’retanrr on these nerves ran cause amalfunction or short cittruit 10' these part*. Chiropractic treathieijtif can, in many *gse#f remove this |Hv»* sure, 'relax the muscle*,^ and place y6u hock on the road to good health* Find out now if yon are ^ Chiropractic ease. • Dr. H. H. Alexander Chiropractic Phytician 1028 Joslyn Aye. . FE 2-0111 JANUARY CLEARANCE Huron Not Just ONE Brand... ALL the Top Famous Brands to Choose From! Prices Reduced on 3,617 Automatic Washers, Dryers, Refrigerators, Freezers, Etc. Our Low Sale Prices Includes Our Free Quality Services: Free Immediate Delivery, Free Installation, Free Expert Service and Full Warranty General Electric 14-Ib. Filter Flo 2-Speed Auto. 188 Delivered Installed Warranted No Money Down—Pay 9.95 Monthly Big 14-Ib. Family sice capacity—choice of 2 agitator, speeds for delicate or regular fabrics—Filter Flo lint control, load and water level control—automatic soap dispensing. HOOVER DELUXE SPIN DRYER STAINLESS TLB 95 Delivered Serviced Warranted PAY 6.75 MONTHLY Designed to wash, rinse and spin-dry a complete load in as little as 8 minutes — rinse one load while starting to wash another — stainless steel tub — heavy duty double pump — has casters for easy moving — come see! First Time Ever EUREKA Upright Vacuum 3 Days Only! NOW ONLY *44 95 NO TRADE-IN NEEDED! NO DOWN PAYMENT $5 Monthly Look what you get! New Super Suction — Vinyl Dust Bag Cover, •with Disposable Bags— Vinyl Furniture Bumper, and much, much more. EUREKA ‘lightweight” 85 • Standard Model $15I. Custom Model $169. NO DOWN PAYMENT $5 Monthly Pelivered and Serviced 2-Stage Blower for every cleaning need. 5-wsy cleaning action. Does any kind of carpet (even bare floors!) —light* weight and easy to use. (weight 7 pounds). GENERAL ELECTRIC 10 cu.ft.Family Size REFRIGERATQR FREEZER Pay only $2.25 Weekly 158 Delivered-Serviced- Wnrrnnted Economy model built With sll convenience of big units .but to fit the pocket book. generous freezer capacity lighted inierior doors storage-Poreelain vegetable crispers-and so much more-come see! . fN0 MONEY DOWN FREE GAS INSTALLATION The Finest HAMILTON GASDtfYER NO MORE GUESSWORK 183 Pay Only $8.30 Monthly • All-Fabrics Drying Heat! • 5 Cycles Fully Flexible! • Satin-smooth Zinc Drying Drum • Handy “Look-in" Gish Door • Automatic Drying-Shuts Off When Dried Now—for the first time this year Consumers Power Co. will install “Free of Charge" the complete gas litte from your meter to your dryer. ■Order now before it is too late. Limited Time See it'Today! COLOR TELEVISION Sylvania 2ll^ 1967 Model... $379.00 Sylvania 21” Swivel Model, Walnut |. Zenith 21” Deluxe $409 Walnut ...... Motorola 23” Maple . . .$464 ..$519 RCA Victor 25” Walnut % .. $543 STEREOS Sonora 4 speed Portable ..... ...$24 RCA Victor 4 speed stereo ., ....$54 Walnut console, ; FM-AM radio.., ,..$129 itmiNiEiivroiis Gibson 2-door Frost Free 12 foot . .... .$217 Philco 2-door 14-ft. Croat free........ $223 GE 2 door Bi g Freezer......... .$204 Frigidaire-Frost Free—15-ft.........$267 RANGES 20” gas - all porcelain ..... $96 36” Hardwick, deluxe, gas ............. $133 30” G.E. Deluxe Electric...........$186 24” Sunray High oven gas.......... .$153 30” Frigidaire ElectVic Deluxe . . . . . . .$187 FREEZERS Philco 10-foot 350 lbs......... $148 RCA Whirlpool 10” iked................$163 Admiral 154bot cheat 525-lbs.............$176 Frigidaire 20-foot chest 700 lbs.'....:------$266 / wfW • ~ Philco'16-foot upright . 560-lbs............$188 WASHERS Philco Wringer 12-lb. with pump i. $97 Speed Queen Wringer 14-Ib. , ... .... . JlOb Easy Spin d.ry spinner, 1 only•»...... $131 Frigidaire auto. 2 cycle new.....$178 RCA Whirlpool, 2 speed, 14 lbs.... $177 G.E. 2 speed, 3cvcles, 1 only filter . . . . .$187 DRYERS RCAWhirlpool — electric, 14-Jb.. • • $127 Frigidaire gas - - . all temps........ . $148 Hamilton gas — 3 cycles, 1-oolyV........ $151 G. E. Electric—auto cycje all temp ..... ... $149 | Save - Save - Free f Jel !ivery- Service Heavy* Duly AH Attachments Automatic HUMIDIFIER 2-SPEED HEAVYDUTY 27 $54®* *4980 Delivered! Serviced Guaranteed! NO MONEY DOWN! EASY TERMS! New deep-suction rug and floor' nozzle. Lid seals tightly, unclips quickly. Protective vinyl “bumper furniture guards. NO MONEY DOWN $5.00 Monthly Humidify your home for more comfort with less heal. Eliminate troubles caused by harsh, dry baked out winter air. A. humidifier will moisten and filter the air. Delivered! Serviced! Guaranteed! NO MONEY DOWN! EASY TERMS! America’s No. 1 sweeper. It beats—as it sweeps—aa it cleans. Has throw bag Come in today! Free Wiring Big 14 Pound Electric Dryer Automatic Washer 2-Speed—3-Cycle Deluxe Wringer Washer Buy 131 *168 *118 Delivered-Serviced Warranted no Money down $6.37 MONTHLY Delivered - Installed Guaranteed NO MONEY DOWN $7.21 MONTHLY Delivered! Guaranteed! Serviced! NO MONEY DOWN S5.80MONTHLY All porcelain drum ^- 2 Here iris - rated No. 1 cycle — 4 temps GIANT antj ^ mogt flexible capactty - easy to clean hut: automatic on the market Liter - and much more - fea- come see. . . * tures. wit k. illi adjustable wringer has, the famous Maytag exclusive Gyratator washing action. Buy now and savjs! Save - Save - January Clearance 30” Electric Has Automatic Oven NO-FRQST 2-Door Freezer and Refrigerator Upright Freezer Holds 300 Lbs. 157 *198 Delivered! Serviced! Warranted! NO MONEY DOWN- • $6.85 MONTHLY Starts meal choking at preselected time. Ha, electric. Clock and- Tinier — Minute Minder—StofageDrawer — Porcelain Enamel Finish. Delivered! Serviced! Werrented! NO MONEY DOWN $7.10 MONTHLY NO FROST EVER in the Freezer—and NO FROST EVER in the Refrigerator.; 12.2cu. ft. capacity. White or Coppertone. 158 rered-S' -Warrai honeY Delivered -Serviced inted NO MONEY DOWN PAY AS YOU USE jjg Gives you the added conveni- . « ence of 4 extra fast freezing, surfaces, poor shelves with ■big storage capacity efficiently insulation to lower your operating cost. Buy now ... save still more! , GOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP of PONTIAC. 51W. HURON ST.-FE 4-1555 4 ti A—12 ^ THE PONTJAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 2,' 1967 last big week to ‘jump for Joy1 when you seo the savings In THOMAS FURNITURE'S SAVE UP TO 50% OFF REGULAR PRICES AT BOTH STORES! Some merchandise slightly soiled, sdme with slight imperfections-many are one-of-pieces, but everything is Thomas Furniture quaiity'-first come, first served! a- at PONTIAC store only SOFAS DINING ROOMS Reg. $369.95 Traditional 90" tufted curved- ■ back sofa. Royal blue velvet with lined kick- QQ00 . pleat skirt and plush foam rubber cushions..... I 99 Rag. $359.95 Craft 96" ultra-modem sofa in blue on blue print. Extra thick poly-dacron $1 OQuO cushions ................. .......I Rag. $359.95 Italian Provincial 86" sofd ^ ' with exposed fruitwood base. Lovely antique $1 jQOO" gold cover, coil spring construction......... I IV Rag. $439.95 Large 98" traditional cres* ■ _ . cent bade sofa'In durable beige matelasse. 1Q00 Our finest................................ A I® Rag. $309.95 Colonial 86" sofa In durable, easy-to-clean green vinyl. Perfect for the $OOQOO family room.,.............................. ■ Rag. $369.95 Traditional 90" tufted curved- _ _ _ _ back sofa. Royal blue velvet with lined kick- 1 $ 1 OQOO pleat skirt and plush foam rubber cushions. I Rag. $209.95 French Provincial 56" love - seat in beige damask with antique fruitwood $OQOO exposed frame............................... Rag. $249.95 Early American' 72" high _ . wing-back ,sofa in heavy blue and white,$ 1QQOO .tapestry, arm covers included I 9 w Rag. $319.95 Formal Colonial 54" love seat in hand-quilted antique gold floral pat- $1 QQOO Jem................ ......................... 1051 Rag. $99.95 Simmons 84" studio couch with A _ storage space underneath. One only, blue/ SCQOO green print..........................: *>..... 051 Rag. $1,029 Thomasville talkin Provincial ^ 9-pc. grouping; china, buffet, table and six * $CQQ00 chairs. Floor sample /...................... *•¥ Reg. $579.9$JMahogany 18th Century ^ ^ 9-pc. grouping; china, buffet, table and six $A4Q00 chairs. Floor sample .... .......... ^Raw Reg. $29.95 Maple Captain's Chairs. Reg. $^09.95 French Provincial fruitwood -buffet by. famous Thomasville............ Rag. $149.95 French Provincial oval extension table by famous Thomasville......... Rag. $169.95 Seven piece' dinette sets by Howell. Choice of several styles. *129“ *89“ *99®® REG. $119.95 DINING ROOM GROUPS Solid Maple. Choice of three table $RQ00 styles with set of four chairs, now..... WV MATCHING BUFFET WITH HUTCH TOP Reg. $119.95............NOW $89.00 SAVE 25% ATB0TH STORES! BEDROOMS Reg. $269.00 Contemporary bedroom; double dresser, mirror, chest and bed. Traft- $1 QQOO sitlonal finish . CHAIRS Reg. $89.95 Modem lounge chair in red vinyl. Luxurious foam rubber reversible cushion. Floor sample sggoo Reg. $109.95 Modem high-back lounge chair in blue/green contemporary print. One only............... $68°° Reg. $259.95’ Large black traditional man's chair and ottoman. Extra comfortable. *119®° Reg. $149.95 Skirted, ladies' chair in a lovely gold stripe. Very comfortable Sggoo Reg.* $129.95 Italian Provincial loun'te chairs. Handsomely tailored in *a rich' turquoise fabric $4000 Reg. $69.95 Italian Provincial decorator choirs in antique gold velvet. Each $3000 Reg. $139.95 Colonial lounge chair in dur- able blue/green tapestry. Reversible foam rubber seat, arm covers included *68“ Reg. $209.95 French Provincial lounge chair and ottoman in turquoise ‘ ,* *98“ Reg. $109.95 Large modem swivel rockers in heavy woven tweeds. One olive *68“ Reg. $199,95 Colonial lounge chair in un-, usual green, , gold and Orange quilted, floral pattern. Save Vi . . .. $ggoo Reg. $69.95 Early “American swivel rocker olive tweed *. x *48®° 1 CARPET SAMPLES 1 Manyuses throughout your home! • • 1. 18"x27" ...79c 27"x36" .$1.89 I BOTH STORES Reg. $99.95 Modern walnut chest by Kroeh- $CQ00 ler—an outstanding value ................... 99 Reg. $599.95 Lane modern walnut and cane group; door triple dresser, twin mirrors, door $42goo chest and bed . at DRAYTON store only kn DINING ROOMS SOFAS Reg. $159.95 Walnut collarette — bar- server combination............................ Reg. $1,029.00 Thomasville Italian Provincial. grouping; china, buffet, table and six chairs, 9 pieces complete..................... Reg. $299.95 Drexsl 'Declaration' walnut china......................................... Reg. $629.95 Solid pine buffet, hutch, round extension table plus. 2 captain's chairs and 2 mate's chairs.. .dark antique finish,........... Reg. $169.95 Howell 7 piece dinettes In your choice of styles.............................. Reg. $739.00 Keller Italian Provincial 9-Pc. group; China, buffet, extension table with plastic top, six drain............................. $ggod *699°° $19900 $46900 *99“ $53900 Reg. $229.95 Italian Provincial 84" sofa In deep blue on blue pattern. Exposed fruitwood frame, foqm rubber cushions..... j... -....... Reg. $99.95 Simmons studio couch in durable red vinyl with. matching arm bolsters. Sleeps two.................................... Reg. $149.95 Traditional 48" love seat In blue floral qitilt. Skirted. Two left, each... Reg. $239.95 Traditional 82" Sofa in Adriatic green. Hand-tufted back. Plush,foam ‘ rubber cushions, arm covers included......... Reg. $349.00 Craft 92" contemporary sofa in fern green nylon with rich exposed walnut bdse................................... Reg. $259.95 Transitional 88" Sofa. Knife edge cushions, blue-on-blue pattern, pol-docron cushions............................... $f3300 *68“ *188°° s279°° *199®° Open stock close euts at bath eforesl TEEN BEDROOM GROUPINGS Save up to 50% Choose white7 modem, decorated colonial, rugged, oak or solid maple. Most pieces have plastic tops! BOTH STORES BEDROOMS Reg. $229.85 Modem bedroom; door triple .dresser, mirror, full size panel bed and night $ j ^|0OO stand. Rog. $149.95 Italian Provincial large man's $QQ00 door chest, fruitwood finish................. .VS 99 llsg. $319.95 Traditional 58" love seat in an exquisite white on white tapestry cover. Reg. $399.00 Simmons Hlde-A-Bed, blue and white floral cover, full size-mattress, showroom sample.................................... Reg. $319.95- Selig 84" transitional sofa. Handsome contemporary print -in light coffee tone......................«..................... Reg. $489.95 American Provincial 82" maple sofa covered in a beautiful antique gold velvet................V.................... Reg. $249.95 Traditional 84" Tuxedo arm. sofa. Ocean green pattern on white. Loose back pillows and bolsters................I... Reg. $279.95 Traditional 87" sofa In blue/ green Mediterranean pattern. Reversible .seat and back cushions. Slightly faded....... *299“ *198“ *389°° $|ggoo $198°° Reg. $563.00 Drexel 'Declaration' walnut bedroom; dresser, mirror, chest, bed and yQRQDO night stand. Floor sample ...................... We Really Sharpened Our Pencils to Gome Up With These Lew Prices! Reg. $29.95 to $79.95 Odd beds -twin or full size — maple, walnut or cherry.... Reg. $499.95 Thomas-ville Italian Prov. dresser, mirror, chest and Fruitwood....... $1000 *329°° MISCELLANEOUS Reg. $218.90 Acrilan ** Acrylic carpet remnant. Extra heavy embossed gold tweed. 12'x„16'6"... Reg. $174.00 Acrilan1 Acrylic, carpet remnant. Textured tone . on tone. 15'x 10'6"............. Reg. $182.50 Beautiful tip-sheared remnant of Acrilan® Acrylic, in Sun Gold. 12'xI2'3"....... Reg. to $49.95 Qdd mattresses and box springs. Each.......... '-Reg. $34.95 to $49.95 Maple or walnut occasional tables........ $13900 *99«® $129°° $2000 Reg. $109.95 Kroehler walnut study unit........ $2goo *59°® Reg. $199.95 Thomasville French Provincial __ poudre table and bench. $ 1QQ00 Fruitwood finish A... Reg. $39.95 Bassett modem night stands with $1000 plastic tops. MISCELLANEOUS Reg. $69.50 Antique white, console with frutt-wopd top...... Reg'. $29.95 Maple $1Q00 Captain's chairs I 9* $2000 Reg. $34.95 tu $49.95 Famous brand tobies.. odds 'n ends,... Reg. $*159.95 Walnut edrio cabinet with glass $1190G top 'W Reg. $199.95 Hooker $1 QQ00 walnut roll-top desk... IUW Reg. $154.95 100% Wool oval braided rugs.' 1 Q>s~i'4' brown.......L.. 1Q>J Reg. to $49.95 Odd mattresses and box springs .....each..:. $0000 *29®® CHAIRS Reg. $169.95 La-Z-Boy Colonial rediners. Comfort selector, ofive. or .blue tweed. Just two left... each 1 *129“ Reg. $132.45 Traditionpl lounge chair and_ ottoman. Bright blue/green floral, print......." *95»® Reg. $189.95 Colonial lounge chair with matching ottoman. Blue/green plaid $98“ Reg. $69.95 French Provincial pull-up choir in gold/green print *35®® Reg, $154.70 Contemporary lounge chair and ottoman by famous Selig, Contemporary green print. Priced together for quick sale _ $ggoo Reg. $109.95 Traditional tub chair, button 'tufted'back, reversible seat, antique-gold $4090 Reg. $149,95 Colonial occasional .chairs by Maxwell Royal Comfortable petite size in gold-green pattern *75®® Reg. $149.95 Italian Provincial lounge chair. Lovely solid copper fabric, exposed fruitwood base ; *4goo Reg. $179.95 High wing-back colonial chair with open leg, roll arm styling, Beauti-ful mellow brown tapestry $0000 Reg. $139.00 Colonial lounge chairs in antique bronze tapestry, wing-back design. One pair left. each; $0000 Reg. $229.00 Hi-style lounge chair and ottoman In rust fabric, BOtb pieces *149®® Reg. *$169.95 Traditional decorator party chpirs. Smokey blue on white quilt. Just 3 -left’... each $85«« Reg. $69.96 Early American Swivel Rocker in heavy textured olive tweed. Arm covers and reversible T-cushion $4000 your choice.— assorted *1 LAMP SHADES 1 50 BOTH STORES _J / PONTIAC 361 S. SAGINAW• FE 3-7901 DRAYTON 4945 DIXIE HWY• OR 4-0321, * 2fiS 3EN T Ifis ■ 111 f */- -13'- ■ W ’ - V h . - - t,«*h - \ \ i Dr. Paul C. Fein berg ^ Optometrist Pontiac Mall Optical Cantar Although there has been much written lately abopt the impending decline in our economy, I can’t help but feel that.we are merely going through a much needed pause,in our recent high rate of mrfwtb. I believe it's ,ji healthy leveling off period that wiilonly help to solidify our past gains. Many upcoming events will affect our growth pattern, but when looking at die overall picture, I see a bright ftiture ahead. Dr. Paul C. Feinberg Paul Felice Partner Folieo Qualify Market r i Felice Quality . Market began in 1945 with a/tiuali store at 220 S/ Telegraph and has grown to its present site at 1H6 ¥. Huron. Our business expansion demon-‘ strates our faith in the future of the Pontiac area and we are looking forward to another year •f continued expansion. We Wish to take this opportunity to thank «11 our patrOqs for making this growth possible. And to wish you a Happy New -Year. Paul Felice Norman Pattison Owtier CoiHiolly’s Jewelers We are most optimistic about' 1967 and the future of Pontiac. The positive action we have taken in buying and remodeling the building on the North West corner of Saginaw and Huron is proof of our optimism. My attitude is also reflected in the expansion of Connolly's 'Jewelers, moving into this new and larger location with the most modern and up to date facilities to best serve the Pontiac Area. Watch The Pontiac Presf for our announcement advertisement which will complete our story in pictorial detail. Norman Pattison V____________________—._____ Leslie H, Hudson Pretiden}, Nicholie-Hudson Associates, Inc. What does Pontiac’s future hold for her cituens? Nothing, If you are pessi-/ mistic. / ' . // Everything, If you ate optimistic with the intestinal fortitude. to back up your ideas with proper financing., If you believe in the experts statistical predictions on popu- . lation explosion. Then, any man with proper investments in real estatq, expecially acreage and commercial porperties, should realise an' excellent return ion his investment. For* those determines optimists. Let’s explore your ideas, then act. Lealie H. Hudion < Ralph I. Mercovitz Associate Gresham Cleaners and Shirt Laundif" From tin* very beginning, Pontiac has been a thriving ami community. - We at Gresham began our growth in 1911 ami with great pride have continued to go forward with the progress of Pontiac. V ith the expansion* of (iM(i Trurk and Pontiac Motor and the inclusions of Oakland l nivemty * and Oakland Community Col- , lege we. have gained a wealth of many fine new residents and culture in our area. Things look great for ’67 and many years to • come. * ® !Ralph I. Mercovitz v J Rose Goodman Manager „ .. 4 Edward’s With heartfelt thanks for ’66, / I welcome the new year knowing^ ' jt will bring us equal prosperity* I. hold faith*in opr industrial and. labor leaders to work.Aut amiable agreements and thus, avoid any economical problems. --I am proud of Pontiac, aijd point to it aa in example of haw happy people, regardless of twee, creed or religion can live together and enjoy life’s many blmsinga. " / ' . Rose Goodman C; H. Alford, Manager ' Montgomery Ward & Company- We at Ward’s are looking for-ward to a good year. Our. faith in this area for 190? and-the v future is best expressed hv our decision to expand our present facilities starling with the Auto Service Outer llial tf as completed in November. The maif\ store expansion is now in progress and is scheduled for completion In early fall. This will provide our customers with broader assortments; better service, wide main aisles ajl "with a casual atmosphere. C.H. Alford O. D. Spencer Owner-Manager Spencer Floor Covering Unless unforseen circumstances arise, the coming year , of 19^7 should pro'se basically sound economy.wise. The trend -over the past few years has been definitely on the upgrade and should level off somewhat in the future. The future of the business wprld and the world in general real* with the younger generation. I would ljke to see every young man and woman take advantage of the many, opportunities offered' them in 1967.' ■ . * Howard T. Keating President Howard T. Keating COt All indications point to • good year generally, an excellent year in our business. But, considering the slow down late in 1966 “T believe it will take 3 to 6 months to get back on the track and then a .whale of a finish. The pent up demand for housing has put great (tress 'on multiple dwellings — this year to the, tune of 40% of the market. That’s the way we’ll go in 1967. Howard T. Keating i ------/ O; D. Spencer Joseph Mihalak •_ Owner The Floor Shop The over-all economy should be outstanding in 1967. We at the Floor Shop are. planning for the future in accordance with this belief, The year 1966 has opened wide the door of dy* namic economic growth for .the Pontiac are*. We ere uniquely situated directly across .Elisabeth Lake Road, from the ex-’ pending Pontiac Mall, and with our unusually large stock .of quality wall snd floor coverings, substantial gains are assured in 1967. ■' Joseph Mihalak THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 2, 1967 m Ifi Fredrick J. Pool* President • Pool* Lumber and Hardware l The Building Material Industry >haa experienced a drastic decline in housing starts during 1966. It now appears that this decline hat about run its course aa steps are being taken to ease the “tight money.” In my view, there should be a moderate increase in the rate of housing starts the first six months 91 1967 compared to December’s rate. There Could be a more rapid acceleration of the rate during the second half oftheyear. Frederick J. Poole Ronald J. Wilde Treasurer Pontiac Co-op Federal Credit Union The positions of leadership^ enjoyed by our, |wo major, jq-. dustries, Pontiac Motor and' CMC Truck & Coach, plus the small business and retail expansion in our area, show Oakland County will again, he a pace-setter for the nation’s growth in 1967. Although 1966 has seen a so-called tight money market, our credit union has had a 25% increase in loans. Our Board’s policy in. 1967, along with our new higher 4Vi% dividend, will enable us to continue making loans available and serving many .people who are not able to borrow elsewhere due to' tight money restrictions. Ronald J. Wilde Kenneth Ri Pox Associate Fox Dry Cleaners 119 West Huron Kenneth R. Fox, partner with brother William A. Fox,, are certain that with the added industrial expansion taking place in Pontiac in particular and the published statistics regarding • the population growth of Oakland County, 1967, despite many pessimistic predictions, will be one of the most prosperous years ih the history of our community. Kenjieth R. Fox .Elbert Whitaker, Jr. President Drayton Plains, Michigan In viewing our steady increase of sales, we, at Karen’s are very optimistic in the continuation of this growth/ also are confident that the overall economy, now being enjoyed in our area, will remain, despite talk of inflation arid recessions. We believe our economy is experiencing one of its most stable positions ever. Granted there has been fiscal arid monetary actions taken by the government, howevet*, they have been executed by mert of understanding and knowledge to strengthen the cause of economic stability. Elbert Whitaker, Jr. Dan Mattingly President Dan Mattingly Agency In 1967 we look forward to the following: It wjll be necessary lo cope witlr Labor problems. There may be a tax increase to finance Vietnam and the Great Society. Credit will be even more1 expensive than in the past. On the good side, sales will be spurred, by the influx of young people. In short, it will be a year bf expensive buying and borrowing a'nd both buyer and borrower shall prevail and 1967 will be a proa-perous year. L . Dan Mattingly TiAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 2, 196* CLEARANCE SAIE SJfjsj m te*: fg H Men’s Suits ” I Ladies’ Fur Trimmed Goatsj* Students* Suits fihotti: 1 m. Regular to $135 *61 •• *113 Men’s Topcoats Regular to $125 $54 to $99 :*» 1 |s| 49 | *15” ,o *19” I HI | /j£ Ladies’ Better Cresses | Boys’ Outerwear Regular to $30 |i Regular to $30 $899 to $1799 $ll99 to $2299 i s All Styles Are in Broken Sizes Ladies’ Dress Shoes i Strict* — High- egulqr to $1 $|]90 mM I Naturalizor and Lite Stride—High—Mid—Cuban Heels Regular to $19 § Ladies’ Casual Shoes Naturalizor and Ufa Stride Reg. to $15 —Stacks and Flat Heels - i $790 and$990 Men’s Alt Weather Coats 1 Ladies’Sportwear | Boys’Robes I Ladies’Dress Shoes American Giri—High and Mid Heel* Regular to $13 ItoflulartoMO I . Regular to $15 I Regular to $7 , $31 to $54 I $5" to $8" 1 $329 to $4" 1 $590 :SS Men’s Outerwear Regular to $55 *1990 to $4590 Ladies’ Car Coats Regular to $55 *15 u. *39 « I Men’s Van Heusen Shirts Century Van-O-Plus,* Discontinued Styles 3 for no50 Ladies’ Knit Suits Regular to $45 $19,o$29 Boys’ Pajamas Flannel and Knit Stylet Regular to $4 Ladies’ Casuals ass ftvl American Giri and Miss America Regular to $11 y $259 ,0 $2" J $490 Boys’ Sport Shirts j Ladies’ Nylon Casuals m | By Ball Band Regular to $4 | Regular to $8.99 t§ Kw sw $239 to $339 ass P m m | Men’s Sport Shirts^ | 1 Ca“"c ■«“' i ®a»i e»w> n.. Boys’ Slacks Regular to $11 $090 Ladies’ Snow Boots m Leather or Suede~ Fleece Lined Regular to $12 Ladies’ Gowns Regular $5 | Brushed Nylon—Regular $6 $399 2 for $775 , J $3" 1 $399to$599 I . . ^$890 | Men's Wool Sport Shirts Ladies’Blouses S Boys’Sweaters Children’s Shoes i ^ ;? Regular to $6 ' Regular to $12.98 $199 to $3" Regular $10.00 $799 $5" to $7 99 Boy*'and Girt*1 Butter Brawns j| Oxfords—Straps— Slipons—Regular to $10.99 1 ’ $490 .....................................................................................................• ■ *■..............................................................................................&" % <■. . • g-g M Men’s Robes . Regular to $20.00 $5" to $14" Men’s Slacks Regular to $18.95 $6" to $15" Girls’ Coats-Coat Sets | Pre-Teen Dresses-Jumpers Regular to $45 $14" to $36" Regular to $25 Men’s Porto Pods Oxfords and Slipons—(Discontinued Styles) Regular $27 $159° IS? Girls’ Skirt v-Jumpers Regular to $15 $499 to $9°° Men’s Sweaters Regular to $20 *6" to *14" Men’s Better Sweaters Regular to $35 to Girls’ Dresses Regular to $18 Sft:S¥5af5l:¥^¥^%5%V:::yjSS888^88l Pre-Teen Outerwear Regular to $35 ' $13" .. Pre-Teen Sportswear and *16’° Men’s Sheas m 1 ' Portago and Padsrins Oxfords and Slipons v 3$|f $6Tind $990 1 Swoators—Skirts—Slacks. Regular to $ 13 » Men’s Hush Puppies $3" te $799 Discontinuod Stylos Brushed Casuals* $*99 $ Children’s Snow Suits Regular to $30 $10" to $19" Men’s Snow Boots Zl|* Front— Flooco Linod Regular $ 11 A ,\i Tom Bateman President Bateman Realty Co. 1 . If - Jj “To, predict the future ha* al-way* been risky. But.., We have experienced consecutive gain* for 6 years and see no rCason for any change in 1967. Existing home price* will stay firm during the first, six months with perhaps a slight deoline late in > - the year. New home prices should increase slightly—with 4 land sales and commercial opportunities flourishing along with the' relaxing of the light-money market. We anticipate another banner year. In fact, we shall show our confidence in, flie market by opening two new offices.” - ’ Tom Bateman l _________/ E. Curtis Matthews President Matthews-Hargreaves Chevrolet “1967 promises to be one of our best years. Consolidating past gains must be pur objective. .Complete customer satisfaction will be increasingly emphasized. Our vastly extended warranty carries , only the customer re. sponsibility of proper maintenance. Our job thru expanding facilities and adding night service is to make true customer satisfactions a reality.” E, Curtis Matthew* J. A. Cunningham Mamager * Capitol Savings It Loan PONTIAC “Cautious optimism seems to be. the consensus in financial circles, according to J. A. Cunrttng-ham, Assistant Vice-President and Manager of the local Capitol Savings & Loan Association office. Locally, income-per-household continues to increase, and customers’ savings habits remain virtually unchanged. Pointing to the fact that savings in his office has increased? Cunningham’s opinion is that the tight mortgage money could ease in 1967,” J. A. Cunningham A. E. Little, ' "y President j Manpower of Pontiac, Inc. “We look forward to. a bigger year in 1967 than in ’66, which was our record year .here in the Pontiac area. We believe the business economy ’will remain sound, and with-business people ■ becoming increasingly aware of the advantages, cost savings and wide fgope of services available in our temporary help services in experienced help, both male and female, the outlook for this’ New Year is most promising.” . A. E. Little Charles M. Tucker, Jr. President Tucker Realty Company “Economic growth and progress will continue, but in a more stable and constant manner. “1 share the optimism that we in Pontiac will make great strides in 1967 to cooperatively solve the many problems facing any urban city; We have recently seen representatives of a cross section of our’city meeting And seriously planning ways to make the city of Pontiac one of the best in which to live.” Charles M. Tucker, Jr. Gerald D. Ross President WORLD WIDE Home Furnishing Inc. “Although month;to month sale* increases are harder to achieve than a year ago, World Wide Home Furnishings bas enjoyed a prosperous 1966 and is anticipating a considerable gain in 1967. Most furniture manufac- . tiirers report a healthy backlog of orders runnings well into the first three months of 1967 and from all ” indications, they are expecting a banner year. 1 look for continued sales gains and an exciting year ahead.” Gerald D. Ross § Russell A.'Gustavson President Pontiac Travel Service ’ Inc. “International travel fsts- 1967 • ■ should exceed atl previous records. New low group fares L ,, announced by lata Carriers, glamourous new ocean liners, v , will undoubtedly result in in- -• ’ Creased travel to Europe and the -•1 \ A. G. Kampsen Leon Blanchura President’’ General Contractor, Inc. \ “Located as we are in one of the most naturally gifted areas in Michigan for home^ /location, 'adjacent to the rebuilding. City of Pontiac and on the fringe of ■ ' dynamic Metropolitan Detroit coupled , with the .* industrial expansion and. population in-„ crease of the total area, we a* builders of hoines, schools, hospitals, apartmehts, factories. \ etc., are looking forward to \ nothing but ever-incroasing plan- \' \ (ling lid building ahead.” Leon Rlachura • ' J THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, JANUARY 2, 1867 B—3 Arthur J. Lake President Lake Jewelers Birmingham “In my estimation, the prospects for a prosperous 1967 evolves almost completely around the automobile industry. It seems that practically everyone in the Midwest is dependent upon the auto industry either directly or indirectly. Relating •hi* to Lake Jewelers, believe tins to Lake Jewelerftr111 be at a premium ami V,L.°£llev? to be a' wise investment” Arthur J* Lake Ray O'Neil President O’Neil Really Co. “We experienced a record year in sales of existing homes and the construction and sales of new homes in 1966; even though handicapped by the “tight money market. Now!!! The market is good, home financing is rapidly improving and the challenge for the aggressive, knowledgeable Realtors must be met Our very successful trade-in and guarantee sales programs, our experience and our sincere desire to serve, prepares us for the challenge and T booming 1967. We are alert!!! We are enthusiastic. We are ready for the new year.” falter Chapoton ■Manager \Big Bear Construction Co; “We at B.ig gear Construction look forward to 1967 a* another, very busy mgr. Big Byar is proud that tinci g|39 we have been a leader, in (lie ever-expanding growth of our great city, continuing to offer Shelter service, the best workmanship and materials guaranteed in 'writing on all construction needs. Rig Bear is ready and .you can count on us to seive you well iir’1967.” E. Eugene Bussell District Commercial Manager Boll Telephono “The current forecast anticipates , a growthjn 1967 comparable to 1966. Major service^ improvements scheduled in 1967 include new million dollar switching centers in Orion • Township and Walled Lake, automatic calling number identification * on long distance calls for Pop- ■ tiae federal customers, • and a $573,000 addition to long distance facilities at the mam*of-fice in Pontiac. Over 11.5 million U budgeted to upgrade ' telephone facilities for Pontiac Und adjacent coipmuaitiee.”\ ' ' ft I- ..' r; , -,’V ^ x E. Eugene Russell ; * -J THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONJDAY, JANUARY" 2, 1967 TT AP Wlrtphoto BOEING DESIGN — The Federal Aviation Agency has accepted the Boeing _ design for the SST. supersonic giant transport, ending a 30-month competitipn between Boeing and Lockheed Aircraft Corp. General Electric won the,-bid for the engines. This multiple exposure photo demonstrates how the wings fold from an open position to almost a tail fin configuration. . * - . . ,.i.i ..I .i ,.1 > , ; . ;;r : ,»; —/■ ■■ • Vi, '66 Space Ventures CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP) To planners stating Ameri ca’s space exploration, 1966 will be remembered as the year the moon suddenly became real. The conclusion of this nation’s striking photographs of the mom’s surface sent back by Surveydr 1 and Lunar Orbiters 1 and 2 cleared the way for-the National Aeronautics and Space Administrate nto move confidently into the Apollo man-to-the-moon program in 1967. Space officials hope to launch two maned earth or- bital flights during Jb* next 12 months, opening mi Apollo 1 in late February oc March piloted by Air Force Lt. Cols. Virgil L Grissom and Edward H. White n and Navy Lt. Cmdr. Roger B. Chaffee. Later in 1967, a second Apollo earth orbit flight ^scheduled ip Were killed after their jet train- which the astronauts will ren-satellite only to find they dezvoUs with a spider-leggedj cou*“ not dock because a pro-lunar vehicle like the one U.S. | tectlve cover was still attached, spacemen are to ride to the sur-j '■ *, * * face of the moon in 1968 or 1969. Space walk problems encoun-* * jtered by Ceraan and the Gemini The first monstruous Saturn pilot, Air Force Maj. Richard S moon rocket,, a 360-foot-tall Gordon, alarmed project giant, is to be launched in 1967 j Pinners. T^y admittedly un-with five times more booster derostimated how difficult it is muscle than the saturn 1 that ror work .outside a space- will be used ih the early manned craft. Apollo flights. EMPHASIS The emphasis on moon explo- GEMINI12 But the Gemini 12 pilot, Air Force Maj. Edwin E. Aldrin Jr., ration will continue iir^un-l^ bY new hand-holds and manned space flights during lolh€r restraints to give him lev- 1967. Three more camera-carrying Lunar Orbiters and three Surveyor moon-landing spacecraft are on the Cape Kennedy launch schedule to. scout potential astronaut landing sites and harvest more scientific information about the moon’s surface. > While the Soviet Union’s manned space efforts remained curiously silent in 1966, the United Stated Launched the last five flights in its two-man Gemini program. ★ ★ ★ There were frustrations, with the most tragic occurring Feb. 28 when the pilots named to fly Gemini 9-civilian pilot Elliot M. See Jr. and Air Force Maj. Charles. A. Bassett II — PRESERVE PRECIOUS PAPERS by having them LAMINATED Protect Important Papers Such As: Deeds - Contracts — Photographs Marriage License - Military Records Family Documents — Letters This simple process .protects them.' from stains, tears, alteration and aging. It costs s6 little and so much ... CALL US AT 334-1523 THE AUDIO-VISUAL CENTER 55 Oakland Ave. - Pontiac .I-' as*- H-V STILL TIME TO WIN‘1,000 PLAY THE BIG DEAL GAME! (ENDS SAT., JAN. 7.) PRICES EFFECTIVE TUES., JAN. 3 THRU JAN. 8 GORDON'S ROLL PORK SAUSAGE 2 79 U.S. GOVERNMENT GRADED CHOICE FROZEN CHOPPED CUBED ROUND SIRLOIN L FAMILY SUaM 10 Km U.S. CHOICE TENDER AY 2-°Z- |$| WT. PATTIES :■ RIB ROAST ^,Y.?:.r...u.79* STEAK STEAK U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE-TENDER AY T-BONE STEAK ...u 99* U.S. CHOICE 1-INCH RIB STEAK ..™I... u*9« m ing plane crashed in St. Louis, MO yr—- -OUT OF CONTROL Troubles continued when Gemini 8, carrying astronauts Neil A. Armstrong and Air Force Maj. David R. Scott, spun out of control shortly after achieving America’s first linkup with an AgeOa target satellite March 16 and"* forced an emergency landing in the Pa-cific. , Bad luck persisted on Gemini 9. An Atlas rocket boosting an Agena target satellite broke apart and plummeted into the ocean May 17. Then two weeks later, Gemini 9 pilots Air Force Lt. Col. Thomas P. Stafford and Navy! Lt. Cmdr. Eugene A. Cernan rendezvoused with a substitute ASSORTED FLAVORS Hl-C DRINKS CANS | VALUABLE COUPON Limit On* Coupon. TASTY ORCHARD PRIDE APPLESAUCE SUN GOLD SLICED WHITE BREAD ASSORTED COLORS LESSER QUANTITIES 2 LOAVES 414 •••••#••••••! WITH THIS COUPONS 55 PURCHASE OR MORE BORDEN'S SHERBET OR COUNTRY CLUB ■ICE CREAM FIRST y2 GAL 65* SECOND y2 galn Valid thru Sun., Jan. 8, 1967 at Kroger Oof. & East. Mich.. erage previous space -walkers did not have; proved that man can wbrk and walk-in space. The* Gemini program' accomplished all the things that we had to do aS a prelude to Apollo,” said Dr. Robert R. Gilruth, director of NASA’s Manned .Spacecraft Center. Other significant U.S. space feats in 1966 included the successful launching of several scientific spacecraft — the Pioneer .7 suborbiter, weather satellites, the P a g e o s 1 earth-mapping spacecraft, an Orbiting'Geophysical Observatory and the first Advanced Technology Satellite: ASSORTED COLORS - PUFFS FACIAL JR OU TISSUE 4-OD VALUABLE COUPON ___________________ Limit On* Coupon. WITH THIS COUPON S SS PURCHASE OR MORE COFFEE SALE KROGER VAC PAC SPOTLIGHT FRENCH BRAND tomato loop. CAMPBELL’S TOMATO SOUP LB. BAG 59165 INSTANT SAVINGS UP TO 8« 9 9R 1Bcm MhuT Valid thfu Sun., Jan. 8, 1967 at Kr*f*r D*t. t Eett. Mich. Algeria banned the Communist party from its assembly in November, 1962. > SLICED OR HALVES HUNT’S PEACHES________ KROGER ALL WHITE FRESH GRADS -A- LARGE EGGS KROGER COTTAGE CHEESE.......... 7-LB 13-OZ CAN , « U.S. NO.X MICH. RUSSET DOZ. ■ BAKING ■ POTATOES 7-LB. CTN. LB BAG SMOOTH SPREADING HOMESTiAD FLORIDA MARSH SEEDLESS GRAPE-FRUIT ■AADO BDIilE lm I .RE, 8 69 W TOP VALUE #9 STAMPS ■ JP TOP VALUE ■9 STAMPS Z WITH THIS COUPON ON J J WITH THIS COUPON ON ” I . WITH THIS COUPON ON , 5 „ WITH THIS COUPON ON II WITH THIS COUPON ON I ANY 4 LOAVES Si ANY 2 PKGS. KROGER ia ANY TWO BTL5. a ■ , TWO PKGS. ! I * 1-PKG. Z ■ MEL-O-SOFT BREAD • . VELVET DELIGHT ■ ■ KROGER ■ a PESCHKE’S ai FROZEN ■ ■ OR KROGER BUNS «■ PUDDING ■ ■ SYRUP ■ b CIRCUS WIENERS ■ ■ FAMILY STEAKS ■ "• Valid Thru Sun., Jon. 8, 1967 J Volid Thru Sun., Jon. 8, 7967 pJ| J Valid Thru Sun., Jan. W, 1967 pi 2 Valid Thru Sun., fan. 8, 1967. mmM ■ Valid Thru Sun.fJm. 8, 1967 mJ ■ o"f Kroger Dtt. S East. Mich. H I at Krogar Dtt.i East. Mich. ElB I of Kroger Dot. by Orbiter.*II four .miles above the moon, N — President Jenson gave the the moon shows the giant Sater Copernicus > was received in horizontal strips and pasted at Bethesda. ★ - While we are not so militant as this group, we think that women have held back, have not always stated their position on issues and have not taken full advantage of the opportunities they have. So, at the start of a new year, we have asked five prominent women in the community to state their hopes for 1967. To speak for their sex we contacted the first lady of the state; an educator; a hospital administrator; an officer of the county board, of auditors; and the president of the Pontiac Federation of Women’s Clubs. May their expressecT’hopes echo those of readers. MRS. ronnic rrwi rnorv oy kojt wimtr LESLIE SHANKS Individuals Get Attention By PEARLINA BUTLER Assistant Director Elementary Education / Pontiac School System is of one’s which we .to look back awards, mis-by all. of 1966 consisted of as war and un-of the world’s peoples, would like to see for the coming year peace and harmony among people throughout America and around the world. Peace on earth and good will toward men should be honored and practiced by all individuals. FULL DEVELOPMENT Education for all children and thg development of individuals to their full potential is my sincere aim as an educator. e idea of developing a great society introduced by the United States government has given1 educators an unlimited insight into the various facets of education. ★ ★ ★ ■ Teachers have been able to secure materials and introduce innovations to meet the needs of individual children. Emphasis on individual differences, coupled With the im-p 1 e m e n t a t i o n of a variety of methods and materials should equip pupils to make tHeir contribution to society. ★ ★ ★ - The dreams, desires and hopes of educators are beginning to be fulfilled. The greatest» reward for/hll concerned is the time when all Johnnys learn to live productive lives. Mental Health Is Concern of Mary Shanks By MARY SHANKS Reimbursement Director, Oakland Cpttnty Board -of Auditors This is the age of change, both in the technical field and in individual concept-and approach to standards that have beon considered guidelines for j generation, One of the social fields in which I have worked and' been interested in for some 10 years is mental health. Not many years ago mental illness was considered a lifetime disability, but today mental illness is slowly being accepted on the same basis as physical illness, both by the lay person and the professional. Hopefully, this acceptance and understanding will be accelerated during the year 1967. ★ ★ ★ Children and problems that develop with certain dmdren should be the concern of us all., These same children will be the citizens of tomorrow and we, first as parents and secondly as interested citizens, .have the re/ sponsibility to lay a firm foundation so well adjusted children with an o r d e r 1 y progression from infancy to adulthood will result. ’ / ' We in Oakland County are most fortunate to live in an area that is cognizant of this need and has built a well defined and functioning Protective Service-Juvenile Court program to assist in this need. ★ ★ ★ I consider myself privileged by birth to be a member of one of the original families of Oakland County where meeting one’s obligations to the best of one’s ability was the “only way.” *, My g r e a t e s t hope for 1967 would be that there be an increased awareness and acceptance of responsibility for one’s self and one’s family instead-of a declining interest as has been the current trend. ★ ~k' ★ There is no doubt in my mind that the greatest satisfaction in life can be achieved by having a tolerant, non-bigoted awareness of our fellowman and doing what we can to make this world a better place in which to live. She Stresses until, ed. By LOUISE SAKS President, Pontiac Federation oI Women’s Clubs -i Americans in a world of bewildering and often threatening change have been searching for stability and the meaning of life. Now we Are all looking forward to an early and complete, fulfillment of that stability with freedqm, service and dedication. In this new year of 1967, let us begin with the song of freedom which should be loud, clear and joyous in all languages. In order to keep this song echoing in the language of our forefathers and in English, the tongue of our own or adopted land, we must work together in harmony and good fellowship. ★ > ® ★ As Americans, we represent a most significant voice for the preservation and advancement of our civic and social life; and as an America^, I can think of no more important idea to stress than that all races, colors and creeds work and live together in warm and harmonious relationship. The purpose of community service, another aspect of stability, is to discharge collectively those obligations which can best be met through organized groups. In Pontiac, we have made great progress through the interest and dedication of many citizens who comprise these /groups called citizens’ committees. HELPING GROUPS Our Pontiac Press readers have been made aware that we have such citizens’. committees including “Human Relations,’’. “0dm mu n i t jr Evaluation,” “Pontiac Finance,” “Housing,”-“Pontiac Foundation,” “Equal Education Opportunity,” “City .. Library” and “Youth.” * ' ■ j Ralph Waldo Emerson has defined progress as the "activity of today for the assurance of to- I morrow." Tomorrow we can be full of hope, if we, the men and women of many -faiths, continue increasing measure to de- velop the highest potentialities of our young people by providing them with the best education and inspiration. HAVE CONCERN As cooperation is 4he key to community service, unity is the key to dedication. Being concerned citizens of our country and our community, let us learn what we want — practice what we stand for, and convince other citizens of our cause and needs. ★ ★ ★ - Hopefully, through our united efforts we can fulfill our needs. One of many civil responsibilities is-to respond to the call of the underprivileged, handicapped and the indigent. The Pontiac Federation of Women’s Clubs, comprised of ethnic, business, professional, political, sorority and study groups, is geared to “Bring into communication the various women’s organizations of Pontiac as a means of promoting work of cojiunon civic interest.” Men'l service clubs also respond to help the many unfortunates to become useful and proud citizens. What beautiful dedication! * * * My personal hope and prayer in this new year is that the leaders and coworkers of our country and community be blessed with good health and well-being; that they may have the strength and inspiration to continue their efforts with greater devotion for world peace and community progress; that together we will continue our harmonious relations in this great land of freedom, the United States of America. M .MRS. DAVID SAKS MONDAY, JANUARY 2, 1967 THE PON l’I AC & . ' ' V • - THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY Mother-Daughter Tea for Members •: A mother-daughter tea tor the Oakland Comity Alumnae of Delta Zeta Sorority was celebrated recently. Mothers were presented with pins and pendants were given to daughters and granddaughters. Group I 1 i1 Group I will meet Wednesday at 10 a.m. in the home of Mrs. Frederick Lutze of Beverly Hills. A book report by Mrs. Forbes Kascall will be presented. Group II Group U will start the new Rodney Evans, son of Mrs. Hubert E. Evans of Dover Road and the late Mr. Evans recently received his Ph.D. from Michigan State University in Marketing and Transportation Adminis-trationyHe, accompanied by his wife and two sons, will reside in Ohio where he will be based as 1st Lt. in the U.S.A.F. on Jan. 9. Her Hobby Is Now a Job ODESSA, Tex. (UPI)-Mrs. W. D. (Beatrice) Maguire, 77, never advertises her business—her “billboards” are the ties men wear in West Texas cities. Mrs. Maguire makes String ties ahd four-in-hands, wool and silk and synthetics, clip-ons and scarves. ★ ★ ★ And her advertising goes by word of mouth. A. Midland businessman walked up to her , on the street once and asked, A-“Why don’t you come to sell me your ties? Don’t you like , me?” His friends had bought ties from h6r and now he wanted some. • ★ ★ Mrs. Maguire makes them to order or sells from her stock. The chipper gray-haired dady learned the art in Dallas in 1935. ★ ★ * When her husband died in 1951, she began to sen the-ties to support herself and a disabled son. During the oKrean War, she worked under government contract to make uniform ties, around 17 dozen a day at 36 cents the dozen. Now her pace is around 10 dozen a day by hand. “I turned a hobby into a meal ticket,” she said. year with, a philanthropic project. At an 8 p.m. meeting Thursday, members will make felt board stories and number cards for the Primary Deaf Class of Mrs. Rebecca Alehin. Mrs. Alehin teaches at the Cherokee Hills Elementary School,- and has the first classroom of its type in the Waterford School district. She is a member of Delta Zeta. ★ ★ , .★ Mrs. Thomas Sander of Southfield will be hostess for the' evening Mrs>,; Dan Nagelvoort of Royal Oak may be contacted for further information. Look for the patriotic color schemes to sing out. The red-white-blue combination flags its way throughtout spring and summer collections. Don't Iron It On Ironing spots and stains frequently will set them in the material. • To Stay Around Pants stay on the fashion scene for spring. Some marks of the pants story: slightly bellbottom, Straight slacks, jeans, knickers, bloomers. • ^ h ir W There will be pants for travel, lounging, street, even formal. They come in safari, nautical, military moods. Also to figure in the $porty«vein: miniskirts and kiltie pleated skirts. JKeumode SMART GIRL NYLONS 1 Plain or Micro with nude heel and demi-toe. [DressSheers , CHILDREN'S SHOP LOCATED AT 2161 SOUTH TELEGRAPH MIRACLE tMHE SHOPPING CENTER IS GOING OUT OF BUSINESS MIRACLE MILE STORE ONLY and the entire and complete stock of this fine, reliable firm must and will be closed out to tho bare walls regardless of cost or loss of profits in the shortest time possible in a GREAT *70,000 GOING OUT OF BUSINESS SALE involving every department and article in our store at the most drastic and substantial price reductions of our entire business career. ; STORE. CLOSED ■i Jjg Our store will be closed all day Monday, January 2nd, Tuesday, January 3rd and Wednesday, January 4th to mark down all of our prices, engage and train extra help and to prepare for this: . GREAT GOING-OUT-OF-lUSINESS SALE . . . COME EARLY . .. FIRST COME .. . FIRST SERVED . .. WHILE OUR STOCKS LAST HELP WANTED 8 INFANTS' WEAR SALESLADIES 8 CHILDREN'S WEAR SALESLADIES 3 CASHIERS AND WRAPPERS Experience preferred but not necessary. Apply at store Tuesday morning, January 3id promptly at 10 o'clock. WAIT AND WATCH for Wednesday's PONTIAC PRESS for prices and full details of this great sale. Don't buy a dollar's worth of children's or infants’, wear until this great sale begins Thursday morning, January 5th, promptly at 10 o'clock. . SALE BEGINS THURS. MORNING JAN. 5, PROMPTLY AT 10 AM. Fur Trimmed- Coats Regular to *135 . .. 1 *89„*99 Regular to *170 V,. *119 .*139 Regular to *325 . . *149. *199 Winter Coats Regular to *165 • *39’,. *99 FUR CLEARANCE Coats-Jackets-Stoles-Minks-Broadtails Regular to *2500 *299lb *1799 fUmt's Andrew Geller DeLiso Debs Caressa Mr. Easton Were to $34 1990 Were, to $22 14" Were to $ 18 1290 Were to $16 12" Town & Country Dress were.o$i6 9" Capezio were»$17 790 Town & Country Casuals 6"-7" California Cobblers were to $12 690-790 ini I Ladies' Snow Boots ' > Regular to $32 $890. » Casual and Dressy -Dresses Regular to *20 *10 .*14 Regular to *45 *17. *29 Regular to *110 . .■ *34. *59 Fur Trimmed .. •' Regular Walking Suits t0$225 *89. *149 * CONTINENTAL Knit Suits-Dresse. ROOM ‘ * - If D s-Costumes 1/3 » V-2 -X . OFF Ladies' . ‘ ■ , Regular Car Coats *> *22 - *39 Skirts and Slacks Regular to $20 *8. *13” | ; . ! . • Sweaters and Tops * J /. . Regular to *18 *6-»*12 HURON «t TELEGRAPH B—10 < THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 2, 1967- DON'T MISS OUR , annual JANUARY Save 35% to ON reupholstering OB' NEW* CUSTOM FURNITURE All Workmanship Guaranteed Serving Oakland County Over 35 Yean WILLIAM WRIGHT r i. u i ,,, , , . EASY BUDGET^ r urniture Makers and LIpriolsterers TFRMS OR 270 Orchard Lake'* FE 4-0558 90 D^s cash Wed Friday in Holy Name Church, Birmingham, were Susan Mary Foley, daughter of the* Paul Foleys of Birmingham and New York, to Henry Thomas McElvery Jr., son of the senior McElverys ‘ of Old Greenwich, Conn. MRS. HENRY T. McELVERY JR. FASHION WIGS and WIGLETTES or FALLS Designed to Enhance l'our Hair Style RANDALL’S SHOPPE 88 Wnvnc St. FE 2-1424 Vows Are Exchanged at Friday Nuptial Moss CHILDREN OUTGROWN SKIS, SLEDS, TOBOGGANS. SELL THEM WITH A LOW COST PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED AD. TO PLACE YOURS, CALL 332-8181. Reception and dinner in the Bloomfield Open Hunt followed a nuptial Mass for Susan Mary Foley and Henry Thomas McElvery Jr., Friday in Holy Name Church, Birmingham.', Parents of the couple are the Paul Foleys of Birmingham and New York, and the senior McElverys of Old Greenwich, Conn. / STORE HOURS: 1:00 A.M* to 8:00 P.M. NOW THERE’S ^LOCATIONS SHIRT SERVICE EggsHI SS - ' 1 SERVICE .Dry Cleaning Special. TOES., WED., and TOURS., JAN. 2nd-3rd-4th These Specials Good at Miracle/Mile Store Only SLACKS, TROUSERS SWEATERS, PLAIN SKIRTS for 98* 0PENIN6 SPECIAL Good at New Waterford Location Only 3397 Elizabeth Lake Road HAVE ONE GARMENT CLEANED AT REGULAR PRICE, LIKE GARMENT CLEANED FOR H # . 3 DAYS ONLY-TUES., WED., and THORS., JANUARY 2nd-3rd-4th * Ney^Loca (ion Dial ,332-0884 inn DIAL 332-1822 -T---- 3397 ELIZARETH LAKE ROAD in‘Lit Lake Shopping Center BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE Telegraph at Square Lk. Rd. With her lace-trimmed gown of delustered candlelight satin, the bride wore an illusion veil and a white pearl Juliet cap her mother wore at her wedding. She carried white roses. Honor attendants were Mrs. Vito Gatanese of Milwaukee, and the bride’s sister Jane. Bridesmaids included Mrs. Kenneth Welch, Birmingham; Jane O’Sullivan,- Stamford, Conn., Barbara Smith, Davenport, Iowa, and Mrs. Daniel Nichols of Chicago. ★ k \k With best man, Thoirfas Ternus of Omaha were the ushers Peter Foley with Charles Shur, Darien, Conn., Liam Murphy and Jon Denman, Old Greenwich, and Fred Kelly of Holyoke, Mass. After a honeymoon, the couple will establish residence in Wallingford, Conn. They are graduates af Marquette University. Who Needs This Friendship? SEALS OUT DIRT & WEAR KEEPS CAKPclINu CLEANER A MORE BEAUTIFUL FAR LONGER! HAGOPIAN* SONS CLEANERS 31 GLENWOOD SHOPPING PLAZA. PONTIAC "Two names you can trust’ "LIVING SOUND"] HEARING AIDS By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DfeAR ABBY: My husband and I have put up with this nervy couple and their seveh-year-old son just long enotigh. They a 1 w a y s—* come, at meal-™ time. Being a w e I 1-man-nered person, I cannot eat in front of people, so I ask them | to join us. And when! they do, they eat everything ABBY in sight. We bought curtains to clpse off the front windows, but they seem to know when we are home and keep ringing the bell and pounding on our door Uhtil we let them in. We have started to eat in our basement with the lights off, but my husband-refuses to eat down there in the dark anymore. How can we discourage these pests? END OF ROPE DEAR END: You could come right out and tell them that when you want guests you mil invite them. And if y o u are lucky they will never speak to you again. ★ ★ k DEAR ABBY: Not too long ago our son got in trouble with the law. It was/bis first offense, but quite a bit of publicity resulted from it, which was unfortunate for both him and us. Ever since this happened, our friends have been very standoffish, and have made up wild excuses so they won’t have to be seen with us. How can we regain their friendship^ PUZZLED PARENTS ★ ★ ★ DEAR PUZZLED: Don’t try too hard to regain the “friendship” of those who wduld drop you for this reason. They weren’t “real” friends in the first place. How they react when the going gets rough is the best test of friendship. * * ★ PEAR ABBY: I am stationed in Vietnam and like all the guys here I like to get mail, but this one girl from back home has been making it embarrassing for me. She decorates the outside of her envelopes with cute sayings, such as, “DELIVER DA LETTER DA SOONER THE BETTER,” and “SEALED WITH A KISS” then she puts a big lipstick print ort it. She even draws hearts and cupids with"our initials all over the front of the envelope and to top it off she douses it with some kind of strong perfutne. Boy, do I ever take a ribbing at mail call. How can I get her to cut out all that jazz without making her think I don’t want to hear from her? SHY GUY DEAR SHY: Write her. that you would appreciate it if she’d keep her sentiments INSIDE the envelope—and tell her why. Some guys like their letters gift-wrapped! but if you aren’t one of them, let her know it. ★ ★ ★ DEAR ABBY: My baby chose to arrive on the night that a friend' of mine was giving a baby shower in my honor. Because of this I wasn’t at the shower and I don’t even know who attended it. My problem is that the hostess never turned over any of the gifts to me. ★ ★ '■ ★ My little girl is a year old now so it isn’t likely that many of the gifts would be useful at this time. I am so embarrassed when I see friends who may have attended the shower and brought a gift. They must think I’m terrible for not havmg thanked them. k k ★ I’ve given the hostess several broad hints about giving me the gifts, biit she never has.[ How can I clear up this complicated mess without embarrassing anybody? CONCERNED ★ ★ ★ DEAR CONCERNED: Unless You’ve been in poor health for the last year I see no reason why this “mess” (which is not at ,all “complicated”) has not been Cleared up. * k ■ Simply ask the hostess for the shower gifts and acknowledge each one. If she refuses, ask a friend who was there to write to each one, with your thanks, explanations and apologies for your tardiness. ★ k - DEAR ABBY: You might think this is a stupid question, but we have beeif discussing it for a long time and wpuld like an answer. When a girl bends her leg at the knee while being kissed, wh§t meaning is she trying to put across? k k * You see if in the movies and mi TV quite often. We have heard many different versions, and would like your opinions I WONDERING1 DEAR WONDERING: I don’t! know that the girl being kissed j is trying to /jiut across” any particular idea, but from an observer’s point of view, I would say that’s the time she should keep both her feet on the ground. CONFIDENTIAL TO “RAISING THEM ALONE” IN ANN ARBOR r Fatherhood is imposed upon a man without inquiring whether or not he is equal to the task. That is why there are so many fathers who have children, but so few children who have fathers. •k k . -k - How has the world been treating you? Unload your problems oh Dear Abby, in care of The Pontiac Press. ★ k k For a personal, unpublished reply, inclose a self-addressed, stamped envelope. ★ tk k For Abhy’s booklet, “How to Have a Lovely Wedding,” send $1 to Abby, in care of The Pontiac Press. STATE COLLEGE OF BEAUTY 47 N. Saginaw St. Pontiac 335-9249 See Our Selection of BIBLES MADONNA SHOP 742 W. Huron St., 335-9275 NEW 7-Ff.*YACUU8Jl CLEANER HOSE Braided Cloth, All Rubber Exchangeable with tOtk A V1 Your Old Re-Use- H U ■§ able Hose Ends Regular 7.50 O Come In nr Free Delivery PARTS and SERVICE ON ALL CLEANERS - Disposal Begs, Hoses, Brushes, Belts, Attachments. Lie. L “Rebuilt J>y Curt’s-Appliance* Using Our Own' Parts'* Complete with Attachments Free Home Demonstration-OR 4-1101 ' Within 25-Miie Radius CIRT\S APPLIANCES it Fqjpfory Authorized White Mcalcr 6484 WILLIAMS LAKE ROAD MIRACLE MILE m &co COHfrM/tell- and DRY CLEAN FE 5-0725 Tor trait Special For Llmltsd Tim* Wty Below Normal Coil , 8x10 Portrait 99* FREE If yau call within 4 days I extra Ixlt interval photos • Only one after each 6 months • Croups, costumes ami persons over 12 yrs. slijlhtly additional. • Minimum Ape, 2 Months KENDALE . . Photographers Mon.,Tu.Thor.. 12 to 8iS0 rjc. 45 W. Huron St. »«u.9.s, Fri.amisat.9ios Phone for Appointment, FE 5-3260, FE 5*0322 riHS OFFER ENDS IN 10 DAYS ^CmSHCE BONm, Display Models & Demonstrators of SINGER* sewing machines including tha famous TOUCH & SEW* sewing machines by SINGEftI THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 2, 1967 the John Bensons of North Berkshire Road announce the engagement of their daughter, Monica Ann, toPfc. Jimmy Lee Williams .currently stationed in Vietnam with the Marines. His parents are Mr. and Mrs. Rowland Williams of Devonshire Roa& The.bride-elect is a sophomore at Webbef College, BabsonJPark, Fla. !' The engagement of Janet Suzanne High-bail gh to Emory A. Rockafellow of North Saginaw Street is announced by her parents, the James F. High* baughs of Lexington Drive. His patents are Edward Of. Rockafellow of Ifjffunt Morris and the Jdte Mrs. Rockafellow. May vows are planned. mmm Early August vows are planned by Sally Jo Hearn and Pfc. Gary L. Polley who is serving in Thailand with the IL.S. Army. Parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. Leslie W. Hearn of'Bay-brook Street, ,J/lrs. Rol-. land Polley of North Ascot Street and the late Mr. Polley. March Vows Are Planned Yule Festivities in Sweden Continue (EDITOR'S NOTE - Our correspondent, Signs Karl-strom is in ,Swedes tohere she spent Christmas with her mother and sister. Her account of the festive days arrived at The Press on Sat* urday.) The forthcoming March vows j)f their daughter Linda Kay to William M. Miller is announced by her parents, die Ira Sherks of Osceola Drive;. He |s' the nephew of Mr. and Mrs. Clay Fisher of Mishawaka, Ind. His parents are the late Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Miller. Both young people are graduates of Bethel College. *" By Signe Karlstrom In Sweden %ianArtndows and throughou t h e house which all radiates a warm and inviting spirit. ★ ★. * In the churches hundreds of candles flicker in huge can-delabras hanging from file ceiling, in the pews and at the altar. This is in general all over Sweden. Christmas Eve (Dec. 24th) is the big family day in the Swedish homes. Usually it-begins with a large mid-day meal. People gather in the kitchen which has been prepared for the occasion with candle lights, special holiday clothes and dishes and in general Christmas decorations. ■ ★ ★ ★ First “glogg” is served and everyone wishes each other “Happy Christmas.” Then there is the routine of especially prepared dishes and the entire meal lasts for a long time. - In some homes you move into the dining room for the main course.-------—^--------- In the evening Sankta Claus appears with a sack full of gifts and usually he cranes with a sleigh and stops at each house. This is the long sought' moment by the children. Sr ' "k k In Swedish churches a service held in the late afternoon on Christmas Eve is usually attended by the entire family. In cities ah'well as hi the country, Christmas Eve (jul-aftort) is the high point of tfie holidays. It is a dtjy which p u t s special emphasis on tradition,' hopemg the family as a unit* Christmas Day, church bells begin ringing as early as 5 a.m. perhaps 7 a.m. in most of the larger cities. Several services are held early in the morning. ★ ★ ★ One cannot say that the Swedish families attend church services in the same, manner as the Americans do, but at this time of the year it seems to be part, of the tradition. Christmas Day is also a family day,* a day of rest and young' and old love to ski if the weather permits, so entire families have fun together. Usually it becomes pitch dark in S#eden by 3 or 4 p.m. in the winter so the daytime is not too long. * Not until the second day of Christmas (which is also a holiday) friends come to visit or are rather invited for » special time. Today thejhtfkey has become more i& bvidence than ever before as a main course for a holiday dinner. jfAF ★ ★ Each day seems to be a day of celebration until New Year’s. Many businesses have reduced their staff during this week, others take time off (what’s left of their vacation), for an-average worker has now four weeks vacation- in Sweden). Country week-ends, ski excusions and other pleasure trips are planned by, many. - * ★ tree before it is dismantled abojit-'Jan. 1.3.. Each child and kef* or his guest receive some of the goodies that decorated the tree. There is singing'and dancing around the tree on this last festive moment of the Christmas holidays. Remove to Point Shutters,, screens and storm sashes are easier' to paint if they -are removed from the house and laid flat on supports. Wipe off all dust and dirt before applying paint. WIGS IN EVERY PRICE RANGE -•« ,69’s-,139,5-,189,*.*389,s « Includes: cutting, fitting, styling, * , c head blocks and wig case. I For your convenience, arrangements can be made for appointments in either your home or our office. CALL 338-6216 THU bu.inru Irsally re ' # ■*;r A rnjjjjTT. Save 3.11-Rich , men’s wing-lip exferds! Expertly styled with black or brgwn full grain dress leather uppers. Goodyear welt construction means extra.long wear without uncomfortable seams underfoot. Flexible, rugged com-v position soles. Men! Look your best in black or brown quantone or black plair^toe, oxford styles. Nov^, so low in price, you’lkwant more than one pair! Smooth leather uppers polish to a high sheen.'-Goodyear welt construction assures extra long wear. Flexible composition soles. Sizes 7V:i to 11, 12 D. Hurry in now! Special purchase on men’s expertly crafted shoes JUST SAY "CHARGE IT" 2-pants suits FINE BRENT WORSTEDS IN 2 AND 3-BUTTON MODELS REGULARLY $65 SAVE EVEN MORE ... BUY 2 FOR $95 . • Pick fabrics front top American mills • London-shrunk to assure lasting fit ° •• Extra pair of pants doubles your wear 'M Fantastic! How else can you describe a sale like this? Select firm, long wearing wool worsteds in subdued patterns. Latest 2 and 3-button models with the most up-to-date detailings. And remember, every suit has an extra pair of pants! Medium, dark shades. Regulars, shorts, longs. Reg. $80 Suits ., . . . *.... .. ........... $58—2 for $110 OPEN MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 10 A.M. TO 9:00 P.M SATURDAY 9:30 A M. TO 9:00 P.M. SUNDAY 12 NOON TO 5 P.M. . 682-4940 M ONTGOMERY WARD JANUARY JAN.' 2—Ex-Pontiac prop star Walt Beach sets up Cleveland field goal with first-half interception in National Football League championship game. 1 . JAN. 1-2—Pontiac Rolladi-um skaters dominate own annual New Year’s Invitational meet by winning seven first places. JAN. 6—Midwest Football League, selects John Abel of Pontiac as its commissioner. JAiN. 7—Micki King of Pontiac .wins Canadian Open Swimming Championships’ women’s indoor title; Royal Oak Kimball preps surprise Birmingham Seaholm’s perennial champs, 61-44. because of ineligible players Who competed & church league games. MAR. 5—Pontiac Northern 4th, Walled Lake 5th in state class A wrestling tournament MAR. 5—1Toledo ice boat t a c e p Frank Wing dies of .heart attack in Cass Lake ★ ★ ★ MAR. 10—Pontiac Arrows get 5-year lease on Wisner Stadium. i MAR. 11—Ferndale knocks Pontiac Central out of basketball regionals, 5246. t JAN. 11—Pontiac Central voted No. 1 Class A basketball team in first weekly Associated Press Class A state high school poll; Unbeaten Kettering cagers nudge Waterford,' 54-50. MAR. 12—Birmingham Seaholm dethroned by Battle Creek for state swim crown as Kimball’s Doug Webster shatters* record in 400 freestyle in 3:39.47. JAN. 15—Les Littlejohn, 14-year - old Rochester bowler, rolls 277—689 In North Hill Lanes junior league. ★ ★ . ★ JAN. 18—PCH drops to second in weekly ratings despite 72-52 win over Flint Northern cagers. . JAN. 22—Unheralded Rochester ski team surprises by winning the boys’ title in the sixth annual Interscholastic Slalom Races at Mount Holly. JAN. 23—A wire fox terrier, Ch. Dundrum Super Star from Texas, named Best-in-Show at annual indoor winter Pontiac Kennel Club Show. JAN. 28—Dan Fife of Clarks-toil tallies 43 points in 65-62 win over West Bloomfield. JAN, 29—Bloomfield Hills’ Tim Wood finishes fourth in file United States Men’s Figure Skating championships, faffing to make file U. S. Men’s team; 10 young boxers qualify for state Golden Glove semifinals at Grand Rapids daring eliminations at Pontiac Central High School. MAR. 12—Holly, OL St. Mary lose in regional cage tourney. MAR. 14—Rebellion stirs Saginaw Valley Conference with Flint schools and Pontiac threatening to pull out -. ★ ★ ★ - MAR- IB—All-County basketball team includes Mike Rafferty, Groves; Dan Fife, Clarkston; Roger Peltz, Kimball; Jessie Evans, JCH; John Canine, Hazel Park and Rick Ziem, Waterford. Tom Car-son, Groves, picked as coach-of-the-year. MAR. 18—Ferndale wins class A cage title by defeating Ann Arbor, 65-60. MAR 22—Dryden’s Ken Kitchmapter on AP All-State ‘D’ team. MAR. 23—OL St Mary’s Conrad Krogulecki on All-State ‘O’ team. MAR. 24—River Rouge joins Midwest Football. League, MAR. 25—Clarksto^s Dan Fife on All-State class %’ team. JAN. 30—Pontiae jeweler Glenn WWJcroft sweeps three matches from BUI Schock of St. Louis to win file Western U.S. Veterans’ Singles Squash Racquets championship at MAR. 28—Pontiac golfers Tom' Baliet and son Gary on state Publinx honor roll. MAR. 27—Former All-Sports star at PCH in 1897-89, Bob Dawson, passes sway. MAR. 28—Pontiac bowlers Dick Viles-Larry Angott tie for first hi ABC tournament doubles in Rochester, N. Y. with 1,308. MAR. 28—Highest series ever bowled at 300 Bowl, A1 Schupbach hits 265-255-233— 752. IN COUNTY SRQRTS HIGHLIGHTS—1. Doug Webster, RO Kimball swimmer tops in Michigan Class A championships; 2. Dan Fife of Clarkston, All-County and. All-State basketball player; 3. Bill Hollis, state novice Golden Gloves middleweight champion; 4. A1 Watrous, dean county golf pros retires; 5. Don Balkwell, U.S. Junior College All-America cross-country t e a m running for Highland Lakes campus; 6. Laura Meade, of Rochester, member of U.S. Women’s Bowling team at Guatemala; 7. Ted Simmons, MVP and coach Ed Bryanfof Southfield, champion of coun- Open champion; 15. Bobbi Miller, Pontiac city wom-ty baseball tournament; 8. Emily Fisher, Bloomfield en’s golf champion; 16. Crystine Jones of Bloonifield Hills tennis player; national Jaycee 16-under girls Hills member of US. Equestrian team; 17. Jim Ball, champion; 9. Bill Tipton, PCH hurdler, state cham- Rochester quarterback, winner of Outstanding Player pion; 10. Tom Carsofl, Groves High School, County Basketball Coach-of-theYear; 11. Paul Young and Ray Shearer, Men’s Singles and Doubles champions of Oakland County; 12. Don Lavalais, PCH state champion in high jump;»13. Paul Bada, Pontiac city men’s Award and All-State choice; 18. Karl Sweeten, former Pontiac Arrow Who gets starting nod with Detroit Lions; 19. George Green, Pontiac Open Bowling champion, and Neil Ricketts, Actual’s champion; 20. Ivy Loftin of RO Dondero is County Football Coach-of?the-Year; 21. Dick Robinson, first inter- golf champion; 14. Gene Bone of Pontiac, Michigan collegiate basketball coach at Oakland University, USGA 1 o c a 1 qualifying at Grosse lie with 141.\ MAY 27—PCH \)aktand County track champ in meet at Hazel Park. \ MAY 27—Bloomfield ffiHs Phyllis Chandler city mixed two-bail golf champs; Chock Byrne-Joe Brisson win Birmingham Invitational golf. rous takes 65-69 division of PGA state seniors golf. AUG. 24 — Teainster win city Class bpseball playoff. ClevelandT FEBRUARY FEB. 1-No. 1-rated East Detroit outplayed Ferndale, 71-60; and No. 2-ranked Pontiac Central suffers first defeat, 56-54, to Flint Southwest- ern. Feb. 4—St. Frederick defeats St. Michae}, 55-54, and Waterford Our Lady of Lakes ties them for first place and qualifies for the Detroit Catholic League playoffs by whipping St. Augustine, 95-76. , ★ ★ ★ FEB. 6—Rochester’s Laura Mead helps United States women’s team fo a record 2646 three-game series for a gold medal at the Federation International des Quilleurs Tournament at Guatemala City, Guatemala, . FEB. 8—Waterford cagers upset Kettering, 52-45, ending Captains’ perfect skein at 11 in a row. . « APRIL APR. 1—Bill Tipton of PCH ties Hayes Jones r e c o r d in Central Michigan track meet by taking 65-yard high hurdles in 7.8 seconds. APR. 2—Amberwood Kennels wins Pontiac Woman’s Bowling Association team championship. • Nora Jones, singles champion; Grace Kiser-Olive McCarty, doubles champs. takes Press Prep Golf touma-ment for third straight time at Pontiac Country Club. JUNE JULY 18 — Jim Picard of Pontiac wins Michigan assist- APR, 8—Pin Ryan, ex-Kimball coach, appointed athletic director of Oakland Community College. FEB. 12—Pontiac’s Bill Hollis wins state Golden Gloves 160 - pound novice championship under direction of Harold Dugan. FEB. 18—Junior Dan Fife of Clarkston ^breaks his own school sowing record with 49 points in 72 • 67 victory at Holly; Rick Ziem of Waterford surpasses the 1,000-point mark in his varsity career by scoring 16 in 5148 win over Roseville. * ♦ ■' ★ FEB. 20—Orchard Lake St Mary beaten, 58-56, by unbeat-en Detroit St.Hedwig in finals /Of the Second Division playoffs of the Detroit Catholic League; OLSM’s Conrad Krogulecki chosen most valuable player in the tournament. FEB. 20—“Ro" Redner pf the Cass Lake Yacht Club wins D-N Class International sailing championship at Kalamazoo’s Gull Like. ★ * ♦' APR. 14-Bud Stevens Us ted No. 1 on Michigan Golf Association’ honor roll. APR. 17—Bill Tipton only double winner in Mansfield Relays winning both hurdles and setting record of 14 seconds in high hurdles. APR. 22—PNH defeats PCH, 3-1; Waterford defeats Kettering.5-2 in prep baseball game. APR. 24—Ferndale wins Waterford Relays. APR. 25—Basketball confirmed as intercollegiate .sport at Oakland U. APR. 26—Shirley Pointer of Huron Bowl rolls 704 series. APR. 26—Defending North-South amateur champ Tom Draper of Birmingham is loser in second play at Pinehurst, N. C. APR. 29—Cranbrook, Oxford 1-2 in class B relays at Central Michigan. JUNE 3—Southfield wins 5th Pontiac Invitational Baseball tournament, defeating North-ville, 5-1. JUNE 5—Tad Schmidt-Tom Carmichael win Indian wood Invitational Golf Meet: JUNE 7—Sam Snead falls for first time to qualify for USGA Open with 7-over par 151 at sectional at Country Club of Detroit. Gene Bone qualifies with 145. JUNE 17—Birming h am ’ s Chan Simonds signs contract with Detroit Tigers. JUNE 19—Paul Bada-George Hammitt win Pontiac’ Best-Ball title. ant pro golf tourney. \ JULY 21 — Gene Bone fires 74 in fast round of PGA, JULY 22 — B 0 n e misses halfway cut by ope stroke. JULY 24 - F a r m i n g> ton wins District 18 Legion basebaU crown. JULY 25 — B 1 r m 1 n g-ham’s Bob Larkins and Holly’s Bill Taylor qualify for National Jaycee Golf Tournament., AUG. 27 - Bill Tipton wins high _and low Wdlex in National Jaycee meet at Denver; Allen Kerivan-Tom Chisholm take OLCC Blue Coat Invitational golf. AUG. 28 — Paul Bada wins fifth city golf-erown; Spencer-Floors in Class A and Class JP Town & Country last local soft-ball teams ousted in state play; Teamsters win state district baseball honors. SEPTEMBER AUGUST JUNE 22—Pontiac’s Larry Frye signs bonus contract with Los Angeles Dodgers. JUNE. 25—Pontiac Rollad-ium skaters dominate state meet. • JUNE 26—Clare Shepard-Ron Hall defeat Chuck Livinjg-ston-Sam Greenawalt for Piiie Lake CC Invitational title, 54. JUNE 26—Pete Reece, 71, is Pontiac Retirees’ golf champion. JUNE 27—NHL goalie Terry Sawchuk has back surgery in Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital. FEB. 22-Unbeaten Utica loses tp Mount Clemens, 74-71, after 14 straight wins; and Royal Ode Kimball’s Roger Peltz tallies 3t points in 74-71v win over RO Dondero. MARCH ... . \ ‘ MAR. 2—Spencer Floor won * the Waterford recreation class A basketball title. , 4 MAR. 4—Almoht and Capac disqualified from date C district basketball tournament MAY MAY 2—Dick Miceli records first no-hitter in Kettering history as Captains defeat Oxford, 74. • MAY 137-Death takes Twin Lakes GC owner Mrs. Florence OTtaole. May 14—Bill Tipton wins both hurdles In state regional prep track meet MAY 17—Crystine Jones of Bloomfield Hills picked on U. S. Equestrian Team. MAY 22-Tlpteil sets state high hurdles mark in 14 flat, adds low hurdles; Don Lavalais wins high jdnp but PCH finishes second in state ‘A’ meet. Cranbrook ‘B’ champion. • •’* ♦. >♦, MAY 23—Seaholm golf team second behind Arthur Hill for state title. ; ' MAY 23—Gene Bone leads JULY JULY 3 - Bay Potato Golf Club pro Gene Bone wins state PGA. * JULY 4 — Rolladium roller skaters win 17 firift places in regional. . • • JULY 10 — Waterford Township hydroplane pilot Hank BaU takes Eastern Division 48-cubic-inch class 6f nationals; Emily Fisher of Bloomfield Hills loses in finals of Western Jr. Girls Tennis Meet; Bill BenjamtarWalter. Hagen Jr. cop Forest Lake Invitational golf; Ponfidc’s Leo Wasserberger wins' George Smith Regatta. ★ ★ * JULY 12 — Detroit L i 0 n s, Pontiac Arrows start grid workouts; Pontiac’s Top Bal-' liet qualifies for National Publinx match play. V.A • JULY 13 — Balliet ousted, 4 and 3. A; <• '* ? JULY 14 — Russ Herron’s 71 leads 12 wbo* qualify for state Jaycee golf. fending state champion Gass A Ferndale in basketball; Bill French scores 33 points in St. Michael victory. . DEC. 11—Pontiac classic league bowlers Shirley Pointer and Art Pearson qualify for the National All-Star Tournament in Saginaw eliminations; ® DEC. 13—Oakland Univer- -sity varsity cagers score-118 points for school scoring record in lopsided victory over Hope College’s junior varsity; Tom Sirbaugh posts school scoring mark of 32 points in Waterford Our Lady of lakes' triumph. •* DEC. 16-GarkstOn All-Stater Dan Fife notches 49 points, equaling his own school standard; in 78-73 .conquest; Tim Megge of Orchard Lake St. Mary. registers 35 markers in victory. DEC. 18—George Green, 24, is new Pontiac Open Men’s Handicap Bowling Singles champion and Neil Ricketts tops Actuals’ Invitational field. DEC. 20-45t. hfichael upends .Waterford Our Lady, 59-57, in double overtime for Macomb Catholic League lead. DEC. 26—World Series ring belonging to baseball star Frank Robinson found on Pontiac Street after disappearing in 1964. » DEC. 27—PNH Huskies trim Pontiac Central, 58-45, for only third win in 21-Hgama city basketball series. DEC. ’ 28—Northern wrestlers win Oakland County Invitational Tournament at Oakland University. '•'X • DEC. 36-Larry August of Farmington earns U.S. Hind-ball Ateociation’s junior cham- t pionteiip at Salt Lake City; Southfield Jffigh School wtaa annual Northwest Suburban Invitational Bisketi^aB Tournament title. V 4 C—2 TUE PONT!AG PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 2, 1967 Buffalo CHIEFS ROMP — Kansas City halfback Mike Garrett squeezes through a small opening for a touchdown on this fourth-down play yesterday as the Chiefs trimmed the Buf- falo Bills, 31-7, for the AFL championship. Watching Garrett is Chiefs’ quarterback Len Dawson (16). BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) - Hie Kansas City Chiefs are headed for the Super Bowl game against Green Bay, and there seems little doubt that they not only have the personnel — but the added touch of Coach Hank Stram’s gimmicks — to test the National League champions. Confusing the usually precision Buffalo defense by beginning their 'plays in the rarely used “I” formation, the Chiefs rode Len Dawson’s unerring passes to a one-sided 31-7 victory over the Bills Sunday. it ik it The victory, worth a league record $5,306.39 to each member of the Chiefs, brought them their first American Football League championship since 1962 reign as the class of the seven-year-old league. • ★ ★ ★ It also sent the Chiefs into the Super Bowl game ■ the first test of strength between American and National League clubs — against the powerful packers, like Buffalo a team that rarely makes mistakes and has a strong, veteran defensive unit. But that’s exactly where the Chiefs, under Stram’s dirceiton, befuddled the Bills. THROW FIRST “Our game plan was to throw first and run second, and we used 10 to 12 formations off the I,” Stram explained after taking der War Memorial Stadium. “The purpose of the I was ttyt Buffalo reads and reacts so well defensively that we wanted to shrink their reaction time. What we did was change the make-up of our attack -c- but not the plays.’’ Stram tactfully avoided saying the Chiefs fooled the BiUs by masking their offensive maneu-vers. X ' But what about the National League champion? Stram didn’t refuse to discuss the upcoming game, but then he didn’t tip his hand either. ★ * ♦ “We don’t care who we play,” he said. “We’re just so tickled a champagne bath in the small | (Continued on Page C-3, Col. 3) AP Wirephote CARRIED OFF — Coach Vince Lombardi of the Green Bay Packers is parried off the field on the shoulders of his joyous players following the win over Dallas. ' : ' Rose Bowl Brims With I Unexpected! MM 66 Pro and Amateur Sports Champions Auto Racing PASADENA, Calif. (AP) Purdue was favored to defeat! Pacific Coast—Eastern: Tulsa| var, Mexico City. Oilers. Western:, Seattle Angels. Playoff: Seattle. Texas — Arkansas Travelers. Playoff: Austin Braves. are upset by the Trojans. The history of this series brims with the unexpected. Football American 500—Fred Lorenzen, - ...__, . .. _ i Charlotte,. N.C. Muthem California in the B^e, Atlanta 500 — Jim Hurtubise,1 Southern-Mobile Athletics Bowl today but no one should be North T_nflwan(lfl N v soumern-Mopne mnieucs surnriseH if th# Rniiormairprs INOrtn lonawanaa< . • , Eastern—Elmira Pioneers. „rp.„ “ . erm*Kers Charlotte 600 — Marvin Panch, Daytona Beach, and Richard COLLEGE* Petty, Randleman, N.C. 11AAWU—’Washington State. - . ... .. .Daytona 500—Petty (485 miles). Atlantic—North Carolina. Just a year ago Michigan Daytona 24-hour Endurance g- Big Eight-Oklahoma State, State went into the bowl as anj Ren Miles, Hollywood, Calif., gig skv-Idaho overwhelming favorite over a and Lloyd Ruby, Wichita Bi| Ten-*Ohio' State. lighter UCLA team manned by a I Falls, Tex. \ East-’Army. * „ ....................... sophomore quarterback, Gary Indianapolis 500—Graham HIM, Mid-American—Western Michl-ivy — Harvard Princeton and °eSan- I London. gan The score: UCLA 14, Michi- NASCAR-Grand National: Da- Mid-Atlantic-’Lafavette gan State 12 - and Michigan vid Pearson, Spartanburg,t Missouri Valle^^trixmis. S.C. Modified: Ernie Gahan, NAIA—Linfield. Dover, N.H. Sportsman: Don NCAA—fexas Western Bantamweight — ’Masahika Harada, Tokyo. Flyweight — Horacio Accavallo, Argentina, and Walter McGowan, Scotland. AAWU — Southern California. Atlantic — Clemson. Big Eight — ’Nebraska. Big Ten — ’Michigan State. State threatened to tie the score on a two-point conversion attempt that failed in the fading seconds. Three years ago. Southern Cal met a strong Wisconsin team and quickly rolled up a top heavy score. The Badgers rallied in the darkening minutes behind quarterback Ron Vander-Kelen but the Trojans, escaped with a 42-37 triumph in as bizarre a finish as bowl fans ever) witnessed. Coach John McKay, the win- MacTavish, Dover, Mass National 500 — Lee Yarbrough, Columbia, S.C. Riverside 500 — ’Dan Gurney, Costa Mesa, Calif. Road America 500—Chuck Parsons, Carmel, Calif. Rockingham 500 — Paul Goldsmith, Munster, Ind. Sebring 12-hour Endurance — Miles and Ruby. Southern 500—Darel Dieringer, Charlotte, N.C. Rocky Mountain — ’Colorado State. Southeast—Mississippi -State. Southern—East Carolina. Southwest—Baylor, TCU, Texas A & M and ,’Texas tied. Western AC—Arizona. Yankee — Connecticut, Massachusetts and Maine tied. Basketball Ford Mustangs; Dearborn, Mich. Women: ’Nashville Business College. NBA—’Boston Celtics. COLLEGE Sugar Bowl TV Sours Locally ning coach, recently explained USAC — Mario Andretti, Naza-the Wisconsin rally: f reth, Pa. “You’ll recall VanderKelen at U.S. Road—Parsons. t the tftne didn’t have_ an offer Volunteer 500—Goldsmith, from the pros, so we thought World Road —Jack Brabham, we’d be kind and make.him look! London, good. Also I sent in s^me of my AAWU-Gregon State, best defensive plays*-' DacaUa|| 1 Atlahtic-Duke. DCIMJUail Big Eight—Kansas. J Big Sky—Gonzaga and ’Weber 1 World Series — Baltimore Ort- *5^ oles- Big Ten-’Michigan. [American Leagu^djrioles. Ivy—Penn. National League—*L6s Angeles Mid-American—’Miami, Ohio. « Dodgers. s j Mid-Atlantic—*St. Joseph’s. Leading batters—National: Mat- Missouri Valley—Cincinnati, _DT- 7 _ fy A,ou’ Plates, .342. Amer-|NAlA-Oklahoma Baptist U. , NEW ORLEANS (AP) — To- ican: Frank Robinson, Qri- NCAA—Texas Western, day’s Sugar Bowl waS blacked oles, .316. NIT—Brigham Young, out for the television sets in Home Runs — National: Henry Festival—Providence. New Orleans—unless yoy had anj Aaron, Braves, 44; American:1 Mountain — ’Colorado antenna which would pick- up F. Robinson, 49. Runs Bat-j gtete channel 2 in Baton Rouge, 85 ted in—National: Aaron, 127. Southeast—Kentucky. miles away. j American: F. Robinson, 122. Southern—Davidson. This didn’t make a number of Leading Pitchers — Best Per- Southwest—’SMU. New Orleans people, who want-) centage, National: -Phil Re- J Yankee — Rhode Island and gan, Dodgers 14-1, .938, Amer- *Connecticut tied, ican: Dave Boswell. Twins,! 12-5, .706. Most Wins-National: ’Sandy Koufax, Dodgers, 27-9, American: Jim Kaat, Twins, 25-13. Least Earned Runsf-National: ’Koufax, 1,73. American: Gary Peters, White Sox, 2.03. Dartmouth tied. Mid-American —Western Michigan and -’Miami, Ohio tied Missouri Valley — North Texas State and ’Tulsa tied. Southeast — Georgia and ’Alabama tied. Southern — William & and East Carolina tied. Southwest — SMU. Western AC — Wyoming. Yankee — Massachusetts. Mary Golf Australian Open — Arnold Palmer, Latrobe, Pa. British OpCn — Jack Nicklaus, Columbus, Ohio. Buick Open — Phil Rodgers, San Diego. ed to watch the clash between unbeaten Alabama and Nebras-j ka, happy, but Sugar Bowl officials said that was ^Jost too bad” the New Orleans Mid - Winter j Sports Association, sponsoring] organization of the 33rd annual | post-season football classic, has had trouble selling all 82,000 Most Valuable Players — Na-tiekets in recent years because tional: Roberto Clemente, Pi-it didn’t have the veryjop New!' rates. American: F. Robin-Year’s Day bowl game. r son. This vear the Sugar Bowl got International — Rochester Red Alabama and once beaten Ne- Wings. Playoff: •Toronto Ma-braska, the Tmost glamorous pi® Leafs, bowl game, and sold out faster than a fox. * Juiciest Game - Could Develop in Orange Bowl MIAMI, Fja. (AP) - Robert Lee (Bobby f Dodd, cagey old -mastermind of Georgia Tech football for 22 years, goes after his10th post-season victory today against explosive Florida in the Orange Bowl. And the battte with the Gators, led by the exciting Heisman Trophy-winning quarterback, Steve Spurrier, cpuld be the best of the football-crapmed holiday. \*<*-*!r Preeeded by the Sugar and Rose Bowl games, the Orange Bowl contest will wind up some 19 hours of solid football on NBC. The Rickoff 4r scheduled tor 1 p m (JCST) , Bowling BILLY CASPER Wins Second U.S. Open ABC: Classic Singles — Len j Canada Cup. — Nicklaus and Schissler, Denver. Doubles—j Palmer, U.S. Individual: Jim Stefanich and Andy Re- George Knudson, Canada, goznica, Chicago. All Events Canadian Open — Don Massen- — Schissler. Team — Ace Mitchell’s Shur Hooks, Akron. Regular Singles — Don Chapman, Scranton. Doubles — Tony Loiacano and Bob Kwie-cien, Detroit. All Events — John Wilcox, Williamsport, Pa. Team — Plaza Lanes, Sault Ste. Marie, Ont. Masters — Bob Strampe, Detroit. BPA — Wavne Zahn, Atlanta. ' WIBC: Singles — Gloria Bolivia, World Series — Gene Littler. Woodward — Buckpasser. San Diego. Horse of the Year -*■ Buckpas- AMATEUR Ser- Curtis Cup — U.S. Eisenhower Cup — U.S. Public Links — Monty Kaser, Wichita, Kan. U.S. Amateur — Gary Cowan, Kitchener, Ont. Women: Mrs, Don . earner, Seekonk, Mass. USGA Junior — Gary Sanders, Buena Park,. Calif. Girls: Claudia Ann Mayhew, Indianapolis. COLLEGE AAWU — Southern California. Atlantic — Duke. Big Eight — ’Oklahoma State. Big Sky — ’Montana. Big Ten — Ohio State.. East — Penn State. Ivy — ’Yale. Mid-American — Marshall. Mid-Atlantic — Lehigh. Missouri Valley — ’North Texas State- NAIA — Southwestern LouisP ana. NCAA — ’Houston. Individual: Bob Murphy, Florida. Rocky Mountain — Colorado Mines and Colorado State tied. Southeast — LSU. Southern — Davidson. / Southwest — Baylor./- Western AC — Brigham Young. Yankee — Massachusetts. Ice Hockey Stanley Cup — ’Montreal Cana-diens. National League — Montreal. Leading Scorer — Bobby Hull, Chicago Black Hawks, 97 points. American League — Blast: ’Quebec Aces. West: ’Rochester Americans. Playoff: ’Rochester. Western Portland. Playoff: Victoria, B.C. Central — Minnesota Rangers. Playbff: Oklahoma City Blazers. COLLEGE Big Ten — ’Minnesota. ECAC — Clarkson. Ivy — Cornell. NCAA —.Michigan State. Leading Money Winner — Buck-passer, 3649,921. HARNESS RACING Carve Pace — Romeo Hanover. Futurities — Kentucky: Gov. Armbro. Roosevelt:. Romulus Hanover. Westbury: Pay Dirt. Jndianpolis: Carlisle. Yonkers: Polaris. Hambletonian — Kerry Way. International Trot: Armbro Flight. Pace: Cardigan Bay. Little Brown Jug — Romeo Hanover. Messenger — Romeo Hanover. United Nations Trot — Roque-pine, France. Swimming ■ Outdoor.: ’Saida Clara Women: ’Santa Clara Racing American Derby — Buckpasser. Aqueduct Futurity — Bold Hour. Arlington Classic — Buckpasser. Arlington-Washington Futurity-Diplomat Way. gale, Dallas. PG: Moe Norman, Gilford, Ont. Carling Open — Bruce Devlin, Australia. Citrus Open — Lionel Hebert,]Belmont — Amberoid. Lafayette, La. ‘ Champagne — Successor. Cleveland Open — R. H. Sikes, Flamingo — Buckpasser. Paris, Ark. ‘ Florida Derby — Williamston Colonial — Devlin. - Rid. . Doral Open — Rodgers. I Garden State — Successor. Greensboro Open — Doug S&n- Gardenia — Pepperwood. Hawthorne Gold Cup — Bidder: Hollywood Derby — Fleet Host, AAU S,C S.C. ’ / Indoor: ’Southern California. Womenr Santa Clara S.C. COLLEGE AAWU — ’Southern California. Atlantic — North Carolina State. Big Eight — ’Oklahoma. Big Sky — Montana. Big Ten — ’Indiana. East — Army. Ivy — ’Yale. Mid-American ’Ohio U. % Mid-Atlantic — LaSalle. Missouri Valley — ’Cincinnati. NAIA — ’Macalester, St. Paul. NCAA — ’Southern California. Rocky Mountain — Western •State. Southeast — ’Florida. Southern — East Carolina. Southwest - *SMU. —........ Western AC — ’Utah. 60-Yard High Hurdles — Willie - Davenport, Southern U. Long Jump—Norman Tate, Durham, N.C. High Jump—John Thomas, Boston A. A. Pole Vault—Bob Sehgren, S.C. Striders. ‘ ■- ’ , Shot Put—’John .McGrath, Pasadena A. A. 35-Pound Weight—’Hal Connolly, Culver City, Calif. • Mile Relay—Southern U, (Webster . Johnson, Bob Johnson, E v e r e 11 Mason, Theron Lewis). ‘ / Two Mile Relay — 49er!P/C. (Dave Kemp, DanyLraylor, Dave Mellady, Dave Perry). 1,060 Yard Medley Relay — Southern JU: (Lewis, W. Johnson, tysion, Grunday Harris). OUTDOOR 100 Yards — Charles Greene, Nebraska. 220 — Jim Hines, Athens A. C., * Oakland. 440 — Lee Evans, San Jose, Calif. 880—Tom Farrell, N. Y. A. C. One Mile — ’Jim Ryun, Jay Hawk T. C., Lawrence, Kan. Six Miles—Tracy Smith, Pasadena A. A. Three Miles — George Young,] Casa Grande, Ariz. 120-Yard High Hurdles—’Davenport, Cleveland Striders; 440 Hurdles—Jim Miller, S. C. Striders-. 3,000 Meter Steeplechase—Lt. Pat Traynor, U.S. Air Force. Two Mile Walk — Ron Laird, N. Y. A. C. Bart Starr Connects for Four Touchdowns in 34-27 Conquest $ DALLAS, Tex. (AP) - Vince Lombardi, coach of Green Bay’s mighty Packers, said the National Football eague championship would be won by Green Bay if quarterback Bart Starr was hot and by Dallas if quarterback Don Meredith was hot. Coach Tom Landry of the Dallas' Cowboys said you couldn’t make mistakes against Green Bay and hope to win. ★ A- irj . Both coaches were right Sunday as Green "Bay won its fourth NFL title in six years by beating Dallas 34-27. . The Packers now meet Kansas City, the American Football League champion, hi the Super Bowl at Los Angeles Jan. 15. Bart Starr certainly was hot as he passed for four touchdowns. Meredith was only lukewarm. He passed for only one. And Dallas made two errors that lost it the ball game—or at least a sudden death chapce at it. , COSTLY PENALTY Mel Renfro fumbled a kickoff that handed GreejrBay a touchdown. The o|hCr Dallas error came whema motion penalty set the Cowbhys bade to the Green Bay/Six with a minute and a half to go and the Cowboys on me Packer one-yard line. Green Bay made some mistakes, too, lmt Landry had said nothihg about that since the Packers- are known as a team that usually ctovers up its mis-cues with some good plays later. ★ ★ ★ An instance of this came when Packer defensive back Tom Brown committed pass interference to give Dallas the ball on the Green Bay two. It was this same Brown, who intercepted Meredith’s pass in the end zone to end Dallas’ last hope with only 28 seconds left on the clock. Had Dallas scored and kicked the extra point, the game would have gone into a sudden death playoff. Landry said he thought Dallas would have won the game in that event “since it had momentum riding with, it.” ^ But the observation about errors would still stand.— Dallas probably wouldn’t have won the playoff had it made a mistake. FAST start * Dallas actually lost it in the Shot Put—Randy Mason, Texas first four minutes when Green Aggies. Discus—A1 Oerter, N. Y. A. C. Bay took the opening kickoff back 76 yards in eight (days for Javeline — John Tushaus, Los,a touchdown on Starr’s 17-yard Angeles. - toss to Elijah Pitts, and when, Hammer — Ed Burke, S. C. * on the ensuing kickoff Mel Ren- Striders. High Jump—*Otis Burrell, S. C. Striders. Pole Vault — Seagren, S. C. .Striders. Long Jump — ’Ralph Boston, S. C. Striders. Triple Jump—’Art Walker, S. C. Striders. fro, hit hard by Brown, fumbled and Jim Grabowski, rookie back, picked it up and scooted 18 yards to a score. Dallas managed to tie it at 14-14 in the first period but never did take the lead. Green Bay added another touchdown in the second quarter on a 51-yard ders, Cedartown, Ga Portland, Ore. Doubles —jHouston Champions — Palmer, Martha Morgan and Pat LPld Cup — ’Native Diver. Juvenile — Forgotten Dreams. Hopeful — Bold Hour. International — Behistoun, France. Jockey Club Gold/Cup — Buck-passer, Kentucky Derby — Kauai King. Man 0’ War — Assagai. Matron — Swiss Cheese. New Hampshire Sweepstakes — j ■' Buffle. . . /.. Pimlico Futurity — In Reality. 1 Preakness — Kauai King. Santa Anita Derby — Boldhe-sian. . y . : /• Handicap — Lucky Debonair. Sapling — Great Power. * ' | Seliitia — Royal Gleam. United' Nations — Assagai. Wfalenar — Pia Star. - JIM RYUN America’s Premier MUer ji Southern—’Davidson. Southwest—’Rice. Western AC—Brigham Young. Yankee—’Vermont. National Singles — Fred Stolle, Australia. Women: Bueno, Brazil. Do ’Stolle and Roy Em Women: Miss Bueno •Nancy Richey, Dallas. National Clay Court — Richey, Dallas. Women: ’Miss Richey. J National Indoor-rCharles Pasa-rell, Puerto Rico. Women: 1 Mrs. Billy Jean King, .Long Beach, Calif. Wimbledon — Manuel Santana, Spain. Women: Mrs. King. Wightman Cup—’United States. AAU - *Outdoor and ’Indoor:! COLLEGE 'Southern California Striders. AAWU—Southern California. Women:' *Outdoor and ’In-;Atlantic—'*Nbrth Carolina, dote’—Tennessee Mate. Big. Eight—Oklahoma. Big Sky—Idaho. Big Ten—’Michigan, 60 Yards — Bill Gaines, Penn East—’Harvard. ’ * A. C. “Mid-American—Toledo. 600—Theron Lewis, Soutiiera U.' Mid-Atlantic—'‘Swarthmore. 1,000 — *Ted Nelson, R C.]Miteouri Valley—North Texas ;Slridm.” ,| Mate.* ’ One Mile — ’Jim Grelle, Mult- NAIA—Redlands nomah, A. C. - INCAA—Southern California. Three Miles — Lajos Meesbr,1 Rocky Mountain — Colorado j Hungary. , . .1j Mate. Mile Walk — Rudy Haluza; S. C. Southeast—Tennessee. Strfca—______",' ’’•' ■____a wm« ■■ ■' | \ Decathlon—’Bill Toomey, S. C. bomb, from Starr to Carroll Striders. Dale; Dallas could get only Dan- Pentathlon—Jeff Banister, Gofi-jny Villanueva’s 11-yard field jiam A. C. - — goal, and the Packers led 21-17 at the half. Dallas pulled within a point on Villanueva’s 32-yard field (Continued on Page C-3, CM. S) Tennis 1 First downs It 23 J Rushing yardag 102 117 {Passing yardage Hi 233 f Passes 19-28 15-31 i Passes intercepted by 1 0 i Punts 4-40 4-32 i Fumbles lost 1 1 {Yards penalized 23 29 i Green Bay 14 7 7 4—14 1 Dallas 14 3 8 7—27 Track INDOOR GBr*Pitt* 17 pass from Starr (Chandler kick) - GS—Grabowski II run with fumblo ro-covery (Chandler kick) Oal—ftaavea 3 run (Villanuovt kick) Dai—Perkins 23 run (Villanueva kick) GB—Dale si pass from Starr (Chandlar Oal—FG Villanueva 11 Dal—FG Villanueva 3! GB—Dowter it pass from* Starr (Chandler kick) GB—McGee 21 pass from Starr (kick failed) Ofl—Clarke M pass from Meredith .(Villanueva kick) Attendance 75.50a RUSHING Alt Yds. A vs. Pitts, GB 12 44 5.5 Taylor, GB 10 37 3J Starr, GB 2 -4* -s Parkins, Dal t» I os 4.3 Reeves, Dal 17 47 iii Norman, Dai I IS Mtrtdith, Dal 4 22 5.5 PASSING Alt. Cam. Yds. TOs. Int. Starr, GB 21 t* SIM 4 0 Meredith, Dal 3) tj 231 i> 1 PASS RtCBIVING Ng, Yds. TOs. £a|f, GB J tM 1 Oowier, GB . ' J ft 1 Taylor. GB S is B Pitta, GB •• T - 17 1 Long, GB' 1 9 0 Flaming, GB 3 so 0 McGee. GB 1 71 ! Reeves, Dal 4 77 0 Gent, Dai ■ 1 M mj • Norman, Dal * ■ 4 30 r Clarke. Da! IMvili Oat 8 —... i m —T- 1 -B ■ TrfE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 2, 1967 DETROIT (fiP)'— The New Year looked mighty fine to the Detroit Red Wings today as they had a pair of weekend victories to crow about thanks to thealthy Paul Henderson. The Wings Climbed out of the National Hockey League cellar Prep Schedule Tuesday Prep Basketball L'Anse Creuse at Clintondale Oxford at Flint st. Michael Romulus at Livonia Franklin Marine City at NB Anchor Bay Imlay City at Flint Holy Rotary Frederick at St. Michael (Kennedy St. Rose st MC Holy Cross Waterford OLL at St. Augustins Ferndale St. James at St. -Rita St. Benedict at RO St. Mary Benedictine at RO Shrine Brother Rica at Salesian Emmanuel Christian at Utica Stevenson St., Lawrence at St. Martin Prep Wrestling Birmingham Groves at Lake Orion Madison Lamphere at Troy Wednesday J Prep Swimming Pontiac Northern at Flint Northwestern Birmingham Groves at Ferndale Utica at Hazel Park THURSDAY Prep Wrestling Madison at Avondale Clarkston at Kettering Leka Orion at Warren Fitzgerald Utica-at MC L'Anse Creuse Pontiac Central at Bay City Handy Clawson..at Rochester . .. 'Troy at Warren Cousino Walled Lake at Roseville College Basketball Schoolcraft CC at Oakland University f/o Eleven Draws Praises in Bowl Victory DALLAS, Tex. (AP) — Georgia’s football team, rated the best seen in Dallas iit the collegiate season, Hew home Sunday with a check forthcoming for $125,000 because the Bulldogs blasted Southern Methodist 24-9 in the Cotton Bowl. 'y p j Coach Vince Dooley said SMU made a fine game of it Saturday blit Coach Hayden Fry of South- on New Year’s. Eve as they dumped Boston 3-1 on Detroit Olympia ice and added a- 4-1 triumph over Montreal at Olympia Sunday. '/ Henderson, out of action for six weeks with a throat ailment, scored two goals and assisted on three others during the Wings’ weekend splurge.- * Henderson scored what proved to be the winning goal against the Canadiens who liad posted five straight wins over Detroit until Sunday, f 1 * ★ w In other games, Stan Mikita picked up four more points, padding his league leading total, as Chicago moved into a first place tie, beating Toronto 5-1 Saturday and Boston. 3-2 Sunday. New York dropped a pair, 3-o to Montreal Saturday and 2-1 to Torohto Sunday. Henderson had sewed nine goals in 15 gaines when he developed a heavy congestion in his throat. He had trouble breathing and found himself coughing heavily everytime he went on the ice. REST ^URE The Red Wings shipped him to Arizona for a rest and he missed a month of action. But against the Bruins and Canadiens it appeared he was never away. The two goals gave, him 11 in 17 games — a healthy pace that could put him among the league’s top scorers if he’s able to avoid illness and continue playing. Mikita, meanwhile, continued his assault on the NHL point marie,of 97 set by teammate Bobby Hull last season. His four weekend assists gave him 33, for tiie season and a total of 49 points in only 30 games. The slick Chicago center set COOL PACKER — Green Bay Packers’ quarterback Bart Starr (15) keeps a cool head on this second period play yesterday against the Dallas Cowboys as he waits for the Cowboy defense to move in before flipping a short pass to halfback Elijah Pitts (22) that went for a first down. Packers took the NFL title, 34-27. tor AFL Title, 31-7 «rn Methodist had a different I XhSt a “S* vareinn “Thotr „„ . |Monns and.Ken Wharram as the ta| Hawks built a 3-0 lead and then held off a late Boston rally. every phase of the game. Since Georgia led by as many us 15 points most of the time. Fry’s version seemed to hit the nail more on the head. The - Southwest Conference which furnishes its champion each year, wasn’t exactly happy about it. It was "the second straight year the conference lost in its own game Cage Scores . Salurdey'e College Basketball Auburn 64, Vanderbilt 49 Kentucky 96, Notre Dame 15 Mississippi State 93, Georgia 71 Florida ft, Mississippi 64 » Ball State 90, Evansville 67, overtime Memphis State 57, Yale 43 St. Leo 71, Hanover, Ind. 64 Kalamazoo 69, Franklin, Ind. 69 Oglethorpe 75, LaGrange 65 TOURNAMENTS Quean City Teurnament Championship Canislus*17, Fairfield 66 Cemelaftea New Orleans Loyola 17, Seton Hall 66 Lenoir Rhyne Holiday Classic Championship Lenoir Rhyne 65, Georgia Southern 49 Consolation ^Georgetown, Ky. 96, Cumberland, Ky. Norfolk State HelMly Tournament Championship Norfolk State lit Virginia Union 77 Consolation Morgan State It Qulnniplac 61 SphMale Rotary Tournament Championship Shorter 56, Campbell 51 . Consolation ' • Appalachian II, Catawba 77 . NHL Standings W L T Pts. GF G A Chicago ..,v...... 11.1 4 40 1M 75 New York ..V .. . 17 11 6 40 101 10 Toronto .......... 14 10 7 35 05 17 Montreal ......... 14 13 3 31 77 *73 i Detroit .......... 10 19 3 23 (I 107 Boston ............ 7 19 7 21 11 111 Sunday's Results Toronto 2, New York 1 - Detroit 4, Montreal 1 Chicago 3, Boston 2 International League Saturday's Results Port Huron 7, Columbus 3 Dayton 4, Muskegon 3, overtime Toledo 5, Fort Wayne 3 Sunday's Results Columbus 7, Dae Moines 2 Dayton 6, Muskegon 2 GATE CLOSED The Rangers, finishing tough nine day period in which they played six games, outshot Toronto 43-17 but were halted by the Leafs’ tiiird string goalie Bruce Gamble, who filled in for injured Johnny Bower and Terry Sawchuk. , Rod Gilbert, the NHL’s leading goal-scorer, potted his 20th for New York while Brian Con-acher and Dave Keon hit for Toronto. Syracuse Runner Shines in Defeat MIAMI, Fla. UFi — Give Floyd Little enough daylight and he’ll run far — like a record 216 yards in the Gator Bowl football game Saturday. The bow - legged Suracuse halfback was the individual star of the game and the most frequent topic of conversation, although Tennessee’s smaller but quicker team won 18-12. Little’s rushing record of 216 yards erased a Gator Bowl mark that stood since 1948, when Lu Gambino of Maryland ran 175 yards in a 20-20 tie* against Georgia. Another record was .broken when Gary Wright kicked two field goals for Tennessee’s first six points. Four players had kicked one field goal each in a Gator Bowl game and shared the old record. (Continued From C-2) to be to it I haven’t seen their team play yet, but I had two people in Dallas and it’s also safe to say we’ve looked at their films.”....- ' - - ; —- As for using-gimmicks, Stram wouldn’t say. But Stram always seems to come up with a new wrinkle — the educated guess-ers are saying he will again. Led split end Bobby Crockett in the end zone — and fired. But Robinson scooted over from his free safety position, picked the ball off and raced 72 yards to the Kansas City 28. ★ ★ . ■ ★ Then, with three seconds left NFL Champion Mikemen Entertain St. Fred by Costly Mistakes (Continued From Page C-2) goal but. Green Bay led 28-20. going into the fourth period. It seemed wrapped up for the ,, , ,, .. , 1 steady Packers when Max Mc- to “2i S,?eS Gee t00k a 28-yard shot from goal and the Chiefs led l7-7. It gtarr for another touchdown. _ „ , t. £Tl appare"u the\bU,t f* &>b Lilly blocked Don Chand- The one Stram threw at the Bills were on the way to losing |ier«s trv for noint hut it Hirin’ Jills was the I, with the running their crown and taking home a Lepm L-JLvL wi(tl Bills backs — Mike Garrett and Curt! check for only $3,779.98 McClinton — lining up straight * * * behind Dawson, and concealing the play, until the last seconds when they would line up at the normal spots to the side of the quarterback. WENT TO WORK ‘‘If Robinson hadn’t made the interception,” Dawson said, “it could have been 14-14 at foe half and another ball game.” Not so, said Joe Collier, foe I Buffalo coach. ■ Having laid the groundwork to hide the Chiefs’ intent on virtually every play, Dawson went to work in the air during foe first half and, as it turned out, put foe game out of reach with two touchdown passes. Dawson hit tight end Fred Arbanas and flanker Otis Taylor with duplicate 29-yard touchdown passes and Mike Mercer kicked a 32-yard field goal for a 17-7 halftime lead before Garrett wrapped it up to the fourth quarter with one-and 18-yard touchdown runs. Dawson, meanwhile completed 16 of 24 passes for 227 yards, sharing his tosses with his three receivers. He hit Tay-ior five times for 78 yards, connected with split end Chris Burton! four times for 76 yards and found Arbanas twice for 44 yards. COSTLY ERRORS The Bills, on foe other hand, made several mistakes. Dudley Meredith fumbled the opening kickoff, Tom Janik was unable to hold two of Dawspn’s throws on apparent interceptions and Johnny Robinson intercepted a key Jackie Kemp pass. * That came near foe end of foe first half with Kansas City leading only 114-7. The Bills, on Kemp’s two passes to Bobby Burnett for 50 yards, brought the ball to the 12. Two plays later, Kemp spot- Sparks East to 45-22 Win , Unsung QB Stars in Shrine Classic SAN FRANCISCa (API Korth Carolina’s Danny Talbott went into the 42nd annual Shrine classic Saturday an unsung quarterback playing, with eight All - Americans and wound up| being chosen the most valuablej offensive player. ' He tied the East-West record for touchdown passes by throwing three and led foe East to a recqid 513 total yards to their 45-22 win over the smaller and glower West team. WWW “I don't think I deserve that much credit," Talbott said later. He said be had no idea tbat Michigan State poach Duffy DtftghOrty would Mart him. Daugherty admitted that T^j-bott surprised him, also. ‘‘This team was by far foe best all star group I’ve* ever coached,” said Daugherty, who has coached two previous East squads. “I didn’t expect Talbott would be that good,” he said. “He did not throw that well to practice. In fact, I didn’t’ think anyone was that good.’ II STRAIGHT Talbott threw 11 successful aerials before he missed one I just threw the boll bard and tried to get it within reach -foe receivers did the jest," Talbott said. Linebacker George Webster of Michigan State was rigwen the best defensive player. ,W(l • W W 1 Led by, Webster, who received a bruised rib in foe second half, the East held the West team fo for an average of 4.4 per carry for the East in 27 runs. He divpd] over,from the two to score the: East’s second touchdown. I Talbott flipped Ms scoring tosses on plays covering 25 yards to Michigan State’s Gene Washington, nine yards to Kenj Last of Minnesota and 14 to Michigan’s Jack Clancy wifo only 13 seconds left to play w w w The game was the best tit his career, Talbott said, but he did not coh&ier it good eqough to attract pro football offers. “I weigh about 188,” he said, 'and they aren’t interested in a quarterback that Small.” He is considering pro base- “ It looked like they were good enough to win without it,” Collier said. “They had foe people, and they executed. If they play like they did today, they’ll give the'National League a battle.” » Chiefs Bills First downs Rushing yerdage Passing yardage Passes Passes intercepted by Fumbles lost Punts Yards penalized Kansas City Buttale KC—Arbanas 29 pass (Mercer kick) Buff—Dubanion 69 pass from Kemp (Lusteg kick) KC—Taylor 29 pass from Dawson (Mercer kick) KC—FG Mercer 32 KC—Garrett 1 run (Mercer kick) i KC—Garrett II run (Mercer kick) Attendance 42,010 ; Oxford’s Wildcats and St. Frederick’s Rams Will be looking for some encouragement from St. Michael on two fronts Tuesday night as prep basketball play resumes. . „ St. Fred and St. Mike will clash to a Kennedy JHS game the Rams must win to retain atiy hopes for a Macomb circuit titif. The unbeaten Mikemen how lead, their intra-city rivals by: two games. Oxford (3-1) will attempt to start the new year with a-win at Flint St. Michael to a non-league encounter that is an important warmup for the Wildcats’ Tri-County League visit »to unbeaten Kettering Frida? night. Another Tri-County member, L’Anse Cretfse, win invade Clintondale tomorrow. Parochial League action will resume Tuesday with a full slate of Macomb Catholic contests, two Northwest loop tilts and two other key Parochial games, CONTENDER Waterford Our Lady of Lakes, who is 1% off the pace, will visit Richmond St. Augustine to a bid to keep second place. St. Rose will invade Marine City Holy Cross. The Northwest League encounters will have St. Benedict at Royal Oak St. Mary and St. p. 11 / j n . .James at St. Rita. Both St.' Dallas Bid Ruined James and St. Mary could climb within a half game of coleaders Orchard Lake St. Mary and Farmington Our Lady of Sorrows. ft ft ft Undefeated Birmingham Brother Rice will invade Detroit Salesian in a Central Division struggle while once-defeated Royal Oak Sbrtae will entertain Benedictine in a Double-A, encounter. Emmanuel Christian will try to repeat an earlier victory in a visit to youthful Utica Stevenson. uled meeting in basketball for them, although there’s a chance they’ll meet to tournament play. ft ft ft The two tied with Waterford OLL for foe league title last winter and all appear closely matched this season, too. St. NBA Standings EuleraDivision ... Lo»t Pet. Behind Philadelphia .... 35 3 .921 —. Boston ../.. 37 9 .750 7 New York 20 20 .500 16 Cincinnati .... 13 22 .371 JOVi Baltimore 8 31 .205 V'/t Western Division San, Francisco 24 13 „ .649 — St. Louis ..... 16 19 .457 7 Detroit 15 22 .405 9 Los Angeles . . . r14 23 .378 10 Chicago 15 25 .375 10VS Sunday's Results Los Angeles 111, Boston 110 St. Louis 128. New York 105 Today's Games ■ Detroit vs. St. Louis at Memphis, Tffnn. Tuesday's Gamas Baltimore vs. Detroit .at New York Philadelphia at New York Boston at San Francisco Cincinnati at Chicago Mike, also, pfoped WOLL in overtime andHhe Laker4 took St. Fred by 1C points. OOliMN SKCIAL wkIti WALLS! Ntt 4 rift ORIGINAL IQUIPMINT TYPE nttSTONI, GOOOTIA*, MOHAWK, GENIRAL YOUR CHOICE! LIFETIME 5UARANTBE Tubslass Ratraad Pad. Tas Ha te.Ma wad A ay Old Tresdahm Tire OPEN DAILY M-SAT. M UNITED TIRE SERVICE 1007 Baldwin Ave. t Min. From Downtown Pontiac Enroll Today-Learn Electronics g New CLASSES START JAN. 24th # DAY and EVENING — FULL and PART TIME OPENINGS d ELECTRONICS g ELECTRONICS TECHNOLOGY g ALL COURSES VA. APPROVED - CALL OR WRITE TODAY! '•••^•••■•••■••••••••••EEEiBBBEEEIElEEEIREIEEBEBBIiEillBligiBEEE. ELECTRONICS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY 2457 WOODWARD WO 2-M60 DETROIT 41201 Gentlemen: Please Rush Details v Name ................................ Address ........ ........ ........, City. .......,y...Phone ............. 16-24 12-2/ 6-42 8-39 40 23 7 10 0 14—31 7 0 0 0—7 from Dawson Tennis Title for U. S. MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) -The United States has captured the Sunshine Cup, symbolic of world junior tennis supremacy, by defeating Australia 2-1 for foe second year in a row. t seem important with Green Bay holding a 34-20 lead. However, the Cowboys gathered themselves for a- feverish finish. Rendfro returned the kickoff 26 yards to the Dallas 29. Meredith finally loosed a bomb to Frank Clarke that gained 68 yards and a touchdown arid suddenly Dallas was back to the game. Another mistake by Green Bay—a puny 16-yard punt by Chandler—set Dallas up on the Green Bay 47 and the Cowboys were ready to ride. They did— right down to foe Green Bay one-yard line. Then came the penalty that set the Cowboys back so that a four-yard pass to Pettis Norman still left two yards to go. BroWn made his interception, and time ran out for Dallas to its first great bid for a championship in seven years of trying. A personal foul penalty set up Dallas’, first touchdown from the Green Bay three, with Danny Reeves scoring it. The second Cowboy score came on a 59-yard drive in which ’ Don Perkins got the last 23’ yards. Perkins was foe leading ground-gainer of the day with 108 yards on 17 runs—an average of 6.3. . ! ffr We Have Trailers To Rent To Take You: NORTH ... L or SOUTH FOR THE WINTER Enjoy the versatility of "your own” accommodations Slop in and check on our low winter rental ratei . JACOBSON’TRAILER SALES 5690 Williams Lake Rd., Drayton PL, OR 3-5981 St. Fred (5-2) dropped a 57-56; decision to, St. Mike’s Shamrocks . in double overtime the first time they met this season. Since the two schools are con-1 solidating as Catholic Central next year, this is the last sched- Lakers Rally to Nip.Celts By The Associated Press Bumping heads with the Boston Celtics is no picnic for Los Angeles’ struggling Lakers; but it brought out the best in Jerry West and Elgin Baylor Sunday. West drilled in 35 points and Baylor hit the winning free throw with two seconds .to play as foe Lakers nipped Boston’s defending National Basketball Association champions' 111-110. Baylor, who scored 30 points in all, dropped in the tie-breaker after hitting a hook with l:0f remaining to knot foe count at 110-110. ■ gle first down fo the first half. Michigan State kicker, Dick Kenney, set a record with six League conversions and the barefooted kicker added a field goaL ***/ , IIC OulU. All-America Clint Jones, of “ft's a good Way to slart a new " Michigan state netted 118 yards]year I guess." ■ 203 yards and didn’t allow a ton* ball, however. Then-year-old 6- footer said he has been drafted by Pittsburgh of the National ‘But I won’t sign anything until 1 finish college," he said NEW BUSINESS HOURS Effective January 3rd, 1967 Members of Rochester Automobile Dealer's Association NEW and USED CM SALES DEPMTMENTS Monday and Thursday 8 a.m. - 9 ji.m. Tues., Wed., Fri., Sat. . .. .8 a.m. *6 p.m. SERVICE and PARTS DEPARTMEHTS Monday through Friday.... 8 a.m. - 5:30 Saturday . . .... . . .. 8 a.m.-12:00 p.m, -I H ■ GOODYEAR THIS WEKK'S SPECIAL AT YOUR CAR-CARE HEADQUARTERS Pay a* You Ride Winter Brake Offer Get Safer Braking for winter driving 88* Any U.S. Cir Plui Pirtl Remora front ft reir wheel*, adjust brakes, repack front wheel bearing*, inspect grea*e seal*, add fluid, teat. PRICE-BREAK SPECIAL TRADE-IN YOUR OLD RATTERY Jumbo Cannon Blanket WashaMe ft Mothproof $066 Jumbo irxwrun L Limit one to a customer at this price! Special LOCK-NAP* weave. Rayon and nylon blend. Reversible. DKLCO RETREAD BUYS Most Sizes Blackwell or Whitewall Discontinued design as tow m « for i49* Phis SI fed. tx. Tex SERVICE STORE 1370 Wide Track Drive FE 5-6123 , HOURS: al C—4 -f~rr THE PONTIAC PRESS,' MONDAY, JANUARY 2, 1967 In City; Goynlf Death by fire, motorized metal and old-fashioned g***"* *■*»»*» ^ mmrnm lead dominated a major portion of 1966 headlines. I Most of the tragedy was private and personal. Meanwhile, in the public arena, most of the hap-1 penings of the past year reflected accomplishment 1 and progress, pointing toward great strides for 1967 | and thereafter. For example, the long-sought transfer of Pon- | tiac Municipal Airport to county ownership can mean nothing but majoc advances for local air | service. Also, culture took a giant leap forward with the creation of Oakland University’s drama center headed by John Femald, former director of England’s Royal Academy of Dramatic Art. ★ ★ ★ Other 1966 events included: • Progress on downtown Pontiac redevelopment. • A second grand jury probe. • A successful “End Measles” program. • Republican victories at the polls. V • Successful fund raising by St. Joseph Mercy .Hospital. ' * / • A police work “boycott” weathered in Pontiac. CONTINUE TO HUM By DAVID J. COOK i leads since then without success. | Missing from the dead man’s pocket New calendars wen/ on desks and! By contrast, the 1966 murders “of a w«s bis wallet, containing about^tO and wails at PonUac police headquarters, Caro truckdflver and a 55-year-old citylPaP®I'S-yesterday, but behin | | 4I" ‘“J r *w#p presence hangs much unfinished busi-1 investigators, ness. / TIPS Tips and bits of information have been received almost weekly in the fatal shoot- I papers. Neither wallet nor gun has their empty white'resident are still fresh in the minds of ever been found. Still on the list of unsolved crimes in the city for 1966 are two homicides, one of which has stymied investigators since BOBBERY Doyon, too, was the victim of a robbery. In critical condition prior to his death at Pontiac General Hospital, he last April and another which occurred Joseph M. Doyon of 57 Park Place. tags of Carlaroy W. Henry, 29, andi^d investigators he was shot by a Thanksgiving weekend. Adding to the frustrations of de-tectives who have worked on the two cases is that only one other murder in recent Pontiac police history has defied solution. That was the fatal shooting July 24, 1959, of 71-year-old Dr. W. Carleton Warrick. Police cleared an initial suspect in. the killing and have probed countless matte. Henry was .found dead at 2:30 a.m. April 15 in a gravel parking lot at the side of die Jet Bar and Tavern, 716 Woodward, His body lay facedown next to his still-running diesel truck rig. slender, youthful Negro who took his wallet and some $7 in $l-bills. His assailant, Doyon sdid, was a youth he picked up from a telephone booth oiitside the Orchard Lake Tavern, 404 Orchard Lake. A A A Residents^Jof the Walnut-Harris area, lamination In the 10th U.S. Congressional District, k ■' a a a 5—Howard H. Fitzgerald II became president add publisher of The Pontiac Press, succeeding Harold A. Fitzgerald who now serves as chairman of the board. , X. a a a . 0—John A. MacDonald, chairman of the Oakland County Social Welfare Board since 1939, died after a brief illness., 12—Oakland County Circuit Judge Philip Pratt was named the one-man grand jtiror to investigate alleged illegal activities at the Hazel Park Race Trade. Detectives believe he fell there from who saw the victim minutes after the, the steps of the truck cab after being shooting, told police three persons fled shot in the chest with a 22-caliber auto-1 the scene. Their identities are still not known. 25—Judge P h i 1 i p Pratt was I Meadow BFook Music Festival, f. . . The public phase of a authorized by the Circuit Court) 15—Lake Orion voters ousted campaign to faise $550,000 got Although local General Motors plants continued tobench to expand his grand jury t h re e incumbent village offkIunder way for the purchase and hum night and day during the past year, the nation’s;?™be Royal Oak Township ciais. (development of the^Lost Lake . /•. rinto other areas of the county. nwt,~ i Reservation near Clare as a grants awarded prosperity appeared to level off a bit. -[ [Crime on rise .............Lamping site for the ClintonjGRANTS AWARDED RIGHT WINGERS 18—Sparked by an emotion-packed speech by Gov. Romney, Oakland County Republicans united to beat down a threatened take over by right-wingers within the party. 20—Calvin J. Werner, in his seventh year as general manager of the GMC Truck & Coach Div. and a GM vice president, 16-^Oakland County AFL-CIOiwas named general manager of president for 13 years, Fred V.the Cadillac Motor Car Divi-Haggard, died after a long ill-' s*on-ness. | * * * 30—Both sides in the Waterford Township teacher contract ★ ★ ★ Following is a summary of .major local news as recorded in The Pontiac Press in 1966. January 3—Mary A. and Lynette Wilson, teen-aged daughters of a Commerce Township c o u p 1 e, were killed in a Monday morn-i tag school bus-automobile accident which injured eight others. 5—Three girls and a boy—all children of/Waterford Township divorcee Mrs. Barbara Brown-died In an early-morning fire ht their home. One son, Larry, 14, escaped. * * A 9—A fire in the Lake Orion business district destroyed Wait-man’s Bakery & Restaurant; damages were estimated at $100,000. 12—A 3-year-old boy became the sixth victim of house fires in Waterford Township in two weeks. , EXEC DIES / 17-General Motors Corp. ex ecutive James E. Goodman of Bloomfield Hills died at age 61. At the time, he Was an executive vice president and chairman of the GMC administrative committee. ' 28— Record low temperatures hit the Pontiac area, including •8 in Pontiac and -20 in Leonard . . . An early-morf ing fire caused $50,000 damage to an Ortonville auto parts manufacturing plant. ★ A A 29— Seventeen-year-old Bonnie Britton of Farmington Township was named Michigan’s Junior Miss in state Jaycee competition at Pontiac Not them*.High' School. i 31—A $250,000 blaze tipped downtown Oxford; firemen from 10 departments fought the blaze, termed the worst in the city’s history. March •16—Pontiac Police Chief Wil-Valiev Council Boy Scouts. I . ^ wK’rJJjf? 0^°® °f Educa- dispute went to the state level iliam K. Hanger reported a sig-j 5_Four workers were injure®10 J"®"1 ^nts of in search of support. -- - . v. . . __„t._ lion to Oakland Community Col- 1—State Jail- Inspector Robert Russell said the Oakland County Jail does not meet state nificant increase in major crimei m white Lake Township wherf;. I I _ I for the first two months of 1966. ja construction elevator plunged [8ge an$$1. m^lon §1 ?akland 1 University to be used for con- struction of'new facilities. 17—Pontiac Motor Division un-[50 feet to the ground at St, veiled plans for a 300,000-square- Patrick’s Catholic Church, standards for Segregation of *d£-foot administration building. 6-Oakland community C o 1-ferent types of prisoners. ,19-North Farmington High|lege trustees authorized a $9,- 2—A 36- year - old man sched- School. senior Bonnie Britton 277,700 contract for the constouc, uled to be arraigned on a gross'traveled to Mobile, Ala; to^om-jtion of the , gdmrd Ridge AAA 22-Jack W. Young, 34, of .3940 Crooks, Avon Township, was arrested and charged with the February 2— A $1.25-million lawsuit was filed against Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital in the accidental ether-injection death of a 24-year-old Pontiac housewife. 3— Kenneth S. Miller, assistant traffic manager at GMC Truck & Coach Division, was named president of the Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce. A A A ' 8—The Coiinty Board of Supervisors authorized establishment of a county building authority to guide future construction projects. 10—Allan Ross Pearson Jr., 17, was sentenced to 9-20 years in prison for the fatal stabbing of another Waterford Township youth in June, 1965. PAY HIKES 15—Waterford Township, police received across-the-board pay hikes totaling $25,318; a 5-day workweek was also instituted. 18—Oakland County sheriff’s 6—The Waterford Education Association ratified new contracts after long negotiations. AAA 9—A 30-year-old Pontiac bar- thc Pontiac ooUce 4tatton bv'the Miss contest. ' (of a bond sale. ucau‘ “ “* = »*jmaid was shot to death ta S-A. Alfred Taubnum ant. Everett Joseph, 59, of 599 Pontiac city officials a $250,000 ®x-convict, Gary C Gray r t, ..,. W1 ★ ’ ★ a faith” rfpnneit nn hie nlanc'VOld, 28, was found m a lake at! 20—P1 a n s for a $3-nulhon * * * L o c h av e n, West Bloomfield g po p gtony Qreek Park, five miles apartment project on Pontiac’s! 14—The 1967 Pontiac cars tadecencv charcc^was* shotTt Pete in America’s 1966 Junior!Campus, pending state approval™u r d er kls wife-noeceqcy cnarge was shot at r , |bludgeoned to death in their September Township, was held in the shoot- for downtown redevelopment. ing of John Lee Court. A . A A 7—Joseph R. Famham of Birmingham was elected the chairman of the Republican party of Oakland County. 9—The Oakland, County Commission on Economic Opportunity sought $42,000 from Oakland County for a health services program ... Michigan Supreme Court upheld legislation extending the terms of office for two Oakland County Circuit Court ! northeast of Rochester. B. Cannon, 5| 24—The Oakland County j Board of Supervisors approved PROGRAM APPROVED a tentative 1967 salaries budget of $8,907,282 for county e m-ployes. 25—GMC Truck and Coach Division produced its 500,000th V6-powered truck ... Two Oakland County sheriff’s deputies re- 11—Bloomfield Township voters gave approval 1,221 to 741 to a $1,160,000 bond issue for constructing and equipping a new library. far east side were upset when the Pontiac City Commission refused to rezone the property. AAA 30—A car-train accident ta Lapeer killed Donald E. Johnson of were previewed . . . The public heard developer A. Alfred Taub-man explain his downtown Pontiac redevelopment plan. 15—A wage hike was a pproved to make Pontiac Osteo- Lapeer Township, his pregnantIp a t h i.c ‘ Hospital employes wife and their four children. j among the highest paid ta Mich- July ligan. . . The Pontiac Board of Education said it would sponsor 'a study to determine the equali-jty of educational opportunity in the school district. 17—The Waterford , Township Board of Trustees approved an ported they watched an un-jagreement for the township’s identified flying object over In- participation ta the $16.5-niilliqn dependence Township . . . Pon- j Clinton-Oakland sewage dispos- tiac’s Salute to Youth program1 al Program. | 6—Seven communities outside ___ honored 200 young people. j a a ,a (Pontiac were to pay more thaninew PLANT 29—Waterford Township; 24—The Oakland County Tax they expected for the proposed) 16—General Motors Corp. an-School District voters defeated Allocation Board allocated 15.18 Clinton - Oakland Sewage Dis-jounced the construction of a posal System because Pontiac new 280,000-square foot Pontiac pulled out of the project. j plant in the city’s north end. judges. GENERAL CHAIRMAN I plans for a $13-million •btiilding mills to townships, school dis-10—w a ter f o r d Township'program. trictsuand the county, with the Schools Supt. Dr, Don O. Tatroe AAA county receiving 5.4 mills, one- 30—Some 7,000 hourly workers|tenth more than previously, and at GMC Truck and Coach Di- 'at the expense of the school dis-vision staged a wildcat strike tricts. over working conditions. was named general chairman of the 1966 Pontiac Area United Fund campaign. 11—Oakland Community College announced it will seek federal matching funds for a $3-million vocational-technical facility. A A * * 12—Pontiac General Hospital announced a two-phase construction program expected to cost at least $21 million, primarily 25—Pontiac’s two municipal [for expansion of its emergency judges, Cecil B. McCallum and! and mental health facilities. Maurice E. Finnegan, requested j * A A that the city appropriate funw 20—A new model-year produc-for a third judge to ease the tion record was set at Pontiac 1—S o m e 20,000 workers at1 css® burden in court. Motor Division as model No. April 14—Oakland University offi-' Pontiac Motor Division and the detectives arrested 17 men and ciais Were stunned by the an-(Fisher Body,plants are idled as two women ta a raid on an alleged g am b ling operation ta Orion Township. nouncement that the Detroit;a result of the railroad strike Symphony Orchestra is cancel-1 4—Ten persons are arrested in ing its summer concerts at the raids of alleged narcotics opera-1 tions throughout Pontiac. 5-^Bloomfield Hills School District voters approved an $11-j million bond issue while those in j the Brandon School District defeated proposed annexation to' the GlaikSton district. e AAA 12— The Oakland County Board of Supervisors elected Delos Hamlin to his 11th consecutive term as chairman. 13— 'The Pontiac office of the Michigan Employment Security Commission applied fbr a $2-million federal grant to operate a, job-training program ta the Pontiac School District RECORD BUDGET 14— The Pontiac Board of Edu approved an agreement vgltti A. Alfred Taubman. \ October 5— The Oakland County Board of Supervisors approved a $18.8-million budget for 1967 ... Pontiac Motor Division announced it made 47,763 cars last month an all-time high for September. 6— The grand jury indicted two men on conspiracy and extortion, and one on perjury and obstruction of justice... 1116 Oakland County school reorganization plan passed ta a special election. A # A 7— Birmingham school district voters approved a bond issiie arid tax increase. 12—A, citizen’s committee was selected by Mayor William H. Taylor Jr. to study Pontiac’s fiscal crisis, 35,006 INOCULATED 24— ^The end measles campaign inoculated 35,000 county children. 25— A new federal building was announced to be built in downtown Pontiac ... Waterford Township approved a $1.2-million budget for 1967. A A A 26— The City Commission removed ordinance 1270 from the books after the housing ordinance was ruled void by the attorney general. * 28—A $108,350 grant for Neighborhood Youth Corps., was approved by U. S. Department of Labor. November 2— Forty-two policemen called ta sick ta an apparent protest by members of the Pontiac Police Officers Association stemming from a wage dispute with the city. 3— The first snowstorm of the season crippled the county, forcing the closing of several schools ... Oakland University unveiled a five-year plan for $46 million in construction, proposing a $7,-265,203 budget to operatq a campus of 4,071 students. AAA 4— The Pontiac police’s 41-hour “boycott” ended as all but a few officers returned to work (Continued on Page C-5, Col. 1) 20— A $154,138 federal grant for education funds was given to Oakland County Commission on Economic Opportunity for four school districts ... The Oakland County Social Welfare Department and the Bureau of Social Aid approved a merger. AAA' 21— A man was arrested on a 902,OH rolled off the aesero- ,£?£ * 28—Three Lapeer County girls, bly line. idling °* a bamaid Sept. 8 Marcia A. Madeline, her sis- 21—Oakland University ''' R°c|'ester vot®d te become ter Margaret, and Karen Rider announced that OU would be the a clty by 8 margin of 676 to — were killed, in a car-truck jsjte of a major drama center t p. ...n. D ,. crash on M53. [headed by the former director m, j .j, n i a j _ t was granted increased junsdic- fya *c'j<7 01 film Is the .cope of JtevMU-III nP ’ gation whs extended to include JU,,C APARTMENT PROJECT all of Oakland County. 1—Federal authorities gavel *7*! $18-million apartment L0CAL PICKETS approval o„ 250 public housingdevdopi^ntsimilmto tee$15te 24-Local Michigan Bell Teleunits planned, in Pontiac f o r I*0* Co., employes picketed semor citizens. “ y88. anMunSed„ „ 8 the Pontiac district office. - 3— The Waterford Township J181*-™^ ^on)fge_on Bou' 26^-A $10,000 grant from the Board of Education rejected an levardin Pontiac Township. Mott ^Institute for Community offer from the Gideons to dis-1 . ' • ■ Improvement was announced tribute free Bibles in the school AUQUSt for a director to initiate a study district on the grounds that it w of the concept of a human re- would be in violation of a U. S.) sources center. . • Supreme Court ruling. j 3—Jack H. McDonald, show-i AAA * * * (tag balanced vote-getting 29-Th ft re was an unauthor- 4— A fire at Jered Industries, [strength in both Wayne and Oak-lied walkout at the Fisher Body Inc., Troy, lulled an employe, j land counties, outpointed Rich-[plant James Oiias, 41, of Roseville, ard D. Kuhn for the Republican! Death Toll in Drownings Topped '65 . The City Commission cation set a record $13.87-mimon >d “used an estimated $500,-operating budget for 1966-67-... 000 damage. Whitney M. Young Jr., National 7-Proposals to incorporate Urban League executive direc [Farmington Township and Lake tor, warned Pontiac “has trou* Orion village as cities were de-bles.” : jfeated by voters ta both com- 15—A young truck driver was tnunities. shot and killed in tyie parking! POPULATION PROJECTION lot of a south-end Pontiac tav-j era. . 9—The chairman of the Oak- 19—Pontiar voters reelected tend G°Unty Planning Commis-19—Pontiac voters reeiected si Donald A. Kalmbach, all seven incumbent city com-jspeaklng at a pIanning missioners. ence at Oakland University, pre- D 2h5t- Joseph Mercy Hospitaiidicted the cqjintv’s population of ^ ?,",paignI sur" i815,000 will double Lathe next passed its $3.25-million goal. I ss - i - 'Ar '* yva*8- A A , * - ,] A A A 22—White Lake Township Su- _. , , , 14—Voters inrWaterford W8S .m" I Township approved a $10.8-mil- d‘ct®d by tae Oakland C o u n t y jUon ^ issue for ^ Grand Jury on charges of con-jconstruction ... t™ „eW mem- spiracy, bribery and extortion in ^ w et6Cted to the C*- a zoning issue. {land Community College Board ' I 1 ■ Mi <^R|Pr j 26—Pontiac City Commission 0f Trustees. Ralph F. Tyndall HEADS CHRYSLER - Vir- elected William H. Taylor J^ and Gordon Henderson. TRUCK CHIEF - Marita J. Caserio, formerly general A disastrous weekend early in August, when six persons drowned to Oakland County waters, provided the big push in lifting the county’s lDSR’4 water death toll 50 per cent above the year before. The higher fatality count-35 compared to 22 in 1965— came to the face of an expanded water safety program by Oakland County Sheriffs deputies as Well as a seeming growth in concern by citizens. Unusual heat, growing numbers of swimmers and boater* And “just plain carelessness” are cited by sheriffs Lt. Donald K. Krati as factors contributing to the drowning toll. Kratt, head of the department’s water safety division, directed a program which ta-[ eluded boating instruction, enforcement of water safety regulations and patrol by summer deputies of area lakes. AAA Implemented late ta (he summer season —and counted on next year as an effective patrol tool—was a 36 station radio network. ‘WORST WEEKEND* The Aug. 6-7 weekend, when five men and a 12-vear-old boy lost their lives, was termed by Sheriff Frank W. Irons as the “worst weekend" for drowning deaths in the department's history. Drowning deaths began early last winter when several youths plunged through .thin ice and con tinned through late this fall when a fisherman perished in cold Elizabeth Lake. to a second term as mayor. gil E- Boyd, 376 Dunston. manager of Flint’s AC Spark PwiUac Prtu Phot* BONDED FRECKLES — These freckles won « $25 bond for (heir owners, Peggy Braniff, to Jol,rfVi4xn* t 13, OaUglllCl ( 496 Tan, Vic, Oxford, and Timothy Clifton, 10, son of Mrs. Mary Clifton of 592 Valencia. The bond, contributed by The Pontiac Press, May 3—Pontiac * A A Bloomfield Hills, whs named Plug Division, was named 15—Angelo ( Barrels) Lombar- president of Chrysler Corp; Dec. Sept. 1, as general manager of dl. 37, of Detroit was convicted 1, succeeding Lyiin A. Town- GMC Trade & Coach Division, by an Oakland County Orcuit send. Boyd, who joined Chrysler Caserio, a General Motors Court Jury of bribing a Pontiac in 1962 as vice president and vice president, succeeded Itor Bruce J.{police officer, who was working general sales manager, wasdes- Calvin J. Werner, named head The calendar span underlines the year-round challenge of water accident prevention. “Our main problem is to. summer,” Kratt noted. “There’s Ho question about it , ■« “With fishing. Skating' and other sports ta every month Oakland County 4-R Fair. the Pontiac Area United Fund ona gambling establishment. for the i down for even a minute.” .. mm v*& THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 2, 1967 C—3 November (Continued from Page C-4) ... The Pontiac Area United Fund exceeded its $1,042,000 goal on the final day of tee drive as $1,042,120 was raised. 9— Republicans outdid Democrats in election races as the Romney-Griffin ticket bested its Democratic foes .'. , Jack H. ,McDonald of Redford Township defeated Democrat incumbent Billie S. Faraum/of Waterford Township, for the 19th Congressional District Bouse seat . . . Led by supervisor/candidate Elmo? ,R. Johnson, Republicans ousted five Democratic incumbents from the Waterford Town-ship'Board. 8 PERISH 10- S eve ii of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Polmateer’s eight children perished in a Farmington Township house fire; the mother and, one/ daughter escaped the blaze and the /father was working wheri the catastrophe occurred. * 17—Howard H. Fitzgerald II, publisher of The Pontiac Press, announced the formation of a committee of community leaders to study and analyze housing needs in the Pontiac area. * • ★ .* 22— Moderates retained control of the county’s Republican executive committee at a convention held in S o u -t h f i e 1 d, despite an attempt by a conservative faction to gain more power. 23— The Pontiac City Commission voted to offer to transfer Pontiac Municipal Airport to the county for two pieces of county-owned downtown real estate. * ★ * . 30—GMC Truck and Coach Division receive da $10-million order for 200 intercity5 buses from Greyhound Lines, Inc. December 5—A sheet of ice on county streets, following a freezing rain, made driving hazardous 1 and forced the closing of several schools. . .Johanna L. Yan-sen of 80 Chippewa, a 17-year-old senior at Pontiac Central • High School, was crowned Pontiac Junior Miss. ★ * 8—Former Pontiac surgeon, 51-year-old Dr. Neil H. Sullen-berger, was slain in Memphis, Term. 8—Major crime in the city was up 15 per cent from last year, according to statistics for the first 10 months. JUNIOR MISS 12—Jennifer Siegwart of 3258 Wormer, a 17-(year-old senior at Waterford Kettering High School, was crowned Waterford Township Junior-Miss. ONLY ONE., SURVIVED - Nine-year-Old Cynthia Polmateer (extr'eme right), shown here holding her sister Denise, 2, was the lone surviving child in an early morning fire Nov. 10 at the Farmington Township home of Mr. and In Three Separate 1966 Tragedies Mrs. Harold Polmateer of 22840 Colgate. Killed in the blaze were seven Polmateer children, (from left) Susanna, 6; David, 5; Carol, 12, holding Dennis (a twin), 2; Lisa, 9; Randolph, 3; aiid Denise. WHERE FOUR DIED — With smoke still billowing from an upstairs window, Troy firemen inspect the home Of Mr. and Mrs. David Kirby of 6729 John R, after fire gutted the PwitiK Press Photo, two-story frame building Feb. 22. Four of the Kirby’s five children perished in the blaze. ELMER JOHNSON GOP Is Relishing Waterford Sweep 13— The Pontiac Municipal Airport transfer to the county „ in exchange for two downtown county properties was approved. ★ ★ - ★ 14— A proposed $9.2-m i 11 i o n budget for 1967 was officially received by the City of Pontiac. 15— Construction contracts were awarded for a $3.72-mil-lion, nine-story dormitory at Oakland University. . .A record $9.5-millk>n budget was adopted by Pontiac General Hospital Board of Trustees. ACCORD REACHED 17—Accord was reached on new pay scales for Pontiac policemen after a mediator had been called into the dispute. 23—White Lake Township Supervisor Edward Cheyz was acquitted of bribery charges when Circuit Court Judge Beer dismissed the case. * ★ « ★ ★ 27—The Northern Oakland County Girl Scout Council said it faced a financial crisis and possible curtailment of its program. * * * 28 — Employe payrolls at the city’s three General Motors plants rose to a record high of $333.8 million last year, an increase of $16 million over 1965, it was reported. OFFICIALS CLASH 29 — Oakland County Sheriff Frank Irons and civil rights officials clashed over racial segregation at the county jail and exchanged warnings during their heated discussion. ★ ★ ★ 30 — James M. McNeely, executive director of the Oakland County Commission on Eeonomr ic Opportunity answered recent criticism of the county’s anti-poverty program. 31—Pontiac Motor ' Division built a record' 866,199 Pontiacs and Tempests in 1966, eclipsing last year’s previous high of 860,652 units. By HUDSON WIL^SE Tragedy in the form of fire claimed 15 young Oakland County residents last year 'in three separate house fires. All of the victims were children. Four of Mrs. Barbara Brown’s 1 five children died last Jan. 5 in an early morning blaze at thjeir home at 3980 Apaadia Park, Waterford Township, The following month, mi Feb. 22, four preschool sisters perished in a fire at 6729 John R,j Troy. They were the daughters of Mr. and Mrs. David Kirby. Several months later, on Noy. 10, fire struck a small frame home in Farmington Tpwnship, killing seven of the eight children of Mr. and - Mrs. Harold Polmateer of 22840 Colgate. " ★ ★ ' ik ' . . Ironically, in each tragedy, the parents were spared one child. Mrs. Barbara Brown’s 14-year-old son, Larry, managed to escape from their two-story frame home by running across a porch roof and leaping to safety. Killed in that fire were Katheryn Brown, 15; Nancy, 12; Donald, 9; and Julia, 7. Mrs. Brown was at work when the fire erupted. ^ Killed in the Troy fire were Debra Kirby, 4, and her sisters, Patricia, 3; Diane, 2; and Wendy, 1. ★ ★ ♦ Another child, Kris, 5, was at school at the time. . The seven Polmateer children who died were Carol, 12; Lisa, 9; Suzanne, 6; David, 5; Randolph, 3; and 2-year-old twins, Dennis and Denise. Another child, Cynthia, 9, escaped the flames along with Mrs. Polmateer. Polmateer, likewise, was at work when the fire struck. The Waterford Township and Troy fires were, attributed to malfunctioning space heaters. The cause of the blaze at the Polmateer home was not given. A tragic train of events followed the prankish Halloweenvspray-painting of-these mailboxes in Orion Township. A . 13-year-old shot herself apparently fearful of the consequences for her role I " pfe|l - in the prank and a neighbor—a 39-year-old-man —killed himself because of harassing telephone calls that wrongly accused him of reporting the pranksters to authorities. TRAIN WRECK — An observation tower was leveled and a switchyard employe suffered a broken leg when two diesel engines collided, and one of them tipped over near a city crossing Oct, 29. The crossing area on North Johnson was Pontiac Pros* Photo closed and partially disrupted for some 48 hours as firemen and Grand Trunk Western Railroad crews worked to clear "the wreckage. November 8 was a day Waterford Township Republicans will relish for some time. The Democrats had firm control of the Township Board since April, 1957, when they scored a sweep in the general election. Going into the Nov. 8 election, Democrats held five id seven seats op the Township Board, headed by Supervisor Dorothy W. Olson. *» Then the roof collapsed under the Democrats as it bad under the Republicans in 1957. Another sweep, but this time favoring the GOP. ★ * * . Republican Elmer R. Johnson, a three-time former Waterford Township supervisor, defeated Mrs. Otsom FANGBONER Democratic Clerk Elmar R, Fangboner and Treasurer James Schell feD victims to Arthur Salley and Mrs. L. Catherine Wotter*. • Also losipg ware incumbent x Trustees William Dean Jr. and Rudy Mansfield to Republicans Ted McCullough Jr. and Herbert C.'^Cooley; ‘ «'■' .T When the* victors take over April 10, the Republicans will ; hold at tagst a 6 to 1 margin on the Township Board. • 1 Pontiac prill rncro PICKETING - City employes parade for .higher wages. TOs was a regular happening during 1966 as thf .dty’ifc nearly 700 emptqyes organized for ning late in the year collective wage boosts totaling more than $527,000. As the year closed, however, the higher wages' ■ GOP WINNERS—Three Republican candi- « - oiynradsi dates, (from left) Sen. Robert P. Griffin, Gov. . County Market during a fall campaign swing George W.-Romney and Lt. Gov. WHtiaitt JG. through southeastern Michigan. Alt three woo C-e m THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, JANUAR^g. 1967 War Is Chosen as No. 1 News By The Associated Press THE VIETNAM WAR, for the second straight year, is voted the top news story of the year by AP member newspapers and radio and TV stations. it it it - It is a, guerrilla war, a helicopter war, a war bf Operation Masher, Operation Texas, Op-‘ eration Hawthorne, Operation El Paso, Operation Hastings, Operation Sgt. Howard, with 1? Marines holding Hill 488, Operation Attleboro, with 25,000 Americans in the fray. It is a war Defense Secretary Robert McNamara says ' our side is winning, and a war we keep trying to stop.. Ambassador Arthur Goldberg told the United Nations t h e U.S. would stop bombing North Vietnam “the moment we are assured North Vietnam would act to reduce its support of the war in the South.” Secretary of State Dean Rusk and tiie President called repeatedly in 1966 for peace talks. U.S. jets started bombing oil depots near Hanoi and Haiphong June 29. China said American jets shot down a Chinese plane inside China; the U.S. said it was 20 miles from the border over Vietnam. ' * ★ ★ U.S pilots were paraded in Hanoi and there was a brief threat they would be tried as war criminals. On Aug. 9, U.S. planes bombed civilians in a village and one of our own Coast Guard cutters. PURGE Internally, Premier Nguyen Cao Ky, of South Vietnam purged his chief rival in April and mobs of Buddhists demonstrated I in Da Nang, 'Hue and Saigon. At least six committed suicide by fire. On Sept. 11 the South Vietnamese elected 117 persons to write a constitution to return the country to civilian rule next year SNIPER — An Austin, Tex., policeman is carried to an ambulance after being critically wounded by a sniper bn the 24th floor of the University of Texas library tower. When Aug. 1 Was over, 30 were wounded and 17 were dead, including the sniper, Charles Whitman. In August, American forces in South Vietnam- passed the 300,000 mark. In September, the total American deaths since 1961 passed 5,000. ★ * * 2. This was a year scarred by apparently motiveless murders, several of them mass murders. WHITMAN On July 31, Charles Whitman, 24, killed, his wife and mother," then climbed to the top of the University of Texas library tower in Austin and began blasting with three rifles, a shotgun and two pistols. In 80 minutes he killed 14 strangers and wounded 30. An Austin patrolman climbed to a platform above Whitman and shot and killed him. Whitman, an architectural engineering student, had seemed normal to friends, but he left behind notes indicating he hated his father and realized there was something wrong with his mind. A 32-man panel of experts on Sept. 8 said a malignant brain Orbiter 2 took spectacular | closeups of the moon Nov. 23. ! We sent up GemipJ 8, 9,10,11 j ahd 12, with astronauts taking; walks in space, tethering toj target satellites and splashing] down tight beside, recovery ships. Our Titan 3, supposed to put’ eight communications satellites into orbit, blew up Aug. 26. AFQLLO The Apollo space ship, which will carry Americans to the moon, flew successfully, unmanned, Aug. 25. ’ 5. Another shocking ,mass, i killing was that of eight student nurses in Chicago, just after midnight July 14. A young man entered a house used as a dormitory by student nurses at South Chicago Community Hospital, bound the nine girls there and strangled or stabbed to death eight ' of them. . tumor may have caused Whit-] C®ra®)n Amurao, from the Philippines, saved herself by hiding under a bed. ... i ★ *■ ★ ' 1 The off-year election and its 'heavy wins for the Republican iParty is the year’s No- 3 story. The GOP picked up three seats jin the Senate, 47 in the House of (Representatives, and eight gov-lernorships to bring the party’s 'total to 25. The Republicans The Top 10 Stories o! the Year and Top 19 Newsmakers of the Year selections are made In strict accordance w i t h ballots returned by editor* of Associated Press member newspapers and radio and TV stations. Editors are annually asked to vote for the a e ^ s stories of greatest impact and import and to name 10 top news personalities. Selections do nob necessarily indicate support for policies carried out in stories chosen or support of the actions'of persons chosen. They merely identify the top news stories and individuals who made the most news in 1966 in thelr respective fields. man to go berserk. ★ ★ both also added 677 seats legislatures, now control houses in 15 states. FOR PRESIDENT Some winners, Gov. George Romney in Michigan, Ronald Reagan, elected governor in California,, and Charles Percy, elected senator from Illinois, are being eyed as possible presidential timber for 1968. 4. In space, the Russians achieved their first soft iand- After an Intensive manhunt, police on July 17 arrested Richard F. Speck, 24, seaman and drifter. He has pleaded Innocent to eight murder indictments. MANILA / , 6. ^ President Johnson in late in state octobec'went to Manila for a conference Of nations: allied in thp/Vietnam War—the- United .States, South Korea, South Vietnam, Thailand, Australia, New Zealand and the Philippines. National leaders signed' a communique pledging the United States to quit South Vietnam within six months after North Vietnam withdrew its forces. Peking called the communique ing on the moon, with Luna 9, (humbug; Hanoi said it was a Feb. 3. Our Surveyor 1 landed I demand for surrender. gently on the moon June 2 and took 11,000 pictures. Surveyor 2 went out of control and crashed on the moon. Our Orbiter 1 went up Aug. 10. k. it it In his 17 days out of the country, LBJ went to six countries, including Australia, where bags of paint were thrown at the bub- ble-top Hmoushie ir) which he and Mrs. Johnson were riding. He .mauie a surprise 2 hour 24 minute visit to Vietnam. \ RIOTS 7. There were race riots in several cities this year, none as destructive as last year’s riots in the Watts section of Los Angeles. I There was another incident in Watts in March, with two killed and 25 injured. During July’s heat wave, there was rioting when policemen tried to turn off fire hydrants in Chicago. After three days, with two dead, six policemen shot, and 300 arrested, 3,000 n a t i o n a 1 guardsmen were called in to restore order. * Cleveland, on July (21, had 1,000 national guardsmen patrolling a Negro area but 85 fires started anyway, frpm fire bombs. Rioting broke out the same day in Brooklyn, with one killed. Violence smoldered in Detroit and Lansing. it it it Francisco, in an Impoverished area near Candlestick Park and St. Louis had demonstrations for several nights. In both cities violence erupted after a policeman had shot and killed a fleeing Negro suspect. / / ' INFLATION •' 8. The greatest “peacetime boom in the nation’s history overheated in 1966 and some of its benefits were lost in- the steam of inflation. r- Everybody asked too.much of the economy,. Business rfeed to build new factories; labor askeddor higher wages; the federal government spent heavily for social welfare and the war in Vietnam. •'' The economy couldn’t meet the demands. There wasn't enough highly skilled labor to do everything that was wanted, so labor could command greater price for its services, and did. This put pressure on prices. The pressure on prices forced workers to demand higher wages. Food prices cose and so did housewives’ anger. •k it it was ailing; the teen-age Red used in court unless the defendant had been clearly notified of his rights. The minority opinion expressed fear file decision will hamper the police in handling criminals. , Guard roamed the streets inveighing against the old “order. But the big news ih 1966 was Red China’s swift movement into the nuclqar age. j . ★ it . -it | On May 9 China announced it| had successfully detonated ai device containing thermonuclear j material. At first the U,S. State Department estimated it wasi 130 Itilotons *of yield, later decided it was at least in the! 2f)0-kilotons range, equivalent to 200,000 tons of TNT. RED WARHEAD > In October, China announced it had flown a guided missile with a nuclear warheads If it went only 500 miles, that is far enough from near a Chinese border to reach Korea, Japan, Vietnam, Thailand or Formosa. it it, it 10. In a 5 to 4 decision June 13, tiie Supreme Court handed down a ruling which makes far-ranging changes in the interrogation of suspects by police. The suspect must be told he has a right to have a lawyer present throughout injerroga- The stock market spent the fi°n-year in descent. If inflation was I Also,- no confession may be going to eat into profits, traders Reasoned, stocks weren’t as good a buy as they had been. ANTI-INFLATION The Federal Reserve System forced interest rates up, some of them to their highest levels in 40 years, thusdiscouraging borrowing. The first administration anti-inflationary measure was to suspend the 7 per cent investment tax credit that had been encouraging business, to build new plants. The President also announced plans to cut federal spending and late in the year considered raising taxes. By this time, the economy had begun to slow. Fewer demands were being made and inflation was less of a threat. Red China deepened i t s AP TOP TEN 1. Vietnam War. 2. Sniper Charles Whit-. man kills 14 from top of University of Texas library tower. 3. GOP wins heavily in off-year elections. 4. Space flights and explorations. 5. Eight student nurses murdered in Chicago. • 6. President Johnson’s 17-day trip to Asia for Manila conference. 7. Race-riots 8. Stock market slumps; tight money. 9. Red China blasts nuclear bomb; flics missile with nuclear warhead. 10. Supreme Court rules on arrest procedures. In September, three nights of;split with Russia; Mao Tze-tung, uproar and looting raged in San Communist Party chairman, POLITICAL VICTORY — Ronald Reagan, probably the best known of the Republicans who defeated Democratic incumbents Nov. 8, acknowledges cheers of supporters as he appears with his wife, Nancy, at his Los Angeles election night headquarters. QatuuUiy— 1— Pope Paul VI appeals for peace In Viet Nam. Transit strike halts sub-w*ys and buses in New York City. 2— Green Bay Packers wallop Cleveland Browns. 23-12, to win NFL title. 11— India Prime Minister Shastri dies in Russia few* hours after signing peace pact with Pakistan. 12— President Johnson, in state of union message, vows United States will stay in Vietnam “until aggression has stopped.” Indonesia blood bath wipes out Communists and sympathizers. 13— New York transit strike ends with big gains for workers. 17—Sargent Shrivet, gives up Peace Corps post to direct war on poverty. U.$. hydrogen bomb lost over S p a fn after bomber and Jet tanker collide. 24—Mrs. Indira Gandhi becomes India’s prime minister. 31—U.S. bombing of North Vietnam resumes after 37-day pause. General Motors’ 196!^ profits are $2.1 billion, largest ever for a U S. firm. J’sbJiuaity— 1—Sad-faced Buster Keaton dies at 70. 3— Unmanned Soviet spacecraft makes soft landing on the moon. 4— Johnson meets South Vietnamese leaders in Hawaii talks. 10—Millionaire showman Billy Rose dies at 66. . 16—To fight inflation, U.S. savings bonds interest is raised to 4.15 per cent. 47—Soviet TU 114. "world's, largest airliner, crashes in Moscow take-o(T. 20—Adm. Chester Nim-Itz, U.S. Pacific fleet chief in World War II, diet at 80 ' 21—France notifies NATO to move out by 1969 7TltUuch— 1—Soviets claim unmanned spacecraft crashes on planet Venus. 3— Cold war GIs granted educational and other benefits. 4— U.S. fighter-bombers strike fa o r t h Vietnamese targets within 40 miles of China border. 5— Canadian Pacific air; liner crashes in Tokyo; kill ing 64. 6— British jet, with 85/ Americana aboard, crashes on Japan’s Mount Fuji; 1^4 die. 7— Supreme Court Upholds Voting Rights Agt of ,1965, clearing way for large-scale Negro participa tion in this year’s elections 10—Crown Princess Beatrix of the Netherlands weds Claus von Amsberg. German commoner with a history of Hitler Youth Corps membership. 15— Watts section of Los Angeles explodes in bloody Negro rioting. • 16— Gemini-8 docks with Agena vehicle in space. 21—New York Herald Tribune, Journal American and Worid • Telegram announce they’ll merge 25—Premier Ky promises constitution to South Vietnam. 31—Britain rg-elects Harold Wilson to another term. - sanction to halt ships taking oil to Rfiodesia. British author Evelyn Waugh dies at 62. 11—Jack Nicklaus wins Master green coat second vear in row. 13—Vietnamese guerrib las attack and wreck main Salmon air base. l%—More Yanks than natives die in week’s Vietnam tives fighting. 18—U.S, fighter-bombers wreck radar and missile bases near Hanoi.' 21—Queen Elizabeth is 40 Medal of Honor Is awarded Pfc. Milton Olive of -Chicago. who threw himself on a Viet Cong grenade to save buddies! 24— Labor disputes block New York newspaper mer ger, 25— Industry says it will accept federal auto safety standards 28—Johnson asks Congress for legislation .banning all housing bias. Wlm}- his hostage of a week, teenager Peggy Ann Bradnick. is released unharmed. . 21—Cassius Clay defeats Briton Henry Cooper in title* defense. 26— Buddhist students sack and hum U S. cultural cpnt»r in Hue. 27— Indonesia ends " with Malaysia. Qune— oil installations near Hanoi and Haiphong. British seamen end 45-day strike. Mf- dpjul— 1— Britain’s Labor party wins 97-seat m a j o r i t v- in Commons. 2— Buddhists go pnTam-page in Hue, Da Nang, call for overthrow of South Vietnam’s Ky. 6— Anti - American riots rage in Saigon. 7— Missing U.S. H-bomb recovered intact from 2,500-foot depth in sea off spain. .8—Caribbean liner Viking Princess burns at sea; 491 rescued. 9—Britain asks U:N. 2— Second Pulitzer for Arthur Schlesinger Jr for “A Thousand Days"—President Kennedy’s White House tenure. 3— Yanks chase Viet Cong force into Cambodia. 4— Mrs. George Wallace wins. Democratic nomination for governor of Ala bama. 5— Car sales decline in wake of auto safety hearings. 7— Kauai King wins Kentucky Derby. 8— U.S.„bombers cut rail lines serving Hanoi. 9— Red China explodes nuclear device. 10— Peking releases pic tares of an apparently healthy Mao Tse-tunf, not seen in public since, November. 16—Brit ish seamen strike first tifhe in 55' years, threaten nation's economy 18—Kidnaper William Hollenbaugh, 44, is slain near'‘Shade Gap, Pa., and 1— U.S. bombers wreck arsenal and munitions dumps north of Hanoi. 2— Surveyor spacecraft soft-lands on moon, sends back pictures of moon surface. Joanuin Balaguer wins presidency of Dominican Republic. Gemini-9 blasts off Cape Kennedy on 3-day space flight. 3— Loose shield prevents Gemini-9 from docking with target vehicle. 5— Astronaut Eugene Cecnan takes 2-hour space walk. James Meredith shot while on Mississippi march to encourage Negrbes to vote. 6— Gemini-9 lands safely in Atlantic. 8—National and American football .leagues merge. Hurricane Alma rips Florida. 11— Capt. Bill Carpenter, former West Point football star, is 'awarded Medal of Honor for ordering a napalm drop on his position, overrun by the Viet Cong, 12— Khrushchev appears in Moscow to vote. ’ 18—Richard Helms sue ceeds Admiral William Ra barfi as CIA head. 20—De Gaulle is Russia state visitor. 20—Billy Casper wins U.S. Open title in playoff with Arnold Palmer. 28— Military jfinta overthrows Argentine President IRia. 29— U.S. bombers wreck 7—Sukarno definitely out as Indonesian president as Gen. Suharto takes reins. , 9—Great Britain and France comolete agreement to build t"nnel sys: tem under English channel. 12—Soviet, Polish athletic teams cancel Los Angeles appearances as protest against U.S. actions in Vietnam. 14— Jim Brown, pro football’s peerless perform er, retires from game. 15— Suspect Richard Speck indicted in murder of eight nurses in Chicago apartment., • , 19—Organized hoodlum gangs suspected in Cleveland Negro riots as arsonists, ‘ looters rampage five days. Gemini-10 mission tagged “success" ?1—North Viet Nam threaten^ captured U.S. flyers with “war trials." 24—Champagne Tony Lema, colorful golfdom fig ure. dies in>plane crash. 26—-Stock market drops to lowest point since Ken* nedy assassination. 31—Machinists Union spurns President’s recommended settlement, votes to continue strike against five major airlines. CbtquAt-* I— University of Texas sniper kills 15 before he is slain. ” ■ 6—Luci Baines Johnson weds Patrick Nugent, 8—Jetliner crash takes 42 lives at Fails City, bleb. II— Lunar Orbiter launched, to'photograph moon landing sites fof astronauts. 12—Beatles begin U.S. tour amid “more popular than Jesus” furor. 18—Red Guard youth corps goes on rampage in Chinese cities against foreign influence. 22—Airlines strike ends. 26—U.S. planes strafe, napalm Yanks in Vjetnam mistake. 28—Former President Truman warns of depression danger in rising in terest rates. Sfipianibsh— I— National Guard keeps order as 250 Negro demonstrators march through Cicero. Ill, 6-—Prime Minister Hendrik Verwoerd of South Africa is slain by white man. Negroes riot in Atlanta. SNICK leader Stokely Carmichael arrested for role in Atlanta riots. 10—Cassius Clay stops Karl Mildenberger in Germany bout to retain title II— De Gaull* vje ws French nuefear test in Tuamotu Islands. Large voter turnout in Viet Nam election is blow to Reds. 12— New York World Journal Tribune publishes first edition as 140-day strike ends. 13— Balthazar Vorster is new South African prime minister. 15—Gemini-11 mission ends safely in Atlantic. 18—Valerie Percy, daughter of ChaHes Percy, GOP ^Senate candidate, slain by intruder in home nepr Chicago. 25—Typhoon races through Japan, kills more than 300. 28—Negro riots flare up in San Francisco. Octobah— 5—Texas <5ourt of Criminal Appeals reverses Jack Ruby’s murder conviction and orders I new trial for Lee Harvey Oswald’s assassin. 6—President Johnson drafts- Llewellyn Thompson for return to Soviet as U.S. ambassador. Baltimore Orioles take fourth straight from Los Angeles Dodgers to win World Series., 10—President Johnson, Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko discuss closer ties between their two countries at White House meeting. 17—Johnson arrives in Hawaii on .first leg of- his Far East trip. 20—Sen. Harry F. Byrd, potent political figure, dies. . ’ I 24—Johnson, leaders of six other non-Commnnist nations meet in Manila for summit conference on Viet Nam war. 26—J o h n s o n flies to South Vietnam, tells troops, “We shall never let ydu down.” 28—Red China explodes fourth nuclear device, this one carried as missile warhead. 31—New York police arrest 20 calling themselves Minutemen, seize arms and ammunition whicn the men had planned to use in attacking what they considered Communist -run camps in New York, New Jersey and Connecticut. | Tbbambah— 4—Thousands homeless, art works damaged as storms lash northern Italy, causing heavy flooding. 8—GOP gains 47 Hoitse seats, three in Senate in off-year upsurgence. ; 10—Nuclear submarine N a u t i 1 u s. rams carrier Essex off North Carolina, 13—Isf8fi attacks across Jordan border. 15— Gemini-12 splashes down safely after astronauts demonstrate man can work in space. 16— President Johnson has hernia repaired and a polyp removed from his throat in successful operation. 18—Sandy Koufax,. fearing permanent damage to his ailing, arm, retires at Zenith of pitching career. a 26—K u r t-G e o r g Kies* inger forms West German coalition government, takes • chancellor’s reins. (Dacambah— 1—Thirty-two crewmen die as ore ship breaks up ahd sinks in Lake Huron storm. 8—U Thant is Te-elected to five-year term as U.N. secretary general. 4—Viet Cong deal Saigon double -blow—mortar attack on Tan Son Nhut airport and blasting a U.S. billet In downtown Saigon. 6— Rhodesia rejects Brit- -ain’s terms to settle independence crisis. 7— U.S. air units aid Thais ih anti-Communist guerrilla war. 8— Greek ship sinks in Aegean storm; 237 lost. . 9-—Historic U.N. pact bars war and weapons in spdbe. , 12—Supreme Court qp-holds 1964 jury tampering conviction of Teamsters* James Hoffa., . Jn pressure to get more revenue, Syria cuts flow of oil in pipeline from Iriq to the Mediterranean. 14— Reds charge U. S. bombs fall inside Hanoi. 15— Bill Moyers, President Johnson’s press secretary, quits to become a newspaper publisher. ££ Walt Disney dies at 65. 16— Weston, 111., chosen as site of Atomic Energy commission’s $375 million atom smasher,. 17— U.N. Security Council invokes mandatory economic sanctions against Rhodesia rpled by a rebel white minority. |f 19-^U. S. 9th Division lands in South Vietnam in troop" build-up. Some Must Go; Some Must Stay “Not Exactly a Perfect Fit!" THE PQ^TIAl PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 2, 1967 Cr*~t but Loses Elsewhere By NEIL GILBRIDE AP Labor Writer WASHINGTON - Organized labor triumphed over the White House and business in its fight for higher wages in 1966 but lost ground in prices and poli-tics. . . * The result spells trduble to the unions in tee new Congress and in tee coming year’s major bargaining table collision with industry. * ★ ★ _ Labor victories In breeching White House wage guidelines in the past year’s biggest contract settlements had a somewhat empty ring in light of the sharpest rising living costs in a decade. Cost-of-living wage escalators — the workers’ insurance policy against inflation — became a prime union demand again after years of decline. APPREHENSIVE And after many of their candidates went down to defeat in the November elections, labor leaders became increasingly apprehensive about possible hostile legislation in Congress in 1967. AFL-CIO President G e o r.g e Meany foresaw the possibility of a compulsory arbitration law to prevent walkouts like last summers jrirlines strike, and maybe even wage-price controls. ' ★ * ★ «,. *. - “Wo don’t look forward to that with any great feeling of delight,-’ Meany said in behalf of the bigJAbor federation’s lls million members in IK unions. Some 35,000 machinists won annual wage and fringe benefit increases of 5 per cent or more a f t e r a six-week strike that grounded five major airlines. In the process, they handed President Johnson his firs defeat in major labor cases by rejecting one contract proposal negotiated in the White House SIMILAR SIZE Later, about 180,000 members of 11 unions won a similar size contract increase from the * giants of the electrical industry. General Electric Co. and West inghouse Electric Corp. Labor did get a new minimum wage law, hiking the present $1.25 an hour minimum to $1.40 next February and to $1.60 in , February 1968. ★ ★ ★ The 5 per cent contract gains and the emphasis on cost-of living protection against inflar tion, set a trend that put in lifnbo the. government’s efforts to hold wage hikes to 3.2 per cent a year under White House economic guidelines. The government also increasingly warned of threats to the Vietnam war effort in coping with a rash of strikes involving defense products ranging froih electronic tubes to jet aircraft engines./1 - NATIONAL INTEREST The question of national interest and vital defense production and the economic argument over inflation are sure to heighten in the series of major contract negotiations coming up in 1967. ■ These involve several million workers in trucking, auto manufacturing, rubber, clothing, telephone, paper, leather, food processing and other industries. ★ ★ * In politics the AFL-CIO started off the year irked at the Democratic administration for what it termed failure to deliver past campaign promises to labor, but returned to the fold in toe to share tiiie party’s rtf morse at the big Democratic losses to the Republicans at election time. . Meany warned that labor must work to prevent “strangulation” of recently enacted programs for medical care, education, antipoverty and other Great Society legislation. UNABLE TO WIN Labor was unable.to win repeal of Section 14B of the faft-Hartley Act. legalize, construction site picketing, or improve unemployment compensation in the heavily Democratic 89th Congress, and chances for these proposals in the new 90fli appeared poor. “Pretty dim,” Meany said glumly of the chances of reviving the bill to repeal Section 14B, which now sanctions state laws prohibiting unibn shop contracts under which all employes must join the union. * ★ ★ In another labor event of the past year, James R. Hoffa was reelected president of the independent Teamsters union despite 13 years in pending prison sentences. Meany and auto workers President Walter Reuther, the principal architects of tee 11-year-old AFL-CIO, clashed bitterly iii a dispute over the federation’s hard-line foreign policy'. REUTHER ACCUSATION Reuther accused Meany of undermining President Johnson’s “bridge-building” efforts to ease tensions with the Communist world. “We don’t believe you can build bridges to countries that oppiress workers,” said Meany. A rash of ^trikes and. strike threats grew from a relatively new quarter — public employes, teachers, hospital workers and transit employes. These labor troubles raised anew the question of whether city and state employes should have the fight to strike. RAISED A STINK In one such case, a garbage-ynen’s strike in a well-toS# A«M. to S P.M. WEDNESDAY MU SATUKDAY ViSC A.M. *• 1 P.M. ,1044 Josljra 3S44SIS Poadae, Midi. 4*055 ~ ■■ ■■ ^ s&S&ssssss; /\A WHITE * COLOR # If MONTGOMERY WARD SPICTACULAB SAVINGS TQ YOU. BUY NOW AND SAVE. STOCK SAIF m® &■ ' ' Ur I1VVV MIVU 9ATII Priced lew! White muslin and colorful percale sheets GREAT VALUE I THRIFTY, DURABLE WHITE COTTON MUSLIN SHEETS Crisp, wear-tested 128 count muslin for serviceable wear. 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THIS HYDROGEN BOMB, the only one ever photographed for publication, was recovered intact from the craggy depths of the Mediterranean, the last of four jettisoned on and off southern Spain when a U. S. bomber and tanker collided in mid-air. The incident proved one thing: The nuclear age carries less accidental danger to the world than had been suspected. Rugged and barren surface of the moon. ■ “HAWKS" and “doves” fought the war at home, the Selective Service sys-i!p/ tem came under fire from many quarters but GIs (be-p•• ft C;a >%exi! pJ^s-s'Sp 'ik;f ■ rt* SPECIAL! COZY COLOJIIAL LIVING ROOM ENSEMBLE... SOFA AND TWO CHAIRS Now you can furnish your whole living room at once with decorator correlated pieces.. Plush, attached pillow back sofa and two matching lounge Chairs. Pleated skirts, reversible cushions, wing back styling. CLOSEOUT ON ALL 1966 WESTINGHOUSE COLOR - BUCK and WHITE - AND FORT ABLE TELEVISIONS! 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Also, the hunting crowd has been criticized so often for ganging up on poor defenseless Reynard that its members are becoming thin-skinned. VOLUNTEERS The human quarries that are now being hunted instead of foxes are all volunteers who are paid well for their services. Typical is Garth Williams, a stable boy of Solihull, Warwickshire, who allows himself to be hunted by the Wootton Hall bloodhounds. “I like it," says Garth. “I have been hunted at least a thousand times — usually in the morning around 7 o’clock in order to give the dogs a workout and myself some practice. ★ ★ ★ “You get bitten now and again, but only by accident,” Garth adds. ENTHUSIASM NOT SHARED Not all volunteers share Garth’s enthusiasm for getting nipped by the dogs. ' Tom Dent, of Debenham, Suffolk, recently ran 12 miles over ploughed fields with IS bloodhounds and the Easton harriers in hot pursuit. Dent, I ★ ★ ★ A second Surveyor was less fortunate, however, and ran into control trouble on Its way to toe moon in September and was destroyed. | CHRISTMAS EVE Russia’s second moon' land-down on toe Ocean of Stoning Christmas Eve and sent back panoramic photographs of the lunar* terrain. The probe’s picture quality was good, but it was not expected to match toe photographic productivity of Surveyor 1. But tiie Soviet news agency Tass said Luna 13 also carried mechanical manipulations to tret hath the jjensity and hardness of toe lunar surface. America’s next Surveyor, set for a late February launch, is expected to cany a similar instrument to dig into toe mom’s soil. ' HOME CARE EQUIPMENT BED RENTAL • HOSPITAL BEDS, COMMODES o ALL TYPES OF WHEEL CHAIRS • CANES, CRUTCHES, PORTO LIFTS • BED BOARDS, TRACTION UNITS 0 WALKERS, BATHROOM AIDS Dial 334-2529 AREA WIDE FREE DELIVERY AMERICAN ORTHOPEDIC SBVICE 1066 W. 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FRONT FLOOR MAT I ALUMINUM SNOW SHOVEL | SAFETY BLINKER LANTERN 6-Q-326 DOOR-TO-DOOR •Heavy duty molded rubber • Fits most cars—full contour •Black, white, red, blue, green UmH 2 per customer Additional $2.S0ee. • 40% lighter than average steel shovel • Heavy-gauge, deep-ribbed aluminum blade with reinforcing steel edge • Blade size 18” x 14" ONLY POWERFUL SEARCHLIGHT BEAM •4-way waterproof push button switch •Unbreakableplastic case-' •Two-tone •Batteries extra Limit two per customer Additional lanterns $1.95 6-Q-741 QQo Each ' •' * “ i ' Tire and Appliance Center A- ' \ ■ \ 146 WEST HURON STREET, PONTIAC-333- . Hours: Tub., Wed., Thur. and Sat. 9 to 6-Mon. and Fri, 9 to I P.M. - e THE PONTIAC PfiESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 2, 1967 By JOSEPH R. COYNE WASHINGTON (AP)-The nation’s economy, subjected this year to its Brit big taste of inflation since the currbnt boom began in 1961, moves into the new year still going strong but with some majorheadaches. The past year was one of higher prices, higher interest, supermarket boycotts, talk of tax increases, rapidly increasing defense spending brought on by escalation b( t h e Vietnam war and a business investment boom that had more than a few economists jumpy. •* * • * Government experts predict a continuation of the boom in 1967 but without' the unusual price increases of 1966.. Some foresee a slight slackening in economic activity during the second half of the .year. “The entire year should be good but the first half will probably be better than the second,” says one economist. SECOND LARGEST? The over-all rise in economic activity, however, could be the second largest' in history, second only to 1966 when inflation ate away a good part of the advances. Government economists have used such terms as healthy, robust, steady and strong to describe the over-all economic growth expected to continue into 1967. As 1966 moved into December, the biggest uncertainty of the year was still unresolved — whether President Johnson would request a tax increase to help meet the cost of the Vietnam war. , ' Johnson indicated a decision might not come until January. WARN OF RECESSION Some private economists who had urged a tax increase early in 1966 as a hedge against inflation said as the year drew to a close that a tax increase during 1967 might lead to recession. But government economists don’t see a recession in the cards. W ★ ★ mid Strong, Faces Problems For the housing industry,' the slack already is there, But government experts predict an upturn no later than mid-1967. Despite this prediction, however, privately owned housing starts are expeeted to hit their lowest point in two decades. Tight money—thp scarcity of funds which is accompanied by high interest rates—was h}amed for the slump in housing construction which saw new starts drop late in 1966 to their lowest level since the end of World War H. GROWTH RATE The President’s Council of Economic Advisers said a 4 per cent rate of real economic growth in 1967 would keep the nation within its physical capacity to produce and thus lead to greater price stability. Here’s how Gardner Ackley, the council president, sees the future: “Barring a sudden end to Vietnam hostilities, and given a reasonable degree of wisdom in the fiscal and monetary policy decisions still to be made, I am confident that the economy in 1967 can continue to provide high andf growing1 production and incomes, steady jobs, and some reduction of existing distortions, both real and financial. ★ •k -k “Given as well a reasonably responsible behavior by labor and management in forthcom-ing wage and price decisions, we can also begin to move significantly toward the reestablishment of price stability.’’ Ackley said the cost of living can’t be expected to return to the 1.25 per cent fate of annual! increase in the 1960-65 period but it shouldn't repeat the 3.5 per cent rise of 1966. GREATER INCREASE A top private economist agrees that real economic growth next year should approximate 4 per cent but foresees a greater increase jn prices during 1967 than this year. This view, said Carl Madden, chief economist for the U S. Chamber of Commerce, is linked to further acceleration of the Vietnam war. Some government economists, although not challenging the 4 per pent goal in real economic growth, have said a 4.5 per cent rate is needed to prevent a rise in unemployment and to prevent an erosion of job opportunities for Negroes. An average 5.5 per cent rise in real-growth the last 5Vfe years dropped the unemployment rate to less ttafn 4 per cent of tHe total labor force during 1966. Gross National Product—the value of all goods and services produced in the economy— reached $681.2 billion duriitig 1966 and was expected to\reach about $740 billion in 1966, a record rise of almost $60 billion. 1967 RISE The 1967 rise is estimated by the council at about $50 billion, the second largest in history, but with a lesser percentage of the advance eaten by inflation. About $30 billion of this was figured as real growth in output. This would produce a GWP figure in 1967 of $790 billion, well on its way to the $1 trillion projected for 1970. k * * cal year, $7 billion higher than I market boycotts which sprang projected. _\PP throughout the country as The figures for the new fiscal year beginning July 1 were anybody’s guess. One projection — the cost of living continued to rise. Some of these sales gimmicks were being abandoned as given. NoVt 30 to newsmen coy-'the year came to a close.. , erjng^ President Johnsop in T«-j Pr,gE INCREASES as — went as high as $146 billion * ..... ,. In addition to higher consumer prices, 1966 also Saw price increases in basic industries as — went as high as $1$ or more in spending. A clearer picture won’t .. . .. emerge until January whenw‘f^ government called President Johnson presents his tionary and wage settle ■ ■ ■ ■ • ~ - aments which shattered the ad cent ministration s 3.2 per wage-price guidelines. It also saw the administration fail to end the deficit in the na- A good part of the output will result from government spending, but as the year drew to a close it still was uncertain what the income and outgo figures for the current and the next fiscal year would be. Some predictions of govern ment spending for the fiscal year which ends next June 30 exceeded $125 billion, including $20 billion to fight the Vietnam war. This would be well above the $122.8-billion spending budget sent to Congress for fiscal 1967. REVENUE RISE - But revenues also have been rising faster than expected and eveh the Treasury Department —usually conservative in its estimates—said tax receipts could reach $118 billion this fis- budget to Congress for the fiscal year beginning July 1. And even that is subject to change later, depending especially on the course of the Vietnam war. , -----1 m-------- Officials in the other regulato- tion’s balance of payments -ry field approved the largest!th® difference between wha! ! corporate merger ,in history j Americans spend abroad and during the year — the joining of|^ore’8ners spend in this eornlry, the Pennsylvania and New York Th® imbalance was less than Central railroads - but it will expected considering the impact be 1967 before any final decision °* P*e Vietnam war. is made. j $ . * * * REVIEW SCHEDULED ffitfSESS talU The Supreme Court is sched- back part of a steel price in-' juled to review some aspects of crease, but the story was differ-.j the case in January. ent in August when the industry i Another major merger pro- presented a united front in rais-posal that would have resulted ing prices on strip and sheet jn the longest rail system was | steel by 2.2 per cent. Irejected. This would have com-. This climaxed a poor month bined the Great Northern, on the wage-price field for the Northern Pacific and Chicago,! administration. It also saw air-Burlington & Quincy into one-line machinists reject a contract huge system linking the Mid-j settlement drawn up under west with the Pacific. White House auspices. The final * * [settlement produced^<<>iiuinat- The Federal Trade Commis-ed wage and fringe benefit in-sion, meanwhile, began an in-crease of more than 6 per cent vestigation of promotional gim-jand included a cost of living micks used bv supermarkets to escalator which the Council of attract business. ; Economic Advisers has called This was prompted by super-!an engine of inflation. GROSS NATIONAL PRODUCT - In terms of real dollars rather than inflated dollars, the gain in the gross . national product during 1966 could be termed modest. A big part of the increase was due to inflation. Another part of the increase was the result of sharply higher defense expenditures. The gross national product is the total production of all goods and services. New York Bond Results for Past Year 1*M ANNUAL NEW YORK BONDS , NEW YORK (AP)—Following Is a table of transactions In tha bonds on the " York Stock Exchange during the wet, sales naii sates Nat 5 a table! ^ (hds.) HW Low L«t Chi. (hdt.) High Low Last Chg. (hds.) High Low Last Chg. the New ChIB&Q 3V4X5 39 74'* 75V. 74V4+ )V, Duq Lt 2+As80 19 76 73+4 73+4—4+4 LehV 4sD2003f 611 3f% 20 2064—12% the Year ChiBAQ 2+4s?0 596 91 86 88%—2% Duq Lt 2Hs79 27 79 71 76 — SVilLehVTer 5s79 129 79 63% 68 —15% the previous year on the bonds listed ChlEIII 3%s85 prior to Jaousry 1, 1966. IChlErle 5s82 Sales Ne j ChiGW 6%s3Bf (In 811808) High Low Last Chg 1 ChiGW 8s88 INTER-AM DEV. BANK ,ChlL 4V*s2003t 8Vis 86 Apr 10 83 13 83 • 6V» 86 Nov -23 90 85 85 WORLD BANK IntBk 3%s68 2 96 96 96 IntBk 3s72 1 12 8? 82 IntBk 6V*s73 2 91.16 91 91 9 IntBk 6%s78 2 90.16 90.16 90.16 NEW YORK CITY li 80 1626 86.7 76 80.12 CORPORATION BONDS iChil&L 4s83f CMSP 5s2055f CMSP 8Vjs2019 Chi&NW 3s89 5.2 iChiRIP 5Vjs83 iChlRIP 8Vas95 „ . ;ChlRIP 2Ves80 N" Chi TH rt»96 Salas (hds.) High Law Last Chg.'chl TH Inc96 ______A____ jChWIpd 4+4*42 AlrRed 3’/is87 nn°r If a'ujj&V 23116 131 86 107%—19% £ "gif AlsGtSo 3V.S67 8 96% 95% 95'%- 2 ? L£Z3 AJaPow 3%S72 323 91% 85% 88 - AlbSus 4V4*75 21 97 95% 95%- 2+4*74 AlbSus 4**s75 21 97 95% 95V4- AlleghL 4+4*44 5 92% 92% 92’A- AlleghL cv6SS1 8818 122 90% 116 - Alleg W 6s9| 79 72% 60% 61%-tl% AllledC 5.20891 791 100 AlliadCh 3%s78 1638 88% 77 83' - 5 AIllSt CV6%S81 10860 126% 92 98%—28% Alcoa cv5%s91 6860 118 106% 115'% Alcoa 414X2 1215 95 , 86 89% Alcoa 3%s83 692 90% 76 83% Alcoa 3s79 AlumCa 4V2S8O AlumCa 37/ss70 AAlrl cv5%s91 CCC&SL 5s93 CCCSL 4%s77 CCC&SL 4s93 CCCCWM 4s91 CCCSL 4s90SL 61/ | ClevEI II 4%S04 l TV ’t /O W7I--- Otlim___Pill oT/.-nn 256 81% 78% 79 - 2+4l£ **§ 351 96 86 89%- 6% 373 97 92% 96 Clevfllll 3s70 Clevillll 3s82 17510 131 107 128% cieHill!1 9%Ss 55991 166% 90 122%- 2Vs £ *vEIII 2%s|5 AmCan 4+4S+0 156 100% 89% 89V*-10'/< AmCan 3+4X8 305 88 78% 81 -6 ‘SSL ADist CV6%S86 2329 106% 75% 86 -18 jCoHlnsR <%s80 AmFP 5s2030 6326 81 67 75%— 2% - , -- rui7/„77 AmrFP. 4.80S87 3060 83 68 73'£- 9% SW? AMF cv8%s81 9902 95% 69 72 -20% « Gas 5 %S85 87%— 8% 90%- AOpt CV4.40S80 639 310 192% 310 +1101 A Smelt 6%s88 752 98 87 AmSug 5.30s93 2183 100% 86 AmTAT 6%s85 22866 95 82 AmTAT 3%s90 3165 87% 76 AmTAT 3%s73 6157 90% 86 AmTAT 3%s86 1608 82 71% 74+4- AmTAT 0+4X7 608 75% OS’/ AmTAT 2+4(71 5200 90% 88 AmTAT 2+4*75 5066 83% 73% 80%- AmTAT 2+4*80 2633 79 70 75 — 1% AmTAT 2%s82 893 79% 68% 73%— 3% AmTAT 2%s86 1518 73 65 68%- 3% Am Tob 8%s90 576 96 86% 87'+— 7% Am Tob 3%$77 223 87% 78 80%— 4V* Am Tob 3s69 903 97 92 93%— 2% Ampx cv5%s91 8633 118% 97% 115 Anheus 5.65s91 862 102% 96% 100 - 80 9S'/s 81 85—8% 68 87% 79 79 — 9% 103 67 56% 56%—10% 320 102%’ 90 91 —10% 193 96'% 85% 90 — 7% 399 96 86 87%— 6% 2913 96% 79% 86%- 9 ------- ” 88'%—27% Col Gas 6%sB3 4%! Col Gas 3%s81 li/,. Col Gas 3%s60 jiJ1 Col Gas 3'%s79 ,._J4u|CojGas 3%s77 Ms/a_47/. ColGas 3s75A M%I ml ColGas 3s75B ColSOE 3%s70 Anheusr 8%s89 Anheusr 3%s77 AnnArb 4s95 ApcoOII 5%s81 Armco 6%s86 Armco 4.35s84 Armour 5s86 m . Armr cv6'As83 9697 116% 82 AshO cv3%s93 10592 215% 153 Assolnv »4s77 65 103% 91 Assoinv SVnV Ass61nv 5%s79 Assolnv 6%s85 AssolnV 6%s76 Assolnv 6%s83 Assolnv 6%s86 Atchison 6s95 Atchison 6s95st AtICstL 6.95S88 AtfCstL 6%s88 AtICstL 6%s72 AtICstL 4s80 AtICstL 3%s80 AtIRel 3%»79 Con Ed 6%s91 ConEdis 4%s93 Con Ed 6%s91 ConEd 8%s92V ConE . 4%s92W ConEdis 6%s86 ConEdis 6s86 667 103% 91 93%— 6% 366 101 89% i9%-J0% 121 91% 78 83 —12 “n|d s 3^2 278 95% 86 86%— 6'% ?®"!® * 203 93% 77% 83 -13% “nEd s 3%s85 231 93 79% 80 -!3'%!“"|2? 3%s81 K67 89% 77 82'%— 8% nti aml 77 ia _ 3S79 314 -83% 72.. I® - - • I ConEdis 3s81 2W’/2+?2W 9414— 8 % f3l*_ 67/% *8%—UW% Comw Ed 3s78 Cdmw Ed 3s99 ComEd 27/«s01 ComEd 2%sW ConEd 43/4590 594 91 86 88%- 2% 7776 163 95 142 +27% 1462 75 60 65% — 5% 112 86 82 - 2% 85 81 68 69 - 3%' 286 74% 58 61%-- 12% 274 83% 66 69%— 13% 232 70% 63% 65%— 3 244 70 61 61%— 6% 5171 80% 63% 66%— 10% 167 84% 80 80 - 4%' 2811 94% 68% 72 %— 9% 135 83 71% 72 - 9% 25934 221 no 132%- 53 * 11 80 76 76 178 100% 84 84 - 16.% 114 86% 65 68 - 15 24 74% 65% 65 V}— 9%, 59 71 Va 58 58 - 13% 58 703/x 58 58 - 123/4 66 92% 85 • 87 - 4 1579 94 74% 763/4- 14% 133 90% 80 83%— 8% 1 77 77 71 - 5% 315 83% 76% 793/4- 4% 59 95 92 92%— 3% 102 84% 80 80%— 4 3751 96% 87V} 91V}- 4% 1982 94 88% 92%~ 1 1037 84 75 77%- 5% 11 91% 91% 91% 950 89 79 80 %— 9% 128 76% 62 64 —10% 71 72 59 61 - 9% 17 86 85% 85%— 1% 74 96 81 87 - 12% 85 85% 92 75w — 14% 29 77V} 72 72 - 8% 2400 93% 89% 92 + % 27 78% 72 72 - 6 J 15 72% 68% 68%- 4% 8 71 67% 69 - 3" 5672 135% 85% 96%— 35% 3299 99% 81 83 31446 46% 90% 119%+ 5 4469 102% 76% 86%— 13% 589 101% 92 93 - 10 1400 01% 89% 94%— 7%' 471 100% 89% 91 %— 7% 339 90% 863/4 893/4- 83/4 577 94% 79% 87 - 6% T26 88% 80 81%— 7% 132 86V} 77% 79 - 6% 100 85% 78 80V}- 4% 106 86% 70 82%- 4 88 85% 77% 80 - 63/4 20 81 77% IVk- 10% 117 92% 82 83%- m 5 80 80 80 - 9% 160 97 80 90%- 1% 7825 230% ns% 163 - 56 7401 00 80 85 1787 85 75 80%— 3% 123 84 76% 78 - 7% 29 68V2 60 60 - 13% 25 70 70 70 65 68% 59 59 - 15 2408 03 89% 93%— 9% 1504 103 88 93%— 7% 417 99% 85% 89V}- 8% * 347 100 84 89%— 11% 342 98 82 86% *t“ m -E- iLlbMc cv5s76 4506 123 92 96 —27V% Ligg My 6s92 196 10396 W/t 103% 652 111 90V% 92 -17 LlnQ TV 5%s76 3657.95 81V%'tm 34 108V4 99 99 — 9V<1 LlnflT cv596s76 11 98\% 98V% 98V%— ’A| 20517 238 Erie Lack 6s69 Erie cv4 LouNSL 3$80 -14% 33 100 90 22 92% 87 17 743/4 703/4 74%—- 7 122 98 84 86 —13% 38 76 .74% 74%— 53/4 142 70% 58% 583/4—11% 15 70% 59% 59%—13% 134 65 52 53%—10Va 28 75% 65 69 9% -O- 70 91 10 92% 88 2 85% 851* 5 80Va 80% 2% 88%-10 120 -20 j 80 -15%! —M MackTr 5V>s81 1052 100 MacyCr 410s81 37 95 Macy cv5s77 22 3^7 i Macy cv4Vis90 3978 1 Macy 2'/is72 GAccept 4Vss85 45 82'+ SOW 82'+ ____ ...... ’GAOil cv4(0s84 8251 114V. 92 97Vk-13'A MelnaC 5'+s78 GATran cv4s81 20 1971+ 148 152'+—47'+] MaraOil 4WsB7 Gen Bak 4s90f 1038 82 70 71 — 8'+: MavDSt 3>/4S78 Gen Clg 5'+s87 420 101 Ui 887/s 90 — ip MayDSt 3'/4s80 Gen Dev cv8s75 1415 95 78 84 — 4 MayDSt 2Hs72 Gen Elec 3>+s76 3135 9014 8144 8544- 4'+ MaySReal 5s77 GEOver 4'4s85 2 10344 10314 10314 McCall 444s92 __ GenFds 344876 218 88'+ 78 83'+—i'AiMcCror 5'+s76 1937 Genlnst 414s85 , .'McCrory 5s81 2588 69 41796 186'+ 107 13844 . McKess 444S80 GMotAcc 5s77 MetBdc Cv6s75 15105 101'+ 8844 95'+— 6'4IMetEdis 2'+s74 GMotAcc 5s80 MIchBe 444s9! ■* 11938 10144 87 9444—-<1+ ~ GMotAcc 5s81 6087 1011+ 88'+ 95'+—544 GMotAc 444S87 4471 10044 84 9144- 8'+ GMAcc 444s82 4938 96'+ 83 87'+— 744 GMAcc 444S83 4096 96'+ 84'+ 87V, - 744 GMAcc 444S86 1791 9644 82'+ 88'+- 7'+ 300 97 8544 8744-11 757 93'+ 80'+ 84 — 744 325 91'+ 77>+ 82'+—1044 972 9344 79'+ 8S<+— 5 959 «'+ 75'+ 80 —10V4 179 821+ 72 7L - m 276 85Vl 75’+ 7544- 744 162 83 17027 95'+ 774+■ 8714- 7'+ GMotAcc 4s79 5557 9144 78 85 - 6'+ GMAcc 34+S75 4885 89’+ 7744 84 - 5'+iM’pls$tL 6s85 GMAcc 31+872 6448 92 84’+ 8844- 2'+|MSPSS 4'+s71 GMotAcc 3s69 23366 9444 91 9344- '+1 MinMM 244S67 GMotCp 3’+s79 1288 93'+ 811+ 83 —10>+!mKT In5'+s33( GTel cv4'+s77 383 280'+ 234 276 — 6 ' 10823 42'+ 21 GenTel cv4s71 157 270'+ 222 258 —13 MoKanT 5s67t 489 101 97 GenTEI CV4S90 •> MoKaT 4V+S78 34 7444 62 19347 117'+ B9V4 10844- 844 MoKanT 4s90 934 64 50'+ 52 13 85 210 9441 167 96 30 80 25 75 , 9 86'+ 82'+ 82'+ 97 9944 88'+ 88'+—111+ 1532 207 124 140 —11 77’+—10'+ 60'+ 78 9444 85 86'+—131+ 388 333 158'+ 245 —25 64 83'+ 78'+ 79'+— 644 135 92 76 85 - 6'+ MIchBe 3'+s88 MlchCe 4'+s79 MichCG 3'+s67 30112 10044 98 99 1-164-1 MichCG 3V+S69 1010 9544 51 94444- MichCO 344S69 21 5S'+ 92 95'+ + 46 94'+ 90'+ 93 — '+ 260 9144 t 82 — 8'+ 86 9044 841+ 86 — 4'+ 687 103 90 91 —T044 249 94'+ 88 89’+— 4<+ MSPSSM 4s91f 815 7044 55 5944— 6'+ 772 10044 9544 97’++ 1 Ocdd P 5'/is91’, 33376 121 Ohio Edis 3s74 338 865 OhioEd 244975 OklaGE 4'+s87 OklaGE 4'+s95 OklaGE 4'4s93 OklaGE 3’+s88 OklaGE 344s 2 "‘ OklaGE 244S75 OllnM cv5'+s82 14626 136'+ 10444 126-5 1414 ' OlinM 5v5Vas83 9282 136'+ 10514 12644- 41+ 95 95 I Outlet CV51+S86 950 1034. 94 100'+ 267'+ 275 —63 iOwenlll 344s88 102 86 75V. 78 —1044 '+ 87'+ 93'+—25 lOxfP cv444s78 9467 173 IN M 86 64 76'+ 80'+ 85'+- Salas Nat , (hds.) High Law Last Ch|. SmlthC 5'+s79 Socotjy 4'+s93 Socony 21+S76 SoBell TT 3s79 SBelITT 2'+s87 SBelITT 244s85 SoCalEd 3'4'S80 SoIndRy ?44s94 SoNG Cv4'+s73 SoPac 5V.S83 SoPac 4'+s69 SoPac 4'+s81 SoPSFT 344S75 SoPac 2'+s86 SoPac 244S96 SouthRy 5s94 SRyCar 444S88 SoRyMem 5s96 SwBellT 3'+s83 38620 110% 85 101%- 32157. 476 226% 301 - 807 95' 83% 85%- 648 82% 73 78 - 274 80% 73% 77%- 95 72% 67% 69 • 260 743/4 65% 69%- 19476 101% 81% 99%- 1 41 73 60% 61 - 11 203 174 175 525 103 91 95 5539 99% 943/4 96 2671 94Vj 79 84%- 2791 98V} 83 87V}- livestock Prices Fell in Fall CHICAGO (AP) — Increased production of both hogs and slaughter steers contributed to weaker, price trends in the late That was an advance of more than $12 from the year’s low. In its outlook for the months ahead, the government predicted hog slaughter will continue 7 to 10 per cent above .a year 3 87'+ 87Va 87'+ 115 72'+ 67 67 - 89 65 58 -58 1317 10244 90'+ 96'+- SwgellT 244s<5 310 75 Spartans 5s86 Spiegel 5%s 83 64%' 68%— 3% 84 106% 86%—-14% 107% 2% 82 Va— f % 80 82 -11% , 80,/i ST*- ?v iPacG*'E 5sW 7.1* !2iaIiJ vP,cOIE 5s91 Hi WV+-,fW|p,e GE 444S92 Pac GE 4'+s86 2177 102'+ 90'+ 957+-2322 1 0344 87'+ 96'+-251 96'+ 82'+ 8644- Pac GE 4'+S90 Pac GE 41+S93 PGE 4'+s96JJ PGE 4'+s96KK Pac GE 444S94 Pac GE 4V.S95 Pac GE 344s78 1175 89 Pac GE 344s 85 262 8044 704 97'+ 83 562 96'+ 82 88>+- 171 9444 83 85V, - 435 96'+ 82V. 86V.-94 95 8444 85 - 192 9244 81 89 - 300 89'+ 79'+ 82'+-8344- 37 89'+ 77 Pec GE 344s87 " j Pac GE 344s88 ,, Pac GE 3'+s82 if | PaGE 3'4s84W 8 P.r.c 71/..a,v 72 76 444 Spiegellnc 5S87 1 23 99 Spiegl cv4'+s90 5980 123 StdOCal 444583 2006 9644 04 StdOInd 6s91 2582 107V. 105 StdOInd 4<+s83 2240 10044 85 StdOrnd 3'+s82 116 8144 72 74 StdONJ 244S74 1198 8844 78 82 StdONJ 244571 3039 89V, 83 88 StOtlOh 4V.S82 87 93 B6'+ 87 Std Packg 6s90 1427 86'+ 70'+ 71 ntl After starting the year at 2 [more than $28 a hundredweight,iago with prices remaining un-1044 hog prices ’went into a, steep der pressure of liberal offerings. 8 [slide by winter. Although they i Slaughter steer prices started 944' recovered somewhat during the'the year on the steady advance ,0,,ijsummer, heavier marketing injtor several weeks but they, too, [early fall had driven the market Reversed the trend sharply. 3441 down to about $20 a hundred- They topped at $29.70 for the r the comparable period a year earlier and that cattle slaughter^ for the first eight months of 1966 was 5 per cent larger than a year ago. Status of Investing Firms 73% 78 . - 3% 71% 77%— 2% 70 71 %- 71/4 77% 79%.- 6 34 69 74%- 3% 70% 72%— 4% Talcott 5%8 79 Taicott 5%s. 80 Talcott cv5s79 Tandy 6%t7i' Ter AS L 4s2019 TerASL 2%s85 44 103V} 86% 89 I 100 86 89 118 130 79 87V 6% 10 10% I MtWdCr 5V4S 1 81'/}—30% | MtWdCr 4%s80 89%—10% MtWdCr 4%s8l 32 72 60 60 - 11% 943 85 74 '+ 'BobbleB 5+4*81 W^®,* “JJ 5* Borden 4+4*71 Ml »+'+ *3'+ 88 — 6+* Boeing 5+4*1 **,,**,«*„, Borden 7»+sl' 37 81V* 73V* S+4-»+* BostonMe 8*67 2266 87 67 72 t++ 237 74+4 81+4 17 65 87'* 80+4 82V. 30 82 78+4.78+4 7 80+4 80++ 80++- .. I_____Ml 20 w<+ 73+4 76+4 ConsPw 5+4*76 1646 104V4 101V, 103'* onsPw 4+4*87 20102 ,97 77 :on*Pw 4+4*87 170 100 84V. 70 59 94+4 87V. 90 —ig 123 99+4 I7+* 91 - I++ 129 95 86V. 87+4— 7+4 I______________ 339 85 76 BO’+- 3 _ Ct Bk cv4+4*83 2275 106+4 82'+ 86'+—17'+ ConKon 4+4*85 113 91'* 86 90 - 9+4 ContCan 3 *76 54 17 80 10 - 9+4 ContOil 4'**91 295 97 86++ 8? - /'* ConlOll 3*84 94 77+4 -7J++ 7S — 7+4 “ —1 -r 11C*—19'* BosMe 4'+*70f 2772 72+4 +0 « -JJ jCrn Ck 4+4*88 BrkUnG 4W*70 8 88 *» g,~ !S Ciir Pub 6*86f BrkUnG 4+4*81 18 J1V4 8''4 8V4-1TO BrkUnG 4+s83 51 78 82 • « - fi* RrkUnG 190 12 W 7TV»— 3%! BrownS 3'*s71 37 75 86'* 88+4- S++lD»ystm S'+*M SSm cviwSl 6771 12'* 62 64j-14V+;Oay PL 3'*M2 RudoetF 6$2010 512 97 79% 79%—15% ®ayP&L 3*71 SWa 2+4*75 »U 82+4 76V+ 77+4- 3++!p«yP&L 3*84 Hack W 2+4*76 68 -15 IS 51V‘ K*- *15 N Dairy 4+4892 38 95 93'* 93'*— ''* N Dairy 3+4*76 14 7I++ 74'+ 74'+- I’+'n.! Dairy 3*70 H_____ | N Dairy 2+4*70 45 80 7+4 philaBW 5*74 i PhllBW 4++S77 ♦'+ PhllaEI 5*19 PhllaEI 4+4*87 ,M+3'W., |Phn«i! 4+4*8+ 255 94 83'* 17 SI f* PhilaEI 3+4*88 139 88 '+3 87++ 81+4 83 — 4'*:ph||»EI 3'/.s82 679 92+4 88=4 90 — 2+4] pnilaEI 3'**83 PhllaEI 3'*s85 85 101+4 90 94 97 88+4 88+4- 6'* 879 102+4 90 95+4— 6'+ 271 98+4 86 87'*— 7+4 177 75 '84V* 86V.- 8+4 6+4 166 81V* 72 105 78'+ 70 78 77’+ 70’* 137 I3V+ 73 6'* HarvAl 5Va*71 7328117V* 71 !1«4 . .. NatLead 4+4*88 NatSfeel 4+4*87 Hess OC 4V+S87 4511 130'* 74 HockV 41-2*97 -IIS 72'* 82 14 — 6V+ Hooker 47**71 83 77'* 74+4 74+4 HouseF 6s69 21915101% 90% 100% HouseF 5s«2 172100% 84% 90%~10% U^lNEnO TT 3*82 HouseF 4+4X1 305 100V* 15 19 HouseF 4+4(77 340 96% Of 15 HouseF 4+4(04 111 95 85 « HouseF 4+4X7 224 92 ff 81%- HouseF 4V4SX w 97 95 95 HouseF 4(71 826 91 10 81%- HouseF 2+4(70 183 89% 96% 9 87%- HuntFds 4+4(90 95 00 80 Hunt cv4%sl6 10355 100 71V* 77 %- NafSteel 3+4x16 NatSteel 3+4*82 Nat Tee 5*77 Nat Tea 3V+*so NEng TT 3*74 623 7t'+ 86+4 88+4- 77 86+4 13+4 M+4— 5+4 j pnilaEI 2+4*67 265453 102+1 PhllaEI 2+4*71 340 88+4 85 PhllaEI ’ 2+4*74 PhllaEI 2+4*11 PhilMor 4+4*77 PhilllpP 4V4S87 77V4- 5 1,1/4 NJBell.T 3V+S88 NJ Junct 4*86 N J PwL-t 3*74 507 76’* 84 86V. 237 78'* 65 87V+— 7V. 114 18+4 76V* 79'*— 91* 257 82+4 73+4 76'*- 6+4 37 9 +4 95 95 — 3 298 80 65 68'+— 9+4 43, H+4 81 13 — 51+ 56 76V* TO1* 73 —31+ 27 78V* 701* 72V*— 7 6 75 75 75 + I 34 83+4 80+4 80'/.- 4 IIIBellTel 3*78 IIIBallT 2+4*81 IHCen 3+4&79A lltCan 3+4*79B IHCen 3+4S74C IHCen 3’+*80 IHCen 3+4*89H IHCen 31+iMG IndUnR 2'**86 Inlands 4'*s89 —I— 274 83 i/rinu rwi/r j*/a ja un ouv, euv.— 4 “SJ.NY Cent 4*80 2972 HWA 951* 97V*— 5+4 NY Cent 6890 1200104V* 94 97 - 5V* —,37* NYCent 5*2013 4800 91+4 ffV* 76 —13V* NYC 4V**2013 9178 82V4„ 63'* 47+4—13V* NY Cent 4*9 4280 75V. 62 63 —111* ------------ 772 72V* 40 62 —12 305 66 53V* 54 —111+ 313 68+4 54 54++—13 97+4+ 1 i 16V*- 2 723 85 75V* 11'*- 2+4 99 76'* 70+4 72 — 21+ 207 100+4 90V* 92+4— 7+4 Plllsby 3'+*72 PitBLE 2+4*96 PCC&SL 5*78 PCC&SL 5*75 PCC SL 3+4*75 PitPlete 3*67 51728 123 : 87 99'+—22 22 89 II 81 5 75' * 7S<* 75+4 527 100'A 91 94'*- S'* 241 99+4 88+4 92+4— 6+4 64 85V* 74+4 75'+—13+4 3 75 II 92 31 16 CopwSt Cv5s79 3017 130 ■ ComPd 4+4*83 821 99 86V* 90+4-1 Z Crete CvSl+sS 57301181+ 80 II -24W —- 'CrowCol 41**81 4213 162 183*4 125 -5 992 10 46 69+4- 6V* j lnlan()j 4+4s87 n j Inlands 3’*s8! —IJ— tnistl 3.20*82 ■ 100 91 91 — 3 - IntHarv 400*91 3865 96V+ 16 44 80V* 73 73+4— 6+4 IntHarv 4+4*81 1461 98 861* |‘ II 78V* 76V*-7- 8V* IhtHarC 4+4*81 222 100 6 11 73 70 73 - 6<* IntHarC 4+4*79 560 96+4 02+4 87 Butova" 4'4S84J 7233 126+4 8r ‘ 110V4- 3'* Oiy PL 2+4*75 237 12'4 77 79+4- 3V*|lntH*rOv 5*86 14103 102+4 102+4 NYCLS 3'+*98 „ rjuk— JU, NYCMC 3'+*9» J Mul |” Bv ChS 4V*s*9 75-11 NY ChS 3'A*80 li "IL, NYChSL 3*86 75 -10V*lMYC#nn 2+4*7 NYHar 4s43A NYHar 4*436 77 94 83 83+4 ?4 „ H 17 75V* 65 Liu. h*YConn 2+4*75 299 78' 81V* 8S*—- } 4a4’8 i. mi 64'+—14 80 *S 70 —14 " - 9+4 —15 - 7+4 30 80>* 4? 3 66'+ 66 391 971A 06 2M 96+4 85 307 86 771* 81 — 1 MV* 77 77'+— 7V* —11 66 — IV* 86'*—10'* NYHa 3'**2000 NYLaW 4V*s73 NYLackW 4(73 V|NH 4V**2022f 18 7614 72 53 78 64 65V*—13 3 87. 85 85 —2 382 70V4 56 »V4—8+4 $67 66V4 52V* 55 — 5+4 V|NH 4*20071 14213 23’+ 11'+ 13+4- 6'+ -JVINH 4'A*73f m-.Sj NYP&L 2+1*75 E+V-ll+4 NY»Put 4*93 *V4 NYSEG 2+4*77 • ■ NYSus 4'+*19f I NY Sus cv4*94 PNYSus 4*2004 -jNYTel 4'*s91 NYTel 4’+*93 •rlf* NYTel 3+4a96 +*1 l NYTel 3+4*78 NYTel 3*81 Burtlnd ev5*91 1777 103'* 941* 103'* LGIPow 3*76 1& 84 Deere 4V*s83 6+4 Oeere 3'**77 j DelLW 5*73 ...J&etLW 5*85 OtV* 81V*—161+f DelLW 4V*s8S 66V* 48 —10 .DelLW Inc93f .. .. 80 81 —1*+5|DLW'IxdiJOttt 62 74'* 45’A 68’+- 4 OelP&L 4+4*94 1072 95V. 80 85 — O'A'DelPL 3+4*81 ■ Mi M(88 tin 1124 95 84’* 87 — 7 CanDry 4+4*90 CanPac 4*perp CeroCO 4Vjs90 CarthAd 4*81 Cate 5'*s96 — --P-- , •Case 3V**7I 77 82 10 ~ I CatdrTr M4S86 » 361 991+ 87'* 91V*- 7 CaltrTr 4\**77 620. 98 88V* 91V*- 4+4 Cetanes cv4*90 _ „ 24825113+4 76V* 79'A—33+4 celanes 3’<*s76 157 171* »0’A 80V*- 7 Cence CV514sB6 2909120VA ?8'* 11714 cede 4V*sB20f 389 75 „ SV 51 -22 CmiG* 4*95 184 78+4 42’A 64 —14 139 85’A 78 82 98V* 96 96 DelPL DeIPL IntMin cv4sf 1 74 MW 77 77 - 9V*| 28H6117V* 80 Y6++ 189 74 43 43 " - BVe lnt Pack 5+4*16 »3 107 96 107 148 71 55 55 -I2V* Int Sllv CV4S85 5422 131V* 98 12) m 61V* 47<* 4714-9+4 mtT&T 4.RM87 528 99 85V* 87 325 41V* 79'* 30'+- 2++ 474 41 48 50'A— 7+4 tnterDS 4+4d1 20 09'A 83+4 83+4—15V* jlntOPL 4'ArtT 31 85 7714 10+4— 714! IhtOPL .3VW*77 2 17140 47+4 23 5 30A 47V* 48 - RMvctBf %t1 / 13826113% 74 77% RepStl/ 4%s85 403 94% 84% f|%> RpyM/ cv4%sf 1 7 76216 121 88 103% RfyhTob 3*73 95 17% »3 83 - ■ hm 3%l 75 16 88% 85 85 - , *fl cv4 s83 1296 224 192 218 ochGE 3%s69 96 94 89 92%- . OCkStd 5%s91 3501(0% 94 94 RodcS cv4%s9i f 22932 101 Te x NO 3%s90 TexNO 3%s70 TexP 5s2000 TexR 3%s85 TPMPT 3%s74 ThomPd 4%$82 10369 152% 118 ThoRW 5%$86 121 101% 90 TideOil 3%s86 ■ 95 13% 77 TWA 6%$78f 18445 105% 91 v 19760131 85 p —u— UnEIMo 3%s7! 799 94 87 UnEIMo 3%s82 110 30% 73 MnElAAo 3s66 189 96 94 UnEIMo 2%sf0 UnEIMo 2%$75 UnOCal 4%s86 UnOCal 4%s91 1324 285 UnOCal 2*-4$70 165 92 UnPac 2%$76 UnPac 2V}$91 UnTank, 5s86 UnTank 4%$73 UnAirL cv5$91 15131 1^ 112 118 UnAirL cv4$90 38409 257 132% 195 UAIrc cv5%s91 9601 126 103% 124 UAIrc cv4%$88 10282 298 184V} 244 UnBis 3%s77 15 85 84% B4 UnGasC 5V»s80 417 102% 89% 91 84%-15% 82 - 3% 3% - 9% 15 76% 76% 76%- 5% 127 82% 75% 79V»—■ 4 1 432 100% 88 92 — 8% m............ 2403/4- 5% ANNUAL INVESTING NEW YORK (AP) -The following table compiled' by the -Natl. Assn. Securities Dealers, Inc. gives the high, to# and last bid price in 1966 of the leading Investing Companies Aberdeen Fd Advisers Fd Affiliated Fd Am Bus Shrs Am Grwth Fd Am Investors Em Mutual Fd Am Pacif Assoc Fd Trust Assn | Invest Fd Axe-noughton: Fund A Fund B Stock Scl & Electr Blue Ridge Mut Bondstock Corp Boston Fund Rroad St Inv Byltock Futyd 3.08 2.38 2.67 9.35 6.90 7.79 9.49 7.60 7.86 4.27 3.47 3.55 7.70 5.42 6.13 35.95 23.58 29.72 Can Gen Fd Canadian Fund Capit Income Cap Life Ins Sh 750 67% 60 63 - 367 101 92% 93%- 69 96 91»A 93 - 4% 6% UnGasCp 5s80 UnGasC 4%s78 UnGasC 4%s82 UnGasC 4'/xi77 UnGasC 4%s72 UnGasC 4%$78 UnGasC 3%s73 UnGasC 3%s71 UnGasC, 3%s72 UnGasC 3%s75 UnGasC 2%s70 Unit Merc 4s90 292 101% 85% 91 %- 9% 518 11% 89 - 7% 267 97% 86 87,4—10% 297 97% 87% 88%- 7% 331 94% 80% 85 — 7^/1 49 91% 13 83 - 9V« 428 94 86 90%- 3% 519 92% 84 88%- 3% 24 18% 85% 85%— 6% 12 91 90% 90% — % 35198 120% 79% 82%-30% USFrgh cv5s81 3178 210 128 .176 -1-2 USGyps 4%s91 281 96% 89% 92 USRub 2%s619 21300 101% 96 99 5-16+4 9-16 USRub 2%s76 5 80% 80% 80 USSmelt 5%s95 3971 90 77 81 - 7V USSteel 4%s96 * 29287 95% 82% 89%- 4?/ USSteel 4%s86 4268 96% 86% 90%- 5V USSteel 4s83 2447 91% 83% 85%- Channing Funds: Balance Com $tk ' Growth Income Special Chase Fd Bos Chemical Fd * Citadel, Fd Coast Secur . Colonial Fund Colonial Grth. & En Com St Bd Mtge Commonwealth Funds: Cap Fd Income Investmf _________ Stock* Commw Tr A&B Commw Tr CBO Composite B&S Composite Fd Concord Fund Consolidat tnv Consum Invest Convert Secur Fd Convert Grth Corp Leaders * ... Crown Wstn D2 K de Vegh Mut Fd '•'Decatur Income Variable “Pay Invest Research tstel Fund Inc I vest Fund Inc Johnstn Mut Fd 9,08 6.62 7.48 20.83 14.13 15.94 21.49 16.05 17*28 16.23 10.72 12.81 19.66 15.11 17.65 Med G Bd B-2 Disc Bd B-4 Inco Fd K-1 Grth Fd K-2 24.48 22.31 22.31 11.12 9.61 9.69 10.19 8.30 8.68 7.63 5.37 5.86 25.19 17.6f20r22 10.75 8.62 9.73 Inco Stk $-2 14.56 8.62 9.71 8.40 5.82 6.57 Growth S*3 11.76 6.92 8.65 1.87 1.28 1.33 LoPr Cm S-4 7.44 4.23 5.48 7.52 5.77 6.66 Int Fund b 18.26.10.26 11.00 Knickerbck Fd 8.10 6.15 6.58 7.86 5.46 6.28 Knlckerbck Gr F 10.97 7.62 9.41 11.15 7.86 9.07 Lazard Fund 19.00 14.50 15.75 6.86 4.16 5.12 Lexnatn Inc Tr 11.32 9.36 9,7\ 19.59 12.50 15.69 Life Ins Inv 9.21 5.54 6.50 14.59 10.80 12.42 Life Ins Stk 6.78 4.15 4.78 6.94 5.47 6.03 Loomis Sayles Fds: 10.54 8.49 8.96 Canadian 33.76 26.78 28.61 16.70 13.10 13.84 Capital 10.71 9.12 10.12 16.38 12.80 13.58 Mutual . 16.77 14.18 1433 10.40 8.07 8.62 Manhattan Fd® 10.09 7.24 8.60 19.46 16.04 16.63 Mass Inv Grth 11.66 8.99 10J1 10.39 7.55 7.87 Mass Inv Trust 17.93 14.16 15.10 v9.10 13.81 5.65 6.61 Mass Life 1310 10.66 11.69 9.43 11.13 Mid Airier f Morton Funds: 6.36 5.34 6.22 14.84 11.82 12.89 Growth r 10.89 7,73 8.89 2.32 1.81 1.87 Income 4.70 3.63 3.63 18.82 13.19 16.00 Insurance 8.59 6.01 6.94 9.43 7.52 7.82 M.l.r, Fund 20.20 15.41 16.21 3.30 2.20 2.26 M.I.F. Growth 431 4.94 530 11.33 7.39 8.67 Mutual Shrs f. 34 1.53 14.01 11.07 11v69 16.77 12.48 1 5.19 4.66 3.74 4.16 —V— Vanad */. VaEPw 3+4*81 7* 82 74'*.75'4-10’+ VaEPw 3'A*82 52 78 74'**76 _ 8 VaEPw 2+4*7+ 6 77+4 77V4 77'*- 3+4 VaEPw 2+4*75 33+ 13 77*4 80 - 2+4 VaEPw 2+4*80 15 74V* 67+4 74<+- 6+4 -VirgRy lnc«*OI -1338 11*4 100 102V4-11+4 VirgRy 4*03 17 08 II IV -10 VirgRy 3V4173 32 IS'/. 81 63'+ 63'/ Delaware Fd Divers Glh.Stk Divers Invstmt Dividend Shrs Dow Th Inv Fd Dreyfus Fund Easton & H Bal Eaton & H Stk Employ Grp_______ Energy Fd Equity Fund Farm Bur Mut Federal Gr Fd Fidelity Cap Fidelity Fund Fid Trend Fd Fid Mut Inv Co F.I.F. . nd In Mutual Trust £.00 2.2+ Nation-Wide See Natl Investors Nationel Securities Series Balanced Bond Dividend Preferred Income Stock Growth NaH Western Fd NEA Mut Fd New England New Horiz RP Noreast Inv One William St Oppenheim.Fd Penn Sq Peoples Sec Phil* Fd Pine Street Pioneer Fund Price, TR Grth Provident Fd Puritan Fund Putnam Funds: George Growth Income Invest Qtly Dist Sh Reg Tech 17.95 14.34 15.62 3.01 2.2+ 2.43 12.10 +.74 10.34 7.26 5.61.. 6.43 RohrA CV5V4177 5033 21 Ryder cvS'/.$l3 3227 115 12V* 132+4170 -52 10+ 137 -20 SaguenPw 3*71 StLaw Ad 66+6 StLaw Ad Ss+6 SLSF 5*30061 StLSF 4*00 StLSF 4*+7 StLSw 1*14*8+ , ■ StLSw 2nd4*S+ 85V4— 4+*|StP*Dut 4461 ♦5'*— 6+4' StPUnD 3*4(71 45 8+ 17 17 22 +5*4 77V* 77V4-12VY 8 7IV4 nt+- ++4 69'* 71V4-1+V+ 73V* 73**—16 V* 13VA 1512 +1 . ne » ,(SV4 20 86 Chei&O 3+4*73 312 K *V* DowCh cv3*32 1014171 Ore** cv4'+*77 C&O 3V*S M3 1 +6E OO/ JHl we -4Q rw n$ rvwi— »n;ww u nun »•* *vw ^ — »jyiww++ wriww- «+ w mm mtt-w i"+P+ + -"T l»ia*''K33P is*? OflBtomstg ltl +3^ 17'*, ITVIy/*'.* Duo LI 3+4*77 451 |1V*71 77V+-3V+lLOhV 4*4+3003 203 58M 44 41 -ft Nertl P Ss+0 DwPCh I00V4— P I B *7 .*2 - r __________ I3V4* 11 — 4 2313+141 ___ .. 83 88 - 4 Duq Lt 5*2010 730 101 JOS 7* 50+4 TWA—7+4 Duq Lt 41A*|+ 77 +2 70 70*4— 7+1 Ouq Lt 125 130 -30 .15*4 M vfi - «v* Nor NG 4+4*7 104 ,0044 100’A—3314 N°r NG 4+4*31 741 82 64 53 —13' 55 86 7IW 80 - 6 4 I4W 84'* 84'*— V* 2 +7+4 H+k +3+4- 3V» 3 86 86 8i <— 1% „ .Sender* 5+4*86 3371130V* +6 123 | — A-t* lseiotov 4*8+ 26 36 731* 73V+-I3V4 133 13384 $9*4 MV*^ fSclent D S’**86 35+ 140 18 ML \ 104 +6+4 88 +0 - 4V* ScottPl cv3*7! 3454 T54V* 101+4 113 -3+ 36+ J7V4 BV4'3IJ+-it ....... |) +6 . fit* »7 ' +0 +0 -10 130 33 -LS&MS 3'*s»7 LehVHT ‘ ’ LehVi 82'A 14'.*— 5V* I LehV *15+4 I - 7+* I Si*, LehVal 4*5+74 . , LehV 5*C3803 W 33 - 7*4 LehV 5*F2003t 1+3 73V* m n 137 71 "lE-a' - 41' Nor NG 4V+834 63'+—" 74* Nor NG-4+4*33 64V*—137A Nor NG 3+4*73 65W4M0'/, Nor NG 3*4*74 S6 —is NoPac 41*447', BV*—U NorPac 4*84 " 171 JV+lSbOVHI 4*4*32 . . - f?,'» 2 ^MfStL 3*4(77 « M+4 W4 33+4 +6 37 W - gi+'SeabAL 3*80 63 ft' 73’* W'+- 5 131 W4 331* J3V4- 7'*fSbd Fin S'4a30 36+100'* '3+ J3. - . +4 +3V* 3W4 {3 - + Sears R 4+4X3 .7+41 +++4 M'+ «4<4-3V4 '7 3+ 34+4 36+4- 6+4 SearsRAc 5*32 1S+3131'* 37+4 *2'+- 3*4 35 3+V4 821+' 3J’+—. S’* SesrsAt 4+4*72 1451 +*** 33'* »3'4- *'+ 2?! 5i+* 10) li. b 188 188 89 90% 7% NW Inx Fd Grth 7 Fst tnv Stk Fd I Fletcher Fd Fla Growth 161 37V* 70 74 -12 i Fnd Lt 35 37+4 73'* 75 - 3t* Founders -w- 1+0 »(+4 17 0++4- 81'+, +4+4 W»ash 414X1 Wabash 4*81 Wabash 314*71 Wag El 4+4*86 2+56 *6 Warm 3’*s3000 +8 47 36V* 36'*- +V* WPenEI 3V*s74 41 +SV4 84 *2 — '/« WShore 4*2361 86+ 71V* X'* 5+ —11+4 West Lt 314X7 HI , 11680810+4 +7+4 «+ WestchLt 3*7+ 1 34'* 841* 14'* + Vk WnMd 514X2 99 103V* +9+4 +9+4- 1+4 460 +7V* +11* *2+4- 3V* WnPt. ■■ WnUn 6<*S*+ WnUn 5V.X7 62 35 73 7814- 4*4 117 ++V* 87 87 -14 V 514102 101+4 103 \ 7X10 -+OV4 +l'*-!0+4 Gi Wn union 5*92 22V6 100V* 82 IS —11+4 WettgEI 2+4*71 10+ +0<4 15V, 17 _ 2'* Weyerh 5.20*91 UI1100*4 +1 ++V* ------ :+4*75 21X+I7 U 6144-20 35 O'* 70 71 -10 107 +1 .8614 8614—8 463 73 . 55+4 60+%- f+4 363 77+4 61“ 45 -11+4 1+4 -74V* 74’4— t14 ‘ 88 ,+0'4— 3V* Wheels 3+4*75 Whirl 3*4*88 Wilson 4*4*78 WisCftn 4'487+t WlsCen 4*2004 WIsElP 2+4*76 WisPSv 3*4*71 7 "31'* +1 +1+4 1 — Xerox cv.. 4*34 Foursquare Fd Franklin Custodian: Com Slk Inc Stk Pfd Stk Utilines Fund of Am 15.37,11.00 13,80 10786' 8.80, 8.99 11.05 8.4+’ +.37 11.27 1.30 +.41 1.14 1.35 1.54 1.96 1.X 1.63 10.X 1.12 1.72 10.97 1.42 +.16 16.75 1237 13.46 11.12 3.50 10.87 4.91 3.36 3.74 9.45 7.89 8.68 14.51 9.50 12.50 T9.54 14.65 14.90 6.96 5.36 5.69 80.23 57.54 6738 13.30 10.35 10.97 17.85 13.36 14.56 14.76 10.54 11.24 10.X 1.25 0.67' 3.93 3.02 3.35 8.16 6.21 6.58 14.81 10.74 12.45 12.94 10.96 1131 17.1D'13.58 14.73 __25.74 20/72 23.26 15.09 lO.TS tifW ’11.28 8.73> 9.X 11.53 8.66 9.86 15.31 1134 12.X 17.04 12.26 12.43 20.07 16.00 18.08 33.54 23.26 26.40 9.93 7.75 0.17 . 6.10 4.21 5.03 --6.16 4.94 5.30 9.28 6.73 1.05 ‘ 11.73 9.14 10.20 9.53 9.35 9.53 ; 7.15 5:32 5.55 7.X 4.23 4.92 +.11 4.74 7.34 15.04 10.55 1I.X 13.10 10.15 10.56 6.X 5.37 5.64 ^ 5.58 4.124.36 7:70 6.50 6.58 6.17 5.38 541 9.88 7.X 8.17 10.771.09 9.44 8.80 5.10 5.+1 12.00 9.07 10.2+ 12:40 10.02 10.94 15.29 12,3+ 15.14 18.93 15.91 14.35 16.28 12.72 14.74 27.08 18.32 22.18 22.71 15.11 17.34 ' 12.43 7.56 +.2+ 15.52 11.98 13.16 13.41 10.07 11.30 12.10 9.70 10.0+ 22.X 17.73 20.0+ 543 4.22 4.43 11.83 8.75 +.71 Fun G6n Invest Tr Group Securities: Aeroipace-Sci Common Stk 8.04 5,57 6.51 3.X 2.70 2.12 2.0+ 2.47 2.32 C31 6 .« 7.38 12.38 7.70 8.27 13.X +41 10.15 7.X 4.16 6.53 Research Inv Revere Fd Scudder Funds: Balanced Com Stk Inti Inv Special Sec Equity Selected Amer Sherehld Tr Bo* Southwstn tnv Soverelqn Inv State St Inv Steadman Scl Steadman Shrs Stein Roe Funds: Balance Stock 17.63 13.7$ 15.10 13.X 9.53 10,90 10.10 1.29 8.67 1.41 6.247.S 0.67 6.83 7 01 5.76 3.66 4.28 16.4111.18 18 j» ~ 17.92 10.06 11.X 21.01 16.20 18.00 13.X 1024 1140 15.91 12.15 12.+5. 32.X 23.30 25.11 12.54 847 11.11. 1314 9.73 11.34 12.59 9.S0 10.26 10.00 0.03 I.S7 ■ 17.96 13.X 14.04 X.08 38.63 44.30 ' 7.10 4.59 5.65 2243 16.23 1M1 Inti 12.07 8.49 9.1+ 1S.+4 12.36 12.62 YonkEP 2+4*74 YnoSh 4'**W 28061 777 128 283 Gryphen . Guard Mut „ Ham Fd HDA Hor Marin Fd Imperial Cep Fd Impartal Fd Incdtne Found „ Income FO BS* Ind Trend Ins & Bank Slk Fd invest Co Am Invest Tr Bo* Investor* Group Funds Mutual Inc ~ 10.89 8.82 8.97 2248 17.29 19.38 1729 11.52 12.81 27.X 21:73 24.27 6.08 4.26 5.01 16,74 T3.X 14.9? 1031 f.00 8.85 S.W 4.54 5.X 14.00 ll.n 11.83 I.J5 72* 7.53 14 39 9.95 I1.B ,7.04 4.X 5.19 «.» 10.89 12-41 14.35 10.23 11-53. Se*fctiv+» tl.3? 10M 10.70 7TX 17 55 WOO 10.27^9,40 +.55 Sterling Inv Sup Inv Grth Tetevlsn Elect Temp Gth Can Texas Fund . 20th Cent Gr Inv 20th Cen+t Inc United' Funds: Accumulative 22.15 M.35 20.25 14.36 11.36 13.10 1647 12.X 12.86 1433 11.X 12.04 5.08 U4 477 1141 7,83 1.74 16.01 13.52 1405* 1423 940 1M& 4 4.73 4.X S TB t 6.33 444 5.2+ Science Unit Fd Can' Value Lint Funds: Vatu* Lin* incame Si Spact Sit h ’ w Vanguard Fd Varied 1ndu*t 18.96 15.29 10.35 15-04 1142 12.04 10,72 7.X 847 5 96 471 4*1 8,8,5.04 7.10 6.74 s.fi. ____ . Invest ■■■., Wash Mut Inv Wellington Fd Western Indus! Whitehall .Fd Windier Fd Winfield GHh m ." Wisconsin Fd 5 77 I.I7M7 4,13; 45 JS ,6.30 „4J+. 5.06 434 4® 429 11.63 94+ ijM 1459 tOSlfP 1491 +f.4t 12.95 M m # w D—3 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 2, 1967 1W ANNUAL NEW YORK STOCKS NEW YORK (API—Following'Is a table of transaction* In the slocks on the New ■York Stock Exchange during the year 1*66. It gives the yearly skies, high, low and last prices and the net change from the previous year on thy stocks listed prior to January, 1M6. | Salas Net (hds.) Nigh Lew Last Che. Abacus 1.071 74* 16% ,1214 13 split Abbott Lab 1 17457 46% 350 44 — 10 ABC Con .10 12395 33 15% 160- 6% Abex Cp 1.60 1902 340 26% 23% split ACF |nd 2,20 14352 54% 35 38% I Sales Net (hds.) High Low Lest Chg. Carrier Cp 2 7564 88% 62% 77%+ 4% Carrier pf2.2S 129820 49% 42 43%— 5% Carr Gen I 2e 456 36 25% 26 — 8% CarterW ,40a 27983 23% 10% 12%— 5% Case t>l « 16818 32% 16% 19%— 5% Castle Cka 1 2782 34% 24 26% split CaterTr 1.20/37187 51% 33% 35 —14% Ceco Cp 1.40 3024 33 24 20%+4 CelaneseCp 2 27396 89% 41% 470—370 Celahese pf 7 13640 15?'+ 124 125 -27% Celan pfA4.50 1624 92% 74% 75%-15% | 14344 48% 28% 34%— 2% 2086 36% 25 30%+ 5% 1772 15% 7% ,7%— 7% 1584 38% 28 290- 6% 4280 30% 20% 25%— 2% Cenco ins CAgylr 1.20* CentFdy .30p Cent Hud 1.36 Acme Mkt 2b 3375 57 38% 390-100 Cent IIILt 1-----------1_____ M . AdamE 2.41e 2913 30% 26 26%- 2%'C IIILt p(4.50 110840 93% 77% 79'A—13 Ad Minis .40b 3627 19% 12% 15%+ 10,Cenlll PSv 1 6857 26%. 20% 220—4. Address 1.40 36078 77% 49% 49%- 9 CenMe Pow t 4863 21% 16% 19 — 1% Admiral .50 42481 55% 28% 29% split Cent SW 1.50 12513 50 *35 46%—2% Aeroqulp lb 2493 45% 33 35 — IH'CentSoya .80 1650 30 22% 25% spilt Air Prod .20 8513 42% 22% 32% split ICerro 1.60b 35814 59 300 370 Air Pd pf4.75 532 103V, 93% 103% .' Cert-teed .80 Air Reduct 3 9895 78% 51 65%— 9% I Cert-ted pl.90 AJ Industries 47377 7% 3 30+ % CesSnaA 1.40 Ala Gas 1.80 1268 37% 29 30%— 5%'CFI Stl ,50e Alberto Culv 12790 19% 9% 1 %+ 2 CFI Stl pt2.75 _ Alcan Alum 1 55960 42% 23% 270— 3% Chadbn Goth 13784 7% 3% /40— 1% A teg Cp ,20a 32309 14% 7% 7%- 50 ChampP 1.30 12542 45 27% 38-2% A leg 6pf 40 1839 60% 24% 250—210 Champ pf4.50 18780 97% 80% 91 — SI* AllegLud 2.20 9003 61% 43% 57%+4% ] Champ S 2.20 3620 48% 36% 36%—7% Atleg Pw 1.20 13341 28% 21'A 27%+ %|ChaseMBk 2 12611 67% 46% '620— 10 18604 27 11 12%—11% 2335 18% 14% 15% 14362 57% 30% 37%-!2% 22171 19.% 10 110— i 46%— —19% 6%— 1% 37+4—12 61%—16% 28%+ 2% 9% 15% split 2747 89% 38% 56 1804 89% 50 Allen In 1.40b 2299 40% 21% '210— 8 [Checker Mot >897 21% 11% 13 Allied C 190b 47732 *2% 32 33 —16%iChemetn 1.80 10693 64% 34 38 AIIMKM AS 2408 26% 14% 15%-2% Chemway .20 20727 12% 5% 6 AllledMills 2a 260 58 49% 53'',+ 3% Che* Va 1.60 488 49% 36 Allied Pd .50 15895 70% 25% 27>4— -7% Ches Oh 4 7768 86V, 60 AllledStr 1.32 5049 33% 22% 22% split Chesebrou .76 1629 ) 32 Allied St Pf4 215720 880 690 700—17'+, ChlcEast III 5145 18% - AlliedSup 60 10725 15% 10% 100-30 ChlGWst JO* Allis Chal 1 51531 40% 19% 22 —ll0;ChiGW pt2.50 AllisCh pf4.20 1330 133 79% Alpha PC .25 6050 13% 7% , , Alslde Inc .20 4143 14%, 5% 5%—60 CM Music 1 Alcoa 1.60 20950 94% 66% 78%+ 10 Chi&NWest 4 AmalSg 1.20a 1522 30% 20% 21 - 5H Chl&NW pf 5 Amerac* 1b 3121 31 19% 220— 4'+ ChIPnu 1.80b Amerada 3 23481 87% 66 7644+ 3% Chi Rl Pac Ameren 1 90s 1815 58% 34% 55%+ 70 ChRIPct UP AmAlrFilt 9 0 690 35% 20% 31% spljt;| ChRIP ct N_W Salas Nat (hds.) High Low Last' Cltg. Erie Lack RR 27522 15% 6% 7%—344 Erie Lack pt 299260.49% 24 89 -3 Erie Pit 3.50 2530 6544 54 58%- 7V4 EssxWlr 1.20 12300 52% 3146 50%+10% EthylCprp .60 36998 41% 24 32%— 4% Eurofnd ,30e 2706 13% 9% 9%- 2% EvansPd .60b 20960 53% 17% 230-22 fvershp .50p 22136 32 i 15% 17 - 5% xCellO 2.20 6699 6645 41% 44%—15% . —F— ■ 1 FactorA ,76b 9218 43% 3244 41%+ 5% FatnrB 2.20a • 1090 57 42 44%— 5% FairCam ,75e 145218 21644 96% 116%—34% Fair Mill ,30a 50634 ,22 - 10 160— 144 Fairmont 1 ,' 5195 24% 13% 1349— OVt 5736 20% 12% 12%— 6% 5832 26% 17% 2149— 444 14966 36% 17% 31%+H% 5452 13% 444 5%—7% 1003 20% 15% 16%— % 6692 19% 11 12%— 6 5171 3944 29 30 —8 W - 10%. 14%— 1% 18% 19%— 2% 5931. 38% 19% 2149-10% 284 24% 20 2044— 3% 12765 69% 52% 54%—12% 2436 13% 4% 6% . 2103 20% 12% 150— 144 6902 32% 24% 25 — 1% '5062 35% 24 260+ 544 4896 33% 19 19%—12 Fiitrol 2.80 8098 59% 40 41%— 3% Finl Fed .99t 17859 24% 8% 120-1 % Firestne 1.40 22116 5049 36% 46+1% FsfChart -Sit 27614 23% 9 1649— 6, FslNStr 2.25e 6899 40 22% 24 —10% Foistaff .76 Fern Fin 1.30 Fansteel Met Fir West Fin Fawick .80 Fedders JOe FedMofl 1.80 FedPac Elec 20655 20 F Pad pf 1.26 955 24 Fed PapBd.1 F Pap pf 1.15 FedOStr 1.70 Fed Mtg Inv Fenestra .25p Ferro Cp 1.20 Fibr Cp 1.40 FieldctM 1.20 nn , FstWFn 1.50t 21100 ... Sj4 Fischbch 1.20 2835 » 18 18+- 5% _ . . _ _ . I PUN OJVW JW wv Uy* \ 1 I1M9 iJIA 16%— 4% 24$IF 1 r s “v^lFjintkt^p. 4 ,4470 88^ 7,% 73%-14V> 4179 14544 M% 93 -280 | £!? 4140 !??■ -5?V Sales Net . (hds.) High Low Last Chg-ntchm pf4,50 ,17090 97 81. 84%—12% nterco 1.60 4256 40% 31 350— 5% nterlkSt 1.80 7179 41% 26% 2649-12% ntBusM 4.40 18933386 289% 371% split ntFlavFr .60 5501 66 45% 64%+l»% ntFlavFr wl 26 33 3144 32% split nt Harv 1.00 27934 52% 32 34%—)!% nt Miner 1 1733 4544 36% 44% abllt ntMlner pf4 153 fi 68% \71 0—15 nt Mng ,40a 17758 17% 9% M -+ 1 nt Nick 2.80 17200 10044 73% WSr- 1% ntl Packers 8106 13% 6% 8%—’■1% ntl Pap 1.35 62455 35 2344 254+- 5% nt Pap pf 4 106 95% 70 79 —16% nt PipeCer 1 3224 34 14% 15 — 18V4 nt Pipe pt 5 ‘473 108% 7344 74%-33% ntIRect 1.37t 22901 31% 15% 19%+ 1% ntl Salt 3a 1013 80% 5244 5449-22% nt Silver 1.20 6752 44% 29 39%+ % nt T&T 1,50 30736 79% 58% 72%+ 2% ntT&T pfB 4 ,14310 135 10144 125%+ 7 ntT&T p(C 4’*,36290 133 101% 125+0 ntTLT pfD 4 ,34440 13044 101 125 + 9 ntT&T pfE 4 ,15730 123 96 117 + 4% nTT pfG .62e 42 88, 86 *7% ~ mm 1152ItfW 94 111%+ 4% 2563 30% 21% 33 — 444 3402 32 23% 25%- 5% 1593 3744 24% 29 -4% 10047 3844 2444 27%— 9% 2108 37 19/ 20 —15% 2584 28% 22% 24%— 3% 2096 3)% 2244 25%—6% 2586 3444 26 2744— 644 nfT T pfF 4 nt Util 1.20 nt Util pf 1.32 ntBaker 1.60 nterDSt .52b ntMotFr 1.20 ntersPw 1.20 a EILP 1.20 ai> IIIGE 1.30 owa PL 1.50 owaPSv 1.20 RC Inc la sICrkC 1.60b TT CpnSv pt TE Ckt lb tek Corp MIchTube JO MidAPipe .40 MConrfel .76 MldAP pfl.12 Minn Pw It 1 Missn Cp.2.05 Mission Dev Mtes River 1 Mo Kan Tex Mo Pac A 5 MP Cem 1.60 MoPubS ,80b MobilOII 1.00 Mohasco 1 2337 4044 2744 31%- 7%. .. HHj 2279 29 2344 25'/.- 30[JJ°£** Pj4 *® J* 33476 4944 21% 430+130 Wohas pf3.50 ,3350 *144 68 7277 40% 26% 36 - 2% 32 08 84% 89% 3689 48% 28 37% split 69173 100% 57% 90% .... AmAirlln L50 50096 82 44% 69 + 7%jChi Tltle l. 10446 4544 28% 28V.—17 2578 47 16 17'%—17V 7607 39% 14% 1S%—17%' 5436 34 14% 15% 1608 40% 29% 30%— 9 Am Baker 1 4513 21% 1444 150- 544 ChOCkFull 30 10933 13% 3% , *£- » 24 ACan pf 1.35 Am Cem .60 AmChaln 1.60 AmComl 1.60 A Consm ,75r AmCredit .72 AmCrySug 1 ChrisCraft lb 12974 28V, 15% 21% Chromall .60 18947 47% 19% 27 —wn Chrysler 2 168340 61% 2944 3044—22% Cinn GE 1.20 7171 2944.2244 26%- 2% ClnGE pf4.75 Z6050 102Vj 86% 86V.—15V, ClnGE pf 4 ,25300 8444 68% 72'%—12% Cinn Mill la 2231 36% 26% 33 split %! ClT Fin 1.60 37148 32% 23% 2944—1% AmBk Note 1 355 28 % 23 AmBkN pf 3 ,3970 74% 68 68 — a • Am Bosch .60 11640 34% 16% 1944— 8% AmBdcst 1.60 17927 08 62 S4%+11% Am Can 2.20 16605, 59V. 4444 47 - 8% H 1691 40% 31% 33%— 6% ,4098 13 8% 8%- * 2904 40% 29% 38% ........ . ... 1713 53% 34% 37%— 7% , ClT Fin pf5 ,22300 101 o. 1049 19V, 1044 13 — 4% j CitiesSvc 1.80 59629 55% 40 1087 16% 11% 1244— 2%jCitSv Pf 4.40 579 182 '2345 23 14 14%— 5% jCitS cvpf2.25 ACry pt 4.50 ,3320 88 69 70 —16% City Inv .50 AmCyan 1.25 19295 4444 30 30% split City Stores AmDlst ,1.40a 995 34% 27% 29 - 3 Clark Eq 1 A EIPw '1.44b 23806 43% 32% 39 — 444 Clark Oil .60 A Ink" 130a 9777 4444 27% 27%- 9Vj Clevcilf 2.60a AmExo Isbrn 16274 6044 26 31%- 244iCIevEIIII 1.68 .... .. ,, AExIsbrn pf6 512 93% rr% 81'/.—11% Clev Pit 3.50 ,5560 7144 6V/, 64 — o AmFPwnil6* 8873 21% 16% 17%—2 Clev P spl 2 ,3740 41 35% 37 .— 3 Am Holst 1.20 2265 3P/. 18% 21 - 9% Clevite 2 10 AmHome 1.00 16766 90% 61% 80%- 6% AmHome pf2 6683 74% 48% 65 — 9% Am HoSP .50 14613 49% 35% 48%+ 8% Am Inti 1.41e 656 1644 13% 14%. AmlnvCo 1.10 4488 21 85%—14% 46%+ 4% 155 +15 72% 85%+ 9% 26 46%+13% 13% 15%+ 2 Arnlnv pf5.25 ,2300 100% 86% 87%—14% Am MFd .90 41374 21% 13Vi 1344— 5% AMF pf 3.90 ,2190 91 74 74 —15% AMet Cl 1.40 19889 65% 34% 4244— 5% AM« pf 435 453 162% 93% lll%- 2% Am Motors 95198 14 6V. 4%- 244 AmNGas 1.80 8093 49% 35 38 -1144 Am News lb 2365 23V. 1644 17%— 6% A Optical .35b 6522 76% 47% 74%+24% Am Photocpv 47534 12% 4% 5%— 5% APotash lT» 12053 48% 27 3244-1044 AResrch 29a 11103 4444 20% 40 +20 Am Seat 1 H»4 22 16% 17% split Am Ship .60 3976 17% 9 1044 split Am Siholt 30 1S111 82% HW4 |» —W/i AmSoAfr 70 15378 44% 2744 33 Split Am Std l 31882 22% 14% 1844- 2% Amstand pt7 Z3B90 158 131 131 —26% Am Stern .80 3892 40 2344 2644 .. ArrtSugar 1.40 9525 34% 22% 23%- 6% AmSug pf .68 1390 13% 10% I1%- ljk Am T&T 2 20 193847 63% 49% 55 — 544 Am Tob 1.80 32387 40% 29% 30%— 7% AmWWks .56 2633 18 12% 13%- ,5260. 26% 19% 21%- 187 24% 19% 20%— a™ 711 30% 23% 23%- 6% 2412 36% 19% 19%—1044 5449 32% 18% 19%—10% 9976 61% 42%, 58%+12% 3WSWT.1* I] SJ lU ji9%-.p]? Amsted 2.20 3774 51% 36% • 38%— 9 A S ™ - 36451 110% «5 80 — J* 5485 58% 40% 52%+1044 ,1020 93 81V. 83 —11 ’2797 38+3 24 27%- 44489 38% 9 APCoOII 1.131 13359 23% 13* p" ,0«7 35% M% «%- 5% Arlans D Str 25594 27% 9% ll'A-15% 813 98 5548 53 2841 21 8257 32 19% 21% split 3326 32% 16% 22% . .. .. 1088 88% 48% 60%—26% 5413 44% 35% 41%+ % 4742 57% 37% 38%—13 CluettPea .80 6280 26% 16% 10 split CluettP Pt 7 ,2420 141% 123 125%—14 Coast St Gas 18801 38% 20 25%—10% CocaCola 1.90 1»35 92 71% W%+ 3% 16% 16%— 3% CocaBtlg 1.10 1823 28 20% 20%—7% AWW5pf AW pref 1.25 AW 4.1pf 1.43 AmZInc 1.40* Amttek la. AMP Inc Ampex Cp Anaconda 5* AnchHG 1.40 AnchHG Pf 4. Ander Clay 1 Anken Ch*m . 5% 10%— 6: 17%+ m 21172 72% 44 Colg Pa"im 1 19919 30 22% 27%+ % ColflP Pf 3.50 ,10170 80% 68 48%—11% CollmAlk 1.20 8813 35% 18 18%—16 CollinRad .60 101737 85% 37% 58%+ 9% ColoIntG 1.40 9338 36 25% 29%—6% Colo Sou pf 4 ,9460 56 49 49 — 1 colt Indust 19216 29% 13% 18%— 4% Coltlnd pf 1.60 691 29% 21% 23%— 5% CBS 1.4™ 39172 65% 42 6l%+16% Col Gas 1.34 16642 30% 24% 25%—3% Col Plct 2.04t 8813 39% 22% 35%+ 7% ColPIC Pf4.25 ,4550 86 71% Wj—14% COISoOh 1.52 4062 41% 31% J*%— IVk Comb Ena 2 21494 69% 35% 47%—17% ComlCre 1.00 20979 34 22 26%- gk ComCr Pt4.50 243 96 69 73%—17% ComSolv 1.20 41419 79% 28% 37%— 4 ComISol pf.90 2101 47% 19% 24 — 1% Comw Ed 2 11313 54% 40% 51%- 2% ComEd pfl.42 185 33% 32% 33% Comw Oil .40 82832 26% 16% 20%+ 2% Comsat 45196 64% 35 43%+ % ConeMIII 1.20 6883 31% 20 »'%—10 ... Xongolm ,80a 5641 25% 13% 7% split ' 4% [Con Cig 1.20a 25974 39% 15% 17%—2W, - Con Edls 1.80 51291 43% 31% 31%-10% ConEdis Pf 5 2535 101% 83% f7V,-J3% ConE PfC4.65 95 100% 79 ' 82V.-17% ConElecInd 1 26475 45% 31 38+4% ConFood 1.40 9225 49% 38% 48%+ 4% Con Frghf .80 6944 25% 14% 16% 4Pllt CnLaun 1.208 1144 36 20 M%- 2% ConNGas 1.60 1154 29% 27% M% *Pll» ConsPow 1.90 10467 -57 40% 50%—5% ConPw pf4.52 ,12970 99 82 85 —12 ConPw pf4.50 ,71240 93% 77 81%—+% ConPw Pf4.16 ,2830 89% 73% 75%—12% Contalnr 1.30 11303 37% 26% 26%- 7% Cont Alr*:t0 42389 83% 46% 77%+24% ContBak 2+0 2984 50»% 46 - 2 CtBak pt S.S0 *10100 105% 89 95 - 8 Cont Can T.S6 5690 44% 37 42% spilt CtCan pf 3.75 ,6810 90% 75% 78 -13 - ' - H 33140 30% 15% 21%— 1% AmirUpf14 75 '^8 S ?2% 75%—12%!crC0P°pfl'.25 249 21% 16% 17'%- 2% Armr pf ,4./5 , uuj M 473/4_13 Cont |ns 3 12402 80% 65'% 79%+ 5% 73% '* ~ ArmRub 1.60 W' 48%, 32% ArvininrPl.Mb 45% 24, ?4%—14%! Cont Oil" Pf_ 2 Jn 75 ,8070 93% 71% 73'%—18 ContMfgl 1.72 4170 34% 21 KSof.k iffl 3811 48% 32% 35%-1 Iconl Mof .40 4039 17% 14% 15%+ % ArlT Coro lM 3785 31% 17% "21%— TJJ Cont Oil 2.60 23629 74% 54% 70% || Arvlnln 1 20b ?735 45% 24 24%—14% Cont Oil Pf 2 - Ash and Oil 1 2(1873 33% 23% 32% spill Cont Stl 1.80 Ainiena uii I T«| m Ashion pf2.40 AssdBrew .40 AssdOG, 1.40 1319 67% 52% 65 [Conti Tel 8552 18 10% 15% . Control Data 9959 55% 44% 52 — 3 con Data pf2 994 27 18 18 . *PM Conwod 1.20a 4924 25% 13% 14% ___CookCof 1.551 9252 24% 19% 21%— 3% \ Cooper Ind 1 37990 42 24% 28V.— 5 ; CooperTR .80 8% 9%-27'%- Atchls Df .50 12064 11% AtCItvEI 1.22 " 3388 33% 25, All C El ,Pt4 ,3350 86% 15% AtlCLIne 3a .2934 56% 67 - % Copeland 1.20 6 CoppRng .50b 6%|copWdSfl 1.20 AtICLI All Rich 2.so SAtlRch Pt3.75 AtIRch pf3 •AtlasChm .80 Atlas Cp Atlas Cp pllk AuroraP 46b Aust Nlch .50 AustN pt 1.20 ARA Inc .60 Avco CP 1 20 Avnet .50b 15535 80% 67 76% iCorng pfn3.50 14557 25% 14% 16%— * I Coronet .40 90273 , 4% "2% 2%— % Cowles .50 2306 2' '5% 15%— J* CoxBdcas 50 4)55 32 12 13% split Crane 1.60b 1974 21% 13% 18%+ '%1 Crane pf 3.75 95 46% 34 46%+6% Crescent .90b 6795 55% 42% 54%+ 4% Cresct pf.1.25 53509 31% 20 24716 24 ' 1967 39 25 25 - 1% 20610 28% 19% 270+ % 115847 39Vj 23% 320— 5% 3021 46% 31% 36%—10% 1183 29% 21 22%— 5 2386 35% 25 TS (irp .40 8386 43 23 31% split Avon Pd 1.20 26523 89% 66 81% 84 ICudahy Co -15 Bo'l«» 'pt C 4',4270 86 72 73%—11 Cudahy p» 6255 36% 18% 26 - 6% Cummln, 80 518 38% 23% 28 - • Bangs Ptl 25. Barer OH -64t 1746 30% 38% Split i CunnDrug '.TO n'28 20 11% 11% split 7375 9% 6 6%— % 255 60 43 47%— 3% 3991 56% 31% 33'/,—14% 495 14 10% 10%. |U c Pf 1.50 ,I4M0 48% 35% 36%- 7% ^'Vub 3pt 24M 47 30 35 7* SAA& 017/p OVa 9%— riieDnk B7n 1734 1A1A 19' BatesMfg _ Bethlron 1.40 BauadiLb .80 BaktrLab .28 BayukCig .50 Beaf?v Olft 1 Bearings .80 Beat Fds 1 -50 - — BeatFd pf4 50 ,6580 97 Beaunit BeckS pf Beckman * Becton D ■ BeectiAr .80b Beecb Crk 2 BeechLS 1.80 BeecftLS pt2 Belco .50 Beid Hem .70 • 870 17% lO’/k 12'/a— 2Va 16891 27% 15% 17%—10% 817 37% 31% 32’/V— 4% 4580 72% 39 42%—15% 2m .isw >** ._.,9 .v.un yyi i 5959 61% 33% 60% *Pjj* CurtWr A 2 19210 42% 22% 4]J? *1,1* cutler H 1.20 ... _ , ,,,, 3205 14% . 8% 9%- I CyC|op(;p i .80 4513 47%'27% 29%—16% 3272 42% 24% 4|X4t w CyprusM 1.20 24708 81 27% S3 —14 0*6 M% 22 M%+ 2% 5165 58% 40 50J+-.J1* ---U----- 6580 97 82 [DanRlvr 1 20 10601 37% 20 20%-! 4% 8048 2j% I' 12V» SPl'T Djlna Cp 2.20 4941 53% 35% 35%—13% J«70 *4% 75 81 + Dan* pt 3.75 ,1010 90% 75 78 -11; 3% 33% 55%+.Pl» :R-T“ 1.60 128. 26% 23% 23% split 25% 29 — 3% 67 — 8% 63% 68 —11 30 2365 4W% MV- W PL 1.32 4533 33% 25' 0b 1 J58 22* S2 STI Dbl pf A 3.75 *14390 76% 65 ’B b S _ BelT How iso 3,’S 'f «^14 |oe.W .98 Bell int :83f 9933 ‘ DentISp 1.20a BemlsCo 1.40 265 32% 25% DenRGW 1.10 1 3815 25 WA 16% Bendix 1.40 5345 35 ^ 28 DtSotoCh .70 2319 25% 15% 15%- 9% BenefFin 1.W 15038 55% 28% | DetEdls 1.40 9963 37% 28% 33%~ 4% BenF nPf4 » -455 120 46 « |ogt Steel .60 16921 20 11% 11%-5% BenFin Pf4.30 3024 9J^4 n 42%—7% I DeVlibis 1.10 697 28% 19% 20%- 5% ...... DiamAlk 1.20 21504 75% 51% 68 +15% 5644 42% 24% 31 %~ 5% 4860 29% 21% 28% split 44489 129% 66’4 118’/4 + 463// 1842 36 9326 51% 39% 50. + 3% PwL 1.64 10575 79 63% 73%-^ 5% Fla Steel .80a 1081 19'% 13 13V4 Fluor Cor” 8126 36% 2149 32'/. split FMC Cp .75 17168 42 29% 30 split FoodFav »0 »933 24V9 13% )4Vk— 7% Fd Fr pf4.20 ,3810 95 81 83/,-ll% FdGtMkt .80 7981 1849 1 0% ll%— FdGMk pf.40 74 13V, 8% 8%— 27/. -Foote CB .80 3610 1949 10% 13%- 549 Ebole M 25d 5624 247. lT'-a 24%+ IV. FordMot. 2 40 1 *404 57% 38% M%-45% Fore Dalr .50 28490 27% 1449 JO — ]% Post Whl .50*' 4556 2249 1149 1 3% spl > Foxboro Co 1 6943 53 33 41'%— 3V, Fram L60b 3101 46 33% 45%+ /% FrankStr 40b 962 14% 10% 11%— FreeptSu 1 25 12560 4449 27% 38% SpUt FruehCp 1.70 27435 3644 24V. 25;/>—IW9 Fryehauf pf4 ,20960 95V, 76 77%— 7% ,9361 22% 7% 8%— 649. 16 14% 13% 13% .... —G— 2171 35% 21% 22—11'/, 1181 41% 26% 27%—10% 2650 3649 24% 26%— 9% 9861 1! 5% 6%+ % 126 42% 29 29'%— 5% 5640 41% 25% 2944-10' 1183 20% 13% 15% split 2600 24 17% 1949- 49 164 17% 14% 15%— 1% 424 13 9% 10%— 1% 2473 41% 25% 30%— 7% j5530 96 87 88%— 6% r. AmOII 40b 14962 4049 26% 3049— 3% GA Tran T.55 12354 48%..28% „M%%M GenAnilF - - — - tMI cm tjw - 1408 11% •% O'7*— JJ* 8247 37% T4% I7%— 1*9 9901 36 22% 3349 split 3853 33% 18 18%—14% 33)4 5% 2% 349— 1% 32395 844 4% 6%+ 1% 61339 66% 38% 48%-O*n¥l*c l60 50686 120 “1 GenFlnan 1 Fulton In Fultonl pfA 1 Gam Sko 1.30 GamSk pfl.75 GamSk pfl.60 Gar Wood GarW ptJ.Blk GardDen 1.50 Garlock .60 G Accept. 1.20 GenAccpt ptl GenAcc pf 60 aSra 12354 48% 28% 334' ® ® ® Gen Bronze Gen Cable 1 Gen Clg 1.20 GenConF .10 Gen Develop GenDynam l ■PP 9 88%—29% 936 22% 17% 1749— 3% 15270 r JRfcnS oSUlnstr W Ig 64% f* GenMIllS 1.50 6W2 66% 52 M p St® G Mot pf3.75 GenPCem .80 GenPrec 1.50 47363 67V GPrec ptl .60" 1559 444 GPubSvc .459 12251 G PubUI 150 1904 111% 9244, 99% 11% 811 85% 6» 75V, 15639 15% .80 39 62 + 21% 33% 43%+ 3% 5% 549— 49 15004 3744 26% 30%—.6 6655 27 HI G Refrac Gen Slg 1.20 ... .. G Stllnd 1.20 8248 3144 16 GTel El 1.28 61630 46%. 35% 45 /, GTelF ptl .25 GTel pfB1.30 13%—11V JaegerM ,60a JapanFd .43e JerCPL pf 4 Jewel Co 1.20 Jewel pf3.75 Jim Walter 1 JimWIt pfl .20 JlmWalt pf 1 1! . 2% 3330 19 5365 13% 9% 10%— % ,7490 81% 70% 71 %— 9% 9265 44 25 26%-ll% ,1340 91% 75 ; 75 -16% 6903 25% 13% 1849— 6% 1424 25 18% 20% ..... 241 >17 1249 1349— 3% JohnMan '2.20 12051 61 44% 48%- /% JohnsnJ 1.40a 3247 202 139 171 — 1% JohnsSv 1.30a 2456 52% 33% 35 —12% JonLogan .80 10096 5249 31% 440%+ 1% Jones L 2.70 18891 74% 44% 46%—24% Jones&L pf 5 ,40790 105 85% 87 -17% Jorgensen 1 2785 26% 17% 18 — 4% Jostens .50 3859 1 9% 1049 , !3%— 6% Joy Mfg 1.25 17761,50% 21% 24% split' w-K— Kaiser Al 1 22510 52% 30% 42%+ 5% Kals 57pf4.75 500 111 85% 91—9 Kais 59pf4.75 1 24 110 82 91%— 6% Kals 66pf4.75 113 96 85% 94% KalsAI pf4.12 846 94V. 71 79'%— 3% Kals ncpf2.37 115 49V. 42 44%— 4 Kals Cem .80 4184 16 10% 12%—2% KalsC pf2.50 596 52% 36% 37%-12V, KaisC pf1,37 1453 23% 18 19%— 3% Kan CPL 1.56 3511 45 31 37%- 4% KC PL pf4.50 ,3220 95'% 79 82 -13 KC PL pf4.35 ,1350 93 76% 77 —15 KC PL pf4.20 i-------- KC PL pt 4 KC PL pf3.8J KC Souind 2 KC Sou pf 1 Kan GE 1.28 KanPwLt .93 KayserRo .60 Keebler 1.20 Keller Ind 1 Kellogg 1.20 Kelsey ,1.30 Kendall Co 1 Kennecott 2 Ky Util 1.36 KernCLd 2.60 KerrMc 1.40 KeystonSW 2 KiddeW 1.53t KimbClark 2 _________ Kldde pfA2.20 730 1471/- 72^ 101 KlngSel 1.50a ' 2789 4049 25%, 25%~1444 King DSt ,50b 7070 23% 13% 14'%- 8% KlnneyNS .40 3935 42% 0% 26%— 3V9 Kinney pf.70 452 34V, 22% 26% KLM Airlines 84192 155% 75 95%+l6% Koehrlng 1.90 9021 46% 27% 29%—8% Koppers 1.40 3500 33% 22V. 26% split ! Koppers pf 4 ,18840 92 70 72%-16'% Kresge .80 5089 47% 35% 37% split KroehlrMf lb 1440 39% 16 16 —19 Kroger 1.30 16252 37V, 20% 22'%—1349 3264 62% 3549 - 9%'Lab gVctron 22944 22% 10% 20 + 7*fa Z1320 90 75 77 - 15 z790 90 76 80 - 10% Z 2090 78 66 66%—10V? 5 664 53% 32 36 - 7% 412 20% 16 17 - 2% 3278 38% 27 31%— *5% 3579 26% 19% 22%— 3% 10054 44% 21% 30%— 71% 2467 36% 23 23%— 6 3921 40% 16% 18%— 13 5849 43% 30% 36 V?— 4% 2885 30% 24% 270 split 3401 50% 30 36 - 9% 22542 41% 28 38% split 3593 33% 25% 33%+ 1/2 5578 76% 51% 57%—10 15127 87% 65% 81 • +11% 1360 39% 29% 29%— 8% 17487 74% 36 49%+ 4% 12430 58% 44% 48 - 6% 18%-^j 8% % 329 25% 21% 22 286 26% 21% 23%— 2% fca?a1 'sTs: p B b a S21’K Gibralt 1.26t Gillette 1.20 GimbelB 1.80 Ginn Co .72 Glen Aid .70 Glidden 1 GlobeUn ,80a Globe W .70b Goodrich 2.40 Goodyr 1-35 GouldBat 1.40 HmdOrg 1.40 HanesCp .90 Hanna M 1.40 HarbWIk* 1.80 .. , HarbWk pf 6 22% 23%- 8% Harcourt, 1 Harris tnl 1 10% 18%— 0% 5636 20% 7% 12%— 7% 3«91 43% '32% 41%+ 3% 4872 59V. 40% 40%-13% 8502 40% 23% 30 — 4 13451 14% 9% 9%— 2% 8338 28% 1,8% 20%— 3 3184 31 17% 24% . 5*11 28% 15 17 — 7% 17477 69% 54 61, + 4% 32603 57% 40% 41 Vj— 6 4125 33% 19% !9%—1049 GraceCo 1.30 21964 68% '*34V. 49%- 6% Granby .50a 2343 37% 22 29%+ 6^9 GrandU .60b 10890 25% 549 6%- 9% Granites 1.4Q 8032 27% 19 T9 - 6% Granltev 1 40 5372 4049 21 2149—12% GrantWT 1.10 6456 31% 20% 2W. split Grant pf 3.75 ,9270 82% 69 70 -12% GtAmlns 2.80 2982 66% 4*V, 60%- 5 GtA&P 1.20a 26337 37% 25'/» 26%— 9 GtNorlr 1.60e 2607 18% 15 Gt Nor Pap 1 12575 49 30% 32V?_ ,1% GINorP pf.40 1986 14% 9% 10 — A Gl Nor Rv 3 11658 76% 48% 52 -10 Gt West Flnl 53383 11% 5% 8V«~ 2% GtWSug .1.60a 3216 44V. 34 38 - 349 GtWSug pf 7 ,32330 187 140 140 -17 GreenGnt .80 1741 28% 21% 27% , GreenRf 1.10 1821 24% 17 17% GreenSh 1.10 1525'25% 6% 16%- *% Greyhnd .90 26438 23V, 15% 16 — s% Greyh cvpt 3 203 80% *0 *3—14 Grey cvpf2.25 22 80 64% 64 % 25 Groller/i 50 5112 63% 43 49’/,- 6% GrumAIrc lb 326 94 61 32% 51%+ 4% Gulf MO 2.60a 1919 79 49% *3%— 1% GulfMOh pf5 120 92 83% 83V.— 6% Gulf Oil 2.20 4 5964 6049 48% 59%+ 1% GulfStaUt .80 10459 29 20 49 2*%- % GulfSU ptS.08 ,5960 1 04% 87% 9 %-12% Gulf SU pt 5 ,3020102 89%89%-14 GulfSU pW.52 ,1610 95% *1% 82%—1 3 GulfSU Rf4.44 ,1170 96 78 . 80 —16 GulfSU pf4.40 ,11530 90 75% 79 — 9 GulfSU pf4.20 , 1630 88% 74% '75%—13% GulfWin 25b 63293 37% 18 34% split GulfW pfl.75 841 25 54 1 05%+12 % GulfW pf3.50 .3496 160 69% 134 GulfW pf5,75 947 82% *9% 79% Gulton indust 14072 5549 27% 52%+2449 Hack W 1.60 438 42% 32% 3m- HallPrt 1.40a 1103 46 29 33% + Halltburt 1.70 12142 56 Ham Watch 1 Ham Fap .90 3230 28V* 21 1488 28Mi 21 Vb 22 — 5 7927 ( 36% 26 36Va+.9Va 25% 31%+ 3% 13% 16V4— 3Va 219 71 ” 66W 68 .... 40359 35% 17 2142 24% 11« 4278 33% )V 12432 35% 16 10778 17% I 38569 12% 1015 98 7066 33% 3843 11 14885 58% “ 6170 15% ■_________ _ 6459 79% 65 Ligg&My pf7 Z11490 159Va 126% 129 LIlyTullp 1.20 18135 39% 21 24%- 4% LingTVflht 1b 48349 80% 38% 74Va+26Vi» LlngTVgt pf3 2461 99 55 94%+32V. LinkBIt 1.80a 3851 44 33 33%— 7% Lionel Corp 23615 6% 2% 2%- 1% Lionel Cp pf ]B9 19 6% 6%— 6% Lac Gas 1.25 LaneBry 1.10 Lanv Ritz .60 Lanvin pf.80 LatrobeS .60a LearS pf4.50 Lear Sieg .70 Leaseway .50 LeedsNor .50 Leesona .40 LehFCem .60 Leh Val ind LV Ind pfl.50 Lehman 2.14e Leonard R .60 LOFGIs 2.80a LibbMcN ,.49t Llggett&M 17 20%— % 11% 12 17% 19% 16 2D%— 83/4 8% 9%— /% 7% 80+ % 6? 67 + 2% 26% 30%— 1% 11 11%— 1 40% 40%— 43/j 9Va 9%*— 5% 65 65 — 6 126% 129 - 2y% Litton 1.54t Litton ptc pf Litton cvpf 3 Livingstn Oil LockhdA 2.20 31319 73 Loews Theat 8694 39 Londontn .20 LoneS Cem 1 LoneSt pf4.50 LoneSGa 1.12 LonglsLt 1.08 UL pf B 5 LIL pfD 4.25 LIL pfE 4.35 Loral Corp Lubrizol LuckyStrs .80 Ludlow 1.76 Lukens Stl 1 Lykes SS .80a Lytton Flnl . "455 120 3024 98% Beryllim 30a 1096 32% 2S99 29% & a s Bigelow S .80 BltCkOk 1.40 gg, • 251% )% 2884 24% 15% 19 4667 68% 45% SErsfetss BoM'les'k 70 W »% '*'A Bo%e2.scM25 37% U% 23% epllt 23%+ BoiseC pfl 40 Bond Sirs 1 BookMh 1.20a Borden 1.20 Diemlnfl 1.60 DianaStr .lOr Dictphon .80* Dtebold 40b OIGiorglo .80 DinersCI .50b Disney 40b Olsl Seag 1 DivcoWy 1+0 Dr Pepper 1 DodgeMf 1.60 Dome Min .80 DomFd l.Tle Donnelley ,60 Doug Air 20665 48%. 25 31% 4190 42% 33% 36%— 2% 2937 13% 6% 7%— 5% 7807 30% 17 25%+ % 10589 38% 15% 19 —11% 1442 24% 15% 1S%— 4% 10819 30 14% 19%— 7% 11*12 84% 40% 79%+20 4271 37 ,25% 30%— 5% 3) 44 44% 20% 27%—10% 2239 3m 25% 30 — 6% 970 41 31% 39%+ 2% 8818 51% 31% 43%+,*% 1671 24 18% 21'A— 2 8147 47 29% J7%- 6 8920 111% 30 45%—29% 2904 36 22% 31 1402 29% 21 23%+ %jOoverCp 1.10 OTWVH 18808 41% 27% 30%—10% j Dow Chem 2 24941 78 54 61%-I5% BoroWsr 2 20 13769 50 36% 37%-11% i Draper 1.20 8334 37% 17% 19%-11% loroW Pf3 » H390 93% ** »4 - JJ? | Dresslnd 1,25 20087 38% 22% 29%- Borman p1.80 3197 20% 12% 12%- J% DrexelE 160 - ‘ - ” 4297 46% 35 41%— 2% [ Dreyfus .80 8908 30% 13% 13%—10 j Duffy Mf 1.10 1132 5* 23% M%—18% Duke Pw 120 Bos Edls 1.92 jBost Me Cp 6390 27*A 14* 22% Br*ni$ Air 20136 9fW 41% 70 *P»f Brlf?My J0a 7447 58^6 4341 SS i|Mit BwyHale 1.40 BklynUG 1.60 Brown Co M BwnShrp 1 JO IwnCo pfl .50 BwnShoe 2.4Q .Brunswick Buckinghm 1 932 42'A 33% M% 4927 3S46 26% 27%— 6V 16466 2m 17 17%- J ' 3277 46% *28% 29Ve—1341 2058 31 26% 27M 988 62% 48 If 91S60 12% 6 11679 17% 11% 14% split 3% Dunhlll Duplin Corp dupont 5.7Se duPont pf4.50 duPont pf3.50 Duq Lt. 1.60 Dq 4.20pf2.10 Dq 4.15pf? .07 Dq 4.10pf2.05 DuqLt 4pf BGSEr l 6^ 13128 37% 22% S’4* *p!?k DWG Corp BUdd CO 80 18885 23' Budd Co pf 5 n 90% 76V, Rudd Fin ,64 1565 15% "9% Budg F pf -60 353 10% 8% „ Buff Fpr 1.80 891 45% 28% 30 Bulterd 1' Butovs JOb KnicHIll t+8_____— - — — . Burl Ind 1.20 24739 S0% 25% 28%—14% Burndv .40 9606 33% 20% 32%, split iwroughs 1 104253 93% 49% 87%+37% Bush Ter 20r 1923 29% 20%“ 21%- 5% BVD Co .50 10700 31% 19% 20%— $% 1075 17% 4St 20784 22% 12% 18*1 DynsmCp .40 33311 16% ’ J * OynsmCp pfl 9% 1703 49 25% 28’9—17% 7136 19% 12% 13% 2921 28% 19% 21%— 5% 3633 43 35% 40%- 2 3358 19% 11% 12%- 3% 3560 1* 6% *%- 4 16948 242 143% 143%-95% 1342 102% 85 90V,—12% 505 81% 67 71 —10 10208 33% 27% 30%- 2% ,3530 45% 38% 38%- 6% ,5600 46 36% 30 — 7% ,3220 45 37 38 - 5% ,47850 44% 35% 36%— 5% 33%— 6% 38%— 5% 9%— 5% j Hotel Cp Am % Hotel pt 1+5 '"nr % Houd Ind la 1* — 4% Houd In pfl.12 Houd pf 2.35 House Fht 1 HarscoCp .90 HarfSchM 1 Harv Al 1+0 Hat Corp 40%. 1544 16’» 1! 13% split 1772 32". 22% 31% split 5462 26% 18 18%— 7% 1935 29% 18% 19% 2174 61 45% 52 4360 43% 27% 28 —12% ,2210 1 34% 124% 124%—)JVj 4501 90 63% 82%+14% 9115 41% 23 28%— 8 7894 25 16 "" 3537 4 2 29% 16039 29% 19'/J 2635 13% 7% HatCp pf 2.50 ,3270 45 I HaWElec 1.08 2525 30% 22 Hawaii Tel 1 Hayes V80 234 20 -E- 710 34% 14% W9+-10J) Eagle P 1.40 2548 34<* 24% 2*%- 7% » U 2 «5?T i EastAIrL .60 129114123% S3 7*%-12% 27759 4Wi 23% EastGF 1.49t 738 113 74 86%-22% EastSStl .90 3789 19% 12% 13 -6 EKodak 1.60a 41115141% 105% 127%+!0% EatonVa 1+5 7609 29% 22% 24% split Eaton pt 1.19 602 35% 23% »%- 6% eohtlnMt .48 3456 18% 9% 12%-2% EdisBros. 1.30' 1717 0 28 3I%+1% Ed Br pf4.25 ,8910 93% 76 ,76%-16% EG&G .20 22917 54 21% 49%+20% ElasStop 1.80 2385 61 »% 58%+25% ElBondS 1,72 5106 42>A »% 31%~ 7% El MUSIC .12* 34857. 5% 3% 3%- % EIStBatf 2:20 2111 57% 38% 48%^ 5% a El Assoc .348 16487 27% 12% M%- 8% Hm— 3% Electron Sp TM—.13% ftain Watch 5646+ J% EIPasoNG 1 S8 8% 5% ' *%- lHliltreC» 1AB« I *4 47% St —11 Elba pt 1.40 835 14% M 14%— % 36% M% 23%— 6% , »% 38 split EmeryA 1* 3846 i0% » 66 +9% 19070' 6% 2% 3%— 1% SHE 31 22% 2S% — 4% 23524 15 ftk «*+ . % 21729 66 26% 31%+ 3 ________.7839 27% 16% 20%+ % Camp SOUP I 14366 36% 24% 27:' Can Dry * 29M 32% CaDry pf4 25 ,10440 91% 7* CanSou Rv 3 - I4|» 57 “ 14063 27% 15% 20% 2062 14% 7% «%—!%! 26090 21% 16% 17%—1% 9062 54% 35% 31 —10 412 49% 36% 3*%— 9 mar El 130 10239 6m 47% 60 + 4% mersEI pfl 239 52% , 38% -46% + 2% 5372 96% £7 33% spilt 26% + 6% 8 — 1% 0 — 4% 24%— 5% 6745 42% 23% 41%+ 1% 2223 44% 28% 31 %— 2% ........ ■ 8647 10% 5% 6'%- 1% HeclaM I lia 159*2 64% 27V, 42 +14% Heinz HJ 1.20 8146 67% 27% 30 —13% Heinz (it 3:S U160 90% 73% 74%-!S%] Helene Curtis 15943 24% 9% ll%- % Hell Coil .60 1985. 18% 13% 1Z% sPif* He Her WE .50 1913! «% 8 9%- 3% HelmeProd 1 17M 20% 17% 19%- % Helmrch .10e *748 13% 7% 9%- % HeTctnc 1.10# 20815 50 36% 43%+ 1% HercInA 1.65 308 156% 116% 145%+14% HershCh .90s 5409 35% 22% *6%—9% Hertz'1+0 10434 S6% 31% 39%—13% Hert, pfB 2 105 47% 42 4* Hess O&C +0 45020 32% 15 23 + 7% Haublein 1+0 ■ 5212 38% 28% 37%+ 1% HewPack .20 14885 55% 35% fl%+12% High Voltage 46595 30% 15% ' 20%+ 1% HIWOnHot .80 10019 20% 13% 15%— 1% Hiltonln 1.19t *479 37% 22% 32%+ 6% Hobart Mf .80 1*1 32% 30 30% split HoH Electron 20490 25% 7%. 9%- 2% Holid Inn .50 11064 45 25% 40%+ 8% Holly Sugar 1 1581 20% 17 17% split Holt RW .90 6506 59 44% 5S%+ 8% Homestk 1.60 8664 55% 3$ 41%- Honeywl 1.10 29868 96 53% 66%- Honeyw pf 3 804 108 74% 83 - Hook Ch 1.40 15452- 55 29% 36%-15V, Hooker pf4.25 ,3750 91% 74% 78 —13 Hooker pfC 5 ,000103 87 88%—1* Hoov Ball la 1951 43% 22V, 22% split “ | 4443 7% 3% 3%— 3% 113 24% 18% 18'+— '*% 1289 23% 16% 18% split 675 29% 20% 2!%— 3% 242 44% 34% 35% — 8% 9017 30% 20% 30 split 2329114% .79 95%—l* 14724 55% 39 49% - 3 6597 0% 29% 36 split-1*789 0% 2A 48 V.+28% 1358 84% 5m 58%—13 9166 31 18% 20 — 8% — — 79%—14 50251 86% 56% 81%+11% 8563 96% 60 83%. 948 172 130 162 +13 30676 13% 4% 4%— 5 V. 49 64V, + 7% 20% 26 — 4 1248 20% 15 15% 17149 19% 14% 14'+— 3V, 486 97% 74 77%—19% 18332 25% 18% 19'/,- 5% 8171 32% 25 29 - 3% ,3450 103'/, 87 88'/,—14% ,130 88% 85% 85%— 4% ,2810 91 76% 78'+—13 ____ MV 26544 17% 8 8V,- 2% Lorillard 2.50 21177 56% 40% 40%- 2% Lorlllard pf 7 ,9290 154 124% 129%-25V. LoulsGE 1.28 3760 37V. 24% 31%— 4% Lou Nash 4a 2790 102% 73% 78%-10'/, Lowenstn .80 9798 27 14% 14%— 9% 1649 50% 0% 41V. 1009 19% 15 14% split 3233 64% 34% 35*+- 9% 25227 58% 27V, 31%-21% 3251 28 20V, 24%— % 7154 9% 4 4%— 4% —M— 663 WV* 9Vv 9% ’split Mack T r 1.59t 17041 543,4 27 307/»~17Mi Mack pf 2.62 342 49% 41}$ 41 Va— 8V4 MacyRH 1.60 5178 54% 42% 42%-ll% Macy pf 4.25 *19840 923^ 76 Mad Fd 2.71# 7711 26% 20 22%- 1% MadFd efl.20 2442 28 “ 22% 25 ---- . 2B056 6 5Vfc+ 1522 13% 10V4 l^/a-i- % ___________________ 4805 65 40% 52%--- Magnavox .80 95148 563/d 36% 36% spilt Mallory 1.60a 6977 70% 38% 49%— % ManSmrt .56 384 • 27 18 24% split Marathn 2.40 18481 64% '49 62%+6% Maremont 1 Mar Mid L30 ____________ Marquar .25# 14374 19% MarqCem .60 5720 22% MarshFleld 2 MartlnMar 1 Md Cup, 40b Masbnlte .1.20 Massey F 1 Mattel .40 MayDStr 1.60 May 45pf3.75 May 47pf3.75 May »p(3.75 MayDS pf3.40 MayDS pfl .80 Mays JW .80 Maytag 1.60a MCA Inc MCA pf 1.50 McCall 40b McCord 1.20 McCrary -1.20 MacAndF Mad Sq Gar MadSG pf .60 MagmaC 3.60 3074 29% 17% 187/i— 8% 10270 0% 24 28 - m ---- — )% 2'A 10% im—io 3994 60 39% 40%—16% *3749 27% 16% 2TVb— % 1791 49% 35% 40'+— 3 3840 46% 0% 37%— 4% 75344 36% 18% 21 %—11% 6743 20% 10% 10%— 8% 12147. 54% 32 32%—21% ,1370 84% 70 72 • ,1130 84 70 73 • -,220 83% 71 71 ■ Z300 74% 63% 65 80 40 32% 33% 509 16% 11% 11%-5034 0% 25% 29'/,- 7% 6794 61% 28% 54,'»—18V, 987 34% 24% 26%- 5% 9227 40% 23% 26 — 2% 1254 34 17% 19 -10%' -10% Salas Ntl (hds.) High Lew Last CM. Merck pf3.50 70 87% 69 72%—15%E MasabIT .80* 12375 15 11% 12%- 2% Mesta M 2.50 2124 M% 31 31%-34% MGM 1 16325 39% 24% 0% split Metromad .80 10928 55% 23 42 — 2% MetEd pf4.45 ,550 90 77% 8]%-!6 MetEd pf4.35 ,1270 96 78 79 —16 MetEd pf3.90 ,6240 83% 64 72 -10 MetEd pf3. 5 ,1420 82% 67% 69 -13% MetEd pf3.80 ,1370 82 « 67 —14 MIChGas 1.20 . 636 26% 19% 20%— 6 68 16% 14% 15% apltt 2391 15% 10% 12% .... 204 24% 15% 21%-1% 231 23% 18% 20 .... MldSoUtll .76 20430 26% 21 25% split Midld R 1.40 52570 29% 22 24% split MidRpfA 4,75 428 133% 101% 111 —6 MldW Oil 2.40 1035 96% 68% 68%—28% MiehleGD .90 4521 0% 18% 25%—6% Miles Lab 1 6345 46% »% 3149+14% Milt Brad .80 11M 24% 16% 20% . MlnarCh 1,30 10081 3m 23% 26%- 5% Minn Ent 1 830 24% 16% 17 — 6% MinnAUM 1.20 30849 86% 61 78 +18 3326 30% 21 Z3%- 6% 2416 98% 82 95 +7 1810 92 56% 89%+32% 19103 25 15% 17%— 2% 046 13% 4% 549-4% 61 96% 75% 80 - 5% 3268 28% 11% 19%— 6% 1417 29% 22% 25 - 3% 20014 49% 35% 46% split 17642" »% 13 1449-11% 77%—14% 68 -14% Monarch M 1 1242 0% 14% 14% split MononB L25t 1481 2949 17% 20%- 6% Monsan 1.60b 45551 84% 0% 41%—44% MontDUt 1J2 - 3815 39% 28% 30'+— 9 MontPow 1.56 5870 3849 2 3149— 5% MontWard 1 39473 0% 19% 20%-+14% MooreMcC 1 11627 31% 1549 im+ % Morrell ,25p 7973 3249 19% 25%+ % Morse Sh .60 3642 28% 20% 21'/,— 3% MoslerSaf .70 1809 36 22% 29'/,— 5% Motorola 1 45534 233% 92 93 —71% MtFuelS 1.68 2688 0 27V, 2749—10% MtSf TT 1.12 6060 0>A M 20%- 4% MSL Ind 1.60 5990 35 26% 2649- 6% Munslng 1.0 1696 0% 22% 23 —12 Murphy 1.0 4642 24% 11% 18%— 3% MurphOII .0 7253 29% 20% 2449- 49 MurpD pf4.90 0310 104 10—1 N— NalcoChem 1 071 60% 4249 60%+lSV, NatcoCp .30* 510 31 12% 0%+13% Nat Acme 2a 230 55% 37% 0%— 7% Nat Aero A0 2732 44% 27% 32%— 8%. Nat Airlin .60 36487 104% 56 85%+15% N Aviat 5.68e 5610 50% 0% 46%+ 3% NatBisc 1.90 . 9560 54% 049 47%—649 Nat Can ,50b 10472 32% 0 23%+- 349 N CashR 1.20 1970 91% » 6749— 949 NatCityL 1.60 1400 40 27% 0 — 4% NatDalry 1.40 10007 40 3149 0 split Nat Dlst 1.60 17862 4149 30 0%+ 5% NDIst pf4.25 459 92% 74 77 -15 NDIst pf2.25 00 47 3 % 41'/,— 4% Nat Fuel 1.60 410 0% 046 0 — 5 . Nat Gen I ,0 16401 12% 7% 11%+ 1% Nat Gypsm 2 13053 0 2349 29%- 749 NGyps pf4.50 ,2070 97 80 86 — 9% N Lead 3.25a 24193 74%, 52% 55%—15% NatPerlodd 1 14059 45% 18% 25%— 1% Nat Prop .60 4561 18 10% 1149- 5% NatSvcIn 1.32 786 35% 27% 0%— 5% Natl Std .0 1284 21 16% 1749- 249 NatStarch .70 1698 44Vt 0 0%+ 2 Nat Steal 2.50 17927 0% 36% 40%—0% NSugRfg ,15a 1263 25% 13 13%— 6% Nat Tea .80 602 16% 13 13—2% NatUnEI .70 14832 4849 21% 21%— 49 Natomas .25 20240 15% 9% 1149+ 1% Neisner Bros 150 1449 7 8%— 1 Neptune 1.40 370 0% 22% M%—11% Nevada P M 4205 46% » 3749- 0% Newbery ,«t 5099 2449 15 15%— 5% Newb pf 3.75 Z81M 70% 59 60%— 9% NEng Ej 1J4 965 »% 22% 27%- 1% NEngTT 2.36 7979 51% 42% 4349- 6% Newmt 2.0b 1540 0% 0% 4549-13% Newmt pf 4 224 191 11J 140 —23% NawpNSn 2a 5623 52% 31 33%—1949 NYAIrBk 1+0 2466.0% 11% 23% split NYCent 3.12a 35553 0% 52% 60%—11 NY Hond .95r 4533 51 26% 3649+ 949 NYStEG 1.0 7777 46% 0% 43%- 249 NY SE pf3.75 ,9080 78% 63% 68%— 8% Niag MP 1:10 20552 26% 2049 21 - 549 NlagM pf5.25 ,11870 105% 90V. 93%—11% NiagM p(4.85 ,12270 101% 81% 8444—13% NlagM pf4.10 ,4110 88 70 72%—14 NlagM pf3.90 ,17620 81 65 67 —12 NiagM pf3.60 ,36070 74 *044 62%— 9% NlagM pf3.40 ,17770 *9% 57 60'+— 7%' Niag Shr 1.10 1510 21% 16% 1749- 3% NopcoCh 1.40 5450 47V, 32V, 0%+ % NorflkWst 0 91010% 93% »%—MV, Norrislnd ,75 2491 19% 12% 17% spilt NA Avia 2. 0 21960 61% 0% 48 -11 NoAmCar .90 1408 0% 17% 1844— 9%-2755 16% 10% 1ZV,- 2% 07 17 1049 10%- 349 ,5580 82% 71 75 — m 5566 33 24% 3049 spilt 6223 0% 4149 4849— 949 ----- “ 99%— 6% 96—8 Z8260 10% 92% 95—9 10798 65% 43% 46%— 949 7472 35% 27% 3349- 149 ,1490 96 81% 81%—14 ,260 88V, 74% 76 —12% ,8150 87% 72 75 —12% ,810 87V, 70% 74%—12% ,670 6 72 73%—13 PCoka 5pf 5 PCoke pf4.80 Pitt Forg n PltFtW pt 7 PltPlata 2.60 Fit Steel -------------... PltSteel pf A 0480 91 Pl»t] pfl.25k 237 89 PSEO pf4.18 PSEG pf4.06 PSEG pfl.40 PubSInd 1.76 PSInd pf3.50 PSInd pfl.M PSInd pfl.M Publklnd .349 NAmCoal NoASugar .40 NorCentRy 4 Nor Ind PS 1 NorNGas 2.40 ■■■■ NoNG pf5.80 ,1400100 NoNG pf5.60 ,5170 105 NoNG pf5.50 Nor Pac 2.60 NSta-Pw 1.52 NSPw pf+56 NSPW pf4.16 NSPw "pf4.1t NSPw pf4.10 NSPw pf4.C‘ 61 —10 Northrp pf wl Nwst Alrl .60 NwBan -1 90a NwtStlW 1.40 Norton 1.50 NorWlch 1.30 NuTon* .90 NuTon pfl.28 NVF Co 1.0 27'Arid 27% 2449 2* .... 27467 125% 78 119 split 3097 47% 37% 46%+ 1% 1584 31% 23 0V,+ 249 9926 48% 2749 049+- 5% 4621. 62% 46% 59%+ 649 017 3V+ 17 23%— 3V, Ml 0% 2049 23% ....... 12M 0% 0% 25 —O— 83040 57Vd 26 23556 27 13 12640 30 23Vb 42%+ 9% r=i Me Greg McIntyre 2.80 McKee 1.50 McK«ss 1.80 McLean ,60a McLouth 1.60 McNeil Cp 1b McQuay 1.10 Mead Cp 1.90 Mead pf4.2S Mead pf2.80 MedusaC 1.20 Melv Sh 1.25 MelvShoa pf4 MercanS 1.40 Merck 1.40a Merck 1.40 Occident .80b Ogden Cp .60 OhioEdis 1.20 Oh Ed pf4.56 Z7060 97 „ ■ Oh fd pf4.44 Z5670 95 81 B2Va—11»/S* Oh Ed pf4.40 Z21190 92% 77% 80 -9% Oh Ed pf3.90 z 15000 80Va 67 68%~11 Okla GE 1 8650 31 23% "28%- 1% Ok* GE pf4.24 Z1400 09% 75% 77 —13% Ok GE pf. 0 435 17 14% 14%- 2% OklaNGs 1.T2 5011 25%. 18% 19 — 6% OiinMath 1.80 19158 64% 46 ~ 58%+ Opelika 1 1061 25 )lVa 16 V.— 5 OrangeRk .96 2795 31% 2«% 28%— 1% Otis Elev 2 14120 61% 33% 38%—19 Outb Mar .80 31330 24% 14% 16%— 3% Outlet Co .65 1341 22 13% 15%— % OverTran .80 4007 26 12 12%—10% OwpnsCg 1.40 11088 92% 58 66 — 1 Owenslll 1.35 14840 70 52% 54%— 8% 990 100 80% 82%—11 1 1424 30% 15 15%—11% 9399 24% 15% 17% split —P— PacGEI 1.30 19046 0*6 27 3546— 46 PacIntE ,80a 5618 2369 12*6 14V,- 4V6 Pac Ltg 1.50 16235 2819 2314 2749— 49 Pac Petrol 35312 1449 849 10 — 49 037 2749 21*6 22*9 ... 550 4649 049 45 split 1073 27 0'+ 221+— 249 001 7-16 7-32 49 PacT&T pf 6 ,24000 12846 111'/, 116V9—101+ Pac Tin 60a 400 1149 8*6 849— IV, Packard Ball 3(532 4549 131+ 15 — 649 Pan A Sul .60 64500 26'+ 1116 • 1449— 8*6, Pan Am .60 150526 049 40 046+ 349 Ppnh EP 1.60 032 4049 M'+ 34*6 Panh EP pf4 ,5800 96V, 92V. 92V, Papercrft .0 7114 1349 949 1219+ V9 Pargaslnc .40 2844 14 849 1019 .... 51726 4319 2216 2719— 6*6 3084 45'+ 019 4019+ 149 04 1819 12*6 13 - 549 19228 41*6 0*6 41V,+ 3#25*6—1519 3761 23*6 1619 18*6 417 9 27'+ 14*6 1 716— 9*9 107 2 2-16 PhilEI pf4.0 ,15580 95 PhilEI pf4 0 ,00 94 0 (1 —1219 PhilEI pf3.80 ,1500 83'+ 019 71'/,—11*4 Phil Rdg 1.0 2640 049 019 0 —1316 PhllMorr 1.0 7175 35’+ 2449 019 split PhilMor pf4 ,11000 M M 77 —1049 PhllM ,pf3.W ,3540 86 69 7119-13'+ PhillPet 2.20a 2650 049 019 0*6 PhllVaH 2.241 024 35*6 2049 2049. PHIsbury 1.15 5519 4m 27*6 33*9- 719 HousF pf4.0 Houst LP 1 Howard John Mowmet Cp 1 HudBay 340a HuntFds .50b HuntF pfA 5 ,32430 HuntF pfB 5 ,WP 97 HUpp Cp .171 25323 Hupp pR.0 .0 IdahoPw 1.0 Ideal Cam 1 ItlCanlnd 2.0 111 Pow 160 Market Highlights of 1966 Are Listed Sun Oil lb Sunatco Sunas pt 1.65 Sunbeam 1.16 Sundstnd nJ8 Sunray 1.40a Idmmm 50'9 32'6 45 tpm Emhart 1.20b 1020 39*9 TV* 24 .^Hl 0 29*9 15'9+ 5*9 [EmpOlsf 1.0 939 36'« MV9 <2(49 Indian Hd 91V.+23’/. ; Ind Gen 00b 9*6ilndptsPL 1.0 5<9 InElMax +2a 103 41<+ 29’6 X spin IngerRand 2 46M 31*6 1899 2149- 616! Inland Stl, 2 SuCrest Suncham.• SunCh..pf4.M ,120 J6 8^ 610 2349 849 1149 ..... 200 3019 1949'2049 5353 5949 0 49 - 649 0 30 28V. 30 split 31590 0 25 27 — 416 4)057 4719 17*6 3646- IW SuoerOII 1.0 3*3317416 9849 12519—3016 5wSttC0«l 1058 1(49 3549 4449-1049 Sw no In* -70b 1011 0 M16 3749+749 Symway 1 JO 401 im 1*49 019- 549 . _T— tu> nrH an *001 35*6 1*16 3446+ 216, 10031 1149 1349 1549- 219 057 2746 1746 1949 split 018* 3149 019 1*49- 16 4830 10 1146 .1489- 49 14*41 1149 4 *16—349 21245 0'A 3419 21 -41* 7140 1049 4 H4- 249 .5049 SW ■■ n “fjK .... .. . M ________________________________________________________ ____________________ I___________ 0751 24V9 1*49 21 — 146 501* 3546 2716 33*9+ W+ng table. Sales aro 6> hundreds. * 'Am Motors 95,198 14 - 416 4'A— 246 Texaco 2.60a 44387 B. .4116 2119— 889 464 946 6 4'6- 2>« Sperry Rd 303.172 3349 1749 2**4+ 7*6 Magnavox 95,10 56*6 36*6 369s SplitiT*xSTrh 1.00 47180 22*6 17*6 2119- 21* 1401 58* 0 30'+—16Val Am T&T 193+41M319 4**4 55 - 5*6 TransW Air 92,463 101 51*6 7349+10161TaxGasT 1+4 2091 3146 ’0 2716 Split 35714 4549 2949 31’A-13*a SCM Carp 170,95^91*9 4P* 56*9+ 3*6 .Brunswick 9l;58t 12'6 6 699- 3W TexGSuf .0 1103251310 0 — 814, Chrysler 168+0 61*6 2946 ,30*6—72*6[Allas .Corp *0,273 06 219 244 1 19i T4K89 Mtf TIS 3*17 20 ——■ —- , 8616+ *9] Pan Am Air 150,526 79*6 *0 5446+ 349 Douglas Air 09,730 11149 30 0V9-29V9 Taxaslnst JO 4057013*46 00 9949 split 2716— mioan Motors-147,217 10116 4549 4549 -3/4*1 Ampax Carp 0MB 2749- 17 24 -149|t«xOII0 .111 -4299 2046 1446 251*-0 ANNUAL SPOTLIGHT ' ‘ANNUAL STOCKS l|« SPOTLIGHT NEW YORK (AP) - Of the total I Polaroid 4V*| volume of 1,900,215+74 shares traded duA1 Raytheon ’ I.............. “ ■ “ iRCA Coni Data (Nu.) High Law Last CM. PIparA 1.40a - 6194 69*4 3246 0 -1519 PftnayB 1.0 fl31»4 5919 0 019- V9 Pit Coke .0 360 a 3249 41 - IV9 ,160 95 a (2 —10 55 911+ 751+ 77'A—14 0 17 1519 151+ split A930 1451+ 12416 IM -16 0671 II 50 5449-11 10773 1716 9 9'+-649 7519 78 — 716 ■■■ _ 67 0 —13*4 PltWtVa .56* 307 1049 .1 819- 2 PitYngA pf7 01010 10 122 -2146 Plttston 1.20b 33621 0 2219,3119+ 7+ Plough .*2 3141 016 019 6149+1619 Polaroid .0 122504 175 1081+ 158*4 +4219 Poor Co 1.50 1780 3319 2319 2419- 346 Porter pf5.50 ,1*570 102'+ 8619 *319- 619 PotomEIPw 1 11170 2246 1646 20*9- 116 Pot El pf2.0 603 52*6 0 5119 . Premier I .70 130 21*6 1419 16 wilt Procter G 2 17007. 77 0'A 73 + 349 PubSvCol .*0 1240 2149 1*1+ 2349- 4+ PSEG pf5.05 ,1443010419 U'A *1 —12*6 PSEG pf4.30 ,6600 92'+ 74 77*6-1316 “ ,230 0'A 74 76 -12*6 ,7000 (7 72 7419—1119 1056 2919 23*9 0*6- 419 4126 5019 3989 019- 189 000 73 39*4 62 — 8*9 174 2316 18 * 1919— 3'+ 151 22*9 18'+ 19'+- 3'A 6001 9*6 SH 589- 319 Publnd pf4.75 ,3270 (5 75 75 —10 Pueblo Su .0 2981 24H 13V, 1419 PR Cem 1.10 2256 24*4 1789 1BV,-2V9 PugSPL 1.0 490 3*46 3119 3249— 3H Pullman 2.0 11478 7389 40 *319—13*9 PurexCp .0b 4309 26'+ 13*49 19 - 4H Purex pt 1.35 373 3519 . 24 28'+- 619 Purolatr 1.0 2777 39'A 3119 J4V6+ 19 . —Q— QuakOat 2.20 4463 76'+ 0'A 55 —211+ QuakOats ptt ,520)36'+ .118 122 -121+ Qu'ak St 1.60b 100 55 35'+ 43 V,- 49 —R— RCA .80b 118002 6214 36*6 0*6- 419 RCA pf 3.50 155 (6 73*4 74 -12 99§6 52 0 0*9+ 6*9 4657 23 1319 15 - 4*6 5)3 64*6 50*6 5419— 1<+ 22211 3489 1814 31'++ 3*9 902 13*9 8 10 + H Rayonier 1.0 28127 « 24 33'A- 3*4 Raytheon .80 11048 57H 36 53 +14 Reading Co 720 0H 11H 1249- 8H - " ‘ ' 2037 ffl'A 12 12>+— 649 3521 27*9 11'A 11*9- SH 2671 22H 12*6. 13'+- 8 V, 4732 5016 23 27 ft* 6'A 3752 0'+ 23V, 25'A— 8*9 111H 1516 10'+ 12 — 1H 731 20 13'+ 1416— 3H 4158 31'+ 19H 23'+ split 470 7*9 3*9 5 - 1H 04 14V, 10V9 11'A— 2H 508 171+ 11*4 13 — 1H 22673 0V, 30H 39'+— 389 011 59H 41*6 49*6+ 2H 28708 0 33*6 0H+ 3*9 330 0 28'+ 37*6 < 2027 0'A 25 31H split 27657 48H 19H 26'+—22*9 4955 4489 0 *37'+ .. 4400 66V, 38'A 0'++ *6 140132'+ 95'+ 116'+— A6 1121 49*6 42*6 019— 4'+ 46396 4589 0 0>+-489 ■■ 175 M'+ 0 0'+—151+ RheemM 1.20 10141 3tV9 20H 2389- 3V, Rheingold .20 18178 3489 15'+ 17*9- RalstonP 1.0 Ranco In ,92a Raybestos 3 Rayefte .0 Raym Inti .0 Reading 1 pf Reading1 2 pf RedOwl St 1 Read Inti 1a ReevesB 1.0 Reich Ch .0 Reliab Str .0 RelianEI 1.10 Republic Cp RepCorp pfl Republnd .0 RapubStl 2.0 Revere 2.60a Revlon 1.0 Revlon pfl RaxChn 1.20a Rexali .30b : Rexall pf2 Reyn Met .0 ReyM pf4.0 ReyM pf2.37 Reyn. Tob 2 ReyT pf 3.0 UOCal pf2.50 Un Pac 1.80a UnPac pf.0 Un Tank 2.0 Unlshops .72 UnltAIrLln 1 UnitAlrc 1.0 UnArtist .50a Unit Carr 1 UnGImp 1.08 Un Greenf 2m Unit Indust Unlndus pf.0 Unit MM 1.0 Unit Nuclear Unit Pk Min GnShoe 2.50a 8691 87*4 59H 7719- 2H 7309 26’A 15V, 15H- 6*4 205 2619 16*6 18 - 6 6743 52H 33'+ 0 + 7'A Roan Sal .98e 13630 1589 6'A 7 + 89 Robertcont 1 4666 4189 22*4 23*4-V1V, 3002 51*4 4119 019 split 39(6 3589 2489 26*6- 8*6 ____ ... ■ 308 3719 25 3JH- 20 Rock SW 1.0 11889 4289 26 27 -11*4 RohmH 1.60b 4007161 16*4 91'+-65+ ' - 4778 2489 16V4 22 Milt 6709 2589 1519 18'+— 689 00 32'+ U'A 17*6— 6H Sorer W 1.10 1080 621+ 2B'A 36*4—14'/, RoyCCola .72 4378 2589 1814 21*6- 3*4 - ~ 0763 45H 30'+ 0'+—9H 1530 33H 21H 23'A— 2*9 21 241+ 22H 2316 split 01 24*9 22V, 24*6 split 5742 2SH 16 V, 21 + 3'A 10655 2389 13 160- 10 RIchMer 1.0 RlegelPap .0 Rlegel Text 1 RltterPfaud 1 RobinAH .80a RochGE 1.10 Roeh Tel .M Rohr Cp .0 Ronson .60b Roper GD 1 Roy Dot 1.79e Rubbrmd .88 Rubarold n Russ Togs .0 RyanAaro .20 RyderSys .60 01+ 7319-10*6 66'+ 0 -11(6 61'+ 016—10 « 5114+ 'A ....... 0'+ 67*4— m 17570 47*4 33 37'+— SV, 570 9 7*4 70- IV, 4908 78 47 57*9- 8'+ 4926 28V, 18V, 21—30 53347 74*4 00 61 spilt 47602 990 61V, 810- 1+ 35305 3289 210 27 split 5751 350 18'+ 22'+— 8V, Uniteorp ,40a 13475 919 8 9 UnitElastic 1 1372 280 170 18- — 90 Un Eng&F 1 3905.2116 140 140- 5<+ Unit Sin Cal 6221 9>A 40 6>+— 20 Un Fruit .756 37240 360 2414 280—. 5'+ UGasCp 1.70 28559 0'+ 37 4(0+ 20 ------ . - 214J ^ 1790 47 340 4016+ 50 23236 270 110 14'+- 3 3253 130 70 9 —1 10450 36'+ 220 220- 70 38907 24 120 1789- '+ 12343 30 10 189- 0 3283 71 51 52'+—14 U Shoe pfl .50 ,23440 330 28 2916— 40 US Borax la 5982 40V, 220 230- 9,0 USForS 1.74e 3091 300 24*4 27'+- 10 US Frgt 2.20a 9977 630 360 52 USGypsm 3a 19483 470 43'A 56*9—10'+ US Indust .70 425M 230 1201 14<+- 30 US Ind pf2.25 US Lines 2b USLIne pf.45 79 80 70 70- 1 USPIpe.1.20 6767 230 17 17V,-40 US Play 1.55e 1387 340 260 290+ 2 USPlywd 1.40 7340 550 29V, 420- 50 USPIy gt 3.75 ,1370 90 720 .76 —14 US Rub 1.20 22436 480 320 39 6pllt US Shoa 1.20 4832 370 220 240- 5'A *JS Rub pf 8 ,96050 174V, 133 100-290 US smelt lb 55517 (10 350 45V<—150 USSme pf5.50 498 910 750 770-10 US Steel 2.40 75094 550 35 . 3689-150 US Tob 1.60 2216 3316 260 260- 50 USTob ptl M ,4960 43 40 . 43 , + 2 Unit Utfi .74 21064 29 19 26 — 0 Unit Whelan 3191 140 80 110 ... 32074 180 9 11'++ 23 + 4 3178 00 340 37*9- 0 4900 350 27 330+ 10 .194 50 410 420— 80 1209 340 250 260-- 40 9812 300 160 220+ 20 171 320 M 290— 1 1476 19 16 140— 4 20514 410 310 380- 0 2100 35 240 280 spill SouiriGE Tjft 1027 360 240 330— 10 SouNGas 1J0 ,7319 35 250 M0+ 0 SouthPac 1.50 24072 47 27 South Ry 2.80 14357 65% 39% 42%—15% Sou Ry pf T 7072 19% 16% 16%4r 2% SouRv MO 4 *640 79 68% 73Vj^ 6% Swes? PS -64 10524 20% 13% 16% *Pl[t Spartan Ind 25111 280 im 50-100 SpartlndA. .40 3450 180 120 17, SpartCorp .40 5419 14 7 70- 30 CnMrrw Milt 1 5380 26 16% lo'/J Sperry Rand 303172 330 im 290+ 70 SperRd pf4.50,18500 93'+ 730 78'A-140 S oraoue 1.20b 28971040 7801040 ■ , » -60a 12581 260 160 90 split i?.r|eny?4M* 1551 00 340 36A-8 ItdBrandl .30 4841 36 270 340 StdBrd pf3.50 ,16600 03 67 Skll Corp SmlthAO 1,20 SmithK 1.80a Smuckar .60 Sola Bas .60b SooLlne 3.15a SoCaro EG 1 SC EG pf2.50 SouJerG 1.40 SoPRSug .65a Sou PRS pt2 SoaatlPS 1.00 SouCalE 1.25 90 Std Kolls .50 350K 43 saga w sfs Sw s StOIINJ 3.300 72980 040 »0 M StdOllOh 2.40 5762 73 550 680+ m StOOh pf3.75 106 930 73 740—19 ItdOH » P»4 368 1030 920 98 ■ HpM& »« » SW Press .60 StPrudUn .0 StanWar 1.50 StanWks 1.20 Stanray .60 Starrett LS 1 StauffCh 1.60 StavfC pf3.50 SterchIBr 5264 24 150 330+ 50 1514 110. *0 4925 590 400 570+130 10 350 240 250 6405 140 90 100— 5 774 240 18 «0+,g6 !IS! f B ff s ssssss s S i; sr St#v*nJI^*2 25 llS 800 37'A 400-300 & ti? ^ m ft ***- » StokeVC 80b StokaVC pt 1 Stone Web 3a StaneCont .50 StorerBdcst 1 SfouffFd 37r 5691 280 170 190— 70 509 190 150 18 —,|0 1934 75 490 55 -190 1027 300 18 18 — 6 15493 480 280 400— 1' S So M 00 730 SuburGas .4 8392 1*0 l** US- “0 69 61 32 32 — 50 3758 38 280 330— 30 13363 200 140 140— 5 6562 840 63 730+ 4 9146 450 350 42 — 20 111 Pw pf2.35 ,10(50 49 41 Y3. — 60 ■■■■■■■■■■■■ III Pw pt231 moo 00 39 400— 70[mg 1966 on the New .York Stock ill Pw pt2.13 tSS90 450 370 39 — 7 change, the wenty-flve mo*t active - sett! Pw pf2.!0 ,3750 44 370 380— 60 curitles accounted for 320.336J00 shares Jit Pw pt2.04 ,10980 430 35 370— 60 or 16,7 per cent of the aggregate Sales. Amp Co Am '26039 70 4 50— 20 Individual volume, high, tow and closing • “ "5318 260 160 0180- 10 prices, with the net change for the yaw 8009 3(0 170 250— IH of the 25 leadersare shown in the foHow- OHHns Rad (01,737 (50 370.580+ 90 Tannaoe 1.28 'Am Motors Fairch CM 145,218 2160 960 1160+340 Roan Sal 136,348 150 40 7 + 0 East .AlrLin 129,113 1210 S3 760—12'+ ..._____ 123,504 175 10(0 1580+420 Talon Inc JO 118,248 570 36 9 +14 Tampa El .60 118,09 620 380 420-«+ Tandy Core 115J9 390 230 320- 50 TechMaf ,2« Benguei 114,363 30 10 20+ I .Taktrontx FOrd Mot 111J04 5m 380 3(0-1501 Tetauhwr* ..I Tax Gulf Sul 110,325 1310 880 1050+1481 TatodYtS Inc 01707133 Burrough . 104,253 930 4*0 870+370 Tetedy pf3.9 ft* 125 h Lew Lift Chg. TexP Ld ,35a 4522 , 22'+ 130 130- 60 Tax Util 1.44 13834 030 470 57 - 40 Taxtron 1.20 24322 530 380 510+9 78113 90 1100+250 44209 230 100 170— 20 4774 330 220 260+ 0 1620 340 15 160-160 4858, 220 130 150- 50 20445 75 420 730+220 2882 240 220 220— 10 (7431070 730 890—130 ------ 32’+ 360 SI Taxtrn pfl .25 Thlokol .35a ThomBatt .80 Thomeivl .70 ThriftyDr .60 Tldewat Oil TideO pfl.20 Time In 1.90a TimeMirr .50 Tim RB 1.80a TistT'Reel .75 ToblnPack la Toted Ed 1.40, ToladoScala 1 TootRoll .40b TorrlnO 1.60 TradTsup .50 Trane Co .80 TransWAIr 1 Trans W Fin Transamer 1 Transa pf4.50 Transltron TranswnP .50 Trl Cont ,92a Tricon pf2.50 Trling 1.20a TRW 1.40 TRWpfA 4.25-TRW pf 4 TwentC 1.20b 03 290 21 230- 10 807 240 >16 17 - 4 2793 400 280 40 + 10 935 270 160.190— 60 1776 220 110 130- 50 2507 45 7,100 33 —11 4835 150 90 100- 3 4609 540 350 450— 80 92463101 510 730+100 3667 10 40 50— 40 24351 430 23 280-140 1233 156 940 112 —47 77841 210 >00 120+ 10 (099 150 110 12 + 0 13595 260 200 23 — 30 1206 510 43 448k- 60 5499 360 220 26 + 30 16910 500 370 45 — 30 361 1540 123 1410— 20 ,4840 900 70 74 -16 19977 380 250 340+ 1 -u- UARCO .90 2175 26 1718 22 + 0 Udylife 1.60 1178 380 260 270- 50 UMC Ind .60 18499 22 110 138k-7 Unarco .40 253) 15 70 (0- 60 Unit Ltd .(4a 3528 180 140 U + H Unll NV 1.16a 11974 33 200 230— 80 UnCamp 1.72 7889 550 36 370— 90 Un Carbide 2 55760 700 450 470-210 Urt Elec 1.20 12655 280 22 250— 20 Un El pf4.56 ,670 9 <+ (6 86 -11 Un El pf4J0 ,28550 94 770 81 -100 Un El pf 4 24610 85 Un El pf3.70 ,500 79 Un El pf3J0 ,12500 74 UnOCal 1.20a 27153 60 15011 7) Univ Amer UnAmpf 2.50 UnAn)2pf 1.75 Univ Leaf la UnivLeaf pf8 UnlvOPd 1.-40 Upiohn 1.60 Urls Bldg .60 Utah PL 1.60 UTD Cp 1.20 -V— ValiyMid l.io ' 3669 230 130 14H- 70 VanRaal 1.30 1234 290 22 ’ 350- 2 Vanad 1.40a 6950 340 22i+ 33 + 60 VanityFr 1.40 1164 380 280 320 Vbrjan As 59296 430 330 300+ 30 Vaadarln 1 JO 1192 380 26 32*k— 30 Vendo Co .50 8636 39'+ 190 240—100 Victor C .40 10322 53 300 53 +190 VaEIPw 1.28 15776 49'+ 380 480-10 VaE&P pf 5 ,32370)040 90 91.-12 VaEP pf4.80 ,84901010 85 860-140 VaEP pf4.20 ,3950 890 75 760+110 VaEP pf4.12 ,1660 880 76 76 —130 VaEP p(4.04 ,3400 85 68 740—110 VonGroc 1.20 2062 350 220 23 -10 Vornado Inc 11446 350 180 190 split VSI Corp .20 1559 26 17 , 240+ 10 Vulcan Mat 1 5993 230 150 170— 4'A Vulcan pf4.25 ,9740 106 980 101 — 40 —W— ,8450 94 740 790—130 6665 550 31 460+140 1712 42 240 37'A 2501 40 320 340+ 0 3238 340 230 260— 7 . 3932 36 180 26'A split 319 68 37 48 -9 6266 470 30 310-100 12289 14 70 8'A-l'A 2 5405 30 90 130-130 Ward Fds pf ,17580 95 70 940+110 WarnBro 1.20 3696 640 190 220-170 ---- 639 42 240 260 734 44 21 24 —160 13924 190 110 160+ '/( 947 39'+ 260 270+ 90 22202 430 30'+ 381+- 20 WarLam P» 4 ,45560132 970 1170- 80 Warn Sw 1.60 8119 510 270 27'+—220 3035 550 340 370—12 2291 340 27'+ 280- * 6073 240 20'+ 21'+— 20 448 420 310 310—100 479 300 210 220— 30 2227 190 140 1*0 41639 50 20 2*+— 20 2855 230 16 160— 20 5898 40 2 20— 0 3954 250 140 20 —10 677* 180 8'+ 130- 40 ■MB 1497 290 200 230+ 20 WPP pf 4.50 ,19510 98'+ 77 820—130 WPP pfB4.20 Z490 90 75 750-150 WPP pfC4.10 ,1420 86 7m 74 —120 WstPt Pap 2a 6242 630 350 37 —180 WVaPulp 1.70 9331 550 3m 38 +100 WVaP pf 4 JO ,1960 1000 840 85 —150 WestnAirL 1 42840 56 300 440+ '+ 14449 39 24 300— 50 960^430 25 3702 47 300 320- 7'A 25920 580 280 360—13 _____ _____ 2S68U70 78 830 WstgABk 1.80 10420 470 2(0 300—100 WestgEI 1.40 50798 *7 H ™ WabR pf 4.50 Wagner El WagEI pfl.M Wlgreen 1.40 WalkrH 1.20a WaHMurr .70 WaMur pfl .70 WallTler l.io Walworth Co Ward Foods WarBr pfl .50 WarBr pfl .22 WarnPlc .50* Warn Co 1.44 WamLamb 1 WarrSD 1.40b WashGas 1.56 WashWat 1.16 Waukesha 2 WaynKnt 1.40’ Weanlnd «55e Webb Del E' Weis Mkt :60 Welbllt .05e Welch Scl .40 WescoF .80* Westcst Tren WnBanc 1.10 WstnMd 1.60a WstnPac 2.20 WUnTel 1.40 Wn Un pf4.60 ANNUAL NEW YORK STOCK SALB. Total 1966 .. ... 1,900,215,874 shares Total 1*65 ....... . .1,558,266,262 share* Total 1964 1,238,885,223 shares Total 1963 .............1,147,183,295 shares Total 1962 .............. 962,155,308 shirts 470-140 Westl ]pf3.80 342 860 72 ' 730—11 Weyberi 1.20 1102 240 U0 18'+— 50 Weyerhr 1.40 21630 42'+ 28 34 - 50 Wheel L 5.75, z6801190115 115 —6 Wheelg Steel 8180 36 150 160—110 Wheel Stl pf ,94450 820 490 550-260 Whirl Cp 1.60 14860 50'+ 310 320- 80 WhiteCn 2.251 9906 640 240 380 split WhlteC pf2.75 559 410 360 360 WhlteCon pf2 60 34 270 280- 50 White M 1.80 16301 520 36'+ 410+ 0 WlckesCorp 1 4244 320 19*4 U0- *0 Wilson Co 2 11707 61»+ 42'+ 600+10 , Wilson pf4.25 2*7 890 71 740-150 WlnnOIx 1.44 6620 380 280 300-, 50 WisEIPw 1.24 8087 310 220 28*+- 20 Wis EIP pf6 Z3820126 1080110 —16 WlscPSvt .94 5403 210 U 180— 20 WttcoCh 1.20 4155 380 260 270- 60 WltCOC pt2.65 1505 71 500 540 . WolvWW .50 6822 360 130 130—160 Wometco .62 >678 300 170 210- 70 Woodwlr 1.60 1652 310 230 24 - '0 Wootworth 1 42540 320„ 190 190-12 worthing 1.20 14*7* 450 220 33 — 60 Worth pf 4.50 ,8820 910 740 78 -120 Wri gley 3a 1 2461 160 96 1 140+140. Wurtitzer .80 1901 240 150 18 WyandW .40 1 322 1#A 110 110— 50 —X-Y-Z— XeroxCorp 1 86526267 0 12501970- 40 YngstSht 1.80 187 36 45 260 260—160 YngsSDr 1.20 3065 220 150 170 Zayre Corp 8734 41 0 250 280- 8 ZenlthRad 1* 4108 8 870 48 0_470 split Copyrighted by The Assoc I atedPress 196 6 l Sates figures are unofficial. Unless otherwise noted, rates of dividends in the foregoing table are annual disbursements based on th last quarterly or semi-annual declaration. Special or extra dividends or payments not designated as regular are identified In the following footnotes. a—Also . extra o r extras . b—Annua fate plus stock dividend, c—Liquidating dividend, d—De dared Or paid in 1965 Top Events From World of Business NEW YORK (AP) — Business continued to jboom in 1966 but many uncertainties hung ovjer ‘the economy. ,/ is Top events: / Another price hassle enipted between the steel industry and the government. Bethlehem Steel Corp. initiated a $5-a-ton raise for structural steel. The government said it would’t buy from companies that boosted prices. U.S. Steel Corp., the No. 1 producer, announced a $2.75 raise which was accepted by the government and then followed by other companies. President Johnson, in his economic message to C o n g r e s s, said ‘.‘The American economic miracle” will , continue through 1966. He sent to Congress a record $112.8-billion budget for the 1967 fiscal year. The stock market, as measured by the EKiw Jones industrial average, reached an all-time high of’995.15 on Feb. 9. Then it started a steady slide that took it well below the 806-mark in late summer. ■ A rash . of price increases heightened .the degree of inflation. Consumers had to dig * deeper into their pockets to buy deeper into their pockets to buy food, automobiles and many other items. The business boom entered its sixth year in March with most economists predicting that 1966 would be as good as 1965 despite threats of inflation* tighter money and manpower shortages. The Interstate Commerce commission approved the merged of the New York Central and Pennsylvania railraods which' would create the world’s largest privately owned rail system. The merger was delayed in taking effect by suits brought by other railroads. Steel producers increased the price of sheet metal $2 to & a ton. The White House called the move ‘‘irresponsible.”- But the producers stood, firm and the raise held. The Machinists’ Union staged a month-long strike against five airlines, snarling air transportation. The settlement exceeded die government’s wage guidelines which had put a limit of 3.2 per cent on increases. The cost of living climbed steadily throughout the year. Food cost increases were the major factor. Housewives in many sections of the nation organized supermarket boycotts to air their protests. Automobile sales declined during the fall from the record level of 1965. General Motors, Ford, Chrysler and American Motors trimmed production. ANNUAL U.t. GOVT.BONDS NEW YORK (AP)—Over the Counter U.S. Government Treasury bonds 1964 price range. SUUU'UOJ - —TT m Ml,___ j w,V.uniu u----—„ ww,™ . ... " — Sub Prop 1.52 2480 #40 25 370—4 _jUJ ,tock dividend, a—Declared or paid SuCrest .80 ijiJg 377% 120 14 — 3Vk“ ,#r ,his **®r' ,—P*w in s,ock dur- so far this year. __________ _______ Ing 1965. estimated cask value on ex-dlvl-dend or ex-distribution date, g—Paid last year, h—Declared or paid after stock divl dend or split up. k—Declared or,, paid Ibis; year, an accumulative issue with dividends In arrears, n—New Issue. j>—Paid this year, dividend omitted, deferred or no action taken at last dividend meeting, r-ABkclared or [ paid in 1966 plus stock dividend. 9-Pald to stock during 19M, estimated cash value on «K-dlvldend or ex-dlstrlbution data, z—Sates In ML • cld—Called, x^ls—Ex distribution, xr— Ex rights, xw—Without .warrants, ww— With warrants, wd—When d istributad. wi+Whan issued, nd—Next day delivery, vj—tn bankruptcy receivership orjjStt' 1.0 1970 being reorganized under thp Bankruptcy Hi Act, dr securities assumed by such companies.' , * split—Indicates split or stock distribution, ol 25 per Mof or over during 19M, no not change shown. vj—In bankruptcy or receivership or being raorganUed under ttw Bankruptcy Act, ar securities assumed by such corn- 201, 67-62 30s 67 30S 68 30s 68-30s 68 Ndv 20s 68-63 4s 70 Fab 20S 70+5 4s 70 Aug 20s 71-66 4s 71 30s 71 , 4s 72 Feb 20s 72+7 Jun 4s 72 "Aud* 20s 72-67, Sap 20s 72+7 Dec ,4s.. 73:-, .W 40s 73 40s 74 50s 74 30s 24 4S. (0 30s 80 30S 83-7* 30S 85 40s 85-75 30s 90 40s 92+7 4s 93+0 40S 94-W ' 3s 95 30S 98 , . Prices seconds. High Low Last 99 9629 99 99.2 97.16 99.2 98.28 96.8 98.28 98.12 95.18 98.12 98.12 95.8 98.10 96.16 92.28 96.16 97.12 93.10 97.12 94.16 (9.14 94.16 *9.7.4, 92.18 97 93.14 88.2 93.14 97.4 91.30 96.28 96.16 90.26 96.12 97 91<4 96.22 91.8 85.16 91.4 96.24 90.26 96.14 90.24 85 90.24 90.20 84.18 90.16 96.6 89.24 96.2 96.16 90.10 96.14 96.18 90.6 96.16 97.16 91.6 ♦7.12 9SJ 88.4 95.4 94.16 88 94.14 (9.8)4. 489.8 85.18 80J 85.12 852 79.16 84.12 97 88.28 96.4 (520 79 M 9622 88 9520 92.26 *87 Jl fl 94.24 87 93.29 (4.12 78.16 84.8 85.8 78.24 85.8 quoted In dollars and thirty ANNUAL US TREASURY NOTES' NEW YORK (AP)—US Treasury Ndtoa 1964 price range. Feb 30 1967 Feb 4 1967 Apr 10 1967 May 40 1967 Aug 30 1*67 Aug 40 1967 Aug 50 1967 Oct 10 1967 NOV 60 1967 Feb 50 196* Apr 10 198* 00/10 196* Apr 10 1969 Oct 10 1969 Apr 10 >197* tn May 50 1971 Oct 10 1971 Nov 50 1971 High Law Last 99.29 98.18 99.29 99.30 98.30 99.30 99.8 98.18 9*.t 99.25 .98.28 99.25 99.28 98.2 99.12 180J 99.2 100.2 100.1 99.12 lOOJ 98.2 95.12 98J 100,4 98.20 M| 10025 99.30 100.25 96.24 93.24 9634 95.12 9230 95.12 94.4 # 91.8 94.4 • 92.22 Mil Mil 91.18 (8.4- 91.16 - ,90.12 87.4 9032 101.1 9638 10*3* *9.4 85 ' 89.4, 101.30 98 1*13* 88.12 84 18.12 102.18 99.26 182.24 19M Annual What NY Stocks RM 1986 198S 196 Advances .M m w .188* 184* 1423 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY,, JANUARY 2? 1967 D—8 1*U ANNUAL American Stocks A Bonds NEW YORK (AP)—Following Is a tsbls of transactions In the stocks and bonds on itna American stock Exchange during the year IMS. It- gives the yearly sales, high, tow and/last prices and the net change from .the previous year on the stocks and bonds listed prior to January 1, IMS. -A- Sales Net (hds.) High Low Last Chg. 1874 22 4293 5Vi 1767 4% 11276 38% 2297 5% 1926 20 +5 3V*+ 1IA 2VA— 1 8%— 4 VS 3 Vi 3'*— % 4%— % 6168 37V* 19% 31V.-2% 7711 4334 25% 3311 12% 1473 8% 7460 $8 I 2515 25 AlaPw pf4.20 114450 86 Alep Wdl.40 ' 1062 31% 18% 18%—11% Alan Wd p*5 14200 84 , 68% 68%—12% ■■■■ 9%+ 2% 6 V*— % 9% lOVS-14% 5% 6%— 1% 5% 5%— 2% 41% 42 —17% 10% 18%+ 5% - 73%— 9% DayllnCp .40 2808 19% 10 DCTran ,60p 734 10% DefianOe ,16b 11275 17% Deltona Corp 1662 13% t% Del town .20p 1020 10% 4% DennMfA .60 18246 43' DennM deb 8 22600 151 130 DennyRes .20 2245 30% 20 - " M ■ Alaska Alrl 36815 15% AIIAmEri .721 3907 16% 7% AllegAIrl ,06a 19682 26% 12 AllegCorp wt 6715 12% '5% AlllanTR ,32a Allied Art Allied Art pf AllledCon .44 Allied Pap 2 2 6% 3 VHi- 2 12%— % 5%— 4% 2% 7026 2% 1% 1%— % 191 9 5 5%— 2% 5407 28% 13% 20%— 4% 13777 20% 12 15%+ AlloysUn ,15e 41124 91 36% J7to+11to Alloys Un wl 1230 23% 18% 19% split AlrlghtAu .50 . '861 13% 9% 10 — tu Alsco A 3659 8% 4% 6%+ % AltemllCp .20 19755 17% 7% 10 + to Alter Fds .50 2223 23% 11% 14% split Alcoa pf3.75 Z38150 85 68% 72 —11% Amco Indust 3084 4% 2% 4 + 1 14321 38% 6% 8% .. 830 10% 4% 5%— 3% 3635 18% 11% llto— 6% 6074 47% 26 38% split 2437 8% 4% 5%—1% 1613 13% 5% 6VA+ % 52512 5% 1% 1 %— % 4811 4% 1% 2%+ 1% 1074 3% Ameco Inc Am Beverag AmBlltrlt .60 Am Book ,56a ABkStra ,30e ABusIness .20 Am Electron Am' Int Al A Israeli ,19e AmMfg 1.45e AmPetro ,40e Am Real Pet A SafeEq .16 A Thrd pf.25 AMK Cp ,25r AncPosi .80b Andersn ,36b Andrea R .50 Andy Gard ANelex Corp AngLaut .55# AngostW .50a Ansul Co .50 AnthPool . 18p AP Parts .90 Apeche .10 API Inst .40 APL Corp APL pfB.50 Apollo Indust 359 35% 26% 29%-2% 5398 2725 8830. 18% 9%+ 1% 2% 3%+ ' 5% 5%— 7% 5% 5%+ I % 14%+ 2% 1431 25% 12% 12% 711 2»y 13% 19%+ 3% 920> 7 5968 15 15ft 16%— 714 lft lft—2ft 7% 10%—13ft 9% 10%— % 12 12ft split 2 - 3% 13ft- 4403 43 1906 3 7442 28 9469 9 402 14 2346 21 12 1723 6% 2 1639 2444 13 3167 13% m 9ft- T 3008 16% 10ft 1344+ 3 7455 15ft 6% 12V4- 1 838 10V4 6^/8 10V4 ... 2016 8% 3% 3ft—4!.. AppPw pf4.50 234430 92ft 77V«i 82ft— 844 Aqua Chem 1818 -18ft 9ft io% 18816 14V4 444 5ft- 8920 46V4 33V4 40'/3-2950 97% 80 80V4-1644 1064 5% 244 244— lft 6 32 3144 3144 1893 21 57935 444 HOB 1544 but Inc ArfcLGas 1.50 ArkPL pf4.72 Arrow Elect Arundel 1.60 Arwood .32b Asamera Oil AssdBaby .60 AsEI Ind .24e AssdFdSt .20 Assd Laund AssdOII 8. G AssdProd .40 Astrex Inc Astrodata Atco Chem Atlco Fin .30 AtCLCo 1.20a At Research Atlas M 1 J32a 1 %+10ft l7/4 3ft+ 9% 10V4— 13 7ft SV4 5V4—1 7-16 3 — *4% 144— 847 344 1393 .69093 _ ... 529 1814 IOVb 1044- ■344 1% 5ft- iy4 744 split 5+244 13287 12 7/j 3147- 944 6Va 7412 5V4 1% 488 IOV4 844 728 3544 25 31 ft split 7692 1644 9 13V4+ 3% 2341 2744 2144 25ft split ................ 144+ i AtlasCorp wt 43325 3ft lft Audio De .47t 13432 4U4 17 Automat Rad 3005 22-44 AutoStIP .50b AVC Corp 2a Avien inc Avis Ind .20b Ayrsh Coll 1 813 21 12 375 108 60 7948 4'/4 lft 1368 19i/4 944 522 5144 39 314— lft -B— Balfleld Ind Bakerlnd .60 Baldwin 1.20 BaldMon .lor BaldMont pf 1 Bald Sec ,17e Banff Oil Banner Indus BarbLynn .32 Barnes Eng 162-41 48 . 18% 34V. . 17183 41% 14% 25%+10% 70 27V. 22% 23 ... 3664 14% 6% 10%+ % 757 18% 13% 15%— % 1552 5% 3% 4%— % 32412 1 % 7 3-16 15%+ 8V. 12561 4% % l'A+7-14 558 8% 5V 7% _ 8 14245 38% 18% 28V.+ 1 Barnwell Ind 15338 13A— 13/, 59 4% 2% 3V<— % 2108 lVi 9-16 9-16-13-16 684 10 4% 4%— 1% _ 2075 31% 11 13%—12% Bohck pf2.75p 213430 79 38% 46 —30% Bonanza Air 14159 23% 12% 16%+ 3% Blackman Uh Blackstn Clg Bloomfld Bid Bloss Hyd .20 BohackHC Co Nal Chg. 2%+ % Daltch .12p Daryl Indua Data Cont (Ms.) High Lew Lett 5173 7'......... 3876 33 15% 293/4+14% 2354 4% 2% 2%— % 563 11% 6% 6%— 4% 20798 22% 9% 12%+ 1% 14392 30% 18 39%+ 9% 1367 27% II 26%+ 7% —D— 3831 5% 2% 2%— 2 '1341 2% 1 1%- % 7256 18% 6% 7%—10 Day Min ,35a 19565 18% 7% 12%+ 5% DeslluPd ,48t Detocto S .25 DetMob Horn Devon - Polls Dielectric Digital Equip Dist Ltd ,09e Dlversey .60b Divers M-.36 11% 1707 7% 1074 6% 2193 2% 2556 10% -3% 5%— 5% 9%+ 3% 9IW3 4H- 4% 23% 40% split 138-—13 ,29V*— % 9%+ % 2% 6% 2%—2% lto+ % 5%— 1% 1% 5% 4343 35% 27% 30% 275 8% 2% 2%— % 555 19% 10% 12%— 5% 1297 53% 15% 47% . Dlxilyn Corp 22160 15% 6% 13 + 3% Dome Petrol ' 12201 36% 12% 33%+18% 7 26 " 17% 19 -8 220 15% 8% 8%— 4% 1 25% 25% 25%— 3% 771 19% 14% 14%— 2% 9780 29% 14 17%—10% Dorn Brldg DomStlC .'Op DomTxt 1,25a Domtar 1 DorrOliv .60b DorrOliv pf2 Z15125 58 36% 40 -15% Dorsey .IQe Driver Harr Drug Pair .30 DunlopR 13a Duralov Co Duro Pen .40 DurTes) .20b DuvatCp 1.40 Dynalectrn 2876 26% 1$% 17%-1018 14% 1% 12 1% + 7% Jupiter Kaiser l/t/y+ T Federals Inc 9233 Fed Purch Felmont Oil Field Plastic Fifmway .15r Finl Gen .40b FirstNt] Real FstNR pf.l5p Fst N Rl wt FirthStrl .15e FischrP 1.29t Fishman .36 Fla Cap .26r Flying Tiger Ford Can 3034 12% 923 13ft 248 22 6201 4ft ... .... „ 2730 27ft 12ft 16ft split 7408 14% 7 8 — Vi 1418 10ft 5ft 6 — 2ft 5163 u 4ft 1ft l.ft— ft 2126 15%‘ 8ft 12ft+ ft 2907 5ft 1% 1ft— ft 1193 40% 27ft 3250 13% 7 574Q 40Va 18ft 2352 8% 4ft 972 4 * 15-16 1ft— Ift 1426 31ft 20% 22ft— 1% 134 18ft 17ft 17ft split 823 19ft 12ft 13ft—. ft 1944 32ft 15ft 15ft—13ft Salts Net (hds.7 High Low Last Chg. ' —M— Matke Co, .30 Mackey Air Macola *20 Magell Pet Magic 1012 12ft 8634 7% Ntfpco Indust Nat Alfalfa NatBell Hess N BowlOMat 1 759 3 NatICasket 1 z39800 37 National Co 2508 1 NElWeld .80 3 38 1 NERent . 20e 361 Nat Gen wt 5319 Natl Petrol 12608 3 NatPresto lb 1187 2 NRealty .80a 1388 11 Nat Rojl Mill Nat Video .60 132840120 NatWkCI Needhm .24p Nelly Don .50 NestleLe .20 Newark Ef .25 NHampB .40 NewHavn Bd Newldria Mn New Mex&Ar NewPark Mn 1487 12 10354 16ft 1834 lift 875 28 NYAuct 1.50 vjNoramco Norf So Ry . Nor Am Roy Nor Cdn Oils Noeast Airl Novo Ind .80 NRM Cp .60 Nuclear Am Nytronlc .53t 924 21ft 46897 4 9545 20% —0— 2633 23ft Oak Elect . Ohio Brass Oh Pw pf4.50 Z22130 93 OklaCmt .53t 1573 171 Okonite 1 4387 28’ Old Town 7624 35' Old Town pf Ooklep 19.47e Orginala .30a OSullivn .30r OverhdDr .60 OversS 2.04e OxfordEI .18t OxfordFn .20t 5Va Pac Air Lina Pac Airmotiv Pac Clay .60 Pac Coast 1740 170 1080 lift 1799 9ft 2385 14ft 212 21ft 3828 5ft 1197 7ft —P— 762 15% 11 1125 14% 107' 1759 30ft 11V 2136 21 6Va 6% ■ 8ft 21% 23 — 41* 3% 3%—*- M 4% 5%+ ft 7ft 12 + 3% 4 — n% 1% 1% + ft 24ft 25ft— 7ft 4% 6ft — Ift 12% 13ft + ft 4ft ‘4 %— 1% 2% 4’4 + ft 5-16 1%— % 15% 16ft— 6ft 8% 8%— 2% 8% 10% split 38 ft 38%—44% 7ft 7%— 2% 1 3ft 4ft— 4% 5ft 5ft— 1% 5% 6ft— % 5% 7 16 24ft . 4ft 4Va 2 2 ft— ft to'A 15'A— 83/4 2% 434 — % 51 60%'+ ft 24 25%— 13/4. % %— 53/4 26ft 37Va+ ft 2% 3 + ft 1% 23/4 - lft Ifift 23%— /% 72 74%- l ; Cst 6pf 1.50 ?3150 23*/4 21 P Cst 5pf1.25 Z3300 22ft 18' Pac Cst Prop 4301 10ft 51' PGE 6pf 1.50 3093 31 I 253 PionrAer .60b PionPlas 10p PitDesM 1.40 PitLakeE 6a Pitt Rwys .60 Plan Resrch P-iant Ind PlumeAt .40b PlyRub A .50 Pneu Scale .56 PlyRub B .50 P/ieu Dyn .36 Polarad El Poloron Pd A vjPolycast Polychm .05r ■Polymer .24r PortEITI .30 Potter Inst Pow Can .44 Prairie Oil I Pratt L 1.60a 1469 30% 15ft 15%+* % 3934 5 3-16 3 3 3-16—5-16 10796 25% 6% 8 — 6ft 197 12ft lift 12ft + 1 1157 5ft 2 2ft- ft 31138 3% lft 1ft— ft 522 15ft 12 12ft— % 770 13 8ft Bft— ft 23762 2ft. lft 1 7-16 5230 19ft 7 ft 10ft— 7% • 1830 7ft 5% 6ft 2 3ft 5ft 5ft 9415 4 2ft 21% 2721 20ft «6ft 2721 20ft 6ft 1959 9 4% 5994 23ft 12 1589 13% 434 819 14ft 9ft 3899 33ft 21V4 1761 48ft 303/4 47ft 1 Rift FinB 7559 143/4 8V4 l0ft+ % j Riviana F 3357 19 v 4ft 5V4- 7Va Robin tech 97 253/4 1 9 19 Z80O0 154 Va 113ft 113’ 1915 34 20ft 27 3852 36Va 12ft 20 3302 7% 2ft 3 5636 28ft 12ft 21’ 90 13ft 9ft 9’ 492 2034 lift II1 114 13ft 8ft 9’ 10408 27ft 13215' 10ft 3013 14 1947 4ft 1605 9ft 1108 17 2143 1234 7298 26% 238 13ft 83/4 5617 4ft 2 13-16 560 42 33ft 205 14 2046 4ft 6098 14ft 433 14ft 5634 12ft 1391 21 1454 12% 1961 2ft 3%- iSealectro Cp j Season Alt 4ValSeeman Bros lftlSelasCorp .40 l’/a| Sella Latz la 3ft SelRexCp .70 Servo Corp 4% Seton Lea .72 Z58410 26 33/4 Seven Arts 19627 34 3ft Shaer* Sh .64 687 12 Shahmoon In 854 13ft 3433 17% 1219 4ft I’/a 1%— ft 6350 9ft 3ft * 4ft— 4% 6349 32% 83/4 107/a-20% j 1204 21% 16% 19%+ 1% 3899 33 18’/a 28ft + Jft 6’/a 8ft+ 1ft 1434 15ft- 2% ■ 19%— 12044 16V 8ft 9ft ft 105 22ft 163/4 21 ft+ ft ShatQenn .22t 10302 1 2ft 4ft 8 6ft 46ft Split 7149 2730 1 07' 682 15 5704 7* 17713 5 5235 43 2359 5* 2451' 17’ 1685 273/ 2572 15ft5 10 3787 25354 2779 17ft 18475 34ft •2218 69ft 4287 37ft 2445 938 .34 5815 20 9966 3ft 838 8% 3082 26ft 2318 .60 803 6ft 2ft Siboney Corp 4ft 4ft-7- 5, Sigmalnst .40 8ft 834— 5 Signal OilA 1 3ft 5Va .. SigOil pf 2.40 2 2ft— ft Silicon Tran 303/i <39ft+ 4 Silyray Lt 2’/? 2ft— lft Simm Prec 13ft 14ft— 1% Simmon Bd pf z7000 27ft 12ft 19ft— 3ft! SimpIxWire 1 1140 293% i Simpsons .60 929 29ft 4-/« 4-/4— *41 Sincl Venz 2 Z30940 42 3ft 4—3 Singer Ltd 173 6ft 10ft 13 split SkylineCp .60 1 1 — 1 ft j Slick Corp 3ft 4ft+ Va I SolitronD .24 17% 21%+ 4ftjSonotone .10e 5ft S3^— 1% Soss Mfg .50 1 ’/a j South Coast ft ft—1-16 14ft + 3% 26ft- 3% 56% — 9ft 6ft 30’/a+23ft I’/a— 483/ 23527 65ft 28ft 41% split 18 18 22% 223/4—153/4 5ft 5ft- 13ft—11V4 8ft— 2ft 60’4 134 split 15 17ft !»+-8ft ,1434 17 Sp|it 3 3%+ ft 5ft lQ‘/a+ 4Va 5-16 ft- 2ft Roblih Stl RocbG pfF 4 Z13280 82 Rockower .20 RodneyM .77t Rogers 1.44t Rollinslnc .24 RollsRoy .42e RooseRac .80 Rosenau .50 Ross Prod RowldPd .lOp Roxbury Cpt Royal Amer RoyBusn .lie Roy School 8 9'8— Rudy Mf .40b 9ft 133/4- 2V4,Rusco In .05e 33/4 9%-. 3ft Russeks Inc 3ft + ’/4'RyanC Pet -333/4— Va RyerHayn .20 1059 11 1493 19ft 1119 35ft 21 7468 46ft % 3ft 2 Va j ft 5-16- ft Forest Cit .20 Fresnillo .45r Friend Frost Frontier l.OBt FurmWolf .80 1673 9925 7% ■' * '‘A 3'/i— 6591 29 ft 13% 15ft—103/4 339 1 2% 8 8ft split, 2932 5ft 1ft lft— 2% 62635 51 24% 46’/4+18 Zl’5310 146 107 108’/4-30% 700 5ft 3ft 4791 18ft lO’/a 13^ + % 1354 4234 39 340 11% —G— 9993 4% i 767 14% 6 876 23Va 10 960 15% 8 5580 1 7ft 8 9936 32% 19 6762 1 5% 1149 71/4 .......■ H 2064 7ft Gen Bat Cer 16102 lift Gale Indust Garan Inc .40 Garland .60 Gate Ind .30 GateSport .32 GCA Corp Gearhart ,18b GenAccep wt GenAlloy :10e 1%- 1ft 6%— 7% 10% split 33/4 1002 2639 Botany Ind Bowling Corp Bowmdr Inst Bowser .20 BradFtG .20e Bradford .60a Brandy 1.40, BrazilLtPw 1 Breeze .65e BrACons .24p BrAmOil 1.10 BrAmTb .32e BrAmT r.32e 435 10ft Brit Pet .55e 5508 11 Brody Seat .36 BrookPrk .20 BrownEn .20 BrwnFA .40b BrwnFB .40b BrownF pf.40 Bruce EL BSF Co Buell Ind .10t Bunk Ramo 24 113/4 11%- 5ft 3 ft lft rl%— 1% 19ft 6ft 7 - 3ft 143* 5% 6ft— 5% 6ft 3% 4ft+ ft 30 14 16%— 8ft 26ft 19ft 23 - 2 11 7ft 9% + ft 11% 7ft 11%+ 3% 8ft 4% 5ft- lft 333/4 25^, 29%+ 1% 1% 93^+1 1-16 Gen' Build G Cinema G El Ltd GenFoam Gen Interior 3% 15e 40 1ft 1V»— % 13ft 16 + 1% 5ft 5ft-U-16 12ft 14%— lft 3ft 1ft lft— % ’.50b 695 9ft 6 Vs 7%- 1’ 7 Va 234 1 0’/a 4148 21 Va 254 35 1388 31 9% 12Va— 3’/a 21ft 21ft—12% 16% 17%—13% 6582 16 3181 *% 1470 10ft 22713 1 0ft 6% 6V2— lft 9%— 3ft 3ft+ 6%— Burma Mines 87097 % 4% 7ft— % ^ BurnsWmJ 1 ^ Burr JP .05e ButlersSh .60 Butte Gas Oil Byers .30a 248 1154 30ft 20% 26’/a 4ft 2ft 2Va— % 944 14ft 10>/4 10ft split 1499 4ft 2% 2ft .............. 541 14ft 8% 9 — ft C&U Com .50 Caldor Inc Caicomp Cameo R .10p —c— 881 2m 13V* 21 spin 1238 21Ve 13 1314 split 7009 3444 13'4 3OV3+I4 , 1043 444 T% 2V4— 1V4 Campbl Chib 43996 1214 4 9-14 S44— V. CampbM .30 3007 1844 9 1744 split Can So Pet 25993 3V4 144 2 -7-16 CdnExp G&O 76007 544 2 5-16 4 15-16+2 9-16 Cdn Far ,25a 2973 4 9-16 1 15-16 2 9-16-7-16 Cdn Grldoll 22217 13-16 3 11-16 7Vt Cdn Homestd 18586 2 13^64 7-16 2 7-16+ Ga Pw 5pf 5 2660 102 GaPw pf 4.60 215350 94V. 76 GF Indust 5966 4'4 1: GianniniC .40 8677 3544 18 674 2244 ll'/j 12 - 4V* G-L Inds .381 Glen Ger ,50a GlenDisB .40 GlorayKn .70 Gluckln .75 Goldfield Goodway brt GordJIy A .40 Gorham 1.60 Gray Mfg Gt Am Ind Gt Bas Pet GtLak Chem GtLkRec -lit GreerHyd .50 Grlesdk t.20e Grow Ch ,30b Gruen Ind GTI Con* GuardCh .50b Guerdon Ind Gulf Am Cp 1 923 15% 8% 03/4- ft 1193 .113/4 ,7ft 7ft— I’/a 1441 18% 11 11%— 5% 2430 16% 10ft 10%— 2% 823 15% 10 10 - 5’/a 50368 3 1% 2ft+ 2885 10ft 3% 4%— 2% 2615 20 12Va 16'* split 1777 45ft 31% 373/4- 2ft 57*3 21% 6% 7%— 5ft 32991 14% IVa 4%+ 3ft 43937 53ft 2ft 2’/4- ■ ft 25230 5ft 2% 3%+ % 378 5 ft 3% 3%— 134 3976 21% 8% 9’/4— 4% 175 19ft 14 15 - 3’/4 Z10625 29 23ft 27ft- ft 3675 17 9 10 — 4ft 820 744 344 444 2Si4 8% 20098 13ft Cdn Javelin CdnMarc .10# Cdn Properts Cdn Sup Oil Canaver Inti Camatn 1.60a 25184 12W 9315 864 374 4<4— 2 370 S44 4Vi JV«+ V, 14254 3044 17V. 28’4+)014 8495 5V4 144 4 +, 214 1235 9744 7644 80V5+ 144 Caro PL pf5 29990 105V4 87V, 90 —1014 Carpenter Carrer B .04a CarterJW .20 CastleAM .60 CBK Ind .241 CCI Corp CenCharg .40 213 67/» 364 364— 144 1564 1644- 4 4 '4—264 6*4+ 2V4 8V4— 144 1425 24 566 7V4 29042 864 ... 12 ■ m CenMe pf3.50 29220 7064 5864 99V4—1064 CenPItL pf 4 23475 II 68 70 —1044 Can Sec 2.20e 1630 l»+ 144 464+ 44 291 46* 444 4<* ConNtShA .80 Con Oil Got * Con Royal 50 Consult Dtslg ContComl M , CtConnA .30a Cont Malar Cobk Elec .30 CookPIVlTO -CooperJar St Coro Inc Corr Ray .9* Celt Corp .24 Ms?.*: Croolt, 94fO CrowSynj0 10874 306* 106* 1344 171 14^ 11573 Hm 535 ill* & 24(5-^264 - 544 844 106* 5 51*— 36* *1* 964+ 244 1 1 +3-14 .... .„ . 7 74*- (4* 299 2*44 1844 1(44— 764 2523 1764 (6* 864-1 ^Btd* 744 *v*+ 1 JiA MU. UU IS'. 134* 191*9 264 4508'1*44 Gulf St Land 13384 146* 56 Gulf Sulphur 13267 30'* 12 —H— HB Amer .25 10775 844 36 Hall Limp 3259 14'* Handlemn .80 4*4+ '4 644—r3V 644-' 4 Harnlschfgr 2 HartAlfrd .40 Hartfield Sir Harvard Ind Harv Rad .12 HarvStrs .24b Hastings .50 HazelBsh .321 Head Ski Co HebrNat .12e Heinlcke Inst HelenR 1.30b 530 V8 9005 59 677 116* 2523 944 7086 1064 1460' 544 711 7'* 464 514— I 9'* 1819 12317 3440 14'* 5914 944 5365 1744 ‘■795 48 TV- TV* 9069 144* 347 28 2723 84* 12045 1044 19777 31 Heller pf5.50 22140 98’* Heller 4pf 4 z360 81 Here Gal .46t HigbleMf 1.20 HlltanHbt wt Httco .15a Hoe & Co HoeCoA l.87k HoemerW .82 Hofm Indus! Hollinger 1 Holly Corp Holophn 1,20a HolyokeS .20 HomOIIA .35a HomOIIB .35a 714- 264 944- 4 444+ 44 344 464-1214 2444 3044— 444 14 ,8544- 66'* 6864—1044 444 564— 6<* 1744 2064- 364 564 444 . .. ■ «V* 30 +2314 2656 2044 1* 1844+ 144 1270 296* 184* 1844- 744 6318 244 1 16*+ 6* 627 26’* 176* 20>4- 444 3 390 16* 44 44- 41 571 2 66* 22 22 - 461 243 106* 844 106*+ 144 3547 234* 1*44 22 + 54* 670 236* 15V* 221*+ 5 Horniei l.40 * 239025 37 25 274*- 46* Horn&H .30p 2345 206* 144* 18'*+ 14* HornliH pf Hoskins .80a House Fabric 57 6344-2964 14+3 15 split Howe Int .15e HubbellA 1.20 HubbellB 1.20 Hud&Man A Hugh Hat .40 HuntCh A .40 HuskyOil .15# Hycan Mfg Hydromatk Hydrometal HygradF .50p 24940 94 376 20 1395 S'* 3 314— iw 4614 157* 54* 1364+ 8 250 2944 21V* 23'* split 246 284* 21'* 22 split 797 46 396* 42 + 14* 1860 186 6 Per .cent in August, down additionally by high inter- money” began to sell in advance of that. Talleylnd .471 21017 246* 94* 194*+ 944 Tasty Bk .76a 476 18'* 156* 166*— V* Tech Measur Technic Oper Technicol .41 Tel A Sign Telectro Tnd Telepromt offered the competition of better Itlnwr cPns est rates and tighter credit, by a slowing down in the business boom, by concern over the Vietnam fighting and worry over the SHARP DROP The turnabout was signaled 7965 7966 SHARP RISE — As almost any housewife will tell you, consumer prices rose sharply through most of 1966. Among biggest contributors to thq increase were food and medical services, but transportation, clothing and housing costs were higher, too. Grain Trade for 1966 CHICAGO (AP) - Trade in grain futures became a bigger business in 1966 on ttie Chicago Board of Trade than in any other of the 119-year existence of the exchange. ★ ★ Value of the handled exceeded $65.8 billion set in 1965. The number of contracts was also at a record peak. ★ k ★ commodities the record Prices of suph major commodities as Wheat, corn and soybeans were substantially above those of 1965 with com at the highest levels on average in more than 10 years. Soybeans, usually the leader in trade volume, again accounted for a large percentage of the business and rarely sold under $3 a bushel. In August, when supplies in commercial positions had been virtually exhausted, the price climbed to $3.98, highest in many years. It compared with a top of $4.25, set in tiie 1953-54 crop year. IN SOYBEANS Speculative trading was very active in all pits at times but it held consistently high in soy-beans, A drought in early summer became a scare factor in both the corn and soybean trading and it twice boosted activity in com to 118-year record highs. The‘open interest in corn also hit a record peak - * * * However, the drought was only one influence in the market. More important early in the year was a general belief reserve stocks of all major „ grams could be nearlysdepleted cmi 6*j*n6ixt heavy withdrawals fromjcMit sharply even after harvest of the nation's second largest crop. However, a record Canadian yield and word Russia had booked all its requirements to supplement a good, production imparted some bearish sentiment to the trade for a while. ★ ★ ★ ’ ■ But again near pe year’s end, the trade had become at least moderately concerned * about reports of dry weather in the possibility of a rise in income a sharp drop on Feb. taXes 15, a larger one Feb. 17 and an rve aw 'even bigger one Feb. 21. Greater RECESSION | losses came on Feb. 23 and 24. As the year ended there was a thumping setback came on fear of an economic recession j March 1. -in 1967 but also a question in* in less than three weeks the many minds as to" whether the big stock market shake-out had not already anticipated this to a great extent. Another worry was about the situation! in Vietnam. Would the fighting escalate to the point where the United ' States would be put more on a war footing? -t trend reversal was clear-cut. Wall Street was in a bear market. Despite occasional recoveries, the market never again came near its record high. •k * ★ The 1966 stock market chart looked like the course a rubber ball might take bouncing downstairs. A series of small bounces If so, how severely would this ion each step would be followed affect business and profits?|by a larger fall to the next step What if peace were restored? Nobody could pretend to have a conclusive answer to these questions. Nevertheless, Wall Street was continuing the slow job of rebuilding stock market confidence which had been badly battered. UPWARD PUSH • Hie market made peaks early in the year as it continued the powerful upward push of 1965 rather poor development. On the basis of the point loss in the Dow industrials, 1966 overshadowed 1962 as the high of 369,7 on Jan. 18. Buti worst since 1929. The 1929- southern Great Plains where!The Associated Press average the winter crop had s h o w n of 60 stocks hit a record closing each step representing* a hoped-for support level. \ DECLINE How big was the 1966 drop? The decline of 250.83 in the Dow industrials exceeded the 1962 loss of 199.15. The percentage loss in 1966 was 25 per cent whereas it was 27 per cent ini ^‘ed uncertainty 1962 because the market dropped from a lower level. This is the basic interest rate charged by the top commercial banks to their biggest and best credit risks. In late July the.U.S. Treasury paid 5V6 per cent interest in refunding federal securities, the highest rate paid since the administration of Prosident Warren G. Harding in the early 1920s. The money squeeze put a crimp on business expansion at the same time that inflation was eroding purchasing power and pushing wages up, thus trimming profit margins. Profits Were pared further by cancellation of the 7 per cent investment tax credit. TermHud .321 Tex PL pf4.56 Texster Textron ' wt Thomp Sta i" ThoroMkt .80 Thrift! A 1.40 Tob Sec ,16e TobSecD .50e ToddShp 1.40 6254 10** 23A 2%— 6% 4656 47 18ft 31**—15V* 11857 83/4 .2% 3V*— 2% 19097 20ft 7ft 8' -1 10% 8801 5% 1% 1%- 3V* 9317 8% 2 2%— 1 7647 2 ft 10% 13 -$ 6ft 1625 4% •7 2’/4- 1% 2122 10 Va 33/4 4% . 5756 9 4.- 4%—- -1% Z4500 94 80ft 81 11 4467 5% 2% 2%— 993 38 24% 36ft split 29889 7ft 2ft 2ft- 3% 1442 16% ft ft 83A- 5 . 1565 28% '/0*» 2Q%- 6% 17S 3 1 5-16 2%; 3 3-16+ >A 63 8% / 8%+ 1% 3122 48ft 27% 27%— JH Z16400 8/ 71 74 — 11 2244 24% 16 21 - r* 6245 31ft 14ft 27ft . Tonka Cp TooIRsch . vjTower Cred 1823 1% ft . ft-. % Tran Beacon 12818 7% I’/a 1%— 14 TrnsCarib .40 21540 22 fft lift— 1ft TrnsCTei .10e 2015 23% 16’/a 22ft .... 727 16ft 10ft 14 + 3 2257 4 2ft 2ft— % 9158 5 ft Va 1%— 2% 616 19% 6’/a 6%—13ft 561 / 9ft 4ft '4ft ... 88682 2’/a 31% 52’/a+ 8ft 794 44% 30% 35ftH0 1993 lift " 4ft 5%— 2% 1882 25Va 17ft 17%— 7ft 967 23 17’/a 19ft— % —U— TransLux Transair .10 Transcon Inv Trnln pf1.22p Transogrm TWA wt Trl Cont wt Triangle ,05r Tropic Gas 1 True Temp i Ultronic Sys Unexcell Inc UGastan 27 Un Invest .70 UStkOm 1.20 UnAirPd .25# Unit Asbest UnitBdC .20b Unit Fds .20b Unit Imp Inv VIETNAM Jitters a boll t Vietnam were accentuated by bombing of the oil depots in North Vietnam in June, conflicting reports about bombing Hanoi in December and other news from Asia. On NJRR 10 Un PDye .I0p USCerm .I5e US Filter US Leas .20e US Nat Gas US Poly 1.56t US Rad .50a. US Rub Rec Un Am 42wt Unlv Aut Ind Un Cigar .07t U Contain .30 A drop in auto sales combined with production cutbacks by General Motors and other manufacturers height- Bonds for the Year FOREIGN BONDS Akershui 4s68 1 96V* 96'* 94'*+ 4* 8 98'* 93V* 93V*- 8V4 1 150 150 150 +16 424 794* 664* 76V*+)0i* 1 90V* 98'* 98'*+ 14* 47 100V* 92 92V*— 74* 239 99V4 904* 91V*— 7% 345 99V* 91V* 911*- 6V* 227 100 90 91 -5 247 99V* 90V* 9144- 444 2 996*-99'* 99V* ... 197 97V* 91V* 93—5 127 9*1* 09 89 - 94* 72 100 94 95<*— 5 137 98 88 91V*- 6V* 61 95V* 8944 90 — 4V* 29 97 91'* 95 - 3'* 75 97V4 92V* 94 — IV* 120 94V* 93 Amster 5V,s73 Antteq 7»A45xf Antloq 3s78 Austral 544S85 'Austral 5V*s79 Austral 5V*sll Aust 5V*s82Ja0 Aust 5V*s82Jul Aust 5V*s820ct Austral 5V*s85 Austral, 5'4s80 Austra 5V4s80n Austral Ss72 Austral 5s78 -Austral Ss83 Austral 4V*$7t Austral 344s69 Austral 3'*s67 502 9844 96'* 98 9-32+1 1-32 Austria S'*s73 64 102V. 100 100 —2 12 -09V* (7 88 — 4 279 48'* 3SV4 38 '• — 4 , 8 100'* - 9714 9714— 4'A 59 994* -92V* 96 — 644 75 99'4 924* 93 — 61* 14 99'* 96 4 99V* 94 Cuba 4<*s77f Cundln 3s78 Czech st6s60xf Denmrk 5<*s74 Denmk 5V.S77 Denmk 5V.S78 ElSalv 3’*s76 Cttotv 3s76 Europe 5'*s75 EuropC 544*80 Europe 5V4S82 EuropC 5S78 Europln 6*85 Finland 6V*s80 Finland 6s73 Finland 6s76 Finland 6s79 Frankft 444S73 93'*—14* ] German 5V*s69 Germany 5s80 1637 17 112 80 68 34 Austrf as4V2s80 BelgC 5V.s73f Belgium S'*s72 Belgium 5<*s76 Belgium 514S77 BerlC 44*570 BerlC 4V*s78 BerIPL 44*S7B' BerlPL 4V*s7I Brazil 8s4lst Braz 6V*s26xf Braz 6'*s26st 4 Braz 6'*s27st 2 78'* 76 61 99 96 1170 170 172 99V4 95 Brazil &51st BrazCR 7s52xf BrazCR 7s52st Caldas 3s 78 Canada 244s74 Canada 244s7S CaucsV 3s78 ChileMB 6563xf major i citiie 6s60xt 4 nttk M -1 . 77 — * 374* 274*— to 660 21* 1 1 — V* 66 (2 66V* m +151* ____„ _______ 109.96Vi",W MVi^i 1 1101* llov* 1101*+ TV* i Mexico 64*s81 483 96 92 931* , 2 ntv* 111V*1UV*+ 5V> Mexico 6tos78 1417101V* 91 91 — 94* J 50V* SOW 50V*+2'* Mexico 4V*» 79 1271 99V* (9 90V*- (V* 936 54'* 49to 4944— 24* Mexico 6' as80 1341 98V* 88to WV*— IV* 1109 1# - 109 +1644 Mexlci 6'As79 2195 96 86 (94*- 4 3 95 95. « — 4* Milan 5'*s78 237 994* «7»* 9f'*+6V* Minas 61*sS8st 12 01 B (7V*-IV* Minas 4V*sJ9st 10 914* 17 17 —131A| NewZeal 7s76» 07V* im-104* NewZeal (V*sM 79 91 90 1 90V*— IV 11 12 51 75 +16> 23 10 59 60’ +25 i ion* ion* ion* :• 15 97 05V* VSV* 33 99V* 96 0644- 24* 3 91 95 25 . + 1'* 91'*- 40 100 42 96 67 9844 90 90 — 6'* 99 98'* 93 93V*— >A 43 96 88 88 — 6V* 80 934* 88'* 934* ... 59 99 94 94 —5 , 59 9794 91V* 94 — 3'* 53 984* 97'* 98'*— 24* 68 96'* 17 914*—S'* 12 9544 95V* 9544+ 52 100 99 9944— 4* 1 94 94 94 1 87'* 7'A 87'* 23 100 -10 93 95 ■ 5V* Portugal 544sS5 247 974* 92 Rhodes 54*s73 212 05 70V* RlodeJ 8s46st RlodJ 6V«S3sf RIoGdoS 8s46st RtoGdoS 7s6«t 90'* 92 4 064* 864* 8644—124* 0-77 » 76+4 ' 14 1144* 110'* 111 — 2'* 6114 112 112V*— IV* 266 90<* 80 80'*— 944 52 1144 91* 104*— 11* 9'* 10 — IV* 91* 1l4i+- »* 9V4 94*- 14* 94* 10 — 1 '7 75 +0 +114* -j. +1SV* •7 17 + 2 41V* 66 + 4V* ■ 13—4 President Johnson's health, underlined by suspense about whether his surgery would be successful, was another news situation which made Wall Street nervous. ,Republican election gains stiffened prices. ANNUAL NUMBER bF TRADED ISSUES 1966 1965 1964 N Y Stocks ........1664 1640 1623 N Y Bonds .........1069 _ 103 41039 American Stocks ...1041 1034 1025 American -Bonds .... 97 98 89 Midwest Stocks .... 409 407 380 YEAR IN STOCKS AND BONDS Following gives the range of Dow-Jones closing averages for the year 1966. STOCK AVERAGES First High Low Last Net Ch. 967.17 995.15 744.32 785.69—183.57 247.66 271.72 184.34 202.97 —44.51 ■151.96 152.39 118.96 136.18 —16.45 65 Stfcs -325,09 352.40 261.27 281.59 —59.29 BOND AVERAGES 40 Bonds 87.01 87.12 79.98 80.89 — 6.19 1st RRs 80.22 80.56 71.88 12.46 — 7.87 2nd RRs 90.10 90.29 79.39 80.71 — 9.50 Utils 85.87 1626 79.59 82.78 — 3.09 Indust 91.87 92.11- 85.39 87,59 — ,4,35 Ine Ralls 80.25 83.25 67*3 72JH — 8.0!" Indust Rails Utils 93 II If 12 122 11V* 5t 10W 37 76 10 41 35 92 231 72 15 97 22 90 67 RIoGdoS 6s68st 40 86 SaoPC 0s52st . 2 99 SaoPC 6Vjs57st a Wt - SerbsCS 8562xf 4 41% SerbsCS 7s62xt 30 42 Stlesla 7s58xf 1 » 05 Silesia 4V*s58xf SoEurP 5'*sl2 Soltaly 5V*s74 Taiwn 5V*s81st Tokyo 6s80 Tokyo 5toS79 -UnSOAf 5'*s68 UhSoA 5'*s68n Urug a|4V*j78 Urug cv4 5-16$ Urug a|4'*t79 Urug cv4V*s79 Urug 3V*s84 Venezia 6'*s88 Warsaw 7s$8xf Wars 41*558x1 174* 89 .+ f 831*+ IV* 99 + 1 97 .... 38 + * 42 + 44* w 74* iV*—1 B *31* 94 - 5<* W . too too 27 974* 971* 9714-25 100V* 98 100 130 94V* 9114 9TV6— 14* J 0446, 1444 0444- 6'A 78101 99V* 100 + 4* 68 102 99'* 100'*+ V* 55 (7 061* 9)4*1+ 346 _6S 99 771* 99 + 9V*: 50 9 *14* 74 06V4+111* 64 99 86 98 + 7 i 43 94 83 94 VjH| 1338 99'* 96'* 974* . .17 11V* 11* 9V*_ 4 I • 120 9V* 71* 7V6- 1 - ANN.UAL STANDARD AND POOR'S NEW YORK (AP) — Following gives the Annual range of Standard and Poor's 500 stock index: 3 Net High- Low Close Change 425 Industrials 100.60 77.89 8S.24 —13.23 25 Railroads 56.32 37.91 41.04 —10.24 50 Utilities " 75.37 59. 03 69.35 —6.16 500 Stocks 94.06 73.20 80.33 —12.10 ANNUAL AMERICAN STOCK SALES Total 1966 . •....... 690,516,821 Shares. Total 1965 ............. 534,402,090 shares. Total 1964 .. ... 374,500,114 shares AMERICAN BONDS... Total ' 1966 . 8160,283,000. Total- 1965 . $145,541,000 Total 1944 ...... *104,231,000 ANNUAL AMERICAN LEADERS NEW!, YORK (AP)—Sales, high, low* closing price and the net change for the ten most active American Exchange stacks for the year 1966. Sales are in hundreds. . . 1 - - ■ Syntex 16S+0S 1244* 57 7) >*-244* Nat Video 132,840 120 381* 38**-441* TWA wt 88,632 82'* 314* 52'*+.('* Unlv Mar .60 UrlsBIdg wt Utah IdS .60a 700 113/4 9ft 9% . 8484 26% 12*t 176*—1 5 170 11% 9 93/4 split 127 133/4 10ft 103/4— 2% 697 20ft 153/4 16 - 2 7939 13ft 7ft 9%+ lft 9327 4ft ?ft ' 2 5-16-M6 411 9 43/4 5V* . 588 7 4% 4%— 1% 4571 6ft 2 2%-. 2 13600 7% 2ft 3 — 1% 22700 207 178 189 — 17 ft 2397 9% 2% 2%— 4% 1219 8ft 4% 5ft- 2% 2029 !/% 4% 4% split 10699 /ft 3’/a 3%— 1% 3159 9% 4% 5 — 3% 3061 20% 8 10ft- 3594 18'A 104* 104* ... 360 15'* 124* 13'A— V* 448 304* 14 15V*— 14* 2884 14 . 7V* 14* IV* IV* Weiman Inc WabMag .15e Wentworth viWalth Prec West Ch .80 -W-X-Y-Z— 4473 164* 57* 6vJ- 1162 12'* 8'A 1)4* 571 4'+ 2'A 2'A- 151 4'A 2'A 2'A 4* Westby Fash v|Westec Cp„ WnNuclr .20 WnStkln Wheelab Ola 426 29ft 19% 21 %— 2^ .......I T6 -Uft _ 3%— 1% 11477 4% 2ft* 2%— ft 63078 67ft 42% 45ft + 2ft 16224 24ft lift 16ftf 2ft Wheela pfl.50 Z6800 84% 43 Wbippany .60 1897 19V WhitaCrs White Eagle Wichita ROM WiebStrs ,71.t Wmhouse .68t Williams Bro WmMcWII .60 Wiishire Oil WHson Bros Wlnkelmn .40 2027 11-16 7-16 7-16-1-H 5196 32ft 16 16%—- 6 44 —14ft 0%— lft 2764 33% 24% 27ft— 1 3176 2% % 1ft— % 3954 3 lft 1ft— ft 2752 17% 9% 12%— 4ft 1324 19% 12ft 16ft + 1 15891 92ft 34Va 55%—19ft 6526 22 9ft 11%-f ft 40125 7% 3% 4 .... 6178 18ft 10% 12%+ 2 WolveAl ,40a, WoodNM .60 Woodall 1 Woods Corp Wool Ltd .06e WooILt pf.lOe Work Wr .50 WrldColor .60 Wright Harg Xtra inc YonkerR .15e Yonk R pf.30 Zapata 6 Zero Mfg ^ion Foods 102 9 7 8 Z4850 91 75 78 - 12ft 429 18 10 13ft+ 2% 1994 IS 9ft 9%— 1$* 910 32% 16% im— 6ft 58 12% 11% 12ft . 68 3 2 3-16 2ft—0-16 1 2'A 2ft 2'A . 2213 17 17ft 13%+. . % 443 16% 12 13 . 17832 2'A 11-16 13-16+ •A 25238 106ft 38 49 %— lft 3541 6% 3% 3%— 2 633 4% 4 4’^-r % 2506 78 19 21 v.- 3% 41268 '54% 16ft 32ft+15ft 1581 13ft 6% 10ft 345 34* I 14*— 1 Unless otherwise noted, rates of dividends in the foregoing table ere annuel disbursements based on the lest quarterly or semi-annual declaration. Special or extra dividends or payments not designated as regular are identified In the following footnotes. * Also extra or extras. - 0—Annual rate plus stock. dividend, c—Liquidating dividend, d—Declared or paid in 19*5 plus stock dividend, e—Declared or paid so far this year, f—Paid In stock duft ing 1965; estimated cash value on ex-dlvl-dend or ex-dlstrlbutiap date. g~?Pald last year, h—Declared OrjMld after stack dlvt dend or sptjt up. k—Declared or paid tail year, an accumulative Issue with dividends In arrears, n—NOW Issue- P—Raid this year, dividend omitted, deterred r—Declared or paid In 1966 plus stoat dividend, t—Paid In stock during 1986, z—Sates In full, cld—Called, x-dls—Ei, distribution, xr— Ei rights, xw—Without warranto. **-With warrants, wd—When, distributee ' rivd _klavt‘+>u HEllURTV wi—When issued, nd -.Next dey delivery, yt—In bankruptcy or receivership being reorganized under the Bankruptcy Burma Min 87,097 to 'A , V* +1*161 Act,'or securities assumed by such com-SbdWn Air f2;S3d 29to 134* 25V*-t-f(V*;panies. Sperry R wt 11,139 13V* 6 94*— . CdAEp G&O 76.007 5to 7 5-16 4 15-16+2 9-16 Assd O&G 69,093 Ito 14* Wfc* 34* Fed Resrces 68,M2 7'* 2to 5V*+ 24* Flylng Tiger 62*35 51 244* 44*»+18 ANNUAL NEW YORK BOND SALES Total . 1966 Total ms Total T984 split—indicates spilt of: stock distribution of 25 per cent Or Over during 1966, no et change shown. vt—In bankraptcy or receivership or being reorganized under the Bankruptcy Act, or securities assumed by slich com- ___ ponies, ct—Coftiticam. sh-4to«hpod. •— 83,102+41,000. Dealt In............... ’ $2,960,207*00. tiab $2,517,765,280. day _____i..... flat, x—Matured bands, twg»> I. tiabUlty Impaired by maturity. ^ l-'dey delWeiy. xw 'fa warranto; i m D— 4 THE PONTIAC PRESS. MQ3ffJ>AY, JANUARY 2, 1967 NORTH (D) 4k A 2 4 96 54 ♦ AK3 2 *764 EAST ^ 4k QJ 8 6 5 4 3 4 72 4 Void WEST 4k K 9 7 4 AK3 ♦ Q 7 —I * A K 10 9 5 +J832 SOUTH *10 4Q J10 8 ♦ J 10 98654 - * Q East-West Vulnerable West North East South “ B Pass 3* Pass 4 A Pass Pass 5 ♦ Dble. Pass Pass Pass Opening lead—4 K By OSWALD and JAMES JACOBY This week’s series will dis cuss the troubles of experts. Ex perts don’t make as many mis takes as other players but they do make them and when they do, some are beauties. Today we see four of our greatest players at the table. Some people would open the North hand but this expert chose to pass. East was strictly an action expert. JACOBY Almost anyone would pass hjs hand when vulnerable against nonvuinerabie opponents but not this man. He elected to open the ladling with three spades. West gave a conservative raise to four spades even though he was accustomed to his partner’s habit of making really bad preemptive bids. North and East passed and, after considerable thought, South decided to save at five diamonds. West closed the bid ding with a double. Dummy came down like a Christmas tree but South still had to lose two hearts and a club and was down one trick. East and West would have had no trouble racking up a spade slam and East was very annoyed. He wanted to know East and West would have had no trouble racking up a spade slam and East was very annoyed. He wanted to know why his partner could not have made a trifle stronger move than just raising to four spades. He pointed out that they treated any new suit response below game as a one round force and that West might have taken a wild chance and bid four clubs. Then East suggested that West might have passed the five diamond bid around to him whereupon he, East, would have gone to five spades. We agree with East except for rfone thing. A man who- likes to make vulnerable three-spade bids in second seat with that sort of trash can’t expect his partner ever to know what to do. Q—The bidding has been: West North East South 1* Pass 14 Pass 1* Pass 3* Pass 3 V Pass 3N.T. Pass 1 82-Year-Old Is a Grafter HUXLEY, Iowa — Reward Berhow, 82-year-old retired carpenter, is growing wood these days instead of sawing it. Operator of a black walnut tree orchard, he has perfected a system of grafting top quality nut seedlings to the hardiest root stocks. “I worked five years before I could get my first grafting efforts to succeed,’’ recalls Berhow, who now operates a mailorder business for distribution of black walnut trees. THE WILLETS By Walt Wetter berg COU> WEATHER, FOOD SHORTAGE, FORCES 12 THE DAV ARELpd*OU$E FIELD MICE INTO GITY HOMES , IT- MOVES INHERE, I'LL MOVE SAYS MERE/ HMMMi »3 INTO A/?£££ TOUCAN BESURC. THE BERRYS YE& I MADE MY. , USUAL NEW YEAfife f REsairnoN notT TO SMOKE-WHY?) You, South, hold: *AK 8 7 4A2 44 3 *AK986 ■What do you do How? A—It yout partner will realize that yon are strongly inviting a slam bid five dobs. Otherwise Jump to six elnbs. TODAY’S QUESTION Instead of responding one diamond your partner goes to one no-trump. What do yon do now? Answer Tomorrow Traffic Device Cuts Accidents ABILENE, Tekas W - This city is one of several trying out a new traffic signal that gives the driver a countdown of time left on a green light. According to city officials, the accident rate was almost halved during a recent test. By Carl Grubert —"4. CIGARS/ THE BORN LOSER BERRY’S WORLD-By Jim Berry JjtW 4jfr^ Hi^ological Forecast By SYDNUY OMARS For Tuesday - "Th» wise man control! bis Ssstlny .......Astrology points tho Way." “ ARIES (Mar. H - Apr. »)( Take Special cars In dealing with public. Partnerships emphasized. You attract •ggrasslva, ambitious persons. Thors Is element of surprise action involved. Be reedy! " TAURUS (Apr. 20 • May 20): Stress ■Initiative, highlight originality, Independence. Associates may act In Impulsive ■manner. PROTECT YOUR INTERESTS. Steer clear of senseless dispute. GEMINI (Mey 21 - June 20): Be considerate in relations with young persons. Some Ideas offered td' you may appear rash . . . but try to be patient. It your Attitude Is one of understanding . . . all Is well. CANCER (June 21 - July 22): Intensified activity Involving home, property Indicated. Highlight confidence in yobr own lodgment. Others rpey ect In impulsive manner. Heed wise counsel. LEO (July 23 - Aug. 22): Much activity connected wl.th tourneys, messages, dealings with neighbor^ and relatlvas. Don't permit yoursalt to be overwhelmed. Take stock — then base decision on solid knowledge. VIRGO (Aug.1 23 - Sept. 22): Money, possessions these emphasized., You can benefit from “CREATIVE CHANGE. Member of opposite sek plays paramount role, Surprise gift could eatch you off balance I LIBRA (Sept. 23 - Oct. 22): Cycle high ... but you are possible target of, Irritable associates. Take this in stride. Stress appearance, personality. Put forward views with verve, confidence. SCORPIO (Oct. 23 - Nov. 21): It you attempt to keep secrets from co-workers . . . you Invite difficulty. Day when the hidden is reveaied. Know this end ride with the tide. Play a behind-scenys role. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 - Dec. 21): All actions should bo direct. No day to poll punefies. State needs ... get what's coming to you. Avoid procrastination. If specific, aggressive triend proves worth. Marriage Licenses John A. Greenwood, Birmingham and Nora J. Kosklnen, Birmingham Thomas E. Pecey, Farmington and Joan A. Anderberg, Farmington Theodore A. Schroeder, Walled Lake and Angelina D. Zdanowskl, Hamtramck Cliff B. Shaw, 4872 Elizabeth Laka and Mary V. Shaw, 4872 Elizabeth Lake Thomas E. Burke, DVayton Plains andj Leila F. Markle, Plymouth R. Gniacluc, Troy Kenneth M. Yauch, Royal Oak and) Kimberley R. Sankey, Troy Michael J. Muldownev, 1090 Voorhels! and Susan J. Sinclair, Lake Orion i Philip B. Palmer, Holly and Pauline M. Simmons, Linden - I Jeffrey ‘-C, Pardee, Birmingham and! Mary A. Weil, Detroit j Edward' E. Marx Jr., Drayton Plains and Carlin* F. Penoyer, 60 Washington Edward D. Miller, Lake Orion and Sherry L. Range, Lake Orton Albert E. Knud son, Drayton Plains and Kay A. Earnest, Drayton Plains Dennis R. Zeeman, 101 South Jessie and Lonnia L. Sawyer, Oxford Frank' Townsend, 3335 Auburn and . Patricia E. Pruett, 3335V2 Auburn Donald Burnett, Highland Park and Audrey C. Maks, Rochester Jack J. Jennings, 350 la E. Pettis, 350 Jostyn Donald E. Curran, .2686 Wabum and Ann B. Srygley, 2686 Wabum William W. Manduiak Jr., Farmlnoton and Judith L. Moore, Escanaba, Michigan ’ Larry At Ormsby, Waterford and Diana K. Adams, 1540 Alma CAPRICORN (Oec. 22 - Jan. 19): Impress superiors by completing major assignment. In personal life finish what you start. Career is activated ... you get results. One you respect makes concrete suggestion. 'AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 - Feb. 18): News likely to bt received from afar. Could volvp relative or neighbor. Your viewpoint subject to change based on new knowledge. Be ready — and exercise mature^viewpoirit. PISCES (Feb. 19 - Mar. 20): Emphasis on completion. Family member can resolve dilemma. May affect you financial area. Stand above petty complaints. Realize friends around you may be “under emotional strain. ★ ★ ★ IF TUESDAY IS YOUR BIRTHDAY . . . this could be one of your most significant years. If married, greater financial security Indicated and a possible - addition to the family. If single, marriage may be °on the horizon. ★ ★ ★ GENERAL TENDENCIES: Cycle high for LIBRA, SCORPIO, SAGITTARIUS. Special word to CANCER: Conflict at home resolved if you avoid rash statements, accusattom. (Copyright 1967, General Features Corp.) By Art Sansom ALLEY OOP By V. T. Hamlin ...BUT NO MATTER...WHO'S GOINS TXNOW IF WE'RE RIGHT OR WRONG—'LONG AS IT'S LOUP/ ■ glWty MIA, Isa TAL a-. U4. H*. ow. CAPTAIN EASY By Leslie Turner, e 1966 by NEA, I ‘Now, his stuff doesn’t sell, ‘because the Kennedys aren’t interested in preventing its publication’!” yE5..V0UK FBI friend said THE BASE 19 BEING COMBES’ AGAIN FOR THE MISSING BOMB, wash: BOARDING HOUSE HMPH/YOUNE WATCHED <$0 £GAD, MARTHA,WHY/ MANY FOOTBALLS DID YOU UNPLUGJY^CB AUGUST \V6 NO 'THE-TV ^ YOU WONDER YOU LOOK LIKE U6UALLY X DON'T BET AGAINST MRS. HOOPLE, BUT THAT'S A T0U6W RESOLUTION TO, Keep/ yegjHE THINK* GRANDDAD MAY BE HIDING WITH SOME FRIEND. SO HE'S CHECKED ON EVERY NAME I COULD RECALL.WITH NO LUCKJ EEK & MEEK HELLO, R6.7/ WELCOME TO THE WORLD J By Howie Schneider MAYBE MOD'LL BE THE YEAR THAT U/ILL FINALLY BRING HAPPINESS AUD . JOVTOTHE LUORLP! e MB V HU. he TJL Wf. A* ML WEATHER PERMITTING, OF COURSE!. t-3. NANCY 2rRE-516T101& F0RC&V6. IMMOVABLE O0JECT= ,_2 OUT OUR WAY * Thomas E. Haller. Drayton" Plains and Donna G. Barr, Waterford Dale R-. Quinn. 29 Oneida and Lynn L. Zell, Bloomfield Hills Charles G. Gilmbre, East Lehjing and Patricia S. Smith, Rochester Ronald J. McGinnis II,’ Drayton Plains] and Rebecca G. Ragatz, Waterford j Philip G. Odium, Flint and Gloria L] Johnston, Farmington Nornian H. Rose, Farmington end Pa-j trlcla A. Valton, Farmington Arthur Garza, 291 Midway and Mary H. Acosta, 307 Ferry . , . | George P. Mozola," Greet Lakes Illinois1 and Antoinette L. Stewart Union Lake . j Kenneth L. Kash, 64 Spokane-and Batty! J. Millikan./ 36 Carpenter Jeffrey C, Pardee, Birmingham and: Mary A. Wait Detroit Daniel5C Nelson, Walled Laka and Pamela K. Hendon, walled Lake . . James R. Cathey, Lapeer end Pamela J. smith, Drayton. Plains ■ _ V Then, S. Morris, 900 South East Blvd.. and Elaine M. Morris, 900 South East •tvd. - -• Harry L. Roberts, ♦ Liberty and MH- dred I, D. Farquharson, 229 East Wal-***■ .. '■ r. ; Richard R. Hart, 229 East Walton and Barbara L- Wdeks, 1S69 Ldkevlew Billie J. Brooks', 1022 Cioverlswn and, Vickie J. Brown, 656 Desota Gordon A. Lana, Farmington and Mary R. Stowe,'Detroit ■ „ T: ... Rolland Haroo Jr„ 340 Raeburn and Dorothy M. WhiHf, 56 Jecokes_ „ j JHIdt A Vllewat, 55 PteeeantvHwj. end Alyda L., Pendergrast. 253 Cedar-’ dale 1 By Ernie Bushmilier TIGER By Bud Blake ir6oreu)&o TO THE FLOOf*- DONALD DUCK 1-2 By Walt Disney THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 2, 1967 D—5 By MILTON BESSER j (AP)' — U Thant has disclosed t7Nffl£D NATIONS, N.Y.jhis agreement with President LAST ! IMfcb I PDA INCREDIBLE UNDERSEA ADVENTURES AND INVENTIONS! Starring Also "THE PLAINSMAN” Guy Stockwell Pontiac'S POPULAR THEATER WnK Days: Continuous It a.ni. to tl p.m. Sundays: Continuous It o.m. to II pun. TUESDAY LADIES’ DAY 10:45 a.m. to Silt p.m. UDIES 50c, MEN 10c ■Starts TUESDAY~ Ttx^VibHd's 7mmorttf/1dmiture! *lcrms WILLIAM WYLER'S the collector TECHNiCOLOR*R, Johnson on one aspect of the Vietnam problem — that if the war could be ended the way would bo cleared for vast economic and social aid to millions in Southeast Asia. But on the crucial issue „af how to stop the shooting, there is still a wide gap between the U.N. secretary general* and the Johnson administration. The gap remains despite the latest effort by Thant in behalf of the. United States — an attempt to arrange ' talks leading to - a ceasefire^ MONDAY at 1:00-3:00- 5:00-7:00 and 9:00 P.M. “ALFIE” meets SHIRLEY Exclusive First Run Showing In relying to Washington on the. peace talk effort, Thant appealed anbw for an early $nd to the war: He declared that favorable conditions exist for breakthrough in international cooperation, but that the war stands in the way. Thant said the end of the war could signal cooperation in sore ly needed programs to alleviate hunger and permit social gains in vast areas of the world. John son has^said much the same thing in proposing economic and social aid to Southeast Asia, includihg Vietnam. 3-POINT PLAN . Thant still holds that the only way to achieve peace is through his three-point plan: an immediate halt to the y.S. bombing of North Vietnam, a gradual scaling do w n of military activity by both aides,- and a role for, toe Vietcong in peace negotiations. Moreover, Thant considers that toe approach should be in that order — first a halt in the bombing. ★ ★ ★ The United States accepts Thant’s concept a$ a package proposal, and insists that there be some sign in advance that North Vietnam would make concessions. Hie question naturally arises as to why U.S. Ambassador Arthur J. Goldberg made the re quest to Thant on Dee. 19. It came three days after a confer ence with Johnson, attended by Goldberg and other high officials. Goldberg is credited with initiating the move. FEELS NEED The United States evidently felt toe necessity of showing its desire for peace anew in the face of the extended truce pleas from,Pope Paul VI and others: But the United States also wanted to give Thant some kind of new lever in his declared in-> tention to continue to seek peace in Vietnam. He spoke of this I Dec. 2 in accepting a new five-year term. The United States jwas among those exerting the, greatest pressure on him to stay in office. ★ * ★ Thant made public his response to the Goldberg appeal on Saturday. Another factor has-been added to the situation by the new wave of criticism of U.S. policy following publication of accounts of .civilian casualties from UlS. bomb attacks on North Vietnam. There is no sign that the criticism could bring about an extended truce including a pause in toe bombing. Some students of the situation speculate that this kind of {development would give' Thant more maneuverability p his private'“efforts to arrange talks leading to a ceasefire. Killed in Viet WASHINGTON (AP) -L Hie Defense Department»has announced tiie names of 15 kilted as a result of action in.Vietnam. Rilled as a result of hostile action: ARMY ILLINOIS — Sgt. Santonio Garcia, Chicago; Pfc. Reginald M. Thomas. Chicago. INDIANA — CpI. Jack L. Deaton. Indianapolis. MARYLAND — Pfc. August G. Man-, nlon Jr., Baltimore. NEW YORK - 1st Lt. Timothy McCarthy,. Ossining; Pfc. Charles McClennahan, Brooklyn; Pfc. Raymond Torrey, Bronx. PENNSYLVANIA — Sgt. Richard E. Powell, Phoenixville. " MARINE CORPS -CALIFORNIA — Pfc. Raymond C Clark, Glendale. ILLINOIS — sgt. Wayne E. Dawson. Champaign. . ? OKLAHOMA — Sgt. Allan P. Miller. MidWest City. * WEST VIRGINIA -- Lance CpI. James C, Thomas, Morgantown. Died of wounds: MARINE CORPS GEORGIA — Lane* CpI. James Harris, Griffin. MARYLAND* -* Staff Sgt. Joseph T. McCreight, Timonium. , Missing to dead — hostile: ARMY PENNSYLVANIA - Pfc. Raymond!). Oltak, Pittsburgh, Missing as a result of hostile action: c MARINE CORPS Pfc. Robert G. Da vision GRAND RAPIDS (AP)—With: “I like helicopters,” he said. I the time. They’re more unstable several thousand flying hours j“But you’ve got to fly them all| than airplanes/’ behind him, Mort Peterson is L finding "it difficult to stay on the ground. . I So, for the third time he’s yielding to his ‘.’wi}d blue I yonder itch,” this time as ajl civilian training Army helicop-|| ter pilots.' ~ * I ★ * ★ dr In 1946, after Army service as a troop transport pilot dropping supplies to troops in toe Battle of the Bulge and the Rhine River crossing, Peterson, 57, packed his uniform and spent nine months studying at Wayne State University. In 1947, men an Air Force Major, Peteison reenlisted and served in Japan and England and in Nevada commanding a helicopter rescue unit. j GOING TO ALABAMA This month Peterson will j leave his job at the Grand Rap- ! ids Weather Bureau end report: to Ft. Rucker, Ala., to train helicopter pilots for duty in Vietnam.' Peterson has logged 1,700 hours in helicopters and sever I VERY FRIDAY r Beginning January 6th ^ Iti/P Featuring Our Famous INTERNATIONAL BUFFET Make Reservations In Advance Enjoy Tha Luxurious Comfort and Convonionco of Our Nowiy Romodolod Dining facilitios Serving A Com-£|*to>M»n^oME)oWodd^n|AostFavor»dCui»|iri«s^ Famous For Fine Dining Any Night In The Week A COMPLETE MENU OF D0URMET blSHES TO SELECT FROM DORMAN’S OLD MILL TAVERN 5838 Dixie Highway Waterford, Mich. OR 3-190T Died not as a result of hostile a! tho“sand more in fixed'wing, aircraft. action: CALIFORNIA — Santa Maria. IDAHO — Spec. Parma. DRIVE - I N ft 2-1000 James E. Tooley, Brooks, ELECTRIC IN-CAR HEATERS I GEORGIA — CS3 W! Columbus. * MARINE CORPS SOOTH CAROLINA -* Staff Sgt. Eddie B. Cooke Jr., Florence. Missing not as a result of hos- J tile action: ARMY Pfc. Gregory L. Miller MIRACLE MILE SO. TELEGRAPH AT SQ. LAKE RD. 1 MILE W. WOODWARD I CHILDREN UNDER II FREE pAv/£/ SHIRLEY MacLAINE ■MICHAEL CAINE Hi: TUES.-WED.-THURS. 7:00 and 9:00 GAMBIT TECHNICOLOR® ttstamng HERBERT LOM Smoking Blamed DETROIT ® — Careless smoking was blamed today for two weekend fires in which two Detroit men perished. Victims were Marvin Griffin, 57, who died Sunday of smoke inhalation, and Verna Lee Lemonds, 43, who was killed when his bedroom caught fire. 2-DAYS ONLY ... TUES and WED. TYPEWRITER SALE1 NO MONEY DOWN Weekly PARK FREE IN WKC’S Private Let Rear of Store HOME OFfftEST BRAND NAMES 104 N. SAGINAW-FE 3-1114 {mat IT OUT, FUTURE POt rurvm. WITH any umi imwm • 1<«HT WEIBHT, ALL ITEEl CONSTRUCTION • DELUXE tJKCME CARRYIN0 CMC • iff? 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CMd' COLOR by DELUXE mam# iiWACO luiiiiiiiiittiuiiiBOX OFFICE GPENS 6;30 PM.miuirmnmthmtnQ your news quiz PART I - NATIONAL AND INTERNATIONAL Give yourielf 10 points for each correct answer. « My Btate has . a-£r b-6 Senators in Congress. C-ll a Each Congress meets for a-one year b-two years c-three years Senators serve a....year term. a-two b-four c-six Representatives serve a....year term. a-two b-four c-slx A bill passed by Congress becomes a law only when toe President signs it True or False? PART II - CONGRESSIONAL VOCABULARY Give yourself 4 points for each word that you can match correctly with' its special Congressional meaning. i «*. u.wih, a-political party with few- 1.. ...the Majority Members. 2.. ...constituent b-political party in control c-uaed to delay or prevent voting d-a voter e-what the President can do 3.. ...the Minority 4.. ... veto 5.....filibuster PART III - CONGRESSIONAL OFFICES Take 6 points for each correctly matched answter. “ • ' •1.. ...Speaker a-presides in Senate in absence of Vice Pres- 2.. ..Whip ldentof the U.S. b-presidee in the House 3.. ..Chaplain c-represente no particular district 4.. ..Congressmen "at • large*^ IftliBljliEliwB d-aeee that all are present for voting «... ..President Pro * - c Tempore Vol. XVI, No. 15 e-opens dally meetings f VEC, toe., Med! ion , Wl*. THE PONTIAC PRESS Monday, January 2, 1967 ^ 'HewtPnyutm Match word clues with their corresponding pictures or symbols. 10 points for each correct answer. authority for Congress Republican symbol Democratic symbol Party Party 4.... the nation’s capital The House begins bills dealing with this subject. $ 6.... some is done by roll call D ‘ f............. I , the nation’s Capitol 435 100 8..... * * number of Senators K ■ I'.* J ...... number of Representatives 10...... The Executive enforced the laws. HOW DO YOU RATE? (Scon Each Side of Quli Saparataly) 91 to 100 point* - TOP SCORE! •Ho 90 point! - Excellent. 71 to SO point* - Good. ( , ■/ 41 Is 70 point* - Fair. 40 «f Under??? - If mm! Thl* Quia I) part of the Educational. Program which Thii Nowipeper fumiihas to School* in this aroa to Stimulate in tar ait in Nationa and World Affslti a* an aid to Davaloping Good Cltixomhip. Seve Tlif» Practice Examination! STUDENTS Valuable Reference Materiel For ixeim. ANSWERS v-ot fa-6 ii-8 ff l fg-i i»-» *H*t ia-i U-t >zin& ioinas M MHt fp-* Mil M|H o-S !«•£ lp-3 iq-t :|| IMYd es|tj-s i«ir 8»-t fq-g St-l if JJlVd D—6 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 2, 1967 msmmeasm «ss Deaths in Pontiac, Nearby Areas Modesto Compagnoni Service for Modesto Comipag-noni, 76, of 525 Gallogly wi|l be 9:30 a.m. Wednesday at St. Michael’s Church, with burial by Donelson-Johns Funeral Home in Mount Hope Cemetery. A Rosary service will be at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow at the, funeral home. Mr. Compagnoni died Saturday, after a long illness. Surviving are his wife, Frances; two sons, Louis A. and Frank P., both of Pontiac: and 10 grandchildren. Mrs. Richard Thornton Service for former Pontiac resident Mrs. Richard (Dorothy) Thornton, 40, of Anaheim, Calif., will be tomorrow at, the Smith Mortuary, Huntington Beach, Calif. Mrs. Thompson died Friday. * She is survived by her husband; parents; four children, Diane, Linda, David and Danny, all at home; and two sisters. Mrs. Charles Wilkison Mrs. C. B. Falkenbury A prayer service for Mrs. Clarence B. (Almira J.) Falkenbury, 78, of 116 Oak Hill will be. 11 a.m. Wednesday at Voor-hees-Siple Funeral Home. Regular service will follow at 1:30 p.m. at West Deerfield Methodist Church, West Deerfield Township, Lapeer County. Burial will be in West Deerfield Cemtery there. Mrs. Falkenbury died Saturday.* . Surviving are her husband; two/ daughters, Mrs. Mabel P./ Ransom and Helen of. Pontiac; a brother, Charles Burley of Columbiaville; four sisters, Mrs. Savilla Locke of Davison, Mrs. Emma Sprague of Pontiac, Mrs. Lillian Patrick of North Branch and Mrs.Mary Heckman of Waterford Township; and one grandson. Randall Fast Service for Randall Fast, 4-moiHh-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Fast, 6671 LaBlanc, Waterford Township, will be tomorrow at the Bennett Funeral Home in Frankfort. Burial will be in Platte Cemetery there. Local arrangements were by the Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home. The baby died Saturday. Laura Marie Foglio Service for Laura Marie Fog-iio of 617 Markle was to be at 1 p.m. today at the Huntoon Funeral Home with burial* in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Laura Marie was stillborn Saturday. Surviving are her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John A. Foglio; and one sister. Charles E. Fries Mrs. piiarles (Edith E. ) Wilk-isoh, 66, of 13 Chamberlain died yesterday. Her body is at the Voorhees-Siple Funeral Homo- Mrs. Wilkison was a member of Church of Christ. Surviving are two sons, Noel and Lowell, both of Pontiac, and three daughters, Mrs. Eugene Ewing of Pontiac, Mrs. James Boal of Rochester and Mrs. Joyce Gooch of Long Beach, Calif. Also surviving are a brother, 18 grandchildren and two greatgrandchildren. a.m. Wednesday at St. Colum-ban’s Church, with burial by Manley Bailey Funeral Home in Holy Sepulchre Cemetery. A Rosary service will be at 8:30 p.m. tomorrow at the funeral home. Mrs. Garlitz. died Saturday after a long illness. Surviving are three sons James E. of Orchard Lake and Leonard and Albert O., both of Birjningham, and three daughters, Mrs. Joseph Granda of Birmingham, Mrg. Herbert Johnson of Dearborn and Mrs. Hubert Lancaster of Caro. Also surviving are two sisters, three brothers, 16 grandchildren and 18 great-grandchildren. Mrs. Leonard Garlitz BIRMINGHAM - Service' for Mrs. Leonard (Esther) Garlitz, 84, of 1307 Humphrey will be 9 GIs Face Arms 3 Army Doctors Note 0. Cong Use of Arrows CHICAGO (AP)—Three Army doctors working in Vietnam said today the Vietcong are inflicting wounds vwith everything from captured U.S. M16 rifles to bows and arrows. Four of 1,196 patients treated in the 2nd Surgical Hospital during lheiirstiiye months of 1966 had been shot with arrows, the physicians said. Another ancient weapon which took many more casualties was the punji stick—a sharpened stick with a fire-hardened, contaminated point, placed in the ground at an angle designed to puncture a soldier’s foot. There was 2,343 such wounds. The surgical team reported that in most cases, -punji sticks disable men about as long as small arms wounds. Requiem Mass for Charles E. Fries,. 38, of 2524 Pontiac, Sylvan Lake, will be said at 10 a.m. tomorrow at St. Benedict Catholic Church, with burial in Mount Hope Cemetery. Mr. Fries died Friday after! The doctors found the bullet of a long illness. ,tne U.S. M16 rifle causes the Surviving are his wife, Sally,most destructive wound to tis-A.; parents Mr. and Mrs. Glenn sue I MOST DESTRUCTIVE Fries: a son, Kelly, at home; two brothers, Glenn El. and David, both of Pontiac; and one sister. A RoSary will be said at 8 p.m. today at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Mrs. Fred Nierstheimer , Maj. Norman M. Rich, Maj Egon V. Johnson and Lt. Col Francis D. Dimond Jr., of .the U.S. Army Medical Corps, published their observations- in the Journal of the American Medi cal Association. * ★ ★ Of the M16 wound, they said “its bullet’s high velocity of 3 Thomas S. Groves BIRMINGHAM - Service for Thomas S. Groves, 79, of 1760 Cole will be 2:30 p.m. Wednesday at Manley Bailey Funeral Hoipe. Burial will be in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Mr. Groves, a landscape gardener, died yesterday. Surviving are his wife, Mar^ garet; seven sons, Douglas Groves of Walled Lake, Thomas Groves Jr. and Milton Groves of oipa rj& o Royal Oak, Richard L. Groves . anal of Clawson, Marvin T. and Francis Dalv of Royal Oak And Donald J. Daly of Orchard Lake; a daughter, Mrs. Dave May pf Royal Oak; a brother, Robert Groves of Lathrup Village;- 23 grandchildren; and five greatgrandchildren. Mrs. John Hildred ROMEO — Service for Mrs. John (Edith) Hildred, 83, of 219 Rawles will be 7:30 p.m. tomorrow tit Roth’s Home for Funerals. Graveside service will be conducted at 11:30 a.m. Wednesday in the Maple Grove Cemetery, Concord, by the Concord OES. Mrs. Hildred died yesterday. She was a Member of St. Paul’s Episcopal Church and a life member of Concord OES. Surviving are her husband and a son, John R. Hildred Jr. of Utica. Clyde W‘ Wilson AVON TOWNSHIP - Service for former resident Clyde W. Wilson, 59, of Phoenix, Ariz., will be 10 a.m. tomorrow at Moore Mortuary in Phoenix. He will be buried in Phoenix. Mr. Wilson, an employe of the Phoenix Pie Co., died Friday. Surviving are a son, Clyde Wilson Jr. of Utica; two daughters, Mrs. Jimmie Martin and Mrs., Harold Zabel, both of Utica; two sisters, Mrs. Austin Henderson' of Rochester and M^ Blanche Buske.of Utica; ana four grandchildren. Signs Point to Solo Job in Art Theft WORLD! — Two tiny Himalayan cubs blom on the weekend at the St-J*aul, Minn., Como Park Zoo, greet the world 'with loud squeals from the hands of a zoo veterinarian. The cubs, one male and one AP WlrtpAoto female, are the Asiatic equivalent of the North American black bear. When fully grown, they will weigh between 400 and 450 pounds each. Garage Hit by Fire in Shelby Township Children were believed responsible for a blaze which Saturday did $1,600 damage to a two-car garage in Shelby Township. § h e 1 b y Fire Department fought the blaze for four hours. The garage was attached to a $25,000 model home owned by Weiqberger Builders. About 200 bales of straw was stored in the garage, according to firemen. Some smoke damage to the home was reported. Townspeople Save Flier Lost in East Schoolteachers Stay Mistresses NOTTINGHAM, England (JPI — Members of the Associ- police, tftion of Assistant mistresses in Secondary Schools haye voted to remain mistresses. The schoolteachers at their annual convention Sunday rejected a complaint by one branch that their title was open to “grave misinterpretation.” ELLINGTON, Conn. (AP) -“There was nowhere I could go,” said dil°t Frank Robinson of Windsor Locks. His small, single-engine plane was about a dozen miles from Bradley International Airport in Windsor Locks Sunday night when its radio died. * .* ' ★ “When that went out, so did my navigation,”* said Robinson, flight instructor and operator of Robinson Airways at Plainville Airport. Clouds, ground’ fog and a freezing drizzle cut visibility to about 200 feet. Concerned officials .at Bradley called state News in Brief HUNTS LANDING SITE Robinson, 38, banked his plane downward through the clouds and looked for a place to land. Hyde Field, a small private airstrip, was nearby, but Robinson couldn’t see it and didn’t know it was there — it had no runway lights. He spotted a house with lights Ion near a field and used it as a engines on the Beatrice Jennings of 6329, PjBBB .... . Elizabeth Lake, W a t e r f o r d|la"dm^- The", hQgr^s„w t Township, told police Saturday out and he lost his bearings' that $105 in cash was stolen from! Using precious fuel, he circled her house. 7 up alongside the fire and. shine your lights field.” The landing strip began to glow from the revolving red lights, spotlights, ear headlights and even flashlights. SEES FIRE ENGINE Above, Robinson caught sight of a speeding fire engine, its red light spinning. Thinking it might be meant for him, he followed it to the strip,-where Hyde was signaling with a spotlight.' Robinson had to make several approaches to the strip because a car parked at the end-of it kept blinding him with its headlights. Finally the car moved.. ■k k ★ About 30 minutes after he had lost his radio, Robinson landed his plane without a scratch. The pilot praised the firemen and townspeople. “This was the worst predicament I’ve been in in all my 10,« ■000 hours flying time,” said Robinson. “It’s wonderful they way they did it.” “If they hadn’t done it,” he said, “I’d have ended up in the woods.” ® LONDON, (AP)-Police inves tigating history’s biggest art theft,sought clues today dmong thousands of American, , European and British names in the visitors book at the Dulwich College Art Gallery. Scotland Yard detectives said all signs indicate only one man —a thin; wiry man-pulled off tjhe theft Friday night of eight paintings worth an estimated $7-million form the college’s cOl lection. ■ ★ k k “'There is a strong possibility the thief, or someone working for him, visited the gallery in recent weeks to chart the layout,” a detective said. , , “Nearly everyone who visits this little gallery is expected to sign the book. We think the thief or his accomplice may have scribbled something down, perhaps to appear inconspicuous So we are going to check out every - single name ana ad dress.” . ' * , ‘POLITICAL MOTIVE?’ Police officials speculated the thief may not be out for money. “He could have had a political motive to draw attention to a grievance,” said Detective Supt Charles Hewett, who is in charge jgf the case. kkk “It could have been greed or j jealousy. I certainly don’t think J there’s very much in it for him money-wise.” The paintings were not insured, reducing the prospect of collecting a large' ransom for them. They are so well known that presumably they could not be sold to anyone except an unusually, eccentric art lover who would keep them entirely to himself. i-Junior Editors Quiz on- HARES Mrs Fred (Ethel) Niersthei- ?50 feet Per sfond causes enor-mer. 71, of 575 E. Madison diedjjnous tissue damage The tum-vesterday. Her body is at I ^effect of the: bullet after_ it Sparks-Griffin funeral Home. strikeA ™ object adds to this Mrs. Nierstheimer was a member of Fontiac Eagles Lodge No. 1230. injury. *The nidus doctors described inge-makeShift booby traps Surviving are two daughters,!U£ed by the Vietcong. Mrs. EtheT Hall of Oxford and! BULLETS USED Mrs: Helen Ha^ner of Pontiac ;j one such trap is made by fix-a son, James P. in California; jng three 45-caliber bullets point-a brother. Erwin Odgen in er upwards into a board and Washington; seven grandchil- fitting another board with nail dren; and 20 ' great-grandchil- points beneath’that holding the dren. I bullets. Approximately 8 pounds j of pressure will detonate these Mrs. Clyde Quant bullets HARE —n fell barely above the treetops ALARM RELAYED Townspeople below heard the low-flying plane. They phoned the fire department and state police trooper Lionel Labreche, saying there was a plane in trouble somewhere in the clouds and that it had narrowly missed several houses. -An alarm was relayed to-the town’s volunteer firemen. About 25 appeared at the landing strip; with three fire engines. ★ § k Dozens of townspeople drove to the airstrip to see what was happening. Firemen, Labreche and airport official Robert Hyde told them, “Keep, going and line Mrs. Clyde (Dio) Quant, 61, of 883 Kettering died yesterday. Her body is at the Huntoon Fu- The doctors .said improved medical care “is cutting the loss of life on the battlefield. Rapid helicopter evacuation, adequate ’neral Home. Burial will be in blood replacement, antibiotics, Perry Mount Park. j established principles of war Mrs. Quant is'survived by her surgery and modem operating husband; and two daughters, Voom equipment have markedly Mrs. Nardy Bolt of Union Lake lowered the Vietnam statistics and Mrs. Daisy Hipsher of Mari-’ for deaths due to wounds, com-on, Ohio. pared to earlier wars.” Mrs. LeRoy E. Schuster \ Requiem Mass for Mrs. LeRoy E. (Louise M.) Schuster. 64. of) 4075 Mbto’rway, Waterford Township, will be said at 9:30 a.m. tomorrow at St. Perpetua’s Catholic Church, with burial in Holy Sepulchre Cemetery South-, field, by Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Mrs. Schuster died Saturday. She was a member of the Altar. Society at St. Benedict Catholic Church. t Surviving are her husband; one daughter, Mrs. Charles Muma of St. Louis, Mo.; four sons, Thomas R., James A. and John A., all of Pontiac, and Robert L. of Ann Arbor; two sisters; and 13 grandchildren. A Rosary will be said 8:30 p.m. today at the funeral home. $8,000 to $10,000 in Clothing Stolen Between $8,000 and $10,000 worth of men’s clothing was reported stolen yesterday from Barr and Hanna Clothing Store, 75 W. Long Lake, Bloomfield Hills. - Bloomfield Hills police said that the store was checked at 7:30 p.m. yesterday and a half hour later it was found to have bdeff; broken into. Missing, according to police reports^ are :52 sports coats, 30 sweaters, 32 pairs of shoes, 25 topcoats, 65 suits, 50 pairs of slacks,' 25 ties and 25 pairs of cuff links. Birmingham Driver Charged in Fatality LANSING (AP)^— Police to-, day sought a ,pair of gunmen who calmly waited on a gasoline station customer moments* after fatally shooting the station attendant and a police officer. ★ ★ k Eaton County Sheriff Elwin J. Smith identified the dead men as Deputy Dean Foster, 24, of Charlotte and Harold Peterson, 27, of .Lansing. He said both men had been shot in the head, the deputy with a small-caliber pistol and the station attendant with a heavier caliber weapon. ★ k k Deputy Foster, riding alone in a patrol, car, was on his way In to headquarters to wrap up his day’s work, when he answered the final call that took him to his death. HOLDUP CALL “We got a call that a holdup was in progress at the gasoline station and we dispatched two cars — one of them Foster’s,” explained the sheriff. He said investigation indicated the deputy went into the gasoline station and apparently talked for a minute or two with the two men who were still in the station office, the sheriff said. ★ k k “We are not certain at this point whether the station attendant’s body was in the washroom,” police said. Sheriff Smith said that five witnesses has supplied descriptions of the two men wanted in the shootings. HOAX SEEN Notable Dies LONDON McLaggan, UPI -ear - Sir Douglas specialist for Scotland Yard believed a ran- Queen Elizabeth II, her father, Service Station Robbed of $155 This Morning , SANTA ROSA, N.M. (UPI)— A Birmingham, Mich., woman was charged with failure to use due care after striking-and kill-ling a youth with her car Saturday night. Police said Elizabeth Kiefer, 37, slid on a slushy spot on U.S. 66 and went .out of control, slipping, 112 feet before hitting David Thompson, 9, of Saratoga, fcalif. The boy died early yesterday. He. was* standing beside a parked station wagon occupied by his father, Walter Edward Thompson, 40, at the time of the accident. som demand for 100,000 pounds $280,000—telephoned in Saturday night was a New Year’s Eve hoax. ■ The Yard believed the thin man, who crawled through a small opening drilled in an outside door of the gallery, loved the .art he stole. He removed the eight paintings from their frames with meticulous care. k, k k The only solid clue was a broken, high-speed drill tip discovered in the grounds of the gallery. ^ The eight paintings were among the most ymueble of the 300 in the Duhvich. collection They included three Rem brandts—“Girl at a Window,” a i “Portrait of a Young Man,” and: “Portrait of Jacob de Gheyn;”j three by Rubens one by Geradi Dou and one by Adam Elsheim-er. | In a public appeal for the return of the paintings, Lord Shawcross, chairman of the governors of the college, told the thief: “Kefep them in.a constant temperature and humidity. Rohing or bending will ruin them.”' King George VI, and her grandmother, Queen Mary, died Sunday at the age of 73. The cause of death was not disclosed. ’ or "Cfigf A Single Protection Plan for the entire family... MODERN WOODMEN'S LOW COST FAMILY PLAN * LIFE INSURANCE M. E. DANIELS QUESTION: Why do snowshoe rabbits change colors? ★. ★ k m ANSWER: Actually, the snowshoe rabbit is a hare, an animal with longer legs than the . rabbit, who can leap a long way and who generally has longer ears. The snowshoe rabbit has shorter ears than most other hares. Because it lives in the north where there is much winter snowT it has large feet which hold It up on the surface as a snowshoe holds up a man. The changing colors are a remarkable example of protective coloration by which nature enables many of her creatures to blend with their surroundings so as not to be easily seen by hunters or hunting animals. Animals which escape because their color protects them, survive to produce young which are, also fitted to survive, because of protective" coloration. In this way, snowshoe rabbits in summer have become dark ail oVer because they blend witKthe dark leaves and thickets (1). But As the snow begins to fly in-the fall (2) white patches appear on the dark ground and white patches also appear on the bodies of snowshoe rabbits. In the white winter (3) these hares turn white all over. In spring (4) they become light and dark again, as the snow begins to melt. ' ’ Jr k k , , FOR YOU TO DO: Look for some examples of protective" coloration, especially among the birds, which are easy to study. .■I The B&J Gulf gas station, 714 Baldwin, was robbed of $155 early today. The attendant, Alfred L. Cobb, 17, of , 395 N. Saginaw, said the bandit came into the station about 3 a.m. and, after demanding money, locked him in a restroom. Cobb told police that he did not see a weapon, but that the robber'' had hfc hand in his pocket as if he had a gun. Cobb escaped by smashing against the restroom door and breaking the latch. District- Representative 563 West HUton FI 3-7111 , MODERN WOODMEN ; OF AMERICA Office,—Rock Island, Illinois Annual Winter * DISCOUNT SALE! SAVE 10% Order now for Spring Delivery ENDURING MEMORIALS INCH MEMORIALS, INC. $2,200 Damage in City House Fire 864 M. Perry 335-6931 Bronze Plates for Memorial Park Cemeteries at Below Cemetery Prices Garl (W. CDonchon Q)onal<) 3£. Johns A fire, believed to have start-ed'* from Christmas tree_ lights, caused an estimated $2,200 dam-! age to a home at 858 Inglewood Saturday night. The one-story frame house is owned aftd occupied by James Newsom, according to Pohtiac firemen. The fire was reported drli:36 p.m. and extinguished in an hour., .■ ,1',,. j ENTERTAINER DIES-Au-brey Wilson (Moon) Mullican, whoVe twangy backwoods voice helped sell records and elect politicians is dead at 57 of a heart attack suffered last night in Beaumont, Tex. Mul-lican campaigned with-fellow hillbilly singer Jimmie Davis, who made two successful bras for governor of Louisiana* Mullican had been a member of the Grand Ole Opry troupe since 1949 and entertained troops in Vietnam. , .£ ■ Courtesy and Care— Ideas That T^ever Die Some of our ways at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home seem old-fashioned. Courtesy and care are frequently forgotten in the rush of our modern life —. but they are features very much alive here. Exacting care is present in everything we do at toe Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Courtesy to everyone is assured. These are ideas that refuse to die — and we insist on keeping them alive. (Phone FEDERAL 4-4511 On Ou hnq (Premise* FUNERAL HOME 855 WEST. HURON ST. F*ONTIAC K wi . I . :V ^ .. V 'THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 2, 1967 D—7 Death Notices ARCHAMBO, DECEMBER H, 1966, JOHN ARTHUR, 394 North Pad-dock Strati) agt 70#' behoved husband of Myrtle Flack Archtmbo; dear father Of Mrs. Mildred Jameson and George Archtmbo; deer brother of Ira, William, Lawrence, . Elmer, Frank and Harry . Archambo and Mrs. Cecelia Kira, Mrs. Jeanette Start and Mrs. Theresa Newcomber; also survived by seven grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. Funeral,, service will be held Tuesday, January 3, at 1 p.m. at the Voorhees-SIple Funeral Home with Pastor Jaremla Florea officiating. Graveside service Immediately following the funeral service is under the auspices of Lyons Masonic Lodge No. 37 at Oak Hill Cemetery, Mr. Archambo will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hogrs 3 to $ and 7 to 9 pun.)________________. BUDZINSKI, DECEMBER 31, *1966, JOHN, 3343 Bermuda, Ferndale; age 73; dear father of Mrs. David (Helen) Speer and Mrs. Mathew (Mary) Brown; also survived by nine grandchildren. Funeral service wni be‘held Tuesday, January 3, at the Wysockl Funeral Home, 12500 McDougal, Detroit. Inter-1 -rnent In Mount Olivet Cemetery, Detroit.________________________ COMPAGNONI, DECEMBER 31,1966, MOOESTO, 525 Gailogly; age 75; beloved husband of Frances Com-pagnonl; dear father of Louis and Frank Compegnoni; also survived by It grandchildren. Recitation of the Rosary WUI be Tuesday, at 7:30 p.m, at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, January 4 at 9t30 a.m. at the St. Michaels Church. Interment In Mount Hope Cemetery. Mr. Compagnoni will lie In shite at the funeral home. FALKENBURY, DECEMBER 31, 1966, ALMIRA J.. 116 Oak Hill; age 76; beloved wife of Clarence B. Falkenbury; dear mother of Mrs. Payne (Mabel) Ransom and Miss Helen Falkenbury; dear sister of Mrs. Sevilla Locke, Mrs. Emma Sprague, Mrs. Lillian Patrick, .Mrs. Mary Heckman,, and Charles Burley; also survived by one grandson. Prayer service will be held Wednesday, January 4, at 11:00 a.m., at Voorhees-SIple Funeral Home with Rev. Theodore R. Allebach officiating. Following the prayer service Mrs. Falkenbury will be taken to Qie West Deerfield Methodist Church, West Deerfield Township for services and burial at 1:30 p.m. with Rev. Robert O. ■ Bryce officiating. Mrs. Falkenbury will lie 4n state at the funeral home. (Suggested vislt-Ing hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9 p.m.) FAST, DECEMBER 31; 1966, RANDALL, 6671 LaBIOnc, Waterford; beloved Infant son of Richard and Fay Fast. Randall has been taken from the Voorhees-SIple Funeral Home to the Bennett Funerpl Home, Frankfort, Michigan for service and burial Tuesday. FOGLIO, DECEMBER 31, 1966, LAURA MARIE, 617 Markle Street; beldVed Infant daughter of John A. and Judy Slmm Fogllo; also survlved-by f sister. Funeral service .will be held January 2, , at 1 p.m. at the Huntoon Funeral Home with Rev. Thao. Allebach officiating. Interment In Perry Mount park Cemetery. Baby Fogllo will lie In state at the funeral home.____________________ FRIES, DECEMBER 30, 1966, CHARLES, 2524 Pontiac Drive, Sylvan Lake; age 31; beloved husband of Sally A. Flynn Fries; beloved son of Mr. and Mrs. Glen Fries; dear father of Kelly Fries; deaf brother of Glen Jr. and David Fries and Mrs. Phillip Mc-Llntock. Recitation of -the. Rosary will be today, 8 p.m. at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home, Funeral service will "be held Tuesday, January 3 at 10 a.m. at the ' St. Benedict Church. Interment In Mount Hope Cemetery. Mr. Fries will lie In state at the funeral home.___________________ QUANT, JANUARY 1, 1967, OLO, 863 Kettering Street; age 61; beloved wife of Clyde Quant; dear mother of Mrs. Nardy Bolt, and Mrs. Daisy Htpsher. Funeral arrangements are pending at the ’ Huntoon Funeral Home, where Mrs. Quant will lie In state. Death Notices GARUTZ, DECEMBER 31, 1966, > ESTHER WEIMER, 130? Humphrey, Birmingham; age 04; dear mother of Mrs. *ldseph Granda, Mrs. Herbert Johnson, Mrs. -Hubert Lancaster, James E-, Leonard, and Albeit O. Gartlttj dear sister, of Sister Mary, Veronica. S.S.J., Mrs. Leo Allhoff, Lawrence, George, and’ James Weimer. Recitation of the Rosary will be Tuesday, at 0:30 p.m. at the Manley Bailey Funeral Home, 183 Oakland, Birmingham. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, January 4 at 9 a.m. at the St. Goluny Bah Church, Birmingham. Interment In Holy Sepulchre Cemetery. Mrs. Garfltz will lie In 'state at the funeral home.______________« GROBBEL, DECEMBER 29, 1966, MARY ANNA, 1612 Jarvis, Hazel Park; age 70; dear mother of Vivian, Donald George, William, Robert, RIChard and Mrs. Carl (Gladys) Diehl; also survived by 23 grandchildren. Recitation of the Rosary will be today at 8 p.m. at the Sullivan's Funeral Home, 705 West 11 Mile Road, Royal Oak. Funeral service will be Tuesday, January 3, at 8:45 a.m. at the funeral home followed by e service at St. Justin Catholic Church at 9:30 a.m. Interment In Mount Elliott Cemetery, Detroit. Mrs. GroBtNfl will lie in state at the funeral home. GROVES. JANUARY 1, 1967, THOMAS S., 1760 Cole, Birmingham; beloved husband of Margaret Daly Groves; dear father of Mrs. Dave May, Douglas R., Thomas Jr., Richard L., and Milton $. Groves, Marvin T„ Donald J. and Francis Dalv; also survived by 23 grandchll- ' dren and five' great-grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, January 4, at 2:30 p.m. at the Manley Bailey Funeral. Home, 183 Oakland, Birmingham, with Rev. Ged. Spencer officiating. Interment in wrote Chapel Cemetery. Mr. Groves mil lie in state at the tuneral home. MATHEWS, DECEMBER 30, 1966, GEORGE A., 612 Michigan Avenue; age 72; dear father of Archie Mathews, Mrs. Kenneth (Evelyn) Johnson and Mrs.'Leonard (Betty) Petrie; also survived by 21 grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Tuesday, January 3, 1967 at 11 a.m. at the D. E. Pursley Funeral Home with Rev. Theodore R. Allebach officiating. Interment in Oak Hill Cemetery. Mr. Mathews will lie in state at' the funeral home._________________ NIERSTHEIMER, JANUARY 1, 1967, ETHEL, 575 East Madison; age 71; dear mother of Mrs. Ethel Hall, Mrs. Helen Hagner, and . James, Patrick McWest; dear sister of Erwin Odgen; also survived by seven grandchildren and 20 great-grandchildren. Funeral arrangements are pending at the Sparks-Griff In Funeral Home where Mrs. Nlerstheimer will lie in state.________/_________________ SCHUSTER, DECEMBER 3L 1966, LOUISE M. 4075 Motorway Drlve,-Waterford; age 64; beloved wife of LeRoy E. Schuster; dear mother of Mrs. Charles Muma, Thomas R., James A., John A. and Robert L. Schuster; dear sistefot Mrs. Leo Burke and' Miss Rita Seguin. Recitation of the Rosary will be today, at 6:30 p.m. at the Donelson- Johns Funeral Home. Funeral service will be held Tuesday, January 3 at 9:30 a.m. at St. Perpetua's Church. Interment in Holy Sepulchre Cemetery. Mrs. Schuster will lie. in state at the funeral home.__________________« SMITH, DECEMBER 30, 1966, WILLIAM, 22 Allison; age 95. Funeral service will be held Tuesday, Janu-' ary 3; at 2 p.m. at the Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. Interment In Perry Mount Park Cemetery... Mr. Smith will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested vlslt-Ing hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9 p.m.) THORNTON, DECEMBER 30, 1966, DOROTHY, formerly of PontiaC; age 40; beloved wife of Richard Thornton,- dear mother of Diane, David, Danny, and Linda Thornton; also survived by two sisters. Funeral service will be held Tuesday, January 3 at the Smith Mortuary, 627 Main Street, Huntington - Beach, California, where Mrs. Thornton will lie In sfbte. TECHNICIANS If you want to keep learning- consider becoming an IBM Customer Engineer Here's a job, where you're learning every day. You must, to keep pace with the fast-growing industry of information handling and control. Better still, you earn an excellent salary while you leai^t. Yob would start in ' ' ' - 4 WELL DRESSED MEN* TO DE-llver advertising materiel SIS p*/r evening. Car necessary. OS-2648. ALERT YOUNG MEN We need more men 14-26 to complete stiff of new office, in Pontiac. Must be high school graduate and converse Intelligently. Salary of 8124.50 0 week to start. Exc. chance tor advancement. Call Mr. Wells, 338-0359 9-2 dally. ADDITIONAL MUSIC INSTRUMENT salesman needed, at Grinnell's Pontiac Mall store. Young man with music instrument knowledge, must have car. Full time wltti advancement. Excellent opportunity .to get Into the music business. Contact Mr. Allen at Grinnell's Pontiac Mall. APPLICATIONS NOW BfelNG TAK-en tor ushers and concession help , Apply Blue Sky Drive In Theater 2150 Opdyke Rd. Apply after 1 p.m. ASSISTANT * TRANSPORTATION DIRECTOR Full time position in Rochester School District, high school education desirable, bookeeping and typing skills nec., mechanical ability helpful, exc. opportunity for responsible mature person, liberal fringe benefits, sec., salary open.' Apply — Rochester Board of Education Fourth at Wilcox. Phono 651-6210._________________ Bus Boy Ted's of Pontiac Mall has im-imediate openings for full time bus boys. No Sun. work. Apply in person only. I ED'S . PONTIAC MAH- Billion-Dollar Financial Institution / area needs several mature local men,, age 35 to 50. Must be/ambitious, energotlc, able to provide excellent character references and have stable pest employment rec-o r d. Experience ' In distribution, public service or sales n desirable but not essential. /We are seeking men who desire* dignified work with greater opportunity than their present occupation*or position provides. Applicants chosen will be completely retrained for a specialized career and /a permanent position with our firn Reply by letter, giving a complete resume; and Include a brief statement about why/you are seeking ‘this position. Also, Include a telephone number where we can reach you to arrange an appointment for Interview./All replies will be strictly confidential. RAYMOND M. FLAVIN Community Nat'l Bank Bldg. -Pjtntisc, Michigan Phone 338-4811 Interviews: Jen. 3, 9 to 12 a,m. CARPENTERS /Lay An Equal Opportunity Employer DAYTIME ‘ K I TC H E N HELPER wanted- Apply In person tho Rotunda Country Inn 3230 Pino Lk. Rd. Orchard Lk. DELIVERY-STOCKMAN* 6 Familiar Birmingham area, neat appearance, over 2l. consider older person, some writing and figuring, rate 82 per hr., up, steady 5 day wk. 635 E. Maple, Bir- mlnghanyMIch. ,_____ DRAFTSMAN — ELECTRICAL AND mechanical — experienced. Gemco Electric Co.. 1080 N. Crooks Rd„ Clawson. DESIGNERS Automatic welding equipment, long programs, overtime, benefits. Wal-tonen Engineering Service, 820 W. 11 Mile, Royel Oak. __ EVENING ltel|> WflHtfd Mflle ^4- EXPERIENCED MILK ROUTE talesman tor supervisory |ob, good salary and fringe benefits, whole-sale and retell. Fi 4-2S47. FRY COOK, TOP WAGES, G006 working conditions, fringe benefits. Steak and Egg, Waterford. Apply between li a.m. end 6 p.m. GAS STATION ATTENDANT, EX-peribneed, mechanically Inclined, local ref., full or pert time. Gulf, Telegraph end Maple- ___ GRILL MAN Day shift. Night shift. Part fime. Good wage* and all benefits. - Big Boy Restaurant, Telegraph and Huron.____ . -_______ INSURANTS INVESTIGAT6R needed. Experience preferred. Will consider trainee. Wg pay top wages, we have complete Insurance package as fringe benefits. Pay car depreciation plus expenses. Work out of Pontiac office. Working Oakland County and Northern Detroit* Suburbs. No typ- ■ Ing, must havtkown car. Send resume to P.O. Box 911, Pontiac. IBM PROGRAMER — MULTI-DI ■ vision mfg. in Central Michigan , expanding present EDP application Into an on-line mgt. Information system utilizing IBM 360. Challenging position vylth oppor- -•unity for advancement.’ Must hqye 1401 experience. Knowledge of mfg. applications plus disk and tape experience helpful.'1 Send resume' and salary requirements to 'Pontiac Press Box 40. Equal opoprtunlty employer. ___ INTERESTING CAREER IN OF-flce machines mechanics for qualified young man. Must have meL chanlcal aptitude but experience not necessary. Exc. training program and future. Cell Mr. Thomas at 335-7301. JOB HUNTING? WE CAN SOLVE YOUR PR^BLEMI choose your Career frony over 5,-ooo current lob opening/. Trained personnel consultant* will arrange Interviews for yoO to* moat your compensation end Job objectives, Mr, Moreen, .INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL, 1860,Woodw«rd near ^14 Mile. 642-8268. / MAN TO DO DELIVERY OF AP-pllances and deliver, install and service of water softeners. Must be over 25. have mechanical ability and able to supply references. FE 4-3573 toy appointment. MAN, 45.TO/60 YEARS OLD, FOR yeer-around maintenance work In office bunding- Apply, 406 Rlker Bldg. /______ ’ MAN, J5/TO 50 YEARS OLD, FOR day porter. Steady employment. Apply/Blg Boy Drlve-ln. 2490 Dixie Hwy/_____.__________ MEN/TO 'WORK IN SERVICE STA-tlon. Driveway salesmen, wrecker rivers and mechanics. $2 par hr. start for experienced men. Full lime only.’ Must oe 25 yrs. of *»ge. Shell Station, Woodward and Long Lake Rds, Bloomfield Hills._ MICHIGAN BELL Has 8 Immediate . Openings for LINEMEN and INSTALLERS In the Pontiac, Royal Oak and Southfield Areas ENJOY STEADY WORK - WITH GOOD PAY AND EXCELLENT BENEFITS No experience necessary but prior training and relat-ed military experi- v ence helpful. HIGH SCHOOL EDUCATION OR EQUIVALENT REQUIRED Minimum height 5'6" with porportionate weight. APPLY AT: 90 Lake Street Michigan Bell Garage Pontiac, Michigan 8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. JANUARY 6,7,9, 10 ONLY Help Wonted Male :Real Estate Salesmen Due to the expansion and expected exh-a traffic at tha Mall — we now- have openings tor additional salesmen. For Information call Mr. Vonderhorr 662-5800. VON REALTY SECURITY GUARDS NEEDED. Apply In parson. Holiday Inn, 1801 S. Telegraph. ‘_______________ Tool Designer Tool Detgiler (1) | Year on board* preferably on - . tooling. Days* many fringe benefits*' steady employment and overtime. M. C. MFG. CO. 118 Indianwood Lake Orion, Mich. 692-2711 An equal opportunity employer $ TOP RATES CLOSE TO HOME J DAYS, MANY FRINGE BENEFITS, OVERTIME AND STEADY EM-- PLOYMENT. TOOL MAKERS TOOL GRINDERS HARDINGE OPERATOR PRODUCTION GRiNDER FLOOR INSPECTORS LAYOUT INSPECTORS RECEIVING INSPECTORS TURRET LATHE TRAINEES M, C. MFG. CO. 118 Indianwood Rd. Lika Orion 692-2711 An Equal Opportunity Employes TOO OLD? I* that what people keep telling you? Well* I'm looking for men over 40 who went an interesting sales position' and a rewarding career. Call 332*3053 8 to 10 a.m. and 4 to 5 p.m.___________t________ Help Wanted Female 6:30 to 10:30 P.M., Precisian Machinist Prototypo work INSPEtTORS. Lay-out TEST TECHNICIANS For pneumatic and hydraulic components M. C. MFG- CO; An equal opportunity employer Evenings Part-Time 3 men needed Immediately for part time evening work. Must M neat, mature, .marrlod .and have good work record. Call OR ’4-2233, 4 p.m.-7 p.m. • • ; ; APPLY AT: 1365 Cass Avenue Detroit, Michigan 8:30 a.m*. to 5:00 p.m. Monday thru Friday Excellent Opportunity 9tr a young man batween the ages ot 21-26, draft exempt and Interested In t promising career with fast advancement with a local company In the consumer finance field. Salary, -fringe benefits and working conditions excellent. If Interested contact Mr. Auttlm at 624-1544 for, an appointment. ■ Evenings Part-Time ' ■■ \ 3 -men needed immediately for part flme evening work. Must be neat, mature, married and have good work record. Call OR '4-2233, .4 p.m-7 p.m. tonight. MOTOR ROUTES, DETROIT FREE Press, immediate opening Waterford and N. Farmington areas. Exc. opportunity tor anyone desiring to supplement present Income — Also opportunity Mr retiree. Commission plus car allowance. Call FE 5-9273 or FE 5-9272. OPERATORS, DAY SHIFT FOR * lathe, mills, hand screw and Bullard machines. Also machine re-, pair man. Good future and banal" fits. HAWK TOOL 8, ENGINEERING CO. CLARKSTON. M15 Oft Dixie O'NEIL REALTY HAS OPENING tor experienced talesman. Must be neat, aggressive, personable ond have proven sales reoord. Guaranteed weekly Income. 30 per cent listlhg commission paid. Inquiries will be kept strictly confidential. Call Mr. Proksch, sales manager, OR 4-2222 or OL 1-0575 after 7 p.m OFFSET PRINTER Opportunity far an energotlc young roan with tome layout experience should bo familiar with 1250 L and W Multil ith, liek platemaker, Nuarc exposing unit and plate-maker, verttype equipment. Salary (4000 depending’on experience ana back-ground, excellent fringe benefits In addition to salary Including hospitalization tlfa Insurance retirement program linked with' Social Sec., paid vacations and sick leave. Examination. Apply In person to ’PVfsonnel Div., — Oakland County Court House, 1200 N. Telegraph Rd., Pontiac. ______ PART TIME 82.50 per hr., car necessary. Must be over ,21. Contact Mr. Bryan tor Interview. OR 34545.____ PLANNED j ■ PROMOTIONAL OPPORTUNITIES ‘ This position offers a career opportunity through plannod advancement steps to managerial levels and high earnings. We require a college graduate hr ■ high school graduate with severer years business experience, preferably In Consumers credit. We otter a- good starting salary, plus liberal employee's benefits. Applicants must nave good driving • records—company car furnished. For an interview appointment—Call Mr. Fred Paupard: , 71 Teiegrapn ko, - ., . ’ (Tel-Huron Shopping Canter) .Universal CIT Credit Corp, U • 333-7961. ROY BROS. STANDARD, 205 N. Telegraph, full time, permanent, paid vacations, top pay. Must be experienced, older men preferred. ’Applybtt,H. . / •;■■■ / kod irtaw'itm Attention ell qualified Real Estate, Salesmen in Pontiac and Waterford •roe. An appointment amt me IS A MUST — I am offering e totally new plan of profit sharing to my Sales personnel. Substantial listing commission paid. I 'am a member of Pontiac Board of Realtors 'and Multiple Listing, service. a JACK FRUSH0UR, Realtor I 5730 WIHIemi Lk., Rd. 474-2265 TURRET LATHE Moonlighters or ? An experienced operator only. 6 p.m. to midnight. Able to mike own work. Come In or phone: 65 S. Main, Clawson, 58J-1970; 2320 Hilton, Ferndale, 548-7070* 8561 E: 10 Mile, Center Line. 755-(220. EMPLOYERS TEMP. SERVICE TV TECHNICIAN SWEET'S APPLIANCE SHOP 429 W. Huron________134-5677 Wanted Man or Woman FOR MOTOR ROUTE i IN ' Bloomfield s; Hills Area at Once - Apply to Mr. Stier PONTIAC PRESS CIRCULATION DEPT. Help Wanted Famala 2 MATURE LADIES TO DELIVER end take orders for Fuljer merchandise. Driver's liednsa required. 82.25 per hr. Cell 673-8565._ $70.00 YOUNG TYPIST No experience necessary. Interest- > Ing work. Deet with public. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 1080 W. Huron__________ 334-4971 APPLICATIONS NOW BEING TAK-en tor cashier and concession help. Apply Blue Sky Drive ire Theater. 2150 Opdyke Ro, Apply efter 1 p.m. A HAPPY NEW YEAR Will b* yours once you find out how much fun It Is to en|oy a fine income with Avon Products. Full or part time openings now. Call FE 4-0438/ or write PO Box 91, Drayton Plains._______ BABY SITTER TO LIVE IN. Private room and wagas. Call aft. 5 p.m. or all day Sun. FE 8-9427. BABY-SITTER NEEDED IMMEDI-ataly, hours 10 a.m.-6 p.m., $15 a weak. Call after 6 p.m., FE 5-0992.__________________ BABY SITTER; WATERFORD AREA — part time. FE 8-4851._ BOOKKEEPER, SHARP GAL, NEED a change of pace? Delightful opportunity 8325. Cell Marge Parker, 334-2471, Snelllng and Snelllng. BARMAID AND WAITRESSES, night shift, exp. preferred but not necessary, over 21. Apply tn person, 6-9 p.m. Airway’Lounge, 4825 Highland Rd.______________ BEAUTICIANS, SHAMPOOISTS, full or part tlma, high guarantee, plus commission, call Joll of Birmingham. 647-6566. BOOKKEEPER ” 3 days per ■ week. Experience through trial balance and financial statements. Camp Oaklang Inc OA 8-2561, 9 a.m. to 5 P.m. BEAUTICIAN, EXPERIENCED, 870 week guarantee. 626-1033._ CASHIER Woman with restaurant experience. Day shift. Apply at 'Big Boy Restaurant, Telegraph and Huron. CAFETERIA FLOOR GIRLS^ DINING ROOM WAITRESSES MORNING CLEANER ' Meals and uniforms furnished. Paid Vacations and insurance. Apply Greenfields Restaurant. 725 South Hunter. Birmingham, ______: CONFIDENTIAL SECRETARY, Needed for board of education office. For Western Oakland County School District. Call 887-4111. Waitresses Ted's restaurant has openings tor* curb waitresses on both day Tied night shifts. Free Blue Cross sndx Ilfs insurance, uniforms and meal* furnished. Top wags* and tips. Vacations and paid holidays. Apply In person only. TED'S BLOOMFIELD HILLS Dinirjg Room ■Waitresses Do you entoy meeting people end working with children? Ws will train you as a waitress to work In the friendly atmosphere of our dining room. Day and night shifts. Free Blue Cross add life Insurance. Vacations and paid holidays. Top wages end tips. Apply In person only. TED'S Woodward at Square Lake Rd. ^DISHWASHER* FULL TIME EVE-nlng work. Roccos* 5171 Dixie Hwy. Drayton Plains* Apply evenings. DRUG CLERK — GOOD PAY — Lake Center Drug* 4387 Orchard Lake Rd. Pontiac._. ‘ ELDERLY WOMAN TO BAfcY SIT for 2 young children* Days* Will furnish transportation. FE 4-4148. EXPERIENCED W A J T R E S S — grill cooking, afternoons, Call OR9 3-9919.____________________ FOUNTAIN SALES SORRY, NO STUDENTS Variety of hours available. No experience nec. Uniforms furnished Employee discount 250 N. Woodward near Hamilton 6596 Telegraph at Maple , Bloomfield Shopping Center FRED SANDERS An equal opportunity employer GENERAL CLEANING, TUESDAY and Frl.< own transp. Rets. 626-9934 GENERAL OFFICE, MUST Bj good1 at figures / and good typist, over 25, telephone experience helpful, good salary, pleasant working conditions, Pontiac Airport, call OR 4-0441 between 8 and 4. GIRLS 18 OR OVER", APPLY BIFFS Grill 575 S, Hunter Blvd. Blr- mlngham.__________________ HELP WANTED: WOMEN OVER 18 for nights only. Apply In person. Champs (Chips) Drlve-ln. 5815 Dlx-1e Hwy. HAPPY NEW YEAR MANPOWER OF PONTIAC Housekeeper, cook, for 2 adults, live In, call 642-6154 before ’ 5 p.m., 644-1591 evenings. HOUSEKEPPER FOR PRO-fesslonal couple with 2 school age children. 5 days a wk., drive own car or live in. Hrs. 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Top wage*. 626-5790._ IF You can work 6 to 9 P.M. — 3 eves, a wk. — wish to earn 889 to 8120 wkly. — heva us* or ear — Call bt- ■ fore 12 (toon 642-7363 — 92- _____YEAR-OLD CO. , IF YOU HAVE BEEN LOOKING for a career with an outstanding Company 8390; Call Cathy Dla-. mond, 334-2471, Snalllng a n d Snell-Ing. KITCHEN HELP, FULL TIME EVE-nlng work. Roccos, 5171 Olxla Hwy. Drayton Plains. Apply tvanlngs, KEY PUNCH OPERATOR / Pontiac General Hospital has an/ immediate opening for a key/ punch operator, minimum starting salary, 8385.70 per mo. 40 hr. wk. Exc. fringe benefits. Apply personnel department, Samtnole at /W. Huron.________________ LEGAL SECRETARY-MUST/ Be neat* mature* personable end with good skills, FE 4-9501. / LAUNDRY help; EXPERIENCE not necessary- Pontiac Laundry. 540 S. Telegraph. NIGHT SHIFT WAITRESS, OVER . 21, no Sundays or holidays. FE 4-5760. NURSES/ RN'l - 86219.2047945JO. LPN'a — 84638.40-85928.00 Positions available on all toura of duty. Wa also have openings In our new Rehabilitation Unit. Tima and one/half tor overtime plus shift differential based -on 10 per cent of'hourly rata. Excellent new fringe benefits program. Contact St. Joseph's Mercy Hospital — /900 Woodward Ave., Pontiac. FE/8-9111. X238. Equal Opportunity Employer , NEED/ EXTRA CASH If you nave 15 flexible hours weekly (??) and need 835 to 850 end would llko' to service your area as/ a FULLERETTE dealer, please contact me. Mr. Bryan at OR 3-8565. NEED REAL SHARP GIRL THAT can tend bar and manage night shift,/Must be reliable with ref. Pay /Is very good. Sea Ralph for Interview. Chalet Inn, 79 N. Saginaw, Pontiac. ; NURSES Registered and licensed. Full and part time. For part time, you tall us what hours and days you can work and we will tit you In. For (hose who have bean away from nursing this Is a wonderful op-/portunTty. Contact Seminole .Hills / Nursing Home, 338-7152, Ext. 60 / for more information. / COMPETITIVE SALARY PRIVATE ROOM, BATH, WAGES; Take over - for working mother. Fit Into congenial, busy family, permanent. 647-1106. CLERK TYPIST We have’ an opening In our Birmingham offics for a mature worker. (Female or mala)/ who can type 54 w.P.M. end with figure aptitude No- recent office exp. necessary. Prefer Oakland County Resident. Call FE 2-0153. Aft. 9 a.m. MICHIGAN MUTUAL LIABILITY _______INSURANCE CO- CARE OF 1 CHILD. 6 DAYS, 6 TO 2. Own car. Your home or mine. 51W S. Francis._____________ COOK AND WAITRESS, SUPER Chief. FE 2-6651. COOK NIGHTS. SOME EXPERI-ence Oobskl's Union Lake EM _3;9112. ______ ■ _______ COUNTER GIRL, NO EXPERIENCE necessary. Apply One Hour Mar-tlnizing, Miracle Mile, apply between 8 and 5. COUNTER GIRL AND INSPECTOR, experienced preferred, will train, top wages, full time. Douglas Cleaners. 534 S. Woodward, Blr-m Ingham. , CURB GIRLS No experience necessary, will Wain — FuU time, pay or evening shift* — Paid hospitalization, Jnsurbnce, vacation anr Pension plan. Apply Ellas Bros; Big Boy, 20 S. Tala-graph at Huron/ DENTAL RECEPTIONIST -part Hitto, .soma typing, required. Please send resume to Pontiac ' . Press. Box No. 30. DENT*L ASSISTANT. PART tlME now. toll later. West Pontiac Or-thodkmtlcs office. Medical or dental exparlence. Pontiac Press Bo* 41. DRYCLEANINGJNSPECTOR Experienced only, must bt Obis to sow. Elk Cloanors 220 S. Tola-6 . staph Rd. ROUTE WORK Transportation furnished, salary and commission, Apply 117 N. Casa Thurs. 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. RN's—53.75 PER HOUR_ LPN'S—S2.85 PER HOUR NURSES AIDES—HOUSEKEEPERS FULL OR PART TIME .J# Bonus — 2 weeks all expense paid vacation In Florida. Call EM 3-4131. RECEPTIONIST^ Part tlma 1:30-S:30 Must be excellent typtst, tome bookkeeping preferred. Lynn OptL cal, 138 N. Saginaw.__________ RECEPTIONIST-SECRETARY FOR dentist office, mature, experienced preferred but not required, trensp. necessary. Wlrto In own handwriting qualifications to Dental Office, 2251 S. Telegraph, Pontlec.. REGISTERED N U R S E NEEDED "*tor full time, 3 to 11 shift. P.M. and weekend differentials. Con-tact Mrs. Indlsh at 651-9381. STENOGRAPHER. SKILLED. THii Is a lob for career minded girls. Liberal' benefits. 8350. Call Angle Rook, 334-2471, Snelllng and Snall-ing. «____________________________ TYPIST For'our Drayton Plains office. Interesting position tor a good typist jwho enjoys varlety.*Prevloui offlco experience necessary. Must be mature enough to wock without con-_ tinual supervision. Shorthand helpful, Blue Cross and complete company benefits. Good wages with regular wage reviews. Phone 674-0451 tor appointment. TYPIST - MUST BE HIGH SCHOOL graduate. 6129 Highland Rd., Pon- llac._________ ’ WANTED: WAITRESS FOR SNACK 4 bar work. Apply In person* 300 Bowl 100 S. Casa Lake Rd. WAITRESSES “ Start the new year with a new job. Howard ..Johnsons* has Immediate openings on both day and evening shifts. . 8, WE offer: t. Complete training program, 2. Above average earnings.' 3. Paid vacations, health, and Ufa insurance, .... . 4. Mails end uniforms furnished. • 5. Pleasant working conditions With fine clientele. Apply In person only. . s HOWARD JOHNMMS » Telegraph at Maple Rag ■■ v BIRMINGHAM , , ’ Waitress, for night imipt, ; top salary,*good tips. Apply In person only. Blue Star Driva-U11 ner ot Pontiac and Opdyfce Rdt. WAITRESS '/ HOURS, />lt PJIL weekday*. MS tom, M MX., Only experienced OW wanting steady work need apply. IW, ■ have Own transportation and be a or oktor. Asgty to Barms. The Cradwr Barrel, Unlen Lake Rd. Just I. of Commerce Rd. .. #• D—8 THE PONTIAC FRESS MONDAY, JANUARY 2, 1967 HaW m—«- -» «-—»- u vVIWIV WAITRESS. FULL TIME, APPLY In penbn. Town end Country Inn, my S. Telegraph. WAITRESS. NIGHT SHIFT. Dobskl's Union Lake„EM 3-9112. WAITRESS WANTED DAYS, NO Sundays or holidays. Apply Pete's Lund). 195 Orchard Lake. Sabs Hslp, Mob-Female 8-A Wanted Household Hoods 29 Management Opportunity Management training—melor com peny—■ World wide reputation. Baste salary, bonus, fringes. Local openings. Send personal education and work background to Pontiac PressL Box 23. WAITRESSES, TOP WAGES, EXC tips, choice of shifts, fringe bene-fits. Apply between 11 a.m. and > 6 p.m. Steak and Eggs, Waterford. WAITRESSES Full time,’part time and weekends. ' Excellent benefits, paid meals, hospitalisation, pension plan and paid vacation. Apply In person Elias Bros. Big Boy Telegraph at Huron Dixie Hwy. .at Silver Lake Rd. WAITRESS, JOE'S CONEY IS land, 1651 S. Telegraph—338-8020. WAITRESSES, DAY HELP," FULL and part time openings. Apply in person The Rotunda Country Inn 3230 Pine Lk. Rd„ Orchard Lk, WOMAN TO CLEAN INSIDE OF cars for reconditioning Shop. 350 per week. 338-3513. WOMAN, 24-35. OFFICE WORK, NO experience necessary. 335-0322, be-twten 12-5. » Woman to baby sit, i child ’ 3 P.m. to midnight, 5 days. Must have own transp. In Rochester. 651 \ YOUNG WOMEN No experience necessary, no typing required. Will employ young women in personnel control In manage-ment depr\ Must be able^to start yw>rk Immediately. For appointment 9:30 a.m to 1:30 p.m. X CALL 332-9137 YOUNG WOMAN 18-26 to assist me In myNjusIness. Must, be neat appearing ahd high, school graduate. No typinjK required. Salary $112.50 per week Call Mr. Johnson 338-0359# 9 a.m> 2 p.m. Klip Wanted M. or F. BANK TELLERS, EXPERIENCED, full time. Immediate openings. Excellent opportunity with one of Michigan's fastest growing banks. Apply in parson, Blrmlngham-B loom field Bank, 1040 E. Maple Rd., Birmingham. Mr. Joseph H Barnler. BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED RH Positive 87.50 RH Neg. with positive lectors $10 A. B. & AB neg. 312 O Neg. 314 DETROIT BLOOD 5ERVICE In Pontiac * FE 49947 1342 Wide Track* Or., W. Mon. thru Frl., 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Wad. 1 p.m.-7 p.m. — — CHIEF ACCOUNTANT Needed for Western Oakland County School' District. College graduate with accounting experience pre-ferred. Salary Open, Call 187-4118. LIMOUSINE DRIVERS WANTED Good pay. Call FE 2-9148, Route talesmen I PIECE OR HOUSEFUL) PIANOS, M. C. Llppard. FE S-79». CASH FOR FURNITURE AND Appliances, 1 Piece or houseful. Poor-son's, FE 4-7881. Servlet our regularly trading customers with a variety of 300 staple grocery products and over 4,00( general (merchandise catalog Items you Can earhX 2,000 Guaranteed salary plus attractive profit snaring bonus plan based on performance. Qualifications: Mar. rled, 23- 5, good work record. Com-plate PAID TRAINING PROGRAM , DETROIT 537-5663 Work W anted Male small and rei 682-5137, R|PENTER, LARGE OR ceiling tile, paneling creation room a specialty, li TS, REC. ROOMS FIN Ished, Rpas. 673-1375. MON COMPANY ight hauling, clean-ups, re-, and painting. Reasonable Work Wonted Female 12 MATURE WOMAN WANTS PART time baby-sitting. Needs transpor tation. F £,3*7377. WASHING AND IRONINGS. PICK up and (deliver. 335-6414. » Building Service-Supplies 13 CUSTOM BUILDING ANOERSON-GILFORD, INC, Builders end Designers FE 8-8116 Business Service IS SNOW PLOWING Fast Service, \UL 2-2625 or Ml 4-8402 Credit Advisors 16-A DEBT AID, INC., 718 RIKEB BLDG. FE/2-0181. See announcements Convalescent-Nursing" 21 PRIVATE ROOM FOR ELDERLY lady. Special diets. Priced reenable. 332-3222, Moving and Trucking - 22 SNYDER BROTHERS Moving pnd storage, hourly or flat rates. Plano-expertSv F E 4-4949 'ainting and Decorating 23 ,-1 QUALITY painting, reason- eblf. 628-1670. - __________ !A LADY INTERIOR DECORATOR Papering. FE 8-6214 MAN AND WIFE TO CLEAN RES-taurant, hours, 12-mldnlgM to 6:3( a.m. Apply at Ellas Brothers Bi| Boy, Telegraph and Huron. WANTED COUPLE OR LADY live, In, Lake Orion area, to 2 children off to schoolJn exchai,*., for rent, 1 child welcome, / no drinkers. Reply Pontiac Press Box No. 42. . r PAINTING AND PAPERING, You're next. Orvel Gldcumb, 673 .0496. ____________Sa QUALITY WORK ASSURED. PAINT-Ing; papering, * wall washing. 673-2372. WANTED AT ONCE - DEALER to supply consumers .with /Raw-lelgh sjfOducts IN DIST. IN/PON- Transportation 25 TIAC. Experience unnecessary. Write Rawtolgh, Dept. MCA/69040. F reaport. III. or see or write Gerald Rose, 646 Fourth, Pontiac, Mich. 48053. CAR AND FUEL FURNISHED FOR adult to drive car to Florida about . Jan. 12. 682-0434. Subs Help, Mnb-Femgle 8-A ^areeThTreaTestate WANT DAILY RIDE FROM WIL-liams Lake-Hatchery Rds. area to downtown Pontiac. Working hrs. 8 to 5. 673-8716. Insurance 26 Instruction Class now forming tor a class In real estate. Opening to rseveral salespeople both male and female who aro Interested In making money. Bonus plan and many advantages In one of the fa'stost growing offices. Both existing and new homes, Call FE 1-7161 ask for Jack Ralph. - SNOWMOBILES - Protect that big Investment with an all risk policy. Approximately 325 per year. Call tor datalls. S. K. JOHNSON, AGENCY • FE 4-2533 BATEMAN REALTY Want Ads Pay Off Fast hear our PRICE BEFOREYOU take so little tor your furniture or appliances and what have you. We'll auction It or buy It. B & b Auction 8089 Dixie OR 3-2717 Wanted Miscellaneous 30 COPPER, 35c AND UP; BRASS; radiators;, starters and generators, 75c »a. C. Dlxson, OR >5849. OFFICE FILES, DESKS, JWA-chlnes, drafting equipment, etc OR 3-9767. WANTED, ANTIQUES AND QUAL-Hy furniture. Cali Holly 637-5193. M. H. Ballow. WE PICK UP JUNK CAR6 AND wrecker service, clean garages and basement. Day or night service, 363-7278. Wonted to Rem 32 CHRISTIAN EXECUTIVE Needs 3 bedroom attractive home. In Union Lake, West Bloomfield or Welled Lake area. Good refec, ences. Available. 887-4553 or 863-7000. RENTED sHOUSE SOLD, DESPER-ately need 2-bed room house by January 15. Can give reference. 852-1161. WE" HAVE QUALIFIED TENANTS with verified employment, credit checks end security deposits tor rental in the Pontiac area — Waterford and Drayton Plains ares. Sislock & Kent, Inc. 1309 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. 338-9294 338-9295 Shore Living Quarters 33 ELDERLY LADY WANTED TO share 3 bedroom mobile home with woman. 338-2956 after 9 p.m. Wanted Real Istate 36 1 TO 50 HOMES, LOTS, ACREAGE PARCELS, FARMS, BUSINESS„PROPERTIES, AND LAND CONTRACTS WARREN STOUT, Realtor 1450 N. Opdvke Rd. FE 5-8165 Urgently need tor Immediate Salel ----------Pontiac---------- Dally 'til 8 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE Winted Real Estate CARNIVAL ALL CASH 10 MINUTES HAVE CASH FOR BUYER WHO NEEDS A 3-BEDROOM HOME IN PONTIAC Le-BARON SCHOOL DISTRICT, ■ IF AT ALL POSSIBLE. CALL YORK REALTY AT 6744)363. J. C. Hayden Realtor We need listings, equities bought end sold. 363-6604 10735 Highland Rd. (M59) LOTS-WANTED IN PONTIAC Immediate closing. REAL VALUS REALTY, 626-9571 We Need Listings Buyers Galore J. A. TAYLOR AGENCY Reel Estate—Insurance—Building 7732 Highland Rd. (M59) OR 44006 Evenings Call EM >9937 SPOT CASH FOR YOUR EQUITY, VA, FHA OR OTHER. FOR QUICK ACTION CALL NOW. HAGSTROM REALTOR, OR 441358 OR EVENINGS 682-0435. WANT 3-BEDROOM RANCH, 2-CAft garage, basement, large lot In or near Clarkston. Have cash buyer op to tfl.OOO. Call Jim Williams at Ray O'Neil, Realtor 3520 Pontiac Lk. Rd. OR 4-2222 or 623-0708 Apartments, Famished F 37 1 BABY WELCOME. 338-2343. -ROOM EFFICIENCY FOR 1 119 State St. FE 5-2203. AAAN. ROOM KITCHENETTE PRIVATE, north end, small but nice, 332-4376. ROOM AND BATH. 1 ADULT 148 W. Pike Pvt. entrance. In quire Ruth, Apt. 8.________________ LARGE ROOM 825 PER WEEK. 875 Oep. Inquire Hollerbacks Auto Parts, 273 Baldwin Ave. 338-4054, 3-BEDROOM HOME NEEDED IMMEDIATELY, CASH FOR YOUR EQUITY.. CALL \AGENT AT: 674-1698. CAI L OR 4-0363 _________ For the best deal of your property. An expanding company needs property In Drayton Plains, Wa’ tertord enik surrounding areas Prompt no obligation appraisals We buy outright, no fees, no waiting. For fast action be sure to call: NICE ROOMS, CLOSE IN, NO drinkers. ,338-4272. 2 ROOMS AND BATH, COUPLE OR 2 ROOM EFFICIENCY APART-ment and small house near Pon tlac Motors. Adults only. FE —4-4625.—:------------ 2 ROOM BACHELOR APARTMENT, dep. and ret., required, elderly gentleman only. OR 4-2462 from 3 to 7. ' 3 ROOMS AND BATH, S100 DE posit, 830 week. FE 5-7932._______________ YORK WE-BUY li--------- WE TRADE OR 4-0363 OR 4-03& 4773 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plains CASH 3 ROOMS, UTILITIES, FURNISHED Vylclnlty airport, adults only 822.50 week. 682-3386. ____ 48 HOURS LAND CONTRACTS—HOMES WRIGHT 382 Oakland Ave. F 2-9141 ■ CASH Any Area CASH Any Condition CASH Any Price Small Investor Is desperate for property. Will pay 8150 higher than any one else tor your property or land contract. Even it you are behind in your payments. Mr. Davis. 647-7298 or after 6 P.M. 626-4064. CLARENCE C. RIDGEWAY REALTOR 228 W. WALTON 338-4086 Multiple Listing Service * /"H*F*«*f>- J Aluminum Bldg. Items ALUMINUM SIDING INSTALLED by "Superior" — your authorized Kaiser dealer. FE 4*3177. Architectural. Drawing ANY KIND OF DESIGN AND . drafting work. 363-6508. Auto Repair JIM AND RUSS Auto Repair Automatic Transmission Specialist Any 6-cyl. angina .. 8150 8-cyl. rebuilt ... 8289 Jim and Russ Auto Repair 2528 Elisabeth Lake Rd. 3344)184 Brick & Block Service' BRICK, BLOCK, STONE, CEMENT work, fireplaces specialty. 335-4470. Building Modernization 2-CAR GARAGES, 20‘X20', 8875. WE are local builders and build any size. Cement work. Free estimates. DaHu.a.ilft r. r\n n mn Pedy-Bullt Garbge Co. OR 3-5619. ADDITIONS—REMODELING ANDERSON-GILFORD, INC. Builders and Designers FE 8-8116 COMPLETE MODERNIZATION, AD-ditions, ate. Earl Kline, Bldr. OR 3-1926 Days, OR 3-3182 Eves. COMPLETE REMODELING Servlet Quellty work since 1945 Now Is the best time to plan or remodel—prices ere lowestl Additions—recreation rooms ettte rooms—aluminum storm windows—siding and trim. 86 N. Saginaw G & M FE 2-1211 Free-estimates Terms bo YOURSELF A FAVOR- GET our estimate, on any home improvement at Big Bear Construction. Winter prices now In effect FE 3*7833. Carpentry CARPENTRY/ REC ROOMS, KITCH ens, tree estimates. Phil Kile, 852-..1337. - --- CARPENTRY, NEW AND REPAIR Free estimates. 335-9981. INTERIOR F 1 N 1 S H, KITCHENS paneling, 48 years experience -- FE MSS. MASTER CRAFTSMAN. BEAUTI nil carpentry. Rec rooms, cabinets, custom framing, finishing. Price work can't be beat. 338-9430. Cement Work ALL TYPES OF CEMENT WORK, block Work. OR 4-3267. CEMENT FLOORS FOR PARTICU Cement and Block Work Guinn’s Construction Co. FE 4-7677 Eves. FE 54122 cement Work, all kinds, spe del winter price, OR 3-4172. »<° seduce MtEcntr Dressmaking, Tailoring ALTERATIONS ^LL TYPES, KNIT dresses, leather coats OR 3-7193. Rental Equipment BROWNIES HARDWARE FLOOR SANDERS - POLIShERS WALLPAPER STEAMERS RUG CLEANER - POWER SAWS 952 Joslyn Open Sun. FE 4-6105 Dry Wall Service DRY WALL SPECIALIST, HANG, tape, finish. Praa estimates. 627-3238. Roofer A-1 NEW, REROOF - REPAIRS -Call Jack. Save the lack. 338-6115. OR 3-9590. Eavestroughing " • AAA ALUMINUM GUTTERS MBS GUTTER CO. COMPLETE eavestroughing service, free estimates. 673-6866. HOT TAR ROOFING-SHINGLING, R. Price. FE 4-1024. SPECIALIZE IN HOT TAR ROOF-Ing. L. J. Price. FE 2-1036. Fencing PONTIAC FENCE CO. 5932 Dixie Hwy. OR 2-6595 Snow Plowing A-1 SNOW PLOWING 673-6866 DRIVEWAYS PLOWED. CALL 334-6941 after 5. Floor Sanding CARL L. BILLS SR., NEW AND old floor sending. FE 2-5789, Tree Trimming Service B8.L TREE TRIMMING, REMOVAL. Free estimate. FE 5-4449, 674-3510. R.G. SNYDER, FLOOR LAYING sanding and finishing. FE 5-0592. “DALBY & SONS" Stumf), trees, snow-removal. FE 5-3005 — FIREPLACE WOOD JOHN TAYLOR, FLOOR LAYING. Sanding and finishing. 332-6975. Floor Tiling Lakes Tree Co., Trimming CUSTOM FLOOR COVERING. LL noleum, formica, tile. 741 N. Perry. FE,2-4090. Stump and Tree Removals Fireplace Wood — Plantings 673-2138 625-3800 Hooting Service TREE TRIMMING AND REMOVAL Reasonable. 334-0066. FURNACE REPAIR Day or night, all makes, space heaters, mobile homes. , Wolters Heating. 682-7222. Trucking HAULING AND RUBBISH. .NAME your price. Any time. FE 8-0095. LIGHT MOVING, TRASH HAULED reasonable. FE 4-1353. Lumber LIGHT HAULING, BASEMENTS, garages cleaned. 674-1242. FE 5-3804 TALBOTT LUMBER Glass service, wood or aluminum. Building and Hardware supplies. 1025 Oakland FE 4-4595 UGHT AND HEAVY TRUCKING, rubbish, fill dirt, grading and grav-■ el and front-end loading. FE 2-0603. Moving and Storage Truck Rental AA MOVING CO. — 852-3999 Hourly or fjat rates—piano experts Trucks to Rent W-Ton Pickups 114-Ton Stake TRUCKS — TRACTORS ~ And equipment SMITH MOVING CO. FEA4864 Painting and Decorating A-l INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR - painting, free estimates, work guaranteed. Reasonable rates. 482-0620. Pontiac Farm anu Industrial Tractor’ Co. 825 S. WOODWARD FE 4-0461 FE 4-1441 Open Delly Including Sunday A-1 PAINTING AND PAPER HANGING THOMPSON . FE 4-8364 . Wafer Softeners A-1 QUALITY PAINTING. REASON-able. 628-1670. SALES AND RENTALS Cutligan Water Condt. 334-9944 Piano Tuning Well Cleaners PtANCU TUNING AND REPAIRING Oscar Schmidt FE 2-5217 BLOOMFIELD WALL CLEANERS. Walls cleaned. Reas. Satisfaction guaranteed. Insured. FE 2-1631. Plastering Service A-1 PLASTERING New and Repair. FE 8-2708 Wedding Invitations WEDDING INVITATIONS 12-hour service — UL 2-3234 PLASTERING. FREE ESTIMATES D. Meyers, 363-9595. Restaurants Well Drilling BIG BOY DRIVE-IN, DIXIE At Sllvy Lake—Telegraph at Huron. FORESTER WELL DRILLING, Expert repairing, 2* to 16". 887-5634. of ‘ ■ -3 ROOMS, PRIVATE BATH. Men orily. FE 5-5383. 3 ROOMS AND BATH. CLOSE IN Suitable tor working couple. No smokers or drinkers. No children or pets. 330 per wk. 850 dep. 334-2.769. 3 ROOMS AND BATH. BABY WEL-come. 194 (jplng St., corner Whit-temore. 3 ROOMS. PRIVATE BATH AND entrance. Bachelor only. No smoking or drinking. All ’utilities tur-nlshed. 334-2701. 3 ROOMS AND'BATH, CHILD WEL-comp, 830 per week, 875 dep. In quire at 273 Baldwin Ave. Call 338-4054, 3 ROOMSAND BATH, 530 WEEK, ist), 850 deposit, FE 5-7763. 4 ROOMS, UPPER, UTILITIES, DE posIt-FE S " AND B 75CLA ROOMS AND 'BATH, ADULTS only, no pets, 83750 per week. 5100 dep. Ihqulre at Hollerbacks Auto Parts, 273 Baldwin Aye. APARTMENT, 8140 PER MONTH, — ■ ...... jy\! >50 deposit. Adults only. FE 4-0081 BASEMENT APARTMENT FE -84)547 \ ____________rc o-ujg/____\______ EFFICIENCY, AIR CONDITIONING, carpeted, disposal, Westlnghouse, appliances, swimming pool, Walled Lake - 624*2820. ELIZABETH LAKE FRONT, NICE’ ..........- ‘ “i, pk ly furnished, 3 rooms, bath, private entrance, $50 dep. $140 Irk eludes garage. Couples'* only, ref 683*2568, 8 a.m.*5 p.m._______________ KITCHEN, LIVING ROOM, BATH 1 adult. No children, or pets 363*6761. LOWER 4 ROOMS AND BATH. NO pets. 161 N. Johnson. MODERN EFFICIENCY APART-ments, pd. utilities. Adults 625-2546.. „ JBS VACANCIES COMING. UP SOON, 1 and. 2 bedroom apartments. Security dep. required. $160 to $185 mo. Call FE 8-2221. Apartments, Unfurnished 38 BEDROOM APARTMENT. HEAT and garage furnished. $100 a mo. $50 security dep. FE 4-3864. AND 2 BEDROOM LUXURY apartments. Security dep. required $125 to $160. Call for appointment. FE 8-2221. _______________ AND 2 BEDROOM NEW, NEAR Mall. Immediate occupancy. Air and sound conditioned, disposal, fully carpeted, stove, refrigerator. Adults, no pets. $135*$160 per mo. FE 5-8585 or 682*2610. State St. FE 2-3484. ROOMS, BATH, PRIVATE. NEAR downtown. Inquire 2335 Dixie Hwy. prefer quite nondrinking cguple or older gentleman. Close-in, 860, In-eluding Otltttles.11 FE 4-9641. ROOM FOR COUPLE OVER 40 only, $35 week. FE 3-7111. ROOMS, 1 SEPARATED BED-ro6m, no children, no pets. See caretaker 8t 1 Arcadia Ct., next to Mich. Bell. ROOM APARTMENT NEAR GEN-eral Hospital, 1 child, $35 week. 363-6J01. , 4f By Dick Tuner Sab Houses BARGAIN! Cute and cm 5 rooms and bath — Newly StoiM I n 11 d a and ■ Paneled family room__________ Close to Pontiac, Mall -r- 8300 down to qualified buyer. WRIGHT REALTY CO 382 Oakland Ave- FE 2-9141 “I liked the part where they passed the collection plate and you woke up and thought you'were at the office and said, ‘Who’s getting married around here NOW?’ ’’ Apartments, Unfurnished 38 LOWER 3-ROOM. PAID UTILITIES. Stove, refrigerator adults, ref., dep. FE 2-1050. LEASING NEW BERKLEY SQUARE — 1- and 2-bedroom apartments, 8135 and 3160 per mo. Swimming pool and game area. EM 3-6703, Hackett Realty.____________________ lake its OAKLAND MANOR APTS. .3610, W. Walton Blvd. Open 5 to 6 p.m. Monday thru Friday, Open 2 to 4 p.m. Saturday and Sunday? MODERN 5-ROOM TERRACE -Stove, refrigerator, S145. See Mgr. 2403 James K Blvd. FE 2-6807. NEW 3 BEDROOM DUPLEX, Romeo. Call PL 2-2222 for information. NEW 1-BEDROOM ON PONTIAC Lk., 8125, carpet, air,* laundry, EM 3-7376. PREVIEW SHOWING BEAUTIFUL NEW CORAL RIDGE APARTMENTS Rochester, Michigan TURN WEST FROM MAIN ST. AND DRIVE 2 BLOCKS TO WILCOX. ALL INCLUDED IN LOW MONTHLY RENTAL; 1- AND 2-BEDROOM COMPLETELY CARPETED CUSTOM DRAPES HOTPOINT AIR-CONDITIONING HOTPOINT REFRIGERATOR HOTPOINT OVEN RANGE. * GARBAGE DISPOSAL EATING AREA IN KITCHEN CARPETED HALLWAY LARGE CLOSETS LAUNDRY AND STORAGE SPACE NEAT INCLUDED | SWIMMING POOL PLENTY OF PARKING MASTER TV ANTENNA ' » $125 Open dal|V and Sunday 12 noon-7 pm, 'PHONE 651-0042 ' CORAL RIDGE APARTMENTS 4-H REAL ESTATE CITY - 5-ROOM BUNGALOW, full baselnent, oil heat, near Fisher Body, newly decorated. VACANT. Price, $11,-500, approx., 51,000 down, payment 865 mo. plus taxes and Ins. on, land contract. 5044 Dixie Hwy. OR 4-2296 After 5 p.m. OR 3-0455 OR 3-2391 Turn west from Main St., drive 2 blocks to Wilcox. Rochester, Michigan. \ Real Valua\Realty WEST SIDE - INDIAN VILLAGE One-bedroom apartment, carpeted, air conditioned, built-in Frlg-Idalre appliances. Laundry and' spacious recreation room. Adults only, no pats. Manager FE 2-1688. \ NEW HOME Dishwasher — Garbage disposal— Range m Baseboard heat. Fireplace In Family room. Will accept trade. 8228 FOX BAY DR. White Lake Twp. ROSSI Building Co. 427-4135 T Rent Houses, Furnished 39 • BEDROOM BRICK, ACROSS from GMC Truck and Coach, das heat, air conditioning, 1150 mo. Olus deposit. EM 3-2888. BEDROOM HOME. OVERLOOK-tog lake. $350 per mo. 2-car ga\ rage, 332 2217. "APARTMENT HUNTING? ROOM APARTMENTS WITH THESE ADVANTAGES: Lake Privileges WILL RENT T« THE RIGHT couple — 5 bedrooms, beautifully furnished home, near Community College, lovely stone fireplace, attached garage, large carpeted living room, dining room. Hardwood floors, full walk-out basement. Will five 1 years lease. 8225* per mo. xtra storage space. Ideal for renting extra bedroom, or for convalescent. Zoned multiple dwelling. CALL EM 3-8703 ASK FOR BILL HACKETT — Hackett Realty. Rant Houses, Unfurnished 40 Alley Ski Resort minutes away •75 only one mile from apartments. 2-BEDROOM HOUSE. BOTTLE GAS turnace, Stove, refrigerator. Shower end bath. 3 small closets. Near Commerce Village. $120. MA 4-1356. from traffic noises. * Stove and refrigerator furnished as well as all utilities except electricity ONE BEDROOM—$135 TWO BEDROOM—8160 lions tor a family. with one child over 12 years of age, Call no* for Interview: 625-4680 or 625-2001. _________: 3- BEDROOM BRICK WITH AT-tached garage, rec. basement, 10 miles west of Pontiac, 8150 mo. 476-2672, , 4 ROOMS, PART OF DOUBLE house, separate furnace, $75 per month. 682-5665. UVtCMVniT ncm mwi.. ■•»*-«• room and a 2-bedroom apartment available. Don't park your car outsldei Carport and electric bill Included In your rent. You furnish phone and we furnish the rest. Be one of the last to move Into this luxurious apartment.) Prices start at 8145. 3365 Watkins Lk. Rd. 673-6927, CLARKSTON, * 1-BEDROOM, STOVE and refrigerator, adults, evenings. 625-1865. _______________ ____EMBASSY APARTMENTS 7 Now Renting All modern and beautifully decorated. .See them now. Luxurious praira, mom wra. fcw two-bedroom Ambassador Suite* $145. * Embassy West 5379 Highland Rd. Waterford 674-0569 ELDERLY COUPLE, 1-BEDROOM, Westlnghouse appliances, air conditionings carpeted, swimming pool a .disposal. WaHed LakR. 624-"2820. ' _____________j FOR LEASE, NEW 1- AND 2-. bedroom opts., in Kee*-go Harbor area, ready fbr immediate occupancy. Air-conditioned, hot water baseboard heat, carpeted, ceramic tile bath and completely soundproof. For information, und applications call 363-7000, Mon. thru Sat., 9 aim. to 5 p.m. LARGE UPPER, PARTLY PUR nlshed, S2S plus heat turn. FE 2-2622. * ■ • - ■ FREE RENTAL SERVICE TO landlords. Art Daniels, GA 1-7880, HU 3-2000, 264-1080. Rent Rooms 42 1 SLEEPING ROOM, 2 ROOMS with cooking, Pontlsc, 852-4959. BUSINESS MAN, SHOWER, WEST side, FE 2-3517. _____________________ CLEAN SLEEPING ROOM. MEN l!bnlV. FE 3-7261. 103 E. Howard. FOR PROFESSIONAL MAN. S63 W >h#ro»r£S*Wt ROOM FOR MEN, QUIET AND clean. Single and double, Christian home, no drinkers, please. 33 Flor: ence near Oakland Ave. ROOM FOR 2 GENTLEMEN, NO drinkers, walking distance to Pon- tlac Plant. FE 5-5544.____ ROOM AND OR BOARD, 13SV8 Oakland Ave. FE 4-18S4 SLEEPING ROOM. 140 STATE private entrance. SAGAMORE MOTEL, SINGLE OC ' cupanCy, 835'per weak. Maid service, TV, telephona. 789 South Woodward. ; ; . ' SLEEPING ROOMS. ADULTS ONLY. " FE 4-3701.___ ■ ' ROMM With Beard 43 BEAUTIFUL. ROOMS. EXCELLENT meals. Lunches packed. f,E 5-7959 NICE AND CL RAN, PRIVATE, shower. Southern cooking, for geo Neman. FE S-1128. Rent Stores 44 BUILDING FOR RENT, 1200 $Q ft. with inside loading facilities. Contact Gerald Etlatt, 673-1277. Aft ' er 5 p.m., 674-3376. . .. Rent Office Spud 47 NEW OFFICE BUILDING FQR rent, $75 par mo, Ideal for tnsur * ance, etc. Chandler - Heating Co. , 5480 Highland Rd., VS mile east of Pontiac Airport. OR 3-5632. RentA Office Space 47 800 SQ. FT. OF AIR CONDITIONED building in the Fontelnbleeu Plaza. Ideal tor office or small business. OR 4-2222. Ray O'Neil, Realtor 3520 Pontiac Lk. Rd. PLANNING AHEAD? -New -office building on M-24 lust north of .1-75, reedy for occupancy soon. Smartly appointed suites for professionals: AI r conditioned, draped and carpeted; ample paved parking. For full details, cell: LADD'S OF PONTIAC Leasing and Management Agents FE 5-9292 FE 5-9291 ThREE BUSINESS OFFICES FOR rent or lease. Startlng at 865 per month. Located, in active business area. Call Jack Ralph at FE 8-7161. Rent Business Property 47-A 16,800 Sq. Ft. Downtown Pontiac 2-story masonry bldg.. 8400 sq. ft. on each floor, freight elevator, .will rent "as Is" or remodel and lease. Ideal tor alt retail or ware house purposes. Contact Bruce An nett personally tor further Information. Annett Inc., Realtors, 28 E. Huron. 338-0466. Sale Houses 49 BEDROOM HOUSE ON LARGE lot. 536 £. Glass Rd., Ortonvllle, or call 627-3894. 2 BEDROOM HOUSE, APPROX. 4 acres o( land, bet. Pontlac-Lake Orion. Inquire 2335 Dixie. In Red Barn Village Subdivision tl 6,400 mortgage. $950 moves In VILLA HOMES Model phone 620-1430 3 LOW DOWN-PAYMENT HOMES 712 Linda Vista — 3 bedrooms, 2-car garage, large, lot, close to school beautiful home with Immediate oc cupancy. 305 S. Jessie 3 large bedrooms living rodm, large dining room, V/i baths, paneled den, new lVS-car garage. This Is an above-average home with Immediate occupancy. All homes shown by app. only. Call 332-1696. 4-Bedroom Ranch 159 GAGE ST. This 3 bedroom ranch style home |ust off Perry St. Is on a quiet street-with other new homes. Living room, dining ell and ball carpeted. Bedrooms have oak floors. Kitchen if good slie with lots of cupboard space. Full basement Is tiled, gas neat, S14.500, with 8430 down on FHA Mortgage. <• KENNETH G. HEMPSTEAD, Realtor FE 4-8284 — 185 Elizabeth Lake Rd. 385 AIRPORT RO. • WATERFORD • Lovely 3-bedroom home with 1VS baths. Full size basement, Attached 2-car garage. \ OPEN DAILY 1-5 • \ OR PHONE TO \ SEE ANY TIME Convenient to schools, St. Perpetue School, super shopping. Possession soon. Only 82000 down payment. C. SCHUETT FOR REAL ESTATE 5280 DIXIE HWY. . FE 3-7088 8800 COMMERCE RD. EM 3-7188 $7950 ON YOUR LOT, 3 bedroom ranch, full basement, alum, siding, plumbing feomplen. You do the finishing, no money dn. 3 BEDROOMS BRAND NEW with full basement, close to Union Lake and College. Only 116,900, terms, We trade. YOUNG-BILT HOMES REALLY MEANS BETTER-BUILT Russell Young 334-3830 S3VS W. Huron A VERY NICE CAPE COO Brand new. Nice area, 81500 down. GILFORD REALTY FE M1K AT MILFORD 10 par cent down buys-this nice 3 bedroom bl-level home with family room, city water and aawar, (•need yard and 21S car agaraga. FRANK SHEPHARD . 651-8503.. CASH FOR EQUITY-LAND CONTRACT ATTENTION GI'S. Wall kept 3 bedroom: home In very nice area, wait to wall carpeting, .full bast ment, gas best, water softener, loads of stoargr space, lain privileges. Full price; 817,500. Ted McCullough $r., Realtor PHONE 682-2211 5143 Cess-Ellzebeth Road -MLS OPEN DAIL» 9-9 BE ON THE WATER * FOR SPRING Sea this neat clean 2 bedroom home In Sylvtn taka with gas family room feemg the lake. Owner must tail now Only 819,000. K, L. TEMPLETON, Realtor 2339 Orchard taka Rd. 682-09(y Beauty Rit^7 Homes7 The Finest Custom • Hornet • 673-171-7 I Brown Realtors and Builders Since 1939 H Just .... atrrac-Waterford, GI'S - NO MONEY DOWN closing costs go with this tlva home located In Wl... Situated on 2'acres nf land. It tores 3 bedrooms, Wrge r~ livlng room, basement, new num siding, and gas heat. $16,900, paneled alum I Les Brown, Realtor 509 Elisabeth Lake Rd. (Across from the Mall) FE 2-4810 or FE 4-3564 BY OWNER, 2-86DROOM, E-beth Lake Estates, 8800 down, contract. 875 per month. FE *" ELIZA-i, land ................- 8-6720 CHEAPER THAN RENT Gat early possession on this 3-bedrodm home with gas farm styled kitchen, panel'-Ing room, .oh yes. It Is . carpeted and fenced. Owner Ing 810,900 with no money -to a qualified Gl. Ask much haste on this one. sharp heat mailed llv newly . ask-down, with WE BUY WE TRADE OR Z0363 OR 4-0363 4713 Dixie Hwy- Drayton Plains Cr^stbrook MODEL OPEN DAILY 1-6 3 bedroom, family room and 2 car garage priced at only 3)8,490, plus lot. Located In new sub with paved streets, curb, gutter, sidewalks and city water. Drive out M59 to Crescent Lake Road torn right to Crestbrook street and modal. Floyd Kent Inc., Realtor 2200 Dixie Hwy. at Telegraph FE 2-0123 or FE 2-1984 LAKE FRONT. BEAUTIFUL 4 BED-rooms, 2 baths, aluminum siding home, on Lake Orion. Sacrifice by owner. 693-1069 for appointment. DON GIROUX REAL ESTATE 4511 Highland Road (M59) 673-7837 EAST SIDE 3 bedroom home, FA heat, basement, garage, good lot. WILL CONSIDER GOOD HOUSE-TRAILER IN TRADE, OR 82,500 DOWN ON LAND CONTRACT. SMITH & WIDEMAN REALTORS 334-4526 first in Value of fine homes Evenings after 7:30 LI 2-7327 . WEST0WN REALTY > FE 8-2763 afternoons RENTING $78 Mo. - Excluding taxes and Insurance $10 Deposit WITH APPLICATION 3-BEDROOM HOME GAS HEAT LARGE DINING AREA WILL ACCEPT A L L APPLICA, TIONS FROMVANY WORKERS, WIDOWS OR DIVORCEES. PEOPLE WITH CREDIT PROB LEMS AND RETIREES ARE OKAY WITH US. OPEN DAILY AND SAT. AND SUN, OR COME TO 290 KENNETT * NEAR BALDWIN REAL VALUE REALTY For Immediate Action Cali FE 5-3676 626-9575 Frushour Contemporary Ranch WITH A LOOK AS NEW AS 1967 It features 3 spacious bedrooms, tastefully carpeted, your own bath off the master bedroom, expertly designed kitchen, family room and living room area, over-sized 2 car garage, mud room with Va bath, basement and numerous other features. Your house as trade-in. IMMEDIATE POSSESSION. JACK FRUSHOUR, Realtor 5730 Williams Lake Rd. MLS 674-2245 FORD WIX0M Houses at SIS,450, FHA S500 down, VA no down. DL0RAH BUILDING CO. 437,1500 G® No down payment, now closing cost, If you hava good credit and a good fob, move In this three bedroom east side home. It's a buy at $9000. Ohl sura it has a garage. Call OR 4-1805 tor appointment. Ask for Ron. HOUSE FOR SALE BY OWNER, 3 bedrooms, 1Vfc baths, large shade trees.’ Full basement. Take over 5V4 per cent Gl mortgage. 812,100. 363-6966. HIITER NORTH SIDE — Excellent 5 rooms end bath, basement, 2-car garage 112,500, terms. QUICK POSSESSION — C% this new 3-bedroom and bath, basement, aluminum siding. Call today. WE BUILD — 3-bedroom ranchers with oak floors, vanity In bafil, toll basements, gas heat. $11,550 on your lot. To tee the model call B. C. HIITER, REALTOR, 3792 Elizabeth Lake Rd. FE 2-0179, att-er 8 p.m. 682-6427 HAROLD R. FRANKS, Realty 86500 FULL PRICE 31,000 down, 865 month on lend contract. 4 rooms and bath, wooden floors, oil heat, needs decorsting. Near Round Lake Rd. Handy location. Fist timo offered. Everett Cummings, Realtor 2583 UNION LAKE ROAD EM 3-3208________ .363-7)81 HIGHLAND AREA 2 bedroom ranch, ftt car ga- rown with fireplace, TOcety latid-scaped TOO1 X ISO* tot. 817,100. CO 3140. HOWELL town & Country, Inc. ; Highland Branch Office « PHONEi Gl 3-685-1585 . HAYDEN New Homes—10 Per Cent Dn. bedroom, tri-level finished family room. Ilk car garage 313,750 plus bedroom ranch • with full basement' 2 car garage, alum, siding. 315,200 plus IrtT- V I • • bedroom brick trMavat, lVa baths, 2 car garage, toads of closet and storage. 817,750 plus tot. TRADES ACCEPTED J. C. HAYDEN , li?*?*. , Realtor 363-6804 10735 Highland Rd. (M-59) 'HACKETT. REALTY - CAN GET you cash for youfP .equity. Free jgtormOtion. EM 9-6703. HAPPY NEW YEAR FROM ALL OF US LAWRENCE W. GAYLORD 2 West Flint Street Lake Orion, Michigan' 692-2821 or. F E 8-9693 Sale Houses 49 HAYDEN NEAR. NORTHERN, 3-bedroom homo — Ideally located for schools and shopping. Ehferteln 1n the paneled family room or on the covered patio, Aluminum siding, 114-car garage. 816,500. Terms. WEST SUBURBAN. First ottering of this 3-bedroom spllMevel home featuring large’ kitchen and spacious family room. $16,900 with 11,700 down. - 7 WE NEED LISTINGS ^ J. c. HAYDEN, REALTOR 361-6604 10735 Highland Rd. (M59) Our Lady of the Lakes Area Very attractive three bedroom brick ranch home. Some of the many features are: 114 ceramic file baths; kitchen has dining area combined with fireplace and built-in, barbecue, dishwasher and built-in oven and range; thermopine glass throughout; carpeting and drapes; two car garage. Owner must sell. Reduced price for quick sole. JOHN K. IRWIN & SONS Realtors 313 West Huron—Since 1925 Buying or Selling Call FE 5-9446 Evening call FE 5-4846 KENT Established In 1916 COZY 3 BEDROOM HOME with carpeted living room' and hallway. Nice kitchen end dinette, tiled bath, paved driveway and street, corner lot. Call for an appointment. NO MONEY DOWN Ranch or tri-level shell on your lot, exterior complete. a. FLATTLEY REALTY. 620 Commerce Rd. Call 363*6981 NORTON ST. Extra large Is way to describe this home. Badly In need of work on the Inside, but has 3 large bedrooms, plenty of room to llvo in. The Siding is new, the- roof is new and there Is a new gas conversion to keep you warm. Full price: til 580, terms available. * Sislock & Kent, Inc. 1309 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. 338-9294 338-9295 NEED .MORE ELBOW ROOM? Try this on for size, a neat 3-bedroom brick and asbestos home, situated on almost a 14 acre, no money down to a qualified Gl, early possession, bo sure to call today. WE BUY WE TRADE OR 4-0363 OR 4-0363 4713 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plains NEAR CRESCENT LAKE 5 rooms, full dining room, auto, gas heat, carpeted living room, !■ car garage. Convenient terms, TOM REAGAN REAL ESTATE 2251 Opdyke_________ 332-0156 NEW FINANCING 10% DOWN Will move you Into your new "BEAUTY-RITE" home at HUNT00N SHORES and WtSTRlDGE OF WATERFORD • 9 Models Visit our models at Huntoon Shores West on, M-59 — Right on Airport Rd, 114 miles, open dally and Sunday 2 to 6 AND Westrldge of Waterford North on Dixie (U.S.10) to Our Lady of Lakes Church, open Sunday 2 to 6. Ray O'Neil, Realtor 3520 Pontiac Lk. Rd. OR 4-2222 RHODES HERE'S A RENT BEATER. Indian Village. Nice 3-bedroom home, full basement, gas heat. Only 817,000, 835Q0 down, balance land contract. LAKE PRONJ HOME. 11 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 2 large living rooms, recreation room, 2 beautiful fire, places, 114 baths. This home Is extra nice throughout. Only 828,-000, ' 88,000 down, balance land contract. HOMESITES. Indlanwood shores No 3. Large well restricted choice homesites, reasonably priced. Only 20 per cent down balance land contract. Select your choice home-site today. ALBERT J. RHODES, BROKER FE 8-2306 25 W. Walton FE 5-6712 Multiple Listing Service RESOLVE NOW To bo own landlord — look , over this sparkling newly decorated ranch on nOrthside of town, bedrooms full basement, comfy oil heat, city comforts. $11,500 — $700 down — $64.76 mo.i plus tax and Ins. Hagstrom Rltr„ — MLS — 4900 W. Huron — OR 4-0350, evenings 682-0435. FOR HOME OF OWN See this 3 bedroom ranch gut Dray, ton way, carpeted living 'room, separated dining area, unusual and no steps to climb, closets galore, fenced yard, paved street. $14,. 950, can take over 5'A Gl foi 83850. No closing cost — 868 mo. Includes all tax and Ins. HAGSTROM, Realtor * MULTIPLE) LISTING SERVICE 4900 W. Huron OR 4-0358 682-0435 Struble NORTH SIDE 8700 to movd Into this 8 room home, 3 bedrooms, toll basement, gas Iwat, IVs car garage on a 60x150’ lot. Full prlca. 811,500. C/ALL ON THIS ONE. MILO‘STRUBLE Realtor , MLS 3881 Highland (M59) FE #25 TUCKER REALTY CO. 93 POntlac State Bank • — 3^4-154} TIMES -TIME-to—buy acreage TIME hYbuy homes . . . TIME to buy farm property . . . TIME to join TIMES, for any of your real estate riMES, most people do. Times Realty "The company that makes you happy, before It makes a profit" 5890 DIXIE HIGHWAY (South of Waterford Hill) OR. 4-0396 REALTOR Open 9-9 Dally TRADE-IN ACCEPTED-^ A brand new 4-bedroom cape cod HI the Clarkston area, full basement with gas heat, owner wlH consider' a / trade, be aura to call today. WE BUY WE TRADE OR 4-0363' p OR MM 4713 Dixit Hwy., Drayton Plains Vacant—Keego Harbor 2-bedroom, living mom, dining room, kitchen, oath, gas - spiacs heater, close to school and this. 3025 Most SI. Full prlcei 16,950, 31,000 down, JACK LOVELAND , I Sato Houses 49 WATKiNS LAKE Privilege! are yours with toils 2 Close to schools end shopping center, numerous fruit trees, Mid ample garden space- Small storage bam In back yard. House hat dm-Inb room and full basemant with gas heat. Low Interest land contract terms. Only 816,900 with modest down payment. ROLFE H. SMITH, Realtor 244 S. Telegraph FE 3-7848___________ Eves. 625-5275 FE 5-8183 BftlCK V Story and one half located on the West side. Full basement, N gas heat, two bedrooms on the first floor. Carpeting. Priced to sell and-vacant. SEMINOLE HILLS Three bedroom home, nice living room with fireplace, femlly dining room, den, half bath down. Gas heat, garage, vacant. Tha price Is right. WATERFORD AREA Two bedrooms all on one floor, lust decorated. Auto heat, tile bath. Vacant with terms. , EAST SUBURBAN Nice two bedroom bungalow, auto heat, just decorated. Ft's vacant, priced to sell with easy terms. Payments less than rant. Eves. Call Mr. Castell FE 2-7273 NICHOUE-HARGER CO. 5314 W. Huron St.___FE 5-8183 STOUTS Best Buys Today GET OUT OF T0WN- Peaceful country atmosphere with this neat 3 bedroom rancher In Orion-Rochester area, spacious living room, 12x12 dining area, kitchen with dishwasher, basemant, gas heat,..fireplace, attached 3 car garage, large, tot Included. Only 814,250 with terms. ZERO- ln on this sharp buy tor G.l. with only dosing costs down, 4 large bedrooms, gas- fired hot water heat, storms and screens, aluminum siding, 5 lots included with lake privileges. Only 814,500 total price.. CANAL FRONf- Wlth access to 3 lakes, neat 5 room rancher with part basement, | oil heat, oak floors, large kitchen and dining area, priced to sell at only 811,750 with terms. Warren Stout Realtor 1450 N. Opdyke Ph. FE 5-1165 Open Eves. Tilt 8 p.m. Multiple Listing Service MILLER AARON BAUGHEY REALTOR NEW BRICK RANCH. 3 bedrooms, spacious living room, family size kitchen with bullt-lns. Large family room with 6' glass door and fireplace. 1 ceramic baths. Full basement, gas heat. Attached 2 car garage and lots more. Only 829,900 with easy terms. MIDDLE BELT AREA, 4 bedroom brick ranch. Beautiful naw carpeting, lovely kitchen - dinette, 194 ceramic bath. Large landscaped and fenced lot. Much more and only 817,900 toll prlca. 3 BEDROOM NORTH SIDE RANCH featuring wall to wall carpet, kitchen end dinette, carport, nice lawn and lots more. Only 811,450 with 881 payments. NORTH SIDE 5 rooms and bath with all city conveniences. Full basement, gas heat, 1 car garage plus lots more. Only $11,950. Ttrms. FE 2-0262 670 W. HURON OPEN 9 to 9 CLARK RENT BEATER. Payments only 889 monthly Including takes, Insurance, and 514 per cent inteewat. Has full basement, gas heat,' Immaculate condition, oak floors. Blacktop street. Off Baldwin. 813,650^ Full price with substantial down payment. 4 FAMILY BUY. Owner will sell on land contract with substantial down payment. Well located, two 2-bedroom and bath apartments and two 1-bedroom and bath apartments, gas heat! laundry’facilities, commercial lot 100x255 feel, lVa car garage. Reasonable rents bring In 8370 monthly, unfurnished except stoves and refrigerators. , Asking price 823,500. SYLVAN LAKE PRIVILEGES - 2 lots, 100x120 with sewer and gas and water soon. Easement' for docking your boat across tha street. 83,000 with $150 down. TO BUY, SELL OR TRADE - Call Us For Quick and Efficient Action. CLARK REAL ESTATE 1362 W. HURON ST. 682-5483 or FE 5-5146 Multiple Listing Service IVAN W OLDER HOME 3-bedroom wfth full basement and 2-car garage, located In good neighborhood near schools and shopping, tootr at this price $10,-750, only $750 down to mov* In, hurry on this one. PONTIAC NORTH SIDE We have two 2-bedroom homes with hardwood floors located near Fisher Body, one for salt with •640 down to move in on FHA, other cash to 4’/a per cent mort-. gage, both In fine shape, call today to see. VACANT W* hava two 3 bedroom homes that can be yours for a total of 8450 down to move In and payments less than rent. Start the •New Year- right, call to see these homes, we have the key; List With SCHRAM and Call the Van FE 5-9471 MLS 1111 Joslyn Ave. REALTOR ANNETT Ottawa Hills Brick Immediate possession on thl 2-bedroom tri-level built I )2W- LR with ledgerock fire place, DR, modern kltche with appliances, ceramic til .... wrp"«ii>vca; wiaiiify 1 bath. Basement, gas hea •HkM mm it/ pie bam & Washer. Afi/ p tered garage. Reduced $21,000, terms. Sylvan Lk. Privileges Unusually attractlva brick 8. cedar , shake . ranch, /$* bad-rooms, 2300 sq, ft. of living ■red. LR with studio type ceiling, fireplace, DR, family room with buiit-ta grill, ultra-modern kitchen, 2 baths. central atr oofril&ttog. Am 5-car garage, beautifully landscaped lot. Terms. Lake Huron Motor Ct. 22 offleielncy units with 220 f «- of water frontage In E T»was, also has 300 ft. imit' highway frontdge wfih ample / l W,,,**W» wt|n win,res room tor expansion. 3 year TOund opts. 6, o 6-room owner* living quarters Included. Ail units' connected to city . water 1^ sower.'. Terms., . ■ WE -■WILL- TRADE' REALTORS 28 E. HURON ST. .Office Closed Monday J"' Sol* Houiai Sals Houses 49 10. ACRES •Waterford 'With older form home, with terrific Improvement potential — Large feeder end horse barn, several other outbuildings, good water supply, fumlthed by submersible , pomp system, a real family layout, only $25,900, moderate contract terms. Call for an appointment. CUTE r YOU CAN AFFORD - This 3-bed . room rancher still under construe tlon. Iq choice Clarkston area. 110 baths. Full basement. Attached 2-car garage. SIS,500, comparet / WE CAN CROW — About bedroom rancher In EllzabettyLake Estates. Like new inside and out. Finished basement with bar. Double garage. <18,000 cash to mort-gage. And enloyable 4-room ranch with 1 Vi-car attached garage, prlvl-leges on Williams Lake, partly fenced, blacktop street, paved drive, full basement, forced air heat, all for only $9,600, see it, we will Work out the financing. REALTY WATERF0I 4540 Dixie Hwy./ 673-1273 Multiple/Listing Service GORGEOUS 5 rooms of living on nearly acre .of land,.close to schools [LES partly, and shopping, full basement, gas i heat, lw-car garage, fenced yard, carpeting drapes Included, a fantastic for only $11,500, terms on contract. • / WHEN YOU SEEK OUR SERVICE YOU ' / "JOIN THE MARCH OF/flMES" 3MMERCIAL — Brick building' In excellent condition, designed for 3 professional offices with 1,000 sq. ft. each. Basement under approx. 1-3 of building. 3 furnaces and air conditioning units, plenty of paved parking area. Many other feetures Price: 78,000, reasonable terms. Times Realty 890 DIXIE/HlGHWAY (South df Waterford Hill) OR 4-0396 REALTOR Open 9-9 Dally KAMPSEN INCOME — »5 rooms down, 4 rooms up. Oak floors throughout, plastered walls, 2 baths, basement, steam heat. Plus 4-room house on back of lot. Also adlacent lot with 2-car garage. Price: $14,900. Only $2,000 down. WATKINS LAKE Be FORGOTTEN . . . end look at this all brick home feetur-Ing three huge * bedrooms, huge 14x30 living- room with fireplace, dining roem, kitchen with breakfast room, Ito ceramic tile baths, full basement with fireplace ln:,„ . family room, 2V4 car attached' ?1 Baldwin Ave. garage, 100x150 lot. Lake privileges on Watkins Lake yvlth sandy beach and boat dock. Trada your old housa In for this 1 one. Priced at $29,500. . NEAR GAYLORD MICHIGAN — 12 unit motel plus llvlflg quarters. 12 units completely furnished. Located on Horseshoe Lake. Gas heat, showers, also good skiing resort. Will sell or trade for house or Income property In Pontiac area. Price: $46,000. Terms. Call for further Information. GILES REALTY CO. FE 5-6175 THIS FINE HOME Can be bought on Gl or FHA terms at $16,500. Featured are three bedrooms, living room, utility room, gas heat, Waterford schools, fenced yard, wafer end sewers . . . The resT we win leave tor you to see. Priced right to tell with easy terms available or tredo your old house In. THIS GORGEOUS THREE-BEDROOM RANCH will simply take your breath as you walk through Its fully carpeted sunken living room, hall and dining area. Two and a half ceramic file baths, will Jet you - bet to work on time with that big family. Easy for mom Is the ground floot laundry room, formica kitchen cabinets tor longer wear AM easy care, walnut paneled family room with Georgia white marble fireplace and built In book cases. Full basement, Insulated windows and screens, 6" fiber glass Insulation will cut down on the already economical fuel bill of the lifetime gas fur- nace, plastered walls and this Includes the oversized two-car attached garage. The 16' concrete drive and rear patio make Ufa a lot easier. Community water and paved streets, make Lake Angelus Lake View Estates the Priced at $33,950 and. this includes all the carpeting and custom draperies. IMMEDIATE POSSESSION. Trade your old MLS 1071 West Huron Streeet After $ p.m. call______ // BUD a 3-BEDR00M HOME WITH FIVE ACRES near Pontiac Airport) cozy clean lW-story frame home only mln-utes from downtown, with one bedroom down, full bath, dining room, automatic heat and hot water, IS' x 24' garage, approximately 300 small evergreen trees. Priced at $19,000.00, look . today. » EQUITY TRADE NEW YEAR'S RESOLUTION I’m going to quit paying rent and start building an equity In a home of my own:- Many people say this every year but few follow through. Let's be one of the ones who do I Wo have many homes available on land contract, Gland FHA that requires a minimum down payment. Presently we have a fine selection — January homes sell fast. Don't be one that misses a good deal by lust a few days, Call the action lino 674-2239 CARE FREE Will your summers be In this 2 bedroom all aluminum ranch style home? Full -basement, attached garage. full ceramic bath, lots of trees In Waterford Township. Full price only $16,950. Land contract available. Call tha action lino 674-2239 McCullough realty 5460 Highland Rd. (MS9) MLS CAPE COD DREAM. Sllvercrest Sub division locates this, neat and clean aluminum sided 2 bedroom bath and half home, Pontiac Northern school district. Pavad streets and available lake privileges are but a few advantages to this strafe glc location. This extremely eye appealing home is situated on very nice corner lot 65x120 overlooking Sliver Lake. Handy kitchen with built-in breakfast nook plus a formal dining area. Oak floors, full basement and garage. Assume existing FHA mortgage with monthly taxes and Insurance, ;. MARSHALL ST. — The'Idea family home. 4 vary pleasant bedrooms plus extra lavatory on second floor In this spacious aluminum sided home. Oak floors, plastered walls, glassed-in front porch. Full basement. 2 tots and 2-car garage with solid blacktop drive. Very easy FHA or Gl terms. A good lob and good credit It all that Is required. HOME OR INCOME Five (5) room fist side terrace, with full basement, gas heat and hot water, close to school and bus. Whether you live In it or rent it, It's a good deal at only $5,950.00 cash, shown by appointment only. ' DORRIS & SON, Realtors 2536 Dixie Hwy. ^ 674*0324 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE NICH0LIE-HUDS0N Associates, Inc. 49 Mt. Clemens St. FE 5-1201, After 6 p.m. FE 2-3370 Val-U-Way BRICK RANCHER Very neat 3-bedroom home with basement and gas heat situated among other well kept homes in Pontiac Knolls, hardwood Ifoors, gas heat, tile bath, plenty of , closets, * aluminum storms, and screens. Only $500 dowrl pips closing cost. Quick possession upon closing. 3-BEDR00M HOME Situated on corner lot, aluminum siding, newly decorated, large utilities, dandy - kitchen with dining ell and loads of cupboards. Attractively priced at $10,750 With low, low down payment. ,2-FAMILY - 13-room home with asbestos siding near St. Freds. Gas heat, basement, separate bath. Let one .apartment make your payment. $11,500 with $600 down. R. J. (DICK) VALUET REALTOR FE 4-3531 Pontiac's FHA Appointed Property Management and . Sales Broker'’* LAZENBY $450 MOVES YOU IN 3 bedroom, large living room nicely carpeted, very nice kitchen with ample cupboards and dining space, also full basement with gas heat. Corner lot with a very nice yard. This very well kept home Is priced at only $13,750 on FHA terjns. QUIET AND SERENE T h bedroom brick rancher MUST BE SEEN to be appreciated, nnly 2.years old, has. a large family room with beautiful fireplace, separate dining space, dishwasher and a lovely kitchen, carpeting and drapes throughout, full basement WTttrhutwater heat, 2 car attached garage and a Targe yard. All this and the price is right too — Call for appointment. ROY LAZENBY, Realtor 4626 W. WALTbN— OR 4-0301 (I Block E. of Dixie Hwy.) KINZLER LAKE FRONT BRICK SpacioOs 6-room ranch with heated ?tass porch and patio. Built iq. 95$. New gas furnace. To Include new carpeting, :boat dock and play- -ramed with big frees! and gentle slope to sand beach. Priced with- "Buzz" BATEMAN No. 9 $450 DOWN FHA T^RMS: 3 bedroom bungalow, new carpeting, full basement and gas heat. Will be repainted (pnd new eavestroughs. Already FHA approved and fust waiting for a npw owner. Convenient city east side location. Make your appoint mfent NOW I No. 99 GOLFER'S SPECIAL SILVER LAKE GOLF COURSE at your back door. You can tee-off before breakfast from this Roman-brick rancher. Family room with sliding-glass doors to outside, patio overlooking the course. Attached garage, carpeting and drapes, and , priced for quick sale at $17,950. Just $3,500 down and NO MORTGAGE COSTS. Better Call NOWI No. 91 HAPPY NEW YEAR! TO YOU In this 6-year-old 3 bedroom with attached garage. North suburban living and Immediate possession; will be vacant January 1st. NO MORTGAGE COSTS: lust take over present 5% per cent mortgage with monthly payments of lust $90 per /month. Bargain priced at',$12,500 with approx. $2300 down plus proratlons. 5U'D LIVE! 11 In this Charm- No. 59 LIVE LIKE LIKE TL___________ ing 4 bedroom brick tri-level Only 1 year old. Beautiful acenle country-view between Rochester and Lake Orion. 2 baths, family room with fireplace, all kIMs of extras and built-ins including new carpeting throughout and oversized 2 car garage. You will love every bit of ft, and Priced at $34,900 end as little as $7,000 down plus closing cq§ts. MODEL HOMES COLONIALS, RANCHERS, AND TR.I-LEVELS plus several new homes for Immediate occupancy. A price to fit every pocket-book and $0 per cent and 90 per cent mortgages available. Shown dally by appointment. YOU MAY TRADE your present home equity. Make your appointment TODAY I NATIONWIDE FIND-A-HOME ANOTHER BATEMAN "NO-CHARGE" SERVICE BATEMAN ----- realtor-mls -r: FE $-7161 OL 1-851$ 377 S. Telegraph Rd. 730 S. Roch, Rd. 3 Lovely—Brand New* Water Front 3- and 4-Bedroom Homes.’ Down cent down plus costs. ON M< mortgage - NEW RANCH HOME All white colonial exterior with attached 22*x22' garage. Over 1,100 $q. It. ■< delightful rooms with gleaming oak floors, kitchen with built-in Oven, range and hood, 1V4 baths and daylight basement for recreation. Gas neat. Low taxes.1 - StilT time , to. chdose your own col-ors. see this one wire — you will want If gn sight i JOHN KINZLER. Realtor 4M Dixie Hwy. ■ 674-2235 Across from Packer's Store Multiple Listing Service « Open 9-8 New 90 per cant Financing To those vdm qualify LOT INCLUDED Quality Homes by Lakeland Estates on Dixie Hwy., idst past Walton; Btvd.-WlHtema Lake Rd. in ter sec tlon. r IS ’ * i. Will Build Your Lot — Or Ours Open Daily 1-7 p.m,. Except tfrMay Rost Jlomes,Jnc. OR 3-8021 VEE 4-0591 Sole Houses 49 iots-Acroayt •RED OF LOOKING? it us -build your house the wav you want it. w* will build a 3-bad-mom, aluminum sided ranch for « low as $11,750. Come In and sign the contract now tor this fantastic winter Special. A $500 deposit will Insure you this saving. Baal the Price Increase. Now Is the time, come In today, f Hi !I — 10 Per cent down. BUY IT — Gl nothing down. BUY IT — FHA 3 per cent down. h. ; VON REALTY - , GEORGE VONDERHARR, Realtor In tha Mall MLS Room 110 682-5802 If busy OR 3-6033 O'NEIL NEW FINANCING 10% DOWN IF YOU'RE saECTIVE You'll love this spacious trl-level, located in Drayton Woods. Slate foyer, beautifully carpeted living room with ftrepkff. formal dining room, modem kitchen with dishwasher, three large bedrooms, ceramic tiled bath and dressing room, extra half bath off rear’ entrance and spacious recreation room for tha • children. Two car plastered garage and 100x165 foot tot. This one. will sell real toon at $25,500 with only 10 par cant down payment. Your present home can be used as down payment. No. 4-42 CLARKSTON SCHOOLS Just one year old and better then new. Aluminum ranch, 3 bedrooms, full basement with gas heat. Real nice country style kitchen with lots of birch cupboards and built-in electric range and oven. Two car attached garage. 100x150 foot corner lot.'Priced tor a fast sale at $19,500 with 10 per cent down or we will take your present home in trad*. No, 441 BRING YOUR WIFE and family, when you look at this real sharp 3 bedroom home, located in Pontiac Watkins ^states. Close to schools and the Mall Large fencad-ln yard. Breezeway to attached garage. Only $14,900. . and E-A-S-Y financing available Act fast on this one because they're sold quickly In this nice neighborhood. i m No. $-30 PONTIAC NORTHERN SCHOOLS Three bedroom ranch, neat as a pin throughout, carpeting and drapes Included^ Two car garage, $12,950. You can assume existing low as 5’/4 per cent mortgage with $2,800 down, $79.00 per month including taxes and insurance. Quick possession. No. 3-45 A REAL BEAUTY Listings like this one are hard to find these days. Excellent for a couple or retiree. Just listed this little aluminum- aided gem near Pontiac Lake. Big shady 1st. Large carpeted living room. Two bedrooms. abasement and garage, also 2 storage sheds. Nearly new furnace, easy on tha heat bill. Only $12,000 bn Land Contract — Why rent? Call now. No. 7-51 NEAR TEL-HUR0N Small but cozy, 3 room bungalow -in Huron Gardens. Would appeal especially to retired couple of eld erly person. Walking distance to all shopping facilities and b u transportation. Price $6,900. No. 3-37 RAY O'NEIL, REALTOR 3520 PONTIAC LAKE ROAD OF 4-2222 MLS OR 3-2028 IRWIN 80 ACRE Farm In Lapeer County has room ranch style home with full basement. Only 13 years old. 30'x-50' barn with basement and loft, tool shed, chicken house and silo 18 stantlons and water cups. Will Include all machinery except tractor. Columbiavllle Schools. Price, $40,000, $12,000 down. WHY RENT? When you can have privacy In this small 3 room home. Foil basement, with auto, oil heat, large lot, 80'x-280'. Priced $7900, $100Q down $70 a mo. NORTH END 2 bedroom bungalow. Carpet living and dining room. Full basement, gas heat. Inclosed porch, 1 car garage. Nice shaded, lot. Close to bus and stores. Priced $10,250 on tend contract. GEORGE IRWIN. REALTOR MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE 298 W. Walton FE 3-7883 Income Property 50 CASH Immediate cash for your Income property, large or small. Call McCullough Realty, ask for Ted Mo Cullough Jr., 674-2239, 5460 High-tend Road. Pontiac. GROSS 8100 A MONTH PROFIT on this 2 story. Income. 6 rooms down, 6 up. Ea. rent at 8100. Lake privileges too. In good Waterford location. <3,000 down on tend contract. . WATERFORD REALTY 4540 Dixie Hwy. 673-1273 MuItlple Listing Service WATERFORD TOWNSHIP 5 acres, approved for 48-unit mul tipte dwelling. $39,500. Terms AL PAULY Lake Property 51 COMMERCE - WOLVERINE LAKES. Private Beaches, fish, swim. Many lots $995, $10 per mo. Btoch Bros. 623-1333, FE 44509. Open Eve. and Sun. KcATINGTON Beautiful lake-front end lake-privilege tots available. Plan to live In this beautiful new town In Orton Township. Models open 3-6 dally, 11-6 Sat. end Sun. HOWARD T. KEATING CO. 22060 W. 13 Mila Rd. Birmingham Ml 6-1234 LAKE FROffr LOT, 100* ON PRI vate Bushman Lake. 625-2565. LAKE FRONT HOMES — NEW AND used — J, l. Dally Co. EM $-7114 , SYLVAN LAKE Lake ‘front, 2 bedrooms, nice sjze living room, modem kitchen, gas heat, large patio for additional room on front of house. Price reduced — only $19,000. Owner Irens ter red, must sell. K. 1. TEMPLETON, Realtar 2339 Orcherd Lake Rd. 602-0900 WALTER'S LAKE PRIVILEGES New 2000 sq. ft split foyer bqtok home — 2V4 baths — targe oak paneled family room — 2 natural fireplaces — gas heat-fabulous kitchen — t acre tot Everything you' ever wanted quality end extras In this 1967 dramatic model home. 625-1086—SYLVAN—334-8222 Northern Property 2-BEDR00M , - Retirement special. New, on good flshlnd lake with 60* lake front, open be semen t, 2 hours from Pom ttee. Only $12,500. Terms \V STATEWIDE- REAL ESTATE 561 S. Lapeer Rd.. Lake Orion 338-0000 lets—Atrtags 54 5-SO s ACRES. WOODEP RIVER frontage, Fowler, EM 3-9531, OR 10-10 ACRES NEAR OXFORD—$650 acre, nice—430-1015. 10 ACRES FOR PRIVACY, pIEA tore; Investment. FE 2-2144. J.. Smith. THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 2, 1967 TIZZY D—9 54 14 VACANT LOTS i Near Longefeltow School. Will trade for tend contract, house or what have you. BREWER REAL ESTATE William B. Mitchell, Sales Mgr. 724 Rlker Bldg. FE 4-5101 Acreage Homesites .10 ACRES. 200- road frontage, 1 mile northwaat of Clerks too. $4,*0e $1,000 down. 2.9 ACRES. US' mad frontage. 116 mile northwest of Clarkston. S3,900, Terms. . , Clarkston Real Estate 5065 S. Mein. MA 5-3021 " LOTS Like lots — wooded lots — golf course lots. We have Iota of afl kinds priced from $3000. Terms available. . Dan Mattingly CALL HI 7 P.M. FE 5-9497 or FE 2-2444 OUR OFFICE IS CLOSED y Dec. 27 OPEN'FQR BUSINESS Jan. 2 C. PANGUS INC., REALTY OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 630 M-1S ORTONVILLE CALL COLLECT NO 7-2015 ROLLING SCENIC LAND 40 acres with to acres of wood' land, located In tha Matamora area. Approximately Va mile off of M-24. Several scenic building sites. $22,500. Reasonable terms. C. A. WEBSTER, REALTOR 692-2291 ' * or 628-2515 WALTERS LAKE Privileges, several scenic large homesites — hills — trees — $1500 Owner. 625-1086 or 334-1222. WE HAVE M A N Y COUNTRY homesites and Smell terms In the following ereas — Clarkston, Or-tonvllle, Holly, Davisburg, and White Lake. Drop In to our office — secure your parcel before the spring tend rush. Underwood Real Estate 625-2615* 8665 Dixie Hwy., Clarkston If no answer, 625-5015 sr 625-3125 Sale farms 56 37V4 ACRES — EXCELLENT 4 BED-room. Dutch colonial with field-stone front, nice kitchen with boilt-Ins, large dining room, carpeted living room with fireplace, 17' master bedroom, 1V4 baths, plus shower In basement, 3 car garage with tool shop. A good value at $38,900. Carrigan Quality Homes. Inc. at CE 3-3165 or MA 9-5573. 628-20131 A. SANDERS, t Rap. H. Wilson, Lapeer Sale Business Property 57 BUSINESS PROPERTY NEAR downtown Rochester, its ft. of frontage, now has older house on lot. City water, sewer end paved street. 119,500 with terms. MILTON WEAVER Inc., Realtor In the Village of Rochester 118 W. University_____________651-8141 IN OXFORD ON MAIN STREET, commercial stare building, 19*x-5(7 with full basement. In real good condition, empty, move right In. Next door.to Gamble Store. Full price $13,900, $3,000 down, balance on tend contract, HUMPHRIES REALTY 83 N. Telegraph Rd. FE 2-9236 Eves. Ml 74371 . ZONED FOR MULTIPLES. 44,000 * square foot site — West Side near Central High — walking dlstanca to General Hospital. Leslie R. Tripp, Realtor FE 5-8161 Business Opportunities PARTY STORE 59 Located In Warren on Van Dyke Excellent location for a hustler. Needs new blood. Present owner is tired. A give away price of lust $2,700 plus stock. Warden Realty PARTRIDGE "IS THE BIRD TO SEE" A HAPPY NEW YEAR It will be for you If you build your future with this Chicken Delight franchise that will do close to $100,000 this year. Excellent location, attractive store and big profits for $27,500 with liberal terms. . A PROSPEROUS 1967 Is yours and tor many years to coma by building your future , with this modern 20-unlt family motel on Michigan Ave. There Is 7 acres tor future expansion or use. A lovely 3 bedrm. home. Heated pool, bar-b-q, patio and playground tor the kids. All tor $45,000 dn. end we tradel I PARTRIDGE REAL ESTATE 1050 W. Huron, FE 4-3581 * OPEN NITELY "HL 9:00 SEND FOR FREE NEW.CATALOG ROCHESTER AREA Grocery and parly store. $100,000 gross, ' beer and wine license, corner 2 main roads. Home and business with an extra apartment rented over store. CLASS C BAR— SDM A profit making factory bar. Many years In this location. Excellent Kone of the best In Oakland . Real estate available If de-Used Conn Organ wet $1800 now $693 FOR SXLE OR LEASE Pontiac Township near 1-75, cement block building 40’x60' with a . large garage doors, office In front, gas L(h*6 • *— —I . evrUlen a n(tfl en Anfk ” heat, ample parking. $200 month# BATEMAN COMMERCIAL DEPARTMENT 377 S. Telegraph Rd. . 338-9641 •After 5 FE 2-3759 SMALL, INVESTORS — 81000 TO 810,000. Highest Interest will be paid by Investment Coro., many benefits tor you. Cell EM 147(6 ask B. N. Sr. Hacked Rlty. SUNOCO STATION FOR LEASE 35,000 GAL. PER MO. PARK 8, CHURCH (M-24) LAKE ORION'S JUSY LOCATION EXCELLENT BACKROOM POTENTIAL Be your own boss, earn what your capable of earning —■ not whet some one else is willing to pay you, Cell Sun Oil Go., WEEK DAYS - Ml 64674 Eves, and Weekends — Mr. James Pascoes — 3384717 Sait La*# Contracts 60 1.T0 50 LAND CONTRACTS See us before you deal. WARREN STOUT, Realtor 1450 N. Opdyke Rd. FE #8165 Open Eves, 'til 8 pm. ACTION On your tend contract, large ,er smell call Mr. Hlltar,) FE 2-0179. Broker, $792 Elizabeth Lake Road. t!4 LAND CONTRACT AVAILABLE ON 91 H Midway Street. $730* discounted In $5450. 616 per cm Interest returned on MS per month.. Excellent buyer with credit retorts la show. R. J. VALUET, Realtor . .FE 4-3431 LAND X O N TRACT BUYERS WANTED. PLEASE CALL FE 84116 FOR INFORMATION. GILFORD REALTY. NEW LAND CONTRACT, SALS priced at $10,500, dep. 01,000 bah duei *9,500 at $95 per mo. including Interest at 7 per cent. Will discount to $8,000. Purchesar hes ex-cellent Credit recorjl. ■ ■ „ J. A. TAYLOR AGENCY .Real Estate—Insurance—BylMk mi Highland Rd. (MJ9) OR Eve*. EM #993? or EM#: By Kate Osaitn Water Softeners OfiAUK* > INtle MM* tu to* BSW6 on. Hi-Fi, TV t Radios 66 ZENITH 21" COLOR,TV in beautiful walnut cabinet a repo, but In exc. working condition May be bed foriunpaid bal. of $351 Easy terms may be arranged. FRETTER'S WAREHOUSE I jjj GUITAR LESSONS, BEGINNING and advanced. Pontiac Music end, Sound, 332-4T63. 150 S. Telegraph 66-A ORGAN, PIANO AND ACCORDION, popular, classical, .673-5071. '5835 Mill it.. Waterford, June Peering. NEARLY NEW.lFULLY AUTOMATIC, Culllgan water softener. Pay balance of 8160. 3354069. For Sola Miscellaneous 67 1-6-H.P. AIRNS SNOW BLOWER, practically new, wjll sacrifice, 852-1692. 9W LINOLEUM RUGS S3.95 EACH Plastic Wall Ilia lc aa. Celling tile — wall paneling, cheap. B8.G Tile. FE 4-9957. 1075 W. Huron 23 INCH MOTOROLA TV, CONSOLE, perfect condition. 850. OR 3-9473, after 5:00. 52 Gallon electric hot wa ter heater, will sell or trade' for a gas. 852-1692, 100,000 BTU GAS FIRED BOILER, new, only 1 left, 819*. G. A Thompson. 7005 M59 W. ALL BRONZE SUMP PUMPS, SOLD, 'repaired, exchanged, ranted. CONE'S 71 W.»Sheffield______ FE 84642 ANCHOR FENCES NO MONEY DOWN FE 5-7471 AUTOMATIC WHIRLPOOL WASHER and dryer, good shape. 840 takes both. 25 S. Genesee. “At midnight tonight, I will have been in love for two hours and 47 minutes!’’ CLEANINGEST CARPET CLEANER you ever used, so easy too. Gat Blue Lustra. Rant electric sham-pooer, 81, Hudson's Hdwt., 41 E Walton. CLASSIC GUITAR 835, 9Vi HOCKEY skates 83, Caravelle Skis with cable binding 815. 674-1322: Wanted Contracti-Mtg. 60-A CASH For your equity or tend contracts. Don't lose that home, smallest possible discounts. Call 682-1820. Ask for Ted McCullough Sr. ARRO REALTY 5143 Cass-Etlzabeth Road Sale Household Goads 65 COAL HEATERS, OIL BURNERS, coal furnace, Taylor. 602 Mt. Clemens. _______■ • AUTOMATIC WASHER, NORGE, 515 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS Urgently needed. See us before you deal. WARREN STOUT, Realtor 1450 N. Opdyke Rd. FE #8165 Open Eves, 'til 8 p.m. BRONZE DR CHROME DINETTE sate, BRAND NEW. Large and small siza (round, drop-leaf, rectangular) tables in 3, 5, and 7 pc. sets. 824.95 up. i PEARSON’S FURNITVRE 210 E. Pike FE' 4-7881 CASH FOR LAND CONTRACTS. H. J. Van Welt. 4540 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-1355. NEED LAND CONTRACTS. SMALL discounts, Eerl Gerrels. MA 4-5400. EMpIre 3-4086._________- OUR OFFICE SPECIALIZES IN tend contract collections. FLOYD KENT, REALTOR 6216 N. Saglnew_________FE #6105 QUICK CASH FOR LAND CON tracts. Clerk Real Estate, FE 3 7888, Res. FE 4-4813, Mr. Clark Money to Loan (Licensed Money Lender) 61 LOANS ■ TO $1,000 To consolidate bills Into one monthly payment. Quick aervlce with courteous oxporloncod counselors. Credit life Ineurance available — Stop In or phono FE #8121. HOME & AUTO LOAN CO. 7 N. Perry St. FE 5-8121 9 to 5 dally* Sit. 9 to 12 LOANS TO $1,000 Usually on first visit. Quick, friendly, helpful. FE 2-9026 Is (he number to coll. OAKLAND LOAN CO. LOANS 825 TO $1,000 COMMUNITY LOAN CO. 30 E. LAWRENCE FE #0421 Ml 6-3648, ELECTRIC LIGHT FIXTURES FOR ell rooms, 1967 designs) pull down, balloons, stars, Bedrooms 81.19, porches, 81.55. Irreguters, samples. Prices only factory can give. Michigan Fluorescent, 393 Orchard Lake, FE 44462.-19. BRAND NEW BARGAINS Gas Ranges (chipped) 887 RCA Whirlpool outo. washer $166. RCA Whirlpool auto, dryer 8146. Electric range 1124, Name brand TV's 8134. Color TV's low-low-low. LITTLE JOE'S BARGAIN HOUSE 1461 Baldwin FE 2-6842 DEEP FREEZE 875, CLOTHES dryer 845, electric stove excellent condition, 825, bar refrigerator .839, Maytag wringer washer 845, washer-dryer set 885 both. V. Harris, FE #2766. , DOUBLE MATTRESS AND BOX springs, refrigerator, chest, misc, Items. 363-7616. FACTORY SECOND LIVING ROOMS end bedrooms, 866 and $99. Used Maytag washers $47. Good refrigerators $48. Gas or electric stoves 815 up. Used furniture of all kinds at bargain prices, easy terms. LITTLE JOE'S TRADE-IN DEPARTMENT. Baldwin at Walton. FE 2-6842. GAS .RANGE HOLIDAY SPECIAL PM 30" deluxe Datrolt Jewel has light, timer, window ovtn ■uto. surface burner! Instant-on oven Coppertone or white. A give-a-way at 5139.95 $2 down, 82 per week. " FRETTER'S WAREHOUSE OUTLET IjO S. Telegraph FE 3-7051 GE AUTOMATIC WASHER AND Bendix electric dryer, $35 each. 693-6617. HOUSEHOLD SPECIAL $20 A MONTH BUYS 3 ROOMS OF FURNITURE - Consists of: 8-plece living room outfit with 2-plect living room suite, 2 step tables, 1 cocktail table, 2 table lamps and (1) 9'xlT rug Included. 7-plece bedroom suite with double dresser, chest, full size bed with Innersprtng mattress and matching Music Lissom 71-A ACCORDION, GUITAR LESSONS. Salas-SarVIca Puteneckl OR #5596 196#1967 TRUCK CAMPERS AND travel trailers, on dloptey — some t will be heated every Saturday and Sporting Goods 74 16 H.P, BOLEN DIABLO $NOW-moblle. Come on out, for a ride. Even's Equipment, 6507 Dixie Hwy. 1966 BOW-J/CLOSE-OUTS Gene's Archery—7)4 M. Huron GUNS. BUY, SELL, TRADE. BURR-Shell, 375 S. Telegraph. MEN'S BRUNSWICK FIGURE SKATES, SIZE 11, WORN ONCE. 625-4044 after 4 p.m. SELL, BUY OR TRADE GUNS Opdyke Hardware FE 8-6666 ' SKI DQO'S GUNS-CAMPERS CRUISE-OUT, INC. 63 Waltonr Dally 94 p.m. FE 8-4402 Ski-Doo Polaris Sno-Traveler es low os 8695 f Cliff Dreyer Gun end Sports Center 15210, Holly Rd. Holly, ME #6771 Open Dolly and Sundays Sand—Gravel—Dirt Travel Trailers II . -REAMLINES, FRANKLINS. CREES, FANS, end MONITORS In travel trailers, also carry: Crees, Franklins, and Macklnawi Truck Campers. Came' on out thli week to Holly Travtl Coach, 152H Holly Bd„ Hatty, MB #6791. BOOTH CAMPER ALUM COVERS, CAMPERS, , PARTS, ACCESSORIES ' FOR ANY PICK-UP. 7330 HIGHLAND RD^PONTIAC OR 3-539)1 AT STACHLER'S INSPECT CENTURY-MALLARD-SAGI TAG-A-LONG Also LIFETIME PREMIER MOTOR HOME 5 — 1966 MODELS LEFT STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC. 3771 Highland (M59) FE 2-4921 Mon. and Tues. 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. Wed. thru Frl. 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Sat. 9 a.m, to 5 p.m., closed Sunday HdwLAND SALES AND RENTALS Pickup campprs and covers. Reesa and Drawtlte hitches. 3255 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-1456- , 76 DISHMASTER FAUCETS AT G, Thompsons. 7005 M59 W. FURNACES - SOLVE YOUR HEAT-Ing problems. 625-150L 682-7812. For The Finest In Top-Quality Merchandise Shop At Montgomery Ward Pbhtiac Mall HOT WATER HEATER, 30 GALLON gas, Consumers approved. 889.50 value, $39.95 and $49.95. Marred Michigan Fluorescent, 393 Orchard Lake, FE #1462.-16. JANUARY'S CLEARANCE SALE of oil used end new desks, files, typewriters, adding machines, drafting tables, etc, Forbes, 4500 Dixie, Drayton, OR 3-9767, NEW HOT WATER BASEBOARD, 7'. length, $1.35 per foot. G. A Thompson. 7005 M59 W.______ PONY CUTTER 1664 Olddlngs Rd. PLUMBING BARGAINS. FREE Standing toilet, $16.95. 30-gollon heater, $49.95, 3-plece bath sets $59.95. Laundry tray, trim, $19.95; shower stalls with trim $39.95, 2-bowl sink, $2.95; Lavs., $2.95; tubs, $20 end. up. Pipe cut and thraadad. SAVE PLUMBING CO., 841 Baldwin. FE #1516. SPRED-SATIN PAINTS. WARWICK Supply. 2671 Orchard Lake. 6B2 2820. box spring and 2 vanity temps. 5-plece dinette set with 4 chrome LOANS 825 to 81,000 Insured Payment Plan BAXTER # LIVINGSTONE Finance Co. 1 401 Pontiac State Bank Building FE 4-1538-9 chair* and table. All for 8399. Your credit Is good at Wyman's. WYMAN FURNITURE CO. 17 E. HURON FE #1$01 18 W. PIKE FE 2-2150 LINOLEUM RUGS, MOST SIZES, $3.49 up. Pearson's Furniture, 210 E. Pike St., FE #7881.____________ MATCHING LEATHER INLAID end tables. Nylon couch. 673-7138 Swaps 63 1966 DODGE POLARA FOR PROP-erty or 82100. Need older car. 673-7138. 1966 YAMAHA, 50 CC SWAP FOR auto, of equal value. 634-8169. Sal* Clothing 64 COMPLETE LITTLE GIRLS WARD rob* Sizes Infant to 2. 332-2790. IMPORTED BLACK PERSIAN lamb M coat with taphlre mink collar. Only worn twice. 693-6979 OYSTER WHITE SHEARED MUSK ret (acket. Mink colter. Almost new. Call Thurs. or Sun. #3585. Sola Household Goods 65 Vi WHAT YOU'D EXPECT TO PAY Brand New Furniture 3 Full Rooms $276 82.50 PER WEEK Or, buy each room separately E-Z TERMS LITTLE JOE'S BARGAIN HOUSk 1461 Baldwin at Walton FE 2-6842 Acres of Free Parking Open Eves. Til 9; Sat. 'til 6 1 AS IS Sofa, chair, 2 temps, 3 tables, # piece bedroom outfit, 5-plece dinette, $177. Terms, $2.35 a week. Call Mr. Adam# FE 4-0904, World Wide (next to K mart). 1-2-PIECE LIVING ROOM, 125; bedroom sets, $50 to $75; chest, $1; dresser, $$; bed, $10; studio couch, $50; desk, $5; dinette, $20; stove, $15; refrigerator, *21; dining room, $35: TV; plane. M. C. Llppard, 559 N. Perry. T MORE TIME BRAND NEW FURNITURE $278 (Good) $2.50 Weekly $378 (Better) $3.00 Weekly $478 (Best) $4.00 Weekly NEW LIVING ROOM BARGAINS 7-etec* (brand new) living room: 2-otec* living room suite, two step tables, matching coffee table, decorator lamps, all for $109. Only $1.90 weekly. . NEW BEDROOM BARGAINS #p!ec* (brand new) bedrooms: Beubto itmar. tenltrwf bed and chest, box spring and Innerspring mattress, two vanity temps. All tor *129. tUI weekly. PEARSON'S FURNITURE 21* E. Pike PE #7881 Between Paddock and City Hall Open Mon, and Frl. "til e p.m. #PIECE AMPLE BEDROOM OUT-fit, 875. Custom made turquoise davenport, 175 2 rows nylon frieze club chairs, 825 each. Kenmore auto, washer, Ms. Gibson refrigerator with 155 lb. top freezer, 875. MA 4-1306. ROOMS OP fURNITURE. #7932. Llppirifc FE 9x12 Linolaum Rugs . .$3.89 Solid VinylSTIle ........7c ea. Vinyl Asbestos Hit ...... 7c. ea. Inlaid til* 9x9' . ...... Jt ea. Floor Shop—2255 Elizabeth Lake “Across Front the Moll" 20". APT. GAS IXltei *39ii Used TV'* ........... $19.95 Sweet's Radio and Appliance, Inc. 422 W. Huron 334-5*77 WxlAKESIDE, BIRMINGHAM -nm Woodward and Quartan. 2 bedroom suites, 2 pises curved sec ttonal divan, maple dinette, mahogany server, chairs, tables, lempe, kitchen eat. Raaaanabto. NECCHI DELUXE AUTOMATIC Zlg zag sewing machine — cabinet model — embroiders, blind hems, buttonholes* etc. 1963 model. Take over payments of $5.90 PER MO. for 9 mos. or $53 cash bal. UNIVERSAL CO. FE 4-0905 NICJ= ROPER APARTMENT SIZE range, $39.95. Other‘-good appliances. Michigan Appliance Co. 3282 Dixie Hwy, 673->0lf., REPOSSESSED GE STEREO 83.25 PER WEEK Goodyear Service Store 1370 Wide Track Dr* West Pontiac ROUND TABIE; CANED BACK sofa; champagne step-tables; vanity end chest. FE #1907. , REPOSSESSED ROTARY \aWNM0WER ’ 81.25 PER WEEK Goodyear Service Store 1370 Wkte Track Dr., West Pontiac SINGER Used zig-zagger and cabinet. Makes buttonholes, monograms, em-brodery. #year guarantee, pay account balance of $33.35 cash or 85.00 monthly. Call 33#9283. RICHMAN BROS, SEWING CENTER SINGER DIAL-A-MATIC Zlg zag sewing machine moderp, walnut cabinet designs, appliques, buttonholes, etc. Repossessed. Pay off $54 cash or *6 PER MONTH payments. UNIVERSAL CO. FE 4-0905 SPECIAL 1966 Dressmaker, head. In new cabinet. Zig-z*Mer, for hems, button holes, designs, etc. Must collect balance of 842.82 cash or <4.82 monthly on new contract. Guaranteed. Call 335-9213 tar free home demo. RICHMAN BROS. SEWING CENTER TWIN COUCHES. MUTUAL NYLON foam. 46". Exc. condition, <40 each — MA*#1356. TWIN NEEDLE / ZIG-ZAG Only 3 months old, designs, button holes, hems, ell your plain and fancy sewing without attachments, everything built In. Pay $51.41 cash or Terms $5.14 monthly, atari Feb. 1st. Cel) 363-2622. ™ CERTIFIED SEWING WAS H E R $25, REFRIGERATOR, top freezer $49, Dryer $35, TV Set $25, Gas Stove $35, Washer end Dryer set $85; V. Harris, FE #2766. WYMAN'S 1 USED BARGAIN STORE At our II w. Pike Star* Only Odd Chairs . .......„...,..$ *.9S Mangle iron .................8)4.95 Walnut dresser with mirror .. $24.95 2 pc. living room suit* ......*29.95 36" elec, range .............*29.95 Guar. elec, refrigerator ....*59.95 Guer. elec, waiher . ,......,*59.95 Your Credit to good of Wyman's EASY. TERMS FE #2150 Hi-Fi, TV & Ratos 66 $!" USED TV ..........,. S29.95 welton TV, FE i-pst y V Ope* 9-6 SIS £■ Wilton, ebroer of Jostyn APARTMENT SIZE REFRIGERA-tor, excellent, *29. vTltarris, BUNK BEDS Choice et is style*, trimdi* beds, tripl* trundle bids and bunk beds ■ I m 23 INCH MOTOROLA TV, CONSOLE perfect condition. *50. or 3-9473, after 5:«0. “ : „ COLOR TV ■■■■ Joe's Bargain House, ■____ RECORD PLAYER NEEDLES . hard to ftnd? See us — w* have *11 kinds. ■ Johnson 'TV -Fg *-tS«9 45 E. Walton near BeldWln TALBOTT LUMBER BPS house paint No. 211, $6.95 gal, BPS ranch house white No. 748, $5.95 gal. CookrDunn alum, roof paint, $5.50 gal. Oil base interior, $4.00 gel. Misc. latex paint, 50 cents a qt. 1025 Oakland FE 4-4595 FILL SOIL FIT FOR LEME ON Baldwin at 1-75. FE #2144.___ GOOD RICH TOPSOIL AND BLACK dirt. Del. FE #6588. PONTIAC LAKE' BUILDERS SUP-ply. Sand, gravel, dll dirt. OR 3-1534. Wood-Coal-Coka-FvBl 77 PICKUP TRUCK CAMPERS Over 30 Different models On display at all times BILL COLLER I Camping Supplies On M-21, Lapeer, Mich. PICKUP COVERS, *245 UP. ID'S" cabcovers, $1,295 and up. T & R CAMPER MFG. CO. 1180 Auburn Rd. , 852-3334 PIONEER CAMPER SALES A-l OAK WOOD, SPECIAL THIS week only. 2 cord $26 delivered. Discount on larger orders. FE 8-9846. FE #2483. SEASONEO FIREPLACE WOOD. 62#5263 after 6 p.m. week days, all day Sat. Sun.________ Pete—Hunting Dogs 79 l-AKC DACHSHUND PUPS. STUDS .Eitelheim'.s - FE 2-0889. 4 AKC ALASKAN MALAMUTE PUP-ples, 6 wks. 1 female silver and white, 6 mas. Bred for temperament and reasonably priced. 673 6716. . ADORABLE PUREBRED SMALL, shaggy terrier. 69#I901._ BARTH TRAILERS 8. CAMPERS Travel queen campers MERIT FIBERGLASS COVERS (8"-27"-35" cavers) ALSO OVERLAND 8, COLEMAN 3091 West Huron_ FE 2-8989 RENTAL. DRIVE AND LIVE* IN 1966 Lend Cruiser tor e Florid* vacation. Sleeps 6. 363-2088. SALE Year End Closeout, New 17' Yukon Delta s-e ..........81893 10* Driftwood Camper .........81095 17' Bee Lllie 6-c .......... 81895 16' Frolic s-c .:7.T..v.t;:v.S189S Looking tor a gbon used trailer? , Out entire rental fleet Is now pn sal*. Jacobson Trailer Sales ‘ 5690 Williams Lk. Rd. OR #5981 S'PORTCRAFT PICKUP SLEEPERS. Stronger welded tubular frame. Lined and Insulated.... 8295 4160 Foley, Waterford 673-7843 SOUTH BOUND? Now In stock — 2-24' rounded corner Leyton's Also Holly's and Corsair's. All self-contained. Ellsworth Trailer Sales <577 Dixie Hwy. 625-4400 AKC POODLES, SMALL MINI-eture puppies, males, reas. 624 3070. WOLVERINE TRUCK CAMPERS and 'sleepers. New and used, 839S up. Also ranfals. Jacks, Intercoms, telescoping, bumpers, laddtrt, racks. Lowry Camper Sales, 1325 S.- Hospital -Road, Untop Ltk*. EM 3-3681. Spare fire carriers. BLACK, TAN AND RED BONE pups, 1 pair left, 825. 1 female black end ten treeing with other dogs 835. 68#4979. FREE TO GOOD HOME. 2 PUP-ples 3 mos. Old. 852-4785.______________ Mobile Homes GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPPIES, AKC, wormed, shots, heavy boned. Guaranteed healthy. Call Holly, 1-313-634-8573. _______________ THE SALVATION ARMY RED SHIELD STORE 118 W. LAWRENCE ST. MALAMUTE PUPPIES, EXCEL lent companion for children. Reasonable. 332-3222. OODLES OF POODLE PUPS, AKC. Moke us an offer, must go. 62# 2197Pr3S#2053: - Clothing, Furniture, Appliances TUB ENCLOSURES, GLASS, ONLY $25. G. A. Thompson. 7005. M59 W. WASHED WIPING RAGS, 19 CENT 25 lb. boxes tiFSOO lb. betas Blvd. Supply 500 S. Blvd. E. FE #7061 WEDDING ANNOUNCEMENTS AT discount prices. Forbes Printing and Office Supplies, 4500 Dixie Hwy. OR #9676. WANTED TO BUY Leaded glass lamps or leaded temp shades. FE 4-9096._________ YOUR WELDW00D HEADQUARTERS DRAY I ON PLYWOOD 4112 W. Walton QR 3-*912 Hand Tools-Machlnery 68 36' SEMI STORAGE VAN, A-l. S450. Fork lift trucks, $800 u|f. Blvd. Supply 500 S. Blvd. E 1 FE #7001 HALL'S AUCTION SALES 705 W. Clarkston Rd., Lake Orion, Closed until February 4, 1967. Musical Goods 71 AFTER CHRISTMAS SALE, Hlllaon Lawn 8. Garden 7617 Highland 673-0330 USED RIDING TRACTORS WITH enow blades, priced at SltS and. up. KING BROS. PE #1M2 * . ?'v F8 #**$4 - Ponttee tod, lust east et Opdyke Travel Trailer* ll fO1 TOUR HOME CAMPER, LIKE new, 1900. 673-7292. AIRSTREAM LIGHTWEIGHT TRAVEL TRAILERS Since 1931 Guaranteed tor Ilf*. So* them end get * dtiMMtra-tlon at Warner Traitor Seles, 009! W. Huron (iin to 1*1* *n* of Watty Byenq> exciting oiravaM) YOUR APACHE DEALER EVAN'S EQUIPMENT 6507 Dixie Hwy., Clarkston le Hwy., < <25-1711 <89 2 months free Rent in our Modern Parks January Only Complete Mobil* Home Service RICHARDSON-WINDSOR LIB E RTY-H AMPTON-HOME TT B Colonial Mobile Homes 25 Opdyke 332-1657 (Comer of M-59 et Opdyke) 5430 Dixie Hwy, 674-2101 (VS mil* south of Waterford) 10x46 Wolverine, 1964, 8600 down, take over balance 82100. 33#2956, after 9 p.m,_______________________ I960 GREAT LAKES, 10'X44', EXC. condition, furnish## air conditioning, completely set up, Immediate occupancy, $2,300. 3t#9579. Before you buy a Mobile Home, call Michigan's largest chain mobile home dealership. TOWN & COUNTRY MOBILE HOMES 294-1520 New and Used Bargains in all models and in all sizes available to fit your budget. For Information as to the location nearest you call 294-1520 FALL SALEv SAVE HUNDREDS OF DOLLARS on these new and used beauties over 40 to choose from In 5 different decora. FORESTPARK » PARKWOOD HOLLYPARK All at reduced prtcea. 16 to 60 ft. long, 8 to 20 ft. wide . We have parking spaces. Open 9 to 9 — 7 days a week MIDLAND TRAILER SALES 2257. Dixie Hwy, 338-0772 1 block north of Telegraph HOLIDAY SPECIALS 12' Wide, 2 or 3'-B0droom $4288.00 — Only 8788.00 down. Also many used at bargain price* Guaranteed parking space. AliMinrlrarf * Authorized DETROIT-KRDPP Dealer Bob Hutchinson Mobil* Homes 4301 Dixie Hwy. Drayton Plains OR #1201 Open dally Til 9 p.m. Sat. 8, Sun, 'til 5 p.m. MARLETTES 50'-61', long, 12' to 20* wide. Early American, Traditional or modirn decor. Space available In 4 Star Park, no extra charge. Alto see tha famous light weight Winnebago Trailer. OXFORD TRAILER SALES OPEN 9-8, CLQSED SUNDAYS mile south of Lakt Orton on M24 MY 2-0721 SPECIAL $350 down and walk Into 52'xlO', # bedroom Marietta coach, all set up. Warm and ready tor live in. C*lt OXFORD TRAILER SALES for details. MY #0721. WANTED:3278. Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM Just east of Oakland 1959 CHEVY Bel AIR 2-DOOR,,1-owner, very nice. 333-7542, Riggins, KESSLER'S Oxford DODGE CARS AND TRUCKS Sales and Service . OA. 8-1400 1960 FORD. RUNS GOOD. POWER Steering, Power' Brakes, Full Price 859. Reliable Motors, 250 Oakland Ave, FE 8-9742t________________ WINTER SPECIAL 1962 CORVAIR, 4 TO CHOOSE from—as low as $397 and up. Can be purchased with no down payment. 3 Fords 1961-67 $45 up 1961 International truck $495 4 Chevy 1957-62 $35 up 1957-1959 Bulck $35-$197 3 Ramblers 1963-64 $597 up Pont lacs 1957-64 $55 up Others and trucks (ECONOMY CARS. 2335 DIXIE HWY.) LUCKY AUTO 1961 T-BIRD POWER, AUTOMATIC, $795 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVRO LET, Birmingham, Ml 4-2735.____ 1962 FALCON 2-DOOR WAGON. 6 cylinder standard transmission. Ex, Ira sharp. Only S595. Jeroma Ford Rochester's Ford Dealer OL 1-9711 544 S. WOODWARD 647-5600 1962 CADILLAC 2 DOOR HARDTOP. Power* $1295 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET* Birmingham, Ml 4-2735. ' 1965 Cadillac Coupe DeVille. Samoan bronze with 1962 CHEVROLET STATION WAGON WITH AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION* RADIO* HEATER* POWER STEERING* WHITEWALL TIRES, Full PRICE $766. ABSO-L U T E L Y NO MONEY DOWN, Weekly payments only $7.88. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD . TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7500. 1963 FORD GALAXIE 4 DOOR. V-8, automatic* radio* heater and pow er steering. $895. Jerome Ford Rochester's Ford Dealer. OL 1-9711 1963 FALCON FUTURA# 6-CYLIN der stick shift. Radio* heater* 1 owner, A-1 condition. 363-0866. 1962 FORD GALAXIE 500 4 DOOR, V-8, automatic* radio* and heater Special at only $595. VILLAGE RAMBLER. 666 S. Woodward. Ml v 6-3900. ,1942 JEEP. * 4 • WHEEL DRIVE. Will sell cheap. ROSE RAMBLER-JEEP EM 3-4155 or ^ EM 3-4156 Ford V2-ton plckup,V8, ;k ..........’ . . . . . . $1,195 Chevy 1-ton stake# low ml. $1*295 1965 Chevy Impala Sport Coupe 6, standard $1,295 1965 Olds Starflre. Factory ajr < Full power* console with tachometer ...................a 51*995 1965 Olds 88 Coupe—Factory air ............................. $1,895 1964 Bulck Wildcat Sedan - Clean ................... $1,195 1964 Chevy Impala 4-door hardtop $1*195 1964 Chevy Convertible .. $1*350 1964 Rambler Classic* 2-door .. $ 695 1963 Bel Air Sedan .......... $ 795 1962 Chevy II wagon ......... % 575 1962 GMC SUBURBAN VAN. THIS 9-Passenger beauty Is ideal for the outdoor sportsman and a real buy at only $695 at BOB BORST LINfOLN-MERCURY 520 S. Woodward Birmingham 646-4538 1966 Lincoln Cominental. Full1 power. Factory air conditioning, vinyl top, low 'mileage. Plenty of New Car Warranty. 1h;s is the Boss' own personal car. 1965 FORD _______________________ _____ ,___________________1_________________Station wagon with V-8 engine* auto-1 matching trim, 20,000 miles,' radio,; 1963 CHEVROLET BEL AIR .9 PAS- mafic transmission, radio* heat-] heater* full power* ing. Save ASK FOR NORM DANIELSON WILSON Cadillac Ml 4-1930 1962 AUSTIN HEALY SPRITE CON-vertible* $695 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET* Birmingham* Ml 4-2735. 1964 VOLVO P1800S* MICHELAN tires* air blower* radio and heater, 626-9972 or 626-0745. JEROME MOTOR SALES 1980 Wide Track Dr f£ 3-7021 1965 KARMANN GHIA Club coupe with radio and heater and whitewall tires, full price S1395, only $49 down and $10.92 weekly payments. HAROLD TURNER 1966 Cadillac Sedan DeVllla. Gold with a white leather. top, full power, and air conditioning. SaYe ASK FOR NORM DANIELSON WILSON Cadillac BEATTIE -Quality A-l Unit- 1963 Econoline 895 Van with 6-cyllnder, stick shift, real good unit—will do the |obl m 1963 Willys ............... . .'. .$1395 With snowplow. 4-wheel drive, solid green finish. 1965 Jeep ,.... .$1695 Universal with 1-ton package. Extended wheel base, metal cab, radio aM heater, 1965 Buick LeSabre ... .$L995 2-Door Hardtop. Power steering and brakes, automatic, extra clean. 9,000 actual miles. 1965 Dodge 2-Door v.. .$1495 V-8, stick shift, plenty of warranty. 1965 FordGalaxie\ ... .$1695 Z-Doar Hardtop.' V-8, automatic, dirk blue finish. 1964 Corvette :... .. .$ave Convertible with" V-8, 4-speed, AM-FM radio, bright red finish. ‘hfour FORD DEALER Sine® 1930" C On pixf* Hwy. In Wortrford \ OR 3-1291 T 1966 VW, BLUE, 1300 SERIES WITH sky light. Only 3,000 mi., driven In Europe, $1*500. 682-1^23. j 1966 SUNBEAM TIGER, BLACK with black Interior* tonneau coyer* 4-speed, Ford V8, $3,200. 625-3473! after 6. I STATION . WAGON, 1964, VW, 91 passenger* exd. condition. Sell or swap for pickup caboverr camper.! 651-9422. ___Ml 4-1930 NovCIs the ‘ Time to Save On a New Model Matthews-Hargreaves 631 OAKLAND AVE. • FE 4-4547 senger Wagon. 1 Owner. V8, Ra dio, Heater, Power Rear Window, i Grimaldi Cars 900 Oakland FE 5-9421 1963 CHEVROLET IMPALA HARDTOP WITH V8 ENGINE, AUTOMATIC, POWER STEERING* RADIO AND HEATER* WHITEWALL TIRES* FULL PRICE $995* A D CAI MTC1 V KIA AAnKlCV .ABSOLUTELY NO 'MONEY DOWN, W e e k I y payments only $8.88. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD* Ml 4-7500. $1295* only $49 down and $10l weekly payments. 1963 CHEVROLET IMPALA CON-vertible, automatic, sharp $995 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Blr-mingham* Ml 4-2735. 1963 CORVAIR MONZA* 2 DOOR hardtop—turquoise blue* radio and heater-defrdster* whitewalls* automatic transmission, $495. Private owner. Call Earl Jones. FE 2-8181 or evenings 546-1880. ________ 32? 1964 CORVAIR MONZA COUPE. A-l owner hew-car trade. Automatic, buckets. Nice.polor. Save. Grimaldi Cars , 900 Oakland FE 5-9421 1964 CORVAIR MONZA 2 DOOR with 4 speed transmission, $795 at MIKE SAVOlE CHEVROLET, Birmingham, Ml 4-2735. . .1964 CHEVY SUPER SPORT 300 horsepower, Herst shift, burgandy black interior. 682-6454. HAROLD TURNER. FORD, INC. 464 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM_______ M1 4-7500 1965 FORD COUNTRY SQUIRE 1 passenger wagon. 8 cylinder, auto malic, power steering, power brakes. Save Jerome Ford Roches ter's Ford Dealer. OL 1-9711. Only $4695 Trudell Ford • TAYLOR CHEVROLET 624-4501 WALLED LAKE Oakland County's Oldest Chevrolet Dealership SHOP THE "GOODWILL USED CAR" LOT FOR GENUINE VALUES. PONTIAC RETAIL STORE 65 Mt. Clemens St. (AT WIDE TRACK) FE 3-7954 1940 PONTIAC* NO RUST* SOUTH-ern car with- good tires. Needs new engine, best offer. 674-2407, after 5. 1958 BONNEVILLE CONVERTIBLE Runs like new. $95. Reliable Motors, 250 Oakland Ave. FE 8-9742 1961 TEMPEST WITH AUTOMATIC transmission* radio* heater, $295 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET* Bfr-mingham, Ml 4-2?35. i96i Bonneville, 2-door hard'-top* just like new. Can be purchased with no down payment. LUCKY AUTO WOULD YOU BELIEVE NO CASH NEEDED—BANK RATES '60 Pontiac Catalina wagon '61 Pontiac Catalina convert. '60 CorValr coupe '61 Chevy Impair hardtop , 62 Plymouth Fury convert. 62 Olds F85 Cuflass . $299 . $599 . $199 .$599 . $499 . $599 OPDYKE MOTORS 2230 Pontiac Rd. at Opdyke FE 8-9237 ______ ___ FE 8*9238 1961 PONTIAC, STARCHIEF* 4-DR", air conditioning* power brakes, steering 1 owner new car trade In. Assume small monthly pay ments. 1965 RAMBLER Classic station wagon. Blue with white top. Real sharp and priced to sell. ROSE RAMBLER-JEEP 777 John R, Troy 585-2522 T T irY'V AUTO ™ *-J w A I - Wagon Radio, heater, automatic. PONTIAC-BUICK . 855 S. ROCHESTER RD. ______651-5500___ THE NEW AUDETTE PONTIAC NOW SERVING Troy—Pontiac—Birmingham Area 1850 Maple* across from Berz Airport 642-8600 CREDIT PROBLEMS? Drive a new or used car from Keego Pontiac Sales. Call Mr. Clay at 682-7300. ____ _____________ 1964 GTO 2 DR. HARDTOP TR1-* power* 4 speed* aluminum wheels* radio* heater, for only $1495. VILLAGE RAMBLER. 666 S. Woodward. Ml 6-3900. LLOYD 1965 PONTIAC Catalina 2-Door Hardtop. Metallic lilver finish. Automatic, power steering and brakes. Garage-kept condition. Full price $1789 • $89 Down LLOYD MOTORS 1250 Oakland 333-7863 1965 TEMPEST 2 DOOR WITH Automatic transmission, power steering, $1495, MIKE SAVOIE CHEV-POLET, Birmingham, Ml 4-2735. NO ESTABLISHED CREDIT? Drive a new or used car from Keego POntlac Sales. Call Mr. Clay at 682-7300. 1966 GTO, BURGUNDY WITH black vinyl .top, 4-speed, trl-power, custom steering wheel, rally gauges, AM-FM radio, reverb, and stereo tape pack. 569 W. Huron or call FE 5-7428. _________- TAKE OVER PAYMENTS ON 1966 Pontiac GTO Convertible and 1966 Pontiac Catalina. 624-2358. 1966 PONTIAC LEAAANS. 2 DOOR hardtop. Silver with black Interior. Many extras. 82100. 628-1749._____________ VILLAGE RAMBLER 666 S. Woodward Birmingham Ml 6-3900 1962 COMET. 2 DOOR. V,8 RADJD,!FE 4-1006 heater, standard transmission. Only; 8495. VILLAGE RAMBLER, 666 S. Woodward Ave. Ml 6-3900. 1940 W. Wide Track WAGON Radio, heater, automatic, and V-8. 817.96. VILLAGE RAMBLER 666 S. Woodward. Ml 6-3900. LLOYD 1965 EALC0N L. 4-door station wagon with automatic ;C-transmission* radio and heater, and whitewall tires* full price $1195* only $49 down and $9.98 weekly payments. « 1962 COMET 2-Door. This car Is extra special transportation. Full price No Mdhey Down HAROLD TURNER 1966 CHEVY CAPRICE, V8* 2-DOOR sports sedan, full power, bucket seats, console vinyl top. 549-1322. 1966 CHEVROLET IMPALA 4 DOOR hardtop, burgundy finish with black vinyl top, automatic transmission, power steering and still under new car warranty. $2295 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET* Birmingham, Ml 4-2735... MIKE SAVOIE ms i RION For Your 1966 GTO 2-door Hardtop, Tiger Gold. Auto. Lease 1966 GTO 2-door Hardtop, Burgundy. Demo Unit 1966 GTO Convertible, Gulf Turquoise, Stick 1967 GTO 2-idoor Hardtop, Turquoise. New Unit 1967 GTO 2-door Hardtop, Black, 4-speed. New 1967 GTO 2-door Hardtop, Burgundy. Hydramatic 1967 GTO Hardtop, Regimental Red, 4-speed Ask for one of our courteous salesmen \ DISCOUNTS uptoS1687.94 • - % ■ \ “ • On M24 in Lake Orion Qp+w 9 to 9 Mon. - Fri. . MY 3-6266 ■’ V an Birmingham's New CHEVROLET DEALER 1104 S. Woodward Ml 4-2735 FORD, INC. 464 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM , Ml _4-7500 1965 LTD er, power steering, power brakes* whitewall tires* tulr price $1795, only $49 down and $13.92 weekly payments. HAROLD TURNER < FORD, INC. 464 S. WOODWARD AVE. 'BIRMINGHAM Ml 4-7500 ONE-STOP TRANSPORTATION CENTER VALU-RATED USED CARS „ 1965 RIVIERA: Air-conditioning .......... $2595 1965 OLDS Dynamic .88. 4-door................. .$1895 1963 OLDS Super 88. 4,door hardtop ...........$1095 1964 6J.DS 98. 4-door. Air-conditioning ...... . $1695 1964 OLDS 88,Convertible. Like new — $1495 1965 OLDS 98.Xuxuiy sedan......................$2395 1966 PONTIAC BonneviJIe. 2-door H.T. Air ..... $2895 1962 CHRYSLER Newport. 4-door .n,....v..$ 745 1965 MERCURY Monterey. Convertible .$1795 T965 .PLYMOUTH Belvedere. 2-door hardtop ..- .$1495 2 YEAR WARRANTY 635 S. Woodward Ave. Birmingham . '647-5111 LLOYD MOTORS 1250 Oakland 333-7863 1963 COMET HARDTOP WITH AUTOMATIC TRANS-MI.SSION, RADIO AND HEATER, WHITEWALL TIRES, FULL PRICE $792, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Weekly payments $7.88 CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7590. LLOYD 1965 MERCURY Monterey 2-D o o r Hardtop. Twilight turquoise, automatic, power, lull factory equipment. Sold by us new and serviced. 24 months or 50,--000 mile warranty available. Full price $1789 $89 DOWN LLOYD MOTORS 1250 Oakland 333-7863 1962 OLDS 88, LOW MILEAGE* double power* deluxe. 6-2358. Chrysler-Plymouth - Jeep FASTEST GROWING Dealer 1963 RAMBLER American, 6 cyl. engine standard shift, economy plus transportation. . . Only...... $695 1963 VALIANT 2-door sedan, looks like new throughout, special ......749 We have 3 CJ-S® jeeps available with plows, as "Y low as .............................. $ 795 1965 CHEVY Biscayne 2-door sedan, auto., in very good condition. Only............. . . ..... $1295 1961 FALCON 2-door, automatic, .reconditioned engine. Only .............................. ............$495 “T966 FORD Styleside, V8, custom cob, excellent condition. Only . .. j. —..........■ $1595 1963 BUICK LeSabre 4-Door hardtopLgpe-owner — like new—Only —'. ■:...........v?..............$1295 ON, DIXIE HWY. — NEAR Ml 5 CLARKSTON MA 5-2635 used] OLIVER BUICK CARS , . SERVICE HOURS 1 . Monday and Thursday 7:30 a.m. toYiOO p.m. NEW • ii Tuesday, Wednesday and Friday HOURS 1 7:30 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. : Closed Saturday and Sunday NEW AND USED CARS . Monday and Thursday 8:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday and Saturday 8:00 a.m.' to 6{00 p.m. Closed Sunday 1963 BUICK. Electra 4-Door Hardtop. Power steering and brakes, radio, heater. Whitewalls, medium blue,' beautiful condition. A Real £uy at Only— 1966 BUICK,.. / Electra "225" 4-Door Hardtop, Oluc with black vinyl top, power steering and brakes, automatic, ra real-ereem puff. Ottly— ' \ . . • $3195 1961 CADILLAC.... Fleetwood with full power* 'air conditioning* automatic, jet black (finish* beautiful condition throughout! Ready to go at Only-— $1295 1965 CHEVY,:., Super Sport Impala 2-Door Hardtop. Automatic, radio, heater, whitewalls; bucket seals, clean inside and*outt Only— \A 196-210 Orchard Lake FE 2-9165' iiii a. r Programs furnished by stationsi listed in this column aro subject to changt -WJBK-TV. WWJ-TV, 7-WXYZ-TV, 9-CKLW-TV, 50-WKBD-TV, 56-wfvT MONDAY EVENING 1:00 (2) News / „ , (7) Mov^e : “Watch the 4 Birdie”/^1950) Red Skel- ton,.Arlene Dihl, Ann Miller /(SO) Superman /-.• (56) Friendly Giant hit (56) Science Is Fun 6:30 (2) News (9) Twilight Zone (50) Flintstones (56) What's New 7:00 (2) Truth or Consequences (9) Movie: “Adventures trfl Mark Twain” (194A)' (50) McHale’s Navy (56) Master Class— j Segovia 7:30 (2) Gilligan’s Island * | (7) Iron Horse (50) Alfred Hitchcock > 7:45 (4) Orange Bowl Football —Georgia Tech meets Florida at Miami’sfOrahgej Bowl 8:00 (2) Run Buddy Run (50) Perry Mason 8:30 (2) Lucille Ball (7) Rat Patrol 1 (56) N.E.T. Journal 8:55 (9) News 9:00 (2) Andy Griffith (7) Felony Squad (9) Sentimental Agent (50) Movie:. “The Amazing Dr. Clitterhouse” (1938) EdwSrd G. Robinson, Claire Trevor, Humphrey Bogart 9:30 (2) Family Affair (7) Peyton Place (56) French Chef 10:0d (2) To TeU (he Truth (7) Big Valley (9) Front Page Challenge (56) Folk Guitar 10:30 (2) I’ve Got a Secret * (9) Don Messer’s Jubilee (56) Cineposium 11:00 (2) (4) (7) (9) News (50) Alfred Hitchcock 11:30 (2) Movie: “Union Pacific" (1939) (4) Johnny Carson (7) Movie: “Never Steal Anything Small” (1959) James Cagney, Shirley Jones (9) Movie: “The Lavender , Hill Mob” (1951) 1:00 (4) Beat the Champ (9) Window on the World 1:15 (7) News 1:30 (2) (4) News (7) Wanted—Dead or Alive - ’ • , -- . > TV Features Illegal Opium Traffic ORANGE BOWL, 7:45 p m. Florida meet at Miami. (4) Georgia Tech and N.E.T. JOURNAL, 8:30 p.m. (56) “The Opium Trail” traces the development of illegal drugs from die poppy fields of Southeast Asia through their conversion into morphine and disposition via the narcotics syndicates of Hong Kong. CINEPOSIUM, 10:30' p.m. (56) Los Angeles TV personality, Michael Jackson, book critic Bernard Goldman and film produced A. C. Lyles discuss and examine the work of independent and experimental filmmakers. every individual is free to devel-j handicaps or misfortune will re op to his full capacity; where ceive personalized assistance in barriers of poverty, social in- their area of need, whether justice and discrimination, in- mental, physical, material, so-eluding ^ those erected in the eml, cultural, or spiritual — as-minds and hearts of men, have sistance which is already within been tom down; where vocation- our available . skill, time, and al training and higher educa- means to provide. Of course, tion are within the reach of;Washington would have to let us every child, and each is equally free to chpose his path; where the skills and contributions of the people meet their economic needs; where quality housing. TUESDAY MORNING 6:15 (2) On the Farm Scene 6:20 (2) News 6:30 (2) Sunrise Semester (4) Classroom (7) Three Stooges ^:00 (2) Woodrow the Woodsman (4)- Today (7) Morning Show 7:55 (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go- Round 8:00 (2) Captain Kangaroo \ (9) Romper Room 8:30 (7) Movie: “Surprise Package” (1960) Yul Brynner, Mitzi Gaynor 9:00 (2) Merv Griffin , (4) Living (9) Bonnie Prudden Show 9:30 (9) People in Conflict 9:55 (4) News 10:00 (4) Reach for the Stars (9) Hercules (50) Yoga tor Health 10:25 (4) News 10:30 (2) Beverly Hillbillies (4) Concentration (7) Girl Talk (9) Hawkeye (50) Peter Gunn 11:00.(2) Andy Griffith (4) Pat Boone( (7) Supermarket Sweep (9) Butternut Square -(50) Dickdry Doc 11:25 (9) Tales of the River Bank 11:30 (2) Dick Van Dyke (4) Hollywood Squares (7) Dating Game (9) Friendly Giant 11:45 (9) Chez Helene AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) News (4) Jeopardy (7) Donna. Reed (9) Take 30 12:25 (2) News 12:30 (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) Eye Guess (7) Father Knows Best (.9) Communicate (50) Movie: “One Big Affair” (1952) 12:45 (2) Guiding Light 12:55 (4) News 1:00 (2) Love of Life (4) Match Game (7) Ben Casey (9) Movie: '“My Sister Eileen” (1955) Jack Lemmon, Janet Leigh Earl Looks Baclc on Through Bloodshot Eyes By EARL WILSON WILSON NEW YORK—Now that 1967 is practically over and we are ready for 1968—oops, sorry, hangover still hanging over—it is time to train our eyes on certain guideposts to steer us to hap piness in this unhappy world. There is the increasing divorce rate, for example. What causes divorce? According to an extensive poll taken in alif|| 50 states, 98 per cent of the divorces are caused by. marriage. If marriage were done away with, there would be no divorce. Why can’t our leaders understand this? Sometimes I wonder if the best brains are working 1m these problems. ★ ★ ★ Frankly, I have had better years than ’66. I lost a contact lens in St. Louis, and got fog-bound in Wichita where they hadn’t had fog since 1908. In Phoenix, after I’d delivered a lecture, the toastmaster took a slip of paper off the rostrum and handed it to me “Here’s a note somebody left for you,” he said. I looked at it. It said, “Dear Lord ...” At that moment the minister Who was about to pronounce the benediction was scrambling for the paper. R "was his prayer which he’d .carefully written longhand and left on the rostrum. ★ ★ ★ » In Fort Wayne, Ind., columnist Cliff Milnor introduced me, mentioning that in nearby Rockford, O., my home town, there was ,a « . “As long, as the first day of a m REMEMBERED QUOTE: ' diet,” W’1. • ..1 ; As Agnes De Mille once said, “A good education Is usually harmful to a dancer. A good'calf is better than a good head.” ... That’s earl, brother. •- • (TIM Han Syndic*!*, me.) 1:25 (2) News ' (4) Doctor’s House Call 1:30 (2) As the World Turns A (4) Let’s Make a Deal 1:55 (4) News 2:00 (2) Password • (4) Days of Our Lives (7) Newlywed Game 2:30 (2) House Party (4) Doctors (7) Dream Girl (50) Love That Bob 2:55 (7) News 3:00 (2) To Tell the Truth (4) Another World (7) General Hospital , (50) Topper 3:25 (2) (9) News 3:30 (2) Edge of Night (4) You Don’t Say ! (7) Nurses g (9) Swingin’ Time (50) Johnny Ginger 4 #00 (2) Secret Storm (4) Bozo the Clown (7) Dark Shadows (56) Heredity 4:30 (2) Mike Douglas (7) Where the Action Is (9) Fun House (56) Social Security in Action 4:45 (56) British Calendar 4:55 (4) Eliot’s Almanac 5:00 (4) George Pierrot (50) Alvin (7) News (56) Cineposium 5:30 (9) Cheyenne (50) Little Rascals (56) that’s New 5:45 (7) News * 5:55 (4) Carol Duvall takers, friends and citizens: These are our goals. We have sworn to uphold the life and constitutions, and pledged to grapple (boldly with the future with all the vigor and wisdom we possess. iff:- k k a;problems, with yesterday’s over-1 rock of individual effort and re- rebirth of cooperation not only simiplified governmental an-among all governmental levels ’swers. but between government ,and| |j. * . * private effort, to achieve thej The people feel the stifling goals which none can reach!consequences of ov.ercentraliza-alone. . ... L . tion, Conformity, manipulated ' i ★ * * consensus, and arbitrary jm- We seek‘a’ Michigan where'checked power, whether public We seek a Michigan where I those who strive to overcome or private. productive employment and equal opportunity are available to all. GOOD LIFE We seek a Michigan in which all our people share in a good life—a better life than most of us have today — based on qualities of heart and mind and spirit, as well as on material wellbeing. We seek thriving, well-planned cities with efficient, integrated governments; an end to urban blight and ugliness; a new transportation network, unmarred by congestion, frustration and delay; green parks and open spaces accenting and enlivening our communities an unequaled abundance of fresh clean water for all its many uses, and pure air. ★ k k We seek a Michigan where heightened citizen respect for law strengthens the framework of stability and order within which opportunity and freedom flourish. HONORED PURSUIT We seek a' Michigan where citizens throughout our state can The people recognize the limitations of efforts to improve the lives of men and their society by material'means alone. The people sense there is a better way to meet' their needs and still preserve the expression and integrity of individual personality. FOUNDATION LAID The way has been prepared. The foundation has-been laid. The time has come for Michi- use more efficiently more of. our own means. We seek the use of our expanded leisure time as an opportunity not merely for greater I , , . self gratification, but for self- &an to move ahead into a new fulfillment through faith, knowl- ®enera*I0n edge, work,-citizenship, brotherhood and service. k * • ★ jTw And a new generation of peo- sponsibility. It must be shaped by the foundation of family life. It must rest on the sturdy joists, beams, and framework of state, local, and independent institution?: UNCEASING EFFORT Oh this Inauguration Day, I pledge unceasing effort to justify your confidence not only in your chosen leaders but in state government itself. I pledge to. offer additional specific proposals in the weeks and months ahead to advance us further toward our goals." I pledge that we will not drift down the easy paths of least resistance. k k k I pledge to confront you and your representatives with the hard choices necessary if Michigan’s bright promise is to be fulfilled. I pledge to call upon the peo- lution to use not government alope, but all the tools at our command to build a better Michigan. This is the path which will lead, with God’s help, to the fulfillment of our goals. „ i In the words of Winston Churchill: “Come, then, let ua go forward together with our united strength.” pie is prepared to provide much j pie of this state to heed the of the driving faith, imagination, wise advice of Emerson: “What intelligence, and resolve that! would you have?...pay for it and this new generation of progress |take it...it is impossible to get will require. [anything without its price.” FAMILY LIFE And most of all, we seek a renewal of the , vitality and strength of family life and personal conduct, on which all else depends. For the strength of so- ciety is rooted in the strength, |"J w h Lau* re-responsibility, and character of age' w na e n ; individual lives.. js0“rce ~ no ™re Precious as: Michigan’s accomplishments of !s*Jt ,. ^*an ^*ir ener^ the past four years have laid a ldeallsm-stronger foundation for the More than half the. people of Michigan are not yet 30 years and achievement, of these goats Together we have fought to strengthen the people’s control qf state and local self-government. Together we have secured a modern constitution. The «x- k k k Young people in increasing numbers are finding an unequaled creative channel for their idealism in voluntary service to. their fellow men. We have ample evidence in their enthusiastic - response to the Peace ecutive branch is more effec- Corps and to our own student tive, the judicial brandh strong-jvolunteer movement* here in er, and the legislative branch j Michigan, more representative. And politically, young voters Our actions have reflected the are in thfe vanguard of the redetermination , to treat every surgence of public confidence in citizen* with justice, impartiality!.the capacity of state* and local governments to do a job for the people and do it close to home and equality before the law EQUITABLE TREATMENT We have given equitable, treatment to both workers and em walk or ride the streets, by day ployers, and restored Michigan's or night, without fear of physi-j reputation as a responsible and cal assault, property loss, or traffic tragedy. HONORED PURSUIT We seek government directed by those who put the public trust above all personal considerations, and set a high example both of public morality and private conduct; and politics adhering to standards that make public service an honored and preferred pursuit. responsive state — a dynamic state — a good state in which to live, invest, work and play. We have overcome past deficiencies and achieved hew heights in education, health Cheaper postage rates, three cents for a half ounce, up to 3,000 miles, were adopted by Congress on March 3, 1851. On the same day, Congress authorized the coinage of three-cent pieces. (Advertisement) Will medicine or surgery cure Nerve Deafness? The answer to this question plus many more important facts can be found in the revealing new booklet, ‘The Truth About Nerve Deafness.” Write, phone or Visit us today for your FREE copy. There is no obligation. where the people can scrutinize more closely the conduct of, officials and get involved themselves in shaping public pro-j grams and performing publid; tasks. SECOND CHANCE The faltering of overcentralization, the solid accomplishments of state governments in PRICE HIGH The price of personal joy and freedom through self - government and personal responsibility is always high; but I believe the people of Michigan will respond. k k k For the people’s leaders can be the architects, but the people themselves must be the builders of Michigan’s new generation of progress. ' k k k Its hallmarks: recognition of the sanctity of each individual personality; wide-open doors for individual opportunity and, self-fulfillment; respect for God, parents, home, 'and law; receptivity to the idealistic fervor of the young; readiness to sweat, sacrifice, and serve; and reso- RADlO^ARV J. S. KOMARA 1105 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. 28 N. Saginaw FE 8-0728 I TV TECHNICIAN | { NEEDED IMMEDIATELY j SWEEPS : RADIO t TELEVISION i * 422 West Huron FE 4-5677 : COLOR TV SERVICE 9 A.M. TO 9 P.M. "We Service All Makes” OBEL TV SERVICE 3W0 Elizabeth Lakt Rd. 334-9*11 Pontiac*a Number One HOME IMPROVEMENT CENTER - care, recreation, and other field | recent years, the expressed ap- of public service. k k k We have worked closely wifh leaders and citizens in other states to strengthen the forces Ballads We seek more enlightened ac- se^'S°'’ernmcnt controlled by ivitv hv nrivata pntnmrica onrl1.® PCOpie and aspirations. |“Are we ready to take full ad Itivity by private enterprise and;^^* responsive proval of the voters, and the | confidence of youth will give self-government at the state and local level a second chance to prove its worth.. ' As a state, the most important to | question Michigan can ask is, BIG BEAR CUSTOMER fill Be Satisfied! ACROSS l“Ben------” I “Do ye----■ John Peel?” 8“-----Night, Ladies” 12 Swan genu* IS Mountain (comb, form) 14 In matter of (Latin) 15 Capital of ------to Twickenham town” 4S Feminine name 45 Craggy hill 48 Wise insurer 4» Play the flute 62 “Green jfrow *"™*rL t0 *,viou» P,u»l>, i ^nd we have encouraged the Vantage of our second chance? ^ a.i p n n l/ e o a n uotnm __a:__ r ... ° the -(comp, wd.) 54 Slim 55 Mirth 56 Sailor Weatem Samoa 87 Wife of Zeu* 16 “Auld — p o N E P Q K E p A D A V S A R A L. A N 1 £ A T 6 i A E 1 V X l_ E e i T E C H N 1 te i 1 A t F E H 0 u T V 1 0 b p A R o £ X V E N 6 X D 6 R 1 b B A N £ D E E B N E T N T w R .1 N c uv 1 R 9 o D A 1 A M A L A T M O M s s Jp. § E Y E E D 1 T A M D s 1 E R e O R A active participation of self-reli-j For if we fail to use it, ant individuals, families, private!people will have no choice but institutions, economic organize- to turn back to distant federal! tions, and voluntary as9ocia-l power for the services that tions in solving their own prob- state, local, private, and volun- 18 Eye pert 1 f ofed 20 Cajo! 21 Greek letter 22 Prophet 23 Trigonometric ratio 26 Strike SO Arabian name 31 Etruscan name S3 Chemical tufflz 34 Tranigreuiona 38 Yawn 38 Abstract being 39 Keen 41 “Kiss for the (Greek) 58 Aff irmatlve votes 6# Pigpen ____ 80 Kind of cheeie u Act DOWN 17 Departs 1 Wild hog ■ 19 Pan of linger km ■ ~~ Mi 9 Variety of chalcedony lOTrieit* wine measures 32 Mineral 85 Disturbance lake surface (pi.) 87 First word of 2 Greek flask 221 3 Delaying 23 Holder for 4 Characteristic* flowers 5 Tree, source of 24 Lamb's pen Idaho's motto 40 Actor’s part iexican shawl 42 Assuage a beverage 8 Time period 7 Particular occasion 8 Medieval weapon namo 25 Pony 27 Buried 28 Chinese secret eociety 29 Otherwise 44 Arboreal abodes 46 Revelry 47 Govern 48 On the ocean 49 Conservative 50 Italian coin 51 Biblical name and meeting pressing ;tary effort can most effectively independent of govern- i perform. ★ ★ ★ If that should happen, our lofty vision of tomorrow could crumble into dust. Our hopes for a new generation of progress would be crushed. For a sound political, social, and “economic structure cannot! be built from the top down. It I must be faised from the bottom j up. It must be founded on the1 1 2 5 6 $ 9 10 12 12 14 tr it Ilf 18 19 ■ a i 21 | 1 L £ 24 So , ■ 1 Z7 28 29 36 P 1 r 1 sr ¥ ■ 1 IT | 35“ 39 ■ • 42 43 44 j ■ * 1 ■ — U' 4) 48 • ■ 5 50 51 S2 53 64 56 66 67 * 58 59 e6 2 lems needs mental subsidy, regulation, and control. PERIOD OF PREPARATION Together we have passed through a period of prepara*-tion. The people have a new attitude about their state — a new involvement in its affairs — a new optimism for its future. And I am confident that the people of Michigan — responsible individuals devoted to the common good — are able and ready to supply the sweat, sacrifice, and service required to reach our goals. *„ * k For the people have spoken, and this is what they said: “We, the people — we are Individuals. Treat us as individuals. Don’t try to lump us into faceless special-interest cate- j gories. ' “We refuse to be neatly packed and labeled,into economic, religious, racial, or ethnic blocs to be used by political brokers. We will not be deceived by promises of group favoritism and special privilege. We’re not for sale. PEOPLE ‘AWAKE’ “Give utf a government that serves us, not one that makes us dependent and stifles us—a government we can control, not |one that manages ourjiyes.” I That’s what the people said. The people are awake. They I see the futility of trying to meet ! tomorrow’s complex human UP TO 7 YEARS TO PAY Free Eitimatei e ALCOA ALUMINUM SIDING • ALUMINUM AWNINGS • DORMERS • ALUMINUM STORM WINDOWS • FOUNDATIONS • MURAL STONE • GUTTERS • PLASTERING • FURNACES • GARAGES • ROOFING AND SIDING • HOUSE RASING • PORCHES AND ADDITIONS • KITCHENS • BATHROOMS REMODELED • PORCH RAILS «%LE FLOORS IG BEAR Guaranteed Worknuuuhip CONSTRUCTION COMPANY 739 North Perry PONTIAC FE 3-7833 Radio Programs- WJIK760) WXYZQ 270) CKLW(800) WWJ(950)WCAR(17 30) WPQN(1460) WJBK(1500)WHFI-fAA(94.7) TONIGHT 4:04—WJR, Newt,* Sports WWJ, NOWs, Sports WXYZ, Nowscop* * CKLW. News, Music WJBK, Music, Sport* . WCAR, Now*,' Jo* 6•carol!* WPON, Nows. Sport* WHFI, Uncle Jay Show 4:S4—WJR, gut. Barometer 4:45—WJR, Lowell Thomas 7:**—WWJ. News, Phone Opinion WJRrHew*, Sports, MUSIC JMCAIt Newsptan Rose Music. News 7 WPON, Newsraaflnny Irene WHO'. Dinnor Concert 7:T$—WXYZ,~Joey Reynold*, Musk, N«ws ' 5:«e—WHPI, British Jan CKLW, Music WWJ, News, Sportsllne WJR, Nows, Music 9:iS—WHpl, Jade Fuller »:Bt-WJR,. Newt, -Music, Wallace l!:te—WJR, News, Sports, Music TUSSDAY MOONING? 5:04—WJR, Music Hell • wwj. News, 'Robert* j, ,.. CKLW, Nests, Bud Davies WPON,-News, Aritona WCAR, Hern, Delltll ' WJBK,...Nests, Books,-Edi- torial, Music WXYZ, Merc Avery. News, Music 7:«4-tWHFI, Almanac WJR, News, Music Hall WPON, News, Bob Lawrence 7:34—WJBK, Van Patrick 4:44-WjlR, News,' Sunnyslde t:|4—WJR. MusIC Hall t:*l—WJR, -Nevus, Harris Show WCAR, News, Sanders -WHFI, Untie Jay - CKLW, Joe V4n Wwj, News, Neighbor 11.14—WJR, News, Goad v'Y \ . Music ■ WXYZ, Breakfast Club WJBK, News, Music WPON, News, Ban, Johnson * lt:B4-WJR, News, Arthur a WXYZ, Pet Murphy News, Music TUESDAY AFTRRNOON 11:04—WJR, News," Farm WWJ, Review: News: Mar- ket WPON, News, Ben Johneon CKLW, News. Dove Shafer -WCAR, News, Dave \LocR-,\ hart •' \. S WHFI;* News, Encore WJBK, News, Shirley Eder 1 ;4B—WWJ,. News. Call Ken-*i dell, a ■ WJR, News, Elliot Field CKLW, News, pave Sharer 3:14—WJR, News, Llnklelter ’ WPON, Newt, Pet* Ledd WXYZ. Dave Prince < 3:40—WCAR, Newt, Bacahtlla WJBK, ‘ News, MUsle 11 t l !‘r' n K * THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 2, 1967 BERLIN (AP)—Berlin goes Berliners wanting to visit their intq the New Year haying relatives in East Berlin, reached another milestone at It was a separation like the the close of the old: stoic ac-;Christmas seasons of 1961 and ceptance of a Christmas holiday ! 1962 after the Communists first season withput wall passes. ‘built the wa}l. But this time the For the first timeAsifijce 1963, emotional impact at a large ex-the wall dividing the pity was tent appeared gone out of the kept closed to thousands of West issue. Essentially, West Berliners Backed the Western stand not to pay the price,- which was this: recognize the East German Conupunisf | regime or no wall passes. DlbNT BACK OFF ' The Communists always in- sisted on recognition as part oficonstituted a weakening of the eight previous wall pass agree- traditional West German posi-ments, but this time they did tion.„ not back off in negotiations. The! * * * West Berlin side remained The expressed attitude of equally adamant since West jmany West Berliners seemed to Germany does not" recognize he summed up by one man who East Germany, and acceptance declared, “Passes for recogni-of Communist terms would have I tion—never.” A city"spokesman said that tnail from the East also asked-that the West remain steadfast. , The defenders in the Battle of Britain in World War II downed 662 German aircraft in one month—A u g u s t 1940—at the height of the Blitz. - SiMNK U.S. WCATHfK BUUAU 30-DAY WEATHERCAST - These maps, based on those released by the U. S. Weather Bureau in Washington, D. C., indicate below-normal precipitation and temperatures for the Ppntiac area during the next 30 days. 7966 Was Paradox for Nation's Builders By DAVE SMITH AP Business News Writer NEW YORK - For builders, 1966 was the .best of times and the worst of times. The construction industry as a whole set records, while one sector — home-building — entered its worst slump in two decades. Hie U S. Commerce Department estimated outlays for all construction at a record $75.9 billion, a sizable gain over the $6$.5 billion spent in 1965. But privately financed housing construction, expected to Jump from 1965’s 1,425,000 units to 1,515,006 in 1966, plummeted instead. The year's total of 1.2. million housing starts was that low only 1 once before since World War II — in tiie 1957 recession. - And in October, the seasonally adjusted rate of housing starts dropped to 848,000, a 20-year low. The previous lowest annual rate of starts since World War II was 957,000, in November 1964; ' Economic lows Related to'Crime By Science Service WASHINGTON - Economists, concerned with the “upper-world” of respectable business, have neglected the study of the application of economic laws to the eftoninal underworld. And their insights might have a radical effect on “crime” and criminals, according to Dr. T. C. Schelling, Harvard Univer-sity professor of economics. i ★' ★ ★ From the economists’ view, “a large part of organized crime is the selling of commodities and services contrary to law. This includes dope, prostitution, gambling,' liquor, under prohibition, pornography and stolen goods,” The 1966 growth in dollar volume was larger than expected, despite the housing sag, partly because of a 22 per cent expansion in industrial construction, but also because of climbing building costs, economists said. ★ >★ For 1967, they predict a slight boost to $76.1 billion in dollar volume but cuts in physical volume in building. ‘LEVELING OFF’ In all, considering government efforts to bolster the housing market and cutbacks in public building, the Commerce Depart-m%nt says, “Both private and public outlays will level off in the coming year.” The home-building recession was created, economists said, as a somewhat ironic by-product of a generally booming U.S. economy. Savings ahd loan firms, which normally underwrite about one-third of the nation's building mortgages, found safer investments elsewhere than among the smaller, higher-risk builders who normally form a large part of their clientele. ★ ★ Scores of smaller builders went out of business as credit tightened on them, and the National Association of, H o m e Builders estimated late in the year that one of every six contractors in the nation would be engaged in other work before the tight money situation eased in 1967. This house is too-dr It's chilly... even at 75° rirvoess 0 and thro* ary ^ vNea«^n°8a The plaster's cracking Woodwork and ? furniture’s shrun t So much static electricity Dial Way WINTER DRYNESS . . . and eliminate the many problems it causes, with an Aprilaire Humidifier. It’s totally automatic. Just set the dial in your living area (it’s mounted on your,furnace or ••in, your basement .crawl space) and get just The humidity you need. Minerals can’t cause too-frequent maintenance. Phenolic housing will nev^r rust. 5480 HIGHLAND ROAD, PONTIAC OR 3-5632 674.3411 FURNACE FILTERS, Throw-Away Type Tuesday Only c For warm-air heating,systems. Adhesive-treated fiberglas traps dust and dirt. Stock up on sizes K)x2(K 1”, 15x20x1”, 16x20x1”, 20x20x1", 16x25x1”, and 20x25x1”. Limit 6. ?at*h Charge It H eutin^l 1*1 urnhinu ltrpt,, Perry St. Basement Vacuum Bags for Kenmore Vacuum Gleaners Save . 50% when you buy two. Choose from Kenmore, Electrolux, ‘Hoover, Singer, General Electric, Kirby, Eureka, Sunbeam, Whirlpool and many others. Tuesday only! Vacuum (’.leaner Dept., .Main Floor Reg. $1 Ea. 2 ^ $1 Charge It Men’s and Boys’ Rubber Footwear Rubber footwear from Sears. Zipper Re*- $5-49 and 4-buckle arctics. Men’s sizes 7 to ,13, 4-buckle only, big boys’ sizes 3 to 6. 'Little boys’ sizes 11 to 2. Tuesday only! Black, red and white, i 93.99, Little girls’ sices 8-4, front ripper boots. •. ... Shoe Dept,9 Main Floor and $5.99 >7 pair 09: pi Pontiac Only ..2.97 TUESDAY ONLY! draftsman Home-n-Shop Vac for Thorough Cleaning Regular $39.99 at Sears say “CHARGE IT Use it far cleaning any place where ordinary vacuum can’t reach. Picks up to 3Vi bushels of dirt, sawdust, wood chips or metal shavings.. Use as a blower or hair dryer. Use at home or in the shop for effective cleaning. .Dolly or extra wide nozzle.. ... 3.99 ea. Hardware Dept., Main Basement TUESDAY ONLY! Sears 6-Volt and 12-Volt Battery Chargers 11" Regular $15.98 say, “CHARGE IT” at Sears ' Prevent winter battery failure. Charge your battery overnight —in your car—for less than one cent per hour operating cost, Automatic circuit breaker, charging meter, 7-ft. power and battery cables. 6-amp surge, 5-amp charge rate! Charge your battery at home. Auto .Accent.. Perry St. Basement TUESDAY ONLY! TUESDAY ONLY! TUESDAY ONLY! Save *7! on Sears Portable 78x42x42” Ice Shanty Sale! Plug-in or Permanent Mount 2-Lt. Fluorescents Standard Size Foam Latex or Spring Units, Full or Twin Regular $34.99 Regular $16.95 Regular $69.95 Mattress or Box Spring each. NO MONEY DOWN On Sears Easy Payment Plan just say* ‘‘CHARGE IT” at Sears NO MONEY DOWN bn Sears Easy Payment Plan 78x42x42” Size. Ice fish when you are cozy warm in this heavy 10-oz. duckshanty. Aluminum frame. Heavy-duty S'/i-ft, zipper. Icfe'anchor. Green. .T . ..11.88 Reg. $ 14.99 Oil.Heater------- SjMrrtinu floods, Perry St. Basement Put glare-free light over power toolk, ping-pong or pool tables, in garages—wherever good lighting can make work easier or play more enjoyable. Two 40-watt bulbi in white baked-on enamel steel case with chains,' hooks, cord and plug. Shop at ntel sti Sears and save today! Standard 54x754n. full size or 39x75-in. twin size. Same construction' as in king size sets. Sears-Q-Pedic units have 857 coils in each full, 615 coils in twin size. Foam latex mattresses. Buy a pair. , . . ' ' W, ■ \ I \ \ • '' ' Electrical Deft., Main Basement Furniture Dept.. Second Floor np » -rjn Downtown Pontiac "Satisfaction guaranteed or vour money back” uajAIau Phone FE 5-4171 i 1 Wr r r